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i v*

75th Year, No. 250-Wednesday, June 1, 1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H erald -(U S P S 411-2I 0 ) - P r l c e 20 Cents

O f Crooms and Seminole High Schools

Blacks Ask Court To Stop Merger
By Iflcheel Behe
Herald Staff W riter
A U.S. District Court has been
asked by a group of black residents
to block the Sem inole County
School Board's plan to m erge
Crooms and Seminole high schools.
The Rev. Willie King, president o f
the local chapter o f the NAACP and
a member o f Concerned Citizens o f
Seminole County, said Tuesday
night the group has asked the court
to Intervene In the case because the
group feels the board's action vio­
lates the Intent o f a 1970 de­
segregation order by the court. ,
In that order, Crooms was con­
verted from the county's black high

school Into a ninth grade school for
black and white students In the
Seminole High School rone. After
ninth grade the students were sent
on to Seminole.
Last month the school board
voted to merge the two schools over
the objections o f the citizens’ group.
"T h e court order was made to
desegregate the schools,” King said.
"T h e power to Interfere lies with the
court."
The request to Intervene was filed
May 31 by the group's attorneys.
Woolfolk. Perry and Lamb of Or­
lando.
A U.S. District Court Clerk said
today no date has been set for a

decision on the motion.
Burtls Dougherty o f the U.S.
D e p a r t m e n t o f J u s t i c e In
Washington. D.C.. said his agency
has received notice o f the proposed
merger and Is considering whether
the merger Is In compliance with
the desegregation order.
Dougherty said a decision Is
expected by the end o f the month.
By law. the Justice Department
must review all changes In the
district which could affect the de'reflation order,
f the Justice Department agrees
with the action It files a consent
order. If there Is disagreement about
the action, the case must be worked

(

out under the supervision o f a
federal court.
King said the group had to file the
motion because “ the Justice De­
partment Isn't looking out for our
Interests."
Dougherty said he was unaware
that an Intervening motion had
been filed with the court. That
action would take the case out of the
hands o f the Justice Department
and throw responsibility Into the
federal court.
Another member o f the group, the ,
Rev. William Lewis, told a group of
about BO people who gatheread at
Allen Chapel tn Sanford Tuesday
n ig h t, " t h a t b la ck p eo p le o f

Seminole County are Interested In
their students and their schools.
T h e y c a n 't p u sh us a ro u n d
anymore."
"W e want our schools In the black
community as pliable facilities," he
said. "In fact, we would like Crooms
Academy to remain a high school."
The school board has pledged to
c o n s id e r a lte r n a tiv e s to keep
Crooms, on 13th Street In Sanford,
as a functional school.
A plan recommended by Superin­
tendent Robert Hughes to move
Ooldsboro Elementary School Into
the Crooms facility has been op­
posed by the black group.
Another proposal has been made

F u g itiv e
Robinson

SurrendersiOrdered Back To Area

By Diane Retryk
Herald Staff W riter
S u rren dered fu g itiv e C laren ce
Eugene Robinson will be returned to
Central Florida, a U.S. Magistrate In
Miami ruled today.
Judge Peter Palermo • refused to
release Robinson on bond and ordered
he be removed to the Middle District
o f Florida, sold FBI spokesman Chris
Mazzella In Miami.
A U.S. Marshal's office spokesman
said he will probably be taken to
Orlando "as fast as possible."
R obinson's m otive for turning
himself In as the heat was turned up
on a nationwide manhunt was to
p ro tect his g irlfrie n d and th eir
3-year-otd child, sources reported.
Yet FBI special agent Bob Butler
said In a press conference In DeLand
Tuesday that Robinson is known as
"a womanizer." He said he used
girlfriends to provide hideouts and
would frequently leave one with an
excuse for leaving town to visit
another.
His surrender Tuesday night came
after nearly six years as a man wanted
for murder.
He was being sought In connection
with the December 1977 murder o f
Sem inole County reserve deputy
George Pfell and on federal drug
charges.
Roblnsgn was In the custody of the
U.S. Marshal's office In Miami this
morning but may be taken to the
M etropolitan Correctional Center
there while papers are being prepared
for his move, said U.S. Marshal's office
supervisor Gary Tingle.
Law enforcem en t agen cies In ­
tensified their search for Robinson
after he allegedly shot two FBI agents
outside an Orange City restaurant
Friday.
Th e surrender was unexpected.
Police said Robinson, who has spent
10 years behind bars, had vowed
never to be taken alive.
Robinson got out o f a car tn front o f
the FBI's Miami office Tuesday night
and surrendered to agent-ln-charge
Joseph V. Corless. He was to go before
a U.S. magistrate today.
Robinson. 38, Is charged with two
counts of assaulting a federal officer In
connection with the Orange City
shootings, which could result In a
maximum o f 10 years Imprisonment
on each count. The state o f Florida
wants him for the Pfell murder.
FBI sources said th ey b elieve

■a* ROBINSON Page BA

$550 Million
Expressway
To Include
Seminole
An am bitious 8550 m illion plan to build an
expressway system around Orlando has been revealed
to the Seminole County Expressway Authority.
The plan calls for construction o f about 35 miles of
expressway In Seminole County, connecting with
Interstate 4 at State Route 46A near Sanford and going
east across the narrows o f Lake Jesup and close to
Tuskawllla subdivision near Winter Springs to connect
with Orange County expressways near the University of
Central Florida and west around Weklva to an eventual
connection with 1-4 near Walt Disney World In Osceola
County.

^ r~~z~7,~r:^T:TTrL7 __
.before he tinted hair blonde

FBI apodal agent Bob Butler,. Jn. Dick Davit, *f. ttw Jacksonville FBI
charge of tha Tampa office, Malta office, also spoke at the t p.m. prase
re p o rte rs In D eLan d T u esd a y conference. Davis said the story of
Robinson Is "a womanizer" with "an Robinson having a gun under a
^ prob|em « Volusia County Sheriff newspaper when two agents were shot
Edwin H. Duff, left, and special agent InOrange City has proved false.

John Gray, executive director o f the Orlando-Orange
County Expressway Authority, showed the authority on
Tuesday the conceptual plans for the 96-mile project
which tarms a bypass around Orlando.
He said the cost for construction of thge Seminole
County segment would be about 8115 million.
Gray said the Orange County group plans to sell bonds
for construction o f 35 miles o f the system in 1986. He
hopes construction on those sections can begin shortly
after bonds are sold. Construction o f the entire bypass Is
projected by the year 2000.

Gray emphasized that the plan Is only a concept. No
definite routes have been established for the bypasses.
He said the cost for construction o f the Seminole
County segment would be about 8115 million.

And while the Orange County Expressway Authority
haa no say In where an expressway will be located In
Seminole County, a consultant for the group said a
corridor Just east of Winter Springs Is the "critical link"
to the success of the Orange County toll roads.
Dave Dunlap o f the Orlando consulting firm Post.
Buckley, Schuh and Jemlgan said the Winter Springs
corridor is dosing rapidly by development. Steps should
be taken as soon as possible to ensure that a corridor
will remain for construction o fa toll road, he said.
Development In the area between Winter Springs and
Oviedo Is expected to boom during the next 15 years
and Dunlap said the area will provide much o f the traffic
on the proposed system.
*
Seminole County Expressway Authority members
were surprised by the presentation. Even though Dunlap
said he met with Seminole County planning office staff,
several county commissioners who serve on the
authority said they were surprised by the study.

Part of Robinson's arsenal, con­
fiscated by police In a raid on a
house trailer police believe the
fugitive lived In at a KOA camp­
ground near Orange City, was

shown to reporters. The collec­
tion Includes nine handguns, six
automatic weapons, four rifles,
three shotguns, four scopes, am­

munition and protective armour.
"You don't use this stuff to
protect yourself," agents said.
r'You use It to kill people."

County OKs Bid For 4 Fire Stations
PyaOeheall
Herald Staff W riter
A plan designed to Improve fire protection
In south Seminole County and save about $1
million has been spproved by county com­
missioners.
Com m issioners Tuesdsy accepted a
11.215.000 bid from D. Coleman Inc. of
Jacksonville for the construction of three new
(Ire stations in unincorporated areas tn the
xHinty and one station in Altamonte Springs.
New county fire stations will be constructed
Point, Fern Park and Chuluota. The
In
Durth station will be built on Douglas
Road
r------- ----------------ite Spr
Springs'
nd w ill replace Altam onte
lontgomery Road station,
Gary Kaiser. Seminole County's• pulbile
ervices director, said the county will rpay
..
1782.900 and Altamonte Springs will pay
455,800.
The interlocal agreement is an extension of
lie "first-response" agreement between the
ounty and the city in which the department
rtth a unit dosrst to a fire call responds
rgardless of whether the call is in the city or
lie county.
County and city officials were planning for

to move Sanford Middle School from
Its location on U.S. Highway 17-92
In Sanford Into the Crooms facility.
But Hughes recommended that
school remain at Its present loca­
tion. and that a lot owned by the
board across the street from the
school be sold to finance capital
Improvements o f the buildings.
Hughes has also recommended
th at p ro p erty by the C room s
campus be sold to finance Im­
provements there.
The board Is scheduled to make a
decision on the use of Crooms at a
meeting at 3 p.m. today at the
board's offices at 1211 Mellonvllle
Ave.. In Sanford.

new stations when the arrangement was
made. Kaiser said.
Altamonte Springs officials were planning
to build a new station In the Forest City area
and Seminole County officials were planning
for a new station on Weklva Springs Road
when Kaiser developed the Idea.

The county agreed to renovate its Forest
City station and turn it over later to be staffed
by a company of Altamonte Springs
firefighters. That allowed Altamonte Springs
officials to plan their new station in another
section of the city where response Ume was
not as fast
In return. Seminole County will be able to
dose the Sanlando. Fern Park and Chuluota
stations when the new facilities In Sabal
Point. Fern Park and Chuluota are built.
No new firefighters are expected to be
hired.
Kaiser said the agreement is significant

because It will provide better coverage of the
service area and because It will save
•500,000 for both the county and the city.
He called the agreement "the most signifi­
cant thing local government has done for the
people of Seminole County."
But Kaiser said another piece of the
package has not yet been approved. That
portion, a new station for the Lake MaryI Woods Road area, is included tn his
Markham'
department's 1963-84 budget request. Kaiser
If funding for that station is not approved
by county commissioners, response time in
that area will be increased. Kaiser said.
Three other bids were received on the
construction project. Bids were submiteed by
Q J. Hutton Inc. of Brandon; O'Neal and
Corcoran of Winter Park; and Southland
Construction of Orlando.
The low bid submitted by the Jacksonville
firm was nearly 8100,000 less than a
previous bid tn March. County officials said
the 81.2 million Is in line with construction
estimates for the project.
The new stations are scheduled to be
completed in the spring of 1984.

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Sanford City Commissioner David Farr, chairman of
the expressway authority, was puzzled that he had not
learned o f the study before Monday.
" I don’t know why you don't know about It." Gray
told Farr. “ I don't know why the county commission
doesn't know about tt. W e have met with staff. We never
came before the policy body."
Dunlap told commissioners who had expressed hope
that the corridor could be moved about 15 miles east,
"you r staff is fully aware that this corridor has been
selected."

Dunlap said the further east the corridor is moved the
leas traffic It will generate. He said the eastern bypass is
intended to attract traffic away from State Route 436. a
highway already clogged with three times as many
vehicles as U is designed to carry.
Gray said the expressway is necessary to alleviate
traffic congestion on SR 436. Less than 10 percent o f the
traffic tn the metropolitan area is from travelers going
through.
"W e are a destination. W e've got to do something to
take pressure off o f 1-4," Gray said.

Commissioner Bill Klrchhoff said Seminole County
needs to study traffic projections to determine whether
the eastern bypass corridor would be financially feasible.
"You've got to have a destination for that road to
connect with." he said.
Klrchhoff said the road could Initially be Miilt to Red
Bug Lake Road or to State Route 419 east of Winter
Springs If those segments would support themselves.
Commissioner Robert G. "Bud" Feather also lent
support to the program. "The only thing that's going to
save SR 436 is to have this other route for people living
Wi§lhif ttssttestttstttttttttttSA east of 1-4." he said.
Gray promised to let Seminole County officials use the
World tts set stss stesMttt states ISA
findings collected by the consultant in studying the peed
for an expressway system within the county. But
f o o d le s s
County Engineer Bill Bush said the county Thtwik*
As
•I- continue with Its own plans to "look for any and all
derly
corridors within the county."
out on surplus food
The authority has received 8109.000 from the state
commodittts. See story Department of Transportation to study potential
expressway corridors. — H th s a l Bsha.
on Pago3A
M

�SuspectedFraud In Orange And Seminole

NATION
IN BRIEF
FHA Mortgage Rata
Going Up To 12 Percent
WASHINGTON (UPIJ - The FHA-lnsurcd
mortgage Interest rate goes up from 11.5
percent to 12 percent today, the first Increase In
the rate In more than a year.
Housing and Urban Development Secretary
Samuel Pierce Jr. said Tuesday the Increase Is
necessary to keep mortgage money flowing Tor
middle-income homebuyers.
The Federal Housing Administration Interest
rate Is the rate allowed on federally Insured
mortgages for e'ngle-famlly homes.
The lncrease^ln some respects, Is at least a
temporary blow to the administration's In­
sistence that housing would be one o f the
leaders In the nation's economic recovery.
In the past year, as conventional Interest rates
have fallen, followed very shortly by HUDannounced declines In the FHA rate, ad­
ministration officials have said the declines
meant the recovery o f the housing Industry and
therefore showed a turnaround In the economy.

Covert Action Barred
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Administration of­
ficials say a vote In the Democratlc-controlled
House Foreign Affairs Committee to halt covert
operations In Central America Is a long way
from becoming law.
The committee, in a rebuff to President
Reagan's Central American policy, voted 20-14
Tuesday to halt covert U.S. support for
Nicaraguan rebels.
The bill now goes to the full House, where
administration supporters hope to modify the
absolute ban on covert aid.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Thunderstorms soaked the
Rockies and the Plateau area today, hastening snowmelt
that pushed new mudslides down slopes In hard-hit
Utah and Colorado. A flash flood warning continued in
northeast Colorado along the South Platte River, which
was 2 feet above flood stage, and along the Platte River
downstream In western Nebraska. Flash flood watches
covered much o f Nevada and the adjacent east central
California mountain counties o f Inyo. Mono and Alpine.
Showers lingered In the Southeast, and more cold
Canadian air pushed into the Great Lakes. Tempera­
tures In the 80s, expected to remain or rise the rest of
the week, sped up snowmelt Tuesday In Utah, where a
large mudslide began moving slowly down Cold Water
Creek Canyon In North Ogden. 35 miles north o f Salt
Lake City. Hundreds o f Mormons plied sandbags around
the Mormon Temple In Provo and officials drained a
reservoir that threatened to flood the shrine. Street
1Clears and neighborhood volunteers worked around the
clock to fight back waves from Utah Lake that
threatened eight homes In Provo. A mudslide In
Colorado at Dowd Junction Just west o f Vail covered
jparts of Interstate 70 and U.S. 6. A police dispatcher
Itydd the slide left only one lane o f westbound 1-70 open
and forced closure o f a ramp from U.S. 6 onto the
interstate. Forecasters said heavy runoff from melting
mountain snow would cause alow but steady rises on
streams serosa Colorado by Thursday. Record cold
chilled the Midwest and Plaint Tuesday. New lows for
the day were established when the mercury dipped to 31
degrees at International Falls, Minn, and 51 at El Paso.
Texas.
-■
»
ARSA FORECAST: Mostly cloudy today with an 80
(percent chance o f showers and thunderstorms with
locally heavy rain and gusty winds. Highs In the mid to
upper 80s. Southerly wind 10 to 15 mph but gusty In
thunderstorms. Tonight and Thursday variable cloudi­
ness with a chance o f showers or thunderstorms. Lows
In the low to mid 70s. Highs In the mid to upper 80s.
Wind tonight variable mostly northerly 10 mph or less.
Rain chance 50 percent both tonight and Thursday.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Wind southerly near 15 knots through
: tonight except becoming variable near 10 knots north
part late tonight. Wind Thursday northerly 10 to 15
knots north portion and southwest 15 knots south
Seas 3 to 5 feet. Winds and seas higher near
1to numerous showers and thunderstorms.

ARBA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 75;
it tow: 73; Tuesday high: 90; barometric
: 29.84; relative humidity; 90 percent; winds
jth at 15 mph: rain: .88; sunrise 6:27 a.m.. sunset
1:22 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: Daytoaa Beach; highs. 7:13
l.m.. 7:41 p.m.; lows. 12:58 a.m., 12:58 p.m.; Fart
ivarali highs, 7:05 a.m., 7:33 p.m.; lows, 12:49
Lm.. 12:49 p.m.; Bsypart: highs, 1:23 a.m„ 12:25
f.m.: lows, 0:47 a.m.. 7:42 p.m.

FORECAST! Partly cloudy Friday
Sunday. Chance o f mainly afternoon and
j showers and thunderstorms more likely central
I south imrtion Friday. Highs In the mid 80s extreme
to near 90 elsewhere. Lows upper 60s north to
ipper 70a southeast coast and keys.

IOSPITAL NOTES

Man Claiming Diplomatic Immunity Jailed
A man claiming diplomatic immunity Is in the
Seminole County Jail today charged with battery on a
police office, obstruction o f Justice by disguise and
possession o f two or more credit cards In different
names.
Police found the man to be carrying four international
driver's licenses claiming diplomatic Immunity, two
from Columbia and two from Peru.
"W e don't know what he Is," said Seminole County
Investigator Rudy J. Kramer. "T h e Stale Department
has no record of him."
The man, discovert^ with papers in 11 different
aliases, was Jailed under the name Oscar Javcrln
Castillo. He refused to give an address or date o f birth
but listed his place o f birth as Long Island, New York,
and his occupation as a writer.
Kramer said he and two Orlando police officers were
Investigating the man In conjunction with numerous
fraud cases in Seminole and Orange counties when the
man produced an International driver's license claiming
he had diplomatic Immunity from criminal prosecution.
When police said that wasn't sufficient to prove
diplomatic Immunity, the man said he could produce his
Diplomatic Immunity Card at his home.
The man at first agreed to go with the two Orlando
officers but then Jumped out of their police vehicle and
attempted to flee.
When police caught the man shortly thereafter, a
struggle ensued and the man tried to choke one of the
officers by yanking on his tie.
A subsequent search turned up three other interna­
tional driver's licenses, all stating diplomatic Immunity.
In the names of Estevan Dc Vargas. Frank Lopez
Caqueta and Eduardo Rodriguez Pozos,
The man also had four credit cards In three different
names along with checks and other documents in still
different names — 11 names In all.
Seminole County Judge Alan Dickey set bond at
$50,000.
Additional fraud charges may be filed against the
man, Kramer said.
"He alledgedly purchased property (valued at) be­
tween $50,000 and $150,000 and wrote bad checks,
Kramer said. "Th e houses would be filled with furniture
then they'd up and move taking the furniture with
them."
The credit cards the man had in his possession were a
Visa card In the name o f C. Whitcomb Alden; a Master
Charge In the name o f Pozos E. Rodriguez; and an
AMOCO National Credit Card and a Chevron National
Travel Card In the name o f Oscar J. Castillo.

WOMAN SHOOTS MAN
A Sanford area man was in satisfactory condition
today at Central Florida Regional Hospital after being
shot In both arms and the left chest by a woman.
Seminole County sheriff's deputy Jan Kloth reported
the man. Joseph Smith. 18, was found wounded at
Midway Elementary School after the 8:30 p.m. shooting
Tuesday! He had been shot with a .22-ca!lber hand gun.

enough for someone to steal Ills Hllachl portable AM-FM
radlo-easscttc player.
Ludc told poller Ills car was parked In a lot In front o f
Mike’s Rail shop, 1016 South French A ve„ Sanford,
when the radio was stolen as he opened the store
between 5 and 5:10 a.m, Saturday. The radio was
valued at $150.

Action Reports
Fires

★

★ Courts
it Police

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford
following calls:

Fire Department responded to the

Tuesday
-Flagship Bank. 3000 Orlando Drive. 8:25 a.m.. rescue.
—2591Sanford Ave.. 10:09 a.m., rescue.
—700 S. French Ave.. 11:43 a.m.. vehicle (Ire.
— 1204 Oak Ave.. 1:59 p.m.. rescue.
—French Avenue and 3rd St.. 1:59 p.m., rescue.
—2397 French Ave.. 3:51 p.m.. woods fire,
—Apt. 34. Redding Gardens, 5:18 p.m., rescue.
—Good Samaritan Home. 1204 W. 9th St., 5:28 p.m.,
rescue.
—2715 Ridgewood Ave.. 5:28 p.m. rescue.
W ednesday
—Palmetto Avenue and 1st St.. 4:55 p.m.. rescue.
—Cypress Avenue and 6th St.. 5:32 p.m., rescue.
►-Magnolia
Avenue and 7th St., 10:29 p.m. rescue.
GO-KART GONE
Thursday
A go-kart valued at $300 has disappeared from the
patio area o f the Patsy W. Mayo residence, 1209 —Fountain Lodge. 2706 Orlando Ave., 1:49 a.m.,
Magnolia Ave., Sanford. Police report the go-kart, o f an rescue.
unknown brand, was apparently stolen sometime —300 E. Airport Boulevard, 10:48 a.m.. rescue.
—French Avenue and 20th St.. 11:17 a.m., auto
between 1:45 and 4 p.m. Sunday.
accident.
—Lake Monroe Terrace. 11:21 a.m., rescue.
EARLY BIRD THIEF
Michael B. Lucie, 2016 Durrls Drive, Orlando, was -1401 W. 10th St., 1:41 p.m.. car fire.
away from his car for only 10 minutes hut that was long —3H76 Orlando Drive. 4:30 p.m., auto accident.

Smith lives with his wife, Beverly D. Smith, 30. and
Mrs. Smith's great-grandmother Minnie Jennings. 84. al
3614 Washington St. where the shooting occurred.
According to Mrs. Jennings, the shooting followed an
argument between Smith and the woman. She said she
came upon Smith choking the woman on a bed and tried
to stop him.
She said when he left the house she tried to keep him
from coming bock In but he knocked her down.
When he re-entered the house, the woman shot him.
she said.
"I didn't know she had a pistol," Mrs. Jennings said.
No charges have been filed In the case.

A r e T h e F r ie n d ly S k ie s S a f e
WASHINGTON (UPI) - In an
unusual clnsh between federal
agency chiefs, the head o f the
Federal Aviation Administration
contended air travel is as safe as
ever and the head o f the National
Transportation Safely Board said It
could be a lot safer.
The clash was so strong that both
FAA Administrator J. Lynn Helms
and NTSB Chairman Jim Burnett
had to tell a congressional panel, In
their separate appearances, that
was no-personal animosity between
them.
The dispute about relative air
safety since the 1981 strike by
12,000 controllers had to do with
each agency's function. The FAA Is
In charge of air safety; the NTSB In

charge of the FAA's monitoring of
safety.
After the strike, the FAA was
charged with restoring traffic to
prcstrlkc levels quickly and safely.
But the NTSB. Burnett said, "has
an unwritten policy of not pro­
claiming anything safe."
Burnett, a stout, humily-proue
Arkansan. repeatedly avoided the
question o f whether the system is
safe, drawling that to say so could
prejudice future accident Investiga­
tions In which system safety Is at
Issue.
At issue was an NTSB report seen
by the FAA as an Indictment of its
safety priorities. Burnell said safety
would be Increased If controllers
worked fewer hours. If supervisors

Enough?

were returned to their original Jobs
instead of filling in at radar screens
and if Helms had not concentrated
so much on restoring system capac­
ity to the pre-strike level.
Helms said Burnett's report "is
simply not a high quality docu­
ment." contains Inaccuracies and
plays down the record of no acci­
dents due to controller error.
“ S a fety has not been c o m ­
promised at any step during our
rebuilding o f the air traffic control
system, nor will It b e .... The fact is
there has not been one single
accident Investigated by the board
that has been caused by the air
traffic control system since the
strike." Helms said.

Investm ent
C la ss A t SC C
The Office o f Communi­
ty Instructional Services at
S e m in o le C o m m u n ity
C o lle g e w ill o ffe r a
personal growth and deve lo p m e n t c la s s on
"Secu rities and Invest­
ments."
The course will include
explanations o f how stock
exchanges operate and
how they evolved, expla­
nations o f the different
types o f securities avail­
able today (common and
p refe rre d stock s, c o r ­
porate, government and
municipal bonds) and the
Inherent risks and rewards
o f each type o f Investment.
Other topics included will
be: how to read the finan­
cial page o f the newspa­
per. how to read financial
reports and how to de­
termine personal invest­
ment objectives.
Ed Goddard will be the
instructor. The class will
begin June 16 and run
through July 28. The class
will meet from 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. on Thursday.
Registration will be in
class. The classroom will
be the Sears A c tiv ity
Room. Altam onte Mall.
Altamonte Springs.
For further information,
c o n ta c t th e O ffic e o f
Community Instructional
S ervices at SCC, 3231450. ext. 304. from Or­
lando 843-7001. ext. 304.

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By DonaaKateR
Herald Staff Writer
As many as 700 senior citizen couples in Semlnol
County could be denied surplus food commodities unde
new regulations adopted by the state Department o
Health and Rehabilitative Services.
In December regulations changed the first time ti
allow seniors regardless of Income to claim surplus foot
commodities from the U.S. Department o f Agricultur
through Seminole Community Action. By February
under the new regulations, some 700 seniors clalme
5-pound blocks o f cheese and sometimes 1-pound block
o f butter. If It was available, once monthly. .
• HRS announced last week, however, that dlstiibutloi
o f the free government cheese and other commodltle i
will be limited to the Impoverished only from now oi
and that Is expected to cut the handouts in Florida by 4
percent.
In Seminole County, when the seniors were allowed t i
receive the commodities without restrictions, the regula ■
clientele rose from 802 to about 1,500. who requeste I
the food commodities, said Mrs. Ruby Combs, prograr i
field coordinator.
But an HRS spokesman said. "W e're operating unde *
a different program now. We are getting the food strict] ’
for the needy and unemployed, and we're going to b :
accountable for It."

You're N ever Too Young
A lot of Sem inole County teenagers are
getting ready to celebrate what Is the
biggest day so fa r in the ir lives this week.
But these youngsters could teach their
o ld er counterparts a thing or two. They are
m em bers of kindergarten classes in two
Sanford p riv a te schools. They donned caps
and gowns to fo rm a lly m ark the passing on
from kindergarten to the "b ig school" next
year as they become full-fledged first
graders. A ll Souls C ath olic School and
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer School
toasted the 5-year-olds In form al settings.
The 22 graduating youngsters of A ll Souls
gathered together In the photo at left after
each received his or her diplom a. It was
the firs t kindergarten class to graduate at
A ll Souls. The class w as taught by Roseann
D ay. not shown, and M a ry Sparkm an, at
left in photo. The Rev. E . A. Reuscher,
pastor of Lutheran Church of the Redeem­
er, presents a diplom a to Je ff Newton In
the photo at upper le ft w h ile happy
graduates Casey Cline, at left In photo
above, and A sh ley Dunn h appily wait.

The eligibility rules newly enacted by the HRS wl
allow only food stamp recipients, people on welfare, th :
unemployed and those who receive federal dlsablllt r
payments to receive free cheese.
Mrs. Combs estimates that SCA In Decembe r
distributed foods to 802 families In December totalln
about 2.334 persons. The total amount o f chces:
distributed was about 4.850 pounds. Under thr
regulations at tty: time, families o f one to six member i
were eligible to receive one five- pound block o f cheesi.
white families o f more than six received two five pound
blocks o f cheese each. When butter was available
families o f six or less received two pounds and larg«familles each received three pounds.
*
The Rev. Amos Jones, executive director of Seminolb
Community Action, said he Is very disappointed with
the new ruling.
i
"From the very beginning, we weren't serving persoijs
over 60 Indiscriminately.” Jones said."After we started
serving the seniors there were so many that I can’ t
Imagine what they will do."

HoraM Photo by Tommy Vincont

MATTER OF
RECORD
DISSOLUTIONS
OF MARRIAOES
Eugono Horbort Rodgort Jr. and
Patricia J.
Norma Jtan Backman and Evorott
Gladttona Backman.
Chary I Cohan and Sta« art
Patricia Lynn Partin and Hanry
Rudolph Partin Jr.
Victoria Ata»»andrl and Enrico
Jatlray K . Otborn Sr. and Jawal P.
lo u lt 0. Hup hat and Allca T.
Barbara Butcher Vogenten and
Randall V.
Mlchaal J . Taylor and Tammy L.
Camilla M. Shaady and Waltar J.
Thomat F. Wal»h Sr. and Danyta
B.
Shlrlty Laa Burki and Richard W.
Branda C. Mulrragul and Patricio
X.
Carolyn C. Potlmgar and Rebart
Mead Pottanger
John Stephan Wllklnt and Donna S.
Philip Sienla and Joyce
Don C. Edwardt and Jacquelyn
Marla Edwards
C laranca Jamas Madera and Janet
Ruby Irene Magld and Phillip.

TISSUE
AM T. 4-ROU P K l
WTO I n u u MWS c u

MARRIAOE RECORDS
Edwin Otis Bryant. 2).
Naddrall R Sanaa Csmpbell. 23.
Mack Brooks, 12. and Barbara
Harmon.33.
David Kant McManamy. 30,
Susan Louisa McManamy, 2*.
Robert Edward Benton. 20.
Karan L. Fairfield. 20.

LIBBY
NATURAL PAN
WbeN lUfMl ft Ctwm
Styta Cant, Qraea least

and
Ann
and
and

"T h e primary question I’m concerned about Is what
happens to those people who are receiving food stamps
or don't have a card saying they are unemployed? Whdt
happens to the people who don't have these cards bdt
still fall within the Income eligibility guidelines?" Jonds
said.
t
Currently the Income guidelines call for a maximurji
monthly income of $570 for one and $674 for a couple. {
Calling the new regulations "asslnlne and crazyj”
Jones said, “ they make no sense to me. I would sure like
to know who was responsible and I would sure like to
see some people raise a ruckus about It.”
■&gt;
Jones said the new regulations will be a dark clou^l
over the issuance of the food commodities. ‘'One o f die
pleasantries o f distributing the food was looking Into ^fje
faces of seniors, and seeing expressions o f gratitude,” he
said.
'
&lt;1
Seminole Community Action volunteered to distribute
the food In Seminole County and received not a cent tp
cover costs o f handling or to provide refrigeration.
y
Previously, anyone over 60 years o f age could claim a
free live-pound brick o f American cheese bought by thfe
federal government under a dairy price support
program.
The HRS spokesman said available quantities Of
cheese will be greatly reduced. Those who qualify for tWe
handouts will receive "some sort o f card" to present in
order to claim their cheese, the spokesman said.
3
She said the cards would also help cut the number ipf
abuses by people who collect cheese from more than orje
distribution center and then sell It.
,
The changes were made In response to a $4.6 million
federal Jobe bill that took elTect May 1. The bill requires
that surplus dairy products be distributed on the basis Of
state unemployment and poverty rates.
q
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LIMIT O N f PEA FAMILY SH O W IN G TRIP WITH
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"From all the telephone calls and
correspondence I’ve received, the people
are not willing this year to have taxes
increased at any level.'7

( U * M HI-WO)

TON. FRENCHAVE,, SANFORD, FLA. JI771
Area Code305-33S-3611or tSl&lt;WI3

►

* °&gt; *

Wednesday, June I, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 91.00; Month, f t .* ; 6 Months, 01.00;
Year, 14100. By Mail: Week, 91.S; Month, * B ; I Montte,
$30.40; Year. *7.00.

IH f
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||W

w

Court Vindicates
A BSCAM Tactics
T h e re Is a certain qu iet satisfaction at a recent
action o f the U.S. S uprem e Court. T h e court
refused to hear appeals in seven Abscam cases and
said the defendants could now be sent to Jail to
begin servin g th eir sentences.
W e h ave heard quite enough sanctim onious
m oan in g about the tactics o f the Federal Bureau o f
Investigation in the Abscam " s tin g " operation.
One con victed ex-congressm an, R aym on d F.
Lederer o f Pennsylvania, lam ented in his legal
papers, flled w ith the court: "W e do not live In a
w orld o f perfect and infallible hum an beings.
E veryon e Is vulnerable to .tem p tation . Public
officials are susceptible to the sam e problem s and
pressures as everyon e else. Thu s, the question
arises — shall the execu tive be perm itted to exploit
human frailties for political ga in ? "
T h e A m erican C ivil Liberties Union questioned
(h e c o n s titu tio n a lity o f w h a t it c a lle d " t h e
extraordinarily intrusive tech n iq u es" o f federal
Undercover operations.
A s w e understand it, the FBI recruited an agen t
to pose as a sheikh, in flow in g w hite robes, for a
probe into the activities o f organized crim e. T h e
het w as spread, and w ithout an y prom pting,
greed y and corrupt public officials began to fall
Into it.
For its w illin gn ess to pursue its in vestigatory
leads to the highest offices on C apitol Hill, the FBI
deserves high credit. A less courageous executive
agen cy, k n ow in g its dependence on the generosity
o f C o n g re s s at a p p ro p ria tio n tim e an d the
self-defensive cliquishness o f the congressional
club, w ould have backed ofT.
T h e FBI hung in there, w as backed up by the
law yers o f the Justice D epartm ent, and b y the
highest court. N ow It is official — no on e's rights
w e re violated. A n d ou r political system w as
cleansed o f a fe w o f the characters in public life
w h o fall to see that th eir h igh office Is a public
trust.
: W ell done.

[Bee

Excrem ent?

: O u r govern m en t has accused the S o vie t Union o f
fu rn is h in g a kind o f exotic poison for use in
S o u th e a s t A sia . It has been iden tified as a
yn ycotoxin, d erived from the kind o f fu n gi that
$ ro w on grain, and has been called "y e llo w ra in ."
T h e S oviet Union has denied the charges. T h e
:United Nations has been less than aggressive, to
[put it kindly, in In vestigatin g the m atter. A n d ou r
;S tate D epartm ent has continued to denounce the
[S o viets for vio la tin g international agreem en ts
'aga in st the use o f chem ical o r biological weapons.
* N o w com e tw o A m erican scientists, w h o re ­
c e n tly appeared at the annual m eetin g o f the
'Am erican Association for the A d van cem en t o f
S cien ce and declared that the toxic rain appears to
[be nothing m ore than bee excrem ent, to w hich
[n a tu ra l fu n g i c a n b e a t tr a c t e d , p r o d u c in g
m ycotoxin s o f natural origin.
■ W e do not wish to see ou r S tate Departm ent
"em barrassed in the unceasing propaganda w ar
iw ith the S oviet Union. T h e S oviets w ill undoubted­
l y m ake m u ch o f this In e v e ry a vaila b le forum .
5
; But the fact that the scientists cam e forward and
{w en t public w ith th eir fin d in g testifies to the
^freedom o f in qu iry and expression that exists in
pour country. S o viet scientists sim ilarly engaged
{[would sewn find th em selves In S iberia o r In strait
{jackets.

The State Department should quickly come to
1ps with the new yellow rain hypothesis. Our
itlonal credibility is at stake. An Independent
tel of scientists should be commissioned to
a report without delay. And if yellow rain
appears to be of natural origin, we should be the
»t to say so and retract dur accusation.

* C

.
«L

This was the assessment o f State Rep.
Carl Selph, R-Casselberry, early this week
when be returned home from Tallahassee
for a few days, while the Senate- House
Conference Committee was trying to iron
out a com prom ise on a number o f
Important bills.
w hile home, he contacted a number of
citizens, and confirmed the messages he
has been receiving from constituents.
T h e freshm an legislator has been
especially keeping touch with home folks
during this his first year in the Florida
House o f Representatives.
Meanwhile all types o f tax Increases have
been and are being discussed in the state
capital, Selph said. Suggestions include a
nickel tax on cocktails, Increasing the
tangible property tax. permitting school

boards to Increase property taxes and
levying corporate profits taxes.
Selpn said he assumes the people also
understand that Increasing the corporate
profits tax will mean that those increased
taxes will be passed on to the people in the
form o f higher prices for goods.
He noted that corporations traditionally
use the excuse o f higher taxes to raise their
prices above and beyond the amount o f the
taxes.
Selph noted that the prices o f gasoline at
the pump didn't go up by Just seven cents
after the federal government increased the
tax per gallon by five cents and the state
Increased It by two cents beginning April
1.
"From what I've seen the price of
gasoline increased by at least 10 cents per
gallon and more than that at some
stations." he said.
Despite Chris Ray's statements to the

contrary some weeks ago, he Is talking to
friends and possible supporters about his
probable OOP candidacy for state attorney
In 1984.
Ray was chief assistant state attorney for
Seminole County for more than four years
prior to his stepping down a few weeks
ago.
Before passing in his resignation to his
fo rm e r boss, S ta te A tto rn e y D oug
Cheshire, a Democrat, Ray had already
talked to some prominent people in law
enforcement In the two county SeminoleBrevard 18th Judicial Circuit, seeking
advice on whether he should run.
It would be his second bid for public
olflce. Some years ago Ray ran unsuc­
cessfully for public defender. But he made
a lot o f friends during that campaign and
has kept most o f them, in addition to new
friends he won while he was assistant state
attorney.
_______________

SCIENCE WORLD

WASHINGTON WORLD

Lasers'
Limitless
Energy

Senators
Stand Up
For Issue
B y Ira It, A lla n
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Attention editorial writers!
The Senate may soon lob you another
soft pitch to smack over the wall o f your
friendly confines.
You may not be able to Influence
elections or persuade President Reagan
to get out o f El Salvador or write a better
federal budget than Congress.
But a c c o rd in g to Sen. A lfo n se
D*Amato, your power to ridicule will
make It impossible for Senate offices to
get desks and filing cabinets.
It was you editorial writers who had
so much fun with the Senate's con­
struction o f the $137 million Hart Office
Building that the Senate backed down
and cut out a rooftop restaurant, a
cafeteria and a gymnasium.
It also refused for three years to spend
$8 million it approved to furnish the
building. Instead, senators moved their
old traditional furniture into the Hart
Building. What that did, complains
appropriations Chairman Mark Hatfield,
R-Ore., is leave the old offices — now
meant as annex space for staff — empty
o f furniture.
Hatfield gently proposed last week
spending the $8 million on modular
furniture o f the kind he has In his
prototype office before costa gets any
higher.
At another hearing two weeks ago,
Senate Rules Committee Chairman
Charles Mathias, R-Md., said staffers
would have to stand orange crates on
end to be able to sit down.
"T h e Senate got panicked about the
unfortunate publicity about the Hart
Building," Hatfield said in an appropria­
tions subcommittee meeting chaired by
D’Amato, "and we began to do some
silly things," tike cut out the furniture.
“ This is one o f the greatest actions
outside a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta
that I have observed."
But there would be " a hue and
outcry" from the newspapers and the
public, said D'amato. "I'd suggest the
editorial writers and the media are Just
waiting. It's a ready-made issue for
them to exploit, and it will be done. The
headline will read: ‘Senate, with re­
cord-breaking deficits, allocates X mil­
lions o f dollars for their new furniture'.”
Hatfield replied: "1 don't think the
press can make a public issue out o f
furniture to fill the needs o f empty
Senate offices the same way they did
with the gymnasium. I don't think that
is at all in the aame baUpark."
He suggested the word "furniture” is
misleading. "T h ey are really working
tools, working stations." said Hatfield.
"T h a t som ehow you 're goin g to
placate the public by not finishing the
building is not intelligent,'' Hatfield said
politely.
"T h e airwaves will be filled (with
adverse comment).” D'Amato warned. '1
tell you it will be a non-issue that
becomes a real thing a rd will detract
from our work. It will be a distracting,
disturbing element. Perhaps we do have
to suffer.

Jesalca Trsadwav

JEFFREY HART

Dempsey's Importance
Jack Dempsey possessed an im ­
the Dempsey, the Ruth o f tennis. The
portance that went way beyond his
older base-line game, featuring long
greatness as a heavyweight champion,
rallies, gave way to Tllden's explosive
and even beyond the impresslv^dignity
ail-court game — and the crowds loved
o f his years after the ring.
it. To accommodate them there arose in
Jack Dempsey was a central figure in
Forest Hills the tennis equivalent o f
the Golden Age o f Sports during the
Yankee Stadium, and in it Tllden
1020s, and his Importance Is connected
blasted his way to an unprecedented
with that tact
seven national championships.
Something very exciting happened In
In football, the shape o f the ball
American sports and American culture
changed during the 1920s. opening the
generally in the years following WoHd
way to forward passing and high
War I. All across the board, to put it one
scoring. Pre-war football had been a
way, form was being replaced by
low-scoring affair, its rugby-style ball
energy. Victorian form was giving way
making the drop-kick a major factor.
to modern energy, and it produced an
And Harvard and Yale no longer played
explosion o f excitement and creativity,
for the national championship. Instead.
i Dempsey . was something entirely
new. If you compare movies o f his fights. wWO had the Four Horsemen o f Notre
Dame.
with movies o f fighters belonging to an
I remarked that this kind o f thing was
earlier generation, you feel almost that
you are watching two different sporta. ’ happening everyw here. In popular
culture and in the fine arts too.
The older lighten stand upright. left
Dancing was revolutionized, often to
arm extended in the classical boxing
the horror o f an older generation, as the
manner. They look like the photographs
in a barber shop. To get an Idea o f their
waltz gave way to Jazz and the charles­
ton. The older decorousness faded, as
style, watch any Soviet boxer in action
today.
p eop le w ent arou nd sayin g
"boop-boop-a-doop" and "yes. we have
Jack Dempsey bunt through all o f
no bananas." Prohibition was a Joke, as
that. He often fought from a crouch. He
the speakeasy became one center o f
threw punches from every direction. He
social life and the bootlegger a folk hero.
would sometimes lead with his right.
The Stock Market went up. up. up as
And he was in continuous motion, an
explosion o f energy.
people whistled songs like "It Ain't
Gonna Rain No Mo'.'*
The same sort o f thing was taking
place in baseball. Before the WWI. the
In the fine arts, Ezra Pound's motto
ideal player was T y Cobb, a singles
"Make It New" epitomizes the mood.
hitter and a demon base-runner. But
Pound himself revolutionized English
after the war, the baseball moguls
versification, and a young man from St.
sensed accurately the popular mood.
Louis and Harvard. T.S. Eliot, wrote the
The baseball itself was made more
great poem or the '20s, "T h e Waste
lively, restrictions were put on the
Land." Picasso and Bracque carried
pitcher, shifting the advantage to the
through their Cubist revolution in the
batter. And o f course the epitome o f
arts, Stravinsky and Diaghilev burst on
post-war baseball was the Babe Himself,
the scene in music. Frank Lloyd Wright
the Sultan o f S w a t The crowds he
in architecture, Einstein’s theories revo­
attracted built the new Yankee Stadium
lutionized physics, and Hemingway vied
with Scott Fitzgerald for the number
In the Bronx. The excitement was so
one spot in American writing.
great that a man died o f a heart attack
in the stands when Ruth hit one o f his
In American culture, however, the
home runs. And H somehow seems
heavyweight champion has a special
position, not superior to all other forms
natural that in 1927, when the Babe hit
o f expression, certainly, but special
his 60 home runs, Charles Lindbergh
nevertheless. And Jack Dempsey em­
became the first man to fly alone across
the Atlantic.
bodied It all, a Golden Age not only In
The revolution was taking place in
sporta but in all areas o f culture, across
the board.
football, in tennis. Big Bill Til den was

ROCHESTER. N.Y. (UPI) - The Universify o f Rochester's Laboratory for
Laser Energetics looks like something
out o f a science fiction thriller, but the
work conducted there is aimed at
providing endless energy to the real
world.
By shooting multiple laser beams at a
pellet smaller than a pinhead, scientists
at the lab can create, for a fraction of a
second, 20 times the power o f the entire
electrical-generating capacity in the
United States.
The fusion process responsible for this
phenomenon Is one o f the most pro­
mising alternative sources o f energy
today, researchers say. Besides being
environmentally safe, the hydrogen fuel
required for the process is available
from seawater In virtually Inexhaustible
amounts.
"It's safe to say we're not going to run
out," said lab director Robert McCrary.
But scientists have yet to reach the
critical "break-even" point — when the
process creates as much energy as it
uses. Fusion must produce more energy
that It takes to become commercially
useful as an energy source. McCrory
said the break-even point could be
reached as early as 1987.
But he said it will probably be 25 or
30 years before laser facilities replace
coal-powered power plants.
While many laboratories physically
are bland at beat, the "laser bay" of the
cavernous Rochester facility looks like a
kindergarten Jungle gym. The 24 giant
lasers are painted bright blue and sit on
a 30-lnch-thlck orange concrete floor.
It 's here that the Lab oratory's
12-trillion-watt OMEGA system works
by raising the temperature inside the
target pellet to the levels required for
atomic fusion.
When the blast o f light hits the pellet
target, the outer layer o f the pellet flies
o ff toward the outside. The material
flying away from the center creates an
equal and opposite reaction — im­
plosion — during which the rest o f the
fuel la pushed inward toward the pellet's
center.
Two hydrogen Isotopes, deuterium
and tritium, fuse as a result o f the heat
generated by this pressure, freeing up
energy In the form o f neutrons.
The process is Particularly appealing
when compared to energy-garnering
used by atomic reactors, McCrory said.
Unlike fission, which involves the
splitting o f atoms in conventional
atomic power plants, fusion produces
alm ost no radiological hazards or
byproducts. In addition, fusion releases
about four times as much energy.
There are six laboratories in the
country looking at the possibilities of
inertial fusion. Rochester's lab is
unique, McCrory said, because it is
funded by a consortium o f state and
federal government, Industry and Uni­
versity sources.
It Is also the only unclassified
fusion laboratory In the United States.

JA C K ANDERSON

Einstein Probe Data Tarnishes FBI

WASHINGTON — The FBI has been
caught occasionally In the rear-view
mirror. Here is another look backward,
which I hope will help assure a better
road ahead.
Albert Einstein, the exiled German
physicist whose theories led to devel­
opment of the atomic bomb, was under
investigation for five yean on charges
that his Berlin office from 1929 to I N I
was a cable drop for a Soviet espionage
ring operating out of the Far East.
According to FBI and army In­
telligence documents. Einstein was un­
aware of the alleged spying.
The data gathered hy U4
— even the
1966, because they involved a '
reliable" source In Bsrtta who p m
surprisingly explicit details to the
army's intelligence people to 196a The
source had lo w orotected.
Hundreds of pages of documents lay
out the story. They w oe dodaatafiad
1991 and 1993 in response to a
Act refusal by
Van Alia. Here's the

that Soviet spies in Shanghai and
Canton would send coded messages to
countries "such as Egypt or France."
Then these surreptitious messages
would be forwarded to cable addresses
In Berlin. Among the addresses, the
army's informant said, were a wat­
chmaker's shop, a box factory — and
Einstein's office. One of his secretaries
would give the reports to a courier, who
would send them to Moscow, the tipster
The 0-2 report acknowledged that
"since these telegrams from the Soviet
apies were In code, Einstein didn't know
their contents." Bui it added. "However,
h la reaaonsbie to believe that Einstein
did know that hit cffke eras * * * " 1 uaad
by the Soviets as i
- October 29. 196a A follow-up 0-2
report postulated that the aliened Soviet
waa Helen Dukas,
inateta's secretaryr In Princeton, NJ.
— May 19611 The FBI began combtng
*-i'a writings and fato-

Nov. 2. 1961: Dqhaa waa in‘ the FBI oo an unrelated

— Nov. 28, 1952: The army com­
pleted lta investigation in Europe and
forwarded the results to Washington.
— Oct. 14,1953: FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover oaked the army to "complete its
Investigation at the earliest possible
time aud forward the results to this
bureau." The army dispatched a courier
from Heidelberg, Germany, with a letter
stating that the Investigation had been
completed 11 months before and a copy
had already been sent to the FBI.
— June 24. 1964: The army reported
to Hoover — who evidently had asked
0-2 to reopen the case - that tta agents
were trying to Interview a doctor who
might have Information.
— Oct 23, 1994: The army reported
to Hoover that the doctor had been
interviewed with no useful results.
— Nov. 9. 1954: The FBI concluded
that there were no "outstanding leads...
and the moot logical remainlnglead... is
to interview Helen Dukas,”
— Jan. 3, 1956: Though leery about
approaching Dukas "because of her
cfooe association with Einstein... and hla
known tendency to make public state­
ments concerning matten with which
he personally disagrees." tap FBI of
fleiaia decided Dukas had to be in­
terviewed before the Investigation could

be considered complete.
. I ™ * ' P ' 1955: Two TO agents
interviewed Dukas ■* Einstein's home.
M ^ed for her help in an
Investigation of espionage activities In
■SJ*",® quarter of a century earlier.
•She did not appear to be evasive in any
manner, the G-men reported, "but
•poke quite freely,... At no time did she
give any hint or Indication that she waa
aware the investigation concerned her
in any way," .
Thearmy informant's story fell apart.
The FBI concluded, after five ycaraof
digging, that "additional investigation la
not warranted in view of the long lapse
of time since Einstein’s office was
olkflBdly used by the Soviets, the tack of
oonabonfing information, and the fact
Involved are scattered in
many countries and in many
• April W* *995: Einstein died.
- July 27, 1966: A top PW o
recommended that the Eisxeii
ptonagecaae he dosed,

inquiry, unretracted or retracto
Juctanily, diminishes public con/k
Inthe basic Integrityofth*

�f

Robinson Being Held Without Bond
Continued from Page i a
Robinson was in Central Florida until
Tuesday.
The surrender was set up by a
telephone call at 1 p.m. Tuesday to
the Jacksonville FBI that "Just came
out o f the blue. We did not expect him
to surrender." Corlcss said.
He said the call came from a Miami
lawyer, who arranged the surrender at
the request of Robinson's woman
companion. Corless declined to iden­
tify the woman, who has a child.
Other sources Identified Robinson's
girlfriend as Darlene Boyd. 34. of
Melbourne.
"T h e pressure made him decide to
g i v e u p r a t h e r t h a n to r i s k
apprehension," Corlcss said. "He was
concerned for his own safety and for
the safety o f his female companion
and her Infant child."
Robinson, a former professional
boxer, was scheduled to appear In

court in Miami later today on charges
of assault on a federal officer and
Jumping bond
Robinson was accompanied Tuesday night by attorney
Stephen Rosen o f Miami.
FBI agents said the term s o f
Robinson’s surrender Included that
Boyd not be charged with harboring a
fugitive.
Sources had reported that Robinson
was visited regularly while living In
two Central Florida camp sites by a
blonde woman who had a small child.
Robinson has served time In federal
and state prisons for theft, burglary
and armed robbery. He was the
subject o f an Intense five-day search,
with dozens o f heavily armed FBI
agents, state and local police officers
swarming over central and north
Florida. They rousted guests from the
Deltona Inn where two maids reported
seeing a man fitting Robinson's de­
scription. from a campground where

he had hid out, and descended on a
remote woodland spot near the Or­
ange City KOA campground where
officers finally discovered his getaway
car earlier Tuesday.
The manhunt began early Friday at
Orange City. FBI agents Dennis
W lc k le ln , 42, and T h o m a s
Sobolewski, 40, in town investigating
a bank robbery, thought they re­
cognized Robinson coming out of a
restaurant
When the agents approached him.
the man opened fire with a gun. It had
been reported that Robinson had the
gun hidden under a newspaper. But
Tuesday FBI special agent Dick Davis
said that story Is untrue. After
Interviews with the wounded agents.
Davis, assistant In charge or the
Jacksonville FBI office, said:
"W e don't know where he had the
gun secreted on his person."

Wlckleln was hit In the stomach and
staggered Into the Kitchens' Restau­
rant Sobolewski was shot In the back
and leg.
Both agents remained hospitalized
today, reported In serious but stable
condition.
A St. Augustine police detective,
who had been on Robinson's trail,
said the fugitive once vowed he would
never be taken alive.
“ Gene Is always the brains behind
the punks," said Tim Robinson, an
agent with the Florida Department uf
Law Enforcement. “ He's become a
dadgummed legend In his own time,
that's the bad part."
Agent Butler said In his estimation
Robinson "does have an ego problem
and may well be enjoying this (the
manhunt)." He described Robinson as
" a womanizer who neither drinks,
smokes, or uses narcotics."

Court Makes It Easier To Get Search Warrants
W A S H IN G T O N (UPI) - The
Supreme Court, splitting 6r3. today
made It easier for police to obtain
Bcarch warrants based only on anon­

ymous tips but sidestepped a major
law enforcement controversy about
Illegal searches.
The Justices dashed hopes they

finally would decide a hotly debated
question over whether criminal evi­
dence must be thrown out o f court
each time a policeman makes even an

honest, technical mistake In con­
ducting the search.
t The ruling still was a victory for law
enforcement officials

GSA: Bigwigs Get
Chauffeured Limos
WASHINGTON (UPI) —

A $700,000 Industrial revenue bond Issue was
approved Tuesday by Seminole County commissioners.
The bond Issue, through tha Seminole County
Industrial Development Authority, will finance the
construction o f a manufacturing, distribution and office
complex for ROL Manufacturing o f America o f Winter
Park.
The company, according to SCIDA officials, will
employ about 42 people at the new location on Slate
Road 426 near Oviedo.
In five years the company is exprcied to employ about
125.
The project will Increase the tax rolls from $16,000 to
$20,000annually, according to SCIDA officials.
Industrial revenue bonds are Issued by the authority
to encourage firms to locate In Seminole County.
The bonds provide low interest funding for development through the sale o f tax exempt bonds. The bonds
do not obligate the county In any way.

T he

Shopper
Center

violating the law.

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with the law ," the opinion
by Congress' Investigative
arm said.
The GAO conceded both
Itself and Congress have
contributed to the con­
fusion by not clarifying the
scope o f the prohibition
against governm ent
transportation between
home and office.
It. therefore, suggested
allowing officials to con­
tinue receiving the service
through the end of the
current Congress to allow
time for the lawmakers to
adjust the taw if desired.
For the same reason. It
said, no effort should be
made to recover money
from officials deemed to be

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Florida A Leader
In High-Tech Jobs

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

Florida is moving away
from an economy depen­
d e n t on o r a n g e s and
snowbirds to one based on
futuristic technology like
robots, computers, lasers
an d m is s ile g u id a n c e
systems.
T h e c h a n g e Is
transforming resort cities
such as Boca Raton Into
oases o f 21st Century
technology, while making
the state less sensitive to
swift downturns In the
economy.
N ow seven th am on g
states In the number of
high-tech Jobs, Flortda
---- f l » - - . T . o r e than
118,000 people in highThe 24-foot m anatee monument, ’ Hom age to the O range R iv e r V a lle y / Is a
techn ology enterprises.
lacy sculpture In steel. Standing outside the M ia m i Seaquarlum , the statua
And many o f them are
Is a constant rem inder to boaters to w atch out fo r the docile sea cow which
busy building the tools of
each year are badly Injured by boat m otor propellors.____________________
tom orrow — tiny
electronic chips, robots,
com puters and m issile
guidance systems.
In the Southeast, Florida
Is clearly the leader, with
twice as many high-tech
Jobs as nearest competitor
North Carolina.
' ' F l o r i d a Is an
CHINO. Calif. (UPI) - Police ques­
The sheriff said deputies had passed
tioned a suspect in the bloody Blayings of
by the house — unoccupied since last e s ta b lis h e d h ig h -te ch
four people and searched for two of his
Wednesday when a ranch hand left It
frien d s today w h ile In v es tig a to rs
unlocked — four times since the slayings
checked blood smears and fingerprints
were discovered.
found in a ranch house near the murder
Deputies were finally able to locate the
scene.
owner Tuesday to unlock the house. The
In a news conference Tuesday night,
killer locked the door when he left.
police identified the suspect as Milton
Tidwell said the lone survivor of the
Bulau, 34. who was arrested in connec­
attack, Joshua Ryen, 8, was "doing quite
tion with a burglary and liquor store
w ell" In his recovery from head and neck
Hs'i hoping
robbery.
wounds Inflicted during the vicious
thouM ndi to
San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd
attack.
Tidwell described Bulau as "a fair
The youngster's parents, Douglas and
the O ld Teiiasuspect" and said he was arrested
Peg Ryen; his sister, Jessica, 10; and a
Tuesday morning in Costa Mesa, 25
neighbor. Chris Hughes. 11, were
miles south o f the site of the savage
hacked and mutilated in the blood9y m atching
killings.
splashed home. Each victim had more
our novel
than 20 wounds from a hatchet, knife
“ He gave our investigators some
hond-elgn*
Information that may. If true, help the
and either a screwdriver or Ice pick.
with key
event*, peo­
San Bernardino Investigation." said Sgt.
Tidwell said the killer was "mentally
p le and con­
Tim Holbrook. "H e was staying In a
Intent on committing a violent murder,"
cept* o l
motel with two friends but when we got
and he said investigators don't believe
scripture, he'*
there the vehicle that they had been
robbery or a vendetta against the Ryen
using and the men were gone.
family were motives.
them to
"Witnesses described the vehicle and
He also said Investigators have no
It Is similar to the missing Chino vehicle
evidence that any o f three recent
•tble history,
(owned by the victims).”
escapees from nearby prisons and a
geography
Tidwell said evidence found In a
boy's ranch were involved In what the
and personal
vacant ranch house — only 150 yards
coroner called the most gruesome
life-changing
from the house where the killings
killings he had ever seen.
appHcatlont
occurred — Indicate the killer or killers
Joshua, listed In fair condition at Loma
from GocT*
were In the house before and after
Linda University Medical Center where
Word, ttou
Sunday morning’s grisly slayings.
tOO W ll
he was under 24-hour guard, was able to
"T h ere was blood, blood smears,
talk for the first time since the killers
clothing and other evidence that leads us
slashed hts throat. The boy. however,
to believe the person In the house
has not given detectives much informa­
perpetrated the murder." Tidwell said.
tion.

Recalcitrant Legislators
Prompt Extended Section
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Gov. Bob Graham
says conference committee work on the budget
and schools Is moving along so slowly he's
afraid the Legislature will be In extended and
special sessions all month.
Conferee talks on education funding remained
at a standstill Tuesday despite a 9200 million
offer from the Senate on Monday that had the
potential of getting things moving. A second
extension o f the session appears almost certain
now.
Graham said Tuesday he Is afraid legislators
may spend the entire month haggling over the
-chool Improvements thdl
require tax Increases and water conservation.
The House passed an 911.5 billion spending
plan that Is tied to a corporate profits tax
increase and provides about 9300 million more
for education than the Senate's 911.2 billion
no-new-taxes proposal and about 9340 million
more in total government spending.
The House plan has about 9270 million more
In public school funding. Including state dollars
and required and optional local property tax
dollars, than the Senate budget.

V ic tim s ' C a r L in k e d To
Suspect In G r is ly M u rd e rs

Lawmakers Deadlocked
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — House and Senate
negotiators continue bargaining today In hopes
of breaking a deadlock over how to fund
hazardous wastes cleanups and water quality
programs.
Neither side budged from its position Tuesday
and leaders hinted they expect the negotiations
to drag on for several days.
In their key difference on the water bill, the
House Is advocating a tax on the wholesale
value o f dangerous chemicals while the Senate
Is pressing for Increased fees on hazardous
waste producers.
The House program would generate 913
million in recurring annual revenue for hazard­
ous wastes cleanups and other programs; the
Senate plan would produce 92.86 million,
according to House analysts, and 94.8 million,
according to the Senate.

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322-0990 322-5904

Legislature On Hold
Seminole County'e resident legislators were notified
by House Speaker Lee MoflUt not to expect the
Legislature to be In session either Thursday or Friday.
The county's resident legislators are: state Reps.
Bobby Brantley of Longwood, Art Grindle o f Altamonte
Springs and Carl Selph o f Casselberry, all Republicans.
Selph said he and the others were advised that they
wll! get 24 hours notice when the Legislation Is ready to
go back into session.
That notice Is being held up until conferees from both
the state House o f Representatives and the Senate come
to agreement on major, legislation Including funding for
education.
Among those conferees arc Sen. John Vogt, D- Cocoa
Beach and Sen. Richard Langley. R-Clermont. both
members of the Seminole County Legislative delegation.
Also on the conference committee Is state Sen. Clark
Maxwell Jr„R- Melbourne. Maxwell was a member o f the
delegation before reapportionment.

X jE ic h
J s P le c e

V
i

Ladies’ Tanks,
Camisoles And
Fashion Shorts
Solid, (trips tod print tank
tO M . r a - w m l t o r t t t tO M

with cap ilatm and crou
backs, Pulton or Jog iborti
with piping or pockets.

■ P P IC IM H C Y ,

f l 10y e c s . M a r t , £
Marietta In Orlando with
10.125 workers. United
T e c h n o lo g ie s In W est
Palm Beach with 7,800
employees. IBM in Boca
Raton with 6.300 and
Honeywell In Tampa with
5.150^

M A N D O IN G ?

MIAMI (UPI) — A week has gone by with no
new discoveries o f the Mediterranean fruit fly.
but a task force o f agriculture Inspectors took no
chances today in the search for any Infestation
o f the crop-destroying pest.
The 45-member force Is setting 1.700 new fly
traps to lure Mcdflies in an 81-square-mile area
surrounding the discovery last week o f a single.
Infertile female near Miami International
Airport. The job Is costing the state and federal
agriculture departments 9150,000.
Florida spent about 9500,000 two years ago to
eradicate a Medfly Infestation In the Tampa area
that threatened the state's multi-billion dollar
citrus and vegetable Industries.

ICE COLD BECK

availability o f skilled labor,
low wage scales and low
taxes.
Florida leads In all three
categories.
"There has been soma
electonics and high-tech
Industry In Florida for a
long tim e," says Vincent
L a m b , o f S c ie n tific
Services Systems. "T h e
base Just keeps broad­
en in g from com pan ies
fo rm in g from e x is tin g
companies."
The big entries into the
high-tech field In Florida
a r e H a r r i s C o r p . in
Melbourne with 11.175

W HAT IS THIS

No M o n Fruit Fllot

low w, ••pm

state, and one that Is
g r o w in g In h ig h -te c h
e m p lo y m e n t b o th In
absolute numbers and at a
rate that exceeds all but a
few other states." says
Maury Hagerman, an of­
ficial o f the state's bureau
o f Economic Analysis.
Between 1975 and 1981,
Florida added more than
50.000 high-tech Jobs.
That's an Increase o f more
than 90 percent. Last year,
In the worst slump in
post-war history, 4,047
new high-tech Jobs were
created In the Sunshine
State.
'y w i ^ l i r
talent here am ong the
semi-retlred and retired.
especially the military retlr e e s .* ' s a y s M ich ael
Ohanlan. director o f the
micro-electronic division
o f Martin M arietta
Aerospace.
T h e J o in t E con om ic
Committee o f Congress
last year surveyed 691
high-technology com pa­
nies to find out why they
are located In Florida.
Among the reasons were

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Ivtfllnf HsrsM, Sanford, PI.

Wtdnooday, Juno 1,1MS-7A

Lassies
•• J

Jackson Shuts II
Down Seminole
*1
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S r Twnm r VtncvM

Sharon Cash pauses at third base and takes a look for the ball
(above) as Seminole third baseman Anna Hollis leaps In vain.
Cash, the Sanford Lassies catcher, rounded the b W and Scored a
run (right) as catcher Kim Stelnke tries to corral another wild
'Recreation 12and Under Softball title,
f Ji :

_

;■

Herald Sports Editor
Melinda Jackson drove in two
runs and turned in a game-ending
double play as the Sanford Lassies
whipped Seminole's Hawks, 15-7.
for the State Recreation 12 and
Under Softball Champlonshlp-at-th**
ole"Softball Com dex af'TTve
Points near Winter Springs.
Jackson, who also scattered 11
hits to pick up the pitching decision,
snared a line drive off the bat of
Bobble Osbume, and then tossed to
first base to complete the twin­
killing and give Sanford Its second
straight recreation title. Jackson's
teammates made just one error,
which didn't occur until the sixth
Inning when the game was safely
tucked away.
The wlnner-take-all game com­
pleted a double-elim ination
tournament which was rained out in
Ormond Beach Sunday. Seminole's
talented shortstop Tracy Branden­
burg was selected as the tourna­
ment's most valuable player on a
vole by the coaches.
Sanford jumped to a 2-0 lead In
the first Inning. Latlcla Strickland
doubled and came around to score
when Katrina Shuler singled and
Bradenburg overthrew third base,
a l l o w i n g S tr ic kl an d to score.
Shortstop Tina Roberts, who lead
Sanford with three hits, then
singled home Shuler.
Seminole tied the game In the
second when Kim Stelnke singled
and came around to score on a triple
by losing pitcher Dawn Gcbhurdt.
Gebhardt then tallied when the
relay throw was wide o f the plate.
Sanford went ahead for good with
three runs In the fourth and then
put the game out o f reach with nine
runs in the fifth. In the fourth.«
Snuler doubled and Roberts singled
her home to break the deadlock.
Roberts advanced to third on the
play to the plate and scored when
Jackson grounded out to second
base. Paired Pinkney singled and
came home two hitters later when
Ann iPerry sin g led , fr e e w a y 's
Shannon Kennedy made., a nice
running catch In left field to prevent
further damage.
Sanford sent 12 baiters to the
plate In the fifth-run explosion.

pi

Tewanna Chisholm, Perry. Adrian
HUlsman, Roberts and Jackson all
drove in runs. Hillsman's base hit
chased home two runs to highlight
the outburst.
While the big Lassie bats were
building a 14-2 lead, Jackson was
having an easy time with Seminole.
She retired eight hitters In a row
during the second and fourth In­
nings. She also pitched a scoreless
fifth, thanks to a nice grab on a liner
by Roberts.
Trailing 15-2, the Hawks finally
broke loose for three runs In the
sixth and two more in the seventh
to close out the scoring. Singles by
Osborne. Sherry McDonald and
Bradenburg produced the sixthi nni ng runs. T a m m y Las zal c
reached on an error In the seventh
and Stelnke tripled her home for the
first seventh-inning tally. Tonya
Colvin scored Stelnke with a single
before Osborne smacked Into the
game-lnnlng double play.
Stelnke led Seminole with a single
and a triple. Jpckson. Shuler,
Sharon Cash. Pen y and HUlsman
had two hits each for Sanford.
Perry, HUlsman and Jackson had
two RBI apiece while Roberts had a
triple and two singles.

G irls' Softball
While the Lassies were rejoicing
with their second straight champi­
onship. their older counterparts —
the Sanford Juniors — had a whole
lot of trouble picking up the softball
while falling to Haines City, 14-4,
for the 15 and Under championship.
Thirteen errors, Including seven
by shortstop Blondle McKinney, had
Sanford pitcher Revonda Wallace
ready to file "non-support papers."
McKinney kicked the first two
grounders o f the game and Brenda
Andrews added a base hit as Haines
City took a 2-0 lead.
B. McKinney reached on an error
to start the second Inning and came
home two batters later when
Tam m y Fisher singled. Sanford
went ahead for the only time In the
third when Phyllis Moore walked
and Wallace reached on an error.
Vlmesae Chapman then socked a
long double to left center to score
two runs for a 3*2 advantage. Mary
Hicks walked and B. McKinney
crunched a liner to left center, but
the outfielder snared It and doubled

t

Chapman ofT second for the final'
out.
Haines City regained the lead fo r
good In the third on two more'
McKinney errors and a double by'
Wendy Gilley for a 5-3 edge. In the'
fifth, Gilley singled In a run and;
three more scored on a sacrifice and!
two more errors for a 9-3 bulge.
Five slxth-lnnlng runs put the!
game on Ice as Wanda Henderson!
clubbed a two-run homer over the!
left-field fence as the lead grew to
14-3. Sanford rebounded with one!
run In the seventh on hits by Regina.
McKinney and Anlcla Wheeler and!
an RBI-single by Laura Scott.
Chapman led Sanford with two
doubtes and B. McKinney doubled!
In a run. The Juniors could muster
Just seven hits off winning pitcher
Kathy King. Haines City won the
title with an undefeated record.
Sanford would have needed to beat
the H.C. crew twice to gain the title.

Sanford 300 3S1 0-15 17 1
Ooainola 030 003 3 - 7 I I 5.
W P - Jackson. LP -G e b h a r d t
11••• .
* ■

Sanford 013 000 1 - 4 7 14
Haines 313 045 X -14 11 4
W P - K in g . L P -W a lla c e .

♦

Mitchell Burns Ford,
But Seminoles Fall

G r e t z k y Is C o o l A s Ico — O n A n d O ff
Milton

Seminole's Willie Mitchell burned prep All-America
Frank Ford for 42 points, but Cook's Com er came up
short Tuesday night, losing a 78-76 decision to
Oak-Ceola In AAU 17 and Under District 7 Basketball
action al Kissimmee.

Rlchman

The victory moves Oak-Ceola Into the finals against
Daytona Beach, a 95-85 winner over North Orlando. The
championship game will be Thursday night.
Mitchell, who also grabbed 12 rebounds, tossed In 20
first-half points as the Seminole Cook's Comer overcame
a one-point, first-quarter deficit to move ahead at
halftime, 39-38.
Three minutes Into the second half. Seminole opened
Its biggest lead. 48-40, when William Wynn slamdunked a rebound attempt. Osccola'a Ford, a 6-4
forward who will attend Auburn this fall, took over In
the second half, however, when he scored moat o f his 36
points as Oak-Ceola took a narrow lead Into the fourth
quarter.
Seminole had Us last chance to tie the game In the
closing minute. Guard Bruce Franklin atole the ball with
57 seconds left and Mitchell waa fouled by Ford with 43
seconds to go. The 6-3 Junior's two free throws pulled
Cook's Comer to within 78-76,
Twenty-five seconds later, Mark Chase missed a
jumper from the free-throw line and Tracy Holloman
corralled the rebound for Seminole. With 13 seconds to
go, Seminole called a timeout and set up a play for
Mitchell or Wynn.
Seminole, however, couldn't get either one the ball
and Franklin's) um per with one second left hit the rim
and bounced off.
Along with Mitchell's 42 points. Wynn added 13 and
James Rouse chipped In 10.
"W illie Mitchell was unbelievable." raved Mariette.
"Ford was all over him. but be still did ■ great job.
"In the second half, Ford Just took over. It was close
all the way. We Just couldn't get that last shot to fall."
he added.

NEW YORK 1UP1) - On or o ff the
ice. that Wayne Gretzky Is so cool,
you don’t even need the air condi­
tioning.
Like he had this little chore to do.
Wouldn't take him long. All It
meant was Jumping over and pick­
UPI
ing up this $10,000 check and
trophy they were giving him. But
you know how those things are. A
during the Islanders' recent fourguy doesn't like to go by himself.
So Wayne Gretzky brought a game Stanley Cup sweep o f the
friend along. One o f his best friends. Oilers.
Eddie Mlo was In another part of
In fact, a goalie,
the
room Monday, so he couldn't
Billy who?
hear wh at his ol d E dm on ton
C'mon now. Oct serious.
The friend Gretzky brought along teammate was saying about Smith,
waa Eddie Mio. He's a goalie, who but he would've been surprised If It
was with the New York Rangers last was anything critical. He knows
season and probably will be with Gretzky well from having played
them again next season although with him In Edmonton. They are old
locker room buddies.
he’s a free agent right now.
"T o me, he's everything a coach
But he wasn't the goalie everyone
would desire as a hockey player and
was talking about.
In all fairness, Gretzky didn't as an Individual as w ell," Mio said,
bring up Billy Smith’s name first. looking over at a small table where
Someone else did, and then some­ Gretzky waa talking to some mem­
bers of the media Monday.
one else after that.
Gretzky, and Mlo get along great
But each time Smith s name waa
mentioned Monday at the midtown together. One o f the reasons they do
hotel where Gretzky received the is their capacity to kid each other.
"A fte r I left Edmonton." Mio
Seagram's Seven Crowns o f Sports
Award as the National Hockey related laughlnglngly. "h e ’d say to
League's outstanding performer for me he waa gonna pump three or
1982-83. the Edmonton Oilers' four shots past m e and really
spectacular 22-year-old scoring embarrass me the first time we
played against each other. I'd tell
machine played It cool.
He restrained himself nicely and him he'd never do U with that soft
not once did he bad-mouth the shot o f his. I said to him, 'you
abrasive, som etim es belligerent the worst slap shot In hockey. You
New York Islanders' goalie who took couldn't break a pane o f glass with
a whack at him with his stick It.'

■ ts tv M M U M ir

Sanford's Willi* Mitchell (left) scored 42 points
Tuosdey night against Oek-Ceole's fabulous Frank
Ford, but Ford and his teammates held on for a
71-74 victory. Frank didn't do too poorly himself
with 36 points.

"W ell, we finally played against
each other. He got his chance and
he beat me so bad. It wasn't even
funny. He let go a shot from the top
o f the circle. The puck went over
my glove Into the net and It came
back out before I could even turn
around. He beat me so easy. Before
he skated away, he sort o f smirked
and said to me. 'Worst shot In
hockey, huh?'"
But most o f the questions put to
him Monday had to do with Smith,
and when he was asked pointedly
what he thought o f the Islanders'
32^year-old net-minder, particularly
Smith's admission that he put on a
show and feigned being Injured by
Glenn Anderson In the fourth
S ta n ley Cup con test. G retzk y
thought a moment and said:
“ I've always been a big believer In
what happens on the Ice should stay
on the Ice. My own feeling la that he
embarrassed one o f the best referees
(Andy van Hellemondl In the NHL
by doing what he did. But as for
what he (Smith) did or what he said.
I Just consider the source. If It had
come from a class person like Bryan
Trottler or Dents Potvln. I'd be
concerned, but coming from him. 1
don't worry about It. The Lord
works In strange ways. Mr. Smith
will meet hla day."

From Edmonton's point of view,
was there anything Gretzky would
like to see done differenty If there
waa some possible way to play the
Stanley Cup finals all over again?
He thought about that one for
awhile also.

Blake's 3-Hit Shutout Helps Flagship Bank Clinch 2nd Place
Flagship Bank 10, Seminole Petroleum 0
Butch's Chevron 12. Seminole Ford 2
Moose 23. Ball Motor Lines 3
Rotary vs. Elks, rained out
Ruben Blake tossed • three-hit shutout
Tuesday and Keith Armondl collected a pair
of hits as Flagship Bank upended Seminole
Petroleum, 1G0. al Westalde Field in the
final day of regular season play In the
Sanford Little American League. Flaghafp
Bank f in is h e s the season with a 14-4 record
while Seminole Petroleum finished at 5-13.
Adcock Roofing clinched the Little Ameri­
can League title with a victory over Atlantic
Bank last Thursday.
Flaghoip Bank got all the runs it needed
with a seven-run explosion in the lop of the
first Inning. Redman Ingram. Tye Koke and

W.L. Gracey drew consecutive walks to load
the bases with no outs. One run then scored
when Ronald Cox reached on an error and
another run came across on Armondl's
single. Sun with no outs, and the bases
loaded. Travis Pickens unloaded a three-run
double aa Flagship Bank took a 5-0 lead.
Pickens came around to score on a single by
Robert Jackson and JacluOn scored on
Blake'a double for a 7-0 Flagship advantage.
While Flaghsip's bats provided Blake with
a big cushion early. Seminole Petroleum's
lumber waa silenced by Blake who allowed
only three singles In the game, struck out
alx and walked four.
At Fort Mellon Park. Jerry Harkneaa and
Jeff Derr combined on a three-hllter aa
Butch's Chevron rolled to a 12-2 victory
over Seminole Ford. Butch's Chevron
finished at 8-10 for the season while
Seminole Ford fell to 2-16.

Sanford Baseball
Butch's Chevron put a three spot on the
board In the top. of the first inning. Derr led
off with a double, advanced to third on a
groundout and scored on a wild pitch. With
one out, Harkneaa ripped a double and he
came around to acore on another wild pitch.
Anthony Hants, who had walked, even­
tually scored on a passed ball aa Butch's
Chevron took a 3-0 lead on three unearned
runs.
Meanwhile. Harkneaa was doing the lob
on the mound aa he retired the first five
Seminole Ford hitters In order until Johnny
Williams broke the string with a two-out
*ingt* tn the aecof1*)

Butch's Chevron added two runs In the

second, then erupted for six runs In the
third to take a 114) lead. Seminole Ford waa
held scoreless until the fourth Inning, when
it rallied for a pair of runs.
Label Williams had a pair of
Butch's Chevron while WUUama
hits for Seminole Ford.
in Sanford Junior League action at Chase
Park, David OoldsUck hurled a two-hitler aa
crushed m il Motor More. 23-3. Gary
Dctt led Moose at the plate aa he went 3 for
3 and scored five runs. Marven Kill­
ing!worth added a pair of triplea and Oacar
Mrrthlr had two hits including hla third
homer of the season. Anthony Davis had a
homer for *****
*Jy
Moaae now
stands at 5-1 In the second half, one game
while Ball
Knights of
neafclitc
Ito 0-6.
711

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&lt;»Ar-Ev&gt;wlnfl Herald, Sanford, FI.

ssasif:"*

Wsdrwrday, Juns I, HU
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C A 8 E O F 1 2 -M .e 5

SCOTCH
HeraM M ata fcy Tammy Vtaicaat

Sweet
T rophy

From the left, coach Andre Collins, Ton|a Brown
and W alter M cD o n ald accept the first-p lace
trophy from Ju dy Strickland for winning the
Comets League at Sanford's Bowl A m erica. The
winning team, Sweet Brown Sugar, competed In
the nine to 11-year-old division.

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DSI Rolls Into Playoffs;
Phillies Nab Senior Title
(,
*

OMEGA

Chuck Lamb and Jeff Llvcrnois com­
bined on a two-hitter as Longwood I DSI
rolled to a 8-1 victory over Forest City II
Pop's Pirates in the Mustang Round II
Playoff at the Seminole Pony Baseball
In Altamonte baseball action, manager
c o m p le x . T h e v ic t o r y a d v a n c e d
Gene Lctterio’s Phillies extended their
Longwood I into the league championwinning streak to six games in a 4-3
ship tournament.
victory over the favored Braves as the
Leading the offense for Longwood was
Phillies claimed the Altamonte Springs
Lamb who went 3 Tor 3 with two singles
Little League Championship In the
and a double. Other key hits came from
Senior Division.
Justin “ J u ice" Kingston, 1 for 2,
The Phillies accomplished this feat
"Jainm in" Jimmy Keigcr, 1 for 2.
with only two 15-year olds and seven
Livunois, 2 lor 4, and Andy Doniou. 1
14-year olds In the starting lineup. Mike
for 3.
Schmlt stroked a hanging curve ball in
In a losing effort. Mike Trotta was 1 for
(he last Inning for a two-run homer that
2 and Van Caslcm had a double for
lifted the Phillies to the vlotory over the
Pop’s Pirates. Jamie Moenv took the
Braves.
•

TOM SIMS

LORD

B a se b a ll

6 YR. 86* KY.

CALVERT
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★ SANFORD
Hwy. 17*02 SOUTH CITY LIMITS

★ LONGWOOD

pitching loss.

The defensive play of the game was
turned in by Doug Sheridan who caught
a deep fly ball in left center field to end a
Forest Clly rally. Sheridan also made a
diving catch lo save a hit in the third
Inning.
The 8-1 victory not only put Longwood
into the Thursday night opening round,
hut, also jfcivtr Luke Mary the wild card

- * # Suggs’ LajtpJMary team will play
» (Gene Oliver’s longw ood I team on
[ Thursday. The winner will play Jim
Mocny’s Pop’s Pirates In the double
t elimination tournament.
*
In the Bronco Division. Jim Kremer
and Alex Vanderford knocked In two
a runs apiece to lead Longwood to a 6-3
vlctoty over Forest City. With the win.
Longwood advances to the Bronco
* Championship playoffs.
*
Joe Taylor hurled a three-hitter in
J picking up the pitching victory. Kremer
; went 1 for 4. but his single drove in two
1 runs. Vanderford was l for 3 but his hit
j was a two-run homer. Jon Urshaun and
■ Pete Fowler each had a double for Forest
&gt; City.

The Phillies victory run, however,
began the game before when, down 7-2
to the Angels, the Phillies rallied for a
11-8 victory in eight innings. Bill Henly’s
three-run homer provided the winning
punch for the Phillies as they began their
sweep o f the league for the title. Victories
over the Astros. Cardinals, Indians and
the clinching 13-0 rout of the Yankees
gave the Phillies the Senior League
Championship.,In the game against the Yankees.
Schmlt was the winning pitcher and Dan
Beaty's two-run homer in the third
proved to be ail the runs the Phillies
needed. During the stretch run. the
Phillies were led offensively by Shane
Letterio. Schmlt. Mike Pinckes, Beaty.
Pat Lusk and Henly with Sean Casterline
and Sandy Hovis turning In outstanding
defensive play.
The Phillies will play Maitland on June
15 at 5:30 p.m. tn the Top Team
Tournament opener. The game will be
played at Maitland Junior High off
Horatio Avenue. If successful, the next
game for the Phillies would be June 16
against Deltona at Maitland at 5:30 p.m.

I I

J &amp; B

!

SCO TCH

Basketball
Redway. Karen McConkey. Stephanie
Nelson. Tracy Jacobs and Amy Duda of
Oviedo; Beth Elder, Bea Miranda, Patti
Rae and Kellee and Jolle Johnson of
Lake Howell; Lisa McCoy o f Orlando
Luther and Michelle Eck o f Bishop
Moore.

IMI’ IlH 11II Ik! I AND 'I ‘I'i VAt i)t

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CASE O f 6 47 90

GOLD PEAK

CALIFORNIA
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The State Tournament for the AAU 12
and 14 year-old age groups for girls was
held this past weekend at Oviedo High.

2.79

MISC. SPECIALS
MMSVUMmm 6 4 9

North Brevard, from Titusville, captured
the 14-year old title while Sanford
Seminole won the honors in the 12-year
old tourney.

Aretha Riggins was the big gun for
Sanford wlth22 points in a 41-22 rout of
Seminole East in the 12-year old title
game. Tuwanna Wynn and Tery Whyte
controlled the boards for Sanford.
Suzanne Hughes led Seminole East with
eight points.
Seminole East captured third place lit
the 14-year old tourney with a 80-49
stomping of Sanford Seminole. All ten
Seminole East players hit the scoring
column as Rim Forsyth led the way with
20 points. Natalie Barth added IB.
Stephanie Nciaon 12, Jolee Johnson nine
ana Erin Hankins six. Tcmlka Alexnader, of Sanford, took high-scoring
honors With 29 points, Yolando
Robinson added 11 for Sanford while
Allaha Moore tossed In nine.
The winning teams In both divisions
now advance to the AAU Nationals to be
held over the July 4 weekend In Kansas
City, Missouri.

* * CASSELBERRY

3 § 4 * &lt;H N
a :-

&amp;

Riggins Leads
Sanford
A
To Championship

Brinda Green put on a one-girl show
for North Brevard, tossing In 34 points tn
a 59-51 victory over Jacksonville In the
final. Pam Sampson kept Jacksonville In
the game as she poured In 28 points.

J

8 0 *
cut

ICBA Seminoles Head For Big Apple
New York in June will become a reality
, for 30 local l&gt;oy and girl basketball
* players ns the Inter-County Basketball
Association (ICBA) Seminoles depart
* Friday (June 10). by bus for New York
t City. They will proceed to Long Island
and their home base In Huntington.
|
From there, a week o f ballgamcs and
sightseeing will get underway. On the
* latter agenda arc visits to the City, the
( Empire State Building. Radio City Music
Hall, the Statue of Liberty. Madison
Square Garden. Fifth Avenue and Chlnal town. Also, days at Jones Beach. Coney
« Island and the Long Island Sound.
*'
The games begin Sunday. June 12,
* against Hempstead High o f New York,
' one of the top three teams In the Btate
*' the past two years In both boys and girls
•« action. This will be followed by Walt
Whitman High o f South Huntington on
•* Monday, on Tuesday the ICBA will face
Sachem High (over 5.000 students
&lt;• grades 10-12) the largest school tn the
J slate of New York and Northport High on
l Wednesday. There are parties and picnic
planned by the Islanders aa they host
* tbclr Florida friends. Julius "Dr. J "
,, E r v l n g . o f t h e N B A c h a m p i o n
y Philadelphia 76’crs. hopefully will be un
*’ hand lo meet the Seminoles on Monday.
A series o f scrimmages against local
AAU learns has prepared the Seminoles
&lt; for the trip. The varsity boys team
% includes Eric T rotn bo from Lak e
a Brantley. Greg and James Pilot and
* ' Willis Perry o f Lyman. Eddie Norton and
Kelly Klukls of Oviedo and Crockett
• Bohannon and A1 Banyacski o f Lake
J * Howell.
The 8ll|, grade boys, who will lake on
••• Long Island freshman teams, are led by
four members of the South Seminole
U i Middle School team that finished with a
• v 28-2 record this past season. They arc
Oscar Wilder. Vince Florence. Phil
Florence and Darry Crist. They are
«»&lt; Joined by Rob Hughes and Gcordie
Wheeler o f St. Lukes. Glenn Rcichle o f
Jackson Heights and Heath Oxford of
,t«« Milwee.
The girts will be playing high school
&lt;Junior Varsity teams and are made up o f
ninth and 10th graders who played both
JF varsity and JV ball this past year. The
-girls team Includes Mary Lakers, Brenda

|

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Dodgers' Errors Pave Way For Braves' Win
Washington's Homer
Secures 4-1 Victory
— Carlton G ets M ark
A TLA N TA (UP!) — Joe Torre laid it wasn’t a "crucial"
win - just an important one - and he could thank the
wildness o f the young Loo Angeles infield for the victory.
Dodger righthander Bob Welch (4-5) was cruising
along with a three-hitter and a 1-0 lead Tuesday night
when consecutive throwing errors by Steve Sax. Pedro
Ouenero and Greg Brock gave the Atlanta Braves two
runs in the seventh inning en route to a 4-1 triumph.
The win in the first meeUng between the National
League West leaders this season enabled the Braves,
35-18 and ofT to their best start in 18 seasons in Atlanta,
to move within one-half game o f the first-place Dodgers.
" I t ’s a three-game series and now we have 17 more
games to play with them." said Torre. "It’s by no means
crucial, but it is Important. They are all important.
"W elch was Just the victim o f some bad defense,"
added the Atlanta manager. "1 am Just glad we were
close enough to have it mean something for us."
.Wlilkjlisk!&gt;,,'yers and managers wcrcjnJo'mJrtpg the
Importance o f the series. 38,193 fans turned out
following a day-long rain to give the contest a playoff
atmosphere. And Claudell Washington, who got the final
runs lor Atlanta with a two-run homer in the eighth,
said that might have contributed to the wild throws an
inning earlier.
"There were a lot of people out there and a lot of
excitement." said Washington. **tt might have caused a
little pressure on them. They have young guys over
there, too.
"T h ey’ve tried to put a little pressure on us, especially
(Dodger manager Tom) Lasorda, but we’ve got enough
veterans on this club to overcome it.”
With the Dodgers ahead 1-0 on Guerrero’s secondinning homer. Dale Murphy led ofT the seventh with a
grounder that Sax threw into the dirt past Brock at first,
enabling Murphy to reach second. Bob Horner then
grounded to Guerrero who also threw in the dirt
enabling Murphy to score and Horner to reach second.
Homer took third when Brock threw wild to the piste to
try to get Murphy and then scored on Chris Chambliss'
sacrifice fly.
"T h ere is nobody feels any worse than those
youngsters who threw the ball away." said Lasorda.
"It's Just one o f those things. But the errors hurt us."
The Dodgers also were victimised by two doubleplays
after they loaded the bases with one out in both the
fourth and sixth innings off Atlanta's Pascual Peres, 7-1.
In the fourth. Steve Yeager grounded back to Peres
who turned a home-to-flrst double-play. In the sixth, the
Braves got a break when Rick Monday’s grounder
richocheted ofT second baseman Glenn Hubbard's glove
to shortstop Rafael Ramirez standing on second, who
threw to first.
. "RafTy was Just alert enough to see the ball come off
Jiubby's glove and turn it." said Torre. "W e sure as hell
needed those two double-plays."

A.L./N.L. Roundup

CLAUDELL
WASHINGTON

STEVE
SAX

inning. Bo Diaz singled in the eighth for the other hit off
Forscn, who struck out two and walked none In facing
only 29 batters. Carlton struck out six to raise his career
-to iari-U zm u n C r

le a

involved In every decision except his last one. and that's
how he got to be 3-9. His ERA and everything is similar

the extra run that made It difficult." Brewers' manager
Harvey Kuenn said. "Th ey hit the ball hard but we
made some good defensive plays. That’s why we're out
there."
After Milwaukee added a run in the fourth, the Orioles
made It 4-2 In the fourth on a run-scoring single by Rick
Dempsey and Ayala's solo homer In the sixth, his
second, made It 5-2. Ned Yost hit a two-run homer for
Milwaukee In the seventh. Daucr made It 6-4 with his
second homer In the seventh.
"Our ballclub started (he season hitting the ball and
then we went into a tallspln and really hit the skids,"

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

Astros 4, Giants 2

Tigers 4, Red 8ox 2

At Houston, Tony Scott doubled In the winning run In
the seventh inning and scored an Insurance run
momenta later to help the Astros to victory.
„ Nolan Rvan.
Just off the 21-day disabled list, started for the Astros
and worked five Innings, striking out three and walking
seven. The strikeouts gave him 3,524 In his career,
leaving him in second place on the all-time list behind
Carlton.

Boston. John Wockcnfuss capped a four-run first with
a two-run homer to back the five-hit pitching of Milt
Wilcox. 6-6. who struck out four and walked two in
pitching his AL-leadlng seventhcompletegame. John
Tudor fell to 3-4 as the Tigerswon theirthird straight
and fourth In their last live,

Cuba 6,

Mats

I

At Chicago, Ryne 'Sandberg drove in two runs and
Chuck Rainey and BUI Campbell combined on a
six-hitter in leading the Cubs to their sixth straight
triumph. Rainey, 6-4, struck out seven, walked three
and allowed four hits.

Rapes S, Pirates 2
At Montreal, Lee Mazzilll and Johnnie Ray singled in
runs In the sixth Inning to help the Pirates snap a
six-game losing streak. John Candelaria. 4-6, got the
victory with Manny Sarmlento and Kent Tekulvc
pitching In relief. Tekulve earned his fourth save.

Padrss 7, Rsds S
At Cincinnati. Eric Show pitched a slx-hltter and
Terry Kennedy drove In the game-winning run with a
sacrifice fly to give Padres their victory. Show, 7-2.
struck out two and walked three In pitching his third
complete game o f the season. Johnny Bench hit a
two-run homer for Cincinnati.
Ortolan 0, B rsw srs 4
Dennis Martinez had a longer victory drought than
Charlie Brown. But Tuesday night, he reduced the
opposition to Peanuts.
Martinez rode home runs by Eddie Murray. Gar)’
Roenlcke. Benny Ayala and Rich Dauer to his first
victory since May 10 as the Orioles posted a 6-4 decision
over the Milwaukee Brewers.
The Orioles pounded 10 hits off starter Mike Caldwell.
5-5, and reliever Bob Gibson. Tippy Martinez finished for
his seventh save.
"Dennis has pitched well In the last three games."
Baltimore manager Joe Altobelll said. "T h e thing about

Indians 2, Yankees 1
At New York. Toby Hurrah's 10th&gt;lnning ground
single to center field delivered pinch runner Mike
' Flschlln from second base. Alan Bannister, who earlier
committed a costly error, laid down a sacrifice bunt to
set up the run against Goose Gossagc, 2-2. Neal Heaton,
5-2. was the winner,
Rangers 10, M ariners 0
At Seattle, Rick Honeycutt, 8-3. tossed a three-hitter
and Pete O'Brien homcred and drove In three runs. The
left-hander lowered his ERA to 1.66. best among starters
In the AL. O'Brien belted his second home run o f the
year during a six-run first Inning, chasing starter Bob
Stoddard. 4-7.
A ’s 5, Blue Jays 3
At Oakland, Calif.. Mike Davis drove In three runs and
Tim Conroy pitched 5 1-3 Innings, of three-hit relief,
Conroy. 1-1, replaced starter Mike Norris, who left after
two Innings because of stiffness In his right shoulder,
Steve Baker finished and earned his third save. Jim Gott
fell to 2-5.

Royals B, Twins 4
At Kansas City. Mo.. Hal McRae knocked In four runs
to give Larry Gura his first victory since April 26. Gura
scattered eight hits over six Innings to snap a
career-long seven-game losing streak In improving his
record to 5-7. Dan Quisenbcrry hurled the final three
Innings to record his 13th save,

White Sox 12, Angels 11
At Anaheim. Calif., Greg Luzlnskl's two-out. 10thInning double scored Tony Bemazard and lifted the
White Sox. Andy Hasslcr. 0-3. walked Bemazard before
serving up Luzlnskl's double to the left-center field wall.
Dick Tldrow. 1-0, was'the winner despite giving up a
thrcc-run homer and an RBI single In the Angels'
four-run ninth, which sent the game Into extra innings.

m

*

OMAHA. Neb. (UPI) - Alabama
coach Barry Shollenberger says it
was "too exciting for m e." as his
team's early six-run lead was whit­
tled to a final 6-5 margin by a
determined Michigan squad In a
College World Scries clash.
The Crimson Tide fought ofT
Michigan for a second-round,
w in ne r 's bracket vi ctory that
advanced Alabama. 45-9, to a
Thursday night contest with Texas.
63-14. The two clubs are the only
ones unbeaten from the original
eight-team field.
“ Give Michigan credit." Shollen­
berger said. "I saw us Jump out to
an early 6-0 lead but as the game
went along I saw the score move
6-2, 6-3, 6-4 and they Just they kept
creeping back."
"T h ey didn't want to hear they
were going to be blown out and they
fought back within one run and
made the game very exciting." he
said. "T o o exciting for m e."
Allan Stallings' fourth Inning
single scored David Magadan in
what proved the winning run.
Michigan, 49-8, went into the
loser's bracket to face Stanford.
41-16-1, tonight. Arizona State.
43-23, and Oklahoma State. 48-15,
meet in the opener. All are 1-1.
Michigan errors In the first, third
and fourth innings placed Alabama
runners in scoring position.
“ We can’t make mistakes like we
did early against a team like
Alabama and expect to win," said
Wolverine coach Bud Mlddaugh.
"Our defense didn't play well early
but that happens. It is the same
defense that got us here."
Michigan got back-to-back singles
by Ken Hayward and Jeff Jacobson
In the bottom o f the ninth with two

Sports Roundup
outs, but reliever Troy Brauchlc
forced Chuck Fronlng into an Infielder grounder to preserve the
victory.
Alabama scored two runs In the
first on Bret Elbln's homer and a
Magadan single. The Crimson Tide
added another run In the third on a
Frank Velleggla single.
Stallings' RBI fourth-inning single
capped a three-run Alabamu effort
that made It 6-0. Magadan got on
base with an RBI single, and a
single by Rob Skates produced the
other Alabama run.
Michigan countered with three
runs in its half of the fourth on
singles by Hayward. Fred Erdmann.
Rich Bair, and Dale Sklar and a
double by Casey Close.
In the seventh. Michigan's Chris
Sabo doubled and came home on a
single by Jacobson to close the
scoring.
Magadan's fourth-inning single
extended his series hitting streak to
eight games.
He filed out to left field In the
sixth and was walked Intentionally
in the eighth.
" I don't usually go up to the plate
thinking about making an out.”
Magadan said. '1 Just hit the ball
hard and was lucky enough to have
it fall In for hits."
MONTREAL (UPI) - It was not
the victory itself, but rather the
margin o f the triumph which sur­
prised Wayne Gretzky.
The Edmonton Oilers center
became the first player in National
Hockey League history Tuesday to

capture the Hart Trophy, awarded
to the league's most valuable
player, four consecutive times.

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The 22-year-old Gretzky received
215 of a possible 315 points in a
m h
vote among 63 members of the TvWr a w
P ro fe s s io n a l H ock ey W r ite r s ’
Association, while capturing 43 first atvtUMW
place votes to finish 107 points _
obrbll
ahead of Boston Bruins’ goalie Pete
JJ] J
Peelers.
Itwyn te 4000
"I couldn't have won this trophy
Ji i J
without those other 19 guys on the irm m
«sis
Ice. My teammates have always
MM
taken care of me and of course when
m i*
you're winning, everything seems to fscMu p • i ••
fall Into place."
*«u«c
MM
Gretzky, with only four NHL o m H
111,1
seasons to his credit. Joins Gordie
__
Howe, who played 26 NHL seasons
q|
with the Detroit Red Wings and the v «t i, LOS dual
Hartford W halers, and form er «
Boston great Eddie Shore as the
oswM
only players to win the Hart Trophy Myuvw
four limes. He Is the first ever to win Ha—a tWM&gt;
It four straight.
eig53i
i
Rod Langway of the Washington
ft
.
Capitals was awarded the James
y
Norris Trophy as the top d e­
fenseman over Philadelphia's Mark
Howe; Peelers won the Vezlna
Trophy as the top goaltender over
*rfcM
Roland Mclanson of the New York ft— «* _
Islanders; Mike Bossy of the Islan- JJJJJ'J}" J},5
ders won the Lady Byng Trophy as u— * m i s
the most gentlemanly player over
!’ "fellow right winger Rick Middleton kmsn
*tti
o f Boston; center Bobby Clarke o f n o &lt;
m t
Philadelphia won the Frank Selke JA— •
••••
Trophy as the top defensive forward
m m
over winger Jari Kuril o f Edmonton: o*aU— a l l o t
and forw ard S teve Larm er o f JJ *
Chicago captured the Calder Trophy 2 3 ^
as rookie of the year over de«ama— |N
fenseman Phil Houslcy of the Buf_ .
falo Sabres.

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�WORLD
IN BRIEF

Labor Demands Israeli
Withdrawal From Lebanon
B y U nited P re n In te rn atio n al
Israel's opposition Labor Party said it would
call In the Knesset today for all Israeli troops to
withdraw from Lebanon in the party’s most
dramatic protest against the yearlong occupa­
tion.
Labor's plans to introduce a unilateral troop
withdrawal motion in Jerusalem coincided with
newspaper reports of Prime Minister Menachem
Begln's "gloom " over the stalemate In Lebanon.
The reports Tuesday said a majority o f Israelis
are dissatisfied with his government.
Despite a forecast of growing Syrian pressure
In Lebanon and U.S. opposition to a unilateral
Israeli pullout. Labor Party leader Shimon Peres
reportedly planned (a g o ahead with his rootle
ib , l withdrawal In twaffraget.“ **"*'*•“ "
His motion calls for Israeli forces to move first
from Lebanon's Shouf mountains south to Uie
A wall river and later to withdraw entirely.

Mrs. Thatcher In Lead
LONDON (UPIJ — Prime* Minister Margaret
Thatcher headed into her final campaign day
today, challenging voters to give the Con­
servatives a landslide election victory and
banish the "dark divisive clouds" of socialism
from Britain.
The latest opinion polls today showed Mrs.
Thatcher on course to win a spectacular victory
for five more years of Conservative government,
with as much as a 252-seat majority in Britain's
650-seat Parliament.
The opposition Labor Party and Social
Democratic-Liberal Alliance were battling for
second place.

3 Israeli Soldiers Killed
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — An explosion
occurred today on a road in southern Beirut as
an Israeli patrol was passing, the Voice of
Lebanon radio said. The radio said three Israelis
were killed and several passersby were Injured.
Although details were sketchy, the right-wing
Phalangtst Voice of Lebanon estimated from
first reports that three Israelis were killed and
not more than 10 passersby injured In the blast
in the Galerie Semaan area of Beirut.

Is Andropov Ailing ?
MOSCOW (UPI) — An appearance by Soviet
leader Yuri Andropov, looking weary and helped
by aides'at an abbreviated state dinner to honor
Finnish President Mauno Koivisto, prompted
speculation he may be ailing. Finnish sources
said.
In March, Andropov was rumored to have had
a severe kidney ailment, described In American
news reports as nephritis, a chronic 'disease
characterised by Inflammation and degenera­
tion of the kidneys.

U.S. Delays Import
Suit Against Japan
TOKYO (UPI) - The United States has
agreed to postpone until after June 26
parliamentary elections plans to file suit
against Japan's Import quotas on five
farm products Including peanuts and
tomatojulce.
A Ministry o f International Trade and
Industry spokesman said "Washington
apparently agreed" to temporarily shelve
Its plans to file suit with the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
The United States has charged Japan’s
Import quotas on farm products arc in
violation o f G ATT articles.
MITI officials said the government —
after learning o f U.S. plans to file the
complaint — decided last week to ask
Washington to hold off the move until
the June 26 House o f Councillors
elections were over.
The elections for about half o f the
House's representatives was to be the
first ic$l c f support lor Prime Minster
Yasuhlro Nakasone’s government.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Masaharu
Gotoda. however, denied the postpone­
ment was politically motivated, com ­
menting only that "th e United States Is
still undecided on the subject."
U.S. and Japanese trade officials have
failed to break a deadlock over import
ceilings on five farm products, including
peaquis and tomato Juice. Negotiations
on beef and citrus quotas arc continuing.
Japan reportedly told U.S. trade repre­
sentatives the G A T T complaint could
antagonize Japanese farmers and hard­
en their stance against the liberalization
o f beef and citrus quotas.
Nakasone’s ruling Liberal Democratic
Party has traditionally counted on sup­
port from rural farming constituencies to
maintain its overwhelming majority in
both houses of the Diet (parliament).
The party, which needs to win at least
63 seats to maintain control o f the House
of Councillors, cannot afford to lone rural
votes prior to the June 26 election.

SOURCE: J a p t n n t Ministry of Flnanos

Jap an posted another record trade surplus with the U.S. last year, led b
continuing b ris k sales of ca rs and electron ic equipm ent. Its su rplus wltl
the 10-natlon European Com m on M a rk e t w as also up, although not a
‘ sh arply. J a p an Is under Increasing pressure fro m Its m a jo r jtcA£&lt;lr:
p artn ers to open up the Japanese nome m arket to m ore foreign goods.

Afghan Rebels Kill 200 Troops
NEW DELHI. India (UPI) — Rebels attacked govern­
ment troops searching for guerrillas In the mountains of
eastern Afghanistan and killed 200 members o f an elite
commando squad In a three-day battle last month,
according to a Western diplomat.
The surviving members o f the Soviet-backed force of
Afghan soldiers defected to the rebels, the diplomat said.
The diplomat said the attack, which he described as a
"m ajor setback" to the Afghan regime, occurred In
Paktlya, a province bordering Pakistan and heavily
Infiltrated by Moslem rebels.
"Rebels attacked the elite 38th Commandos some­
where In Paktlya province, where the troops were
conducting a sweep operation" In mid-May. the
diplomat said Tuesday.
"In the ensuing battle, which lasted three days, many

Federal Court Upholds
Ja yce e s' Bar On Women
ST. LOUIS (UPI) — A split federal appeals court upheld
the right o f the U.S. Jaycees to bar women from
becoming full members, but called the males-only policy
"nongovernmental discrimination."
The ruling Tuesday by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals reversed decisions by the state Supreme Court
and U.S. District Court In Minnesota, which had said the
Jaycees should admit women to local chapters.
Don E. Jones, president o f the 295,000-member
group, said the ruling "reaffirms our, members’ rights to
decide who should belong to their organization."
The Jaycees had appealed the Minnesota ruling,
saying It was a violation of the group's right o f free
speech, petition, assembly and association.
The federal appeals court agreed with the Jaycees,
saying the group has a right or association because its
activities "Involved the expression o f social and political
beliefs and the advocacy of legislation and constitutional
change."

of the commandos deserted to the rebels," he said.
“ The remainder, some 200-men. were killed," the
diplomat said. He said details came from "a wide variety
of sources during the past two weeks."
The exact location o f the battle was not known.
Paktlya province begins about 40 miles southeast o f the
Afghan capital o f Kabul and stretches southwest for
another 150 miles along the Pakistan border.
Afghan rebels frequently cross the Afghan-Paklstan
border to acquire alleged U.S.-supplied weapons In
Pakistan, and then re-enter Paktlya province's forested
mountains.
In another incident In Paktlya. the diplomat said,
rebels attacked an Afghan government convoy In the
Zarmal area. 60 miles south o f Kabul, wounding or
killing 50 Afghan soldiers.
The guerrillas suffered “ over two dozen casualties”
during their attack on the munitions'convoy. He gave no
breakdown on the number killed or wounded.
"Remnants o f the convoy retreated to Ghazni" 80
miles southwest o f Kabul, he said.
There was no mention in the diplomat’s report of
Soviet soldiers being Involved In (he fighting. Western
diplom ats estim ate the S oviet force occu p yin g
Afghanistan at about 105,000 troops and the Afghan
government forces at about 30.000 soldiers.
Islamic rebels have been trying to topple the regime o f
Babrak Karmal since he was Installed during the Soviet
Invasion o f Afghanistan In December 1979.

Soviet Jewish
Emigration To Fall
MOSCOW (UPI) — The number o f Jews permitted
to leave the Soviet Union will decline because the
majority who wanted to be reunited with their
families In Israel have already left, an "antl-Zlonlst"
Soviet Jewish leader said.
There Is no reason to permit further emigration
despite “ Zionist propaganda," law professor Samuel
Zlvs said at a news conference.
Zlvs Is a deputy chalrmtm o f (he 2-inonth-old
Antt-Zlonlst-Commlttee o f Soviet Society, made up
of Jews who have prominent positions In the Soviet
Union.
The statement apparently meant the drastic drop
In Jewish emigration — from more than 50.000 In
1979 to about 100 a month this year — represented
a long-term change In Soviet policy.
Moscow permitted large-scale emigration over (he
last decade to help reunite families split up by World
War II, "but this is not so important now ." Zlvs said.
“ The process o f family reunion, that Is. those
wanting to be reunited with th*.*ir relatives In Israel,
is almost o v e r ... The absolute majority o f those who
wanted to leave to reunite their families have left."
As for that portion o f the estimated 1.8 million
Jews now In the country who still want to leave, he
said they have "fallen victim to Zionist propaganda,
which brainwashes them ."

AREA DEATHS
PIN K M AJOR
Mr. Pink Major, 90, of
2012 Williams Ave., San­
ford , d ied M onday at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Born June 8.
1 8 9 2 . In D o r c h e s t e r
County. S.C.. he was a
r e t i r e d l a b o r e r and
m e m b e r of Si nai
M issio n a ry Baptist
Church, Sanford.
H e is s u r v i v e d b y
n ume r o us ni eces and
nephews.
Sunrise Funeral Home,
Sanford. Is in charge of
arrangements.

ADRIAN L . KN IGHT
;

Master Adrian Lenox
K n ig h t. 7. o f L in coln
Street. Canaan, east of
Sanford, died Sunday at
the Central Florida Re­
g io n a l H o s p ita l. Born
August 25. of 1975. In
j Sanford, he was a life-long
. resident. He was a student

at the Midway Elementary
School and a member of
th e M o r n i n g G l o r y
M issionary Baptist
Church.
Survivors include his
mother, Veneita Knight, of
Sanford: father, Glenard
G rigle y. o f Newburgh.
N.Y.; a sistei. Veneita Rose
Knight and two brothers.
Marlon and G o d f r e y
Knight, all of Sanford: two
g r a n d m o t h e r a . Mr s .
Pauline Knight and Mrs.
Jennie Mae Grigley, both
o f Sanford: grandfather,
Isaac Knight o f Rochester,
N.Y.: num erous nices,
nephews, aunts and un-.
des.
Wilson-Elchelberger
Mortuary fa in charge of
arrangements.

ORLANDO O R A M I
Mr. Orlando Grass). 72.
o f 275 Abbott Ave., Lake
Mary, died Tuesday at his

B LO O D PRESSURE CLINIC
THURSDAY FROM 10 A .M . TO 2 PM .
AT
M ID CO DISCOUNT PH ARM ACY
Z701 ORLANDO OR. - H v* 17-01
•
Minoawaii
SANFORD

Wo Aro A Full Sunk* Pknrmocy
Currying A M l Slock Of Quolity Srmnd
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ProSvcft At CompoHthro Pricoc.

hom c._Born March 31.
1911, in Italy, he moved to
Lake Mary from Cleveland
In 1666. He was a driver
for the Retired Senior Vol­
unteer Program and a
member o f Die Church o f
Nativity.
Survivors Include his
wife. Josephine: two sons,
Eugene, o f Parma, Ohio,
a n d K e n n e t h E. o f
Cupertino, Calif.: three
g ra n d c h ild re n : two
great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchlld
Funeral Home, Altanionte
Springs, Is in charge o f
arrangements.

Ca w r e n c b o .
Mr. L a w r e n c e G .
Freebersyer. 64. o f 1679
Dunlap Drive, Deltona,
died Friday. Bom In St.
Louis, he moved to De­
ltona from Orlando In
1973. He was a retted
construction supervisor
and a member o f Our Lady
o f the Lakes C a th o lic
Church. Deltona. He was
an Army veteran o f World
War II. He was a member
o f Veterans o f Foreign
03, Orlando.
Wars Foot 2093.
A m eric a n L e g io n Pqst
205, Deltona, and Disabled
Am erican Veterans
Chapter 92. Orange City.

Survivors include his
wife, Ruth A.: four daugh­
ters. Jeannette. Deltona.
Mrs. Jeannlne Rosenbaughm of S t Cloud. Mrs.
Dianne Dunn and Mrs.
Laura Pugh, both of Or­
lando: taro sons, Richard
Randall, both of Dea stepson, Mlnard
Preant of Deltona: two
sisters, Mrs. Elrose Sul­
livan. Buffalo, Wyoming,
and Mrs. Evelyn Disher of

Commerce City. Colo.; a
brother. Leonard o f St.
Louis; 12 grandchildren.
Stephen Baldauff
Funeral Home. Deltona, is
In charge o f arrangements.

Funeral Notices
ORASII, MR. ORLANDO
— Funaral M a il for Mr. Orlando
G ra u i, 71 ol 171 Abbott Ava., Laka
Mary, wtw dltd Tuotday, will ba
calabratad at 10 a.m. Friday at tha
Church of ttw Nativity with Fathar
Clamant Kuhna officiating. Visita­
tion Thursday, 1-i and 7-f p.m.
B u r ia l In H ig h la n d M am ery
O a rd a n i. B a ld w ln - F a ir c h lld
Funaral Hama, AMamonta Spring*.
Indiana.
MAJOR, M
A S. FINK
— Funaral aarvlcat tar M r, pink
Ma|or. TO, of K i l William* A m .,
Sanford, who dted Monday, will ba
at neon Saturday at Ml. Sinai
Mltatanary Saptltt Church with tha
Rav. L.R. Myor* officiating. Burial
In Shiloh Camatery. Vlowlng J*
p.m. Frida y. Sunrlta Funaral
Hama In diana.
SM IT tiM R . JAM SS
— Funaral aarvlcat tar Mr. Jama*
Smith at 711 Bay A m .. Sanford,
who dtad Sunday, will ba al J J P
p.m . Saturday a l Zlen Ho pa
Mltatanary Baptlat Church with tha
Rav. J .L . S roo kt o fficiatin g.
Vlowing M p.m. Friday. Burial In
Shiloh Comatary. Sunrlta Funaral
Hom olndiargt.
KMIOHT, M A S T IR ADRIAN L.
— Funaral aarvicM tar Maatar
Adrian Lanas Knight, 7, at Lincoln
It., Canaan, aaal o l Sanford, wtw
Sunday, w ill ba at 1 p.m.
Saturday at Rw Morning Clary
Mltatanary Oaptltt Church. E.

as. Sanford, with tha
Rav. Androw Evana, patter, In
charpt. Calling hour* ter frlandi
will bo naan until« p.m. Friday at
tha dwpal- Rurlal Saturday at
Raitlawn Camttary.
Wiltonmm
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Sanford. Florida

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Cook Of The W eek

Her No "Bake Cookies
Ideal Summer Snack i

Woman Of
The Year

By Loo Childers
Herald Correspondent

Rita A. Simas
In Aerospace Conference III was a key fnctor In
assuring its success.
Aerospace performs ctiglnccrlng. plnmllng. anal­
ysis and rcscrach for a variety o f systems related to
military space programs. Its principal customer Is
the Air Force Space Division.

ITC Region H onors
2 Toastm istresses
Barbi Wilder o f Longwood, a member
o f the Greater Seminole Toastmistress
Club o f Altamonte Springs, was Installed
Toastmistress Clubs
(ITC) Regloiul President for the 1983-84
term at the Sunshine Region Conference
i J a \ ^ u ^ S o Rc90rt

ws

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^

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clubs In the region. Each contestant had
previously won her club and council
level speech contests.
Ms.
wlU ^ traveling to Boston in
j u|y ,0 compete at the International level
during the ITC convention where over
2,000 mcmbcrs from over 28 countries

or

.

Sue Lewis Consultants, Inc., and a
member o f the same club, won the
regional speech contest, which was
comprised o f eight speakers from the 52

Alberta Norton. "B ertie" to friends and family, lives
with her husband, Jim, and their four children, Jimmy,
I-«sle^l6 . Jean-1A 'Uki*lA3“ V-~9'j?GV the bass-and.
speck capital o f Oviedo known as Hlley's Fish Camp.
The Nortons don't have to go far to get a Ashing line In
the water because the canal that feeds into Lake Jessup
Is right in their own backyard.
Bertie Is known as "Mrs. Norton” to the students of
Jackson Heights Middle School In Oviedo where she
works In the lunchroom cooking, serving and cashifting. She says, “ The most popular lunch we serve Is
dcAnltely pizza — It's always a sellout."
When Bertie moved to this area 10 years ago from
Michigan, she had already started baking and decorat*
ing cakes. She learned this cooking art from her
self-taught mother. "M y dad and mom, Marvin "C ap "
Lynch and Dalsey, live In Chuluota now," says Bertie,
"and I still use a lot o f her recipes."
"Mom started making wedding cakes when her four
daughters got married — she has never had a lesson.”
For Bertie, too, coming up with the right color scheme
and slogans for the cakes she bakes and decorates Just
seems lo come "naturally," The largest cake Bertie has
ever attempted served 300 guests at a wedding
reception. But she insists she wouldn't want to do this
"as a business." only for close friends.
One recipe Bertie hopes to pass down to her own
daughters belongs originally to her own Mother and Is
simply called, Easter Lilies. This soft dough cookie Is
rolled Into a Illy form hot from the cookie sheet and then
Ailed with canned whipped cream and garnished with a
spring of orange peel for the "throat" of the Illy.
"Since It Is hot weather, sometimes I make no-cook
cookies for my family," says Bertie. These are made o f a
base of cream cheese and confectioner's sugar and rolled
In shredded coconut.
When Bertie Is conserving calories and catering to her
family In the summer months, she has several varieties
o f cold salads to serve. Among them, Summer Time
Salad, Chestnut 9-Layer Salad, and Celery and Carrot
Salad, the latter Is her husbnd's favorite.
Right now Bertie's whole family Is getting ready to
help son. Jimmy, celebrate his graduation from Oviedo
High School with an open house. " I planned on doing a
lot o f cooking," she says, "but a lot of my friends and
neighbors are volunteering to make covered dishes, and
I may end up only having to bake a ham." She adds.
however, that she may be forced to make Pineapple
Delight Cake, or perhaps a decorated cake for this
special day. You can be sure whatever this Inventive
cook plans, the results will be delicious.

E A 8 T U LILIES

For Information on attending or Join**
Ing the local Toastmistress organization,
call Dycann Dummer at 830-7300 or
834-3521.

3 e689
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sifted Aour
1 teaspoon baking powder
H cup granulated sugar
Beat eggs until stlfT and frothy. Add sugar, Aour,
baking powder and vanilla. Beat for 2 minutes. Drop by
teaspoons on to greased cookie sheets 3 Inches apart.
Bake in 400 degree oven until done, about 5 minutes,
Remove from pan and roll like lilies while still hot. Place
ftoured side down to cool. When completely cool All with
canned whipped cream and decorate with small strip of
orange peel.

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A lb e rta Norton, a lunchroom w orker a t Jackson
Heights
Mid
idddle
le acnooi,
School, says
says pizza
pizza is
ts the
the most
most
neign
ts m
popular school lunch,
V4 teaspoon gated onion
1 cup salad dressing
2 cups tuna Ash
Mix Ingredients in large bowl and refrigerate 1 hour to
chill. Just before serving, add a No. 2Vi can of shoe
string potato sticks,
Toss and serve.

CHBSTtfUT O -L A Y U SALAD
in large glass bowl layer these Ingredients:
1 head o f lettuce
j medium onion. Anely chopped
1 green bell pepper, chopped
i stalks celery, sliced
1 can water chestnuts, drained and sliced
10 oz. package frozen green peas, unlhawed
Mlx t o £ t h e r l pint o®MlracleWhip and 2 tablespoons
8Ugar. Spread on top o f peas. For next layer, sprinkle on
a 4 oz. can o f grated Parmesan cheese. Then layer on 1
pound o f cooked, crumbled bacon. Cover with plastic
Wrap and refrigerate. This salad Is best when made the
day before serving. Serve from top to bottom

NO-COOK COOKIES

1
1

1

I Kw

jf l

I

1 3-oz. package cream cheese
3 cups confectioner's sugar
W teaspoon vanilla
dash o f salt
1 package shredded coconut
Put cream cheese In small bowl and cream until
smooth. Add sugar slowly and continue beating. Add
vanilla and salt, mixing well. Form balls using 1
tablespoon o f mixture for each. Roll In coconut. Chill
until Arm.

PINEAPPLE DELIGHT CAKE
1. Mix half o f regular cake mix or ) box o f Jiffy yellow
or white cake mix according to box directions. Bake In
13x9-lnch pan. Cool.
2. Mix 8 oz. cream cheese with V4 cup milk.
3. Mix 1 package (large) vanilla or pineapple Instant
pudding with 114 cups milk. Combine with cream
cheese mixture, spread on cool cake.
4. Drain 1 can o f crushed pineapple and spread evenly
•n top o f cake,
5. Spread entire cake with 1 large container of Cool
Whip.
6. Sprinkle Anely chopped pecans on top o f Cool Whip.
Refrigerate until ready to serve.

CELEKY AND CAKKOT SALAD

Who's Cooking
Cask or Tfcs Wn Iu Do y n knew ssmssas
yo« woolA Ilka to m o fcatand ti this spot?
Novies cooks, as well as master cksfs, a ll
a different dimension to dining.
Ploaso contact PEOPLE editor Doris
Dietrich aboot year news and views oa

2 hard boiled eggs
1 cup grated celery
1 cup grated carrot

WE'LL BE TICKLED TO SERVICE

W omen's Club
O fficers 1

Lake Mary Woman's Club president Kathleen Beale, from left, pins orchid
corsages on newly Installed club officers to serve during the 1983-14-season,
Betty Llndmeler, first vice president; DeLores Lash, second vice president;
Lillian Megonegal*, chairman of the Public Affairs Department; Avis Ray,
chairman of the Arts Department; and Jerry Keeth, third vice president.

Public Invited To
■

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Free 'Musical Jui
The Golden East Opera Company,
under the direction o f William and
A d ele Plrigyl. will present, " A
Musical June." on Sunday. June 12,
at 4 p.m.. at the Altamonte Springs
Wcatmonte Civic Center.
The program Is sponsored by the
city o f Altamonte Springs and ad­
mission la free to the public. &gt;

Highlights

from "Madame Butterfly" sung by
William and Adelc Plrigyl. A chorus
o f 20 w ill sing a m edley from
"Oklahom a," and. "It's A Grand
Night For Singing."
Plano and vocal solos will round
out this program for the entire family
to ei\Joy. For further Information call
the Altamonte Qprlnge Recreation

X

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UP S P E C IA L
SANFORD PAIN
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Wtdwriay, Junn«, im

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
Jaycee Women Sponsor
W tlo' M itt Pageant
Girls between the ages or 5 and 8 are eligible
to compete In the fifth annual Little Miss
Firecracker Pageant sponsored by the Alta­
monte South Seminole Women Jaycccs.
The girls will be Judged on appearance, poise,
and personality. This event will be held at the
Altamonte Mall at 2 p.m. on July 4.
Applications must be submitted by June 26.
P.O. Box 695. Altamonte Springs, 32701, along
with a registration fee o f S30 per child. Make
checks payable to the Altam onte South
. Scm Inole Women Jaycees. Inc.
Only the first 30 entries are eligible. Applica­
tions may be obtained by calling Ms. John B.
Verali.

M iss Stamm Raealvat BA
Kathryn Ann Stamm, daughter o f Mrs. Ruth
Ann Stamm, and the late Capt. E.A. "T om m y"
Stamm, USN, was graduated from the Universi­
ty o f Central Florida on April 29 with a BS In
Business Administration, majoring in account­
ing and finance.
She was the Marshal o f Delta Delta Delta
Sorority and a member o f Beta Alpha Psi. Miss
Stamm is employed with Capitol Ventures
Intematlon o f Winter Park and preparing to be
licensed as a certified stockbroker.

WCU A rea Graduates
Dr. H.F. Robinson, chancellor o f Western
Carolina University. Cullowhec. N.C.. conferred
degrees on 863 students, including two from
Altamonte Springs, Sunday. May 15. at the
u n iversity's 94th spring com m encem ent
exercises.
Altamonte Springs graduates are David Hill of
124 Oak Hill, with a bachelor of science degree
in business administration in business law. he
was graduated cum laude (honors): and Sandra
Shope Russell o f 629 Pershing Drive, with a
bachelor o f science degree in business ad­
ministration in resort management.

Named To Dean*s List
Lisa J. Pickens, a freshman from Sanford, has
been named to the Dean's. List at CarsonNewman College, Jefferson City, Tcnn.. for the
spring semester o f 1983, according to Academic
Dean. Dr. Roy A. Dobyns.

Packard Earns Degree
Richard Packard of Sanford, was among the
3.455 seniors at the University of Alabama
receivin g degrees at the com m encem ent
exercises on May 14. Packard graduated with a
Bachelor of Science degree in Communica­
tion-Business Administration.

Evangel Graduate
Leanne P. Harthem was among the 325
students who were graduated from Evangel
College. Springfield. Mo., in the college's 25th
annual commencement exercises this spring.
Miss Harthem. daughter o f Dr. and Mrs. Roy
Harthem, 116 Elderberry Lane, Longwood. Is a
1977 graduate of Edgewater High School,
Orlando.

Grant For M iss Carte
Morehead State University. Morehead. Ky..
has announced that Tamara Daris Carte of Lake
Brantley High School haB been awarded a MSU
Grant for the 1983-84 academic year.
Miss Carte is Science Club president and
Health Occupations Students o f America Secre­
tary. An honor roll student, she is also a
member of Future Business Leaders o f America.
She plans to major in nursing at MSU.

WADES

GROCERY

Birthday Should Be
Quietly Celebrated
DEAR ABBTt This is a problem I've
never seen in your column. I will be 50
years old in December, and my wife
wants to give me a big party to celebrate
the occasion.
I would rather she didn't, because In
September we're giving my parents a big
party to celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary, and a little quick addition
will explain why 1 don't want a big
splash on my 50th birthday.
My wife assures me that people are
very broadminded today, and nobody
will care if It becomes known that my
mother was pregnant with me when she
walked down the aisle.
My wife then suggested that 1 "lo se" a
year and celebrate my 50th birthday
next year in order to spare my parents
embarrassment.
What do you think?
PREMATURE IN
PENN.
DEAR PREMATURE: if you're giving
your parents a big party to celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary in Sep­
tember. I suggest you celebrate your
50th birthday quietly In December.

DEAR ABBTt A reader named Sue
asked you about the expression, "Mind
your p's and q's." She wanted to know.
"What do the ‘p’ and 'q' stand for?”
You supplied three possible theories,
but neglected to mention the explana­
tion one would most expect from an old
newspaper hand like you.
An elderly printer once told me the
expression goes back to the days when
printed pages were set by hand, one
letter at a time.
The printer's wooden "cupboard"
from which he withdrew each piece of
type was called a job case. It was
compartmentalized into pigeonholes that
kept the a's together, the b's together,
etc.
The most popular Job case, with an

Dear

Abby
e x c e p t i o n o r tw o . a r r a n g e d
plegeonholes in alphabetical order.
The bay contlnlng the p’a was the
next-door neighbor of the one containing
the q's. So It was easy to get the p's in
the wrong bay. and vice versa. Such
mistakes led to typographical errors,
which were hard to detect because p's
and q's are look-alikes.
Thus apprentice printers were con­
stantly admonished, "Mind your p's and
q ’s!"

ROBERT McMORRIB,
COLUMNIST, OMAHA
WORLD-HERALD
DEAR MR. McMORRISi The theory
proffered by the elderly printer seems
more likely than any of those I submitted
In my column.

DEAR ABBTt In your reply to "A
Raging Fool." you wisely pointed out
that children who witness violence at
home grow up to believe that it Is an
acceptable way to deal with their anger
and hostility.
That caused me to recall what the late
Martin Luther King Jr. wrote In his book.
"W hy We Can't W alt" (Harper and
Brothers. 1946):
"Man was bom into barbarism when
killing his fcllowman was a normal
condition of existence. He became en­
dowed with a conscience. And he has
now reached the day when violence
toward another human being must
become as abhorrent as eating another's
flesh."

Miss Berrey Wins Citation At Auburn
Auburn U n iv e rsity P h arm acy Prof. D iane Beck, right, congratulates Rachel
B errey of Sanford who received the A lab am a P h arm aceu tical Association
Citation as the graduating senior In p harm acy at Auburn U n iv e rsity with the
highest scholastic average.

R ow e Earn s S ch o la rsh ip
Paul E. Rowe, son of Mrs. Mary
Ellen Rowe of Sanford and a senior at
Ly ma n High School, has been
awarded a Muslcalc Scholarship to
the University o f Central Florida.
Rowe also received the "Louis
Armstrong" JAZZ Trumpet award
and ffic Orchestra award for Viola. He

Is the first lead trumpet player for the
Sun Coast Drum &amp; Bugle Corps out of
Tampa and will tour this summer
through 20 stalls as well as Canada
In Drum &amp; Bugle Corps Competition
and Exhibition shows. The finales
will be In Miami this year instead of
Canada.

ARTHUR H. PRINCE

■MU

AMERICA’S FAMWOlgUG STORE

W h e n y o u 're s e rio u s a b o u t 3 5 m m

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P H O T O P R O C E S S IN G

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WHAT CAN I DO
FOR PAINFUL
SUMMERTIME
M USCLE CRAMPS?

B&amp;mm
nammma
BY RICHARDG STHHARSKY
ECKERD PHARMACIST

1HL

Muscle M n in usually results (run
the over-esertion caused by improper
"warm-up" before eaercising or from
putting prolonged stress on a muicle.
A tubful of warm water will help
heat and loosen tight, tore muscles.
Application of luummts and managing
the affected muscles will also help
increase circulation and ease the
stiffness.
You can use a beating pad or hot
water bottle to apply heat to an af­
fected area. Don't use a heating pad
or hot water bottle with a tinament or
rub. Burns or blisters can result
U the soreness or stiffness doesn't
improve in a few days, it's a good Idea
to check with your doctor or Ecfccrd
pharmacist.

Limit 1

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LIQUID M A P
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Limit 2

Compam with
Softsoap A a m !

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Evening Herald, U meed, Ft.

Tom m ie Bass W ins UDC
C ertificate Of M erit

fS i &amp; (pj?

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The Norman dcVcre Howard
Chapter o f the United Daughters of
the Confederacy met for Its final
meeting of the year at the home of
Mrs. Charles Swinney and Mrs.
W.B. W allace wi t h Mrs. M.R.
Strickland as co-hostcss. Presiding
was Mrs. Linda Zlke, president.

Fleet Reserve Branch, Unit Officers

Wedneeday, June %, i m - 3 9 ;

HeraM StatM hr Tommy Vlncont

Fleet Reserve Association B. Duke Woody B ranch Andy W olf, firs t vice president; and Charles
147 and the Ladles A u x ilia ry Installed officers at Fitzgerald,second vice president. L A F R A officers,
the Sanford branch home on Ju ne 4. B ranch : low er photo, are from left, H.C. Plcanso, secreoff cers Include, upper photo, from left, P a u l ta ry j Betty Tuepker, vice president; Louise Luter,
D ziellnskl, chaplain; Helene Edmondson, secre- president; M a rg a re t M ille r, S .E. Regional presltary-treasurer; A rt Plcanso, president; Del B lack, dent, Installing o fficer; F ra n Baytow lcz, past
S.E. Regional vice president, Installing officer; president; and M a rie Sundvall, treasurer.

Covering alms of the UDC. yearly
reports and planning were heard.
The treasurer. Mrs. Burch Cor­
nelius. reported pledges to the five
UDC objectives were met.
Mrs. Charles Hobson, vice presi­
dent. reported on UDC Day nt
Cypress Gardens May 14 where a
business meeting and luncheon.
Southcrn-stvlc. was held. She an­

n o u n c e d T o m m i e Ba s s w a s
Sem inole High winner o f UDC
C ertifica te o f Merit aw ard for
highest achievement In Southern
and American History. Winners In
six other area schools will be
announced later, she said.
The president reported seven
essays sponsored by the UDC en­
titled "M y Favorite Confederate
Hero" were submitted by students
from Florida Christian School. The
three best will be Judged by the
Division and General UDC.
Mrs. Dunn announced 15 un­
marked Confederate graves were
contained In Geneva Cemetery. Mrs.
Strickland, registrar, presented a
membership certificate to Mrs.' Rob­

ert Miller, and announced a new*’
associate member. ' Mrs. Richard;!
Dunn, to the chapter. She said anjj
application form for Mrs. Martha;;
Ashby's membership Is
being ;
processed. A Confederate 100 dollar ;
bill was given by Mrs. Strickland for j
the Seminole County Historical &lt;
Museum.
Refreshments were served to the ’
following: Mrs. Burch Cornelius.
Mrs. Joe L. Corley. Mrs. Donald ;
Dunn. Mrs. L.D. Hastings. Mrs. ;
Charles Hobson, Mrs. Harold I. ;
Jones. Mrs. John Krider. Mrs. Troy
Ray. Mrs. Strickland. Mrs. Swinney. .
Mrs. Wallace. Mrs. Glenn J. Wlm- .
blsh. Mrs. Zlke. Mrs. Richard Unn.
Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Ashby.

Ginny Hagan 'Woman Of Year'
The home o f Lois Smith was the selling for the recess
meeting o f the XI Theta Epsilon Chapter o f Beta Sigma
Phi.
The chapter has been busy performing the traditional
Beta Sigma Phi rituals. Norma Locpp. Faye Lord and
Bonnie Jones were welcomed Into the group and
received the candlelight ceremony qualifying them for
the cxcmplcar degree.
Additionally. Shelia Hgan and Michelle Johnson,
daughters o f members. Ginny Hagan and Mary
Johnson, were honored with legacy memberships which
assures their acceptance Into Beta Sigma Phi when they
become eligible.
During the annual Founders Day luncheon at the
Roscmont Country Club. It was announced that Ginny
Hagan had been chosen as the chapter’s Woman of the
Year. Other members attending the luncheon included:
Mary Johnson. Donna Frank. Linda Morris. Tina
Bojanowski, Laurel Rodgers. Faye Lord. Evelyn Scrracs
and Lois Smith.
Following the business meeting, members revealed

AMERICAS FAMILY
Tell us a b o u t your n ew Bundle a n d r e c e iv e
Eckerd’s FREE Baby Bundle plus FREE m em b er­
ship in Eckerd’s Baby Bundle Club. M em bers
r e c e iv e discount c o u p o n s for Baby's p re­
scriptions a n d m uch n e e d e d b a b y products.
Visit our P harm acy lor details.

the Identity o f their secret sisters and had a gift .
exchange.
|
Mrs. Smith served refreshments to: Bonnie Jones. J
Norma Locpp. Vikkl Hughes. Tina Bojanowski. Linda).
Dunn. Donna Frank. Ruth Gaines. Ginny Hagan. Vickie;;
Hall. Al Kurtz. Faye Lord. Linda Morris. Laurel Rodgers.!;
Tracey Wight and DlaneGazil.
{’

YM CA S e ts
Su m m er
A ctiv itie s
The Seminole YMCA is offering a wide range oil;
activities for children, ages 4 • 18. this summer.';!
Including Summer Day Camp. Kinder Kamp, Sports.!;
Computer Camps and Swim Instruction.
Summer programs will begin June 13 and run!;
through the end o f summer holidays. Day Camp.';
activities will be conducted In Winter Springs and;;
Trinity Prep and include activities such as swimming !j
lessons, canoeing, archery, sports and more.
The summer Golf Camp Is held at the Disney G olf!;
Studios with local transportation provided daily from!!
Seminole County.
!{
The Y has teamed up with Texas Instruments to !!
provide summer Computer Clinics to be held in Winter!*
Park.
;*
For Information on these and other programs, call the):
Y at 862-0444.
jj

'Diabetic On Vacation'

[!

The Lake'Monroe' Chapter of the American Diabetes;
Association will hold Its final meeting until the fall onj
Tuesday. June 14. at 7:30 p.m.. at the Central Florida)
Regional Hospital, U.S. Highway 17-92 north o f Sanford;!
near Lake Monroe.
The program will Include a discussion on "T h e ;!
Diabetic on Vacation." In addition there will be election;!
of officers for the new year. Members o f ADA arc urged;!
to be present, and anyone else interested in diabetes is;!
invited to attend.
The next meeting will be held on the second Tuesday!!
of September.
A d ju sta b le ip ra y
pattern!.

59»rw

4-way control dial
3 cookli
Folding

TRADE-IN

Whenyoutwmg
inany oM
thorf head

Publicity Procedure
The Herald welcomes organization and personal news.
The following suggestions are recommended to expedite
publication:
1. Releases should be typed (lower and upper case),
double spaced, and written narrative style (third person).
1 Do not abbreviate.
3. A contact person’s name and phone number is
necessary.
4. Keep releases simple.
5. Organization releases (the program should lead the
meeting account) must be submitted no later than two ^
days after the event.
6. Advance notices should be submitted one week prior !;
to publication date.
7. Photographic coverage requests should be made one 2
week in advance.

Selection may vary at each store.
U.S D.A. Choke

CENTER CUT
CHUCK ROAST

$ 1 6 9
A is .

U.I.D.A. Choice

CHUCK
|T U K S

* 1 ?

u .s .&amp; x c h S r

$ 1 9 9

EHCUSN

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U S D A . Choice

SWISS
STEAKS

* 1 “

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$ 0 0 9
STEW
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M M UUI
CHUCK

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Wsdnstday, Jims &gt;, 1W3

Bring On Watermelon In The Good fOle Summertime

#«
. - .
.
.
Summer Is almost here and so Is one of Its most
delightful fruit seasons. It’s 'Watermelon Time.' This
delicious and universally loved fruit Is low In calories,
high In taste and versatile in use.
Sissy Whitfield, former National Watermelon Queen
and currently the Queen Coordinator for the Florida
Watermelon Association, gives some tips and facts on
watermelons and how to select a good one. She also
/jecommcnds a couple or recipe Ideas that not only will
pdd beauty to your table but will be an Instant hit with
(your guests and family.

ripe melon Is yellowish In color, or beginning to turn
from a white or a pale green to light yellow. Sweetness Is
largely dependent on variety, not on appearance,
The flesh o f a cut watermelon should have a fresh.
firm texture and bright color. Dry. mealy flesh or flesh
that Is watery and stringy usually indicates an overripe
or old melon.
There are a number o f varieties o f watermelon, the
most popular being the Charleston gray. It Is a long
type, light green with a gray-green solid rind. The
Jubilee is also a long type, light green with a dark green
.•»
TIPS ON SELECTING
stripe. The Crimson Sweet Is a round watermelon, dark
WATERMELONS
green with light stripes. The Blackstone Is another
Good quality melons are usually firm, symmetrical In favorite, round with a solid dark green rind.
#hape. fresh, attractive In appearance and o f good color.
Many rood stores olTer cut slices o f watermelon, which
hThe color may vary from a deep solid green to a gray, gives shoppers an opportunity to see what is Inside
^depending on the variety.
before they buy.
f, Mature watermelons also have a velvety bloom — a
DID YOU KNOW7
dull rather than a shiny surface. The underside o f the
Watermelon Is a fruit?

Watermelon Is usually the cheapest fruit per pound
that you can buy?
An average watermelon Is 92% water and 8% natural
sugar (some vary up to 12% natural sugar and 88%
water)?
An average wedge o f watermelon has only 120
calories.
/
Watermelon rind may be turned Into delicious
watermelon pickles? The Charleston Gray variety Is best
for pickling the rind.
Mark Twain said: "Watermelon Is a boon apart, and
not to be mentioned with commoner things. It Is chief o f
this world's luxuries, king by the grace or God over all
the fruits o f the earth. When one has tasted It, he knows
what angels eat. It was not watermelon that Eve took.
We know It because she repented."

WATERMELON BO AT...
GREAT FOR PARTIES

.. .
. .. i
•
nf mot/
Cut watermelon lengthwise. Cut edge o f melon In
saw-tooth design with sharp knife. Scoop out center
with melon-ball scoop, leaving about an Inch o f the
watermelon fruit Intact. Fill the watermelon half with all
the prepared melon balls. Decorate with strawberries
and mint. Wrap In plastic wrap or foil. Chill.

MELON K A B O M
Skewer watermelon wedges between diced can­
taloupe. seedless grapes, cubed apples, and orange
sections. Chill, serve with poppyseed dressing.

WATERMELON W E
1 large box Mixed-fruit Jello
1 Ige. size non-dairy whipped topping
tt C. water
2 C watermelon ballsGraham cracker crust
Fold together Jello. water and non-dairy whipped
topping. Fold In watermelon balls. Place mixture Into
graham cracker crust. Chill for 2 hours.

Y O U C A N ’T

JUICY

, By Oaynor Maddox
.j Special To The Herald
i

Spareribs have a univer­
sal appeal. E verybody
isccms to love them now
rthat the outdoor cooking
,season has begun. So. let's
{.get Into the act.
, The following review Is
/by the National Live Stock
[&lt;and Meat Board, experts in
^such matters.
The B oard's experts
point out. "W hile pork ribs
usually come to mind first
when you t hi nk of
barbecued ribs, they are
by no means the only ribs
that are great on the grill.
There are three popular
types o f pork ribs to
choose from — back ribs,
spareribs and countrystyle ribs.
"Back ribs arc cut from
the blade and center sec­
tion of the pork loin. The
meat between the ribs is
called finger meat while
the layer of meat covering
the ribs comes from the
prestigious loin eye mus­
cle. Spareribs. slightly
larger than back ribs, are
cut from the pork belly or
side and contain long rib
bones with a thin covering
o f meat on the outside and
between the ribs. The
meatiest pork ribs arc
country-style,,
Beef ribs are also de­
lic io u s and a great way to
‘'add variety to cookouts.
'-according to the meat
folks. Beef back ribs con‘ ‘tain rib bones and meat
1between these bones. Beef
'-short ribs, cut from the
primal rib or short plate
’ section, are rectangular in
’'sh ape with alternating
-layers of lean and fat.
^ T h e y m a y a l s o be
purchased boneless.
They also suggest for a
f flavorful change of pace
* (and a form of economy)
’ that you consider cooking
'lamb' ribs on the grill.
'L a m b spareribs are cut
|from the breast and eon-tain rib bones and layers
1o f lean and fat. Spareribs
' are often cut Into Individ­
ual ribs and are called
lamb riblets. These are
very economical.

P R I C E S E F F E C T I V E W E D ., J U N E
8 T H R U T U E S ., J U N E 14. 1 9 8 3 .

BATHROOM

LIB B Y’S
VEGETABLES

F IR S T O F

TFIE S E A S O N

C ALIFO R N IA

PLUMS

CORN

HI C
FRU IT D RINKS

V IV A
TOWELS

Pork ribs are a special
treat when made by Ruth
Young o f New York, an
excellent cook. Noted for
Its simplicity, her recipe
calls for washing them.
, seasoning with salt, black
pepper, garlic powder and
'd o u s in g them with
* vinegar. She then leaves
them In the refrigerator
overnight. Next day she
; covers them with water,
'' brings this to a boll and
simmers the ribs for 20-25
* minutes. After this. Ruth
pours o f f the water.
* s p r e a d s th e m wi t h
barbecue sauce, covers the
pan with tin foil and bakes
them slowly for an hour at
325-350. degrees, turning
f the riba when they are half
done. If you like them
r browned, she recommends
taking the cover o(T for the
l a s t 10 m i n u t e s .

Two piher rib recipes
, are: Deviled Short Ribs:
Simmer short ribs until
tender. Remove riba and
spread on all sides with
,gralny English Pub
Mustard and dry bread
c r u m b s . P l a c e on a
shallow pan. Bake In
325-350 degree oven for
15 to 20 minutes.
Baby back spareribs are
the rage in New York
barbecue restaurants. The
tanall but meaty ribs are
cooked until tender, then
spicy to m a t o -b a s e d
barbecue sauce (some­
times U's s r a M flavored!
and baked until glased-

B -H O F

H I LORI DA

IA H C .E

WILL NOT BE I88UED AFTER JUNE 18th.
(ONLY 11 MORE DAY8)
HOWEVER, YOU C A N CONTINUE TO
REDEEM OR PURCHA8E YOUR
COOKWARE THRU JULY 9, 1999.

WATER­
MELONS

M ICH ELO B
BEER

�1

I

Evening

Ssnfsrd, FI. Wfrdassdsr, Jus j

m t-ii

Ahead
Make-ahead foods are especially Important during
summer when everyone wants as much free time as
possible to enjoy the weather.
A ham and pineapple salad and an apple Charlotte for
dessert fit Into this category. Both can be made ahead,
say the day before a picnic or patio outing.

RAM AND PINEAPPLE SAL AD

1 cup elbow
macaroni
(uncooked)
1 can (20 ounces)
chunked or crushed
pineapple In
unsweetened Juice
Vi cup reserved
pineapple juice
2 tablespoons

mayonnaise
1 tablespoon
lemon Juice
2 teaspoons salad
oil
W teaspoon
ground cloves
1 pound ham. cut
Into VHnch
cubes
Vi cup diced
cucumber

macaroni, pineapple, ham and cucumber: •toss with
dressing. Cover and refrigerate at least 3 hours. Serve on
lettuce leaves, if desired.

ground cloves
Vi teaspoon
ground nutmeg
Vi cup butter or
margarine
1 cup bread crumbs

SPICED APPLE CHARLOTTE
4 medium-sized
tart apples,
cored, peeled and
sliced (4 cups)
/ cup sugar
Vi cup orange
Juice
W cup medium dry
sherry or water
lA cup raisins
Vi teaspoon
grated orange rind
V* teaspoon

Cook macaroni according to package directions; drain
and rinse. Drain pineapple, reserving V4 cup juice. To
prepare dressing, combine reserved pineapple Juice,
mayonnaise, lemon Juice, oil and cloves. Combine

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In large bowl, combine
apples with sugar, orange juice, sherry, raisins, orange
rind, cloves and nutmeg: set aside. Combine melted
butter and bread crumbs. Butter a 1-quart casserole.
Spread V* o f the bread crumb mixture evenly on the
bottom o f the casserole. Top with / o f the apple mixture
and W of the bread crumb mixture. Repeat two more
times. Bake for 30 minutes. Remove cover; bake until
apples are tender and top Is golden, about 30 minutes
longer. Serve warm topped with Ice cream or whipped
cream. If desired

Cam per's
Spread

SO WHY PAY MORE?

Hunger Is a companion
on a back-packing trip or
short hike. Things to can y
fo r a q u i c k m e a l o r
p ick-m e-up Include
granola, chocolate, cheese
o r c a n n e d m e a t s or
sardines.
Carry a light container
o f homemade deviled ham
spread in a small cooler
container, pita bread and
sardines to add when you
reach your picnic site. A
container o f milk or small
cartons o f juice also slip
Into a backpack.

3 T O 5 LB A V G

CAMPER’S SARDINE
BREADSPREAD

GROUND

SLICED
BACON

l 1 AN M l A I V

CO UNTRY

STYLE

SPARE RIBS

CALIFORNIA

ROASTS

3 LB AVQ. PKG

3 LB AVG. PKG

AU.SLAVOIW

n

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IM

Brtytn Yogurt s S / ’ f *

A R M

£. H A M M E R

FR EEZER

Q U EEN

SUPPERS

L A U N I )H V

D E TERG EN T

L IP S T IC K
&amp; N A IL COLOR

CO UNTRY

1 can (2 M
ounces) deviled
ham
2 hard cooked
eggs, chopped
1 green onion,
finely chopped
3 stuffed olives,
finely chopped
1 tablespoon
chopped parsley
Vi teaspoon
prepared
horseradish
Salt and pepper
1 can (3 %
ounces) Norway
sardines
2 pocket bread
rounds, cut In
half
Sandwich
garnishes; sliced
tomatoes, red
onions, cucumbers,
green peppers,
black olives
Put deviled ham In mix­
ing bowl; mix In next five
IngredJents. Season to
taste with salt and pepper.
Store In portable contain­
er. In refrigera to r. A t
camping site, open and
drain sardines. Blend with
ham mixture. Fill pocket
bread halves with mixture
and add desired garnishes.
This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 1 Vi cups,
enough for 4 sandwiches.
To make spread In food
processor; Put green on­
ions (cut up). 3 parsley
sprigs and halved olives In
processor bowl. Process
until finely chopped. Add
eggs, quartered, ham and

FR IED

CHICKEN

31*1**
6179*

Have a drink o f fruit!
Fruit nectars are tasty and
nutritious “ atralght-up" —
right from the can. But If
you’re a calorie-counter,
you can start with apricot,
peach or pear nectar and
“ lighten It up” to make a
f l a v or f ul s u m m e r t i m e
drink, full o f vitamins A
and C, that the whole
family will enjoy. Uke this
one:

NECTAR VARIETY

lime Juice

35

O FF

�* *•

BLON DIE

4 B -E y e n ln g Herald, Sanford, FI.

WednawJay, June 1 ,1443

by Chic Young

I 'L L Q S T C * G W O O O '
T O P lX T H E
HOOP 0 V
® &gt; »i/
U S IN G T H IS
BOOK ON
H Y P N O S IS

a

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Be e t l e b a i l e y

by Mort Walker

Flow I WANT ytoJ
ALLTD WATCH AAE
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Answer to Previous Punle
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52 Eggs
disk
53 Unroll
18 Tending to
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54 Italian family
arouie
10 Phrase of un­ 35 Oxygenator
55 Zero
feelings
derstanding (2 37 Demented
SB Remainder
20 Flotilla
wds.)
38 Sultry
21 Article
11 Isn't (si.)
22 Spanish gold
DOWN
40 Brazilian port
IB Christian
23 Bums
41 Own
symbol
1 Actress
26 Mighty
20 College group 42 Small bills
Bsncroft
catsract
43 Fixed amount
22 Lubricates
2 Thailand
30 Immediately
44 Birthmarks
23 Dangle
31 Electrical unit 3 Division
24 Preposition
46 Printer's
preposition
32 Our (Ff,|
25 Phmicist
commodity
4 Energy unit
33 Indefinite in
26 Ibean
(comp, wd.)
order
46 Source of
character
5 Unsophisti­
34 Assumed
metals
27 Poker kitty
cated
manner
47 Lease
28 Cross in a
6 Hub of a
35 At the peak
payment
church
36 Big monkey
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2B Snakes
7 Route
38 Watches out
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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

What The Day Will Bring...

fe E K a M E E K

by Howio Schneider

l/UMJTIDGOTOMVRACE
AU D W ARH 50M ETV?

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Be Autile vuishy-uuashv
NEVER! NO! NO! MO! to
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P r is c il l a ' s p o p

by Ed Sullivan
TM G O N G TO EXERG5E
&gt; WITH T H E A E R O 0 IC
PROGRAM ON TV.
MOU 5H0ULP, T O O -

|UG S BUNNY

SOM'PE AL\MA*t*9
TALKING AB O U T
CLEANING UP THE
E N VIR O N M E N T

&lt; m d u r e P a r t in g

^

TO D E V E LO P A
H A Z A R D O U S W V JS T '

by S toffel ft H eim dahl

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YOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNE 9 . 1BS3
Partnerships hold pro­
mise for yon Ihls coming
year, but they must foe
handled with considerable
skill. If mismanaged, those
who could offer you oppor­
tunity might Instead place
obstacles in your path.
GEMINI (May 21-Jline
20) Agreements must be
negollaled with great care
today In order to avoid
future misunderstandings,
lie sure everyone observe*
the ground rules. Gemini
predictions for the year
ahead are now ready.
Romance, career, luck,
earnings, travel and much
more are discussed. Send
81 lo Astro-Graph. Box
4H0. Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
stale your zodiac sign.
Send nn additional 82 for
the NEW Astro-Graph
Matchmaker wheel and
lmoklct.

CANCER {June 21-July
22) The tiuth will even­
tually surface If you pre­
tend to lake rare of some­
thing for another today,
yet fall lo follow through.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Make a concerted effort
not to appear ffeklc or
selective In your social
encounters today. A
sensitive friend could end
up with hurt feelings.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl.
22) Restlessness could
lead lo unsound reasoning
today and enuse you lo
make changes In situa­
tions which arc presently
running to your advan­
tage.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Your credibility will

suffer If you tell tall tales
today. Play down your
achievements rather than
embellish them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) It will prove unwise ut
tills time lo count your
chickens before they arc
hatched. Don't bank loo
heavily on things which
are not yet a reality.
, SAGI TTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dee. 21) Normally you
arc not the type who
sucrumbs to flattery, but
today you might lei your
guard down and be ma­
nipulated by another.
C A P R I C O R N ( Dec.
22-Jan. 19) You arc not
likely to accomplish all
your aims today If you
permit others to burden
yon with matters they
should he attending to
them selves.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Fob. 19) Don't be sur­
prised if a person will)
whom y o u 'v e recently
become Involved suddenly
makes u quick exit. His
sin rerity lacks slayi ng
power.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Unless the methods
you use to attain your
objectives arc well thought
out. your goals could elude
your today.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) Usually you feel more
comfortable dealing with
situations os they arise,
but today If you don't plan
things In advance events
could overwhelm you.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Avoid Involvements
with friends today who are
c a r e l e s s or c x t r a g a n l
where finances arc con­
cerned.

Mothers-To-Be Told
To Avoid Aspirin
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1am
a 28-ycar-old woman and
am at t empt i ng to get
prcgnniil. I’m very healthy
and do not smoke or drink,
btil 1 have tension and
mi gr ai ne headaches.
Doctors tell me there Is
nothing wrong with me.
that 1am Just a worrier.
I t ake a s p i r i n o c ­
casionally for headaches,
so I ran keep going and
don't have to lie down half
the day. How does aspirin
affecl the unborn child? I
won’t take any If there is
any evidence o f aspirin
musing birth defects. But
it sure would make my life
n lot more comfortable if 1
could take an occasional
aspirin. Do you have any­
thing on aspirin and whut
can you advise me?
DEAR READER Aspirin Is ncclylsalleyllc
acid and salycilatcs do
pass through the placenta
and Into the developing
baby's body. When you
tnkc aspirin, your baby
lakes aspirin. Some of the
e n z y m e s y s t e ms that
metabolize various sub­
stances arc not fully de­
veloped In the baby and
that is why many sub­
stances. such as alcohol,
have a greater effect on the
baby than the mother.
T h e r e Is much lo be
learned here.
There are no reports of
aspirin causing birth de­
fects. But there Is a recent
report o f a study o f aspirin
In pregnant women by
doctors from Upstate Med­
ical Center In Syracuse.
N.Y. They found that tak­
ing aspirin within five
days before delivery In­
creased bleeding in the
m o t h e r and caused
various types o f bleeding
problems, most o f which
w e re

m in o r .

In

th e

newborns. The doctors
concluded that women
should not take aspirin
during pregnancy. Doctors
can read the com plete
article In thr New England
Journal of Medicine, vol­
ume 307, page 909. 1982.
Many preparations other
t han a s p i r i n c o n t a i n
salycilatcs. You can iden­
tify many of these com­
monly used pfiln 'relievers
from the list in The Health

Letter 8-8. Aspirin and
Related Medicines, which I
am sending you. Olliers
who want this Issue can
send 75 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for It to me, In
enre of this newspaper.
l».0. Box 1551. Radio City
Stnllon. New York. NY
10019.
On the good side if your
headaches are migraines,
many women slop having
migraine headaches after
the third month o f pre­
gnancy and don't have
any until nftcr the pregnuncy. So you may not
need aspirin anyway.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can
you tell me If my husband
Is a homosexual or not?
He Is going nut with a
young, unmarried fellow
friend und this fellow told
me he loves my husband.
What I want to know Is
can a doctor tell if hr Is. or
can I find mil about il?
1 have a very nice family
doctor but I don't want to
tell him or ask him about
It until I know If a doctor
can or cannot liiul out.
DEAR READER - Don't
believe those stereotypes
you have heard about.
Ho mo s e x ua l s , me n or
women, look and present
themselves Just like any­
one else. And there is no
magic lesl that tells you
what a person's sexual
preference Is. The only
way you know Is from
what the person tells you
or. mor e l i nporl nntl y.
what the person docs. Be­
ing single, m arried or
h a v i n g had c h i l d r e n
doesn't always answer the
question. I suggest you
talk to your husband and
clcur the air. People mean
different things by the
word love. Your hunbuild
and the young man may
Just enjoy common Inter­
ests. Don’t assume some­
thing that may not hr.
true.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
♦ •71
♦ K lM T H t
♦ 7

WEST
4111

EAST
♦ - --

♦

VJt

a q ii

4 QIt1711
4 J31
♦•••
♦QJIHIM!
SOUTH
♦ AK0J1IH
▼•• •
♦ AK

♦ A K11

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer: South

W«t

Nertfc Em

Paa
Paa

2NT
Paa

Paxa
Paa

14
14

Opening lead : #2

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
At table one o f a team
match South looked over
d u m m y and ask ed .
"Partner, don't you think
you could have bid seven
form e?"
North replied, "I thought
about It. but my grandfa­
ther taught me not to bid
seven when there is any
doubt In my mind, and my
hand made me a doubter.
Now South won the
trump lead In Ills own

hand nnd promptly led his
ace o f clubs. If II had held,
he would have made Ills
unbid grand slam, but
West ruffed and led a
second trump to leave
South with Just one trump
In dummy to ruff two
losing rluhs.
"W ell." said South. "I
talk too much. Let's hope
the other Smith makes the
same play Torn lie board."
At the other table the
bidding started the same
way. hut East was a man
w h o b e l i e v e d in p r e ­
empting. He bid five clubs
o v e r No r t h ' s t wo notrump. South thought of
doubling but finally settled
on what looked like a sure
vulnerable slam.
West opened a trump as
had the other West, but
now South had been given
a clear warning o f unusual
distribution. Undoubtedly.
East held eight clubs, so
the ace or clubs was not
going to live. Therefore, at
trick two South led a low
club. West did ruff and
lead a second trump, but
.South had only one club
loser lo ruff with dummy's
one trump, and the slam
was home.
by J im D a vis

�1

TO N IGH T'S T V
Wjrsrt1H»
OYNMtV Marti

g ^ a im w o m o u r

Seminole County Jail Chaplain Charles Pltroff (left) chats with new Good
News Mission President Harry Greene.

International Jail M inistry
Head Visits Local Pastors
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff W riter
“ Rehabilitation through rejuvena­
tion."
r
That's the message Jail minister Harry
Greene has been bringing to men and
women behind bars for years. Greene,
new president of the Good News Mission
international Jail ministry, brought the
same message to Seminole County
Thursday to a group of area ministers
and members o f the local Good News'
President's Council.
The setting was. what else?, the
Seminole County Jail.
Greene's message is one born of
experience. When he first met Good
News Mission founder Or. W.L. Simmer
19 years ago. Greene was an Inmate at
the Fairfax County (Va.J Jail where he
was doing time for passing bad checks.
Little did he know that one day he would
head the organization which trains and
places Jail chaplains from Long Island to
Hawaii, from Canada to Florida as well
ns In countries as far away as Thailand
and India.
Simmer "led me to the Lord and I have
been involved with the mission In one
way or another ever since." Greene said.
" I f It wasn't for a Jail chaplain I wouldn't
be here today before a group of pastors
telling them how wonderful It is to be
saved."
In 1972. Greene received a pardon
from the governor of Virginia and In
1982 was appointed by Gov. Charles
Robb to the State Board of Corrections,
the first ex-offender to receive such an
appointment
Greene was elected March 14 by the
Board o f Trustees o f Good News Mission,
with headquarters In Arlington. Va., to
be the new president. He resigned his
position as general manager with North

American Van Lines and as o f Juke 1
took over the day-to-day operations of
this world-wide ministry.
Simmer will remain a part of the work
he founded 22 years ago and will stay on
the Board o f Trustees. He will be
working In a ministry In Hawaii now that
he has been relieved o f much of the
burden of overseeing 80 chaplains In 140
Institutions:
“ I am looking forward to continuing
the work Dr. Simmer started and seeing
It grow in orderly fashion." Greene said.
The visit by Simmer and Greene was
arranged by Seminole Jail chaplain the
Rev. Charles "C huck" B. PltrofT who
depends on contributions from area
churches, groups and individuals to
support his Jail ministry.
PltrofT arranged with SherlfT John Polk
and Jail Administrator Jim Shoultz to
have the President's Council and local
pastors tour the Jail and eat lunch there
to familiarize them with the work he is
doing.
j

m MON. TUB. TIM
iT » S l AT TM BIJOU

KIT *N’ CARLYLE™

In addition to conducting worship
services and Bible classes, the chaplain
does one-on-one counseling, crisis
counseling, and offers Bible corre­
spondence courses, which are graded by
volunteers. A follow-up program for
prisoners, who have had their lives
changed through a spiritual experience
while Incarcerated, Is also helping them
get established in churches and the
community once they have been re­
leased. PltrofTsaid.
Anyone wishing to learn more about
the Seminole Jail ministry add how they
may become Involved, may attend the
Good News Mission covered-dish lun­
cheon at the Sanford Alliance Church.
1401 Park Ave.. from noon to 2 p.m..
Thursday. June 16.

OTHBCATUNB

1130

U.S. Retaliates A g a in st
Nicaragua; O usts Diplom ats
o f three Americans: Linda
The State Department
Pfelfel, counselor for pollt- said:

..,y

.„d

c o „.u ,.

.„d

v

s

States no later than June
Nicaragua, strains the al- c r u l t l n g and t r a i n i n g 8. 1983, and the consular
offices tn those cities are io
ready shaky relations be- Nicaraguan citizens and
terminate their functions
tween the two nations.
“ p r o vi d i n g them with
Charging that its six means for the execution" the same day. All other
consulates were used for o f Nicaraguan officials In- N i c a r a g u a n personnel
assigned ta those installa­
spyi ng, the State De- e l u d i n g t h e f o r e i g n
tions, with their depen­
p a r t m e n t c l o s e d t h e minister.MiguelD'Eacoto.
dents.
are to leave the
Nicaraguan offices In New
The U.S. reaction left the
United
States
no later than
York. Miami. New Orleans. Nicaraguan embassy staff
Los Angeles, Houston and a n d c o n s u l a t e I n Friday. June 10.1983."
San Francisco. The ad- Washington Intact, but it
Manuel Cordero, secministration ordered the struck directly at the con- ond-ranklng diplomat In
six heads o f the consulates sulates around the country the United States, teller •
to svsa
leave
4 j*.sis*
p.m. wms
EDT which
do MIC
the bulk
o f the
ated Nicaragua'sO lliaigv
charge
lw
ww. by -w
WIIU.II UU
UU1A Ul
U1C BlCU
today, but gave their staff paper work in the approx- that the three expelled
and family members until imately 920 million in Americans were Involved
Friday to get out o f the Nicaraguan imports Into In an assassination plot
country. About 30 family the United States annu- a g a i n s t his c o u n t r y ' s
members are said to be ally,
foreign minister.
involved.
“ An Important addltlonal consideration was ^
the Nicaraguan govern- V a i
men! use of its consulates _ _
for Intel li gence o pera­
tio n s ," a department
spokesman said, declining
Nil
details.
Lak«
U.S. officials said conW
_
sular ties between the two Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive
countries were not being
West Volusia Stamp Club. 2 p.m.. Jane Murray I
severed and would be car- United Congregational Church. West University Ave
r l e d on t h r o u g h t h e OrangeClty.
______
_____
Nicaraguan Embassy in
THURSDAY. JUH1B
Washington. But relations
Maitland-South Seminole Chamber o f Commi
are obviously strained.
noon. Maitland Civic Center. Dr. Pat Manning will s|
Washington accuses the on her travels In China, where she studied
M arxist-dom inated gov- educational system.
e m m e n t of sending
Lake Mary Rotary. 8 am.. Lake Mary High School,
weapons and supplies to
Greater Seminole Toastmistreas Club. 7:30 f
guerrillas in El Salvador Oreater Seminole Chamber o f Commerce. 291
and fo m e n tln
onduras
American Association oi Kerned persons inaptei
movements in
and Guatemala
1977 covered dish luncheon, noon. Sanford Clvi&lt;
Nicaragua accuses the Center. Speaker. Hugh Pain.
United States o f assisting
Overeaters Anonymous, open. 7.30 p.m. CommunJt)
rebels based in Hondurai United Methodist Church. U.S. Hi ghway It-9 2
who have launched at- • Ca“ cl,be,7y : .
„
. _
_ ___
. i .
tacks Inside Nicaraguan
Sanford Atanon. 8 p . m . ^ t Tlie Crossroads. U k t
territory.
Minnie R o a d o f r H l g ^ y l7 W ; Smiforf.
The Houtc forcltfn Af*
F B I W T i J O W 10
falls C ^ i a T r S n U y
17-92 Group A A 8 p . m . . M «M a h Lutfwran Church
voted 20-14 to halt covert U.S. Highway 17-92. south o f Dog Track Road
U.S. support for
Casselberry,
Nicaraguan rebels. But
Wekfva A A (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Weklva Presbytfrtar
Reagan administration of- Church. State Road 434 at Weklva Road, closed,
finals say the action has a
Rolling H ills Moravian Church AA. 8 p.m.. State Row!

j a L M y * ° berore
The Nlrarguarn Monday

a n ™ u n «3 t h T ^ p u h S I

tsoi w.
Tsnglcwood AA, 8 p.m.. St. Richard s Episcopal

Church. Lake Howell Road.

TIP TOP...HOME OF QUALITY FOODS &amp; MEAT

*

11 ▲A M I J i f f M i i M
M Aw CHv r P w P
'• * ” * * «
■
pQOPf

FAMILY DAY
SPECIAL
A U DAT WIDNISDAV

�IB -E w n lm Mara Mi Santard, FI,

Wodnuday, Juno I, l**3

Sanford Utility Director
To Report For Work July
After a two-month search. Sanford has
’ found Itself a new utility director.
City Manager W.E. "P e te " Knowles
said that Paul Robert Moore, currently
public works director o f South Daytona,
was appointed Sanford's new utility
director today and will report to work
July 5.
Salary of the position has been set at
827.878 annually.
A graduate engineer, Moore holds a
bachelor's degree from the University of
Central Florida and a masters' degree In
environmental engineering.
Moore will be In the city June 16 for a
conference before reporting for duty on

5

July 5.
The city's engineer and utility director
for 11 years prior to his resignation April
1 was Mack LaZcnby. He left the city’s
employ to become assistant director of
aviation at the Sanford Airport.
Asslslant City Manager Sieve Harriett
has been serving as acting director since
LaZenby's resignation. Moore will hold
the title o f utility director only.
A total of 39 persons applied for the Job
after LaZcnby left the city's employ.
Moore, In his mld-20s, was with the
city of South Daytona for nearly two
years. Previously lie was employed by
the East Central Florida Regional Plan­
ning Council.

Social Security D isability
Liberalization 'Not Enough'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Reagan
administration hopes to win points for
fairness by loosening eligibility rules for
the "bureaucratic, insensitive" Social
Security disability program, but critics
say the changes do not go far enough.
Health and Human Services Secretary
Margaret Heckler conceded the ad­
ministration's crackdown on the pro­
gram has "produced some sad results"
as she announced the changes at a news
conference Tuesday,
"It was an awkward, bureaucratic.
Insensitive, paper-oriented process," she
said. "W e would like to see Justice done
for all In a compassionate, humane
w ay."
Mrs. Heckler said the liberalized rules
will cost taxpayers one-third to one-half
the program's projected savings for
1984-86, or up to 8300 million.
Critics praised the changes, but said
more could be done.
"T h e action taken Is very modest and
disappointing," said Sen. Carl Levin,
D-MIch. “ It does not change the pro­
cess."
Levin and Sen. William Cohen, RMaine, scheduled a hearing today to
investigate charges the administration Is
pressuring administrative law Judges,

legal Notice"
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN BY
T H E C IT Y OF LO N G W O O D ,
FLORIDA, that ite City Commlutan
will hold a public tearing to consider
enactment of Ordinance IN I, en­
titled; AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF LONGWOOD. FLORIDA,
AMENDING ORDINANCE NO. 4H
AND A LL ITS AMENDMENTS OF
SAID CITY. SAID ORDINANCE
BEING THE CO M PR EH EN SIVE
ZONING ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF LONGWOOD, FLORIDA,
SAID AM EN D M EN T CHANGING
THE ZONING OF CERTAIN T E R ­
RITORY FRO M R-l (R ESID EN­
T IAL SIN G LE F A M ILY ) TO H
(HISTORICAL DISTRICT); P R O
VIDING AN E FFEC T IV E DATE;
R E P E A L IN G O RD IN AN CES IN
CONFLICT HEREWITH.
Legel: LOTS l i t l i t 114 and 111
(L e u W 10 tael) Long wood, PB l-PG
II.
6*lng more generally d n crlte d at
1IS Jeuup Avenue.
Said Ordinance wet placed an firtl
reading an May 33. H U and tte City
Commlulan Drill consider tame lor
llnel pottage and adoption otter tte
public tearing orbleft will be held In
tte City Hall, Its W. Warren Avonue.
Longwood, Florida, on Monday, tte
llth day of June, A.D., lit) , at 7:J»
P.M or at toon thereafter at pottl
Me. At Ite meeting interested pert let
may appear and bo heard with
respect to tte propoiod Ordinance.
Thlt hearing may be continued tram
time to time until (Inal action It
taken by tte City Cemmlitien.
A copy ot the propoaad Ordinance
la peeled at tte City Hall. Longweed.
Florida, and caplet are on fit* with
tte Clerk ot tte City and tame may
bo Impeded by the pttolk.
A taped recerd ot thti mooting It
made by the City lor Itt convenience.
Thlt rotate may not cent! Ilute an

Legal Notice

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged In business al IMS Bonania
Ct„ Winter Park, FL 177*7, Seminole
County, Florida under tte fktlllou*
name ot SUN ’N FUN, end that I
Intend to register said name with tte
Clerk ot tte Circuit Court. Seminole
County, Florida In accordance with
tte previsions ot tte Fictitious Nam*
Statutes, To-WIt: Section MJ.Of
Florid* Statute* l»S7.
/s/CharlesJ. Coyne
Publish May II. IS and Juna I, I.
1*U.
DEH-114

CITY OF LA K E MARY.
FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HCARINO
TO WHOM ITM AY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS H ER EBY GIVEN by
tte Planning end Zoning Board of the
City ot Lake Mery, Florldo, Kiel sold
Board will hold a Publk Hoering at
•;00 P.M., on June » .1 fU . to:
Consider a Petition to close,
vacate, abandon, discontinue, dls
claim, and to renounce any right of
tte City of Lake Mary, a political
subdivision, and tte public In end to
tte following described rlghts-el
way.towll:
That portion ot the old abandoned
Sanford Avonue lying north ol end
contiguous to tte following property
A ll ot the SW U ot tte SW to of
Section I. Township 30 South. Range
30 East, lying South ot tte rood.
Tte Publk Hearing will be held at
tte City Hall. ISO North Country Club
Rood. Lake Mary. Florida, on the
3*th day of June. IfU. af 1:00 P M .
or as soon Ite re#tier os possible, af
which lime Interested parties tor and
against the request will be heard
Sold tearing may be continued tram
time to time until tte Planning and
Zoning Beard makes a recommend*
lion to tte City Commlulan In favor
of or against the request. A workshop
session will be held on June 14, IfU.
e tl:0 0 P M .
This notice shall te posted In three
public places within tte City of Lake
Mery, at tte City Hell end published
In tte Evening Herald, a newspaper
ol general circulation In Ite City of
Lake Mery, In toe weekly Issues
Krlor to the dele el the P iA llc
taring.
A taped record ot thlt meeting It
made by tte City tor Its convenience.
This record may not constitute an
adequate record lor purpose ot
appeal from a decision made a ‘ “
respect to tte loregoing metier. Any
person wishing to ensure that an
adequate record of tte proceedings It
maintained lor eppellite purposes It
advised to make Ite necessary *r
rangements at hit or her own
expanta.
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
t Connie M*|or
City Clerk
OATED: Ju n e l.H U
Publish June M S . IfU
OEI-37

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IH AHO
FO R S E M IH O LE C O U N TY ,
FLORIDA
CASENO.U-1W -CA
IN RE: Tte Marriage of
E LA Y N E CURRY.
Petitioner/Wit*,
and
L E E W. CURRY
Respondent/Hutband
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO:
Lee Curry
P.O. Bo* M*
Old Osceola Road
Geneva. FL
You are hereby notified that a
Petition for Dissolution ot marrlag*
has boon (lied against you In tte
Court listed above and you aro
required to serve a copy ot your
answer or pleading to tte Petition on
tte Petitioner's attorney, THOMAS
C. G REENE. P.O. Bo* 4*5, 111 W. 1st
SI., Ste. 400, Sanford. Florida 13771,
and tile tte original answer or
pleading In tte oltlce ot tte Clerk ot
the above Circuit Court, Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanford, Florida
31771. on or before tte Mth day at
June. 1*13. It you toll to do so.
Judgment by default will be taken
against you lor tte relief demanded
In tte Petition.
DONE AND ORDERED this 13rd
day ot May. 11*3.
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.
Clofh,
ot tte Clrcull Court
By: Currie E. Buettner
Deputy Clerk
Publish May U B June 1,1. IS. 1*13
DEH 144

who rule on appeals o f Social Security
benefit cut-offs, to reject those claims.
The changes announced Tuesday In­
clude;
“ Permanent exemption from eligibili­
ty reviews for 200,000 handicapped
people with certain specific conditions,
bringing the total in that category to
more than 1 million.
—Temporary exemption for 135.000
severely mentally 111 people — two-thirds,
of the mentally III on the rolls — pending
a study. Depending on the study's
results, the government may try to
reinstate some with mental problems
dropped In the past.
—Picking cases to review randomly,
rather than going for those likely to be
INVITATION TO BIO
dropped. Officials say this will ease
The Housing Authority o&lt; the City
backlogs.
ot San lord, Florida will rocelvo Bids
lor Exterior Painting at Edward
—Asking Congress to make permanent Higgins Terraco. Sanford, Florida.
a law set to expire next June that Fla. 14-3. until 1:00 P.M. on tte 14th
continues benefits during appeal for day ot Juno. IfU al tte Authority's
administration ollicot Castle Brewer
those dropped from the rolls.
Court. W. 10th Streot, Sanlord,
Florida.
—Asking Congress to allow Social
Proposad form* ot Contract Ooe
Security officials to Include In quality
um ents, In clu d in g P la n s and
control reviews cases dropped from the Specifications, are on I lk at tte
Office ot tte Housing Authority ot tte
rolls, as well as those kept on.
C ity o l Sanford, F lo rid a . A d ­
The program pays benefits to 3.9
million workers and dependents.

M c C o llu m A i d e In S a n fo r d
J u n e 15 T o R e n d e r H e lp
A representative from the Winter Park
district ofllce o f U.S. Rep. Bill McCollum.
R-Altamonte Springs, will be In Sanford
June 15 to meet with persons who need
congressional assistance or have questibns about matters relating to the
federal government.
Those persons may meet with Mc­
Collum's staff member anytime between
9:30 and 11 a.m. In the Seminole County

Legal Notice

Commission chambers at the Seminole
County courthouse In Sanford.
. McCollum's staff members periodically
visit locations throughout the threecounty (all o f Seminole and parts of
Orange and Lake counties) district so
that citizens do not have to travel outside
t h e i r o w n c o m m u n i t i e s to seek
assistance.

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF M EETING
A public tearing will be held by tte
SCIOA to consider and act on
opproval tor purpose* ot Section
103(h) ot tte Intomal Rovenuo Code
ot 1*11. as emended, ot bend Issues
for tte project listed below;
I. I7SO.OOQ In Industrial develop
moot revenue bond* lor Centra Cere
Medical Centers project to construct
an emergency medical clinic el Stale
Road 434 end U.S. 17 *1 In Longwood
Florida.
T te above bond Issue w ill be
considered by tte Authority end, II
preliminarily approved, such ap
provel will be Immediately followed
by a public tearing wherein mem
bert ot tte public will be given a
reasonable opportunity to express
their views on the Issuance ot bond*
and Ite location and nature ot tte
proposed project*. Tte public meet
ing preceding Ite publk tearing will
be held on Wednesday, June 37, IIS],
and will tegln at B:30 A M . In tte
Council Chamber* ot tte Altamonte
Springs City Hall and tte public
tearing. II any, will immediately
follow el tte same location.
It a person decides to appeal any
decision made by tte Seminole
County Industrial Development
Authority with respect to any matter
considered el this meeting or hoar
I. he will need a record ot Ih*
proceeding!, and. for such purpose,
he may need to Insure that e
verbatim record ot tte proceedings
Is made, which record Include! tte
testimony and evidence upon which
the appeal I* to bo based.
Roy L. Harris. Jr.. Secretary
Seminole County Industrial
Development Authority
Publish June!. IW)
DEI-11

legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, IH AHO
FO R S E M IH O L E C O U H TY ,
FLORIDA
CASENO .tM to-CA-SIP
CAMERON BROWN COMPANY.
Plaintiff
vs.
NORMAN T. KRIOEL. M ARILYN
R. K R IO E L . and the UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA.
Defendants
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE
NOTICE Is hereby given that tte
undersigned, Arthur H. Beckwith,
Jr.. Clerk ot tte Circuit Court of
Seminole County. Florida, will on tte
1st day ot July, IIU, between II a.m.
and 1 p.m. at tte West front door of
tte Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford, Florida, otter salt and tall
at public outcry to Ite highest and
best bidder tor cash, tte followingd e scrib e d p ro p e rly t llu t le In
Seminole County. Florida:
Let 1, Block J. FOXMOOR, UNIT
1, according to the plat thereof a*
recorded In Piet Book If, Paget 71
and 71 Public Records of Seminole
County. Florldo.
pursuant to Ite Final Judgment
entered in a cate pending In said
Court. Ite style ot which Is Indicated

(SEAL)
ArhturM. Beckwith Jr.
CLERK
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
■y: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish June M L l«H
DEI-41

Commlulan with retpact to the
toragelng matter. Any peraan
wishing to ensure that on adnata
record ot the proceedings It main
tainod for appellato purpoatt It
advltad to make tte nacattary arrangamentt at hit or ter own

ministration Building. Costk Brower
Court, Sanlord, Florida and Ite
Otlica ot tte Architects', Gutmaim
Associate* Architects Planners Inc..
101 Wymore Road. Suit* II, Alta­
monte Springs. Florida.
C o p ie s o t the D o c u m e n ts ,
Drawings and Specifications may te
obtained by depositing: N/A with tte
Architect lor each set ol Document!
so obtained. Such deposit will be
refunded to each person who return*
tte Plans, Specification*, and otter
Documents In good condition within
10days after Bid Opening.
A Certified Check or Bank Draft,
payable to tte Housing Authority ol
tte City ot Sanlord. Florida, U.S.
Government Bonds, or a satisfactory
Bid Bond executed by tte Bidder*
and acceptable Sureties In an
amount equal to S% ol Ite Bid shall
be submitted with each Bid.
Tte successful Bidder w ill te
required to furnish and pay for
S a tisfa cto ry Perform ance and
Payment Bond or Bonds.
A ll Bidder* are hereby notified
that they mutt affirmatively ensure
that In any Contract entered Into
Pursuant to thlt Advertisement, M i­
nority Business Enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to submit
Bids at Sub-Contractors, or at sup­
pliers ot materials, or services, and
will not te discriminated against on
tte grounds ol roc*, color, religion,
sex or national origin In consid­
eration tor award.
In accordance with Executive
Order 1Idas. Minority Contractor
Goals Program, all Bidders will be
afforded full opportunity to submit
Bids In rospens* to thlt Invitation
and will not bo discriminated against
on tte grounds ol race, color,
religion, h i or notional origin In
consideration tor award.
Thlt proloct It sub|*ct to tte
Requirements ol (action 1. ot tte
Housing and Urban Development Act
ol 1*40. AH Bidders w ill bo requlrod
to comply with an Affirmative Action
Plan to provide opportunity to tower
income residents ot Ite prelect tree
tor Treking end Employment.
Tte Housing Authority ot the City
of Sanlord, Florida reserves Ite rtohl
to reject any or ell Elds or to waive
any Informalities In the Bidding- He
Bids shell be withdrew! tor a period
of ie Days subsequent te the opening
el Bids without tte consent at Ite
Housing Authority at tte City of
Senlord. Florida.
THE HOUSING AUTHORITY
OF THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Elliott Smith
Executive Director
Publish June 1,1, IfU
DEI-IS
NOTICE
OF SHERIFF'S B A L I
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN that
by virtue ot that certain Writ ot
Elocution ittued out at and under
tte teal ot the Circuit Court ot
Seminole County, Florida, upon a
final lodgement rendered In tte
alorataJd court on the tnd day ot
October, A O .. IWO, In that certain
cate entitled, CrodHhrltt of America.
Inc., Plaintiff, -vo- Randolph M aiwell, J r . and Victoria Maxwell,
Defendant, which afaraaald Writ at
Elocution waa delivered ta mo at
Nwrift ot Seminole County. Florida,
and I have levied upon the following
detrlbed proparly owned By Ran-

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO. U t ill- C A at L
F E D E R A L NA T IO NA L
M O R T G A G E ASSOCIATION, a
corporation organlnd and oxlstlng
under tte laws ol tte United States.
Plaintiff,
R O Y A L D E L T A P R O P E R T IE S .
INC. a Florida corporation and
R IC H A R D G. JO N E S AN D
PATRICIA J. JONES, his wife,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
RICHARD G. JONES
PATRICIA J. JONES
ADDRESS: UNKNOWN
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
AND RESIDENCE:
1HS Roxbore Road
Longwood. Florida 31710
YOU AR E H ER EBY notified that
a Complaint to foreclose a mortgage
encumbering the following reol
Lot 4, Hidden Lake Phase II, Unit
I, According to tte Plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Booh U . page* »• IT
Public Records ot Seminole County,
Florid*.
tea been filed against you and you
are required to te n * a copy ol your
written defensat. It any, to It on
JOHN M MCCORMICK. Attorney
tor Plaintiff, who** address is Pott
Office Bex m 3. SOI East Church
Street. Orlando, Florida UM I, and
III* the original with Ite Clark ol Ite
above-styled Court on or before June
II, IfU; otherwise a default may be
entered against you tor rellet de­
manded In tte Complaint.
WITNESS my tend and teal of
said Court on May IS, IfU.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk ol tte Circuit Court
Somlnoto County, Florida
By: Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish May II. IS A June 1,1. H U
DEH-I1I

7t—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem in o le

322-26 U

B A R T E N D E R . E xp e rie n ce d .
Apply In Person Monday thru
Friday. It- 1PM . Deltona.
Carpel layor/tumHwre tenditr.

mi ew

_______ Ask tor Chuck_________

RATES

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
H O U RS
1:10 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FR ID AY
SATURDAY V - Noon

ttim g .....................seed
3 consecutive tim es . S4ca
7consecutive tim es. .44c a
10 consecutive tim es « c a
12.00 M inim um
3 Lings M inim um

Concession end Ottlee He'p tor
weekend work. Apply at Ftoa
World. Thursday and Friday M
PM.__________________ _
COOK (Dinner). Apply In person
Tuesday thru Saturday. 1:10 to
4:30 PM. Oeftpna Ipn.__________
CLERICAL..................... 1730 Mo.

DEADLINES

BE EMPLOYED!!

Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
Monday- 5:30 P.M. Friday

Accural* typing
prestigious
company, wants your skills.
B e n o lllsl Move up quickly I
AAA EM PLO YM ENT

313-1174

CRUISE SHIP JOBSI
Great Income potential. A ll oc­
cupation*. For Information call:
1311)741 *7*0 EXT. 7330_______
D RIVER........................ *4« Mo.

21—Personals
I Will not b* responsible tor any
Debts Incurred by anyone alter
than my tel I at ol Juno I, IfU.
Signed. Donald Glndor,________
Ideas. Inventions, New Products
WANTEDI
Industry Presentatlon/Nallonal
Exposition.
Call I IQ0-SM-4U0.XUI.
Lonely* Call or Writ* Bringing
People together Dating Service.
(Ages IS f t ). P. O.. Box tu t
Winter Haven Florid la 33IM.
1-4131*3 7177._______________
14 Piece Brilliant Balloon Bou­
quets. for Birthday Parties and
Special Occasions. Delivered by
a Clown or our Sexy Stripper.
(Male or Female) to Sanford
Surrounding Areas.
BALLOON WIZARD. *04 775 »30.
43 Year Old Genii* Black Male
Would Ilka to meet slander at­
tractive non drinking, non smok­
ing females. White or Oriental
tor Evening Dates from 33 to SO
Years ol Age. Send Photo with
Phone Number to Box IS5. C/o
Evening Herald P. O. Box 1457
Sanlord Fla. 33771.

Will Babysit In my Home. Monday
thru Friday. Raatonabla Rate*
Paolo Area. Call Jody. 333-1371.

31—Private
Instructions
Hannah M utlc le ito n i. Plano,
voice, brat*, woodwind*, banfo,
drum* and guitar (private and
clou.) 773 *711.______________
SWIMMING LESSONS. For In­
fo rm a tio n . V ic k i G o rm ly
Cert Itied Imtructor. (3313300).
II Bable* Drown Every 14Hour*
Infant Swimming Reteerch
Certified and Insured Instruct*
Survival Swimming. eMo ■S Yr.
Call Rosanna Spain. 33* 407*.
e e e *371 1137* * e #
For Swimming Information.
_J*cktoCaoto_^_ _ _ _

33—Rt*l Estate
Courses
REYES LICENSC EXAMSCHOOL
Next 4 day accelerated class
June 11, HU. For tuition reim­
bursement Information ca ll
MlldrtdS. Wang. 313 3700

25—Special Notle ts
New Office now opening
VORWERK
IIIOW. 1st St.

45—Arts A Crafts

27— Nursery A

Adult* Stained Otets Workshop
June 75. * 4. material* Inct. S3J.
Boutique July *,t0. lOam lpm.
material* incl. *15 Adult
Ing A painting (oil A water
Thurs. f - ll wkly. *4 a da*
Into, call 444 4034 or 371 0434
ART CLASSES/Sentord. Children*
print making. Mon. T il. July
11 Aug 1.115 Include* minimal
suppl le**44 4134 373 1434

ChildCare
Babysit In my home. us. a • *k.
Ages 3 yrs. and up.
333 5354.

Legal Notica

49—Miscellaneous
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO. U-ITU-CA-tf-K
CIRCUIT CIVIL
FLO R ID A F E D E R A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, etc..
Plaintiff
vs.
E L LE R ENTERPRISES. INC., etc.
at at..
NOTICE OF S A L !
Notice Is hereby given that,
pursuant to tte Order or Final
Judgment entered In this cause, In
tte Circuit Court of Seminole County,
Florida. I will tall tte property
situated In Seminole County, Florida,
drier feed at:
Lot 7. WOOOBRIDGE AT THE
SPRINGS UNIT III, according to Ite
plat thereof recorded In Plat Book 73,
page* 43 and 44. Public Record* ot
SamlnolaCounty, Florida,
at publk ial*. to tte high**! and belt
bidder, h r caih, at tte front door ot
tte Seminole County Courthoui* In
Sanford. Florida at 11:00 A.M , on
Juna 30. HU.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk
ol tte Circuit Court
By: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publlth June M 5 . H U
DEI-44

For Sal* Champion |ulcer World’s
finest all purpose |ulcer. Puree*.
Ice cream, cockle!It. 331-1055

43—Mortgages Bought
A Sold
Wa P A Y cash tor 1st A 3nd
mortgage*. Ray Legg, Lie.
Mortgage Broker 7*1 }5f*.

BE EMPLOYED!!

Light delivery. Lumber exerlenc*
helpful. Ben*III* no weekend!I
AAA EM PLOYM ENT
713-5174
Experienced Only Sewing Machine
operators. Overlock or Sergurt.
lor T- Shirt Division. Sergur
Hammer. Ampro Fashion* no
Power Cl. 331 3310___________
E xp e rie n ce d phone s o licto r.
Excellent earning*. Seminole
County. Phone 333 4343. II AM to
1PM. A ik tor Marvin._________
G EN E R A L O FFIC E........*300 Wk

BE EMPLOYED!!
Entry level. Learn title work.
Excellent career spoil Great
fringe*.
kAA EM PLO YM ENT
m-1174
Groundsman. Experienced In cere
Ot Grounds and Pool..Apply In
per ion, Mondey thru Friday 11 to
3 PM. Deltona Inn.___________
Helrdrener-txpartooced. Follow
Ing preferred but not necessary.
Apply Headliner* 3303 French
Are Sanford. 331 5*51_________
JUNE CLASSIFIED ADS BRING
THAT E X T R A SUM M ER
VACATION M ONEY TO YOUI
Live-In wanted. Room and board
with pay. Private room.
__________ 333 43*3.__________
looking to make extra Income.
Knowledge ot plumbing. Tran*
portal Ion necessary. 331 344*
eed extra Income. We need you.
Call tor complete detail*
________ 337 3145.__________
A Flute With A Want"Ad
They Work Every Time.
_______ Call 333 3411.________
FFICE W ORKER - Accurate
typing; handle Phone orders.
Complete fringe Benefit*. United
Sol vent*. 333 1400,____________
irt-TIm e Pressman AM12S0W
Experience. Call Ralph Jenson.

1330074____________________
art Time. Women and Man.
Seminole Co. Work from horn* on
telephone program Earn *35. to
*100 per week, depending on lime
available. 377 5300.___________
ERSONNEL UNLIM ITED ha*
Immediate full time opening* tar
14) Cook* and (1) Cocktail
Waitresses. Alta counter Clerks,
and General Laborer*. 373 S44*.

PRODUCTION
WORKER

71—Halp Wanted
CITY OF LA K E M ARY
CITY MANAGER
Population 30it, Orlando SMSA.
Salary 111.000 to (33.000 nagolleb it depending upon qualifica­
tion*. Appointed by I member
C ity C o m m ission ; 1140,0*0
budget; 10 employee*. Require*
executive and administrative ex­
perience with background In
publk administration, engineer­
ing. City planning, construction
or related field*, supplemented
by at toast 3 year* progreulvoly
responsible supervisory experi­
ence, degree desirable Submnlt
return** to City Clerk, City ol
Lake Mary, P. O. Box 735. Late
Mary, Florida 3374a. Resume*
m uil be received by July I, HU.

eod S. S h o uld hava tom o
carpentry axpar lenct. *4 35

M lte d FxR SMFtogtepItonk Buteng)
apldly growing leasing company
need! axptrtoncod Bookkeeper to
till tew position. Applicant mutt
have minimum ot 5 yr* expert
•net and toma college account­
ing court*!. Degree not nece*
sary, but preferred. Apply by
phone* SMr. Carlisle. 3314774.

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

To List Your Business

Dial 322 2611 Of 831 9993
Additions*

Hoalth * Booirty

Romodtling
K T s r a s r s s iT T O :
concrete# v rln iw tf m M
Ertto«ttf&gt;io*o*.a&gt;44A3

i

mom.

Undscaplfif

PmtcnpftOft W r r w ii.
W AM TAObyptem .
___________133 M il___________
TOWER S BEAU TY SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harriett'* Beauty
N o e k.ittE . istSt. 70-1743

A&amp;BROOFING
11 yrs. experience, Llceneed A
Insured.
Free Estimate* on Reefing,
Re-Roofing and Repair*.
Shingles, Butll Up and Tito.

r W iiif im p r u v t m t n i
Carpentry by " B IL L "
W O O D A r t e s ia n G e n e ra l

AppUonct Repair
I

. IF jbrws W - -

6 X BOHMW N

- - ■*

Clean t* and light hauling
at-BIW

322-9417

CLARENCE'S I
E A L Cancrato 1 man gueitty
•Oar at Ian. Pottos, driveways.
Oars MI-7SP Evas. a r iB l.

* OoSadRUtMoySt IW.
Publish May » and J anat. MB*.
O O tU M

a l .iafcw

m■ J RIWPWHI| MOYIGO.

abto rotee. Fkk 19 A &lt;

VaciMM

8 M M after 4PM.

OUR RATES ARE LOWER

Homo Rspoirs

A
t

‘

!n

f

■

"“ “TUTOBuiTJEn

M

1
#
$

’

&gt;

Etoctrkol

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;

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fk ir

a
} 1
5 .^

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f t lb
1 1

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**« • M e l. ca ll

MANNING'S I f RVtCES
NCINO-HOME REPAIRS
AND TREE ERNIE MUCH

l i f r

su

S

m u

I 'T

— r&gt;

Sprlnkltn/IrriBBtion
n A r w a is c n -

i

l i
|

L w tre . Steef r e 5

Have y w bod y w r tame ct
la te ly * C le a n in g w ith Ibg
M n M i tout* roan*. M 4 3 1 1.

n
•

___ SEWINdJkU6tlNd

Ono kf SIngors ' b u t models. Mates
*» •■*2 •«**•*- Itrefcfi siltcbe*. b lin d bam s and butM te to s- Seto new ever B u g *
balance * 0 *734*7 cash ar tate

»yv* exp

j

etf. 333 *747

T rn Strvic*

'1*

■
***44"d4 I

M M M n P J I I I V II

•'■rw*,'..!,

�J

PAp .'TmeW sh m every.
D I L A H D 1 H i split plan. Fra*
t*rm peal, petit, prtvicy (tun .
•w M tlir storega ■building, with
Hetty, I n te r utility. S54.W*.

ECRETARY
Ith shorthand. Immediate long
lorro opening. Typing 50 WPM.
a c c u r a t e l y .
v

^

n fvm afei

■ A b la u t

1 Largo Lakafront home I BR 1
bath LR/OR/KII Extra*.

Thi Nall SL Company
MtefH_______ 3215005

1 Smatlar homo*. S BR I bath,
LR/DR/KIt.

HA L COLBERT REALTY
REALTOR
W E . I l th St.___________ » I T O

WE F A Y TOP DOLLAR FOR
JU N K CARS AN D TRUCKS.
CBS AUTO PARTS. W14JBS.

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy *1. I mite watt of Spaadway,
Daytona Baach will hold a public
AUTO AUCTION avary Monday
&amp; Wednesday at 7:10pm. It'itha
only on* In Florida. You tat tha
reserved prlca. Call *W JJ5I311
for further detail*.____________
Dabary Auto S M arino Salt*
acrost tha rlvtr top of hill 174
hay 17-W Dabary M l 55*1

bapaafy GMNfwi
Mon T h u rif l l 4

“ ' " j a s s r 1- * ' '
SECURITY GUARD
E LP WANTED
Harp Individual Experience In
Man* Clothing Sal* prtltrred.
Apply In person. HIS Sanlord
Plata.

i l l motivated parson for fa il
growing company. Carpentry
knowledge wins. P le n ty ol
overtime her* l

ISO to 5500.00 W E E K L Y
PAYCHECKS (F U LLY GUAR­
ANTEED) working port or lull
time at home. Weekly paychecks
mailed directly to you from
Home Office every Wednesday./
Start Immediately. No experi­
ence necessary. National Com­
pany. Do your work right In tha
com tori and sacurly ot your own
horn*. Detail! and appllcalion
mailed Send your name and
addreu to KEYSTO NE IN­
DUSTRIES. HIRING OEPT. 31.
*410 FREDERICKSBURG R D .
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS 7171*

73- Employment

DAYS 174 1454
Eva*. 10*4111
Older i bdrm, t bath home in nice
area. W/w carpet, appliance*,
ter. porch, SM5 mo. plut dapotll.

nrxso.

Very beautifully restored I bdrm
■1* bath. I story homa new kit. A
bath natural wood sfalrcat* A
trim throughout, hardwood fir*..
Irpl., CHA. tSJO mo., sec. dap.
172 **71 445-4441

105—Duplex*
Triplex / Rent
Available now elegant A spacious
duplex** with large screen
porches, storage room s A
carports. Fully equipped. SM0 to
51*0 Cell lor details. Century it
June Porilg Realty M l EOT.
Large i Bdrm. air. heat, appli­
ances. no psti, *350 Mo. 5150

Travel Trailer lots ot Park Av*.
M obil* P e rk . 510 monthly.
Adults. No pets, M l 7*41._______

Wanted
!*re lor the Eldertly. Certified
Nurses Assistant. Home or Ho*
pilel. Reference* provided. Call
M l *74*.

91—Apartments/
House to Share
Share rent and utilities Employed
female 15 or older. 1 Bdrm.
duplex. Cell etters PM. !74 4*H.

WAREHOUSE
Low rates, 7,000 to 40.000 Sq. FI.
Sprlnklered, heavy Industrial.

OFFICE WAREHOUSE
1500 to 11.000 Sq Ft. Downtown, elr
conditioned. Loads ol Perking.

SHOPPINGCENTER
1500 to 5000 Sq Ft. Low rale*, on
17*1. Greet visibility. The WT
Perks Co. Broker *1* 4M»._____

REALTY, INC.
R tjiL T O R
323*5774
55‘ FEARS EXP ER IEN C E

D R E A M COME TRUEI Sunken
living rm “ set* the mood” lor
this g orgeou* ] bdrm 1 belli tplil
plan homa w/CHAA, dfal car
garaife, custom decor and fenced
c o r n e r lo t In p r e s tig io u s
R a m b la w o o d l F a n t a s t ic
assunspltont No qualifying and
price-1to tall I Only tH.OOO
ONE Q F A KINDI Gorgeous execu­
tive 1 Story 1 bdrm 1.5 bath homa
In m in i condition. Hugo panelled
fam ily rm.. beamed celling*I
DetAched cebenn* w/llv. rm..
bar and bath tor antartalnlngl
Over 1* acre lush A spacious
landscaping! "N o qualifying"
111.100 down 5117 Mo. Principle A
Intel e ll 17%APR Only 141.000 .
M A Y F L O W E R S P E C IA L C o l­
u m bus h im se lf would hevo
chosen this 1 story beauty with
coiy flrtpleca 1 bdrm 1 huge
bath, wooden decks, screen
pnr(:h counlry kitchen, easy
assumption wit*- no qualifying.
Grmit loci Iten. Prlca 14*.too.
SWIM PLAY TENNIS AND R E ­
LA X at Sanora Community and
Cluti houie In this fantastic 4
Bdrm. 1 bath spill plan home
w i t h c o m m a n d in g b r ic k
fireplace, briery screened porch,
sprinkler system, citrus tree*,
easy assumption! Only Sfl.000
FAN TASY ISLAND] Bdrm. Rustic
log cabin surrounded by 1 acres
ol scrawling |ungle, scenic pond
end walk to Laka Jessup. Also
Dbl. wide mobile home currently
rented. Needs TLC owner enxlout. Only 557.500

*OA*f, FISH AND SWIM ON T H I
" i'T JOHNS R IV E R "! Extra
la n jt oaks and palms surround
t h is 1 bdrm. 1 bath home
w/ftanelled family rm. end stone
lireiptec*. Boat dock and covartd
bead house w/eiec. Ilft/Cement
seawalll 4 paddle tansl Dbl. car
detached garage I Many axtrasl
Wtiat a vlewl Only IIOt.500.
Office Spec*. 100 Sq Fl. A ir
conditioned and carpeted on M M
Iroquois. Coll 1117750 or M4S504.

Cowan Mo phono coll*.
Nice furnished efficiency garage
apartment. Private. 555. week

R E P lT *

R emblawood. 4/11Acre. U t.000
Cardinal Oaks. 1/15114.000.
Ravens Brook. 4/111:4,*00.
Forest City, l / i tef.fOO.
Bob M. Ball Jr. PA. Realtor
___________ mem. ________

Vacation Buy*
T h a t 'll O pen E y a s In tha
Classifieds. M 1M H ___________
10 Movl# Potion. 117 Movta Still*
IFaO'* and latar.Atl orlglnal.SlOO.
11 ft folding office labia U0.

I f Datsun pickup truck,
automatic. MOO.
i n 0711 or m o m .

241— Recreation* I
Vehicles / Camper*
GRAND OPENING SALEI
Frl Sat. June I M I.flp m
COLEMAN Camping Trailer*
R.V.SALES.Hwya*. New Smyrna

LOW BOWN P A Y M K T

1970 CHEVY1IPICMJP

’I f f

IHHty la d y
‘ 25 Weak

CALL MR. LEE 323*7/30
TOP Dollar Paid for Junk A Used
cars, truck! A heavy equipment.
____
J715W0.__________

BOB DANCE DODGE
•U06ETCMS

mu it«Nnm*u»o*oiioxc*ooo
"WHIBt EVERYBODY BIDCS "

NEED to soil your houta quickly!
W* can otter guaranteed sal*
within 10 days. Cell n f - lll l.

1*3—Waterfront
Property / Sal*
ST. JOHNS RIVER CANAL LOT.
Clew 14,17 *1 and SR 44». l- l
Central hoot A air, largo let,

Sinlofif

24 HOUR H 322-9283
SANFORD R IA L T Y
REALTOR
Ml
Alt. Hr*. M l 4*54. M l 4141
Senor* South 1 yrs. old. M.000 dn.
A assume 55*4. per mo. Includes
taxes and Insurance. 1 bdrm.. 1
bath, cathedral callings, 1 car
garage, dlihwahiar, swimming
pool, and Iannis available. 541
4*51_______________________
Sellar motivated. Assume Mfg. 4
Bdrm. 1 bath. Cent HA, private
b a c k y a rd 54*.*00. Ow ner
Associate. H I -0414._________

W ALLAC ECRESSREALTY
REALTOR m iO R .
4 Speed Trans. * 3 1 9 1

1977 DATSUN PICKUP

191—Appliances

/ Furniture

* 1 9 9 1

m

1177 DOOSC 1 TON

Bm I HfLMla

A/C, A/T

f 5

1977 MAVERICK

Cash lor good used turnltur*.
Larry's New a Used Furniture
M ert.H5SenterdAve.M14m
COLOR TELEVISION
Zenith tJ " color TV In walnut
console. Origin*! price over 5750.
Balance due 51*5 cash or pay­
ments 51* month. NO MONEY
DOWN. Still In warranty. Call
. M l 11*4 day or nit*. Free home

I t

l, m

* 1 3 9 1

SANFORD

ERNIE JACKSON
AUTO SALES

MOTOR CO

ON HKsHWAY 17*92

AM C

JEEP

Canter a( Lake Mary BM.

3SM 3N

HORI.E FLAY I Nice 1 Bdrm. home
on 14 Acres. w/l*rg* pool sur­
rounded by hundreds ol oaks and
pletity Ol privacy end bring your
horsesl Excellent financing!

Only SIS.ICO.

IANFORD Furnished rooms by the
week. Reasonable ret**. Meld
service catering to working pvo
pit. M l 4507.500 Pet motto Av*.

NEVER
6176
ANY

auto, alr,AM. FM.. power. After
« Pm. Weekday* M14U7.______
I t n Toyota Cellca
G.T. Hat­
chback. AM FM stereo. Auto
Tran*, air, MJ4147. Weekday*
after* PM._________________
M 4 door Chevy Impels. I owner,
rebuilt engine and various part*
replaced. Body and Interior, good

235 -T ru ck* /
B u m s / V ans

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

SHA DY OAKS Surround this CB 1
Bdrm., homa on gorgeous lot and
g o ld location. Easy assumption
and no qualltyingl Why r*nt|
wte n you can own I Only *43.100.

117—Sporting Goods

&lt; if GIFT (99Nf RT f O f O f A

199-Pots ft Supplies
DOBERMAN

W f N EED LISTINGS
CALL USNOWII

^jiiutdjgosiLMlMTJ^^

323-5774
BAMBOO COVE APTS
100 E. Airport Bird. Ph. M l «4M.
IA1 Bdrm i . from 5140 Mo. 5 %
discount tor Senior Cltlien*.

M05HWY 17*1

HANDYMAN SPECIAL!. County
41.Lotl50xtl4.5M.f00.
11* ACBES. Trees, light pole.
Septic tank, and water. Terms to
qualtllod buyer. 511,(00.

LUXURYAPARTM ENTS
Family A Adults section. PooliJde.
1 Bdrm*. M ailer Cove Apts.
MS 7*00

NEW 1 A 1 Badreams. Adjacent to
Lako Monroe. Health Club.
Recquetball and More I
Sentord Lending S R 4 4 H I4H 0
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
15*0 Ridgewood A ve Ph M l 4470
I.IA lB d rm i.fro m lM d .

Unfurnished 1 Bdrm. I bath up­
stairs. Magnolia Apartments.
SN0 MO. |1 K Security deposll.
Realtor 4 M 117* Orlande.______

S tU tiM
CoN K a jti
111*. See our Mg ad in

W E HAVE CLIENTS
WAITING FOR
YOUR RENTAL
PROPERTY
PLEASE CALL
323-3200
54* W. Lake Mery Btvd.
Suites
Lake Mary, Fla . 14744
DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE

IMAGINATIVE DEMON
Tilt* specie** 4 Bdrm., 1 belt* hem*
letters, bright eat In kHch*nia,
lam . rm., llre plact, vaulted
c e ilin g s . S e p a ra te In-law
quarters. M 5..M .
CONVENIENT
Co mpletely renavatad 1 Bdrm. I
hath, large eat In kitchen hat
telld pine cahtnets. Fireplace la
living ream. Oecaratar wall
' paper threughaut. Immaculate.

(MS M l-M M Days 5H-S4H Night.
You're Sure To Get A 'Bite' It You
Drop A Lint* In The Wont Ads.
Cell M l MM

217—Garapt Sates

fm
*tRf f O Y o fA

f i f Gif*

Hwy 17 97 Lonqwood FI
Phone 831 H787 Sunford Phone 337 B60I

ST. JOHNS Rlvar frontage. U s
acre parcats, a lia Intarlor
parcels with rlvar access S IM M
Public water, 10 min. la Alta­
monte M all 17% M yrs financing,
no qualifying. Broker

1M—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sal*

BB G 9
f A S S [ l Hi k k t

KAWASAKI S P R IN G SALE SPECTACULAR

L A K E JE S U P
Waterfront. Nearly S Acres. Over
I '* cleared. Owner sayf'M ust
‘ Sett" 545405. Owner financing

AFtSSSRlINT

O O LFER I OELiONT
W alk to Mayfair Colt Course from
this dellghtlul, 1 Bdrm 1 Baih.
! homo In Lech Arbor. Below FHA
appraisal. U*.J00.

OKI A N D ( i

WHILE O TH ER DEALERS ARE
DISCOUNTING
VA FHA financing. M AM A— .

1 9 8 2 s . . . R.C. HILL S

A N N O U N C E THE F I R S T 1 9 8 3 P R I C E

CLOSEOUT! ! !

JUST LISTED

night* Sal PM.

3999.00

4 4 99 OO
198?

5SOLTD

1999.00

2S99.00

E-Z BANK F I N A N C I N G
O P EN
U H M OBILE TR AILER . OOOO
CO ND ITIO * Mna DhWMa tat
and carpet-C*H MAMIE.

�i

i

lQB-Evsnlng Herald, Sanford, FI. WtdmxUy, Junt I, IW

Teriyaki Pork Chops
Favorite From Grill
Pork is becoming more and more popular In the
American diet. Between 1976 and 1981, U.S.
consumption o f pork Increased by 19%. This
Increase was noted by the Center for Science In the
Public Interest In their recent five year study.
Today’s pork Is leaner than ever and Is best
prepared over a medium to low heal. When cooked
on a babccuc grill. It Is best marinated first and
basted as It cooks. This adds to Its flavor and
juiciness.
To keep the marinade within arm’s reach for
basting, make a foil saucepot. This can be made
easily from three thicknesses o f heavy duty
aluminum loll. A foil saucepot can be placed
directly directly on the grid of the grill and will
save you time and energy' by eliminating messy
saucepot cleanup.
UR ILLE D T E R IY A K I PORK CHOPS
8 pork chops. VJ-Inch thick
Vi cup soy sauce
t i cup dry sherry
Vi cup firmly packed brown sugar
Vi cup vinegar

2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
Vi teaspoon ground ginger
Trim excess fat frompork chops. For marinade,
combine remaining Ingredients. Pour half of
marinade Into large glass dish. Place chops In
marinade; pour remaining marinade over chops.
Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate 2 to 3
hours or overnight, turning occasionally. Line fire
bowl o f grill with heavy duty aluminum wrap.
Make a saucepot (below). Remove chop from
marinade. Heat marinade in saucepot and grill
chops over medium to low direct heat 8 to 12
minutes or until browned. Turn, brush with
reserved marinade and grill 8 to 12 minutes until
Juicy and tender. Makes 4 servings.
SAUCEPOT
1. Mold three layers of heavy duty aluminum
wrap around strlght-sldcd bowl or canister to form
desired size.
2. Remove bowl and fold edges down to form
tight rim.
3. Place on grill and remove using pot holders In
both hands.

S e rv e g r ille d ch o p s w ith r ic e m o u nd s a n d o ra n g e ka b o b s

Grill-Side
Salads Star
A t Cookout

A colorful selection o f salads plays as big a role in
summer's outdoor barbecue as whatever’s on the grill.
Whether It’s simple hamburgers for the family or a
cookout party where everyone brings a dish to pass,
some salad classics are so much a part o f the summer
barbecue scene that they’d be sorely missed If they
weren’t among the offerings.
When It’s your turn to make a salad for an outdoor
meal, look to new-style versions o f old favorites, and be
sure to safeguard your salad creation's goodness by
keeping It cold, below 40° F, until serving. Bacteria can
grow above this temperature. Properly chilling or using
a thermal container. Ice chest or cooler when trans­
porting salads will go a long way toward maintaining
correct temperatures.
Salads prepared with salad dressing, are particularly
suited for outdoor barbecue meals. Even though some
people think that commercially prepared salad dressings
can cause food poisoning, especially when left at room
temperature, this simply Is not true.
In their many forms, bean salads are always grill-side
favorites. Whether made with fresh, frozen or canned
beans. In a vinaigrette or a creamy dressing, they're
always In demand. Snappy Bean Salad I# a colorful
two-tH-an combo with the added flavors and textures of
celery, onion rings and crisp bacon.
Whoever heard o f a barbecue without potato salad?
This summer classic, while on cvcrone else’s "most
requested" list. Is seldom the cook's first choice because
of Its time-consuming preparation. Spicy Potato Salad is
a tasty exception which shortcuts preparation by using
frozen small whole potatoes. It sports the traditional
celery and hard-cooked eggs, then adds a bit o f the
unexpected with green pepper and green onion In a
salad dressing accented with horseradish. Make It the
night before serving to allow flavors to blend and to
reduce last-minute preparation time.
For more creative salad ideas as well as a wealth of
other great new and "classic" recipes using the nation's
favorite salad dressing. "Cooking With MIRACLE WHIP
Salad Dressing." a new cookbook from the Kraft
kitchens, provides over 200 recipes. The 160 page
cookbook contains chapters which highlight interna­
tional and American regional cuisine, Ideas for casual
entertaining, recipes which shortcut preparation time
with food processors and microwave ovens, recipes for
two, and much more. Liberally sprinkled with recipe
tips and hints, the book is Illustrated with more than
two dozen color photographs. To order your copy,
simply send a check or money order for *3.95 to:
Miracle Whip 50th Anniversary Cookbook. P.O. Box
854, Dept P. South Holland, Illinois 60473. Be sure to
enclose your name, address and zip code, and allow six
to eight weeks for delivery.

2690 S. ORLANDO AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 3 2 3 4 9 5 0

“A HELPFUL SMILE IN EVERY AISLE"

CTAEIC ftlfll IDC
D I U llC nUUVIO
rv ta t a

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SUN.•TMUNS. 6a.m.•toMl.
FNI. ASAT. 6A.M.•MIDNITE
raws, nm • raw w » . m m

L O N D O N B R O IL 1

STEAK

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DELICATESSEN

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BAKERY-FRESHLY BAKED

FROZEN FOODS

out

R.WAUKE

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TOSTADOS

JJS

nach ockese

SNAPPY BEAN SALAD
I 16-oz. can kidney beans, drained, rinsed
1 16-oz. can great Northern or pinto beans, drained,
rinsed
■A cup salad dressing
Vi cup celery slices
Vi cup onion rings
4 crisply cooked bacon slices, crumbled
2 tablespoons chopped plmiento
14 teaspoon salt
Dash of pepper
Few drops hot pepper sauce
Combine Ingredients; mix lightly. Chill. Makes 6 to 8
servings.
Variation; Substitute V4 cup bacon flavored bits for
bacon slices. Note: Recipe may be doubled.

BUY ONE
OET I FREE

SPAGHETTI

■ M S H f la r a u

SPICY POTATO SALAD
1 32-oz. pkg. frozen small whole potatoes
1 cup celery slices
■Acup salad dressing
Vt cup chopped green pepper
14 cup green onion slices

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CRISP AND GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

FANCY

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Wcdnetdey, June S, IMS—tC

Wow lo r your shopping convenience
Publlx is open 7 days a week.

Publlx
T H IS A D E F F E C T IV E i
TH U R SD A Y, JU N E 9
TH R U W ED N ESD A Y
JU N 1 1 5 , I M S . . .

■XTRA SAH Q RIIN STAMPS WHEN YOU C U P
COUPONS ON THIS PAGE.
AND RBDHM

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8-oz. hot, Coppertone

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1. (Effective June 0&gt;1B, IMS)

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W M M N M ilH M M H IiM

$219

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18. (Effective June •■IS, IMS)

23. (Effective June »-1S, 1MS)

1.25-oz. tuba,

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18. (Effective June O-fS,
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24. (Effective June 0-1S, IBM)

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1-lb. bowl.

A nt A Roach lURor
28. (Effective June W1S, IBM)

17. (Effective June a-IS, IMS)

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Wtdrwtday, Jun&gt; I, I t il

Say

‘Peaches'

T o p P ie W ith U p d a t e d M e r in g u e
"Americans are eating out of both sides of. their
mouths," according to one food authority. People will
pass up the soup, appetizer, salad, and even the entree.
In an effort to cat light, but rarely will they skip dessert.
The richer the treat the better, especially when It's
homemade.
The renewed Interest In homemade desserts, coupled
with today's busy lifestyles, has created a need for
"shortcut sweets." recipes which have the taste appeal
o f the classics without the work. Many are adaptations of
the hearty, "man-pleasing" treats which grandmother
served the family.
Meringue Is one old favorite which has continued In
popularity, but Its traditional preparation can be tricky.
If overbeaten, egg whites can break down and lose
volume. Once whipped, they have limited stability, and
when the weather is humid, a perfect meringue Is
almost Impossible to achieve.
Fortunately, there is a "secret Ingredient" which
shortcuts the preparation of cver-spectacular meringue
de s s e r t s and ma k e s t he m a l mo s t f oo l pr o o f .
Marshmallow creme, added to egg whites, stabilizes the
meringue, so It can be beaten to Its fullest volume
without worrying aout having the meringue "fall."
Marshmallow creme also eliminates the need for adding
sugar, contributing the perfect amount o f sweetness.
For added appeal, try something different with this
carefree meringue. The Kraft Kitchens have developed
Upside Down Peach Meringue Pie. This dessert uses
grandmother’s favorite meringue, prepared with
marshmallow creme, In an updated presentation.
Instead of a meringue topping, the mixture is baked In a
pastry’ shell until lightly browned. It Is then cooled and
canned pic filling, blended with a small amount of
brandy, is spooned Into the meringue "shell" which
results. All the Ingredients are "pantry staples," Items
which you can keep on hand for last minute dessert
preparation.
If you have dlcovcred the secret of shortcut desserts
prepared with marshmallow creme, you could be a
winner In the 1983 Kraft Marshmallow Creme "Easy
Secret Ingredient" Recipe Contest, open for entries now
through September 30. 1983. The contest has three
recipe categories so almost any recipe can be submitted.
There is "Make-Ahead Treats" for recipes which can be
prepared well ahead of serving time; "Special Occasion
Desserts" for those dazzling desserts served guests; and
for those favorites you like to keep on hand for snacks or
for after meals. “ Desserts for the Family."
Prizes Include a best-of-contest $5,000 Grand Prize,
three 81,000 First Prizes and Eleven Seml-FInallst
Prizes of$ 100 each.
You can obtain a complete copy of the rules for the
1983 Kraft Marshmallow Creme "Easy Secret Ingre­
dient" Recipe Contest by sending your name and
address to: "Rules". KRAFT Marshmallow Creme "Easy
Secret Ingredient" Recipe Contest. P.O. Box 11192.
Chicago. IL60611.
A complete set of the rules will be mailed to you. Be

sure to follow them carefully when submitting you
entry, as any error or omission will disqualify recipe
before they get to the Judges.

UPSIDE DOWN
PEACH MERINGUE PIE
2 egg whites
Dash o f salt
1 7-oz.Jar marshmallow creme
Pastry for 9-lnch pic. baked
1 21 -oz. can peach pie filling
1 tablespoon brandy
Beat egg whites and salt until foamy; gradually adc
marshmallow creme, beating until stiff peaks form
Spread onto bottom and sides o f pastry shell. Bake at
325°. 15 to 18 minutes or until lightly browned. Cool
Combine pie filling and brandy. Spoon Into meringue
shell. Chill.
Variation: Substitute cherry or blueberry pic filling foi
peach pie filling.

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a p p e a l v i pa»i

INI

STA M

Itfsthe2ndweekof IH iU ix
A n d that m eans extra
savings on your
sum m ertim e foods
Summertime means cool
and easy meals you can enjoy
indoors or out. And Pubfix has all
your favorite summertime foods
at extra special savings now during
Pubfix Sunfest Celebration.
M on.-8«t. 8 8.111.-9 p.m.;

THtt AO EFFECTIVE: THURSDAY, JUNE 9
THRU WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15,1963...

Sun. 9 a.m.-7 p.m.

Corrections
Two recipes. Betty’s Favorite Chocolate Pie and
Golden Apple Cake, were incorrect on Wednesday. June
1. The Herald regrets the error.
The corrected recipes are as follows:

BETTY*8 FAVORITE CHOCOLATE PIE
1cup sugar
I6cup cocoa
W cup Ilour
pinch salt
2 cups milk
4 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 beaten egg yolks
Place sugar, flour, cocoa and salt In a saucepan. In
another pan. heat milk to boiling point and pour slowly
Into dry Ingredients stirring until mixture thickens.
When pudding Is rich and thick, add 3 or 4 tablespoons
of the hot chocolate mixture to the beaten egg yolks and
stir. Continue to add the hot chocolate mixture while
stirring. Cook 3 minutes. Stir In butter and vanilla. Pour
Into a baked 9-Inch pie shell. Top with meringue,
following Instructions.

MERINGUE
2 egg whites
4 tablespoons sugar
W teaspoon vanilla
Beat egg whites until stiff peaks form. Continue
beating while adding sugar and vanilla. Mound
meringue on pic filling by heapitfg tablespoons and bake
In a 350 degree oven 3 to 4 minutes or longer, until
golden brown. Watch carefully.

GOLDEN APPLE CARE
1 can (8 ounces) crushed pineapple
1Vi cups sugar
116 cups oil
3 eggs
2 cups flour
2 teaspoons each baking soda,
ground cinnamon and vanilla
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups shredded apples
% cup chopped walnuts

Maple-Flavored Frosting
1 Golden Delicious apple, cored and sliced
Drain pineapple thoroughly; reserve 2 tablespoons
syrup for frosting. Combine all Ingredients except
Maple-Flavored Frosting and sliced apples In mixer
bowl; mix well. Pour Into two greased and Routed 9-lnch
round cake pans. Bake In preheated 300* F. oven 35
minutes or until cake tests done when wooden pick
inserted near center comes out dean. Cool In pan 5
minutes; turn out onto rack and cool completely. Frost
between layers and on top with Maple-Flavored
Floating. Decorate top with apple slices before serving.
Yield: one 9-lnch round cake. ,

C o u n tin g C a lo rie s

UttloHaam

^

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Candy Bara......... 525 *1n
Hershey Large Bar

Kit Kat Candy....... 5“ 59-

Brach Tangerine. Pineapple.
Cherry or Orange
„ ,

Candy Slices........89*

[3 Fresh Produce
Sated Perfect Florida Criep

Cucumbers....... o

t*

For Saiade or Stuffing
Florida Green

*1

6 w M
........ 7

Salad Perfect, Florida

40*

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Hlpa Tatty

R a d B a w tn u m . 7 90*
Perfect For Potato Salad

Potatoes.,.. S &amp; 00*
‘ Fkst Of The Season”
PsMctout Freeh
M s n t a r io s i.
t f 80*
For Salads or Sandwiches Sweet
(Jumbo Slat)

VMoBa Onions..... 7

Kraft
MayonnahaSJ***00*

(Medhan Stas 34b. bog.......... 09$)
Perfect For Cole Slaw Frteh Firm

Qroon Cahhago... 7

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Comod Boot......7

10*

[3 lio/cn Seafood

Armour Star (Heat A Servo)

Florida Grown Frssft

Muahronme........ 5 T M 79

. 7 M T#

TCP Tow Schd With MerjonSrand

•wtft Prm lam (A l Varieties)

7

Medium ASxad Bouquet of Freeh

Cut flo w e rs........A * l »

7

Dili [3 Deli

Let herbs be the salt o f the earth. Try fresh or dry dill,
baifl. rosemary, chives, sage or thyme In sauces and
soups or sprinkled on salads and vegetables. You won’t
miss salt at allf
How about chick peas as a substitute lor peanuts?
There are 105 calories in ten peanuts and 105 calories In
one-third cup o f chick peas. Buy them dry. then soak
them tor about 24 hours In water. Roast the chick p eas.
In the oven Cor one hour at 350*F. and sprinkle with a
little garlic salt for flavor.
A stick o f margarine and a stick o f butter have the
same number o f calories. Margarine Is high In
polyunsaturated fata which lo w e r blood serum
dmlesierol while butter, rich In saturated fats, raises
cholesterol levels. Read the labd. The softer the
consistency o f the margarine the better it is for you.

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�Microwove Magic

Techniques
Fo r Using
Food Wraps

Kitchen wraps have many uses
in our homes today. Perhaps the
use o f them is most Important
with the microwave oven. Paper
toweling can be used as an
absorbent cover, waxed paper as
a protecting light cover, plastic
wrap as a tight cover, apd
aluminum foil as a shield against
the microwaves.
T e c h n i q u e s for using the
plastic wrap are the most impor­
tant. Plastic wrap can be used
when a container does not have a
tight fitting ltd and one is needed.
Be sure the container is the
r e c o m m e n d e d s i z e f or the
specific food being microwaved.
If microwaving a sauce allows for
bubble up. Place the plastic wrap
loosely around the sides to allow
steam to be vented or turn back a
comer as a vent. Do not pull the
wrap underneath the bottom o f
the container. Leave air space
between the food and the wrap.
When removing the wrap, lift the
side away from you so that the
steam goes away from your body.
Do not use a plastic wrap with

my r
COUPON I

(U tK S w J N___
M S -IS_, IS M )

100 EXTRA

,

(EffpcNw

COUPONS

tender. Drain excess liquid. Add
butter, self, crumbled bacon, and
cheese. Combine well. Let stand
3*5 minutes before serving.

XATATOUILI

the conventional oven or with the
browning unit In a microwave
oven.
These recipes all require a tight
fitting lid during the microwav- *
Ing;

SUMMER SQUASH DUO
1 lb. yellow squash
1 lb. zuchlnl squash
1 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons butter, melted.
4 slices bacon, cooked crisp
and crumbled
Vi cup grated Parmesan cheese
Thinly slice yellow and zuc­
chini squash. Place squash in a
2-quart microwave safe contain­
er. Cover with plastic wrap.
Microwave 100% power for 6-8
minutes or until squash is fork

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COUPONS

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200 EXTRA

SAH GRIIN STAMPS

SAH GREEN STAMPS

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exctudbig flfl lofctcco p fo ig fti

M putch**** lo tM n fl tS .0 0 lo M -99 ,

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onputch**** WUSni S I OOt* 119.99. ■
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300 tlw np* Coupon* 2.3 1 putch**** ot S2S lo
S29.M *qu*lt 600 *t*mp«. Coupon* 1,2 ,3 1
putch**•« of 930 or mot* *qu«l* 600 ttan v*

Coupon* t J A putch**** of $20 to 924 99 *q**l*
400 *t*mpt. Coupon* 2.3 9 purchat** of 92S to
929 99 squat* 900 Mamp*. Coupon* 1 .2 .3 1
purchat** of 930 or mot* *qu*l* 600 *l*mp*.
(boon Stamp* 1*600.

It

G*i&gt;

J Pringla 8-ox. Rippled,
J 9-ox. Regular or Light

[3 F r o z e n fo o d s

PUBLIX RESERVES THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SOLO

S

■3 00 E X T R A !

M putch**** !•(*■»• 110.00 to S I4 .M ,

Coupon* 1.21 purch*t**of 916 to9&gt;9 99*qv*l*
300 (tamp* Coupon* 1 ,3 ■ putch**** ot 920 to
924.99 *quai* 400 iltm p *. Coupon* 1,1 .3 S
putch* in* of 130 ot mot* *qu*ls 900 damp*
Iteitnw M 9*aSattp B o m m Oronn Stoop* l» S00.

2 cloves garlic, minced
1 large onion, peeled and sliced
and separated Into rings
Vfccup vegetable oil
1 medium eggplant, peeled and
cut Into V* inch cubes
4 small zucchini, thinly sliced
W lb. fresh mushrooms, diced
1 green pepper, cut into strips
4 medium fresh toma’toes,
peeled and quartered
2 teaspoons salt
W teaspoon pepper
Place garlic, onion, oil and
eggplant in a 3-quart microwave
safe container. Cover with plastic
wrap. Microwave 100% power for
4-5 minutes. Remove from oven,
add remaining ingredients. Re­
store plastic wrap and microwave
100% pwer for 10 minutes. Let
stand 5 minutes.
P.S. Plastic wraps have been
accepted by the *FDA for use In
contact witn food during cooking.

| Potato Chips.......

Serve "itratafled" salad as a main dish that needs
no cooking.

FROZEN CREAM STYLE CORN, j ™njb«r»wu.Auuortw* ^
.....*** 78
Lem onade......... ” ***m h 'WHOLE KERNEL NIBLETS CORN,! SSL*
| SPINACH INCREAM SAUCE ! Raady-To-Spread
Braakfast Club Whtta
---------------------------------■ F r o a ttn g s ..................
Sandwich
j.
OR
BUTTER SAUCE
I NsstssWithLsmon
■road...............2 &amp; &amp; H 09!
Country Tim* Regular or

Braakfast Club

,

Dinner R olls.....2

*1°* I

Sunswast

Prune Juico

• 1 «

Sot

Green Giant
Vegetables

Baal Dog Food

Qalnoa Eurgera....
Baal, Chsaaa or Bacon A Egg
Dog Food

I
|||

Gaines Eurgera....

|

Baaf or Cheese Dog Food

I

Gaines Eurgera.... *?-»3#* J
Else trie Dfshwashar Detergent
reera H a

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Shield Bath Size

1

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ASSORTED FLAVORS

Dairi-Fresh
Sherbet
half gel.

$ J2 9
ASSORTED FLAVORS

ic e c re a m
quart ctn.

I Hatty Disposable
SOact. 0^-ktch
• rFlat
w i vor
ir 25-ct.
d i r v i . 10%
iv 7 4 -Inch
- u iu i or
u i 20-ct.
iv r t i.
10*

I 10%-inch Fashion Compartment
■ or 40-ct. Fashion Luncheon

P lates................... iki
Makes 8-Ouarts, Crystal Light
Lemon-Uma, Lemonade, Oranga,
Mix Fruit or lea Tea

Drink Mix........... fS »2“

Seneca "Natural or Regular’ Cone ’

Appl* Julc*......... '£

79*

C h it Sakito 14-Inch Deluxe or

Party°Pizza......... ‘E* *349

S-M.

7s Off Label, Carat* Bath Bias
........ .....“-s t e *

! Too M ix...............

10-oi. pkg.

05*

Strata Salad
Garden-Fresh
Casserole

Sugar Swaatanad Soft Drink Mix
(Makes 10-Quarta),
I Aaaortad Flavors

I K o o H U d .......... .... 55- *2*a
I
I

Morton Gravy ABMbbury Steak,
Gravy &amp; S ite d Turkey or
Gravy A Baaf Patties

Family Meals...... £

*1“

Chun King Chicken or Shrimp

Chow Mein......... *1M
D a iry [ 3 D a iry

BALLARD

Buttermilk
Biscuits

Dal Monte Haivad or Sliced Lite

Bartlett Peers.....

3

Dal Monte Haivad or Sliced

Bartlett P eart.....0 *

10-ct.
Breakfast Club

Spread...............

Dal Monte, In Unsweetened Juice,
Sliced, Crushed or Chunks
, *«•
i* .

Brayara Aaaortad Flavors

70*

Yogurt............ 3 ££ M*»

PhdtCoektaH...... IZ W
Ute
Prutt Cocktail

Kraft Light'n Uvaty

Dal Mont*

1B-P*.

’A T * 1 H

19-04.

M"

Kraft MMdualy-Wrapptd Sliced
American, Pknanto, Whits Amarican

Dal Monte, No Salt Added
Cream Style or Whole Kamel
Ooldan
w
wepwSM^pge Corn
w i v im m ** 2
ib cm
cane*
Dal Monts Cream Style or

Cheese Food.......’AT *1“

Golden
w w w w v i Com
W w iiih

SaaRaat Smal Curd or
Light 'N Uvafv Lowfat

Cottage Cheese....

Kraft Caabto Brand Mozzarala,
Brick or

Muenster Cheese

• 1* *

Maxwell
House

Dal Monte In Extra Light Syrup

Phiadalphia Brand Aaaortad Soft

Cream Cheese .....Tte 92*

31r

Dal Mont* In Heavy Syrup

w nom M fY vii
h ii

2

1-lb. can

i »

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m i cm
sene

e l07*09 er Mere,

Dal Mont*. No Salt Added
Early Garden

Sweet Pees......2

Coconut, Orange, Banana or Choc

Ten Plus Bare..... .

CHIP’S STRATA BALAD

T om assorted greens
Mushroom slices
Red onion si Ices
Boiled ham slices, rolled
Tomato wedges
Shredded sharp natural Cheddar cheese
Toasted onion dressing made with cream cheese
Layer greens, mushrooms and onion on serving plate
Top with ham. tomato, cheese and dressing.
Make ahead: Prepare as directed: omit dressing
Coven refrigerate several hours. When ready to serve,
remove cover, top with dressing.

One Sandwich,
Please; Hold
The Bread

Del Monte Early Garden

Sweet P eat......2
BREAKFAST CLUB
GRADE A FLORE)A

What ts made in one dish, contains meat, vegetables,
and dairy products, and doesn’t havr to be cooked? The
answer Is a main-dish "stratified' salad.
The CheTs Strata Salad or layered salad was created
as a no-cook alternative to the all-American casserole.
The salad is composed in steps beginning with a bed of
mixed greens, followed by layers o f fresh vegetables,
cold meat and cheese, and crowned with plenty of thick
dressing. The salad requires a dressing that can stand
up to Its hearty character, and Philadelphia Brand
dressings, new from Kraft, are Just what the chef
ordered. Made with real cream cheese, they are thick,
rich, and creamy — the perfect accompaniment to a
main-dish salad.
When It comes to nutrition and flavor, a stratified
salad really stacks up against a casserole, and takes
much less time and energy. A meal composed o f a
main-dish stratified salad and fresh bread sticks or
crackers can Include representatives from all the basic
food groups in a way that is new, exciting, and easy to
prepare. The salad may be made up to eight hours In
advance when covered well with plastic wrap and
refrigerated until serving time.
To make a main-dish C h efs Strata Salad, line a
shallow tray or platter with your favorite lettuce variety,
then arrange a layer o f fresh mushroom slices and red
onion rings. Top them with a circle o f rolled ham slices
and tomato wedges, and pour a liberal amount of
Philadelphia Brand Italian herb dresalng In the center.
Sprinkle shredded Cheddar cheese over the entire salad.
You can combine your own favorite Ingredients to
build a variety o f salads: start with a bed o f your favorite
mixed greens, then be creative and generous with the
fixings. The Kraft Kitchens suggest you try cold, cooked:
chopped chicken: avocado wedges; Swiss cheese slices;
and alfalfa sprouts with Philadelphia Brand cucumber
dressing for a garden-fresh California strata salad. Or go
south-oF-the-border with taco meat, Cheddar cheese, and
hot peppers served with Philadelphia Brand toasted
onion dressing and tortilla chips. Make a hero strata
salad with pepperonl. salami, and provolone or
mozzarella cheese slices, onion rings, and a topping of
Philadelphia Brand Italian herb dresalng.
Now that we’ ve got you thinking, you can start
stratifying!

Dal Monte 17-oc. Cut, or
French Style

Cut or French Style
■•••••••

wfheieshoppingiso pieosue7doysoweek

Who says you need bread to make a sandwich? With a
Saladwich your ‘‘bread” is a slice of iceberg lettuce.
It’s actually an open-faced sandwich that U fa the
lettuce with a slice of brick cheese, tomato, boiled ham
and green pepper rings. Since moat opea-faced
sandwiches are topped with a sauce, try irisanij
cucumber dressing to enhance your ingredients. It’s
made with real cucumber and aour cream that adds n
delightful flavor to any of your saladwich combinations.
B A L A IIW IC B

V W A C IC T *.
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Iceberg lettuce slices
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�</text>
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Library Volunteer Program To Begin Soon
By Micheal Belli
Herald Stiff Writer
Despite her initial reluctance to develop a volunteer
program for Seminole County’s libraries. County
Librarian Jean Rhein says she will begin the program
within two weeks.
She said training for the 12 volunteer positions in the
six-month pilot program In the Seminole County
libraries will begin Tucsuay and the volunteers will
begin performing actual library duties on July 11.
The volunteer program ts being established at the
direction o f county commissioners who want to cut costs
In the library system. Commissioners have said libraries
are one area which can be trimmed to help meet a
projected 91.2 million budget deficit. .

clerks, five pages, one elerk/typist and one processing
aide.
The volunteers will work In the Sanford branch library
and the main library in Casselberry. Their duties will
include filing books, enforcing library rules, typing
overdue book notices, miscellaneous clerical duties and
readying books to be placed on the shelves. By using
volunteecrs for some o f those activities currently
handled by library stafl, the library will be able to
expand Its houre o f servioe.
Meanwhile, merchants at the Seminole Plaza, adjacent
to the Casselberry library, have protested the closing o f
the library on Saturday. The 25 merchants who signed
the petition say they want the library reopened on
Saturdays.

division has led to a delay In Issuing 97 million In library
construction bonds approved by voters last year. The
bonds were scheduled to be issued In March but because
of county fears o f possible deficits, the bond Issue was
delayed.
The Seminole County Library Advisory Board has
recommended a plan to split the bond Issue and proceed
with part of the construction program.
That plan calls for 94 million of the bonds to be issued
Immediately and the funds to be used to finance
construction o f an expansion at the Sanford branch
library and land acquisition and construction of branch
libraries in the Forest City and Oviedo areas along with
land acquisition for new libraries In the Casselberry and
Lake Howell-Tuskawllla areas.

The libraries have been on reduced hours since May to
cut costs. The libraries are closed on weekends and open
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. Hours for
the remainder o f the week arc 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Rhein objected to the commission directive but has
established the positions which will be filled by
volunteers. The program will Include five circulation

"Saturday has traditionally been the busiest day ol the
week, both for the retail trade and library patrons. We
understand that under current budget cuts, some
services have to be curtailed. We think, however, other
alternatives could be found to afreet the savings needed
without the closing on Saturday,’ ’ the petition says.
The concern with budget-cutting In the library

The remaining 93 million worth of bonds would be
sold prior to Oct. 5, 1988. That bond Issue would finance
construction o f the Casselberry and Lake HowellTuskawllla libraries along with land acquisition and
construction of a library In Lake Mary.
County commissioners agreed last week to hold a
work session on the library bond Issue.
I

County
Cuts Out
New Jobs

r-r*r

i

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i i

___ ■

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A ___ §

In what commissioner Robert Sturm
called “ a hatchet Job," Seminole County
commissioners have virtually eliminated
new personnel from the fiscal 1983-84
budget.
.
Commissioners Barbara Christensen.
Sandra Glenn and Robert G. “ BudFeather agreed to a budget package
which eliminates all but essential new
personnel and cuts some existing Jobs.
The board eliminated five vacant Jobs
In the lowest priority rating. The five
positions are contracts coordinator In the
Purchasing Department; urban horilculturalist In the Extension ofllce: inventory
c o n t r o l l e r and m a in t e n a n c e
workcr/program leader In the Division of
Facilities and Recreation and chief of
surveys In the Public Works Depart­
ment.
But that may not be the end o f cuts to
existing Jobs. Another 44 Jobs are in .the
next highest priority ranking and 16 of

By Donna Batts
Herald Staff Writer
Lawyers George Algernon Speer and
son Thomas A. Speer are taking their
fight to stop the city o f Sanford from
beautifying the downtown section to the
federal district court in Orlando.
Their fight In the state courts has
come to an end because o f a Florida
Supreme Court rule.
Although they haven’ t been successful
In the courts so far, their lawsuit has
served to delay the downtown project for
nearly three years.
And during that time construction
costs, according to City Manager W. E.
"P e te ’ ’ Knowles. haVe risen by 60
percent. Some 960.000 has been in the
city reserve account to pay for part of the

•**••*"- •».«»«»&gt;■

P edro A licea puts up one end of a special 40-m eter
quad antenna on a tow er a t the Sanford A irp o rt
during a recent em ergency d rill. The 150-member
L a k e M on roe A m a te u r R adio Society p articip ated
in the A m e ric a n R adio R elay League's 50th annual
fie ld d a y em ergency exercises. The d rill Involved
Iradlo operators fro m throughout the U nited States
C anada and tested how quickly rad io clubs

could react to an emergency In order to provide
{•range communication
com m unication If
if rneeded.
A fte r A licea
long-range
......................
had the special antenna on the tow er, society

m e m b e r A nd rew K ilp a tric k sent messages to
request contacts during the p ra ctic e event.
.

Speers To
Start New
Downtown
Court Fight

look at those 44 Jobs to see If any more
can be cut. Mrs. Christensen has said In
recent months that several divisions
have too many managerial Jobs.
In other personnel actions, the board
decided to review In five months a title
c h a n g e fo r th e ir s e c re ta rie s and
secretaries to the county administrator
and his assistant. The title change to
administrative aide would increase their
salaries by a total o f 98,620.
The starting salary for the seven
positions would Jump from the current
911.602 to 913.123.
Also rejected were a Job classification
change and a 91.170 pay raise for
Support Services Manager Richard
Strom; the purchase o f 31 telephones for
the County Services Building at a cost of
918.910; the upgrading o f a word
'processor in the OfTlcc of Management
and Budget; a reclassification for ihe
secretary In the Fleet Management office;
a small engine mechanic and acheduler/scrvlcc writer for Fleet Manage­
ment; a coordinator o f development
review In the Land Management Division
and a reorganization in the Public Works
Department.
Several items were Initially approved
but then deleted from the budget when
Mrs. Christensen. Feather and Mrs.
Glenn voted to drop the whole package
o f non-essential personnel actions.
Among those which were cut tn that
action Included a reclassification o f
senior budget aide to management and
budget technician in .the Office o f
Management and Budget; a 93.006 raise
for Fleet Manager Frank KUlgore; re­
classification o f administrative assistant
library assistant and public service
coordinator'In the Library Division; a
librarian and secretary for the Library
Division; upgrading the 4-H program
assistant’s job in the Extension ofllce.
account clerk, secretary and permit
coordinator in Public Works.
• IjW c k M lB ils

^ Tjpijpp VIacbsH

Buck!o Up Youngnfmn Today
Scott M y e rs , 2-year-old son of R obert and Lucille M y e rs of Sanford,^doks
rig h t a t home in his c a r seat. B a rb a ra P fluke, ow ner of the G ingerbread
House Child C are Center In Sanford, gets Scott ready In his seat ev ery
afternoon for his fath e r who comes by to take the youngster hom e. Scott's
m other brings Scott to the d ay ca re center each day in the c a r seat. The
M y ers alread y a re In the habit others have to develop as F lo rid a's new
child restrain t law goes into effect today. The law requires th a t children up
to age 3 be In a child's restrain t ch air w hile In a m otor yehlcle and th at
children aged 3 to 5 be restrained in a seat belt.
,

M otorcyclist Killed
A 22-year-old Sanford man was killed
early today-when he lost control" of a
motorcycle he was rldlnj^-and was
thrown against a cement ctilvert off U.S.
Highway 17-92.
Barton Lee Fouts. 79 Shenandoah
Apartments, was pronounced dead at
the scene at 2:18 a.m. today by Seminole
County assistant medical examiner Dr.
Sarah Irrgnng.
According to Sanford police, Fouts was
riding southbound on U.S. 17-92. He lost

control o f the 1982 motorcycle Just north
o f Lake Mary Boulevard, running ofl the
main portion of the road and traveling
approximately 135 feet prior to hitting
the culvert in front o f Seminole Ford. He
was thrown from the vehicle upon
Impact, police said.
The accident is still under Investiga­
tion by ofTlrcr A.J. Collazo. Sanford
police said. No further information was
available this morning.

TODAY
. I0A
Horoscope..............
.,2A
Hospital.................
...2A
Bridge.............................10A Nation.....................
Calendar........................... 00 U t H o M a f o n
Classified Ads
0,9A
Comics............................ 10A It w a s b ille d a t th e
Crossword...................... 10A gam e of the y e a r. But It
DearAbby........................5A w a s n 't. - T im G ra h a m
Deaths...... ...............:......2A and J e ff B la ke saw to
Dr. Lamb........................10A th a t. G ra h a m fired a
E ditorial......................... 4A th re e-h itter and Blake
Florida..............................3A roped th ree hits as the

Action Reports................ 3A

Around The Clock....... 4A

People...............................5A
Sports............................ $,7A
Television...............Leisure
S an fo rd N a tio n a ls
ro u ted the Sanford
A m e r i c a n s , 10-2, In
Sub-D istrict L ittle M a (or Tou rnam ent action
a t L e e s b u rg . See
Sports, P ag e6A .

P*5layor See P. Moore said today th£ city
w ill have to continue delaying the
doVntown project as long as there ts any
doubt and with the Issue remaining In
the court system there Is some doubt
about whether the project can be
accomplished.
Thomas Speer said today he and his
father are not appealing to the Florida
Supreme Court because o f a high court
rule prohibiting appeal from an appellate
court decision when that court doesn't
Issue a written opinion In a case.
Several weeks ago the Fifth District
Court o f Appeal In Daytona Beach
upheld a ruling by Circuit Judge Roger
Dykes In April 1982 that the city of
Sanford has authority to spend money to
Improve the downtown section.
Dykes said the plan for First Street
from Park to Palmetto to construct
planters for flowers at designated areas,
to widen sidewalks, to resurface pari of
First Street, install new street lights and
to close a section o f Magnolia Avenue to
vehicle traffic to create a pedestrian mall
would not create a traffic hazard or take
anyone's rights away.
Speer said today he and his father,
representing themselves only as owners
o f their law office building on Magnolia
Avenue, will go to the federal court In
Orlando asking the court to prohibit the
city from closing Magnolia Avenue.
He said they will challenge the ’ ’taking
o f our private property rights and
damaging us without due process of
law."
"There are no other plaintiffs In the
suit.** Speer said. Other downtown
owners and business people were in­
volved in the suits ortgliudly.
City Attorney Bill CoII»ert said he has
received a letter from George Algernon
Speer notifying that the issue would be
taken to the federal 'court "unless
something can be worked out." Colbert
said he has not discussed the Issue with
the senior Speer yet. The senior Speer
was unavailable for comment today.

Fun, Fireworks To Be Cracking In Many Cities
Carols
and
proceeds
will
the
Fireworks
Fund.
B y J a M C a sM tb sn ry
Carols
and
proceeds
will
gogototo
the
Fireworks
Fund.
will
Mallparking
parkinglot
lotthat
thatwill
willcombine
combinemmusic and a 97.000
willinclude
includebarbecued
barbecuedchicken,
chicken,com
comon
onthe
thecob
coband
and Mall
ff.W
H eraldI B U n
.W rite r
TheThe
Sanford-Seminole
Sanford-Seminole
Jaycces
Jaycces
will will
have
have
a dunk
a dunk
tank
tankbaked
beans.
ColdCold
drinks
willwill
be sold.
There
willwill
be be
fireworks
disolav.*
baked
beans.
drinks
be sold.
There
fireworks
display.'&gt; '
With Artworks displays scheduled in Sanford. Alta­ and other local organizations will sponsor various fooo Judging o f homemade goodies aurh os cakes, pies,
The 21-piece Altamonte Springs Jazz Ensemble will
monte Springs and Oviedo and various other festivities concessions from not dogs to "soul food" and activities cookies, jellies and Jams, afterwhtch they will be sold.
present a concert beginning at 7 p.m. with both pop and
planned around the county. Seminole County residents such as the Moon Walk and fish pond. The Seminole
The Paragators precision skydiving team o f Eustls Is patriotic music. They will also play for 30 minutes
c a n anticipates grand an d a glorious Fourth o f July.
High School Cheerleaders will have a booth serving Ice tentatively scheduled to make s parachute Jump at 3 following the fireworks which are scheduled to begin st
Sanford’s Family Day fun, sponsored by the Greater cream, doughnuts and coffee.
p.m.. but the time may be changed subject to weather. ‘ 9 p.m.
Sanford Chamber o f Commerce, will blast o ff at 11 a.m.
The General Sanford Museum and Library adjacent to
For those with portables or car radios, WD1Z will
Other entertainment and children’s gomes will take
Monday In Fori Mellon Park. A spectacular fireworks the park will be open and the new exhibiL "Th e place throughout the afternoon. The lake will also be attempt to choreograph music with the fireworks anil
the lakefront at 9 p.m. will climax the Tlmucan Trace." featuring an ancient Indian dugout open for swimming.
broadcast a musical background during the show.
!
canoc. will be free to the public.
Bill James, city recreation director, said a fireworks'
There will be games such os egg toss, sack race,
Loral businesses, clubs and Individuals donated time
balloon games, and sponge toss and clown make-up by replica o f Old Glory will be flown In by helicopter as pari
and money to make the 93,000 pyrotechnic display
Clowns o f America.
o f the grand finale.
*
James sold that money for the fireworks was raised
Scheduled to perform st 1 p.m. are the dancers from
The National Ouard Company B. 2nd Ba toll ion. 124th
1 —
■— —
11
■ Betty Vacant) School o f Dance: st 2 p.m.. the Dixieland entirely from voluntary contributions. He said in the
Infantry, o f Sanford will set up a display in Fort Mellon
The Lake Maty CIA (Civic Improvement Association) Cloggers; si 4:30 p.m.. belly dancers; and Michael past, prior to the Altamonte-South Seminole Jaycces
Park across from the armory on East First Street as part will sponsor s Fourth o f July celebration Monday Evans, singer and guitarist. There will be a watermelon taking over the fireworks show for several years, the city
o f the Fourth o f July festivities.
beginning at noon In Crystal Lake Park. Rear Admiral eating contest at 8 p.m.
had been Involved in putting It on. and has now taken It
The city recreation department will sponsor games Tyler Dedman will be the speaker at the patriotic
A t 5:15 p.m., the festivities will move to the parking over again. "W e would like to make It an annual event,
and contests throughout the day such as sack races and ceremony that will kick-off the afternoon o f activities lot in front o f Cafe Sorrento for a 80s dance.
adding to it each year." James said.
s greased pole competition. A greased pig contest will be which will include an ‘ ‘unofncisl’ ’ groundbreaking for
The city of Altamonte Springs and radio station
Also In Altamonte Springs, the Altamonte-South
at 9 p.m. for the more adventuresome youths. (he new community building.
WD1Z-100FM will co-host a Fourth o f July celebration In
S aijord Landings will provide its paddle boats in Lake
Advanced tickets are being sold for the dinner which the Crane’s Roost basin at th«* west end o f the Altamonte

�Graham Vetoes $2 Billion School Bill

NATION
IN BRIEF
T h i FBI It N ow On The
Purloined P apon Cato
WASHINGTON (UPI) - With the controversy
Intensifying over how President Reagan's 1980
campaign got Jimmy Carter's briefing papers,
the FBI says It has entered the Investigation to
find out who obtained the documents.
Reagan, when asked If he would apologize to
Carter over the Incident, said. "I haven't done
anything to apologize for."
The FBI disclosed Thursday It Joined the
Investigation at the request o f the Justice
D epartm ent, w hich has been re vie w in g
hundreds of pages o f papers since the White
House turned them over tarller this week.
Reagan's alleged use of Carter papers surfaced
In a book by Time magazine correspondent
Laurence Barrett, who white that a briefing
book prepared for Carter's climactic Oct. 28
televised debate with Reagan apparently was
slipped to Reagan's campaign by a "m ole."

; W hittle Blowor Vindicated
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court
today vindicated a Wall Street analyst who
uncovered one of the biggest business frauds In
history, ruling 6-3 he did not deserve to be
punished for tipping stockholders about the
scandal.
The Justices ruled the Securities and
Exchange Commission was wrong to censure
Raymond Dirks for alerting certain Investors In
time for some to sell tholr stock before news of
the $2 billion fraud toppled the Equity Funding
Corp. Insurance holding company.
In an Important decision for the entire
securities Industry, the Justices found that strict
rules against buying or selling stock based on
"inside tips" do not prohibit securities analysts
from alerting Investors to all Information they
obtain from company Insiders.

Boat Ramps Crumbling
Boaters planning to use ramps at either o f Seminole
County's Lake Monroe boat launching areas on U.S.
Highway 17-92 north of Sanford may experience delays
In getting their boats Into the water.
Dan* Peters of, the county's Facilities, Parks and
Recreation Division said today that ramps at the two
areas are In disrepair.
He said concrete has washed out o f two ramps at the
facilities. Only one boat can be launched at a time, he
said, rather than three or four which can be launched
under normal circumstances. Peters said boaters may
have a long wait to get their craft in the water.

WEATHER.
.

v

u

»i

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NATIONAL REPORTt-Neariy a dosen tornadoes tore*
through the upper Midwest, wrecking buildings,
knocking out power and snapping off trees 3 to 4 feet
above ground. Up to 8 inches of rain from accompa­
nying storms threatened flash floods today In Minnesota
and Wisconsin. Severe thunderstorms with winds to 70
mph and damaging hall pounded a path from Texas to
North Dakota and east to Ohio Thursday. Flash flood
watches covered all of south central and southeast
Minnesota, and the Klckapoo Basin o f southwestern
Wisconsin. Tomadory were sighted Thursday and
Thursday night 1:
•» Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin
and Ohio. The N i . &lt;
Weather Service said some of
the sightings may have been the same tornado touching
down In different places. In North Dakota, tornado
sightings but no damage were reported northwest and
north o f New Salem, west of Bismarck. Half a dozen
sightings were reported In southeastern Minnesota, west
and south o f Minneapolis. A tornado near Pequayam
Lake snapped trees off 3 to 4 feet above ground. Other
tornadoes were reported at Le Sueur. St. Bonifacius. the
western Minneapolis suburbs of Mayer and Gaylord, and
near Flying Cloud airport west o f the city. High winds
and hall swept though northwestern Wisconsin.
Tornadoes were reported at Sanborn and west of
Lancaster, but no damage was reported from them.
Large hall damaged several cars In Douglas County, and
wind knocked out power In parts of Bayfield County. In
Ohio, a tornado was reported In Pickaway County. In
Minnesota, the tornado at Mayer damaged several farm
buildings. A severe thunderstorm swept from west to
east through southern Minnesota. It dropped golfballslzcd hail on Franklin, lashed Mankato with 60 mph
winds, overturned several mobile homes and dawned
trees and power lines In Faribault, and dumped 8 Inches
o f rain on Steele County. Heavy thunderstorms over
western Nebraska and South Dakota dropped threequarter Inch hall on Ellsworth Air Force Base near Rapid
City. S.D. Golfball to baseball-size hail and up to 60 mph
winds struck Valentine, Neb.
AREA HEADINGS (U a.m.): temperature; 80;
overnight low: 74; Thursday high; 90; barometric
pressure: 30.12; relative humidity: 85 percent; winds
northeast at 7 mph; rain: L44 ; sunrise 6:31 a.m..
sunset 6:27 p.m.
SATURDAY TIDES: Daytona Sosch: highs. 1:13
a.m., 1:45 p.m.; lows. 7:18 a.m.. 7:33 p.m.; Hart
Comororail highs, 1:05 a.m.. 1:37 p.m.; lows, 7:09 a.m..
7:24 p.m.; S o yp o rti highs, 7:16 a.m.. 6:50 p.m.; lows.
12:43 a.m.. 1:21 p.m.
AREA FORECAST: Parity cloudy through Saturday
with a good chance o f afternoon and evening thunder­
showers. Highs In the low 90s, low In the lower 70s.
Winds light and variable.
ROATDfO FORECAST: Winds mainly from the south
to southwest at 10 knots through tonight. Seas 3 feet or

HOSPITAL NOTES

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Gov. Bob
Graham formally vetoed the 82 billion
primary state appropriation for public
schools late Thursday night, but he
accepted most o f the rest o f an 911.5
billion, 1983-84 budget.
Graham acted only a few minutes
before midnight, the beginning o f state
government's new fiscal year and the
effective date for the huge spending plan.
He had announced earlier Thursday he
was vetoing a “ woefully Inadequate"
public school budget and calling another
special session to try to get lax Increases
and school Improvements.
Graham noted In his formal veto
message that money for criminal Justice
was Inadequate as well as the appropria­
tions for the schools, although he did not

veto criminal Justice funding.
He s a i d he m a y t r y to g e t
supplemental appropriations for the
state's attorneys and the prison system
during the special session, but after an
acceptable education budget' has been
worked out.
Overall, the rest of the budget Is fairly
responsible, the governor said.
"T h e Legislature has done a creditable
Job o f funding practically every area of
governmental operations except educa­
tion and criminal Justice." Graham
wrote In his veto message.
He vetoed $54 million in what Is called
"categorial" public school funding, in
addition to the 81.99 billion basic
appropriation. The bulk o f the vetoed

He rejected a couple o f dozen appro­
priations that had nothing to do with the
public schools. The vetoed items In­
cluded $2 million for university quality
Improvement. Including pay raises for
faculty at the University of Florida and
Florida State University law schools,
noting the Legislature Ignored the Board
o f Regents' decision to concentrate
quality Improvement money on under­
graduate programs.
Graham also vetoed projects Important
to both House Speaker Lee Moffitt and

Senate President Curtis Peterson —
$150,000 for the Miss Teenage America;
P agean t In L a k e la n d , P e te rs o n 's
hometown; and several special approprl'
atlons for the University of South Florida
In Tampa. Moffitt's hometown.
He rejected $500,000 to help put oit
the Miami Grand Prlx auto race.
Graham said when announcing hIK
public schools veto Thursday he will put
together a special taxes and education
enhancem ent package to o ffe r to
legislators as an alternative.
The plan, to be released next week. Is
p a rtly In resp on se to c la im s b y
legislators that one reason he didn't get
lax Increases during the Just-completecf
regular and special sessions was that he;
didn't have a specific proposal to offer.
•

Developer's Plea
For Freedom
Denied By Judge
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) — A federal Judge has denied a
petition by attorneys asking that Canadian land
developer Sidney Jaffe be released from prison on the
grounds his return to Florida from Canada by two
bounty hunters violated the U.S.-Canadlan Extradition
Treaty.
U.S. District Court Judge Howell W. Melton thus
accepted the findings o f U.S. Magistrate Harvey
Schleslnger. who found that Jaffe had not yet exhausted
all o f his state appeals In the matter.
JafTe's appeal o f his conviction is pending In Florida's
5th District Court o f Appeal In Daytona Beach.
“ State Judges are as competent as federal Judges to
Insure that federal rights are protected," Schleslnger
wrote In his opinion, referring to the treaty question.
“ State Judges are sensitive to federal rights."
Jaffe, 58, failed to appear for his May 1981 trial on
charges he violated Florida's Uniform Land Sales Act.
Before a request for extradition could be forwarded to
the U.S. State Department, bounty hunters hired by an
Orlando bonding agency forcibly returned Jaffe from
Toronto. Canada.
Jaffe eventually was convicted of 27 counts of
violating the land sales law, and sentenced to 35 years
In prison. He currently Is confined at the Avon Park
Correctional Institution near Tampa.
Earlier this week, the Canadian government filed Its
own motion in Jacksonville federal court, asking for
JafTe's Immediate release and return to Canada. The
Canadian petition argued that Florida ofilclats colluded
with the bonding firm to bring about JafTe's return.
A hearing on that motion has not been held.
In the meantime, the bounty hunters, Timm Johnsen,
o f Orlando, and Daniel Kear. o f Fairfax County. Va. have
been extradited to Canada, where they face kidnapping
charges.

MaraM Pfcataa Sy Tam m y Viacaat

Aaahhhhh

It's hot w ork putting up troop
banners, ten ts, tyi ng knots,
gathering firewood and ali the
other duties a Boy Scout Is
expected to p erform . Just ask
Lake M a ry Troop 831 Scouts
F r a n k D a v i s , 12, h o l d i n g
banner, and M ichael Bedell, 11,
with shovel. A fte r a |ob well
done, Frank, above, takes a
break and a cool sip of w ater
from his canteen. The Scouts
will wind up a week-long cam poree Saturday w ith the laun­
ching of the USS Lake M a ry , a
raft they m ade themselves, and
a barbecue lunch.

Two Arrested In Massive Gun Theft
By Diana Pstryk
Herald SUIT Writer

If you recently bought a gun at a
reasonable price from someone In a bar.
Seminole County sheriff's Investigators
Bay chances are Its stolen property.
P erso n s w h o b ou gh t such guns
anytime after May 31 are being asked to
have their serial numbers checked by the
s h e r iffs departm ent, said s h e r iffs
spokesman John Spolskl.
Jhe reason, a massive gun theft which
occurred In Seminole County on May 31
at the Public Storage rental units. 2620
N. Semoran Blvd.. Winter Park.
In that heist, 69 guns valued at
929,000 were taken.

A few days ago, Information gathered
by Investigator Jason Pauska Indicated
the guns were being sold In surrounding
counties, Spolskl said.
He said after an individual attempted to
sell 18 of the guns. Pauska was able to
arrange a "sting reverse buy" situation
which resulted in the arrest of two men.
"W e started to get Information about
the sales about three days ago.” Spolskl
said. “ From that information we were
able to go undercover and attempt to buy
some o f the guns."
According to Orange County reports,
detectives went to an unidentified gun
dealership and witnessed the sale of 20 of
the stolen guns. Information reportedly

came from a gun dealer who was Is a separate offense so the men could
approached by a customer who wanted to conceivable be charged with 69 separate
sell a large quantity of guns.
counts of theft of a firearm.
Spolskl said arrested were Kevin Barry
Spolskl said the charge Is a felony
MacArthur. 22. o f 3095 Crane Strand.
punishable by up to five years In prison.
Orlando, and Thomas Eugene Campbell.
21. o f 305 Balfour Drive. Winter Park.
Spolskl said some of the stolen guns
They are being held at the Orange have been discovered as far away as
County Jail charged with dealing In stolen Titusville.
property. Spolskl said they will not get
He said It would be prudent for anyone
out on bond because Seminole County
who suspects he or she has a stolen gun
has put "a hold" on them.
to contact the sheriff's office.
He said Seminole County was today
" I f they do not wish to be Identified
preparing charges against the men. He
said they will likely be charged with they may call in the serial number and
armed burglary and theft of a firearm. we will check It out for them anony­
Spolskl said each gun Involved In a theft mously.." Spolskl said.

...Firew o rks Displays Planned By Many Cities
Coatisnsd from Pag* IA
Seminole Women Jaycees will sponsor the fifth annual
Little Miss Firecracker Pageant at the center o f the
Altamonte Mall at 2 p.m. Monday. More than 20 girls
between 5 and 8 years old are expected to compete for
the title. The pageant will open with the contestants
dressed in red. white, and/or blue performing a medley
o f patriotic songs and a dance routine. Each child will be
Interviewed In front o f the audience and be asked a
question by the Judges.
They will be Judged on appearance, poise, and
personality. "N o child will go home empty handed,"
said pageant chairwoman Donna Verall. "there will be
some sort of prize for each contestant." The deadline for
registration has been extended to' Saturday and the
entry fee is 830 per child The final rehearsal will be
Sunday afternoon. To obtain application, contact Mrs.
Verall at 831-7836. This la one o f two major fund-raising
events sponsored each year by the Jaycee Women to
fund their various projects

The city of Oviedo will celebrate the Fourth with a
star-spangled Bag raising and dedication Jubilee.
Bluegrass barbecue and fireworks. Oviedo Lodge 243
FftAM will sponsor the patriotic program at 11 a.m. on
the grounds of the lodge on King Street next to the
Oviedo High School football field assisted by the
Veterans of War Post 10139. the American Legion Post,
the Oviedo Chamber of Commerce and other local civic
organizations.
The principal speaker will be Col. George Snyder
(U.S.A.F. Ret.) of Winter Park who was recently cited by
the 98th Congress, the Air Force Association and the
McDIII Air Force Base Leadership School for his
patriotic, plonering Interest in military education, and
continuing efforts on behalf o f an adequate military
position.
Beginning at noon, the VFW Post will sponsor a
barbecued beef or chicken dinner In the parking lot of
Meat World. Entertainment will be provided by a
six-piece bluegrass band.

AREA DEATHS
JAMEEORITT
James Gritt o f 2022 Old
Lake Mary Road. Sanford,
died Thursday at Florida
Hospltal-Altamonte. Bom
in Sanford, he was a re­
tired laborer.
He is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Sallie Mae
Byrd o f Sanford; one sis­
ter. Charlie Mae Gritt of
S a n fo r d ; fo u r g r a n d ­
children.
fiunriM&gt; Funeral Home.

o f Indiantown. died June
28 In West Palm Beach in
a construction accident.
Bom Sept. 14, 1946 in
Sanford, he lived here
most o f his life. He was a
Crooms High School grad­
uate and a construction
worker. He was a member
o f Zion Hope Missionary
Baptist Church.
Survivors Include his
m o th e r, M rs. J u a n ita
Southward o f Sanford; a
Sanford; four slaters, Eva
and Alice Southward, both
o f In d la n to w n ; C la ra

Ewwliqi llciulffl

categorial money was $43 million to
reimburse school districts for losses from
the $25,000 homestead exemption. The
843 million isn't nearly enough to cover
the losses, he said.

STOCKS

At dark, the Oviedo .Fire Department volunteers will
shoot off fireworks In the Meal World parking lot. The
display was paid for by contributions from local
businesses, civic groups and individuals.
The Mallland-South Seminole Chamber of Commerce
will not hold its usual Fourth o f July Maitland Day
celebration this year. However, the Jewish Community
Center at 651 N. Maitland Ave. will sponsor ..a
community-wide family day. The center will be open
Monday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. All members and
newcomers are invited to enjoy the pool, entertainment
by "Bob and Anetta". as well as participate In relay
gameB and other activities.
Among the events planned are greased watermelon
relays, father-son bronco dunking, and penny dives.
There will be pop-up puppet making and a movie at'3
p.m. for the children. Hot dogs, watermelon and cold
drinks will be on sale.
Those attending are advised to bring their own lawn
chairs.

PUBLIC NOTICI
Farmer o f Orlando, and
Gussle Mae Phillips o f
Sanford; four brothers,
K e n n e th . L io n e l and
Clarence Southward, all o f
S a n fo r d , an d G e o r g e
Bellmany o f Altam ontr
Springs; grandfather, the
Rev. Willie Brown Sr.; five
uncles, six aunts and 17
nieces and nephews.
Browns’ Paradise Memo­
rial Chapel Sanford: Is in
charge o f arrangements.

There Will Be No Garbage
Pickup For Customers Served
By The City Of Sanford’s Refuse
Department On Monday, July
4th.
Mondays Pickup, July 4th, Will
Be Made On Tuesday, July 5th,
And Tuesday’s Pickup Will Be
Made On Wednesday, July 6,
1983.
For Additional Information, Call

The Public Works Office
3 2 2 -3 1 6 1 , Ex t. 2

�k

h#ft*.

«#

E w w lm BsraM, isirtord, F I.

FUDRCA

Friday, Jtrty 1, 1 M 3 -IA

'Suspicious' Pedestrian Arrested For Pot Possession
"Due to his suspicious attitude" police said they
stopped a man walking In an alley near the 900 block of
Park Avenue, Sanford, at 5:23 p.m. Tuesday. Officers
. said a search o f (he man for possible concealed weapons
revealed a brown envelope containing marijuana and a
package or rolling papers.
Richard Williams Jr.. 24. of 1604 W. 16th Si..
Sanford, was arrested and charged with possession o f a
controlled substance and possession of drug parapher­
nalia. He was being held at the Seminole County Jail
today in lieu o f 85,000 bond,

IN BRIEF
A ll Charge%Dropped In
Itaclol Flap A t Seabreeze
DAYTONA BEACH (UP!) - Volusia County
officials have dropped all charges against 66
black students and Tour ministers Jailed for
trespassing during a racial disturbance at
Seabreeze Senior High School.
Officials have decided not to prosecute the
students and ministers Involved In the protest,
even though 25 to 30 percent of the students
had been Involved In criminal activity before,
said Assistant State Attorney Marvin Clegg.
The students and clergymen picketed the
school for three days last month, claiming the
administration excluded them from social activ­
ities and made It Impossible for blacks to be
elected to positions o f power In student
government.

FUNDSSTOLEN
Sometime during a party at his residence, Creed
Monroe Conley. 1320 Forest Drive. Sanford, discovered
81.800 In cash and a negotiable 82.000 cashier's check
missing.
The funds were In his brown leather wallet kept as his
residence, police said. Conley, 60. reported the party
was attended by a number of young males he did not
know.
In an unrelated Incident. $200 In cash was taken from
the Elma DeLorls Daniels residence. 610 E. 5th St..
Sanford, between 7:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Tuesday, police
report.

WINE GONE

life s a v in g C ourse
t o Begin July 13

Fifteen bottles o f CAV Sccondo Ouastl sparkling wine
were taken In a burglary o f the Charles Halgren
residence. 335 Spring Lake Hills, between 10:30 p.m.
Sunday and 10:30 a.m. Monday, police said. The wine
was valued at 8200.

.-’An advanced lifesaving course for persons 15 years of
*fee or over will be sponsored by the Casselberry
•Recreation Center July 13 through Aug. 6 .
.^-.Classes will meet each Wednesday 6-9 p.m. and
■Saturday 9 a.m. until noon. The cost Is *25.
•I.fThe course, approved by the American Red Cross, will
•b* held at (he Wlrz pool on Mark David Boulevard.
•-■f°r more Information, call the Casselberry Recreation
Department at 830-8579.

Nearly 250 feet of brown carpet and padding valued at
$205 were taken from a vacant, locked apurlmenl at
Spanish Trace. Wymore Road. Altamonte Springs,
police said.
The carpel, taken from apartment 305, was taken
between 6:30 p.m. Friday and 7 a.m. Saturday, police
said.

CARPET COPPED

COOL HEIST
A Sears air conditioner valued at 8500 was taken from

9:29 and 9:44 a.m. Monday, police Mid.
The culprits went through several desk drawers and i
trophy case but nothing had been reported missing a
the time the break-ln was discovered.

Action Reports
★

F/res

TAMARA SNATCHED
A 82,200 Yamaha motorcycle was stolen from thi
Kenneth W. New residence. 127 Club Road.. Sanford:
between 9:30 p.m. Sunday and 10 a.m. Monday, police
report. The motorcycle was parked Inside a fenced yard. 1

★ Court(
*

Police

BICYCLE TAKEN
A Sanford 12-year-old's bicycle valued at 8150 w a i
taken from In front o f the Pizza Hut restaurant, 2002 St
French Ave., between 2:50 and 3:15 p.m. Monday}
police report. The bike belongs to Stephanie Ferguson c*
306 E. 20th St.. Sanford.
;

its south wall mounting In a trailer at the construction
site at Howell Branch and Dyke roads, Casselberry,
between 7 p.m. Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday, police said.
The appliance Is the property o f Olln American
Homes. 1033 E. Semoran Blvd.. Casselberry. Police said
the thieves forced open a window’ on the northeast
comer of the trailer to gain entry.

02-TEAR-OLD VICTIM
A thief who took a change puree containing 830 and $
Medicaid card from a 92-year-old Sanford woman cam*
Into her home while she was outside talking to
neighbors, police said.
The change puree la the property o f Hazel Bennett
407 Magnolia Ave., and was taken between 5 and 7 p .n i
Monday.

CAR PARTS STOLEN
Car parts valued at 8315 were taken In a burglary at
Erwin Motors, 100 Orange Blvd.. Sanford, between noon
Saturday and 10:54 a.m. Monday.
Eight Malty spark plug wires, a distributor, radlatopr
and a fbur-barrel carburetor were takeh from the trunk
and passenger compartment of a 2-door red Chevrolet
parked at the auto lot.

FRONT DOOR THIEF
A thief who came and went by the front door took a
purse and its contents from the home o f Gina S. Cuatcij.
1801 W. 4th St., Sanford, between noon and 5 p.n^.
Sunday, police said. The contents of the puree werp
valued at 840.
J

GUNSTAKEN
A shotgun and a .22-callber pistol were reported stolen
from the residence of Louise Blair, 511 Pine Ave.,
Sanford, police said.
The guns were taken by thelvcs who entered thropugh
a rear door that may have been unsecured between 8:30
and 9:30a.m. Monday.
In an unrelated Incident, a .25-callbcr handgun was
reported stolen from under the mattress In the home of
Linda Ann Acrcc, 516 E. 5th St., Sanford, about 11 p.m.
Friday.

VEHICLE BUROLARIZED
Personal property valued at 8220 was taken from p
locked 1973 Bulck belonging to Warren Barber, 23. af
1704 Hawkins Ave., Sanlord; between 2 and 5:15 a.nj.
Monday, police report. The car was parked behind
Barber's house at the time o f the theft.

BUROLARSNET PLANTS
Burglars took several plants valued at 8100 from thp
home of Sally Murphy, 310-C Magnolia Ave.. Sanford, l(i
a theft at approximately 3 a.m. Saturday, police saidThe burglars entered through a front screen porch door, j
I
!
1

CLUB HOUSE RIFLED
The city of Sanford's club house at the shuffleboard
courts at Lake Monroe Park was broken into between

In The
Service

f

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY!

fl
o

, J

T.R. TILLMAN

Pvt. Tlmotheu* R *n *rd Tlllm en.
ion Rf M r* M * r g * r » l B ilk * of f
Cowjn Moughton T e rre ct. Sanford,
roctnfly returned homo on 12 dey*
leev* from D* r r l* lilond. S.C. o fftr
completing I I weeks of recruit
(reining.
During Irolnlng, Tlllm en received
lor mo I Instruction In l i n t old. gftyslcei fitness. m erksm enthlp, d o t*
com b it ttchnlqu**, M o rin * Cor p i
history, custom* and courtesy, d rill,
and nuclear, biological and chemical
warfare.
Following h i* leave, he reported to
Camp Leieune. N.C. for formal
Instruction In personnel adm inistra­
tion. There he w ill be Instructed on
the management of adm inistrative
and clerical functions In the areas of
general administration, personnel
classification and postal services.
Tillm an Is a 1N3 graduate of
Seminole High School.

■**v r;

■H

%

t.

DERRICK ALLEN
LAMAR
P v l. Derrick Allen Lam ar, son of
M r. Henry Lee H arrell and the late
Ellen H arrell of SOJ E . Slh S I,
Sanford, recently returned home on
12 days leave from Parris Island.
S.C. after completing I I weeks of
recruit training.
During training. Lam ar received
form al Instruction In first aid. physi­
cal fitness, marksmanship, dose
combat techniques. M arina Corps
history, customs and courtesy, drill,
and nuclear, biological and chemical
'w arfa re .
Following his leave, he reported to
Camp Leieune. N.C. for formal
Instruction In personnel admlnlstra
tlon. Thor* he w ill be Instructed on
managomonl of administrative and
clerical functions In the area of
general administration, personnel
classification and postal services.
Lam ar is a ISIS graduate of
Seminole High School.

SAVE 20%TO 70% OFF ON MANY ITEMS!
FANS
• WINDOW
• PORTABLE

FOR THIS SALE

RODRICU8 ANDRE
JOHNSON
- Pvt. Rodricus Andre Johnson, son
of M r. and M rs James J. Johnson of
loot Mangoustlne Ave., Sanlord, re­
cently returned home on 12 days
loavo from Parris Island. S.C. after
Ctfnpletlng 11 weeks of recruit
training.
During training. Johnson received
form al Instruction In first aid, physi­
cal Illness, marksmanship, close
iornbof techniques. M arino Corps
.’history, customs and courtesy, d rill,
rend nuclear, biological and chemical
Iw arfare.
I Following his Havo, ha reported to
'F I. Lao, Va. ter formal Instruction in
■petroleum supply. There ho w ill bo
Instructed on the Installation, opera
•tlon. m ain tenant* and repair of h » l
^handling units and accessory
wqulpmont and test potrgteum pro
iducts.

ARTHURJAMES
SIMPSON
Pfc. A rthur James Umpson. son of
M r. and M rs
Arthur Jamas
Slm pa«i. Sr . of H I Jackson St.,
Altam onte Springs, recently re
turned home on 11 days leave from
Parris Island. S C. otter completing
II wooksof recruit fram ing.
During training. Simpson received
ferm el mstruetten In first old. physi­
c a l fttnoos. merksmenshtp, close
•combat techniques. M arina Corps
history, customs end enurteey. d rill,
tend nuclear, bteteglcsl and chemical
w a rfa re .
. Fallowing M s te a t*, ho reparted to
JU.S. A rm y Transporfaften School,
* f . Euslls. Va ter form al Instruction
)n traffic managomonl coordination.
•There ha w ill be Instructed on llw
procurement/acquisition o f OoO
ond/or com m ercial Ironepteteften

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1100 S. French Ave. Sanford
322*7953 OpenMon.-Sit.9AM-5:30PM
30 » 60 • 90 Pay* with NO FINANCE CHAROil

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�Evening Herald
(U SPS W 1-M 0)

,

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or M1-9W3
Friday, July l, 1983-4A

► **&gt; »

Wayne D. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

f&amp;roe Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, $4.23; 6 Months, $24.00;
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Ronald Reagan's
Budget Offensive
W h at a difference a recovery makes. Less than
one yea r ago, Ronald Reagan cast his ow n fiscal
gam e plan aside and barked out the signals for a
record tax hike In August, defense cuts In the fall,
and gasoline user fees and a m ajor jobs bill In
Decem ber. A blitz o f tax-and-spend democrats.
W h ite House advisers, and wishy-washy GOP
leaders In the Senate had the G ipper scram bling
fo r dear life. N ow . the president Is on the offensive.
In politics, as in football. It’s fun to watch a
m aster at w ork. Ronald R eagan's decision to
chuck "th e budget p rocess." an Institution which
e n j o y s s a c r e d - c o w t r e a t m e n t a m o n g th e
W ashington establishm ent, is a bold call —&gt; a
political bom b, to continue the m etaphor. It's a
good call, too, precisely because it goes against the
conventional political and econom ic wisdom .
R eagan advisers David Stockm an and Martin
Feldsteln, for exam ple, warned that w ithout a
budget resolution, even a bad one, the whole
econom ic recovery m ight abort. Fiscal stalem ate
would cause interest rates to rise and the stock
m arket to tum ble, they said. Funny how the
re c o v e ry has actu ally been p ick in g up this
sum m er ju st as the budget process had broken
down. I f the Stockm an-Feldstcin thesis w ere right,
the econ om y should have started boom in g about
1979, w hen deficits w ere coasting dow n: it should
h ave sagged w ith the president and Congress
headed tow ard budgetary grid-lock, with deficits
as far as the e y e can sec.
Our guess is that w h ile deficits are a bad thing,
their role as a cause o f today's high interest rates
iaoverrated . A one-point increase in real econom ic
grow th for the next tw o years, for exam ple, chops
$46 billion o ff the 1985 deficit. Yet Feldsteln and
S tockm an h ave already revised th eir grow th
forecast for 1983 alone by tw o points, and w ill
hpve to revise still m ore given fresh evid en ce o f a
stronger recovery. Hence, the credit and stock
m arkets place little faith in the deficit projections
o f Stockm an. Feldsteln. or the W izard o f O z deficit
beyond m ore than a year o r two.
•If the m arkets are go in g to trust anything, it w ill
not be yet another congressional spending resolu­
tion. the dom estic equivalen t o f a Soviet treaty,
btit greater resolution from the W hite House to
keep C ongress under control. Mr. R eagan 's fiscal
attack plan Is Just w h at the broker ordered, .and It
figh ts red ink the right w ay: with Bpending
restraint and econ om ic grow th.
I W h atever the econ om ic realities, the president's
dieclslon to fight still m et w ith som e s tiff resistance
from his political staff. J im Baker and Richard
barm an both w arned that a confronts ton strategy
cpuld backfire by rem o vin g even the fig leaf o f
fllKa) m odesty that the budget resolution Im poses
oh congressional spending plans. J o in in g them
w as a host o f G O P Senators afraid o f either losing
their seats (P ete D om enlcl. Charles Percy) or their
p resid en tia l a m b itio n s (R ob ert D ole. H ow ard
Baker). J im Baker, if press reports can be believed,
even w ent behind the president’s back in A pril to
encourage D om enicl’s efforts to pass a " c o m ­
p ro m ise " resolution that cut the Reagan defense
increase in half.
Baker reasoned that rejecting the Dom enlcl
com prom ise m ight lead to a confrontation betw een
the president and the Senate leadership. In a
h u ddle w ith the president. Defense Secretary
Caspar W ein b erger delivered the correct response:
S o w h at? T h e president, it's true, w ill face som e
political defections from his ow n party.
T h e b ottom line Is. Ronald Reagan grow s
stron ger w ith e very day o f good new s about the
econ om y, w h ich is Just about e ve ry day. He has
behind him a solid m ajority o f the people, w ho
k n ow that at $850 billion for 1984, federal
spen din g has not y e t been tam ed, and that the
m odest tax re lief o f 1981 was ju st that: Modest. In
poll a fter poll, Am erican a support the Idea o f still
fu rther tax and spen din g cuts. T h e d rive is on and
an yo n e w h o tries to stop it is likely to w ake up
vylth the G ip per's cleat m arks running straight
d ow n his back.

P lm at* W rit•
Letters to the #41tor are welcome fer /
m Mice tie*. A ll letters m e t be signed ead
tooled# e ■ e lllsj addreea and. If possible, a
MM D ia le r . The Brealag Herald ra­
the r | f t to edit letters to avoid libel

What do you say when you're face to
face with an astronaunt?
You don’t ask if the moon is made of
green cheese, which is the only mistake I
didn't make.
It was 4 a.m. on the meriting 4,000
reporters, newscasters and cameramen
streamed Into Kennedy Space Center to
see the shuttle not land.
At that early hour we all still believed
clouds would part and the Challenger
would be able to land at 8:29 a.m. We
parked our cars near the Vehicle Assembly
Building and boarded buses were provided
to take us to the landing strip viewing area.
A colleague-friend and 1 took scats on
one bus by windows on opposite sides of
the aisle. As the bus Oiled up a man and a
woman took the aisle scats next to us. The
man, impeccably dressed, sat next to my
friend. I noticed they both had notebooks
labeled "A B C ". I assumed the man was an
anchorman or newscaster of some sort.
Having been up all night. I tuned out the
conversation my friend was having and
slumped down In the scat, resigned to four
more hours of waiting.

Then my friend said, excitedly,: "Diane,
this is Eugene Ceman, You've heard o f
him, haven't you?"
I ran through my mind all the newsmen
I'd ever heard of.
"N o ." I said In a tone meant to Imply all
of the following: So what?. Who cares?
Don't bother me with trivia, and How can
you be Impressed by someone who Just
stands In front o f a camera and looks
good?
But as the conversation continued and I
heard questions about space suits and lift
offs. I realized my mistake. I sat up.
"Did you go to the moon?" I asked him.
changing from unimpressed to awestruck.
"Y es ," he said, expressionless.
"H ow was It up there?" I asked.
"Interesting." he said.
It was a conversation sure to go down in
history for sheer wit and intelligence.
To enhance the good Impression I was
making, I asked what must have sounded
like an antagonizing question: "W h y didn't
you-all take any women up there to the
moon?"
"None were qualified." he said tersely.

I wanted to mention femnale Jet pilot
Jerrle Cobb, who was tested for the
astronaunt program In 1960. She had
logged 10.000 hours in the air In all types
o f aircraft at a time when candidates John
Glenn had only 5,000, Scott Carpenter
2.900. Physically and psychologically. Ms.
Cobb scored consistently higher than male
competitors.
But those facts escaped me. I merely
replied: " I don't believe that."
At least Cernan's female companion
from ABC told him she thought it was only
because NASA couldn’t figure out how to
provide separate facilities."
Ceman. who took a walk in space as part
o f the Gemini 9 mission, piloted the lunar
module on Apollo 10 and commanded
Apollo 17. remained unimpressed with us.
For the record, while newscasters don't
Impress me. astronauts do. I'm glad he'll
never remember me anyway.
And Just before our bus got to the
landing strip area. It was someone else
brilliantly representing the media who
said: "Say, Is the moon really made of
green cheese?"

ROBERT W A G M A N

JEFFREY HART

Mideast
Policy
Changing?!

Jackson
Should Be
Candidate
The Rev. Jesse Jackson should
launch a presidential candidacy, as
there Is every sign he Is preparing to do.
I say this not really knowing Jackson's
own political agenda, and certain that I
would oppose It If it Is the ofTlclal agenda
o f the major black spokesmen.
Nor do I have any Machiavellian
reasons for hoping for a Jackson
candidacy. He might, or might not. hurt
Walter Mondale to the benefit o f John
Glenn. So what? The six Democratic
dwarfs so far are going nowhere, and if
Teddy Kennedy Joins the race again we
will have a complete Seven Dwarfs.
Whatever his faults might turn out to be
the Rev. Jesse Jackson is a compelling
speaker, and on policy questions he has
a certain unpredictability. The very
least that can now be said for his
candidacy Is that It would add some
interest to the Democratic side of the
1984 presidential race.
In 1976. In Kansas City, as the '
NEW YORK (NEA) - The broad
Republican convention was assembling.
outlines o f a debate over budgetary
I tried to Interest President Ford's
policy that may well dominate the 1984
handlers in a striking Idea.
presidential campaign are now becom­
Ford was then trailing Jimmy Carter
ing visible, and thoughtful Democrats
by about 30 points in most polls. He was
are growing less certain every day that
widely thought to be a bumbler, or, at
they will have the better of the argu­
best, a boring pluggcr.
ment.
I had a political Inspiration. Ford's
Starting from the legislative defeats
vice presidential candidate should be
they suffered at President Reagan’s
our ambassador to the Court o f St.
hands during the first two years of hts
James's, the former national commita d m i n i s t r a t i o n , the D e m o c r a t s
teewoman from Texas who had given a
strengthened their grip on the House of
great speech at the 1972 Miami conven­
Representatives in last November's of­
tion. the beautiful Anne Armstrong. At
f-year elections, and vowed that from
one stroke, Jerry Ford would have been
now on things would be different. There
transformed from a plugger and a bore
would be no more reductions in spend­
into an imaginative trail-blazer. This
ing. save on the allegedly "bloated"
whole notion went over with the Ford
defense budget. Instead. Mr. Reagan
stalwarts like a lead Frtsbee. In their
would be forced to consent to an
collective genius, they electrified the
Increase In taxes — a proposal sup­
country by nominaUng Bob Dole, who
ported even by certain Republican
made history by losing a televised
senators, who were appalled at the
debate to, can you imagine. Walter
deficit projected the next few years.
Mondale.
Well, here we are halfway through
W ou ld Ford have won w ith
1983. and where are those tax in­
Armstrong? My guess is that he would.
creases? It is evident that Mr. Reagan
Now Jesse Jackson is not going to
can hardly wait for Congress to pass
gain the D em ocratic p resid en tial
them so -he can veto them — a
nomination, but how about the second
knowledge that notably diminishes con­
shot on the ticket?
gressional enthusiasm for the whole
idea. Moreover, the Republican senators
Suppose, running in the Democratic
whose consciences compelled them to
primaries, he comes in third behind
break with the president over the size of
Mondale-Glenn. and suppose — out of
the deficit are beginning to realize that
sheer public boredom with the front­
their Democratic allies don’t Intend to
runners and a sense o f Jackson's own
apply one thin dime o f any increased
powers — he breaks out o f his black
tax revenues to the reduction o f that
constituency and begins to make in­
deficit: The money would all be spent on
roads elsewhere? Suppose he arrives at
the usual worthy projects, notably
the San Francisco convention with a
higher welfare "benefits" o f various
very respectable number o f delegates?
sorts.
Why not Jackson for vice president?
Mr. Reagan, therefore, seems clearly
Blacks have held office at the local
to be p osition in g h im s elf as the
and slate levels for a decade or more.
advocate o f low taxes and further cuts
They represent a sizable constituency
In domestic expenditures In the cam­
within the Democratic Party. At some
paign o f 1984. That leaves the Demo­
point, a good black candidate is going to
crats to argue in favor o f higher taxes
run for national office, and why not
and Increased domestic spending — and
now?
Just how popular is that platform likely
So far. the Democratic dwarfs are
to be?
g o in g n o w h e re . T h e ir c o lle c t iv e
The question is not purely rhetorical.
personalities are bland and predictable,
There is a school of thought that big
and they have nothing very striking to
spending by government on worthy
offer in terms o f policy.
domestic projects is more popular than
If I were a Democratic strategist. I
you might suppose. Writing Irf'I’he New
York T im es the other day. corre­
would welcome a Jackson candidacy.

W ILLIAM RUSHER

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Stale Del*,
partment sources report that several
moderate Arab states are vigorously
protesting what they regard as a
fundamental change in U.S. Midcast
policy. The State Department, however,
says that no such change has occurred.
The protests center on one o f the
thorniest Issues in the Mideast: the
continued expansion of Israeli settler
mentson the West Bank. Prime MinisterMenachem Bcgln's government is still
approving new settlements — and the
moderate Arab stales. Including Egypt
and Saudi Arabia, claim this Is a
violation of a promise made at the tim e .
o f the Camp David accords.
A cornerstone o f President Reagan's
Mideast policy has been that the
continued establishment o f West Bank.
settlements Is an "obstacle" to the,
peace process, but this now appears to 4
have changed. In late May. Reagan h eld 7
a
telephone press conference with a
spondent Steven Wcisman referred to
national meeting o f the editors of
"th e deeply ambivalent feeling In the
Jewish publications. When asked if he
electorate that opinion poll after opinion
still viewed the settlements as a n j
poll has uncovered: the sense that
obstacle to peace, Reagan responded,
A m e r ic a n s a re 'id e o lo g ic a lly c o n ­
"N o. I don't — I really don’ t."
servative* and view governm ent spend­
Insiders say the same message has
ing as,wasteful, while reihdinlng 'operabeen sent directly to Begin, who will
ilonaU^'g^etal' and want maintained an
make an ofTlclal visit to Washington
array o f "programs for education, hous­
next month. It’s said that Begin sought
ing. nutrition and the environm ent."
Actually, Wcism an was •b o rro w in g - this assurance before scheduling the
trip.
terms invented a few years back by that
The settlements question has become
old liberal minnesinger Arthur Schlesone o f the most emotional In the region.
inger Jr. to explain w hy his crow d's pet
According to former President Jimmy
sp en d in g p rojects w eren 't actu ally
Carter
and his secretary of state. Cyrus
threatened by the undeniable upsurge
Vance, Begin agreed that no new
o f conservative sentiment all over the
settlements would be built after the
country. But a close Inspection o f the
signing o f the Camp David accords,
relevant opinion polls doesn't really
Begin denies this: All he agreed to. he
support the theory. A substantial af­
says, was a three-month moratorium on
firmative response can always be ob­
the building o f new settlements.
tained by a pollster for a question that
Recently. Sol Llnowltz. the Carter
describes a noble goal ("D o you believe
administration's special ambassador to
g o v e r n m e n t s h o u ld a s s u r e c o m ­
the Midcast, reviewed the situation In a
p r e h e n s i v e m e d i c a l ca re for
long op-ed piece In The Washington
e v e r y o n e ? " ), p rovid ed the p ollster
Post. Carter and Vance, he said, really
prudently stays away from the tender
believe that Begin has gone back on his
subject o f how to pay for it.
agreement to stop building new settle­
What sets up the dilem ma for politi­
ments and to make the establishment of
cians Isn't some deep "am bivalen ce" on
new settlements subject to future nego
the part o f the electorate as a whole hut
nations. At the same tim e, say
a fact pointed out most recently by
Llnowltz. Begin believes that he gave
Congressman Phil Gramm o f Texas:
only a three-month promise, which he.
The proposed beneficiaries o f a federal
kept.
handout, who personally stand to gain
Llnowltz then cites statements made
hundreds or even thousands o f dollars if
at the time by Egyptian President
the bill passes, will lobby their con­
Anwar Sadat, which seem to confirm
gressmen a lot harder for it than most
Bcgln's position that It was only a three
taxpaycts, who stand to get nicked
month promise. As a result, concludes
m aybe 50 additional cents apiece, will
Llnowltz. "it la not unreasonable to.
lobby them against it.
suggest that there was truly a misun­
That explains fully 90 percent of what
must, on any balanced view, be re­ derstanding on this issue."
garded as downright Irrational behavior
But whether or not there was a
on the part o f the Congress. But a
misunderstanding, Egypt and other
presidential election Involves pressures
moderate Arab states have taken the
quite different from those that beat
firm position that the expansion of
ddwn on a congressman when he is settlements violates at least the spirit of
summoned to the floor to vote on a
the Camp David accords. No real
particular appropriation bill. In the
progress towards a wider peace can
voting booth on Election Day 1984,
begin, they say, until these settlements
most people will think fondly o f the
are dismantled. In fact, this issue has
candidate who is known to favor,
caused Egypt to withdraw its am­
broadly speaking. less spending and
bassador from Israel.
lower taxes. Through the haze of battle,
When Reagan announced his peace
that candidate is slowly emerging — plan In September 1982, he sided with
and his name is Ronald Reagan.
the Arab states on the settlement issue.

Great Budget Debate

JACK ANDERSO N
BERRY'S WORLD

Confiscated Vehicles Losing Value
WASHINGTON - President Reagan
made the multi-billion dollar dope traffic
his No. I law-enforcement priority, so
I've been keeping an eye on the results.
Sod to report, the administration’s great
drug crackdown has been found want­
ing in many respects.
In fact, even when the drug prosecu­
tion succeeds, it manages to (ail.
That's the ironic story o f the millions
o f dollars' worth o f airplanes, boats and
automobiles seized from dope smug­
glers caught in the act. The vehicles are
given such slipshod care In storage that
by the time they are auctioned o ff they
bring only a fraction o f their original
value.

.'There an so many dtffarant kinds.. I
m mywfw
J ik
a | r- 1mEtn
1
rMf# conw
msinjctions

T his isn't peanuts w e're talking
about. From 1979 through 1962, seven
seized more
1,900 vehicles having a
value o f more

I

The cars ranged from barely drivablc
clunkers, good only for scrap, to brand
new Mercedes and Rolls Royce limou­
sines. The Customs Service recently
nabbed an $800,000 yacht on her
maiden voyage. And while most o f the
seized airplanes. are small two-engine
Jobs, the recent confiscations Included a
Boeing 707 and a $3 million Lear Jet
Insiders gave my associates Donald
Goldberg and Indy Badhwar some
examples o f the neglect that tarnishes
this treasure trove while in official
custody:
— A 40-foot Ashing boat used for
m arijuana runs was appraised at
$78,000 when customs seized it. After
15 months o f neglect In a Houston
marina, the boat was appraised at
$52,000.
— Drug Enforcement Agency officials
in Chicago stored gouCscated cars in an
underground ga rage w ith serious
drainage problems. The cars were left

standing in a foot o f water and were
badly rusted, stained and mildewed.
f h e results o f all this are predictable:
In fiscal 1961, cars fetched only 38
percent o f their value when seized:
boats went for 43 percent, and aircraft
brought only 35 percent.
Footnote: Not all the fancy cars go to
waste. DEA agents-in-charge at five field
offices drove confiscated vehicles to and
from work and on the Job. One drove a
$40,000 Mercedes, another used a
Mercedes valued at $26,000.
TRASHING THE 1040: Taxpayers in
Lafayette. Ore. (pop. 662), were Irate:
Their federal income tax forma were
found In a trash dumpster by police
looking for stolen property. The individ­
ual 1040 form s, on their w ay to
Lafayette taxpayers, had been thrown
away by the post office as "undeliveraW e" becaus. they had no postal box
numbers in tile address.

*»•

The reason was simple: There is no
space for a box number on the income
tax form. The post office didn’ t try to
match the street addresses with the
patrons' box numbers, and h r m i r ;
undeliverable third-class mall is not
returned to the sender, the 1040s were
simply thrown away.
The taxpayers o f Lafayette com ­
plained to the House Appropriationk
Committee, which recom:.tended that
the Internal Revenue Service include
space for box numbers on the form, and
urged the Postal Service to "m ak e
special efforts to ensure delivery o f all
tax forms."
A spokesman for IRS told my reporter.
Kathy McDonald that inclusion o f box
numbers would be confusing for indi-‘
viduals who have a P.O. box in one
p la c e an d a r e s id e n tia l a d d re s s
elsewhere. He said he had no Idea how
many tax forms are thrown away as
undeliverable each year.

1/

�4
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•

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PEOPLE
I

M cElvenny-Goldin Vows
Exchanged in Mandarin
Veronica McElvenny and Jack Goldin
crc married June 4. at 2 p.m., at St.
oseph’s Catholic Church. Mandarin,
he Rev. Michael Pcndergraft performed
the double ring ceremony.

;

^ T h e bride la the daughter o f Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard J. McElvenny. 2616 De­
rbyshire Road. Maitland. The bride­
groom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Goldin. Fayetteville. Ga.
i The bride's paternal grandmother,
Mrs. Josephine McElvenny. played
' -Amazing Grace" on the organ.
Given In marriage by her father, the
bride chose for her vows a tea-length

In And Around Geneva

Race Kicks Oh
Fourth Of July

fresh Iris, white silk roses, baby's breath
and variegated greenery.
Diana Kerwln. Orlando, attended the
bride as matron o f honor. Bridesmaids
were Teresa Kohl. Tampa; Sheboyan
Brady. Ft. Myers; and Vickie Christie.
Jacksonville. Each wore a purple tissue
taffeta gown featuring a sweetheart
neckline with a rose on the puffed
sleeves. Their flowers were crescents of
Iris, button mums and'baby's breath
with orchid statlcc.

The 1983 Fourth of July festivities In
Geneva will depart from the traditional
early morning parade this year when the
day Is kicked off by a "run for fun" race
around Lake Geneva at 10 a.m.
Registration event will begin at 9:30 at
the elementary school, and the races, all
guaranteed to be under four miles in
endurance, will be open to each age
group.

Jerry Goldin. Montlcello. Ga.. served
his brother best man. Groomsmen were
Larry Reynolds. Jacksonville, and Mike
Costollo and Reed Bell. Orlando.
The reception was held at the bride­
groom's home In Mandarin.

Other p r om o t i o n s for the day.
sponsored by Boy Scout Troop 837 of
Geneva, will Include softball games
(bring your glove) played under "Geneva
rules." volleyball, and various additional
games for children that will be held until
4 p.m.

Following a honeymoon cruise to
Bermuda, the newlyweds are making
their home In Jacksonville where they
are both employedby GAB Services Inc.

Gardening

Geraniums Like
More than half o f the flower
growers and retail nurseries In the
United States grow or sell gerani­
ums. This Indicates their wide
appeal and range of climatic adapt­
ability. Geraniums are popular for
their continuous flow erin g
throughout the summer and early
fall in most of continental United
States and Canada.
Traditionally geraniums are pro­
pagated exclusively by vegetative
means. Commercial operators root
cuttings from disease free stock
plants and sell them to local grow­
ers. l.ocal growers use these cut­
tings as stock plants from which
they vrgctatlvcly propagate plants
for sale. Recently, there Is a trend
toward growing geraniums from
seeds. Seed propagated geraniums
p e r f o r m e q u a l l y as w e l l as
vegetatlvely propagated material
and produce smaller plants at less
cost. Seed propagated geraniums
branch freely, are less leggy and
seem to grow faster. Geraniums are
at their peak of performance late
winter through early summer In
central Florida. To ensure max­
imum p erform a n ce start with
healthy, disease-free plants and
follow proper cultural practices.
• Geraniums grow best In full sun.
They will tolerate partial shade but
will usually grow tall, producing
fewer lateral branches and conse­
quently. fewer flowers. They should
be spaced 18 Inches apart In flower
beds. To avoid disease problems
and give a well-groomed appear­
ance. cut ofTall the old flower heads.
Geraniums grow best In soils that
provide good drainage and aeration,
and have good m oisture and
nutrient retention capacities.
Florida's sandy soils should be
amended with organic matter. In­
corporation of two to three Inches of

early in the growing season and
repeated on a monthly basis.
Mulching Is a good practice to
prevent weed growth and conserve
moisture In the soil. In addition,
m u l c h i n g p r e v e n t s rain and
overhead Irrigation water Injury.
Splashing water combined with
loose particles o f sand rasp leaves
and cause Injury. Grass clippings,
straw, wood chips, sawdust and
organic matter Into planting beds
compost can be used as mulches.
will Increase both w ater and
Occasionally cutworms or cater­
nutrient holding capacities. Organic
pillars will feed on geraniums. They
materials such as leaf mold or peat
can be readily detected by the cut
moss should be thoroughly mixed
edges of the leaves where they feed.
in the soil.
If only a few arc responsible for
W ater geranium s during dry damage, they should be destroyed
periods to prevent wilting and Individually rather than spraying
eventual yellowing and dropping of the entire bed.
The most common diseases that
leaves. To determine the moisture
content of the soil, pick up a attacks geraniums arc non-specific
handful of soil and press It In your In that they attack other plants as
palm. If It crumbles it needs water­ well. Black rot or Pythium blackleg
ing. Soli should be kept moist but caused by the fungus Pythium has
not too wet. Keeping the soli wet been observed to attack geraniums
encourages snail and slug popula­ for many years and while losses to
tions that chew on foliage and the disease mainly occur In the
Invites root rotting orgnalsms. propagation stages It can also be
Avoid overhead Irrigation where found on young plants. Plants
possible, since wet flowers deterio­ Infected with blackleg disease have
a shiny, coalblack. slimy, wet ap­
rate very rapidly.
pearance. The rot progresses rapid­
Garden soils, especially In new ly often killing plants within a week.
flower beds are frequently low In A commercial fungicide specific for
fertility. Flower beds should be Pythium can be used If the disease
fctlllzed prior to planting or at Is In the Initial stages.
lanting time with completely soluBotrytls caused by the common
le or partially soluble fertilizers. gray mold Bolrytjs clncris produces
The rate o f application should be spores which arc airborne and
based primarily on nitrogen content germinate when thcy'comc In con­
o f the fertilizer. * Use a complete tact with wet foliage and flowers. To
fertilizer such as 6 -6-6 or similar control Botrytls blight avoid water­
analysis fertilizer at the rate o f 2 ing foliage and flowers, especially In
pounds per 100 square feet. The the late evening and when the
fertilizer can be Incorporated when humidity Is high. Also since Botrytls
preparing the beds or It can be starts most frequently on old de­
broadcast on top of the soil and cayed leaves and flowers, remove
watered. Fertilizers can be applied and destroy them.

While most people In the community
will be participants In or spectators of
the races and ball games, the United
Methodist Men from the Geneva church
will be busy cooking chicken for the
dinners to be available until 3 p.m. The
menu will Include chicken, slaw, com on
the cob and a drink priced at 83 for a
one-half chicken dinner. 82 for a onequarter portion.

PRACTICAL Of
CSOCAOO
DEAR PRACTICAL: A
mortician is not licensed to
practice dentistry, so If the
family wishes to have gold
removed from the mputh
of a loved one. a dentist
must be engaged to do the
Job.
On Inquiring. I learned
thin engaging a dentist for
this purpose would be
Impractical because the
dentist would probably
charge far more than the
reclaimed gold Is worth.
Even though you've spent
thousand* o f dollars on
den tal w o rk In w hich
much gold waa used, de­
nial gold l* not "p u regold. and Its reclaimed
value Is only a fraction o f
What It's assumed to be.
Your dental bills represent
;hc skill and time of your
dentist, not the dental
gqld.
In conclusion, you can
tafct It with you. And t
suggest you do.

C h lld o r *

Side orders o f com on the cob will ber*
sold for a nominal fee. and the Weblos!'
leader for BSA Troop 837. Rocky Har* &gt;
rclson. says they will be featuring,.’
"watermelon by reservation." All pro;-,,
cecds from the meal will go to th$\,
Geneva Scouts.
Be sure to bring chairs for your own'
comfort for observing and sitting In the
shade.
As an added attraction for the day's *
races, a limited number o f Cross pen and 15
pencil sets valued at 850 each will be,,
awarded as prizes. The gifts weretn
donated by Westlnghousc In Orlando.
,,
For more information, please contact‘ d
Rocky Harrelson after 6 p.m. at 349-,,.
5112.

A L IT T L E COUNTRY
W IT H YOU

ONJULY4th!

Going fishing? Swimming?
Pfcnicing? Come to Bisldte
as early as 6:00 A.M. for

S

1 1 B
C
O
U
F
O
N
:H I

III C
O
U
P
O
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:!BB

ICE COLD
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BY THE BAG
SIX BIG
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Its Cheaper
DEAR ABBY: I have a
fortune In gold in my
mouth. I'm pushing 80
and I've spent at least
84.000 for gold fillings,
cro w n s. Jackets and
bridgework. and I can't see
any sense In burying It
with me.
Abby. after I die. why
can't the mortician be
instructed to remove all
the gold from my mouth
so my heirs can claim It?
I've asked this question
of at least a dozen people,
and not one person could
give me a straight answer.
Can you? I don't want to
take It with me.

Lou

D 00r

DEAR ABBY: With all
the really serious pro­
blems you get. this Is
surely a minor one, but
here goes: Have you ever
heard o f panties with foam
rubber padding to give a
more shapely figure to
w om en w ho have flat
bottoms? I think they are
called "Buns." 1 saw them
advertised years ago. but I
can't remember where.
I am a female senior
citizen and have sciatica,
and my "sit-down bones"
ache constantly because I
don't have* any natural
p a d d i n g . T ho s e
foam-rubber-padded panties would be the answer
to m y prayers. Perhaps
one o f your readers will
know. Thank you.
D I A R

DIPAOf
IN) Try

Frederick's o f Hollywood.
(M en w ea r them , too)
M eanwhile, if someone
writes to tell me where
"B uns" can be purchased,
I'll pasa It on and you'll
soon be sitting pretty.

D B A ! ABBY: I'm a
s tr a ig h t w o m a n . My
boyfriend is bisexual, a
(act I have known for 11
months o f the 12 we've
been together. His being
bisexual doesn't bother
me. but it bothers him. He

wants to be one way or the
other.
1 love him very much
and want him to be happy.
He says he loves me. but
every time he gets sex­
ually attracted to a guy he
can't help himself. He says
he feels like there's a war
going on Inside of him and
he's not sure he knows
which side he wants to
win.
He was married for a
year three years ago. then
his wife found out he liked
guys, so she divorced him.
He can't talk to anyone
about his problem but me.
He's a very talented actor,

IV

SI WV I f I

works constantly, makes
big money, but he says he
feels like a loser because
he's living a lie.
I really want to help
him. But how? I'll do
anything.
LOVES HIM
D E A R L O V E S : No
matter how much you love
him, the only way you can
help him Is to Insist that
he get professional help.

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*

�Dollars A Year Buys A Pretty Good Tutor
NEW YORK (UP() - Have you been
noticing all the helpful advice you've been
getting lately about what to do with your
money? I have. You don't have to be rich,
either. Rich or poor, they still want to make
sure you have plenty o f that expert
counseling.
Put It here, put It there. Try this Fund, try
that one. You have nothing to worry about.
It’s FDIC Insured.
Only one thing bothers me. If all these
people know so much about how to make
millions and they're so eager to do It for you
and me. why do 'they have to use our
money? How come they're not using theirs?
Why arc they being so good to us?
Today's economy Invites a lot of questions
regarding which way to go. Among those
asking the questions are many top drawer
college athletes, and even some In high
school, who don't know whether they
should grab the lucrative ofTers available In
professional sports or finish their education
first.
Should they take the money and run or
pass It up at least until they get their
diploma? With the kind of salaries being
paid professional athletes today, that would
be a tough decision for anybody to make
and It becomes tougher yet for a kid playing
ball in school because he's always risking an

Incapacitating injury ir he stays on. Which
wise old adage docs he follow — look before
you leap or he who hesitates Is lost?
Ralph Sampson, the College Basketball
Player o f the Year for the past three seasons,
had to decide and he stayed In school. He
began getting those head-swimming offers
near the end o f his freshman year at the
University o f Virginia, but he didn't let the
sweet smell o f big money make him dizzy.
The 7-foot-4 All America center turned
down all previous opportunities to become
an Instant millionaire at the expense of his
education and It all worked out fine for him
Tuesday when the Houston Rockets selected
him as the No. 1 pick In the country.
Ronald Reagan was so impressed, he
called Sampson to praise him for the
splendid example he set for others. Sec,
even the President o f the United States is an
Investment counselor at heart.
On the surface. It would appear that
Sampson made the right decision, that he's
now In the Ideal position o f being able to
command as much money as he would have
two or three years ago and he no longer
need be concerned about interrupting his
education.
If you go by that yardstick, then Herschel
Walker made the wrong decision last

Sports
Parade
By MILTON RICKMAN

February by leaving the University of
Georgia and signing a 91.5 million contract
with the New Jersey Generals o f the USFL.
Personally, I felt at the time he had not
made the right decision even though he said
he planned to finish his education at
Georgia. One o f the reasons I thought the
way I did, I suppose, was because I always
regretted not getting a college education
myself. But every time I ever passed up an
opportunity to make money for something I
considered more "Important." I wound up
feeling like a damn fool.
That was why I was enormously Interest­
ed In hearing what three men like O.J.
Simpson. Joe Patcmo and Lou Camesseca.
with such diverse experiences, would have
to say on the subject.
All three addressed Borne of the finest
young athletes In the nation at a midtown

hotel Tuesday as part o f a seminar honoring
the winners o f the Hertz No. I award. The
award recognizes excellence In high school
athletics and some of the past winners
include Marcus Allen, now with the Los
Angeles Raiders, Islah Thomas of the Detroit
Pistons, Georgetown basketball star Pat
Ewing, and Walker.
"I don't blame Herschel Walker." said
Simpson, one of the NFL's premier running
backs during his 11 years with the Buffalo
Bills and San Francisco 49crs. "You can't
force anyone to get an education. Besides,
this has been an education In Itself for him.
He was under an incredible amount of
pressure. I’ ve met him and was very
Impressed with him. H e ' s ' a high type
Individual. He said he's going to go back to
get his degree and I believe he will."
Patcmo, one o f the college football's most
successful coaches during his 17 years at
Penn State, spoke openly and candidly as
usual.
"I can't get angry at Herschel Walker for
signing a professional contract," he said. “ If
it were one of my own kids and he had a
chance to make two million or whatever
Walker Is making. I'd say go ahead. My only
problem with Walker doing what he did was
that we have no procedure to make sure the

N ationals
Too Tough

Willie
To The Wing
For 24 Points

Graham, Blake Lead
Rout Over Americans
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer
LEESBURG — The biggest game of the year in the
Sanford Little Major League never materialized into the
battle it was built up to be. The Sanford Nationals were
Just too strong for the Sanford Americans here Thursday
night as Tim Graham and Willie "Sugar T e x " McCloud
combined for a three-hitter and Jeff Blake collected
three hits to lead the Nationals to a 10-2 victory in the
District 4. Sub-District 2 Tournament
It was the first loss for the Americans who will play
next Tuesday night at 6 against the winner of the
Leesburg Natlonal-Clcrmont game. On the other hand,
the Sanford Nationals are the only remaining unbeaten
team with a 3-0 record.-The Nationals will await the
outcome of the two loser's bracket .game* and.will play
on Wednesday at 6 with a chance to take the
Sub-District title without a loss.
Thursday night, the only question on the minds o f the
Nationals was Graham. "I didn't know how long he
would last." Nationals manager Sylvester "S lick"
Franklin, Jr. said. "W e Just wanted him to get through
ftvc Innings."
Graham got through the five Innings all right. And he
looked almost unstoppable In doing It. The lean
southpaw retired the first nine Sanford American hitters
In order, striking out seven o f the nine. Had It not been
for a few fielding mistakes, Graham may have had a
no-hlttcr as the Americans had Just three fluke hits. In
the five innings he worked. Graham struck out 11 and
walked three. McCloud came In to pitch the sixth Inning
and, after hitting Ronald Cox with a pitch, struck out the
side.
The Nationals took a 1-0 lead in the top o f the first as
Denny Clayton looped a single to right to lead off. Blake
then drilled the first o f his three consecutive hits and.
while the center fielder fumbled around with the ball.
Clayton raced to third and Blake took second. One out
later. Clayton scored on an RBI groundout by McCloud.
After a scoreless second Inning, the Nationals rallied
for four runs In the top o f the third to take a 5-0 lead.
Harry Chlbberton reached on an error to lead off and
Clayton drew a walk and both runners moved up a base
on a wild pitch. Blake then lashed a single up the middle
to drive in both runs. Blake took second and third as the
ball got by the left fielder. Blake scored the third run of
the Inning on a wild pitch. Still with no outs. Dwight
Brinson was Issued a free pass and McCloud followed
with a single up the middle and Brinson came around to
score on the third Sanford American error in the Inning.
Sanford American broke up Graham's bid for a perfect
game in the bottom o f the fourth. "Steady Eddie"
Charles led ofT by lifting a fly ball to center field. The
center fielder, Clayton, was in fine shape to catch the
(sail, but he misjudged ft at the last moment and It fell In
for a double. Graham struck the next two hitters out.

Denny Clayton leads off firs t base as Sanford
Am ericans' first basem an P at Dougherty watches
the b atter. Clayton's Sanford Nationals knocked

W IM BLED O N. E ngland (U P I) Fiery-tempercd John McEnroe and
icy-cool Ivan Lendl o f Czechoslovakia
meet today In a men’s singles semifinal
at the 91.4 million Wimbledon Tennis
Championships.
The other semifinal will provide either
the first unseeded finalist In 16 years —
New Zealand's Chris Lew is — or
advance strong-serving Kevin Currcn of
South Africa, the conqueror o f topseeded defending champion Jim m y
Connors.
In women's play, defending champion
Martina Navratilova and third-seeded
Andrea Jaeger scored the most one­
sided semifinal victories In Wimbledon
history Thursday to set up an allAmerican matchup and leave veteran
Billie Jean King on the sidelines for
Saturday's 900.000 final.
Second-seeded McEnroe and thirdseeded Lendl share an Intense mutual
dislike.
The 23-year-old Czech holds a 7*4
head-to-head advantage against the
stormy American, but McEnroe has
triumphed In the last two. winning at
Philadelphia and Dallas this year.
M cE n roe, the 1081 W im b led on
champion, has marie the last three
finals at Wimbledon and has been
, _ “'JF' ,

•-

J;

Jr

--r-

-• -

-

tr* ** " * -ft

*** - *

*

*■' ’

off the Am ericans, 10-2, In Sub-District L ittle
M a jo r Tournam ent action a t Leesburg on Thurs­
day.

walked Cox. and caught Bernard Mitchell looking at a
third strike to end the Inning.
The Nationals forged ahead, 7-0. with a pair o f runs In
the top of the fifth. McCloud reached on an error to lead
off and George Gordon followed with a single. On
Gordon's hit. McCloud went to third on another Sanford
American error. Graham then slapped a grounder to first
baseman Pat Dougherty who gunned down McCloud at
the plate for the first out. On the same play, catcher
Anthony Harris tried to get Gordon who was going to
second. Harris' throw went Into center field though,
allowing Gordon to score and Graham came all the way
around, knocked the ball out o f Harris' glove, and
scored.
Sanford American came up with two runs In the
bottom o f the fifth, but iht Nationals could have been
out o f the Inning untouched If the Infield made the
plays. With one out, Gerald Morris drew a walk and
went to second on a passed ball. Plnch-hltter Scooter
Leonard then drilled a liner toward the middle. The
shortstop. Brinson, had an easy double play staring him
In the face. but. the ball tipped ofT Brinson’s glove and
Morris went to third while Leonard took second. Anton
Reid followed by bouncing a grounder that Just got
under the glove o f second baseman Steve Johnson as
both Morris and Leonard scored to cut the Nationals'
lead to 7-2.
The Nationals added some Insurance in the top o f the
sixth, scoring three runs to take a 10-2 lead. Brinson led

Fire A nd Ice

. t

other Herschel Walkers who come along
after him have the same opportunity he
had. If he didn't have the exposure, the
program and the coaching that he got at
Georgia, he might not have been worth the
money he got."
Carncsscca is something o f an institution
at St. John’s. He earned his degree there,
replaced Joe Lapchlek as head basketball
coach of the school In 1965, left to coach the
New York Nets five years later and resumed
his old Job as St. John's coach In 1973.
"Look." he said, with regard to Walker. "I
turned down Julius Erving when he wanted
to leave the University of Massachusetts and
play with the Nets. I was wrong. 1 stopped
the young man from making a living. This
was In 1971 or 1972. He came to me and
said. 'Coach. I wanna play pro ball. I wanna
play with the Nets.' 1 told him I couldn't
tnkc him unless they changed the rules. The
next day he signed with the Virginia Squires
of the ABA. Can you Imagine him and Rick
Barry on the same team?
"I tell my players If the opportunity
comes. If It's guaranteed and if your parents
or advisor tells you It's okay, then you go.
After all. why docs anyone go to college? To
get an education and make a living, right? A
million dollars a year Is a pretty good living;
You can get a pretty good tutor for that."

—

•
off by blasting a homer to center. The Nationals' third
hitter had gone 0 for 2 with two strikeouts prior to his
solo homer. An RBI Infield single by Kerry Wiggins
brought home Johnson, who had walked and moved
around on wild pitches, with the second run and Hubert
Williams got an RBI when he walked with the bases
loaded.
Before the bottom of the sixth began. Graham said he
was tired and Franklin went with McCloud in relief.
With a 2-0 count on Cox, McCloud nailed him on the left
elbow with a fastball. McCloud then struck out the next
hitter, walked plnch-hltter Douglas Spann, and struck
out the last two American hitters to end the game.
Sanford pitching had a total o f 14 strikeouts Thursday
and only four walks.
Franklin said he will go with McCloud on Wednesday
with Mike Merthie as a backup. A win on Wednesday
would send the Nationals to the District 4 Tournament
which will also be played In Leesburg.
The Americans will come back on Tuesday with
Charles, according to coach Ron Slpplo, who felt his
team "m ay have been trying too hard" Thursday.
Charles, a tricky southpaw, hurled a one-hitter against
Tavares this past Tuesday night. If the Americans win
Tuesday. It would set up a rematch between the two
Sanford clubs for the Sub-District title. Whichever team
survives In the loser's bracket would have to beat the
Nationals twice to win the tourney so Franklin Ib sitting
In the driver’s seat at the moment.

Willie Mitchell's inside game Is known countywide.
Seminole High's 6-2 center posts low. legs
extending wide, grabs a pass, turns and swish —
two points. The deadliest turnaround In the'
county. Almost unstoppable.
With the graduation o f Calvin "K lk l" Bryant,
however, coach Chris Marlcltc was left without a
pure shooter from the wing. Not very long, though.
Marlcltc moved the versatile Mllchcll to that spot
and Thursday night the Seminole senior poured lit
24 points as Seminole Cook's Corner thrashed &lt;
Oviedo, 79-42. In AAU Basketball action at Oviedo.
"W illie didn’t miss in the first quarter." said
Marlcltc about the 14-point production. “ He was
burning It."
Mitchell finished the half with 20 points as
Seminole stormed to a 47-14 bulge over the Lions
who were without three starters. The victory
Improves Cook's Corner's record to 4-0. It plays at
Lake Howell Tuesday night, then takes on tough
Osceola Wednesday at home and travels to Lake
Brantley on Thursday. Junior varsity tip ofT Is 6:15
p.m.
Mitchell wasn't the only Seminole contributing
Thursday. Kenny Gordon added 14 points, Bruce
Franklin tallied eight. Rod Alexander chipped In
seven while Tracy Hollohian and James Rouse had
six each. Franklin handed out 10 assists and
Holloman grabbed 12 rebounds.
In Junior varsity action, Daryl Williams tossed in
22 points and Mike Wright added 16 as couch John
McNamara's squad ran Its record lo 3-0 with a
65-52 victory. — BAM COOK

S u b -D is tric t B a s e b a ll
SANFORD AMERICAN
ab
Charles, rf
3
Small, ss
2
Doughtcry, lb.p
a
Cox. p. 3b
1
Mitchell, 3b, p 3
Harris, c
2
Spann, ph
0
Morris, cf
1
Ru. Blake, ph 1
Allen. 2b
1
Leonard. 2b
2
Reid, If
2
Totals
21

r

h b!

0 1 0
0 0 0
3 0 0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
2

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
3 2

SANFORD NATIONAL
ab
Clayton, cf
2
Murphy, cf
1
5
Ro. Blake, c
3
Brinson, ss
McCloud. Ib. p 3
3
Gordon, 2b
0
Johnson. 2b
Graham, p. lb 4
M. Merthie. 3b 3
A. Merthie, rf 2
Wiggins, rf
1
Chlbberton. If 3
0
Williams. If
Totals
30

r

2
0
1
2
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
1
0
10

I

h bt
1 Q
0 a
3 z
1 1!
1 i:
1 a
0 a
0 a
1 a
0 a:
1 il
0 a
0 l!l

0 6

Sanford National
104 0 2 9-10 0 0
Sanford Am erican
000 0 2 0 - 2 9 7
E — Harris 2, Cox, Mitchell, Small. Morris. Charles.!
LOB — Americans 6 . Nationals 10. 2B — Charjes. HR —■
Brinson. SB - M» Merthie. HBP - Cox (by McCloud).

McEnroe Battles Lendl In Sem ifinal
W im b le d o n

brought to a fourth set only once this
year In a meeting with compatriot Brad
Gilbert.
Lendl Is looking to prove that he can
be a winner on his least-favorite surface,
grass. He Is anxious also to end a run of
five tournaments without a title. The
Czech has also toot only one set In the
current event but McEnroe Is the first
seed he has had to play.
Lendl, the reigning Masters ti Beholder
and 1061 Grand A la champion, has
regained the grass court confidence that
made him the 1078 Junior champion at
Wimbledon when he was an unknown
18-year-old.
McEnroe has five grass court titles,
Including his Wimbledon crown.
Lewis. 26. was hoping to become the
first non-seed to reach the Wimbledon
final since 1067.
Jaeger's victory was a triumph of
young talent over experience, the
18-year-old winning a surprisingly easy
match against her 90-year-old oppo­
nent, who had made the first o f her
Wimbledon appearances before Jaegpr
was bom.

Though Navratilova Is expected to
retain her UUe. she did not believe she
was Invincible.
"I'm not unbeatable, but Im pretty
difficult to beaL" Navratilova said. “ You
need not only good strategy, but also
good execution to beat me. It has always
been my goal to beat anybody at my
best even when they are at their best,
too. The key is to win when you are not
playing well.
Navratilova holds a 10-4 career
advantage over Jaeger.

carded a 5-under-par 67 to take a!
1-stroke lead Into today's second round!
o f the oldest stop on the PGA tour.
The lone o f Watson's round was set;on his very first hole, the 10th. He made;
a 50-foot birdie putt for the first o f six;
birdies on his round.

Watson, who has won more than;'
9150.000 this year, has a specialIncentive to win the 80lh annual]
Western. If he can win the title Sunday.,i
It would not only mark his first win of
the year but guarantee him a spot on
the Ryder Cup team.
" I want to make It. I think the only
way I can make it la by winning the
UUe." Watson said.
A first prize o f 972.000 also awaits the
winner.
CHICAGO (UP?) Tom Watson,
Most o f the leaders played In the
te having earned more than 93
morning when the course was wet from
in In his career, Is the first to admit
overnight rains. Warmer and windier
he hasn't been playing very *well the
conditions prevailed In the afternoon
past year.
and more o f the same Is forecast for
But Watson says there are signs he It
today, with temperatures expected to
coming out o f a year-long slump and
reach the mid 00s.
pointed to his sizzling play In the
" Gardner's 68 marked the first time
opening round o f the 9400.000 Western
lie has ever shot under par at Butler.
Open Thursday as proof.
Norman also said he benefited from
Watson, who h is won 28 PGA tour
the damp greens In his first attempt at
events but none since last summer.
Butler.

Watson Takes
Western Lead

a

�A

Rookie's H it Trips Expos;
Blue Jays Blast M inn eso ta

Jody D a v it (le ft) contributed a nlnthJnnlng tin g le
to tco re Ron Cey a t the Chicago Cube swept three
gam es from the Pittsburgh Pirates. W illie Upshaw
powered a three-run hom er as the Toronto Blue
Jays ham m ered the M innesota Tw ins, 11-3.

United Free* International
Though Kevin Gross looks like a living argument
against the designated hitter, he would rather knock 'em
dead as a pitcher.
Gross, a pitcher who had never batted ns a
professional until reaching the majors, singled home the
go-ahead run Thursday to lead the Philadelphia Phillies
to a 3-1 triumph over the Montreal Expos.
The 22-ycar-old right-hander put his team ahead 2-1
with a line single to center In the fifth Inning ofT loser
Ray Burris. 3-3.
Gross Is 2-0 since Joining the Phillies last week from
the Pacific Coast League In Portland.
" I felt confident I could pitch up here If I controlled my
pitches. * said Gross. Gross also Impressed the opposi­
tion.
™
Tim Raines contributed a plnch-hlt single In Ills only
time at bat Tor Montreal. Raines was pulled from
Wednesday's second game of after he singled and scored
because of a stiff hamstring muscle. The Injury was not
termed serious, said an Expo official.
MONTREAL
PHILADELPHIA
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Cuba 4. P ira tes 3
; At Chicago. Jody Davis slam m ed reliever Kent
Tcku lvc's first pitch Into center for a single to score Ror.
Cey with one out in the ninth and help the Cubs
complete a sweep o f thetr three-game scries. Davis’ hit.
Which made a loser o f Manny Sam ilcnto. 1-2. gave him
three RBI for the game and gave him 25 for June.

R ede IS , G iants B
At Cincinnati, Paul Householder hit a threc-run.
Inslde-the-park hom er and G ary Rcdus slam m ed
another threc-run homer to power the Reds to a
three-game series sweep. Charlie Pulco. 3-4. was the
winner with Ted Power notching his second save. Fred
Breinlng. 6-5, lasted only two-thirds o f an Inning.

Padres 7, D odgers 8
At San Diego. Luis Salazar doubled in Juan Bonilla
with two out In the bottom o f the ninth to lift the Padres.
John Montrfusco. 7-1, pitched the final 3 2-3 Innings.
Steve Howe, who entered Ihc gam e in the eighth, fell to
2-2. Los Angeles made three errors to up its season total
lo 9 0 in 74 games.

B raves 8, A stros 4
At Atlanta, pinch hitter Chris Chambliss tripled In two
inns in Ihc eighth inning to lift the Braves within a game
o f first-place Los Angeles in the NL West. Steve
Bcdrosian. 5-2. worked the last two Innings for the
victory. Frank DlPlno. 3-3 took the loss. All-Star Bill
Dawlcy allowed Chambliss' hit.

Cardinal ■ 8, M eta I

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

D ave Farr's R eal Estate
Snaps D eltona Win S treak
Mike Powers fired a three-hlltcr and Greg
Miller drove In three runs as Dave Farr’s Real
Estate Supermarket snapped the Deltona Inn's
eight-game winning streak with a 6-3 victory In
Buddy Lake Sum m er League action at Memorial
Stadium Tuesday night.
Powers, who struck out two and walked four,
blanked Deltona for six o f the seven Innings. He
was hit for a three-spot In the second when the
Deltona Inn took a 3-2 edge. Eddie Trem bly took
the loss.
Dave Farr's, though, cam e back with tw o In
the third and one each In the fourth and fifth to
Improve Its record to 6-3. D cltoni Is 8-1. Miller
rapped two singles to chase home his three
runs. Troy Pcndly scored tw o runs and doubled
while Rich Van Dcr W elde tripled. C u n rn
Golden made an ovcr-thc-shouldcr diving catch
for the gam e's defensive gem.
In other action the Florida Baseball School,
belter known was the "Bad News Robarcs,"
scored six runs in the first Inning, but ended up
losing a 7-6 decision to the B &amp; R Family.
Sanford's S ieve Dennis cam e on In relief to
pick up the win while the loser was Paul
Erickson. J. D. D 'ArvlIlc doubled home two runs
for B A R . which Improved to 4-5. Manager Tom
Robare's club Is 0-9, although Florida Baseball
School owner W es Rlnkcr did give Robare a
1 "v o te o f confidence" after his team 's ninth
• straight loss.

Peace Has Disc Surgery
G AIN ESVILLE (UPI) - T w o University o f
. Florida quarterbacks are scheduled for opera­
tions today and a third Is recovering from leg
surgery.
Surgery to correct a herniated disc In Wayne
Peace's low er back region was scheduled to be
performed this m orning at Shands Teaching
Hospital adjacent to the UF campus, said Dr.
Pete Indellcato. Indellcato rem ained "cautiously
optimistic*’ before the operation that Peace
would be well In tim e for the squad's first fall
drill Aug. 11.

Peace, a senior who started last year, injA ed
his back while playing basketball a month ago.
indellcato said physicians decided Thursday,
after his condition worsened, that surgery was
needed. Doctors were scheduled to perform the
. operation this morning.
/ A n oth er quarterback, freshm an Donnie
Whiting, was scheduled for a tonsillectomy
. today.
Junior quarterback Dale Dorm lney had
arthroscopic surgery Thursday to remove a tom
carlllage and bone chips In the right knee.
"N atu rally we are concerned about the
medical complications at the quarterback posi­
tion. but after extensive discussions with our
medical stalT we ore confident all three will be
healthy In Him. to prepare for Miami." Coach
Charley Pell said.

Friday, July 1 , 1 W - 7 A

I v w l m H * r iM , lawfsrd, FI.

A .L ./N .L . B a s e b a ll
At St. Louis. Neil Allen. 4-8. scattered eight hits over
seven Innings and doubled in a run to lead the Cardinals
and notch his second straight triumph over his form er
mates.

Blue J ays 11. T w in s 8
Part o f the reason the Toronto Blue Jays m ay b&lt;* in
first place at the All-Star break is the performance ol
All-Star caliber players like W illie Upshaw.
Upshaw, who was left o ff the A L All-Star reserve
squad named Thursday, cracked a threc-run hom er and
an RBI single later In the day to help the Blue Jays
assume a two-game lead In the Eastern Division with an
11 -3 triumph over the Minnesota Tw ins at Minneapolis.
The first baseman, w ho Is pushing .300 with 15 home
runs and 46 RBI, gives much o f the credit to his
development to the other members o f the Toronto
lineup.
TORONTO

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R o y a la 7 ,A *s 4
At Oakland. Calif.. U.L. W ashington's bascs-clearlng
triple highlighted a four-run seventh Inning that carried
Kansas City. Don Hood, with three shutout relief
Innings, gained credit for his first victory and Dan
Qutscnbcrry. who added onc-hlt relief, posted his 19th
save.

B rew era 4. T ig e r * I
At Milwaukee. Paul Molltor drove In two runs and Rick
Manning scored twice and stole two bases to lead the
Brewers to their fifth triumph In the last six games. Bob
McClure. 4-7, limited the Tigers to six hits but also
walked six over seven innings. Tom 'Tcllcm an n pitched
the final two innings for his sixth save.

Yankeea 4, O rioles 3
At New York. Butch W ynegar cracked his fourth home
run o f the season with two out in the 12th inning, giving
the Yankees the decision. W ynegar hit a 2-and-O pitch
from Tim Stoddard. 0-3. over the right-field wall. The
winner was Rich Gossagc, 5-2. who worked the last four
innings.

Rangara 4, An gela 2
At Anaheim. Calif.. George Wright singled In two runs
with tw o but tn the lOlh inning to give Texas the
victory. Th e Rangers took a one-game leud tn the A L
West over California. Angels shortstop Rick Burleson
returned to action for the first time since tearing a
rotator cuff, and had tw o hits.

Jtnkint

7 12 4 3 I

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alcohol problem, however, while Howe's Involvement is
with an Illegal substance.
Howe pitched an Inning hts first night back with the
Dodgers W ednesday night In a 13-2 loss to San Diego.

CHICAGO IUPI) - The acting chairman of the Chicago
Bulls executive committee has given general manager
Rod Thorn the go-ahead to renew his pursuit of Los
Angeles Lakers free agent center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Th om said he would contact Abdul-Jabbar’s agent
Tom Collins today In hopes o f starting serious talks
early next week.

Lester Crown said Thorn has the authority to make
the deals. He said he was delighted at Thorn's college
draft picks Tuesday.
“ He did a magnificent Job tn the draft." Crown said.
The Bulls landed three first-round drafts picks —
center forward Sidney Green o f Nevada Las Vegas, point
guard Ennis Whatley o f Alabama and scoring guard
Mitchell Wiggins of Florida State - tn Tuesday’s draft.
Crown said the Bulls would "lo v e to h ave" AbdulJabbar. but there are still arrangements to be made
toward making an offer with the player and the team.

A T L A N T A (UPI) — Th e Atlanta Hawks have traded
reserve guard Rudy Macklin to the the New York Knlcks
W ednesday In exchange for an undisclosed amount o f
money and four-year veteran Sly Williams.

The deal was completed after New York was able to
sign Williams to a new contract. The Boston Celtics had
tried to sign Williams, but New York matched a
$450,000 offer sheet.
Williams. 25. averaged 11.9 points per gam e for New
York during the 1962-1983 season.

Sargent Bilko's Streak Ends At 7 Wins
lv l.V .lb p p )r b w
S p e c ia l to I

t

«

r u

| H a r o ld

It's all over. It's ended. It's kaput.
Trite phiasca from a cheap dime
store novel. AH o f these phrases fit
Into this story. The present hero at
Super Seminole Greyhound Park,
Sargent Bllko. has gone down In
defeat after seven straight wins.
Drawing the inside again. Bllko
made his usual slow start. Hts start
is like a freight train pulling out o f a
railway station. Passing the finish
line for the first time In this Grade T
r a c e B l l k o s t a r t e d to pass
greyhounds. The first curve was hts
undoing. It It hard to Imagine that a
wide runner like Bllko would be hit
In the (lrat turn, but that Is exactly
what happened to the Sarg. Hla own
kennel mate running out o f the six
box, Yankee Princess, b k w the tum
and took the 73-pound Bllko out oT
the race.
Any other dog may have given up.
but the Sarg lias heart, make no
mistake about that. He regrouped
after being offstrided and was In the

D o g R a c in g
chase again, but this time the best
he could do was stay In the middle
o f the pack.
Ironically. Sargent Bllko was hit
again by Yankee Princess as she
went wide in the turn home. He
finished sixth. Bllko was out o f the
money for the first time this season.
A 5/18 race la over In the snap of
you r fingers, no m istakes are
allowed.
The winner o f Bilko's race was
Midnight Blue s Srottwood Chomp.
Maybe, the fastest b reakin g
g r e y h o u n d b aae d at S u p e r
Seminole. He glided out o f the seven
box in perfect rhythm, waa on top o f
the first tum. His racing form shows
■moke, like first at the M call and
first entering the stretch call. In the
stretch he seems to run out o f gas
unless he has a commanding lead.
Steve Mcriock. Jr.. Sargent BUko'a

trainer says, "It’s not the end o f the
world for Bllko. He wilt win again.
Maybe start an even longer streak.”
This past Saturday night Bllko
faced Scottwood again. He didn't
win but neither did the Champ.
Bllko was out photoed by a 26-1
■hot named True Classic. H ie 2-6
qulniela paid $44.00 and the 2-6-1
trlfecta paid a Juicy $457.60 as the
Champ was caught In the stretch
and held on for third.
MF
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Moffett — Huge Howe Fine Could s c o r e c a r d
Deter Players From Seeking Help DogRacing
NEW YORK IUPI) Kenneth Mofleit. executive
director o f the Major League Players Association, said
Thursday he fears the fine levied against Los Angeles
Dodgers pitcher Steve Howe will delcr other players
from seeking help for drug and alcohol abuse.
Howe was fined $54,000 and placed on three years'
probation Wednesday by ihc Dodgers — with the
approval o f Commissioner Rowlc Kuhn — upon ihc
pitcher’s release from a cocaine abuse ihcrapy program.
The size o f the fine matches Howe's salary for 30 days,
the time he was away from the club.
MolTelt said the Players Association would "m o re than
lik ely " file a grievance against the Dodgers.
" T o m y knowledge this is the heaviest fine ever
against a major league player," Moffett said. “ You have
some lives at stake here, you have the whole human
clement. I feel this could put a chill on players com ing
forward If any other problems crop up."
Kuhn's policy o f amnesty for players com ing forward
only applies to a first offense. In Howe's case. It was the
second tim e he underwent treatment for hts drug
problem. He attended a five-week treatment center last
fall at a facility chosen by the Dodgers. Kuhn also said
Howe sought treatment last month only at the request o f
the Dodgers.
"T h e Commissioner and the management o f the
Dodgers have unfortunately taken the position that by
being unsuccessful In his first attempt to recover. Steve
has com m lled a punishable offen se." Moffett said.
He also said that before the first five-week treatment
period expired. Howe "fcU it was obvious he was
receiving the w rong kind o f treatm ent."
Howe was admitted May 28 to the Care Unit o f Orange
County, Calif.
Moffett cited a case 12 years ago In which an Impartial
arbitrator ruled that a player whose conduct and
performance problems w ere caused by Illness whould be
placed on the disabled list and not be subject to
discipline.
The player In question — A lex Johnson — had an

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�•A -E v e n in g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, July 1.1W1

logoi Notice

27 Deaths In Florida
Expected This Holiday
J i m C M M lb e r r y
H e r a ld S t a f f W r ite r

The Florida Highway Pnlrol has
predicted 27 people will die on stale
highways this year during the 78-hour
Independence Day holiday period,
which will begin at 6 p.m. today and
end at mldnlgiit on Monday, duly 4th.
The FHP bases Its grim prediction
an statistics gathered during the past
three July Fourth holiday weekends.
There were 23 fatalities during the
same period last year and records
show the leading causes of these fatal
accidents were careless driving, driv­
ing while under the Influence of
ulcohol/drugsand speeding.
The highway patrol will focus on
these violations during the hollduy
period with the drinking driver being
the number one target.
Traditionally, traffic to and from the'
beaches is heavier during this holiday
weekend, a mixture o f drinking and
careless drivers produces an explosive
circumstance, according to the FHP.

Troopers will keep a close watch In
these nrcus for such violators and
special teams will be concentrating on
enforcing the DUI law and regular
work hours will be altered to have
maximum coverage during the hours
of high frequency DUI violations.
Col. Hobby R. Burkett, director of
the FHP said, "W e will use all
available resources to reduce the
number of fatalities and Injuries over
the long holiday weekend.
"Every nvnllablc trooper, auxiliary
troo|&gt;cr, aircraft, and radar unit will be
ust'd to spot and apprehend vio­
lators." lie said. Accidents arc pre­
ventable and drivers and pedestrians.
have the option to obey or not obey
the rules of safe motoring."
The patrol Is asking the public to
help It by obeying all traffic laws and
by calling the nearest Highway Patrol
Station or local law enforcement
agency if a person witnesses any
dungcrous actions by a driver or
pedestrian.

Regan Forecasts Interest,
Jobless Rates Will Fall
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Treasury- Secretary Donald Regan predicted today
Interest rates will drop by the end of the
year.
Regan also predicted unemployment
will go down to the 9 percent level
during 1983 and fall Into the 8 percent
range next year.
Regan was asked during an appear­
ance on CBS1 "Morning News" program
If Interest rates were going to rise since
there Is no evidence the budget deficits
are decreasing.
"No. they don’t have to go up," Regan
said. "Interest rates could and should be
down lower than they arc now by the

end of the year. The reason we suy that
is that if we maintain a sensible fiscal
policy ... I think a lot of the fear of
Inflation will disappear. As fear of
inflation disappears. Interest rales will
com edown."
Regan said It is "possible but not
probable" there could be a short-term
rise In interest rates.
The treasury secretary also said the
administration would he happier if
Congress would cut $13 billion to $20
billion out o f its budget plan.
"Unfortunately rchlring Is the lust part
of the business cycle, whul we call a
lagging Indicator." Regun said.

Ltgal Notice

Legal Notice

Nolle* I* hereby given M a i I * m
»ngag«d *1 business I I m o E
A lta m o n te D r iv e . A l l . S p g s .,
Jamineto. F L under th* fictitious
nam * of M o re , S ta te d i S la t*
Houe* and (hat I inltnd to register
M W name wilti tot Clerk of the
County Court. fomtnote County In
Accordance with tha provident of th#
(ictm out N am * S tatu te , to w n Sec
lion MS OP. FL Statuat 1457
L O S D C H U M L E V"S PUB. INC.

LEGALAO
TH E BOARO O F C O U N TY COM
M ISSIO NER S
TH E C O U N TY O F SEM IN O LE
Separate sealed bids tor FC 41,
Consumer W ater M ain Extension,
w ill t * received In the Office of th*
P urch asing D ire c to r. R o u m llla t
Building. 7nd Floor. 100 E. Isl S ir**),
Seniord. F L 17771. until 1:00 P .M .
local tim e. Wednesday, July 1 7 ,1M1:
• I which lim e and place bids w ill be
publicly opened and read aloud.
Tha Project consists at a water
main Interconnection between ttw
Consumer W ater Plant and tt e Red
Bug Rand W ater M ain . T t e w afer
main Is U Inches In diam eter and
opprnalmatofy 4 A M t e l between
Red Bug Reed and Dyke Road.
A bid bond In an amount of net le u
than live percent (5% ) of the total
bid amount shall accompany each
bidder's proposal Bid security m ay
to In tha form of cashier's check
made payable to th * Board of County
Commissioners, Seminole County, or
a bid bond with Surety satisfactory
to the County. A combination ot any
ol th# former ls not acceptable, bid
quaranty shall bo In a Single, accept
able instrument. T h * County w ill
accept only such surety company or
companies as are author lied to w rite
bonds ol such character end amount
under th * laws ol th * state ol
Florida, and as a r t acceptable to th*
County.
Upon aw ard, th * successful bidder
w ill be required to furnish payment
and performance bond*, each in tha
amount ol 100 por cent of tha total bid
amount and proof of Insurance In
amounts as specified Bond forms
will be furnished by the County and
only those forms w ill bo used. Proof
ol Insurance in amount* equal to or
exceeding th * specified amounts w ill
a iso be required,
Specification* w ill bo available
July S. I N I and m ay be ebtalnod at
th e O f f ic e o l Ih o C o n s u ltin g
Engineer, P ott, Buckley, Schuh A
Jem lgan. Inc.. 444 North Orange
Avenue: Orlando. Florida 7 M 0 M 0 H .
(M SI 41)7775 Paym ent of F ifty
dollar* (SS0 00) w ill be required tor
each M l; no rotunds w ill be made.
C o n tra c t D o c u m o n ts /P la n s a re
available tor review only In th*
Office of Purchasing.
Th* County reserve* the right to
reject a n , or all bids, with or without
causa, to w aive technicalities, o r to
accept the bid which In Its lodgment
best serves th * In te rest ol the
County. Cost of subm ittal of this bid
Is considered an eparattonal cost ol
the bidder and shall not bo passed on
to or borne by Iho County.
Persons are advised that. If they
decide to appeal any decision made
at this m aeting/haarlng. they w ill
need e record ol ttw proceeding-.,
and. tor such purpose, they m ay
need to ensure that a verbatim
record of ttw proceedings is mode,
which record Includes the testimony
end evidence upon which th *
lit o be bated.
JoAiwt Blackmon, C P M
Purchasing Director
Office of Purchasing
2nd Floor,
toOE. First Street
Sanford. F L a m
(MSI 17)4110. E xt. f 41
Publish July l, I N )
D fJ -1 4

By Marc J. Robinson Jr.
P re te rit

Publlth Jure 7 4 1 July 1.0. IS. l i t )
D E M IS

N O TIC E OF
P U S LIC H E A R IN G
T H E BOARD O F C O U N TY COM
M IS S IO N E R S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY w ill hoM a public hearing
In I t e m MS ot th* Samineto County
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida, on
J U L Y T l 1442. at 7:00 P M . or a t
M en thereafter a t possible. to con
aid er a S P E C IF IC L A N D USE
A M E N D M E N T to tha S am lnol*
County Comprehensive Plan and
JtE Z O N IN G el tha d e serte d pro
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 77 IS W H IC H
A M EN D S TH E D E T A IL E D LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF THE
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y C O M
P R E H E N S IV E PLAN FR O M G EN
ER A L R U RA L TO M E O IU M DE
N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L FOR THE
PURPOSE OF R EZO N IN G FR O M
R I M U L T IP L E F A M IL Y D W ELL
IN G D IS TR IC T TO R M J SING LE
F A M IL Y M O B ILE HOM E PARK
D IS TR IC T, th* lot lowing describe
The North 774.J3 toel of Lot I.
Orlando Industrial P ark. Plat Book
to, P age I M . Sec. S a - m i i E .
Seminole County, Florida, appraxlm etely lir e acres. (F u rth e r de
scribed as on the south sld* ot Jessup
Street, east of A lafeya T ra il.) (O IST.
II)
A P P L IC A T IO N H A S B E E N
S U B M IT T E D B Y P A L M V E N
TU R ES. INC.
Additional inform ation m ay be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at R U m ,
E el IM .
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish to comment on the
proposed actions m ay submit written
statements to tha Land Management
Division prior to the scheduled public
hearing. Persons appearing at the
hearings may submit w ritten stale
ments or bo hoard orally.
Persons are advised that. If they
dec Id* to apaeal any decision m ad*
; * t these meetings, they w ill need a
record of Ihe proceedings, and. tor
'such purpose, they m ay need to
■ensure that a verbatim record of the
.proceedings Is mads, which record
1Includes the testimony and evidence
ttoon which the appeal ft to be based.
; &gt; 0* r d of County
I Commissioners
Ssmim te County. Florid*
l y : Sandra Gierw.
C h e trn fri
Attest: A rth u rH . Beckwith. Jr.
Pwbflfh June U B July I. ISO
O CI-1

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le g a l Notice
N O TIC E O F SALE
L U C I N D A H. L U C K . U N I T
N U M B ER MS
G IL B E R T E C TLO FF, U N IT
N U M B E R 4 tl
S A W M A S O N R Y . IN C ., U N IT
N U M B E R IM
J E F F R E Y M U E L L E R , U N IT
N U M B E R MS
HUGO'S OF FLO R ID A . INC .. U N IT
N U M B E R 2)0
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y given the)
pursuant to Florida Statute l l t t s .
Enforcement ol Liens, pursuant to
Owner's Lien a t provided in F lorid*
Statute D M . th * owner *1 SEC U ­
R IT Y STO R E-A LL. fecafed of MS
U.S. H ighw ay t l M . Fern P ark ,
Florida S i m w ill toll
units That the prop*r t) m ay be
v ie w e d a t S e c u r ity S to re A ll
W ir th fliilt Call l y m RDnMitfTMfif
ef telephone number O O O M f That
th* goods w ill bo told tor cash at
public tale on the llth day of Jufy.
IH ) . af t 00 P M . at ihe below
address, to satisfy owner lien tor rent
due In accordance w ith F lo rid a
S tatu te .
A M . H E R R IN G
SEC U R ITY STORE A LL
550U.S. Highway 1741
Fern Park. Florida 17770
tor Owner/Operetor
Publish June 24 A July I, I M l
DEI-137
N O TIC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
N A M E LAW
NO TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N that
the undersigned, desiring to engage
In business under th * flctlttou* name
of N O R TH FO R T M Y E R S
ASSOCIATES at M l W. Highway 43*.
Suit* 1. Altamonte Springs. F L 32701,
Intends to register th* said name
w ith ttw Clerk of the Circuit Court of
Somlnoto County, Florida.
D A T E D this U th d ey ot M ay, I M l
TR Y C O N ASSOCIATES
BEDCON ASSOCIATES.
L IM IT E D
L IL IV A N CORP.
IVASON CORP
D EB O R A H H OLOING S CORP.
JO Y D O R C O R P .
LOWE VAN CORP.
C H R ISA L IN V E S T M E N T S
CORP.
8R O A O A N D C A S S E L
Attorney* tor Applicant
1 IH K an* Concourse

Bay Harbor Islands,
F L 11154
Telephone: &lt;3051 14*1000
By D A V ID SHEAR
Publlth June 24 A July 1. A IS. I N I
dei m
N O T IC E O F P U B LIC
H E A R IN G

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN BY
T H E C IT Y O F LO N G W O O D .
FLORIDA that the Board of Ad
juttmonl will hold a Public tearing
on Ju ly*, IW2 to canater a variance
to equara I outage ef living area
required In an R -IA toning district
requested by Lloyd S. and E ltrod*
Champion on ttw
'
Left • and f. Block A Entimlnger's
Addition fl.P B A PCS » I7 .
Being m en generally described as
ttw vacant lots located an ttw west
lids of Second Pteca.
A Public tearin g will bo held on
Wednesday. July A M il at 7:11 PM
in the Longweed City te ll. I » W.
Warren Avenue, Lin gered. Florida,
or as teen thereafter as poeeteto. At
to il moating Ml totoraetod parties
may appear to be heard wtto re spect
to Variance Request. TMa Nearing
may be caMtouad from lim a la to m
until Anal o c te t to taken by ton
Beard af Adfur imont. A capy af toe
Variance Raquaafto an file wtto toe
City Clark and may be Imp u te d by
toePubfk.
A taped record af toft
ads by to t City af Ungawad tor its
sea. TMa record may naf
tram a
0 ’

Mr
Any parson wtsMng to
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O L T a n r.

City Clark
City af Lang stead,

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legal Notice"

Legal Notice

IN T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T O P T N I
NOTICE
IIO M T B IN T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT OP TH E
N O TIC E I t hereby given that th *
OP T N I STA TS O F F L O R ID A , IN
Board of County C om m littonors of E I O H T B B N T H J U D I C I A L
A N O FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
Somlnoto County, Florida, Intends to C IR C U IT . IN A N O FOR S E M IN O LE
C IV IL A C TIO N
hold a public hearing to consider Ihe C O UNTY. FL O R ID A
F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L
CASE NO. 17I0-CA-04-R
enactment of an ordinance entitled:
M O R TG A G E ASSOCIATION,
I N R I i T H E M A R R IA G E OP
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
P laintiff,
DEBORAH Y U R IC H B E A M E R ,
T H E LA N D D E V E L O P M E N T COOE
W IN ,
OF S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
JE A N M A R IE P IF IT O N E , JA M ES
and
F L O R IO A i P R O V ID IN G FOR
R .L IT K A . and E L L E N P .L IT K A ,
PA TR IC K SCOTT B E A M E R .
G R A N T IN G OF S P E C IA L
$110iSRjkJWWt
E X C E P T I O N I N A - t
N O T IC E OF ACTIO N
N O T IC E O P ACTION
A G R IC U L T U R E FOR THE
TO:
SLA U G H TER O F LIVESTO C K A N D TO:
JA M ES R . L IT K A and E L L E N P.
P A TR IC K SCOTT B E A M E R
M E A T C U T T IN G A N D PROCESS­
L IT K A w ho** residence It
O R Bel last Avenue
IN G O P E R A T IO N S . W I T H N O
to Hawthorn* Avenue
Cincinnati. Ohio 45210
R E T A IL SALES; P R O V ID IN G FOR
Floral P ark. New York 11001
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D th at *
R -IA A A A S IN G L E -F A M IL Y
YO U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
D W E L L IN G O IS TR IC T; P R O V ID ­ Petition for Dissolution of M arriage
th a t an a c tio n to fo re c lo s e a
IN G LOTS FOR R -IA A A A O F AN hat bean filed against you, and you
Mortgage on ttw following property
A R E A N O T LESS T H A N 21,7M J a r t required to serve a copy r i your
In Somlnoto County, F lorid*:
written response or pleadings on
SQUARE F E E T AN D M IN IM U M OF
Let A Block B, N O RTH OR U N D O
W i l t ’s a tto r n e y , C H A R L E S E.
I M F E E T A T T H E B U IL D IN G
T E R R A C E SEC TIO N 1. U N IT t,
GORDON, ESQ., w ho** address 1s
L IN E : P R O V ID IN G THAT
according to ttw p lat ttw ro ri a *
P.O. Box I S i;, W inter Pork, Florida
M IN IM U M D W E L L IN G SIZE FOR
recorded In P lat Book "17," Pago I f ,
32740, on or before ttw 3rd day r i
R -IA AA A IS 1.240 SQUARE F E E T ;
Public Record* r i Somlnoto County,
August, IM 1, and til* ttw original
P R O V I D I N G FOR T H E SUB
with ttw C lark r i this Court either
Florida.
D IV IS IO N OF D U P L E X LOTS IN
Including specifically but not by
before service on Wife's attorney or
R -2 O N E A N D T W O F A M I L Y
w ay of lim itatio n , ttw following
Im mediately thereafter.- o ttw rw lt* a
D W E L L IN G D IS TR IC T; P R O V ID
qulpmont:
IN G FOR T E M P O R A R Y SALES default w ill b * entered against you
ange. imake, model and tortol
I Rang*,
tor th * ra lla f d*m ended In ttw
O F F IC E S IN N EW SU B DIVISIO N S!
num btr not available.
Petition.
D E L E T I N G T H E E X E M P T IO N
I R efrigerator, make, modal and
OATEO this J4th day r i Juno. IN I ,
FOR A P E R M IT FOR D R IV E W A Y S
a t S a n f or d , S om lnoto C o u n ty ,
tortol number not available,
IN S U B D I V I S I O N S H A V I N G
h a t boon fitted against you, JA M ES
Florida.
STREETS W ITH CURB AND
R . L I T K A and E L L E N P .L IT K A ,
IS E A LI
G U T T E R P E R T A I N I N G TO
and you a r t required to serve a copy
A R THU R H. B E C K W ITH , JR.
R I G H T O F W A V USE P E R M IT r i your w ritten defenses. If any, to It
CLERK
IN G i P R O V ID IN G FOR INon B L A IN A CONE, P J L . P la in tiff*
OF THE COURT
CLU SIO tf IN TH E LA N D D E V E L
attorneys, who*# address to P.O. Box
O P M E N T CODE; P R O V ID IN G FOR
BY: C atherineM Evens
3M , Tam pa, Florida 13U1 on or
D E P U TY C LER K
S E V E R A B I L I T Y A N D AN EF
‘ betor* July I t , IM 1, and file ttw
F E C T IV E D A TE.
Publish July 1.1. IS. 21, (M l
original w ith ttw Clark r i this Court
a l 7:M p.m ., or a t soon ttw roaller as O IJ - ll
tlttw r before service on P le ln llirt
possible, at Its regular meeting on
attorney or Im m ediately thereafter;
the JSTH day ol JU L Y . IMS, at ttw
otherwise, a default w ill be entered
Seminole County Courthouse. Room
NOTICE OF A P U B LIC H B A R IN O
against you tor ttw roltot demanded
200. North P ark Avenue. Sanford.
TO CO N SIDER T H I A D O PTIO N OF
In the Complaint or Petition.
Florida. P orten t a r t advised that. II
AN O R O IN A N C I B Y T H E C IT Y OP
ttwy dtclds to appeal any decision
D ATE D on Juno 15.1MJ.
SANFORD, FLO R IO A
made at this hearing, they w ill need
(SEA L)
N olle* Is fwroby given that a
A R TH U R H. B E C K W ITH , JR .
a record ol the proceedings, and. tor
Public Hearing w ill be held a l ttw
such purpose, th e, m e , need to
C LE R K
Commission Room In ttw City H all In
Insure that a verbatim record at the
O F TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T
Iho City ot Sentord. Florida, a l 7 :M
By: Eve Crehfre*
proceedings I* made, which record
o'clock P M on July I t . I N I , to
Includes ttw testimony and evidence
Deputy Ctorfc
consider the adoption r i an ordi­
upon w h k h ltw appeal is to be bated
B laln B C o n *. P.A .
nance by the C ity *1 Sanford,
AR T HU R H B E C K W ITH . JR
P.O B oxJtf
Ftoride. titte ot which is a t follo w *:
Clerk to ttw B aardal
Tam pa, F L 1210)
O R O IN A N C I NO. 10*0
County Commissioners ef
Publish Juno 17,14 A July 1,0 . 1M2
AN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E CI TY
Somlnoto County. Florida
DEI**
OF SANFORD. FLO R ID A . CLOS
BY: P S Costa
I NO. V A C A T I N G . A N D A B A N ­
OeputyCtork
IN T N I C IR C U IT CO U R T IN ANO
D O N IN G A PO R TIO N O F LAKE
Publish July I, IM )
FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
M IN N IE D R IV E L Y IN G W EST OF
D EJ 2
FLO R IO A
H IG H W A Y 17 01 AND SOUTH OF
CASE NO. |} - l* ! 7 CA-*4-L
LAKE M ARY BOULEVARD;
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT O F T H E
IN R I : T H E M A R R IA G E O F
P R O V ID IN G FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y ,
C I O H T I I N T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
JA M ES W. JOHNSON,
C O N F L IC T S . A N D E F F E C T I V E
OF F L O R ID A , I N A N O FOR
Pattttom r/Husband.
DATE.
S E M IN O LE C O UNTY.
and
A copy shall be available a l ttw
CASE NO. tt-IS It-C A -tP O
D EB O R A H JE A N JO H N S O N ,
Office ol ttw C ity Clerk tor ell
O B N E R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
Raspondont/WIto
persons desiring to exam ine ttw
D IV IS IO N
N O TIC E O F AC TIO N
FIRST F A M IL Y M ORTGAGE
TO:
All parties In Interest and cltlten t
C O R PO R A TIO N OF F L O R ID A ,
DEB O R A H JE A N JOHNSON
shall have an opportunity to be hoard
P lalnlltf.
a l said hearing
Currant Address Unknown
vs.
YO U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
By order r i ttw City Commission ot
G L O R E N H A R U O N A G A TA and
that an action tor Dissolution r i
tha City r i Sanford. Florida.
CANDACE L. N A G A TA , his wife.
M arriage has boon filed against you
W.N. Tam m , Jr.
Defendants
by t h * P o tlllo n o r . J A M E S W.
City Clark
N O T IC E OP SALE
JOHNSON, and you are required to
Publlth Jufy 1. ISO
N O TIC E I t hereby given that,
servo a copy r i your written detent**
DC JO
pursuant to th * O rd er or F inal
to said Petition. It any, to JA M ES C.
Judgment entered In this causa. In
W EA R T, P A ., P riltlenor's Attorney,
N O TIC E OP A P U B LIC H E A R IN G
the Circuit Court ol Somlnoto County,
a t 301 W. 1st Streol, Suite 20*.
TO COOTSI O f R T H E A D O PTIO N OF
Florida, 1 w ill sail ttw property
Sentord. Florida. 31771, on or before
AN O R D IN A N C E B Y T H E C IT Y OF
situate In Seminole County, Florida,
July 30. IM J, and fli* ttw original ot
SANFORD, FLO R IO A
d tic rlb td M t
said detonsss w ith tlw Clerk r i this
N o lle * i t hereby given that a
Lot 12. ROSE COURT R E P LA T,
Court either before service on Poll
Public H earing w ill b * hate r i ttw
according to ttw P la l thereof a t
Honor's attorney or Immediately
Commission Room In ttw C ity H all In
recorded In P la l Booh 10. Pago 7, of
thereafter; otherwise a default w ill
Iho City r i Sanford, F lo rid *, r i 7:01
tlw Public R ecord* ot Somlnoto
be entered egelnst you lor ttw roltot
o’clock P M . on July I I , 1442.’ to
County, F k ifld i
dem ented in the Petition.
consider ttw adoption Of an ordl
ot public solo, to ttw highest and bast
O A T E D th is 15th day ot Juno, IM J.
nance by Iho c it y e f S en ferd.
bidder, tor cosh, af ttw West front
IS E A L I
Florida, n il* ol which is a * toltowt:
door ol ttw Somlnoto County Court­
A R T H U R H. B E C K W ITH , JR.
O R O IN A N C I N O 10*1
house In Sentord. Florida, at 11:00
C LER K
AN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E C IT Y
A M ., on July H . IS O
O P T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF SA N FO R D . F L O R ID A . A M E N
I SEA L)
B y i SuaanE.Tabor ‘ “*
O tN G C H A P TE R 11, A R T IC L E I.
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH JR .
Deputy Cterk SECTION I I 12 (a ) ( • ) te l Id ). O F
Clerk
Publish Juno 17,14 E July I, I , IM )
THE SA N FO R D C IT Y C O O E, SA ID
of me Circuit Court
O EI-fS
J
A M E N O M E N T IN C R E A S IN G T H E
BY Susan E T ree r
REFUSE RATE FOR EACH
DEPUTYCLERK
S
E
M
IN
O
LE
CO
U N TY
S IN G L E F A M IL Y E E S ID E N C E .
W IE N E R . S H A P IR O A ROSE
B O A R D O P C O U N TY
FOR A N Y M U L T I P L E 4 * N W l O d Street
COM M ISSIO NER S
R E S ID E N T IA L U SE. A N D FOR
M iam i. Ftoride JJtee
J U L Y 12, H U
EA C H B U S IN E S S O C C U PA N C Y)
P H ; (JOS) iS l 51*1
ll: M A .M .
P R O V ID IN G FO R S E V E R A B IL IT Y ,
Publlth July I, I . ISO)
T
h
*
Board
r i County Commission­
C O N F L IC T S . A N D E F F E C T I V E
D E J 11
e r* r i Seminole County, Ftorida. trill
D A TE.
hold a public hearing to consider ttw
A copy shall b * available r i ttw
EahlIjt^a
gux
N O T IC E U N D E R
flPW
WW
^i■
Office r i ttw City Clark tor all
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E STA TU TE
I. R O B E R T STA K ER - BP 132 portent desiring to exam ine the
TO W H O M IT M A Y CONCE R N :
A t Agriculture Zone — Request tor a
Notice to hereby given that ttw
Barrow P lf P erm it on ttw Northerly
All p e rfio t In Interest and cflUent
u n d e r s ig n e d p u r s u a n t to th a
M 0 ft of Lot 40. W rits F a rm S /D . PE
shall have an opportunity to fa* hoard
"Fictitious Nem o Statute". Chapter
* , Pg 10, oxcapt ttw Easterly l l ft,
at said hearing.
445.04, Florida Statutes, w ill register
located In Section 13J1-J0, at ttw
By order ol ttw City Commission of
w ith ttw Clerk of the Circuit Court, In
Southeast com er r i Cantor D rive and
ttw City r i Sentord, Florida.
and tor Somlnoto County, Florida
Sunsri Drive. (D IS T . I)
H .N .T a m m , Jr.
upon receipt of proof ot ttw publica­
This public hearing w ill ho held In
City Clark
tion of this notice, ttw fictitious
Room 200 r i ttw Somlnoto County
Publlth July 1,1N 3
Nam e. Id w it:
Courthouse. Sentord, Ftoride, on
D
E
J
1
1
P A L M SPRING S A P A R T M E N T S
July tJ, IM J, a t 10:00 A .M ., or as
under which It Is engaged to do
soon thereafter as possible.
N O TIC E OP A P U B LIC M E A B IN O
business at SM Sabal Palm Circle,
W ritten comment* tiled with ttw
TO C O N SIDER T H E A D O P TIO N OF
Altam onte Springs, Ftoride 12701.
Land Msnegement M anager w ill b *
That the party interested in said AN O R D IN A N C E B Y T H E C IT Y O F
considered. Persons appearing a l ttw
SANFORD. F L O R ID A
business enterprise Is a t toltowt:
p u b lic h e a rin g w i l l b * h o a rd .
N olle* I t hereby given that a
Springe!* Ltd., an Ohio
Hearings m ay be continued from
Public Hearing w ill be held a t ttw
Lim ited Partnership
tim e to lim e a * found necessary.
Commission Roam In Ihe C ity H all In
IV Peter P e rris , President
Further dotoll* available by calling
th* City r i Sentord. Ftoride, a t F : «
D a te d a t A lta m o n te S p rin g s,
2214X10. E xt. l i t .
Somlnoto County, Ftoride, June 4. o’clock P -M . on July l l , t t n . to
Parsons o r* advised that. If they
consider ttw adoption r i an erdiIN I.
decide to xppesl any decision m ad*
n a n c * b y I ho C i t y a f Sanford.
Publish June 10.17,14 A July I. 1442
r i M is hearing, ttw y drill m a d a
Florida, MU* r i which It a * toltowt:
D EI-05
record r i Iho proceedings, and. tor
O R O IN A N C I N O 1042
such purpose, ttwy m ay m a d to
AN O R D IN A N C E O P T N I C IT Y
laMaewm
Ite n i i&gt; wrofiim eu
w e al aU
irnurv hw
rvufu
Of Stew
nn
N O T IC E U N D E R
O F SANFORD, F LO R ID A . A M E N
■rocaadlnoft
i v«wpqp
*oi
e^goa Ift
sre sm
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ea w
^wvM
se^d*ea
^^feq^qq
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E S TA TU TE
D IN G A P P E N D IX A . A R T IC L E V .
Include* ttw testimony and evidence
N o tic e I t g iv e n th a t th a u n ­
S E C T IO N 10 ( E ) O F F -S T R E E T
dersigned, desiring to ongigo In P A R K IN G , O F T H I S A N F O R D
upon which ttw ap pari Is to be based,
business under the fictitious nam e of
par Section 10* 0105. Ftorida SlatC I T Y C O D E . P R O V ID IN G FO R
BAGGS PEST C ONTRO L r i 471 West S E V E R A B I L I T Y , C O N F L IC T S ,
B O A R O O F CO U N TY
Lake M a ry Boulevard, Suite 0, In Hw A N D E F F E C T IV E D A T E .
city r i Lake M a ry, Florida, Intends
C O M M ISSIO NER S
A copy shall ha evailabla r i ttw
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
to register that name w ith the Clark O fflc* r i Iha C lly Clark tor all
FL O R ID A
r i ttw Circuit Court r i Somlnoto p o rten t desiring to exam In * ttw
County, Florida In accordance with
I Y : SANDRA G L E N N .
ttw provisions of ttw Fictitious N a m *
C H A IR M A N
A ll parties In Interest and c H la n t
S ta tu te s i to -w ll: S ection &gt;01.00 shell have an opportunity to be tw ard
A T T IS T : A R T H U R H , B E C K W ITH ,
F lo rid * Statutes tM 7.
JR .
r i la id homing.
Dated r i W inter Garden, F tor Ida
Pubihh July 1.1*01
• y ordor a f ttw City Commission r i
on ttw Jrd day r i June, I SCI.
D E J-ia
Itw C Ity riS o n to rd , Florida.
H A T L E Y P E S T CON TR O L. IN C .
H .N . Tam m , Jr.
By: JA M ES R. H A T L E Y , P ra t.
City Ctorfc
IN T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T O P T N I
B L A IR M . JOHNSON
P u M Is h J riy t, ISO
EtO M TB B N TM J U D IC IA L C IB C U IT
Attorney tor Applicant
D E J 14 '
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY, FL O R ID A
P o ri Office Baa ON
C to R A c N m N A O e fB C A E F -K
W inter G erp re, Florida 23747
IN T H I C l EC U IT COURT O P T N I
F IR S T F ID E L IT Y SAVING S A N D
005)050 5511
E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
LOAN ASSOCIATION, r ic ..
Publish June M , 17,14 B July 1 ,1M2
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY, FLO R IO A
P laintiff.
D E Id t
C M IA cNm N ».4H 14
FIR S T F ID E L IT Y SAVINOS A N O
A L P H A I I D E V E L O P M E N T COR
LOAN ASSO CIATION, etc..
NOTICE
PO R A TIO N . IN C , r ic .. r ia l..
P tetetlfl,
T h * Somlnoto County Expressway
Authority announces a public m eet­
N O T IC E OP SALE
ing to which r il persons are invited:
JOHN P . K U RZO N . IN C ., etc., r i al..
N o lle * Is h a re b y d iv a n th a t
O A T E A N O T IM E : Tuesday. July
pursuant to ttw Final Judgment r i
N O T IC E O P S A L I *
S ,im a (S :» P J M .
Fortctosur* and Sato wttorad In ttw
N o lle * i t h e re b y R iv e n th a t
PLACE:
cam e pondi ng In Rw Circuit Court r i
Hoorn h q
pursuant to the Pinal Judgment r i
Iha E IG H T E E N T H Judicial C ’rculf.
In ttw
Sam bteto County Courthouse
In an d fa r S E M IN O L E C ounty,
North P ark Avenue
in R a ClrcvH Court r i
F la rld a , C ivil Action No.
th* Eighteenth Judktel Circuit, In
Ftoride S H I
B3SM CA -B I-K E w w dorslgnad Clark
GENERAL SUBJECT MATTER and tor Som lnoto Comfy. Florida,
in to te

TO BE CONSIDERED:
County Expressway Authority

m aul with lam inate County
s tallin g , and discussion at
tenda/Oranga County Ei
Authority presentstton . a copy r i the
m d* m ay Be M te tead by cant act: Sterm L . R ich ards, te n te r
Samineto County.
PERSONS A R E A D V IIS 0 TH A T.
IP T H E Y D E C ID E TO A P P E A L
A N Y D E C ISIO N S M A D E A T TH E S E
M E E T IN O S /H E A R IN O S , T H E Y
W IL L N E E D A R EC O R D O P T H E
P R O C E E D IN G S A N O FO R SUCH
PU R PO SE, T H E Y M A Y N E E D TO
IN S U R E T H A T A V E R B A T IM R E ­
C O R D O P T H I P R O C E E D IN G S IS
M A D E . W H I(H R E C O R D IN ­
C L U D E S T H E T E S T IM O N Y A N O
E V ID E N C E U P O N W H IC H T H E
A P P E A L . IS T O $ S E A S E D ,
P U R S U A N T TO SEC TIO N 2 H 4 M 5 .

C ivil Action He. 11-111 th * un­
dersigned Ctorfc w ill toll Rw pregorfy
situated In tote Comfy* Mscrlk id
as:
L ets S and 0 , B la ck ''0 , '*
SANLANDO SPRINGS TRACT NO.
70 SECOMO R E P U T , i rrird toa to
RN Ptel teereri « recorded In Rial
Beak f , Pagg a Public Retards r i
l emkwto Com fy, Ftorida
I t BufcOctofcr la
bJder tor cash r i I I :« ririeck AAL
an Rw tM d Ray r i July. 7442, r i ttw
dm r r i ttw lemkwto
C o u a t y C e u r fh e u s e , S e n fe r d ,
F H rtda.
A R T H U R N . B E C K W ITH . JR.
OP T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
•y it
e te r*
SWANN AI N O HAOOOCK, P A
M l Ceurttend Street
O rla n d e , F le rid e 11441’

M

1.1
M il

M I-M I

m i T i W i n W fe A »

C I M I 41. B u ild in g J ., C O A C H
L IG H T ESTA TES, S EC TIO N I I . a
item o c cw dtoj K I N D S
Of C o O liiilfD u if; inoCtC^Ml
In O .R . Booh 1272, Pago h r and
F lrs f Aqwndnwwt Rwrate, rocardad
In O J L B am IM A P # *s tS4R Public
R e c o r d * o f S o m ln o lo C o u n t y ,

CLASSIFIED ADS
Somlnole

Orlando • Winter Park

322*2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:30 A.M. - 3:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
Monday-5:30 P.M. Friday

12—Legal Services

17—Cemetery ft Crypts

CURLEY R D O L T IE
ATTORNEYATUW
101-B W ist Street
Sanford Fla, 1177! J2J OOOO

2 CHOICE C E M E M T E Y LOTS. In
new section r i Oeklavm. W ill tell
at discount price. P.O. Box IS.
Dcbery. *4*4*0 4.

Legal Notice

clerk

O P T H E C R C U IT C O U R T
B y: C M b a rtm M . E m m
D apufyCtork
SW ANN JA N O HAOOOCK. P A

2 1 - Personals

LO N LEY? Call or W rite:
B R IN G IN G P E O P LE TO G E TH E R
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT O F T H E
E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
D A T IN G S E R V IC E .(A g at 25441
C IR C U IT , IN A N D FOR S E M IN O LE
P . O.Box 1451 W inter Haven
C O U N TY, FLO R ID A
Florida 334*8.3112^W 7277.
CASE NO. 131*11 CA -13P
14 Placa B rilliant Balloon Bou
CENTRAL FLORIDA INLAND
quote, for Birthday Parttes and
D E V E L O P M E N T . IN C ., a Florida
Spoclal Occasions. Delivered by
Corporation.
a Clown or our fo xy Stripper.
Plaintiff.
(M ato or F tm a le ) to Sanford
vs.
Surrounding A re **:
JOSEPH N. BISHOP and GUSSIE
BALLOON W IZA R D . &gt;04 775 *428
M . BISHOP, his w ile, It alive, and II
deed, all r i their unknown heirs at
23—Lost ft Found
tow, devisees, grantees, credltora, or
other p a ritet claim ing by, through,
u n d e r or a g a in s t them ,
LO ST. Sm all w h it* poodto/typ*
E N G E L B E R T ULRI CH and E M M A
dog, 18 l l l b ’t in v e cln lfy of
U L R IC H , his w ile, it alive, and it
M a yfa ir Country Club. 323 8815.
dead, all r i ttw lr unknown heirs at
Lost M ale Yorshliro T errier, In
tow, devisees, g ra n t***, creditors, or
M ullet Lake P ark Area. Reward
other pertto* claim ing by, through,
Call 14* 54*4. Evening*._________
under or against them. HORACE M .
H E IS K IL L and
HEISKILL.hl*
LOST or STO LEN, black male,
w ife, II alive, and II dead, all of their
pit lab dog. W white nos*. Short
unknown heirs at tow, devisees,
toll. Reword J05 441 4014.
g ra n t***, creditors, or ether parties
c la im in g b y , through, under or
25—SpeciEl Notices
a g a i n s t t h e m , e n d M A R Y A.
M C D O N A L D e n d
M C D O N A LD , her husband, II e llv t.
IT Take* Two to m ake a M arriage
and II dead, all r i ttw lr unknown
A G i r l ; and
an’ Anxious
tw in e l law. devisees, grantees,
Wot h e r... The Wants A d* Can
creditors, or other parties claim ing
F u rn is h E v e r y t h i n g but th *
by, through, under or against Itw m ;
Groom._______________________ _
ID A L . E A S T O N a n d
New Or I lie now opening.
EASTON, fw r husband. II alive, and
VO R W ERK
II dead, all r i ttw lr unknown heir* at
__________ II2 0 W . 1st St.__________
tow. devisee*, grantee*, creditors, or
T I R E D O F B E I N O FAT7
other parlies claim ing by. through,
Los* weight test, end easy w ith an
undgr or against them,
em ailng new weight toss pro
De tendon I*.
gram . AM natural, no drug*.
N O T IC E O P SU IT
100% g u a ran tee d , o r monoy
TO:
back. 3231B4,
JOSEPH N . B ISH O P and GUSSIE
M . BISHOP, hi* wife, It alive, and if
dead, all r i ttw lr unknown h slr* at
27—N urstry ft
tow, devisees, grantee*, creditors, or
Child Cara
ether pertto* claim ing by. through,
under or a g a in s t them .
E N G E L B E R T U L R IC H and E M M A
24 H r. Service 4 W k i. to 4 year*.
U L R IC H , h it w ile. It alive, and II
Loving care, good food. Play
dead, all ot ttw lr unknown heirs at
yard. Reasonable rate*. H f M |7
law. devisee*, g ra n t***, creditors, or
or 3314047.
other parties claim ing by, through,
under or against them, HORACE M .
31— Private
H E IS K IL L and
H E IS K IL L .
hls wife. If alive, and II (toad, all r i
Instructions
ttw lr unknown holrs at law, devise**,
gran te**,. creditor*, or ether parties
I I B abtotO rew nE very 24Hours
c la im in g . b y , through , under or
Intent Swimming Research
a g a i n s t t h o r n , a n d M A R Y A.
Certified arte Insured Instructor.
M C D O N A L D and
Survival Swimming. SM o-SYr.
M C D O N A LD , her husband. II alive,
Teaching In Sentord. 13# UTS
and If dead, all of ttw lr unknown
holrs a t law, devisee*, g ran t***,
creditors, o r other p e ril** claiming
3 3 -R s a l Estate
through, under or against them:
C ounts
A L . E A S T O N and
EASTO N, her husband. II alive, and
If d M d . all r i ttw lr unknown holrs at
KEYES LICENSE EXAM SCHOOL
tow, dovlsaas, grantee*, creditors, or
Nvxt 4 D ay Accelerated C le t*
ritw r parttes claim ing by, through,
Starts July II . IS43. For twltlef|
un d tr or against thorn.
reimbursement information ciU
You and each ol you a r* notified
M
ild re d s , Wang. 323 3300.
that a suit to qulol till# lo th*
fo llo w in g p ro p e rty In S em lnol*
County. Florida, to w ll:
The west 7712*0 f*et ot ttw NW U
r i ttw SE to, LESS rlg h tri-w a y for
Peoto M arkham Road, ol foci Ion u .
Township i f south. Rang* I t oast.
N O TIC E O F CHANO E
ALSO: A ll r i Block " T " of Ttw
O F P U B L IC H E A R IN G D A T E .;
Town of PAOLA. according to ttw
*ui
Ttw Samineto County Board .'of
plat ttw ro ri a t recorded In Plat Book
Commissioners w ill hold a puttie
1, P ag* 73 of ttw Public Records ol
hearing In Room 200 of ttw Semin
imlrwte
S*mlnoto County, Florida
County Courthouse, Sentord. Florida
ALSO: Ttw south to Ot Government
on AUGUST 23. IM ] A T 7:00 P .M &gt;jsr
Let J. LESS ttw west 330.00 tori and
a * soon thereafter a t possible.;to
L E S S t he f o l l o wi n g d e scr i b ed
consider a request lor retoning.
Parcel: Begin r i ttw southeast cor
This public hearing was previously
rwr r i Section M . Township i t south.
scheduled, and so advertised, for
Rang* I t east, thence run S M * » ’
Sept. 13. IM J.
30“ W, along ttw south line r i said
P U B LIC H I A R l N t f FO R CHANGE
faction u , 1441 271 tear to a point
OF lO N IN O R EG U LA TIO N S
230.04 to ri oast r i ttw south to section
H EN DER SO N IN V E S T M E N T
corner r i said Section 14. thence run
C O R PO RATIO N - R EZO NE
N 00* 1*' 41" W. 145 514 to ri, thenc*
A -l A G R I C U L T U R E T O Rrun oast 1151*55 to ri to ttw aast I In*
SINGLE F A M IL Y D W E L L IA r i M id Section 34. thonc* run
D IS T R IC T - PZII-4-421-42
l
southeast along said east llm r i
Parcels 14, 141, IL 14. In Sectton
Section M . to ttw point r i beginning
24 2IS JOE. toss any portion bttow f w
h a t bean filed against you and you
flood p ro m elevation. Approxim ately
a r * required to serve a copy r i your
20 acres. (Further described a t ton
w ritten dttonsot, II any, to It on ttw
ttw East stes r i Dodd Road, N o rttrri
P la tn lltfi attorney. Alexander C.
Howell Crook.I (O IS T R IC T d ll
.
Mackinnen, w h et* address It Suit*
Further, a public hearing w ill-be
1444, 111 South O range Avenue,
hold by th* S E M IN O LE CO U N TY
Orlande. Florida 32001, and Ml* ttw
P U N N IN G A N D ZO N IN G COfc
o rig in a l w ith Iho C la rk o f th *
M ISSIO N O N J U L Y 4. IM J A T ^ 0
above-tfytod Court on or b r ie r* ttw
P M , or a t toon th ere after ^ t
J i lt day r i July, 1M3; otherwise ttw
possible, in Room 200 r i ttw Semlngto
allegations r i ttw complaint w ill b t
token M adm itted and a lodgment
County Courthouse. Sanfo(d,
Ftorida, In order to review , h m r
m ay be entered again*! you tor tlw
comments and m ake re c o m m *a &gt; r
r r ilr i demanded In Hw Complaint.
liens to Hw Board r i County Com­
W ITN ESS m y hand and teal r i
missioners ot Somlnoto County on ttw
said Court on this 15th day r i June,
io n .
abovt application.
(S E A L)
Those In attendance w ill be heard
Arthur H. Beckwith Jr.
and w ritten comments m ay be (Had
Ctorfc
with ttw Land Managem ent M anag­
r i ttw Circuit Court,
er. Hearings m ay bo continued from
fir m to tim e a t found necessary.
In and tor
Further details ev tlle b to by calling
Sem inal* County, F lor Id*
322 4320, E xt. IM .
By Susan B. Taber
DapufyCtork
Hectare a r * advised that II ttwy
decide to appeal any decision made
Pubitoh Jum 17, la A July t, E. IMJ
DEI-44
r i these meetings, they w ill need a
record r i Iho proceedings, and tor
such purpote. ttw y m ay m od to
Nolle# I t hereby given that I am
ensure that a verbatim record r i ttw
_ tgeged Ip business r i 101* Princess
proceeding* I t mods, which re^prd
Goto B lvd., M aitland. F la . 12711
Includes the testimony and evidence
Samineto County, Ftoride under ttw
upon which ttw appeal Is to be based.
flc tlllo u * nam e of PA M EN
T E R P R I S E I , D / B / A F L O R ID A
C ounty Cam m Ittlo n d r t
R E T IR E M E N T E X P O , N A TIO N A L
Sem lm te County, Ftorida
R E T IR E M E N T E X P O , and that I
B Y : SandraGtenn.
Intend to register said name w llh Itw
C lerk r i ttw C i m l t Court. Samineto
A t t t r iU r ih u r H . Beckwith J r. County, Ftorida in accordance w ith
Pubitth July 1B August 1. IM J
Mm g m to to m *4 Iha Ftettitout N o rm
D E J -7
S tatu te s, to -W it: fa c tio n 445 4 *
Ftoride Statutes IVC7.
/s /M ic h a e l A . Kaplan
Publlth J u m 17.14, July I, A IM J.

^

leg al Notice

DEI-43

B lR u W f SON te Iho M M w ol and bool
bted w te r c a r it r i 11 AS o'clock AAA.
tlv w i ttiai | am
on tea W h day r i Jufy. H B L o M h o
W
l
.
1
"
,#rn
Woof From d m r r i ttw lo m lm te P a rk , F L V M lam inate County,
C o u n ty C o v r th o u s o . S a n f o r d , Ftorida undar ttw Ik tltto u * m n w r i
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H . JR .

RATES

I firm........ .......SfCBlIno
3 consocutivo times . 34c a lint
7consecutivetimes. 44c a lino
10consecutivetimet 4lc a lino
11.00 Minimum
3 Linos Minimum

P '" L T W M O E V ,

INC., and that I Intend to register
said name wtth ttw Clarti r i ttw
Court. Sem lm te County,
FtorUa In accordance wtth ttw p r»
* » ^ * * » / &gt; r i i n e u . Name Slat

SMtoflW.

mm

O rla n d o , F lo r id a S IS S 4’
/ * / Susan R. La Vtowtto
Attorneys lor P laint IN
PteH K bJufy I . A I L I J . t M l
P u b lh h J w w M B J u ty 1. MBS
O fJ -1 1
O C I-U B

�A

/

»

9

C&lt;

A M . P A P E R R O U TE . Combine
lio n hom o d e liv e r y end
w holoulo. Orange, Lake Melon,
Cassldoga
. C O M P L E T E S H O P P IN G
C E N TE R POR BOAT N EED S
Seaworthy h a t boon supplying task
and mohogony parts lor boot
m enufactureri-w hotoM la parts
and retail lovola a t wall a t boot
repairs for 14 years. In tho last
two y ta ra wo have boon located
In the fast growing area of 17*7
and A lfport Blvd iO min from U
and L a k t M a r y a x i l and I
m lnutst from San lord Airport.
Como on aboard, a t wo are
looking tor key personnel to start
or continue their own merino
related business. Such a t boot
motor sales and repairs boat and
■trailer salts -ms r Ins hardware,
electronic goer, fishing teckle,
canvas and upholstery and many
more mods con bo furnished.
' Together w e con borgln for
In s u ra n c e -a d v c rtls ln g -b u y ln g
pow er-m aintance etc. Contact
Dick Crugor at Seaworthy Wood
. Products, t i l l Stats
Slrest.Santord. 1265)2214144.
Forced to Soil duo to Illness. I I you
. ore a go gottor and havo S1S.000
cash to Invest In a good going
business, should havo knowledge
. ot plumbing and sowar, also
employees w ith knowledge now
working, contact m s, W ill fi­
nance balance, lor appointment
W rit* P . O Bos l*S Lake M ary
Flo. 31744 ■

FOR A LL YOUR
R E A L ESTA TE NEEDS

323*3200
A. M . D E L IV E R Y RT.
117.500. lor A .M . Delivery Route.
Earning 170.000 Sanford Area
C a ll R oy Johnson. B rokor
Salesman.
S A W . Lake M a ry Blvd.
Suite B
la k e M e ry, F la . 27744
V ILL A G E
D R IF T

m o r t ga g e s . R o y L t g g , Lie

McjtjojoBroktrTMMje^^^

ASSISTANT MANAGERMANAGER TRAINEE.
E xcallant opportunity w ith a
f ut ure. V a r y good com pany
benlflts. Retell experience de­
sired. Applications and resumes
being accepted e t Walgreen. 2*42
O rlandaD r.Santord.____________
Babysitter needed In m y home
Tuesday. Thursday thru Sunday
nights. Own transportation to
and from. Must bo I I yrs. or
older. Call 222-1000_____________
CARPENTERS, FRAMERS. O N L Y . M u s t hov e tools and
transportation. 4**42*2. 7:M to
4:00 P -M
- ______________

M am inas 1115*71

torvlco catering to working p
p it. B M W , M Q Falm otte Avo.

X NEVER W " M A J O R , IOFFERED W i
II'M
N SHOCKED/
SHOCKED/I
THOUdHT YOV/P BREAK m \ IIE O TO BUY A MODERN!
BARdAlN.'-UM-HAK'^TRUEJ SINCE MW BOUOHT
YOU WERE NEARLY LYNCHED 7 W TURKEY INSTEAD,
R JR H U IN J WATER BNNT V X 6 0 SWAP W ITH r-&gt;
TO FARMER! FOT RARNA 1 X ^ 5 O M E 0 O D Y '
BUT YOU M ID THAT WA? 7 — ^ c = s ^
A MlMUP IN LAB EL!) r ^ A N D GUICKLY/ J U P d E ^
V
J

E X P E R IE N C E D TELEPHO NE
M ias parson. Storting U K on
hour, plus o chance lor advan­
cement. Como by MO S. Sanford
Avo, Suite 313 tor Interview.
Wad F rl from 9:00 P .M . to 4 :N
PJW.___________________________
H E L P W A N TE D . M ature person
tor concession w ork. Apply In
person. Thursday and Friday 9-5
P .M Flea World_______________
H OU S E W I V E S - Ne e d s sucossful
person to help promote m y busi­
ness. P o ri tim e or full tim e. Calf
between i : X A 4:30 tor on
Interview. M H O S ._____________
Licensed Coimetologlst Needed,
s Following preferred but not nec­
essary Coll or app«y a t Guys
And Oals H a ir Styling Studio. I l l
W . 17th SI. 1114001._____________
L IV E IN , with elderly mother and
I n v a l i d son. L o v i n g h o m o .
Housekeeping , s a lary . M ust
hove own transportation and
references. 37?J**0.____________
N E E D E X T R A IN C O M E?
W HY NOTSELLAVON I
N E E D E X P E R E N C E O short o r­
der and scratch cook. Between
1:00 A .M . to 1:00 P .M . Apply U K
S. French Aye.
P o rt T lm o . W om en and M en.
Seminole Co. Work from home on
telephone program . Earn S25. to
*t00 par week, depending on lim a
available. 177 5201.______________
PER SO NN EL U N L IM IT E D
Im m ediate opening. Long term
tem porary. Constructloln Labor.
331 5440._______________________
PR ESTIG EO U S D E L I, occapllng
applications lo r conclontlous
people. W illing to svork food
p rep aration under lim a
guidelines No colls botwoon
11:00 A 1:00.2 P W I1 ____________
I N , N E E D E D . Full tlmo 7 to 1
shift. Apply Lake view Nursing
Canter. t t S E . 2nd Street.
R E V I E W COO RDINATOR. Parttim e w ith peer review organisa­
t i on, Vo l u s i a C o u n t y . W a ll
established hospital, m edical
background m a n d llo ry , R. N.
required. Utilisation review ex­
perience desirable. Salary and
benlflts. Call or w rit*. Florida
H ealth Core Foundation Inc.
P.O. Box 747 Titusville, Florida.
W7M. &lt;205)247 1444. ___________

W A N TE D Full or port tim e dis­
tributors to earn good money and
havo fun doing II. Apply In
parson Th u rt July 7th at Caviller
M otel 17*2 and Airport Blvd In
Sonlord. t P.M . to f P.M . Room
120. Contact Loo.________________

tt—

- x r - g r r

1 != ^

o rp o ts .ttM W O .

159-R eal Estate
Wanted

privacy, newly decorated. ItOO
Week. Plus SMO security deposit.
Call m a n o rm -4447._________

v O T J U P d fe E !rflV E
L O N fi B E N T B N C C *

fJUIFERYOURSELF
In o u r o le g o n tly fu rn is h e d I
B edroom A p a rtm e n t. Single
story living at Its bast. Sur­
rounded by lush landscaping,
private patio, sound controlled
walls, built In bookcases, abundent storage. Just bring your
linens A dishes.

SANFORDCOURT APARTMENTS
323-3301

A F A R T M E N T FO R R E N T .
2 Bdrm ., &gt; Both, Pool, Tennis.
Brand Now. SMO. OoHona 574 1&lt;34.
BAMBOO COVE APTS
2 M E . Airport Blvd. Ph. 2224420
IA2 Bdrms., tram 1240 M o. J %
discount tor Senior CHIwns.
O E N E V A O A R D C N IA P T S .
1.1 A 2 Bdrm . Apts. From S245.

I B D R M . I B ATH, oil appliances.
Including w a s h er/d ry er, poet.
Upstairs unit. M7S.
Coll 222-2200 Of S**-5t2l.
LUXURYAPARTM ENTS
Fam ily A Adults section. Poolside.
2 Bdrms. Master Cove Apts.
322-7*00
_______ Op»n on weekends.________
M ariner's Village on Laka Ada, t
bdrm tram 1245, 2 bdrm from
1210. Located ir *2 lust south ot
A irport Blvd. In Sonlord. All
Adults. 222 1470._______________
M e l l o n v l l l o T r a c e A p t s. 440
Maltonvllle Avo. Spacious mod­
ern 2 bdrm 1 bath apartments.
C a rp e te d , ki t chen equipped,
CH AA, adults, no pots. 1325.
_____________221 1*05____________
N E W 1 A 2 Bedrooms. Ad|ocont to
L a k e M o n ro e . H e a lth C lub,
Rocquolboll and M o rel
Sonlord Landing S. R. *42214220.
RID G EW O O D ARM S APTS.
2500 Ridgewood Ave. Ph.2224420
1.1 A 1 Bdrms. from SMO.
Sonlord Spacious. 1 Bdrm. plus den

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

evenings.

2544S.FRENCH
3770731
A lter Hours W H I P M l-077*
A ssum ab le 74*% M o rtg a g e . 4
Bdrm. 2 Both, Cant HA., Hoxible
financing, 151,000. Appt. M l -0414.

W E L IS T A N D SELL
M O R E HOMES TH A N
A N YO N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY

SA NFORD 2 Bdrm . t Bath., appl.,
drapes. Flo. R m .. utility hook-up,
largo fenced yard, kennel, quiet
nelghbochoed. SIM . M o. 222 «S7».

4-1 COUNTY SM,MO.

2 Bdrm I Bath. House In Sonlord.
H /A . Nice neighborhood. Coll
24*5220 or 227 22*4._____________

105—Duplex*
T rip le x /R e n t
O U P L E X E S 2 Bdrm s. Kitchen
equipped. Cent. Heat and air.
SIM , 1240 and S3M Century 21
June Porslg Realty. Realtor
222 1471.____________ ___

H O M E W IT H IN C O M E 3 1 OR.
F P . oldar with 2 teparolo
apartments. S5f,f00.

CUSTOM B U ILT. J Bdrm. 2 hath
heme, an 1.35 Acres, an Crystal
L a k e ch ain,. Ev e r y Feature
Imaginable, 1115,000.

5 ACRES 111,500.
7 ACR ES S3MOO0T BEST O FF E R
2ACRESSI4.100.

321*0759 Eve 322*7643
DELTONA-Asisum e 525,700, *11%.
FH A loan. 125,700, by owner.
305-33I-4W7.____________________
FOR SALE. By owner, Sunlend
Estates. J bdrm , t bath house on
V» acre. Fenced In yard with
w ell. 147,500. No owner financing.
Phone 322105*._________________

U N D E R 12.000 down. 2 Bdrm .
B*outy. Fenced yard. A llordabl*
payments. Call owner Broker.
____________ 33M 11I.____________
2/1 C H A. Hardwood Doors, large

I Bdrm. kids. pets. SlOO Security
1275. Fee 3M 71W .
Sov-On-Rentals Inc. Realtor

Jftqjw M Ilw ^juiO tt^^^

REALTO R 222 SQM
3 B D R M . 1 Both. Convenient to
Schools, shopping. (42.000. W m .
M allctow skl Realtor 322 7101.
1403.45 M O N T H L Y . MO00 down
buys this Impressive J year old.
2-1 with 2 car garage. Owner
financing, no qualifying. 155,000
Ooltono. 574-754*._________________
11400 BELOW M A R K E T
SANORA 1403 Sq F I. ot comfort. 3
Bdrm . U s B. Condo, extra Lrge.
M a s te r B drm . w ith dressing
area. Enclosed patio and garage
Pool and tennis. Price 157.500
14.000 Oown. I0&gt;s% 240 payments
011514.17.

2 B E D R M , 3 BATH,
COOL POOL. 1325.
CALL 2*5-7744.

W E N E E D L IS T IN G S
323*5774
ITS FU N TO M ake A HOUSE A
H O M E ....... Pick ana of Three.

KISHREALESTATE

CONSULT OUR

2121 FR E N C H A VE

REALTO R

321*0041

L A K E JE S U P
Waterfront. Nearly S Acres. Over
Ik cleared. Owner says"M u it
Sail” 140,000. Owner financing.

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

O O L F E R IO B L IO H T
W alk to M a yfa ir Gelt Course from
this delightful. 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath.
Kama In Lech Arbor. Below FH A
appraisal. SM.SOO.

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

JUST L IS T E D
This 3 bdrm . 1 bath “ cutto" could
be |ust what year's leaking tor.
G reat tor new ly m a rried or
re tir e e s . Class to H o s p ita l.
S 4 0 4 M F H f.

Salesmanneeded

STUPEI KERC]f INC
*214001_____________

HALCOLBERT
R E A L T Y IN C .
S Acre T R A C T S O E N E V A AREA.
East of Sanford. Some on hard
suriaca read. 70% dawn. Closing
In X days. 10 year mortgage, at
10% Interest. Call tordatalU.

207 East 25th St
323-7132 Em. 3224(12
• SANFORD I 4 B 4 4 0
31* A c re -f - country hema si to.
Oak pin* soma cleared paved. 10%
down 10 Yrs. al 12%.
STENSTROM RE A L T Y
REALTORS
* Call 3731*70 A n y tim e *
ST. JOHNS River frontage. US
a c r e pa r c el s , also i nt e r i o r
parcels with river access SI*.too
Public water, 20 min. to A lta ­
monte M a ll 12% 20 yrs financing,
no qualifying. Broker
420-4M2_____________

C O LLIE R 'S N O M I R EPAIRS
carpentry, reeling, palatlag.
■Iidsar repair. M t-am ________
OUR RATE S A R I LOWER
Lakevlew Nursing Cantor
m i . Second St.. Sanford
FO R SALE ' l l M an*fee. single. 3
Bdrm , 2 Balh, screened patio.
Shad. C /H /A /. Furnished Adult
section. tlf.COO. C arriage Cave.
2214424.

Aolortric

doaninf Servlet
LANDCLKARINO. FILL DIRT.

SEWING MACH'IBJ

AteROOFING

Inspection from 10:00 A.M .
Cosh. Visa. MasterCharge

SHOOT STRAIGHT
APOPKA PLAZA
(CORNER 441 AND 436)
_ _ _ _ _ _ 1-889-0842
I S M ITH A WESSON. » Chlel
Special model no. 34. Nover
tired, w ith modi tied handle. One
holster, one bee s h e iie /a M Wta
wod cutters s tM
*

FDR SALE. 71 SKYLINE. daub*
wide. 3 Bdrm. I bath. Florida
ream, carport, shad. C /H /A /,
furnished. peddle tan*, extras,
family section. tU M A Carrlap*

TRASH M A N W O N T P IC K IT U P *
Hove pickup trvck that w till
Reasonabla rates 3274*27,
1
We buy furniture, antiques or
except consignments h r auction
F la Trader Auction. 3304110.
I Strand. 7.SMM. cultured pooris&gt;
■a carat diamond ring. 14 caret
Gold Diamond lo ll lore. 1231001.

Bad Credit?
No Credit? &gt;
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Check-Easy Term s
N A TIO N A L AU TO SALES
1110 S. Sanford Ave
321 4075
24SI S. Orlando D r.________223431*,
BE A H A P P Y TR A V E L E R ..
B U Y A S A F E CAR
B E FO R E YOU GOI
F I N D O N E H E R E I I ___

DA YTO N A A U TO A U CTIO N
H wy *2. 1 m ile west of Speedway,
Daytona Beach w ill hold a public
A U TO A U CTIO N every Monday
A Wednesday a l 7:20 p.m . It's the
or.ly one In Florida. You set the
reserved price. Call *04 2554311,
lor further details.
»
D a b a ry A uto A M a rin a Salesv
across the river top of h ill I 7 r
hay 17 *2 Oebary 4404510
&gt;&gt;
F I A T *73. Engine sound. Restore^
tlo n needed

E ir e I le n t/o r p a rie -

car.1250. (*04)2024244._______
1*71 T Bird Landau Sport D ecor^
C lean . Runs g re a t. P ow er
Brakes. Steering, windows, and
driver seat. A M F M Stereo. T ilt
Wheel. Cruise Centre!. 2212*
Evenings end weak ends
n

AKC Germ an Shepherd Puppies.
Large Black and Tan.

________ 22201IS.________

Dag Obedience Classes begin
Saturday July 2nd. Sonlord Osteen
area. 223 222C and 2224241.
Golden R elrltv er.
M ale 5 M o*, old. S50.
Cell 377 1704 A lter. 5 PM .

FOR SALE,
l y e e r old Coll. Brown.
S225.
2714431.

213—Auctions

FOR ESTATE er C O M M ER C IA L
AUCTIONS Call A I AUCTION
SERVI CE m A IM ._____________
FO R EST A T E. C om m ercial or
Residential Auctions B Apprais­
als. Call Dali's Auction 272 5*30

215-Boots/Accessories
LARSON 17 ft, 15 Chrysler Magic
T ilt T railer. M ust see Excellent
condition 17.500 37700**. Call
anytim e.

217 -G e re g e Seles
C arpori S alt, boat Items, clothing,
chllds A adult. Beaks, toys. m ltc.
F rl, A Sal. 0 4.1107 5. Hally Ave.
Garage Sals Saturday I N Vihien
Rd I A M to J P M Mlsc. Hams
Clathes. Juke B ui. professional

Y A R D S A LK . J u ly 20. I f
electrical appliances.--I leans,
household Item s. m lK - gici
Hartwell Ave. OttlBtN St.
&gt;•

C A O L E A K R IP A 1R .

JO H N A L L f If LAW N A T R B ^

Any kind at Tree Sarvic*
W kM meat aw ythlna-M inn.
sowir 'Se !A u 7 n H 3 r ^

FOR SA LE. Electric Wheelchair,
excel l ent co ndition, w a lk e r,
cruches. m Hc.322 7&gt;M._________

199— Pets A Supplies

USSKSCvCa

FO RM ERLY H arriatt'a Aaauty
Nook 119 C. 1st SI. 22217*7

223-Mlscellaneous

F I L L D I R T A TOP SOIL
Y E LLO W SAND
Clark A H lri 222 7500. 323 2S23

GARAG E SALE. L im a bit e l ev
a r y t h l n g . C l o t h e s , d i s he s ,
cookwar e. 9 5 S atu rd ay. H I
Laurel Ave.
________________

ATTENTION

Carpentry

PAR M AID SCR VICES

153—Lots- Acreage/Sa le

155-Condominiums
Co-O p/Sale

S W I F T C O N C R E T e . F a s te n ,
driveways, pads. H eart, peats.
Chatt. Stone. F r e t E * t / M 7 t M .

Financing Available

Cosh for good used furniture.
Larry's New A Used Furniture
M a ri. 215 Sanford Avo. 122 4112
COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
Zenith 15" color TV In walnut
console. Original price over S750.
Balance due S1T5 cash or pay­
ments S it month. NO M O N E Y
DOWN. Still In w arranty. Call
M2-S]f4 day or nlte. Free home
trial, no obllgit Ion._____________
FOR SALE R E M O D E L IN G OUR
H O U SE. Tresel Dining Room
Table and two Benches. 1275. 5
Piece wicker Patio Set. SI7S.
Walnut Oval Dining Room table
and 4 Cana back chairs. 5250
Early Am . Oeslgn console color
TV. 1150. Tan Iova saat and high
brown cant back chairs. S275.
Plus Much M orel 3237105
FROST F R E E Relrlg, chairs, sola
bad. kltctwn tabla and chairs,
double bed. 222 *410.
Kenmore ports, service,
used washers. 22244*7
M O O N E Y APPLIA N CE S
WILSON M A IE R F U R N I T U R E
211-315 E. FI RSTST.
___________ 2215417
3 PC. L I V I N G ROOM SET.
HER CU LO N , BROWN. StSO.
_________
223 4251.

117—Sporting Goods

322-2420

2 Bdrm .. Kids, prlvota lot. S2M.
Foe 22*7200.
Sov-On-Rttitale Inc. Realtor

se*,*ee.

322.7121

111—Appliances
/ Furniture

•••♦GUN AUCTION****
••SUN. JULY 3 h J1:OOP.M. m
OVER 250 PIECES

W A N TE D TO LEASE S ACRES OR
M O R E , T IL E D LA N D . W IT H
O LD E R R E P A IR A B L E HOUSE
IN SA NFORD A RE A.4214S44.

lack eyed pees. U pick. S4.00
bushel. 7 A M today till Noon
Saturday. Zipper cream
crowdert. 17 00 bushel. Thursday
thru Saturday. G o N orth on
Oregon Aye. oft H w y. 41. I K It.
W . of 14 Overpass

N E E D to sell your house quickly!
We con offer guaranteed sale
within M days. Call 231-1411. _

73—Employment
Wanted

We handle The
VWieto Rail of Wax
IKJMC emL

KOKOMO Tool CO., i t 9 t lW . P in t
St., Sanford, l i n o * buying gloat,
nowtgopor, bim etal ita o l and
, alum inum c a m along wtlft all
o th e r, k in d s a t n o n -la r r e u t
motels. Why not turn this Idle
clutter Into ex tra del l e n t w e all
benefit from recycling.
For details call; m - I I M

24 HOUR 0 322-9213

Furnished apartm ents tor Senior
C lllto m . I l l Palm etto Avo. J.
Cowon No phono calls.__________

They Work A LL the lim a I

91—Apartm ents/
House to Share

P R IV A T E M O B IL E H O M E Com­
munity. Q uarter acre lets. Dou
bio wide homes. Available for
Im m o d lo to occupancy. Sava
N ow . S R i t f . T u e ca w llla Rd.
W inter Springs, F I* . 327-31*0

^

f A1R
DOWN!

1 STORY B E A U T Y Country kitch­
e n , t B d rm . p r i v a c y , aasy
a s s u m p t i o n , na q e a l i l y l n g .

C O LLEG E STU D EN TS leaking lor
ya rd w o rk in Santerd are a.
Available 7 days a week. Call

219—W ented to Buy

WE BUY ANTIQUES
r
FU R N ITU R * A APPLIANCE A

nuns

BUCKET

1*72/74 Ford and Cheyy Knuckle
and Straight boom, r lt ft. 34 ft.
working heights, prices S5.250 to
1*750 Choice of 15 a l Daytona
Auto Auction Hwy. *2 Daytona
Beach *04 255-M il______________
1774 Ford F 500.14 F t. flat bad wllb
side board and Hydraulic fall
gale. Day 11*1-7310.
Alter 4:00 377*5*1
__

241— Recreational
Vehicles/ Campers
G L A D D IN G D E L R A V / 7 4 , 5th
wheel. H /A /. awning, full bath, 1
wardrobes, new rugs, bads A
w iring. Sleeps 4. Hitch. 15.*06
23*1537._______________________
T R A V E L T R A I L E R IT* Sell Con
telned. Old but nice. SI05D Phone

�I

W HOLE-W HEAT

ONE y - I D O N'T
PIECE ( HAVE TlAAB
OP \ POP A L L
T W O ? / T H IS ! JU 8T
.
OlMAAE w
I

f

V

BOGS

BEFORE 1
GO LOOK
FOR YOUR
BALL, S IR ,
T'LL NEEP
A PASS

HEY, CA W ,
.CADDY ? _

NOT NOW,
MY0OY...

W ELL, FREt? I C A N T
FINP ANYTHING PHYSICALLY
WRONG WITH YOU.'/------«&lt;

O U T YOU SEE WE ^
APPLTS ARE IWVDLVEP
IN AN IMPORTANT^
M
6AM E? J H i

THE PROBLEM SEEMS
TO BE NERVES.' LEARN
TO RELAX.'

NOW WHERE
WERE WE,'
E tA P Y S l.

HOW CAN I ? IT'S HAR
TO GET B Y NOWARMS.
PRICES KEEP GOING U P /

Smell? Feet? Keep
Your Toenails Clean

1 ToQod.
ichool (abbr.)
1 £ £ 11
»0f Nero
47 Aye
IT 7 V: T T K
4 Cut of bed 40 Ply
I ££ 1 1 »
0 Over (poetic) 52 Whinny
rTVTrffll
12 Freakish
66 Gallic
* g§
13 Subject
effirmitlve
' f f JHa
14 Eggi
57 Egged on
IPIU aIa S r
15 Lett letter
61 Proipector’i |« v » aMU
16Creek
find
iTl'i il iinnw
17 Whlik
62 Hockey great
infir c
16 Succeed
Bobby____ IAIdl 11o iTcT
20Lymph
63Aip
|s } aIn1« *til
22 DeprinlonIni-64 Light brown UlNlolt TTsl
till*
65 Compju
24 Electrical unit
point
IS Conjunction
26 Rutalan aecret 66 Disliked
(Gar.)
police
67 Commercials 21 Her Majeaty'a
28 For rowing
ship (abbr.)
30•CaollmaallallaJ
placently
DOWN
23. M
ain artery
..
*

9C Q A M I

YOU OON'T KNOW HOW

BAP I FEEL A B O U T
RAISING A4V FEE.'

DEAR DR. LAMB - I
have read your column
and when you have men­
f 8 A «
tioned sm elly feet you
o M £1 A
«
have never said a thing
O J * « •
about people cleaning out
u 1 I JU ft
from under their toenails.
£ X 1 0 1
I wish you would please
tell people to clean under
their toenails at least once
a week If not more often.
who have It.
When they d on ’ t, this
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is It
causes a terrible, terrible
true or Jupt /ynyth that a
odor. Thanks for listening.
d r in k o f w h is k e y or
DEAR READER - Well,
brandy warms the body?
you have told millions of
In the winter the older
people. Now let's hope
members o f our family
the re are m o r e clean
take brandy or whiskey
toenails In your household
with them when they go
and perhaps millions of
Ice fishing "for warmth."
others.
It has been a subject of
Of course you are right.
much controversy In our
It Is Just pari o f cleaning or
house. What about an al­
washing' your feet. But I
coholic drink to cool you
must add that there are
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11
In the summer?
many people who have
DEAR READER - A
problems
with
smelly
feet
12
13
14
who do In fact clean their person who Is drinking
toenails and wash their often has a flushed skin.
15
16
17
That is because there Is an
feet once or twice a day.
Increased (low of blood to
The
first
step
In
control­
18
20 21
19
ling odors Is to wash the the skin. That warm blood
feet regularly and dry warms the skin. If you feel
22
[23
24 j
them thoroughly. Twice a cold (which Is different
day Is not too often If a from actually being cold),
25 26 27
■ 30 31 32 33
t e r 29
that alcohol flush makes
person has a problem. The
34
second step Is to change you feel warm. However,
35
36
37
socks twice a day if possi­ y o u l o s e b o d y h e a t
36
39
ble and. when the temper­ through the skin. Your
40
skin is your radiator and
atu re and s itu a tio n
41
4^
bringing blood to the sur­
43
JH&lt;4
permits, go barefoot. Dry
feet are less likely to be face cools the body.
45 46
47j 46
In cold environments,
smelly feet.
A n y t h i n g that helps and especially In cold sur­
49 SO 51
62
63 64 66
prevent sweating o f your vival, alcohol Is dangerous
feet is also im portant.. because It may cause the
56
57 58 59 60
61
There are many prepara­ body's internal tempera­
tions. as well as a number ture to drop too much
62
63
64
o f home remedies, that do because you lose that heat
through the skin when
Just that.
66
66
67
But the thing most peo­ you use alcohol to feel
ple miss Is that often the warm.
odor is caused by bacteria
In the summer you feel
that live under the surface hot from the same effect
o f the skin and are unaf­ but the cooling o f the
fected by ordinary soap Internal body does occur,
and water. That Is why I provi ded the external
recommend asking your e n v i r o n m e n t Is c o o l
doctor for a prescription enough for you to lose heat
for some pHisoHex pre­ from your skin. Thus
TOUR BIRTHDAY
to help someone else, you
paration to use as a soap. alcohol Is a great deceiver
JULY 2. 1983
might not Ik as liberal as As this penetrates the skin
about body temperature./
Contacts with persons
was your benefactor.
It will kill the bacteria and
I suspect it is taken
who live at n considerable
8AOITTARIUB (Nov. soon there Is no odor. along for Ice fishing for the
distance could prove to be
23-Dec. 21) You'll be ami­ Without help from such a same reason It goes on
very lucky for you tips
cable and easy-going today product, all the washing In fishing trips In summer —
coming year. Stay In close
unless something material the world will not solve because the fishermen like
touch with these friends.
Is at stake. If this occurs this problem for people
CANCER (June 2 1-July you might get a little testy.
22) If there Is something
CAPRICORN (Dec.
trig y o u w i s h to a c ­
22-Jan.
19) You and your
complish today, try to do It
ma t e ma y not see
on your own. Associates
cyc-to-cye on most Issues
might not com prehend
highly Invitational limit
today, but at feast strive to
your alms and cause you
raises
that are in expert
be
In
harmony
about
Im­
NORTH
T-t
to fall. Order now: The
use. Hermlne had no pro­
portant matters.
♦
K
9
6
4
NEW Matchmaker wheel
blem about carrying on to
T ir e
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20and booklet which reveals
♦ A4
gam e with her 5-4-3-1
Feb.
19)
Things
will
go
romantic compatibilities
♦ A853
distribution.
for all signs, tells how to sm oothly today If you
W EST
EAST
The play started simply
focus on the p osi ti ve
get along with others,
♦ J
♦Q10S
enough. She took the ace
aspects
of
situations
rather
finds rising signs, hidden
YQJ42
YK95
o f hearts at trick one. led a
qualities, plus more. Mall than on their critical
9K 1 M III1
♦ QJ3
trump to dummy's king
factors.
'
♦ 8
A J 10 7 4
82 to Astro-Graph.
and another back to her
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
SOUTH
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
ace to discover the 3-1
20) Pleasurable pursuits
♦ A87SJ
Over-all conditions look
spade break. Now she was
Y
A
1
0
1
wh i c h bi te Into y o u r
p r o m i s i n g to d ay , but
looking at one trump and
♦ 7
bankroll could turn out to
there's a possibility you
♦
K
Q
1
two heart losers. There
1k bummers today. Seek
might do easy things the
was
also a slight chance of
fun diversions where you
V u ln e r a b le : E a s t-W e s t
hard way. Don’ t get In
losing a club, but Hermlne
D e a l e r S o u th
don't pay as you go.
your own wuy.
prompt ly reduced this
W fil
M arik E a tt
S,
ARIES (March 21-April
chance
to zero.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 19) If you have formulated
She led a diamond to the
22) You could be rather
specific plans to achieve
ace. ruffed dummy's low
lucky In commercial mai­
your obj ecti ves today,
diamond, cashed her king
lers today, but try to be
stick to them. Last-minute
o f clubs and fed her 10 of
con serva tive. Avoid
changes will lessen your
hearts.
gambles, even If you feel chances for success.
W est took two heart
(he- odds arc tilted your
tricks,
but had to lead a
Opening
lead:
V
]
TAURUS (April 20-May
way.
th ird red card to let
20) In ventures where you
By Oswald Jacoby
Hermlne rulf In one hand
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. p l a y a r o l e but l a c k
and James Jacoby
23) Ups-and-downs are authority, don't tax to
and discard a club from
Hermlne Baron o f Los the other.
likely In partnership ar­ Im pose y o ur Ideas on
rangements today. You're others. Be supportive, not Angeles has long been one
Suppose East had won.
of our very best women He would have had a
apt (o accomplish what vocal.
players. Some years ago chance to lead a club but
you set out to do. but there
O E M *! (May 21-June she gave the late Ivan that would let Hermlne
could be some tense mo­
20) flBJust because your Erdos one o f her favorite pick up the club suit
ments.
friends may be a little hands. It doesn’t show without loss.
•
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. loose with their money anything sensational, but
S u p p o s e c l u b s had
22) You may be the recipi­ today docs not mean you merely careful expert play.
broken 3-2. Then the hand
ent o f another's generosity have to follow suit. Make
North's Jump to three would have been a cinch
today. When It’s your turn each penny count.
spades was one o f those for any declarer.

HOROSCOPE

BEC A U S E 7 W 5

QU\C&lt;\ ABE SOU A C D P ?
CD &lt;rt X ) WUOO K A E A T E ?

IS A S IK K U P

WIN AT BRIDGE

WHILE SOU RE WITH US. SWEETHEART FEEL
FREE TDSTAVUP AG LATE AS MOL) LIKE/
r MEAN, THERE5 NO UMITV TWO, THREE.
FOUR AAA."'HOWEVER LONG VOL) WANT
TO S W AWAKE "'IT S U P T O S O U "'
M

THAT POES IT
EVERV TIAAE/

FRANK AND ER N EST

GARFIELP i YO U ATE
AtY RAISIN COOKIESi

t:

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I PONT

X W I5H X K N g W
NOW W H A T X

THOUGHT x KNEW
COOKIES

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*****

tU M B LEW EED S

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A ffS im W tT V S i

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A ft. H O Y ? !/ AEH C0AJN6 KITH BUB
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�E v e n in g Herald

LEISURE
Com plete W N k 't TV Listings
Sanford, Florida — Friday, July 1, ItSJ

There's A Lot For Kids To Do This Summer
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
Now that school Is out and the kids are bored with
nothing to do but sit around and watch television,
w hy not sign them up for your nearest sum m er

&gt;
••#
s»
w
v" ■,
1.',

etf
r,

%
‘X,
V :

•4

* v*/ * *j
'■—

recreation program , most o f which are already
underway.
T h e city o f Sanford Recreation Department offers
a seven -w eek sum m er youth recreation program at
the Sanford C ivic Center Youth W in g at Sanford
A ven u e and Sem inole Boulevard and also at the
W cstsldc Recreation Center. 919 Persim m on Ave. It
is for children ages 6-12 and Is held Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m. until noon, through July 29.
In uddltlon to the usual fun and games, there arc
special events each week such as "H a t D ay," "S ock
D a y ." talent show, bubble gum blow ing contest.
"H o b o D a y ." scavenger hunt. Police Department.
S h eriffs Department and Fire Department apprecia­
tion days, and movies.
There will be a tour o f the General Sanford
Museum and Library, nature hikes, a Hot Shot
basketball championship, contests and tournaments
from chess to table tennis. The highlights o f the
summer will be the Tournam ent o f Cham pions and
the Sum m er O lym pics with award cerem onies on
July 29.
Attendance averages 75 to 100 youngsters each
day at each center. Children must be picked up at
noon by the parents or guardian.
There is a $10 fee for non-residents or a $15 per
fiscal year fam ily rate.
Special classes are also available throughout the
summer. E very W ednesday, through July 27. 1-2
p.m.. at the Cultural Arts Building. 5th Street and
Oak Avenue, ceram ics classes are available for
youth 10-14 years old. There Is a $5 fee for
materials. Every Monday, through July 25, tennis
lessons are available for 13* and 14-year-olds at the
F t: Mellon Perk tennis courts 11 a.m. to noon: ages
10-12. 9-10 a.m. and l O l l a.m. T h e cost Is $5 and
each child should bring three tennis balls.
Arts and crafts classes arc held every Tuesday,
through July 26. 1:302:30 p.m. at the Youth W in g
for youngsters 1 0 1 2 years old. There is a $2
material fee.
If you live In the Casselberry area, there is a day
cam p program for 6 - 12 -year-olds at Secret Lake
Park that runs M onday through Friday. 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. T h e cost Is $45 per two-week session and $50
for non-residents. T h e next session begins next
week. Each session is limited to 50 youngsters,
according to Jim Booker, city parks and recreation
director, and there arc a lim ited num ber o f openings
left in the second and fourth sessions.
A m on g the day cam p activities included arc
sw im m in g lessons and free swim tim e at the W lrz
pool, archery, skating, bowling, canoeing. Ashing,
arts and crafts, soccer, tennis, racquetball. handball,
nag football, and kickball.
S w im m in g lessons lor kids two m onths and up arc
being offered at the c ity 's W lrz pool in Ave two-week
sessions. There are still som e openings In July and
August and the fee is $10 per session for residents
and $15 for non-residents.
In Longwood. the sum m er recreation program for
children 6-14 continues through Ju ly 29 under the
direction o f R eg Sigm on. Playground activities are
from 9 to 11:30 a.m . followed by lunch (bring your
ow n ) and in the afternoon sw im m ing on Tuesday
and Thursday at the Shartdan Sw im Club and

* XJ

by the various city recreation
Group activities like this are available for area isponsored
.
youngsters In the summen-»yeeth program s— departments

rrrrx z :

�i

a— Evswlng H j f j l d , Sanford, F I.______ F rid a y , July I, m 3

Study C le a rs TV V io le n ce O f Long-Range Effects
By Julisnne Hasting*
URI TV Reporter
NEW YO R K (UPI) - NBC released a
report this week on Its study o f
children and adolescent T V view ers
which concludes that there is no
"causal'* link between television v io ­
lence and the developm ent or a g ­
gressive behavior patterns.
T h e report — 14 years in the*
m aking from 1969-83 at a cost o f "a t
least $1.3 m illion and possibly $2
m illio n " NBC said — was based on a
survey o f 2.400 elem entary school
children and 800 teenage boys in two
Midwestern cities o ver a three-year
period from 1970-73.
i i i i i i i i w

i m

m

T h e network said it chose Min­
neapolis. Minn., and Fort W orth.
Texas, for the study because both are
located In the Central T im e Zone,
where prime-time television program s
— which the network feels contain
more violence — start one hour earlier
than in either coastal tim e zone.
T h e research was led by W illiam
Rubens. NBC vice president o f R e­
search. Dr. J. Ronald M ilavsky. NBC
vice president for New s and Social
Research. Horst Stipp. NBC director o f
social research, and Ronald Kessler,
associate professor o f Sociology. Uni­
versity o f Michigan.
In contrast to a recent National
m

m

m

i f T

T

T

In stitu te o f M ental H ealth report
stating that there is "o v e rw h e lm in g "
e v id e n c e th at te le v is io n v io le n c e
causes aggression, NBC found that if
such a connection existed. It would be
too small to be detectable even by the
m ost sophisticated testing methods.
“ T h e investigation found no e v i­
dence o f a causal connection between
television violence and the develop ­
m ent o f aggressive behavior patterns
am on g children and adolescen ts,"
NBC said.
K essler said he believed the NIMH
reached Its conclusions because "th a t
was the position they had goin g In ."
He em phasized that the NBC project
focused the effects o f violent television
on the long-term d evelop m en t o f
behavior patterns.
"T e le v is io n has short-term arousal
effec ts ." Kessler said — pre-schoolers
m igh t do m ore hitting on the play­
ground if their play period follow s
view in g o f a violent show rather than
" L a s s ie ." "B u t th ese are qu ick ly
extinguished in the real w o rld ."

\ iA / / / / &lt;

A m on g som e o f the program s in­
v o l v e d in the s t ud y w e re "M o d
S q u a d ," "G u n sm o k e," “ Mission Im ­
possible." "B e w itc h e d ." "D ra g n e t."
" F b i ," *‘ Kung F u ." wrestling, and a
variety o f Saturday m orning "k id d le "
shows. Rubens said.
T h e n e t wo r k said each o f the
stu d y's participants, their parents,
peers and teachers w ere queried by
Interview or questionnaires a d ­
m inistered in their classroom s each
w eek during the in-fleld portion o f the
study.
Kessler agreed that the study was
not up-to-the-minute in that it did not
in volve today's program s but he said
he felt television was m ore violent in
1970-73 than it is now.
‘ " T h e U n tou ch ables'" was on five
days a w eek in the tw o m arkets."
Kessler said referrin g to the series
about organized crim e fighter Elliot
N ess in th e h e y d a y o f C h i c a g o
m obdom . "T h e r e is nothing on T V
like that to d ay."

/ /* / • i \

FOURTH OF JU LY WEEK
Good Friday, July 1 thru Tuesday, July 5

FAM ILY DINNER VALUES
P arty Barrel

Family Bucket

(tm r v s * 7 t o 10)
• 20 places chicken
• 2 pints mawhad potatoes
• I pint gravy
• 2 pints coin slow
• IS biscuits

fsorvos f to 7)
• II pieces chicken
• I pint mashed potatoes
• I pint gravy
• 2 pints cole slaw
• 12 biscuits

•

12**

A Dockftid* Rtb and. “R estaurant

The Twilight Catch
daily from 5 p.m. to

10* !

7 p.m.

$5.95
Cup o f Seafood Chowder
Crock o f Cheese with Crackers

Economy Pak

Thrift Pak

Tossed Salad or Cole Slaw

(torvot 3 to 4)

&amp;
&lt;li|»|MNf A

$■799

I #

• • pieces chicken
• I pint mash*'
• 'A pint gravy
• 1 pint cole sk
• 4 biscuits

Florida Grouper
fresh when available

panfried or broiled to perfection

IB M

+ U .

—

Choice o f Potato or Rice

+ tax

Hot Bread and Butter

More meal for your money.
m a S T O tM
u

Ice Cream Crepe with Strawberry Sauce

Now Featuring New Dinner Menu

Jarm/sRac/pe
RSDOiCKtN
e

I - - a * 11-urtiiw

j i |r p

pgiCUSTOMM

Tony Perez at the Keyboards
— Tuesday through Saturday —

Still The best Chicken In Town"
S a n fo r d

«. (Hwy. 17-92)
1 1 1 H

1 I I L L 1 1 X

Flaying Your Favorite Dinner Music

Cotcolborry

W

41 N. Hwy. 17-92
•$14111

. . . i m

i t u

of Sanford

L a k e M o n ro e M a rin a
rU

itb 'W

4«

309/323-1910

J ta&lt; m l

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

What You Won't See
On TV Next Season

TELEVISION
Specials
C a b le C h .

By Peter Meade
The three major networks
recently announced their
1D83-1M4 prime time schedules. CBS will present five
new shows, ABC eight and
NBC nine.
While the chosen 22 represent the best the Big Three
have to offer, here are a few
series proposals that didn't
quite make it to the schedule,
CfflPs: A New Beginning —
Michael Landon will be
directing this series as Erik
Estrada, he of TV’s most
macho teeth, will be back In
the motorcycle saddle again.

OfThe Week
C a b le C h.

(7 )0

( A B C ) O r la n d o

QJ)(35)

In d e p e n d e n t
O r la n d o

(D O

(CBS) Orlando

&lt;ai CD

In d e p e n d e n t
M e lb o u rn e

( ? ) ©

I N B C I D ay to n a Beach
O r la n d o

(1 0 )®

O r la n d o P u b lic
B r o a d c a s tin g S y s t e m

Friday, July 1, HM—3

‘

mar

In a d d itio n ta th e c h a n n e ls lis te d , c a b ie v is io n s u b s c rib e rs
tu n e in to in d e p e n d e n t c h a n n e l 44,
S I. P e te r s b u r g , b y lu m n i to c h a n n e l! ; tu n in g to c h a n n e l t ) , w h ic h c a r r ie s s p o rts a n d th e C h r is tia n
B r o a d c a s tin e N e t w o r k ( C B N ) .

^
ha
2*
*

m
to

the best elements of “ Hello,
Larry," “The McLean Steven­
son Show" and “ In the
Beginning." with possibly a
little bit of "M *A »S *H / In
network phrasing this is
■called a limited-run series. It
will air once and then be
unceremoniously canceled.

Sports On The Air

gift
Certificate
OP LAB A PHYSICAL

Ha par Batson

BP. f/II/t

Little Mansion on the P n ir[e — About * wealthy family
that Uvea oo a col-dMac the
length of the tang Island
Expressway,
The plot features the young,
extremely beautiful daughter.
who is a doctor in a rundown
hospital, plus her three brothers: one is gay, but lives with
two beautiful women; ooe is a
mustachioed private detective
who drives a computerized
car and the third runs a bar
that only six people frequent
once a week. The family has a
wise guy black butler, named
Mr. B, who has a normal Afro

�4— EvcntaB M srakl, Sanford, F I.

F rid a y , July 1,1993

SATURDAY
6.-00

(Q&gt; M Q HT TRACKS

6:26

TH E M A M D R E U .E M IIR B
___
© • W D C WOULD OF SPORTS
"National Sports FaaMvaT Am srlcan athlstsa partidpnts In 33 Olympto sports (Km from Colorado
Bprtnos, C o to l
(TO (3S )Q A N *L BOONE
0 ( 1 0 ) W ASHMOTON W H K M

© O HOLLYWOOD AND THE
STARE "T h s WUd A n d W o n d s rtU

0 ( 9 | NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD

T h lrtln t" Joasph C otton hosts a
tast-p acsd tour through tkn s , stu­
dios and palatial m analona In H o»yw ood during th s 1030s.

(D
PATS
ADDRESS

6:00

• © OIUJOAN-EISLANO
© Q LAW AND YOU
© B d r . sn u q o les
ax a m new s

6:06

OS

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EA R TH

6:30

0 1W ) W A U S TM S T WEEK
0 m NASHVILLE MUSIC

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(D M O TO R W EB O LLUSTRA TK )

6:30

E V IM M

0© TH U N O A R R

0 (9 ) PICTURE

O (SO SOAR

11:36

O TM ECA TU NS
•

11:46

© THE BEST OR CARBON
Host: Johnny Carton. Q uaatr
Martin M u l, Jos OaragM a. &lt;R)

12.-00

© 0 M O W "Oogpound ShutiSs” (1974) Ron Moody. David Soul.
(U D O R H O O A

airs (Data RobartaonL but romantic
complications laad to Oophar-a Sr.

lng.(R)a
0 ( 3 9 ) M O W "M sysrtng" (1999)
Omar SharN, Cstharina Oanauv*.
Austria's Croon Rrtnes N InvoNsd
In a lovs affair which ands In trsgs-

12 *6
OS N EW T TRACKS

12:30
© ■ O N E O N ONE
OS D O LOVE, AMEMCAN STYLE

12:48

Art Cam ay, StwySpmfc.

2.-00
© D ROCK‘N1ROLL TOMTE
OX M B H T TRACKS (C O N TD )

2:46
0 © ENTERT49B4ENT TQNW HT
intsrvtaws with RNs CooSdgo and

FROM FLORIDA

�Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

5.-00
btohop la

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8 r0 0

( B m q h t tr a c k s

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OFFORTUMTYLBW
LAW AND YOU
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i Hampton, Chriatophar Con*
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( S O TRAFFBR JOHN , hu&gt;. A
vtaitlng nmwoaurgaon'a naglactad
wda tafcaa a romantic Intareat In
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B (to ) M A ITERFIBOB THKATRB
"A Town U ke AHoa” Baaed on a
novel by Neva 8hute. Jap e n m
VfPWl WITH•QHJWTl, fODOlBW
TM
3IfCNt* troop* Invade Malaya in W orld War
com batant*, a graphic look la taken II and capture a group of rooldont
at what Me la Hke today In B Salva­ Engtahwoman and children. (Part 1)
(R)g
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B W T H S AVENGERS
10.-05
IB) NEWS
6:30

a

13:30

( S B M O W ‘Tha Daughtara Of
Jothuo Cabo" (1972) Buddy Ebaan.
Karan Vatontma. To koap Ida land
under a new hemaatoadhig law. a
(toy Mr trapper racrutta a thM. a
t and a proatltuto to por•

B ® VOYAOEASt Cleopetra la
benaported to New York City In the
R oaring '20a i '

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tartly; tha Chamber Muaic Boetaty
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back Quartet; Tha Mabou Mbwa
Theatre Compnay, Tha Danea Tha*
atra o» Hartam; Samuel
by Qian Carlo ManottL and

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10:00

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3:15

BBOWV / JET 0EIEMETV

OD (88) M O W "One Mgbt In Tha
Tropica" (1840) Bud Abbott, Lou
to. Tha sany pair attempt to
makar for a nightclub
beeomee a bit oven
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7.-30

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B P y H # 0511 Im s n O

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11:30
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WEEK Featured: Jaime Lao Curtto;
on 810 road wtoi Tha Oak Ridge
Boya; H en Id ol Shaun Caaokty
B LARRY I
Btobdald. bodybuBdar for tha otara;
Chuck ktanglono; Fetor Bro
author of "The Leva You M ake."
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and tom e of the wortd’a waaMNaat
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(1830) Fred AotaMa, (Ungar Aogera.

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Continued from page I
s k a tin g , M o n d a y a n d W o d n c s d a y . A fe e o f $ 8 0 p e r
re s id e n t a n d $ 1 2 0 f o r a n o n -re s id e n t c h ild c o v e r s th e
e n tir e s u m m e r p r o g ra m . T h e r e a r c s p e c ia l ra te s fo r
fa m ilie s w ith m o re th a n o n e p a r t ic ip a t in g c h ild .
T h e c i t y o f L a k e M a r y 's s ix - w e e k s u m m e r
rc c rc u tio n p r o g ra m fo r a g e s 6 -1 2 w ill c o n tin u e
th ro u g h J u ly 2 9 fro m 8 a .m . to n o o n , M o n d a y
th r o u g h F r id a y a t th e L a k e M a r y E le m e n ta r y
S c h o o l. A c t iv it ie s In c lu d e m u s ic , d r a m a , a rts a n d
c ra fts , te a m s p o rts , s p e c ia l e v e n ts , a n d to u r n a ­
m e n ts .
T h e cost ts $ 2 5 fo r th e six w e e k s , b u t s c h o la r s h ip s
a r c a v a ila b le to c it y r e s id e n ts I f n e e d e d .
T h e A lt a m o n t e S p r in g s s u m m e r r e c r e a tio n p r o ­
g r a m fo r c h ild re n 6 -1 3 is b e in g h e ld at b o th th e
E a s tm o n tc C iv ic C e n t e r at 8 3 0 M a g n o lia D r iv e a n d
a t th e W c s tm o n tc C iv ic C e n te r , 5 0 0 S p r in g O a k s
B lv d . T h e p r o g r a m w ill c o n tin u e M o n d a y th ro u g h
F r id a y fro m 9 a .m . to 4 p .m . th r o u g h A u g . 5 u n d e r
th e d ir e c tio n o f M a rk H u ltln . F e e fo r r e s id e n ts is $ 1 5
p e r c h ild a n d $ 2 5 fo r n o n -re s id e n ts (p lu s th e
$ 6 -p er-ch lId o r $ 1 0 -p c r-fa m lly y e a r -ro u n d r e c re a tio n
m e m b e r s h ip ).
A c t iv it ie s in c lu d e m o v ie s , fie ld trip s , s p o rts ,
g a m e s a n d a rts a n d c ra fts .
S e m in o le C o u n t y h a s n o o r g a n iz e d s u m m e r
re c r e a tio n p r o g r a m , b u t h a s r e c r e a tio n a l fa c ilitie s
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M u s e u m , 4 4 9 E. N e w Y o r k A v c ., D c L a n d . J u n e 24
th r o u g h A u g u s t 12. O p e n T u e s d a y th r o u g h S a tu r­
d a y . 1 0 a .m . to 4 p .m . a n d S u n d a y s . 2-4 p .m .
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a n d a s p e c ia l te a m fr o m N o r th C a r o lin a , c o ­
s p o n s o r e d b y C h u rc h S tr e e t S ta tio n . O rla n d o a n d
D ia m o n d J u b ile e C lo g g c r s o f O rla n d o , to b e n e fit
U n ite d C e re b ra l P a ls y C lin ic , O rla n d o , n o o n to 8
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RETURN OF THE

JE D 1
Showtimes: 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:45, 12:15
OPENING SOON IN THIS THEATRE:
TACO BRAVO - WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING

�r

You Don't Have To Be Italian To Enjoy
Laurie's Veal Rosselini, Seafood
T h e New England scacoast and Central Florida
have m ore In com m on than It m ay seem. One o f
these com m on Interests Is seafood prepared In
special ways and Laurie’s Italian Fisherman, a
restaurant new to the local scene. Is adept at
preparing this cuisine.
A s the restaurant’s name Implies. Italian dishes
com plem ent the Interesting menu.

1008 S. FrsucJi too. Saaford
J

P I Z Z A

3 M -7 0 S 0

P I Z Z A *

The Best Itajian Food &amp; Original

PIZZA

Imported Italim H w

N O W O P E N 24 H O U R S

Rainbow trout Is baked In garlic sauce, frog legs,
shrim p and scallops arc fried, or served In scam pi or
marlnara sauces for entrees. Raked clams, escargot,
m ussels m arlnara or shrim p cocktail m ay be
ordered as appetizers.
T h e universal fa v o rite s, lusagna. can cllo n l,
munlcotti. fcttuccini Alfredo, ravioli. Ilngulnl and
spaghetti arc always available, but. probaably, the
piece dc resistance, is one o f Laurie’s ow n creations,
veal Rossini. T his veal dish Is prepared with
prosciutto ham. fresh tomatoes, basil, garlic and
oregano baked and served with dulchcss potatoes
and a choice o f spaghetti. Ilngulnl or French fries.
T h e tab? $12.95. It Is served with soup or salad.
Dinners range from $4.50 to $13.50 for duck a
I’orangc. chicken cacclatora. seafood Oscar, steak or
steak Oscar o r veal Oscar.
Soups arc made by Laurie, chef-owner, and might
be minestrone, onion or clam soup, a lighter,
broth-like delicacy than chowder.
Spinach salad, anti pasta and fried m ozzarella
m ay be ordered as appetizers.
Dessert lovers can Indulge In cannolls, cheese­
cake. rum cake or blueberry crunch, all m ade on the
premises.
Laurie’s Italian Fisherm an serves breakfast from 7
until 11. lunch from 11:30 until 2:30 and dinner
from 5 until 9. Beverages arc available through the
adjacent lounge. Party and banquet room s can be
reserved.
Laurie Robinson, the dim inutive youn g owner,
has brushed pestles with the finest chefs In the area.
Cooking since she was 10 In her parents' restau­
rants both here and In Cape Cod. Mass.. Laurie's
am bitions have brought her to the Cavalier Motor
Inn. where her dining place occupies what was
form erly T h e Buccaneer Restaurant.
Laurie, with her m other ow ns Carol's seafood In
Lon g wood.

2016 S. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD
322-0520
START EVERY MORNING
RIGHT W ITH US!

LUNCHEON SPECIAL
* 2 . M

1 HAMBURGERS
FORA

The ORIGINAL

Seafood
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE
^
SALAD BAR

g f A O N THE K ITCH EN ’

■ AVAILABLE FOR

Featuring

lay Seafood Bui
i - t

M » .

Sunday Brunch

�</text>
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                    <text>SUNDAY EDITION
75th Year, No. 241-Sunday, May 29, 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(USPS 481-280)—Price 35 Cents

Police Like Judge's Sentencing Input Policy
By M lcheal Beha
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Seminole Circuit Judge Dominick Salfl's desire to get
pertinent comments at sentencing hearings from
victims and Investigators Is supported by local law
enforcement officials.
The officials said most officers like the ooDortunltv tn
«&gt; '
and tT b ? aware £
l tic disposition o f coses on whldh they worked.
And even though Salfl will no longer require that
police and victims be notified prior to sentenclngs,
officials say they hope Salfl will continue to listen to
them before tnctlng out Justice to convicted criminals.
Salfl said this past week that although he will no
longer require the State Attorney’s office to notify police

and crime victims o f upcoming sentenclngs. the
prosecutor's office will voluntarily cooperate In conti­
nuing the procedure.
However, that cooperation Is not certain.
Scmlnolc-Drcvard Chief Assistant State Attorney
Ralph Eriksson said no decision has been made on what
the office's position will be.
.
State Attorney Douglas Cheshire has been In
Tallahassee for budget hearings this week and so has
been unavailable to review the situation, Eriksson said.
Cheshire had opposed the original action because he
said Salfl didn't have the power to order his office to
attend sentence hearings or propose alternative sen­
tences.
Eriksscn called Salfl's move a conciliatory gesture
intended to heal the rift with Cheshire.

Bui Seminole County Sheriff John Polk applauded
Salfl's program and said he has heard many positive
comments from officers who have either attended
hearings or filed a written report with the Judge.
"I think It's good to have Input." Polk said. "But It
shouldn't be mandator}’ for them to attend."
Under "norm al" court procedures, Polk said a police
officer may make an arrest and soon after see the
arrested person back on the street without knowing that
the case was dismissed or the person was placed on
probation.
"That's discouraging to the officers," Polk said.
He added that olflcers can tell the Judge about any
extenuating circumstances that might affect the sen­
tence. "They can't have any complaints If they're at the
sentencing."

Another official who supports Salfl's efforts Is Herb
Shea, assistant Sanford police chief.
Shea echoed the comments o f other officers, saying
the program is good for police morale and to let victims
and officers know the disposition o f cases, but pointed
out that the program also saves the taxpayers money.
Shea said Salfl has approved sentences In which the
convicted person is ordered to work for the police
department to repay the money spent on investigating
their case.
Salfl's orders, which follow recommendations from the
President's Task Force on victims o f crime, were’
challenged unsuccessfully In court by Cheshire.
Now that Salfl's order has been dropped, it remains to
be seen whether Cheshire will accede to the wishes of
Salfl and the police officers.

Sewage

Conflict Of
Interest Bill
OK'd By House

Bills Could Skyrocket
If Sanford Can't Pump
Effluent Into Lake Monroe

The voting by city and county public officials on
Issues benefiting them personally may be a thing o f the
past If a proposed bill passes the stale Senate this
coming week.
The bill, already approved bv the House, would forbid
public officials from voting on measures directly
affecting them "personally, privately or professionally"
and require them to publicly slate before a vote Is taken
their conflict of Interest.
The bill also requires that an official making such a
declaration flic a conflict of Interest memo with the
keeper of public records with either the county or city
within 15 days of the vote involved.
Currently, an official has the choice, according to state
law. of voting o r abstaining on Issues In which they
have a conflict of Interest. And there is no requirement
that the public be made aware o f the conflict. The
ofllrlal need only file a memo citing the exact conflict In
the public records.
F lorid a's co n flict o f in te re st law needs change.
See e d ito ria l page 4 A
Last week, slate Reps. Bobby Brantley, R-Longwood,
a n d C a rt S e lp h ,. M -C aaoelberry. jo in e d w ith R e p . R o n

Silver. D-N. Miami Beach, to amend a bill on the floor of
the state House of Representatives to include the conflict
of Interest reform.
The bill to which It was amended was sponsored by
Rep. Tom C. Brown. D-Port Orange. The amended
legislation passed the House unnnlmoulsy on a 96-0
vote.
But It has run Into problems In the Senate. The House
bill was assigned to two Senate Committees and work In
all Senate roinmlttees erased last Tuesday.
Selph appealed to state Sen. Richard Langley, RClermont, another member of the Seminole County
Legislative delegation, Thursday to amend some other
appropriate Senate bill by attaching the House approved
conflict of Interest legislation.
Selph said Friday Langley has agreed to push the
legislation through the Senate before next week's
scheduled adjournment. The bill then must go back to
the House for Its approval.
"Th e House has approved It once and there should be
no problem getting approval again." Selph said, adding
that if time runs out before the proposal Is enacted Into
law, "w e ’ll try again next year."
"I'v e always felt the public has a right to know at the
time a public official votes If he has a conflict, rather
than 15 days later in a memo filed In a drawer
somewhere." Selph said.
"County boards or city commissions are generally
small boards. If a person with a conflict can still vote
when only three people are needed for a quorum, that
one vote with the conflict could swing the whole
decision, " Selph said.
"I would think some persons in conflict situations
would welcome this amendment which removes them
from the conflict situation. They simply could not vote
on the issue." Selph said.
Doana Bales

Rem em bering W ar Dead

Veterans organizations In Sanford, Casselberry, Longwood, and Oviedo
will remember their fallen comrades Monday In Memorial Day
observances. Seminole County Commission Chairman Sandra Glenn Is
scheduled to speak at Sanford ceremonies slated to begin at 11 a.m . In
Memorial Park on Lake Monroe. Congressional Medal of Honor winner
M /Sgt. (R et.) James Hendrix will be guest of honor at ceremonies to
begin at 11 a.m . In All Faiths Memorial Park, Lake Drive, Casselberry.
Longwood will begin Its Memorial Day service at 10 a.m . In Longwood
Memorial Gardens. Flags will be placed on the graves of veterans In
the Oviedo Cemetery beginning at 11 a.m . Al'
these ceremonies are
open to the public.
1

By Donna Bates
Herald S ta ff W rite r
Even though the odds of winning may
be "slim to none", the Sanford City
Commission has unanimously ugreed to
try one more time to gel approval from
the state to continue dumping cfllucnt
into Lake Monroe.
Mayor Lee P. Moore recommended the
action Friday, saying a final effort must
be made, no matter how low the odds are
o f winning, to Justify to Sanford's
taxpayers a course that could Increase
monthly sewer bills threefold.
City Manager W.E. "Pete” Knowles
said the time has come for the com­
mission to make a decision on what
course the city will take In continuing to
operate Its sewer system.
Noting that the city's operating permit
from the state Department of Environ­
mental Regulation for the Poplar Avenue
sewer treatment plant Is set to expire
next year, he reminded commissioners
that the DER has made it clear a new
operating permit will not be Issued
unless Sanford agrees to stop dumping
Its treated sewage effluent into Lake
Monroe In favor of land-spreading. And
land spreading costs, he said, could
reach as high as $20 million.
A bond Issue o f this proportion would
require a pay back at the rate of $2.2
million annually, plus operating costs,
he said, which would In turn Increase
sewer service rates threefold.
The city's only other alternative would
be to fight the DER In court or to seek a
change in state regulations forbidding
the dumping of effluent Into a body of
water.
The court pptlon could mean a fiveyear battle. Knowles said. City Attorney
Bill Colbert said although he wouldn't
mind a court battle, he doesn't feel

confident of winning.
As far as fighting for a change In
regulations. Knowles said a DER official
made It clear to him in Tallahassee last
week that the state's Game and Fresh
Water Fish Commission would object to
changing the regulations as would
environmentalists.
Former City Engineer Mack LaZenby.
a consulting engineer for Sanford on Its
sewer system, said that 10 years ago the
city got the DER to change Its mind
about Issuing an operating permit to
allow dumping into Lake Monroe. But.
lie added, it is unlikely It will happen
again.
"It would be an exercise In futility to
keep talking to them. Let's get on with
the program." LaZenby said.
Knowles also pointed out that the city
might win a court battle with DER only
to lose the- war with the agency which
Inspects the city sewer plant every six
months and reviews operating permits
every five years.
" I f they saw a flea going across the
floor at the plant, they could close it
down." he said.
If the city opts for the land-spreading
process. Knowles said, DER would give
the city until 1988 to accomplish that
plan.
B.C. "C al" Conklin of Conklin. Porter
and Holmes, consulting engineers, said
the city could use the results of a study it
commissioned and paid for some months
ago to appeal DER' stand.
The study, conducted by Dr. Donald
O'Connor, considered an expert In the
field, said that the quality of the water in
Lake Monroe and the St. Johns River is
so degraded that effluent from Sanford's
sewer plant has little effect on the two
bodies of water.
B ee S E W A G E , p a g e 7 B

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Besef By Adversity, The Eggerichs Family Vows To Come Back
E j Jan e Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer

F re d end G lo ria E o g e rlc h i J r. of Longwood and ions, R om m el and P a t
(rig h t), who a re startin g over In life fo r the th ird tim e in less than a
decade. The fa m ily m oved to F lo rid a recently a fte r th e ir M innesota d a iry
fa rm burned an d th e ir Insurance d id n 't co ver the cost of rebuilding.
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Fred and Gloria Eggerichs o f 237 Wlldmere
Ave.. Longwood. are not the type to give up.
Having twice seen their dreams
l_____ , go up
as literally
in smoke In less than 10 years, they have had
To begin over again and are struggling to get
back on their feet.
The Eggerichs and their three sons had lest
everything they owned but the clothes on
their backs In 1074 when their mobile home
in Minnesota was destroyed by a gas
explosion and Ore. Then, last Dec. 18. after
three years o f hard work and sacrifice to get a
dairy farm established, the barn burned and
they lost their Holstein cows and calves and
all o f their equipment.
The family came to Longwood in March
and moved In with Fred’s parents. Fred
started a Hydro-matlc pressure washing
business removing dirt and mildew from
mobile homes, buildings and driveways. He
did so at the suggestion o f his father, who was
unable to get anyone to come out and wash
his house. Gloria found a Job working nights

at a waffle house near Sanford. Their son.
Pat. 16. Is a student at Lyman High School
and Rommel, 14. attends Mllwee. Their other
son. Travis. 19. is in the army stationed at
Fort Campbell. Ky.
" I ’m confident we’ll get off the ground if
hard work and stubborness count; we'll make
U go."
Bom In St. Paul. Minn.. Fred moved to Fort
Lauderdale In 1953 at 15 and remained there
until 1971. He decided to move his family to
BemldJI, Minn, so his boys could grow up In a
wholesome rural environment.
This was the beginning o f their bad fortune.
Mrs. Eggerich became III on the trip with
hepatitis. A doctor misdiagnosed her problem
as _gallstones
and operated
dlscoverinf
..........
____before
„ ______________
ig
his mistake. Eggerich said and they were left
with large medical bills which took several
years to pay ofT.
A trucker, Eggerich was on the road in
Michigan when his mobile home went up in
flames. There was no one at home at the
time. "W e had $1,000 Insurance on our
personal possessions and $1,500 on the

m

trailer." he said, "but the stereo equipment
alone was worth $800 and we had put $2,000
down on the mobile home and had paid on It
for four years. We were back to ground zero
so we bought another mobile home and
started over."
Eggerich has driven more than two million
miles In cross-country trucking. "W e are a
close family and I wanted to go Into farming
so I wouldn't have to be on the road all the
time, but could be home with them," he said.
One chilling event that no doubt intensified
this desire took place on the plains o f North
Dakota one cold dark night in a blizzard
when the wind chIU factor was 65 degrees
below. When the diesel fuel gelled and his
hands were frost bit when he spilled fuel on
them. Somehow he managed to get back tn
the cub o f his truck and when he spotted
headlights coming In the distance he flicked
the light switch with his wrist and was taken
to the hospital by the driver.

FAMILY, page ISA

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Sunday, M ay Jt, I f 13

: NATION
IN BRIEF
Feud With White House
Costs Official His Job

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United Press Internatioaal
Thomas Enders. the Slnlc Department’ s
top-ranking official for Lalln American affairs,
was fired Friday In a dispute with the While
House over the role of U.S. troops In Central
America.
The change was announced by Secretary of
State George Shultz as he flew with President
Reagan to Williamsburg, Va. aboard Air Force
One for the annual economic summit of Western
Industrialized nations.
Enders, 51. will be replnced in his post as
assistant secretary of stale for Inler-Aincrlcan
affairs by Langhornc Motley, a political ap­
pointee from Alaska who Is now serving as U.S.
ambassador to Brazil.
U.S. officials said Enders was relieved of Ills
Job ns head or the Latin American bureau of the
State Department after a continuing debate
between the State Department, represented by
Enders. and the White House, represented by
national security adviser William Clark and U.N.
Ambassador Jcanc Kirkpatrick.
Enders. the officials said, was pressing for a
lower profile for American Involvement, while
the White House was pushing for a stronger line
to meet the challenge posed to U.S. policy by a
rising wave of Insurgency In Latin America.
Enders also was reported by the officials, who
asked not to be identified, to have objected to a
stronger U.S. Involvement in the covcrl opera­
tion against the Sandlnista government in
Nicaragua.

Laveile In Contempt

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WASHINGTON — A federal grand Jury
indicted fired Environmental Protection Agency
official Rita Laveile on a single contempt of
Congress charge on Friday because she refused
to testify about possible wrongdoing in the
agency.
The indictment was handed down only nine
days after the House cited Laveile for contempt
on avolcof4 1 3 loO .
Contempt o f Congress Is a misdemeanor
which carries a maximum penalty of one year In
prison and a S 1.000 fine.
Laveile. fired by President Reagan Feb. 7. was
the EPA’s assistant administrator in chnrgc of
the $1.6 billion Superfund toxic waste cleanup
program.
On Feb. 10, the House Energy and Commerce
Investigations subcommittee unanimously
voted to subpoena Laveile for a March 21
appearance. The subpoena was scrvrd on her
Feb.23.
On March 21. the indictment said, “ Rita M.
Laveile. having been summoned as a witness by
the authority o f the oversight and investigation
subcommittee o f the committee on Energy and
Commerce, willfully made default by refusing to
appear...as required.'*
Lavelle's attorney. James J. Bierbowcr. said
Laveile is “ willing to go in and testify and she's
been willing. She testified 12 times In the last 12
months," including twice during the congres­
sional investigations at the EPA.

Fireworks Blast Kills 11

j

BENTON. Tcnn. — Searchers today continued
looking for bodies of persons killed Friday when
an unlicensed fireworks factory exploded, killing
ut least 11 people in a mushroom cloud of
destruction that rained bodies and debris on
trees and buildings for hundreds of yards.
Neighbors near the site of the explosion.
Webb’s Balt Farm, said there was an initial
scries of thunderous explosions that lusted eight
or nine minutes, followed by more than an hour
o f smaller explosions.
A white mushroom cloud visible for two miles
had formed over the farm. 40 miles east of
Chattanooga, when medical and law enforce­
ment personnel arrived at the scene of awesome
devastation.

Ex-Con's 'Charity' G ave Nothing To The Poor
FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) - Stale
investigators are looking into a charity
founded by an ex-convict who distrib­
uted thousands o f collection cans that
produced as much as $34,000 In coins.

The state’s complaint filed last week
said Dellaera, 54. did not use his real
name on his application to qualify
United St. Jude as a charitable organiza­
tion.

The United St. Jude Foundation of
America Inc. is accused in an ad­
ministrative complaint of filing false
information on its license application,
I lle g a lly e m p lo y in g p ro fe s s io n a l
fundraisers and exploiting Its state
registration while soliciting donations.

Dellaera instead used the name of
Joseph Della on his slate forms. It Is a
name he claims to have been using
informally for years, and which he used
when obtaining tax exempt status for
the charity from the Internal Revenue
Service.

The foundation was founded last
summer by Joseph Dellaera. He could
not be reached for comment, but his
law yer said he has not seen the
complaint nor has he talked with
Dellaera for three months.

Dellaera said in an Interview with the
Fort Lauderdale News and Sun-Sentinel
last March that use of the name an
corporate papers and the state license
would make It difficult for Inspectors
from the Department of State to trace his

past. He said he spent six years in prison
in New York and Canada for attempted
robbery and extortion.
Florida law prohibits convicted felons
fr o m w o r k i n g as p r o f e s s i o n a l
fundraisers. But Dellacra’s status as
president of a charity permits him to
work as a full-time salaried employee of
United St. Jude.
Dellaera estimated 5,700 to 6,500
United St. Jude coin cans had been
distributed to stores and restaurants In
Broward and Dade counties, Bergen
County, N.J., and other states.
The United St. Jude Foundation is
registered In Florida. New Jersey,
Georgia and Texas.
Dellaera said in the Interview he had

Now You Can Take
That 'Lemon' Back
TALLAHASSEE (UP1) — The Senate has passed a bill
protecting consumers who buy new cars that turn out to
be lemons anti sent It to Gov. Bob Graham for his
signature.
The bill (CS-HB 885). which passed the Senate
Thursday by a unanimous 40-0 vote, would allow
Florida consumers who purchase hopelessly defective
cars to gel their money back or have the car replaced.
The House approved the measure 110-6 late last
month.
“ It's a good consumer bill," Sen. Jack Gordon,
D-Mlaml Beach, said.
Gordon had sponsored his own "lemon” bill, but the
Senate ultimately adopted an identical House measure
sponsored by Rep. Tom Drage. R-Wintcr Park.
Under the terms of the bill, a car would qualify as a
lemon if the manufacturer was unable to repair the
same defect after three or more attempts or if the vehicle
was out o f service for 15 working days, excluding
routine maintenance, during the course of a year.
The measure would apply only within the time period
covered by the car's warranty or one year from the date
of delivery, whichever came first.
The bill also provides that a consumer must first seek
to settle the dispute through the manufacturer's own
grievance procedure, if the company has one. The
company’s dispute settlement panel would have to have N O W
at least one member approved by the state.
The measure was made palatable to automobile
dealers because of a companion measure that makes the
manufacturer, not the dealer, liable for monetary losses
resulting from the bill.

R O O f

ftM te fry T tfn m r

Trusties from the Seminole County Correctional building to be used as the county museum.
Facility, under the supervision of Bonner Carter of Located at the county's Five Points complex, the
the Seminole County Historical Commission, have structure was formerly used as the agricultural
almost completed putting a new roof on the old center and before that as the county home.

Longwood Man, 18, Indicted In Fatal Shooting
An 18-ycar-old Longwood man has been Indicted on a
manslaughter charge in the death of another Longwood
man.
Richard Franta, 34. was shot In the stomach May 7
with a 16-gauge shotgun while at the home of Jerry
Roberts of 466W Orange Avc.
Roberts was originally charged with murder in the
shooting.
An Oviedo man has pleaded not guilty in Somlnolc
County Circuit Court to charges or sexual battery o f a
minor.
Waller Art McGee. 47. was indicted by a Seminole
County grand Jury on six counts o f sexual battery. Two
of those offenses carry the death penalty.
The assaults are said to have taken place between
September. f982 and March of this year.
The grand Jury returned a no true bill (refused to
Indict) against a Fern park man who was charged with
sexual battery’ of a three-year-old girl.
Raymond Lee Roberson. 18. o f 2524 Dakota Trail, was
arrested op the basis of the girl’s statement to police.
Following the grand Jury’s action, the charge will be
dropped, prosecutors said.

THEFTS REPORTED
A tractor valued at $2,000 was reported stolen from
the residence of Basdeo Ramassar, 201 McKay Blvd..
Sanford, sometime between 9 p.m. May 22 and 4 a.m.
Tuesday.

HANDGUN TAKEN

Action Reports
*

Fires
★

Courts
it Police

DAT CARE CENTER HIT
The Outreach Day Care Center In Altamonte Springs
has been broken Into three times within the past two
days.
Police report burglars entered the center about 8 p.m.
Thursday through a front window already broken as a
result of a previous break-in.
Whoever broke In took nothing beyond consuming
some food, but they went through records in the office,
police said.
Owner Bessie Holmes of Orlando said Thursday's
break-in was the third in two days.

CREDIT CARDb MISSING
A black tote bag containing Visa and Master Charge
credit cards and a driver's license belonging to a Sanford
woman were tnken from an unlocked car parked a the
First Federal Savings and Loan. 312 W. First Street,
Sanford, between 3:30 and 4:03 p.m. Monday, police
report.

A semi-automatic handgun was taken from under the
front scat o f a pick-up truck owned by Glenn A. Stattcr.
24. Rt. 3. Box 2637, Oviedo, between May 19 and
Tuesday at 6:14 p.m.. police repdrt. The gun. valued at
$50. was taken while the car was parked at 200 Lake
Hays Road. Oviedo.

HOME RANSACKED
The home o f Bill Dokkcn, 9 Trtbly Branch Road,
Longwood, was ransacked between 5:30 p.m. May 19
and 5:13 p.m. Tuesday, police report.
Burglars apparently gained entry through a window
on the east side o f the house. It Is unknown if anything
was taken. A pair o f shears found on the floor Inside the
house may have been used to break the window, police
said.

DUI DISPOSITION
Denis A. Gutschlag, who pleaded guilty to driving
under the influence, was sentenced to 50 hours of
community service and required to pay a $250 fine plus
5 percent, $10 to the Crimes Compensation Trust Fund.
He was also ordered to attend counter attack school, and
his driver's license was suspended for six months.

DUI ARRESTS
The following people were arrested in Seminole
County and charged with driving under the influence
(DUI):
—Raymond Arthur Roberts, 59, of 3807 S. Sanford
Avenue, was arrested at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in the
parking lot o f the ABC Lounge on U.S. Highway 17-92 in
Sanford. Police said Roberts was observed operating a
motor vehicle In a careless manner. He was also charged
with driving with a revoked driver’s license.
—Gary Steffan Roebuck, 20, o f Ormond Beach, was
arrested Wednesday at 11:58 on Interstate 4 at the Lake
Mary exit.
—Charles James Givens. 20. o f 11 Panama Road. Winter
Springs, was arrested after police discovered him passed
out at the wheel o f his car which was pulled off the side
ofU.S. Highway 17-92 near Murphy Road.

An Altamonte Springs man who parked his 1974
HOME BURGLARIZED
Cadillac at the Circus Circus nightclub parking lot ofT
Thieves netted a .22-caliber handgun and $40 worth
U.S. Highway 17-92 in Fern Park Wednesday lost a
of jewelry in a burglary at the residence o f Lorraine
briefcase with Important papers and a calculator.
Wlncmiller. 109 Cambridge Drive, Longwood, between
John Charles Hudson. 19, o f 615 Fenton Place, told 8:50 a.m. and 4:28 p.m. Tuesday.
police his maroon briefcase, valued at $50, was taken
The missing gun is a 929 sharpshooter with six-inch
NATIONAL REPORT: Scattered showers and thun­ from the car seat sometime between 1:30 and 2 a.m. barrel, blue steel with leather holster. The Jewelry is an
derstorms were reported over the northern half of the The briefcase contained a checkbook, copies of an auto 18-Inch necklace with cream colored cultured pearls
Plains and the Mississippi Valley as well as much of New dealers’ license, a calculator valued at $30, and an valued at $400.
Police said the thieves entered the house by removing
England. Sbnny skies prevailed over most o f the West. endorsed bank check from National Independent Auto
a screen and crawling through an open kitchen window.
Showers and thunderstorms were expected to continue Insurers of Winslow, Illinois.
today from the Mississippi Valley extending to the
middle Atlantic states. Fair weather should continue
throughout the West.
AREA FORECAST: Partly eloudy skies today
through Sunday with a chance or Isolated afternoon
thunderstorms and highs in the upper 80s with lows In
f he middle 60s. Winds variable at 10 mph.
BOATING FORECAST: Winds vaiahic. mostly from
the east at 10 knots or less through tonight. Seas 1 to 3
ANN ARBOR. Mich. (UPI) - A federal Circuit Court o f Appeals In Cincinnati.
SPRINGFIELD. 111. (UPI) - The
feet.
The FBI hired Rowe to spy on the Ku
Judge Friday threw out a $2 million
Illinois Supreme Court ruled Friday
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .): temperature: 77: damage suit against the government, K)ux Klan during the civil rights struggle
that the parents o f 15-year-old Walter
overnight low: 70: Friday high: 91; barometric pressure: ruling the FBI was not responsible for In the South o f the 1960s.
Polovchak, who ran away rather than
30.01: relative humidity: 79 percent: winds east at 6
Mrs. Lluzzo, who was white, was Bhot
the Ku Klux Klan ambush staying o f civil
return with them to the Soviet Union,
mph: rain: none: sunrise 6:29 a.m., sunset 8:16 p.m.
rights worker Viola Lluzzo along an while driving a black civil rights worker
muat return to the United States if
SUNDAY TIDES: Daytons Beach: highs. 10:46 a.m.. Alabama highway 18 years ago.
back to Selma, Ala., after the historic
they want custody o f him.
11:05 p.m.: lows. 4:26 a.m.. 4:21 p.m.: Fort Canaveral:
Selm a-to-M ontgom ery votin g rights
The court said attorneys for the boy
The ruling by U.S. District Judge
highs. 10:38 a.m.. 10:57 p.m.: lows. 4:27 a.m.. 4:12
failed to establish that he waa a
Charles Joiner was a stinging defeat for march. The shots were fired from a car
p.m.: Bajrport: highs. 4:28 a.m.. 2:58 p.m.; lows. 9:23
“ runaway'' and beyond control o f his
Mrs. Lluzzo’s five children, who con­ carrying Rowe and three Klansmen.
a.m., 10:27 p.m.
Row e, w ho now lives under an
parents. The boy's lawyers claimed he
tended the FBI was liable because its
assumed name In Savannah. Ga.. denied
should be placed In the custody of
informer cither shot their mother or
he shot Mrs. Lluzzo. Two of the three
Juvenile authoritic*
failed to prevent the shooting.
surviving Klansmen In the car both
The court, noting that federal orders
The Informer, Gary Thomas Rowe,
Identified Rowe as the triggerman.
prevented
his forced departure from
was granted Immunity for prosecution in
In his 16-page opinion. Joiner said "a
the
United
State* said Walter should
exchange for his testimony against the
fair reading o f the evidence suggests his
remain in the custody o f the Cook
boy. t e tte r s
C M flra l f te rM * * • * • * • ■ tte te t e l
three Manxmen accused o f killing Mn.
(Rowe’s) efforts were to divert and defuse
M S*
County Circuit Court until one or both
D IK H A R O E I
Lluzzo on March 25.1965.
A D M I llt O N l
and to later report and testify’ ’ to the FBI
parents return from the Ukraine to
te tte r*
te tte r*
“ The evidence fails to show that Rowe on Klan activities.
take custody.
was In concert with those who did the
Joiner said there was “ no evidence to
If Michael or Anna Polovchak do not
killing and there is nothing to Indicate suggest the FBI was in any type o f Joint
return to the United States to claim
that the FBI as the directing agent had venture with Rowe or conspiracy against
their son, the high court ordered Cook
anything in mind but the acquisition o f M r* Lluzzo ... The court believes that
County authorities to proceed in a
valuable information about a subversive
Rowe's presence in the car was the
manner best suited to Waller's needs.
organization.” said Joiner, who presided
principle reason why the crime was
Attorneys for the parents had
over the $2 million suit without a Jury.
solved so quickly.”
argued that the basic issue in the case
Mrs. Uuzzo'a 27-year-old son, Tony,
Family members said they were “ an­
was the "supreme right” o f parents to
lashed out bitterly against the decision.
gry,” and Dean Robb, chief counsel for
have custody o f their children. They
“ I am disappointed and angry." he
the Lluzzo* said he was “ shacked by
asked the Illinois courts to stay out o f
said. "Th is is not Just a defeat for our
this opinion. We think It's an Incredible
the matter.
family but for the American people... My
lack of facing the truth in this case.”
Justice Robert Underwood wrote
mother's name has been rectified. She
He vowed to “ continue to fight with
that the Justices believed that the boy
was a heroine, a martyr. She gave her
dignity and determination.” possibly by
should have been turned over to his
life for her country.
appealing the case to the U.S. Sixth

WEATHER

Lawsuit Against FBI In
KKK Slaying Dismissed

HOSPITAL NOTES

not donated any o f the $34,000 he
estimated he collected to needy people.
Most o f the organization’s money, he
said, was used to pay his salary and
meet start-up expenses.
The foundation said It was formed to
fund several charitable projects. Includ­
ing construction of a home for needy
children, a rehabilitation center for
alcoholics and a home for the elderly.
The state’s administrative complaint
also charged United St. Jude with
illegally employing two professional
fundraisers to distribute and collect Its
coin cains.
United St. Jude has 21 days to answer
the charges. Otherwise. Its fundraising
privileges will be revoked automatically,
state officials said.

Soviet Parents Must
Return To U.S. For Son
parents when the case first came
b e fo r e C o o k C o u n t y J u v e n ile
authorities.
Even though the court technically
ruled against the boy, Henry Mark
Holzer, one o f Walter's attorneys, said
he considered the decision a victory.
" I couldn't be more delighted We
considered It a complete victory," he
said. “ (Soviet Premier Yurt) Andropov
will end up playing for the New York
Mets before Walter will end up back In
the Soviet Union."
When hla case came before Justices
for oral arguments last March, Walter
said he did not miss h it parents,
adding. " I waa never very close to
them."
Walter has been in the courts and
the news since 1960, when he ran
awsy after hla parents decided to
leave Chicago and return to their
native Ukraine. He reportedly told
social workers he would kill himself
before being forced to return to the
Soviet Union.
Cook County Juvenile Court Judge
Joseph C. Mooney made Walter a
ward o f the state until the custody
battle waa decided. The 1st Illinois
District Court o f Appeals overturned
M o o n e y 's r u l i n g , s a y i n g h e
overstepped his authority, and sent
the case to the state's highest court.

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Senate Passes M edical M alpractice Package
Regents Want Tax Money
Spent On Universities
TALLAHASSEE
The state Board o f Regents
has called on the Legislature to spend up to $75
million o f the House’s proposed $180 million
corporate profits tax increase on Florida’s
universities Instead o f kindergarten through
12th grade.
The House’s education bill calls for Increasing
the corporate profits tax from 5 percent to 7
percent to raise $180 million. But the proposal
calls for spending the money on kindergarten
through 12th grade. The Senate bill docs not
contemplate any new taxes.
Board Chairman Murray Dubbin Friday said
the money would move Florida universities Into
the top 25 percent o f schools nationwide two
years ahead of schedule.
Meanwhile, the board adopted a 37-pagc plan
calling on Florida's universities to take steps to
boost black and minority enrollment. And It
approved a plan to enhance minority enrollment
and programs at predominantly black Florida
A&amp;M University.

Land-Buying Bill OK'd
TALLAHASSEE — Major reforms Intended to
bolster the state's bargaining posture In buying
recreational and coastal land hns passed the
House.
Members voted 113 to 4 Friday for the bill (HB
1209). which grew out o f controversy earlier this
year over the state's Save Our Coasts program.
Key provisions In the bill would:
• Keep state appraisals secret until an option-to-buy contract was adopted or until two
weeks before the Cabinet considered a purchase.
Appraisals are now public and landowners can
use them to set a price at the maximum the
state can pay.
• Allow land-buying negotiations to be con­
fidential — they now arc open — but require
that offers and counteroffers be made In writing.
Those would become public when a deal was
reached.
• Require that priority lists rank enough
properties to use twice as much money as Is
available. That is expected to encourage landowners to deal quickly with the state before the
money runs out.

O il Pact Reached
TALLAHASSEE — Florida and the federal
government have reached an agreement on
leasing off-shore oil and gas exploration rights
for 11 million acres o f the Atlantic from
Jacksonville to Cape Canaveral.
The leases arc to be offered In July at a
minimum rate o f $150 an acre. The area
Involved extends from 12 to 215 miles olfshorc.
The pact exempts from exploration utmost
one million acres near shore at Cape Canaveral;
Includes special protections for live coral reefs

and other rare ecosystems: provides for a
two-year study o f risks that would be posed by
oil spills: and Includes a study o f the socio­
economic effects the drilling will have in the
Cape Canaveral area.

CALENDAR
SUNDAY, HAY 29
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. Florida Power and Light
building. Myrtle Avenue. Open discussion.
Seminole Halfway House AA. 5 p.m.. off U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford. Open.
Maranatha New Life Center Revival. 10:30 a.m. and
7:30 p.m.; dinner at 1 p.m., Sanford Civic Center.

MONDAY, MAY 30
Sanford Rotary Club, noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Mature Dating Service. 1 p.m.. Deltona Public Library,
1691 Providence Boulvard. Deltona.
Rotary Club o f Longwood. 7:30 a.m.. Cassidy's
Restaurant. Longwood,
Fellowship Group AA. 8 p.m.. Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center, North Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St. Closed.

TUESDAY, MAY 3 1
Seminole Halfway House AA. 8 p.m.. off U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford, closed.
Overcaters Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m., Florida
Power &amp; Light. 301 N. Myrtle Ave.. Sanford.
Longwdod Sertoma. noon. Quincy's Restaurant.
Longwood.
Rotary Club o f Longwood, 7:30 a.m.. Cassidy s
Restaurant. Longwood
Sanford Lions Club, noon, Holiday Inn on Lake
Monroe.
Winter Springs Sertoma. 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress.

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 1
Casselberry Rotary breakfast, 7:30 a.m.. Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford Rotary Breakfast Club, 7 a.m., Skyport
Restaurant. Sanford Airport.
Sanford Kiwants Club. noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Serenaders Senior Citizens Dance. 2:30 p.m..
Sanford Civic Center, Sanford Avenue and Seminole
Boulevard.
West Volusia Stamp Club. 2 p.m.. Jane Murray Hall.
United Congregational Church, West University Avenue.
Orange City.
American Association o f University Women, Seminole
County Branch. 7:30 p.m.. Florida Federal Savings and
Loan. 919 W. State Road 436, Altamonte Springs.

THURSDAY, JUNE 2
Lake Mary Rotary. 8 a.m.. Lake Mary High School.
Overeaten Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church, U.S. H ighw ay 17-92.
Casselberry.

FRIDAY. JUNE 3

17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
U.S. Highway 17-92, south o f Dog Track Road,
Casselberry.
Weklva A A (no smoking). 8 p.m., Weklva Presbyterian

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - The Senate
passed Its major medical malpractice
legislation Friday, giving the state's
medical profession many o f the changes
it had sought In Florida's legal system.
The bill (CS-SB 1017) would require
that, a malpractice defendant be finan­
cially liable only to his degree o f
culpability tn an accident, place a higher
burden of proof on plalnllljs before they
could seek punitive damages and pro­
vide for structured payouts o f future
damages.
The bill passed the Senate by a wide
31-7 margin after proponents beat back

N u k e P lan t
P ro te ste rs
S e n te n ce d
ST. PETERSBU RG
(U PI) — Circuit Judge
Philip Federico has sen­
tenced three persons to a
year in prison each for
th eir part In an a n ti­
n u clear d em on stration
outside a General Electric
Co. plant last year.
Daniel Moore. 26. John
X. Llnnehan, 54, and his
wife Martina W. Llnnehan.
44, were convicted a week
ago o f five misdemeanor
charges In the protest In
which they strung a steel
cable across the employee
g a te d a m a g in g tw o
vehicles and part o f a
fence.
Federico said the three
did not deserve probation
because they were not
sorry for their actions and
said he sent them to Jail as
"a message to themselves
and others."
" A warning or a slap on
the wrist In this case
w ou ld o n ly -encourage
others to take up your
philosophy and commit
violations of the law In
ord er to ach ieve your
e n d s ." the Judge said.
"Th is cannot be tolerated
and must be condemned
In clear and convincing
terms."
Each of the three deliv­
ered lengthy speeches Jus­
tifying the Oct. 14 protest.
The three arc members
o f a St. Petersburg Chris­
tian peace group called
Immanuel House, and as
they faced the Judge In
court, about 30 supporters
marched outside signing
"G ive Peace A Chance.’ ,L

SCHOOL

by a narrow 19-16 margin an amend­
ment by Rep. Dick Langley. R-Clermont,
that would have striken from the bill a
provision limiting general damages to no
more than 200 percent o f economic
losses.
The medical malpractice Issue has
pitted the Florida Medical Association
and other health care providers against
the Academy o f Florida Trial Lawyers In
one of the most bitterly contested battles
of the legislative season.
Langley argued, however, that the
legal changes encompassed In the main
Senate bill made It much larger than a

doctor-lawyer Issue. He said the changes
would affect not only malpractice cases
but all other damage cases as well.
‘•We're going to do open heart surgery
on the tort system to repair a broken
arm
I said. "T o come In and wipe out
2m .."
” he
the court system to deal with a'sm all
problem Is Just not the right thing to do.
especially on theapur o f the moment.”
Sen. Dempsey Barron. D-Panama City,
the main sponsor o f the bill, said the
Langley amendment would gut the bill
and that to support It would be to "tell
the people you are not going to address
the malpractice problem.”

Barron also engineered the passage of
a series o f bills that contained In
separate form the major elements o f he
main bill. He said he doubted he
legislation would pass the more ptrolawyer oriented House but that having
separate blits would give the House m6re
options.
In Its principle elements the Senate bill
would:
—Eliminate the doctrine o f Joint ruid
several liability under which a defendant
might be liable for the entire award even
If he were only partially to blame for the
accident.

I
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T h e S a v in g P la c e •

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MONDAY
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ENTREE
Pizza
Whole Potatoes
Spinach
Milk

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Add color to garden and
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TUESDAY
M AYS!
ENTREE
Hotdog
Potato Pattle
Cole Slaw
Milk
Hotdog
Hamburger
Tatcr TotB
Fresh Fruit
Milk
Orange Juice
Secondary-Fruit

WEDNESDAY
JUNE 1
ENTREE
Pizza
Fruit
Tossed Salad
Milk
Pizza
Taler Tola
Fr. Fruit
Milk
OJ

THURSDAY
JUNE 2
Manager's Choice

FRIDAY
JUNES
Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Spinach
Ice Cream
Rolls &amp; Milk
Chlx Filet
TaterTota
Fr. Fruit

MUk

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K moil* Sale Price 10.99
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7.69
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oil that helps d e a n and Im­
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EveningHerald
tu rn t i nt)

c

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 33771
Area CodeSOSmnil or ISl-OttS
Sunday, May 39, 1983—4A

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $U fi;« Months, $M.OO;
Yew, $45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.35; Month, $5.35; $ Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Conflict Of Interest
Law Needs Change
T h ere Is som eth in g drastically w ron g with a law
w hich not o n ly sim ply requires a public official to
declare a conflict o f interest when he stands to
benefit personally from a m atter to be voted on by
the very board on w h ich he sits, but additionally
gives him the option o f votin g or abstaining.
Such has been the case in Florida and w e ’ ve
seen h ow It w orks tim e and tim e again In
Sem inole C ounty govern m en t as w ell as in the
govern m en t o f the cou n ty’s seven cities.
A recent exam p le w as last Tuesday when
Sem inole C ounty Com m issioner R obert G. "B u d "
Feather voted to approve a proposed am endm ent
to the cou n ty’s density laws so he (Feather) could
develop or m arket the proposed developm ent o f a
43.8 acre parcel along the W eklva River. Plans
w ere to build 222 apartm ents on the site.
And. although Com m issioner Feather's request
was defeated 3-2 — Com m issioners Sandra Glenn.
W illiam K lrch h off and Barbara Christensen turned
thumbs dow n to the proposal, w hile Com m ission*
er Robert Sturm sided with Feather w ith a yes vote
— Feather should not have voted on the m atter at
all, In our view . T h e w a y the con flict o f interest
law now reads In Florida, the vote b y a public
official w h o declares a conflict o f interest is
optional and must be follow ed by the filin g o f a
conflict o f Interest notice within 15 days after that
vote.
Com m issioner Feather has filed such a docu­
m ent In this case, as he has done num erous tim es
in the past...and as have his colleagues from tim e
to time.
This is a ludicrous situation and one w e feel
most strongly should be rem edied. T h e re m e d y *
was and m ay still be in the w orks in Tallahassee.
And to Sem inole C ounty's credit, a couple o f local
legislators played a m ajor role In b rin gin g ft about.
State R epresen tatives Carl Selph and B obby
Brantley, both Republicans, join ed w ith a M iam i
legislator, a Democrat, in am en ding a con flict o f
Interest bill on the House floor, sponsored by
Volusia County legislator T om C. Brow n, D-Port
Orange. T h e House bill was approved unanim ous­
ly — 96-0 — and would have corrected this
inequity...if It didn't die In com m ittee in the
Senate. First, the proposed law w ould requ ire a
public official to declare a con flict o f interest
publicly and before the m atter com es up fo r a vote
— there's no such requirem ent at the m om ent —
and the public official Involved w ould h ave to file a
conflict o f interest statem ent as he m ust now...but
he would be prohibited from voting. T h a t's as it
should be. Public officials w ho stand to gain from
an ordinance or other law to be voted on b y the
very board they sit with should abstain from
voting. T h a t's only com m on sense, in our view .
W hen you consider that those citizens w ho go
before a board o f com m issioners — cou nty o r city
— seeking a new taw or changes in existin g law to
proceed with their plans must obtain a m ajority
vote, it becom es clear that a public official in a
sim ilar situation w ho can v o le on the m atter really
has an edge, since he on ly needs — In Sem inole
C o u n ty 's c a s e — Just tw o v o te s fro m h is
colleagues, w h ile the average citizen needs three to
g e t that m a jo rity v o te. T h a t is n 't fair and
shouldn't be allow ed to continue.
T h e word from Tallahassee, unfortunately, is
that w h ile the House acted sw iftly and properly,
the bill died in com m ittee. W e're told the Volusia
C ounty legislator w ho sponsored the bill d idn 't
h ave tim e to go o ve r to the Senate and put the
pressure on to have it taken out o f com m ittee and
attached to som e other Senate bill.
Selph says he got a com m itm en t from Sen.
Richard Lan gley, R-Clerm ont. also a m em b er o f
the S em inole County legislative delegation, to
attem p t attach in g the House bill as an am endm ent
to a S en ate b ill this w eek. E ve ry legislator
interested in open and fair govern m en t should
push Just as hard as possible to h elp L an gley and
the oth er S em in ole C ounty legislators in that
en d eavor and see to it that it passess in both
Houses.

c iOc*
B y Donna Estes

Can you envision a city commissioner or
a city councilman In one o f the larger cities
o f the county spending months re­
searching to find appropriate trees which
might compete for the title o f city mascot?
Those kinds o f things happened In
Longwood and Altamonte Springs back
more than 20 years ago In the days when
everyone In town knew each other and all
felt a responsibility for their community.
A remnant o f those feelings still remains
In those communities. But the community
o f Lake Mary has that community spirit,
that feeling o f personal responsibility and
commitment to an extent that somehow
gets lost when cities grow and more and
more new people become the majority.
The tree that will be Lake Mary’s mascot
Is very Important there and rightly so. If
the dream originally envisioned by the
city’s attorney Bob Petrec comes to pass,
that chosen tree will be seen everywhere In
the city and Its colorful blossoms will set
that community apart In years to come.
In the meantime, City Commissioner
Krnnrth King has spent untold hours

studying trees, finding which ones are the
most suited to the city's climate and soils,
how much care they need and other
Information o f this sort.
The list has now been narrowed down to
the loblolly bay. the crepe myrtle, the
bottle brush, dogwood and Palatka holly.
Now It's up to the people o f the city to
vote on their choice o f a tree and the
results will be known In early June.
Another instance o f community in­
volvement was the city parade marking
the 60th anniversary o f the founding o f the
Lake Mary Chamber of Commerce.
The parade was taken very seriously In
town and was of the same calibre as could
be seen In any community much Inrgcr
than Lake Mary's 3,000 persons.
Incidentally, Sanford Mayor Lee P. Moore
was one of those awarded an honorary
citizenship o f Lake Mary by Mayor Walter
Sorenson after that parade.
He noted the honor at last week's
Sanford City Commission meeting, adding
that apparently Lake Mary has finally

forgiven him.
He said that while Lake Mary residents
were agonizing over whether they should
try to Incorporate more than 10 years ago.
he was Invited as a guest speaker before a
group looking Into the prospect.
Moore said he felt he got their undying
enmity when he suggested rather than
Incorporating, they consider annexing to
the city o f Sanford.
When the Lake Mary city staff Is ready to
submit a proposed budget for the 1983-64
fiscal year to the City Commission, the
document will have a unique and dis­
tinctive cover.
Art students at Lakcvlew Middle School
arc competing In designing covers and the
one that will decorate the financial man­
agement proposal will be chosen by Mayor
Sorenson.
The cover selected will be kept among
the city's important papers and a certifi­
cate of appreciation will be given to the
winning artist.

JULIAN BOND

JEFFREY HART

Helm's
Ulterior
Motives?

How The
Left Is
Helping Us

Now we know why Jesse Helms
opposed renewing the 1965 Voting
Rights Act.
After the House of Representatives
voted overwhelmingly to renew It, and
after Republicans and Democrats In the
Senate had agreed on federal protection
o f voting rights for racial and ethnic
minorities, the North Carolina senator
Insisted on prolonging a battle he had
already lost.
With his colleague. Sen. John East.
R-N.C., Helms tried as long as he could
to stop what some have called the most
successful civil rights bill passed this
century.
At the time, it seemed less than a
useful gesture.
Even die-hard conservatives like
South Carolina’s Strom Thurmond and
Arizona's Barry Goldwatcr supported
renewing the Voting Rights Act. There
could have been no profit for Helms in
opposition, his critics said. Perhaps he
was Just so used to being "against." he
couldn't stand being “ for."
But now It's clear that something else
was at stake.
In November 1984. Jesse Helms will
have to face North Carolina voters once
again. Five years ago. he was barely
re-elected with 54 percent of the vote In
a race In which he outspent his
Democratic rival by almost $2 million.
Six years before that. In Helms' initial
election campaign, he outspent his
opponent by 87.2 million and won with
only 55 percent o f the vote.
In 1984. he will probably face North
Carolina Governor Jim Hunt.
If the North Carolina electorate re­
mains stable and Helms is able to
outspend Hunt as he has outspent his
previous opponents, the 1984 contest
may simply be a replay o f his 1972 and
1978 victories.
But voting populations do not remain
the same.
A week ago. the Rt-v. Jesse Jackson
kicked off a Southern voter registration
drive In North Carolina. By the sum­
mer's end, he plans to have conducted
intensive voting drives in each Southern
state, adding 1 million black voters to
the rolls.
At the same time, the established civil
rights organizations, the NAACP. the
Urban League, the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, and the Voter
Education Project arc continuing their
year-long registration efforts spurred,
perhaps, by Jackson’s Implied sugges­
tion that they need his help to do the
work they've done successfully for
years.
If these efforts have any success In
North Carolina, then the electorate
Helms faces in 1984 will be consid­
erably blacker than the collection of
votere that elected him In 1972 and
re-elected him In 1978.
No Wonder Jesse Helms opposed the
Voting Rights Act. Its future success
may be his final failure.

RUSTY BROWN

College Daze Recalled
room. In my dorm the phone was down
The graduation o f our college student
this month was a long time coming. His
the hall and you had to wait in line to
use it.
Journey Into the realm o f higher educa­
We were soon to learn that It was very
tion began in August 1976.
convenient to lie on the bed and phone
I can still remember his excitement at
the preparation for Departure Day.
lmine "collect." The first call came a
I told him to put what he planned to
day later. He asked that the bike-lock
take In the spare room. By the end o f the
key be mailed post haste and added. "I
week, the rug had disappeared under
need some more money for books."
the guitar, the banjo, stereo,, records, it That was how It began seven years
backpack, sleeping bag; ‘ hiking boots ■ ago., In the Interim was a transfer to
and. oh yes. a modest number of Jeans,
i ,another school. The bike was stolen and
shirts and jockey shorts.
the banjo exchanged for a saxaphonc.
I remember thinking how different
Girlfriends came, went and came
that was from "m y day." when the chief
again.
concerns were cashmere sweaters and
He became a vegetarian, so visits
what length a skirt should be.
home were preceded by laying In stores
Bravo to the younger generation. I
o f lentils, barley and cheese. He cooked
had mused, for discarding such shallow
stir-fry vegetables and told us how to
values.
grow bean sprouts under the kitchen
On second thought. I realized their
sink.
rejection o f expensive clothes had been
There was his water-conservation
replaced by another set o f expensive
period during which he wouldn't flush
tastes: clock-radios, digital watches.
the John but once a day. Later on. he
8250 guitars, calculators and superwould discuss the esoteric zero sum
sophisticated sound systems with tape
economics of Lester Thu row.
decks, speakers and on and on.
He had an car pierced and for a time
The morning o f our departure arrived
wore an earring, though it was pretty
and the last item attached to the car was
hard to see it under his long hair and
the 10-spced bike, yet another costly
beard. He abstained from Jackets and
fixture o f the new era.
tics.
On the highway south, we saw other
There were several semesters out of
cars apparently also college-bound
college along the way — much-needed
because they were packed, as ours, with
time, he said, for recuperation and
bikes out back, clothes and guitars
self-examination. While he was finding
showing through the windows.
himself, the tuition soared. Then he
Now and then, collegiate hitchhikers
decided to go for the extra year and an
turned up on the berm, their gear in
advanced degree.
bundles on the ground. A twosome held
Now he has it all: B.A. M.A. and a
up a sign reading, “ Help us get to Bible
brand new Job. Before him. remarkably,
College."
is the opportunity for a career in the
When we turned onto his campus five
field he majored in.
hours later, we saw that other parents
And he is still changing. He actually
had rented U-Haul trailers to transport
thanked us for our financial help and
kids and gear to college.
encouragement all these yean,.
"Thank goodness we escaped that."
For his birthday, he asked for a shin
said my relieved husband.
and tie. "Something to wear to the
The dormitory room for two seemed
office," he said.
familiar, reminiscent o f an earlier time:
This is the same young man who was
the same student desks, maple beds,
once the only member at a family
bare floors and duplicate closets with
wedding wearing a plaid, flannel shirt
towel racks on doors.
and sandals.
But now there was a phone In the

During the past year we have wit­
nessed an odd political phenomenon,
and It is a very Important one. If It Is
properly understood, for our own 1984
presidential election.
In key Western elections, a radicalized
leftist faction has played a key role In
electing conservative governments and
stiffening the Western spine In our
dealings with Mr. Andropov and his
SS-20s.
Reagan and his strategists ought to
study this phenomenon and exploit It In
their own forthcoming electoral battle.
We see the pattern repeating itself In
the current electoral campaign in Great
Britain. Historically, the British Labour
Party had been the generator and
protector o f a comprehensive welfare
state, but under Its traditional leader­
ship It was rootcdly patriotic and
toughly anti-communist.
In recent years, however, a vociferous
faction of the Labour Party has become
"Trotskyist." which here means com­
munist but without overt subservience
to Moscow. These activists have made
some headway in the local constituen­
cies and have defeated some regular
Labour candidates in local contests.
They have also pushed the party itself
so sharply to the left that a more
moderate faction split away and formed
the social Democratic-Liberal Party.
At 4he .moment; the leader o f the.
Labour Party, Michael Foot, is cam­
paigning on a platform of unilateral
nuclear disarmament, widespread na­
tionalization o f Industry, banking, and
corporations, and an escalation of social
spending. Moreover, with the Labour
Party. Mr. Foot Is regarded as the
"centrist” — standing to the right of
T on y Bonn and D enis H ealey, a
seasoned politician o f the older sort.
A Labour Party unified under Healey
or someone like him might stand a real
chance of beating Margaret Thatcher on
June 9.
In the United States, the Democrat
party Is also split between mainstream
Democrats who take a dim view of
socialism and communism and believe
in a strong national defense, and a
potent faction coming forward from the
1972 McGovern movement, the thrust
of which was most recently articulated
in Senator Christopher Dodd's televised
reply to President Reagan's speech on
Centra] America.
This left faction in the present Demo­
c ra tic P a rty Is a p o w e rfu l on e,
particularly because o f its academic and
media support, but Its overall stance Is
electoral poison. Its positions on foreign
affairs amount to cave-ln before the
expansion of Soviet power, and it would
do nothing practical to prevent the
Castroization o f Central America.
The opportunity for Reagan and his
strategists is clear. He should seek to
shatter paper-thin Democratic unity by
mounting a slashing attack on the
Democratic left, by hitting hard at Its
most "sacred" left positions and making
the Dodds of our politics stand up and
defend them.

JACK ANDERSON
BERRYS WORLD

FDA Director Cavalier About Ethics
WASHINGTON - The man who has
Jurisdiction ever what's in your medi­
cine cabinet is a respected cardiologist
named Dr. Arthur Hull Hayes Jr.
Unfortunately, his undoubted pro­
fessional skills are not matched by an
appreciation o f the conflict-of-interest
ruies laid down for employees o f the
Food and Drug Administration, which
beheads.
On his frequent travels around the
country to apeak to industry groups, the
slight, bespectacled Dr. Hayes has been
mighty relaxed about accepting free
plane trips and hotel accommodations
from companies that do business with
the FDA.
Dr. Hayes' cavalier attitude toward
government ethics regulations has al­
ready been reported in part. But a U.S.
attorney declined to press criminal
charges against Hayes because he did
not "knowingly and willfully" violate
the law.
Internal flies o f the FDA's Inspector
general show that this has been Hayes'
alibi wlienever he was caught breaking

the rules. Confronted by evidence that
he liad misbehaved. Hayes claimed
Ignorance o f the law — which, as any
traffic cop or FDA Inspector could have
told him. is no excuse.
A m on g the charges the IG In­
vestigated were accepting honoraria for
speeches while on government busi­
ness: letting FDA-regulated companies
pay his travel- and hotel costs, and
improperly using a government vehicle
lo go between home and office. The IG
auditors found merit in all the allega­
tions.
An FDA spokesman told my associate
Tony Capacclo that Hayes did not
accept speaking fees from groups regu­
lated by the agency. "H e was very
scrupulous about that." (he aide aald,
Hayes was hazy on other charges,
though, according to internal IG reports.
Hayes told investigators, for example,
that “ to the irest of his knowledge, he
never stayed In a (hotel) room that he
did not pay for."
The records show, however, that on at

least five occasions Hayes' hotel rooms
were paid for by groups or Institutions
affected by FDA decisions: the National
Wholesale Druggists Association, the
American Pharmaceutical Association,
the Am erican S ociety o f Hospital
Pharmacists, the College o f Physicians
o f Philadelphia and Lankcnau Hospital
in Overbrook. Pa.
The general counsel for the Depart­
ment o f Health and Human Services
found the acceptance o f these free
“ courtesy rooms" in violation o f ethics
guidelines.
When informed o f this in an Interview
with the IQ investigators. "Dr. Hayes
said that he is now being told that he
violated rules he did not know existed,"
one report states. "H e docs not recall
ever being briefed concerning the
Standards o f Conduct."
Yet In 1981, Hayes told Congress o f
the need for these very standards,
saying:
"FD A has made a major effort on a
continuing basis to ensure that all
employees are properly notified o f the

standards of conduct expected o f them.
We provide every new employee with an
orientation to conflict-of-interest rules."
But Hayes evidently didn't follow his
own prescription. He "appears to have
violated" department guidelines by ac­
cepting plane rides from General Foods
Corp. and Hershey. the HHS ethics
officer concluded.
'
The records also show that Hayes'
government chauffeur racked up more
than 813.000 In overtime accumulated
after 4:30 p.m. Hayes admitted the
chauffeur had driven him to and from
home, but "said he was not aware that
it was a violation until so advised
several months ago by a staff assistant.".
But. according to an IG memo, the
staff assistant said he warned Hayes of
the violation "on several occasions.'*
Continued the memo: "In spite o f such'
warnings, such use (by Hayes) con*
tlnued up until several months ago."
;
The IG suggested "that Hayes might
consider figuring out the total cost tq
the government and make restitution."

�*t

%*

-a.

O PN O N
OUR READERS WRITE
We Need To Gain A Fresh Perspective For Memorial Day
Do we need a new perspective on
Memorial Day?
Memorial Day Is more than
sim p ly an oth er p atriotic observance, another long weekend
for recreation, having fun. or
“ getting away" for a few days.
These may be good in themselves,
but let’s not forget to plan a time
tor some quiet thoughts In deep
tribute, on taking a few moments,
to recall and reflect on the prime
purpose o f the day.
Private citizen, public official,
newspaper editor, all are engulfed
In the pressures o f earning a
living, dolhg a Job, untangling the
snarls o f uncertainty In the daily
routines. Contemporary problems
of economics and environment, of
energy and Inflation, arc apt to
overshadow the memories of the
war-ravaged years. The American
heritage of sacrifice and heart­
aches has become almost forgotten
in our preoccupation with the
tasks immediately at hand.
On Memorial Day we become
patriotic — brieflyi We wave the
flag. We listen to a few speeches.
We spring to attention as rifle
shots salute the dead. We bow
reverently as the bugle whispers
"taps," and another echoes back
faintly from a nearby hill. We have
“ done our thing!** W e have
honored our hero-dead.
W e n eed to g a in a fres h
p e r s p e c t i v e , th a t th e fu ll
significance o f Memorial Day
might not be lost to the next
generation.
W e h ave seen fou r m ajor

tragedies o f conflict In the past
four-score years. Many have
served — and died — that ag­
gression might be stopped, that
peace might come, that freedom
might continue to live. We owe
them a debt of gratitude, and a
responsibility to assure that the
cherished dreams for which they
gave their lives, might not be
clouded over, and perhaps lost, by
apathy or by neglect.
How have we accepted this
responsibility?
In Afghanistan. In the Persian
Gulf, In Latin-Amerlca. in Cuba,
we have been outfoxed, outmaneuvered, outnegotlated. Our
nucler superiority has vanished.
Our m ilita r y c a p a b ility has
diminished. Our prestige has
plummeted. We have "lost face"
with both the weak and mighty of
the earth.
We scold. We whimper. We
appease. We speak too softly —
and nobody listens! Or. if they do.
they are laughing up their sleeves.
We have over-reacted to the
tragedies and mistakes of the
Vietnam era. Some believe we
have become a "paper tiger!"
It's time to awaken. America! It’s
time to regain our self-respect, our
prestige, our leadership in world
affairs. Peace, and a secure and
prosperous America do not come
by wishful thinking, or from the
whimperings o f an emasculated
military, or from political squab­
bling which further erodes our
strength.
It's time for action. America! It's

time to speak with courage and a
bold voice. Time to make our
nation strong enough to deter any
aggressor, to assure the peace.
Time to make our foreign policy
one of firmness, commanding re­
spect by friend and foe alike. Time
to make our nation's reputation
such as to deter aggression, give
hope to the opp ressed, and
establish an environment for peace

and justice to develop throughout
the world. For peace, prosperity,
and stability can only be assured
when reinforced by strength, by
sacrifice, and by courageous de­
termination.
This Is our best tribute In
memory or our honored dead.
James Stanley Speese
Chaplain, Lt. Col.
USA Ret.
Altamonte Springs

Lake Mary Resident Is Proud Of City
Re: Bob Dachn’s letter o f May
22. 1983:
1 suggest Mr. Daehn make a trip
to Lake Mary and get his facta
correct. The City of Lake Mary is
less than 10 years old, yet we have
police and fire protection, streets,
and even electric lights and cable
TV.
Lake Mary had a water system
for over 50 years. In 1976 the
decision was made to purchase
water from the city o f Sanford; this
apparently was poor Judgment as
Indicated by recent events.

We plead guilty to having no
central sewer system; we have
septic tanks. Lake Mary has some
problems — which will be solved.
In my opinion, the decision to
Incorporate by the citizens o f Lake
Mary was correct. It was not based
on some flippant whim, as Mr.
Daehn Intimates. His observations
arc somewhat myopic.
Sincerely.
Ray Fox
Commissioner
City o f Lake Mary

W e tla n d s S tu d y Is A p p re c ia te d
The Lcagqc o f Women Voters of
Seminole County commends the
Board o f County Commissioners
for in itiatin g a study o f the
Seminole County wetlands with
the view of protecting this impor­
tant resource from negative pre­
ssures of population growth.

citizens committee will result in an
appropriate ordinance that will
assure the wise use and protection
o f the Seminole County wetlands.
The League strongly supports
your move to develope and Inact
an effective surface water man­
agement code.

We hope that the outcome o f this
study that has been reviewed by a

Helen C. Smith
President

S in c e re ly .

There Is No End To The Tax Burden These Days
companies, hospitalization, medi­
cine. water, sew erage, water
treatment, etc.: every service and
utility goes up on an almost
semi-monthly basis, and some
legisla to r w ill also bring up
another type of tax. There is no
end to the gouging.

Is It any wonder that Gov. Bob
Graham and others like him want
to stop the tax cut plan proposed
in the 1984 November ballot? This
plan would allow you and me to
tell our legislators by a majority
vote, what we really want and
need. Of course, the people with
substantial Incomes, such as most
o f our legislators and millionaire
Bob Graham are not really con­
cerned with what we want, only
what kind of an empire they can
build In their name.

The only thing staying close to
the same are most peoples wages
and retirement. A large amount of
people such as steelw orkers,
automobile factory workers, airline
employees and many others are
accepting cuts In salaries to re­
main working. The only people
gettin g more m oney are the
wealthy. I think Its about time to
give the average Individual a
chance to voice his opinion.

1 am sure both Mrs. Reagan and
Mrs. Graham do not do their own
shopping. If they did. they both
could tell their husbands what a
fallacy lt Is about prices stabiliz­
ing. Power companies, phone

With President Reagan's policy
of taking from the poor and middle
class to help the rich, Gov.
Graham Is following right In his
shadow at our expense. I wonder If
Graham can't also find a way o f
getting more money from the
waitresses of the state. After all,
most o f them work many more
hours than usual and even some
get their meals along with the
large tips everyone can now afford
to leave. No one ever seems to
mention the fact that the abun­
dance o f retired people In this
state, living on a meager retire­
ment and having no chUden. play
a large pari In paying for educa­
tion. Of course. If they try to
supplement their income with
part-time Job. the gas taxes and

other newly thought-up revenues
will take most o f it away anyway.
Between Gov. Graham and Pres­
ident Reagan’s policies, It seems
the elderly, poor and retired
should be placed on an ice floe and
allowed to drift away to die as
some cultures have done. Hypocri­
sy abounds in Washington and
Tallahassee.
I hope you worry Mr- Graham
and all the other legislators against
this "T a x Cut Proposal". If you
were not afraid of the average
persons wishes you wouldn't be
fighting so hard against It.
I know where all my support will
be, and I am sure I am not along.
Sincerely,
G.B.O.
Sanford

Alzheimer's Disease
Sometimes Treatable
0 . M y brother-in-law. age 61.
w as a h igh ly resp ected baslnesemaa and fath er. I said was
because although he le a liv e
today, he le to ta lly disoriented.
A b ou t s ix m onths ago, m y
sister began to notice th a t he
w as having d iffic u lty m aintain­
in g h ie b a la n c e , c o m p le tin g
s im p le m a th em a tic a l ca lcu la ­
tions, and even drivin g hie car.
Soon, he began to fin d It Im­
possible to concentrete or com ­
municate. Then, several months
ago, he couldn't rem em ber what
day or month lt was.
He was forced to re tire from
hie Job, eo he stayed at home
watching television program s he
couldn't comprehend.
Last month, my sister had a
number o f physicians g iv e him a
m edical checkup. The diagnosis
w as A lsh eim er's disease, which
th e y e x p la in e d Is a form o f
sen ility. His brain sim ply m elted
away.
W hat Is A lsh eim er's disease?
M y M eter's doctors o ffe r her no
hope fo r his Im provem ent. Is
th is true? W hat can I do to help?
A. Alzheimer's disease was first
d e s c r ib e d in 1906 b y A lo is
Alzheimer. A patient o f his. a
55-year-old woman, had displayed
"progressive Jealousy" and died
following severe dementia, medi­
cally defined as a profound loss of
memory, Intellectual functioning
and the ability to take care of social
and bodily needs.
Until five years ago. scientists and
physicians regarded Alzheimer's as
comparatively rare, untreatablc and
a consequence o f the aging process
rather than a true disease.
Those beliefs have been washed
away by new research that shows
Alzheimer's is far more widespread
than once believed and may be
treatable with drugs.
T h e r e is n o w g o o d e v id e n c e that
A lz h e im e r 's d isease c la im s a b ou t
100.000 e ld e rly A m e r ic a n s a y e a r
a n d a fflic ts an a d d itio n a l 1 m illio n .

We now know that 5 to 6 percent
of all Americans over 70. and a
substantial number under 70, con­
tract the disease. This means that
Alzheimer's disease Is the fourth
leading cause o f death for the
elderly and, with major advanees
being made in researching a cure, it
is now becoming vitally important
that those senior citizens who con-

Growing

Oldsr
U.ILRep.

t r a c t th e d is e a s e n o t be
misdiagnosed as senile and shunted
aside.
While researchers are still seeking’
to Identify the cause of Alzheimer's.'
scientists have discovered two
d ru gs that Bhow p ro m is e inovercoming the disease. The ad-;
ministration and Congress are fc-t
commending increased funding for
fu rth er research into variou s
treatments for this killer disease.
The House Select Committee on.
Aging, on which I serve. Is conven-'
ing hearings on Alzheimer's to'
examine both the myths surround-'
Ing senility and the actual causes o f
mental deterioration. I anticipate
that Increases In funding for the
identification and treatment o f
Alzheimer's disease will receive,
quite a bit of attention during this
session of the Congress.
For more inform ation about
Alzheimer's, I would suggest that'
you contact the Alzheimer’s Disease
and Related Disorders Association.'
Write to the national headquarters
at 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago.
111.60601.
0 . M y u n cle, w h o w ill be
turning 65 y eere old, was told by,
hie em ployer th at although th ey
have no m andatory retirem en t;
rules until he reaches age 70,
th eir pension plan requ ires th at
he re tire at age 65. Does m y
uncle have to re tire i f he does
not want to?
A. No. he docs not have to retire.1
The requirements of the pension
plan cannot override federal law.:
which says your uncle has the right
to keep his Job until age 70.r
However, the law does permit his
employer to stop contributing to
your uncle's pension plan when he
reaches age 65 and to not count his1
years o f service after age 65 in'
figuring the amount of his retire-'
ment pension.
REP. CLAUDE PEPPER /s the

ranking member o f the House Select
Committee on Aging.

Proposed State Optometry Legislation Is Opposed
It would be a waste o f space In
your publication to discuss the
"political clout" o f Senator De­
mpsey Barron and his associates
In both chambers of the Florida
Legislature. What my Integrity as
a medical doctor and a human
being dictates is that I pass on to
the public through you what
would be allowed under S.B. 168.
an act relating to optometry, as
passed by the Florida Senate and
about to face (Inal action before the
House of Representatives.
The normal Interpretation o f the
word "doctor" unfortunately lulls
the average citizen into believing
anyone with that title Is qualified
to diagnose and treat. It leads to
the presum ption that anyone
called "doctor" Is qualified to care
for the human body. Since the
beginning of organized medicine
ethical and legal safeguards have
been built In to protect the public
from those who are not qualified
and/or clinically trained in the
modality they profess to be. Op­
tometrists are not trained to treat
eye disease with drugs.
First, should this legislation go
on to become law. let us tell the
public the difference It seta up In
'qualifications*' for an optometrist
to use and prescribe drugs In the
treatment o f eye disease. Under
S.B. 168 a board certified optomepieted^at T a es ‘ u i?oM hou “

of

a p p ro v e d tr a n s c rip t q u a lity
coureework and clinical training in
general and ocular pharmacology,
sa determined by their own board

Thank-You
On behalf o f the All Souls Home
and School Association and All
Souls school, we would like to
express our sincere appreclaton for
the news coverage afforded the
Association and the school during
this school year.
You helped make the activitis o f
our school very special and need­
less to say. all the students whose
n am es w ere m e n tio n ed and
pictures appeared In the newspa­
per. thought It was very special.
We look forward to working with
you In the upcoming year. Once
again, thank you.
Sincerely.
Eve Crabtree
Secretary
All Souls Home
and School Association

and at least 1,500 hours or 6
months of supervised experience
in differential diagnosis o f eye
disease or disorders either as pari
o f the optometric training OR
THROUGH ON-THE-JOB EXPE­
RIENCE.
Supervision is not defined in the
Senate Bill that was passed and
could result In one optometrist
untrained In diagnosing dlsase and
without the proper pharmacology
training giving on the Job training
to another optometrist. The very
fact that 1,500 hours of training Is
mentioned In the bill is an outright
admission the training is lacking
In schools o f optometry!
Just to d isp en se drugs, a
pharmacist must have 1.100 hours
o f pharmacology training. An opthalmologtst at the completion of
his/her residency program has
2.400 hours o f classroom and
clinical training, doing hands on
patient diagnosis and tratment
under direct supervision of highly
skilled physicians. In addition, an
opthalmologist must complete 150
hoours o f continuing medical edu­
cation every three years .as re­
quired by the Florida Medical
Association. This new optometry
act would call for only 6 or more
hours o f approved transcript quailt y c o u r s e w o r k In o c u l a r

A

pharmacology every two years,
prior to license renewal.
Here Is a list o f some of the other
health endangering acts the law
would allow a "Doctor" o f Optom­
etry to perform:
1. For up to 48 hours an
optometrist would be allowed to
e m p lo y n o n c o n t r o lle d o r a l
analgesics for the relief of severe
pain associated with eye trauma
w ith ou t con su ltation w ith a
physician. By then it could be too
late for a physician to correct the
damage.
2. Allows an optometrist to
employ topical stcriods without
any consultation with a physician.
However, consultation Is required
only when within the opinion of
the optometrist, the condition he is
treating Is not responding to the
treatment. Certain diseases could
be out o f control by the time the
"opinion" is reached, or at least
require extensive medical treat­
ment ind/or prolonged hospital
care.
3. After consultation with a
physician (not defined) which
could be a telephone call, an
optometrist would be able to
prescribe, order, dispense, ad­
minister. supply, sell and give

"systemic drugs" which "relate”
to the practice of optometry. The
bill FAILS to prohibit those same
activities with systemic drugs un­
related to the practice o f Optome­
try. Thus, with no consultation
whatever, an optometrist may
supply or sell a systemic drug
unrelated to the practice of Op­
tometry.
4. The treatment of glaucoma is
Implicitly allowed. However, there
Is language that requires referral of
angle closure, infantile, or congen­
ital glaucom a to a physician
skilled in diseases o f the eye.
5. The treatment of infectious
corneal disease by optometrists Is
specifically permitted. However,
the optometrist must consult with
a physician who "treats diseases of
the eye" when, IN THE OPTOME­
TRIST'S JUDGMENT, the disease
has not responded to standard
methods o f treatment within the
scope of optometric practice. With
such language, who knows what
the Board o f Optometry will de­
termine to be "standard methods
of treatment."
Sincerely.
William J. Broussard. M.D.
President.
Florida Society of
Opthalmology. Inc.
Melbourne
,

Should Be Put On Unnecessary Spending In Seminole

If the news stories and figures
are correct about the proposed
S em inole budget and lib rary
system, we all should be con­
cerned and truly alarmed, lt has
been proven that growth does not
pay for Itself and old revenues
cannot support It. Therefore this
growth necessitates more taxes
out o f our pockets. Since we
cannot seem to stop growth (not all
o f us want growth. In spite o f what
greedy promoters believe), we
must put a halt to all unnecessary
spending.
The library issue was not pro­
p e rly p u b licised . I. for one.
misunderstood that the October
vote was binding. It was my
impression that vote was only
preliminary, and the actual de­
cision o f whether or not to build
the library *y»tem would be on the
November ballot. 1 was shocked to
team that a handful o f voters may
have succeeded In putting us all in
near bondage for years to pay for
this unneeded system.

At the time of the vote we seem
to have been misinformed of the
coot of the bond Issue said to
involve about 87 million. Now the
cost may run 850 8100 million,
including roughly 81.5 million per
ear to operate alter construction,
low much better to use our funds
rather to Improve already existing
school libraries and open them to
the public after hours.
Voters, listen to our County
Administrator Rase and prepare
for the reality o f this situation, not
to a librarian who says we cannot

K

anticipate disaster. One of the
duties of our elected leaders is to
anticipate possible disaster and
warn us. The wisest ones have
done this. We call upon them now
to reverse this horrendous error
before it Is too late. I do not mind
my money being used for the
necessities o f us all, but I do not
want my taxes raised and wasted
for libraries which the vast majori­
ty o f us Seminole Counliana will
never use. DO YOU?
Sincerely.
M.E. Johnson

Hospital Papsrs A re Appreciated
I was a very recent patient in the
new Central Florida Regional Hos­
pital. and I would like to thank you
and Faust Drug Store for the free
newspapers you provided for us.
Your generosity was greatly ap­
preciated. especially by me. as
they no longer have the newspaper
stands on each floor. ,
And. 1 would like to also convey

my Sincere Thanks to all the Staff
as they did all they could to make
my stay as comfortable as possi­
ble. Everyone was so very nice.
Very Sincerely.
Mrs. Elizabeth R. Pruitt
200 Pine Winds Drive
Hidden Lake
Sanford

M lfW r w g lty tM M f llU U ik .

Leaders W orry How Long
Economic Recovery Will Last
B y B arry Jam ee
UPI Senior E ditor
The whiff o f economic recovery is
in the air. but the question facing
leaders o f the world's wealthiest
nations holding their ninth annual
summit at Williamsburg, Va.. is
whether that recovery can be sus­
tained.
Four o f the seven countries repre­
sented — the United States, Britain,
West Germany and Japan — appear
poised for at least a modest upswing
in their fortunes this summer,
thanks in part to the decline in oil
prices earlier this year and the
falling of inflation rates.
And. according to U.S. Treasury
Secretary Donald Regan, all the
Western economies should recover
"with a little lag tlm/' in between —
at least within the same calendar
year."
Many government leaden and
their advisers fear the recovery may
be short-lived anti Insufficient to
diminish the pool o f 32 million
unemployed in the industrialUed
world, unless the summit nations
can achieve greater coordination of
m onetary, finan cial and trade
policies.
"W e are still facing the question,"
said former West German Chan­
c e llo r H elm u t S ch m id t, “ w ill
countries try to solve their Joint
problems by cooperating — as it

w ere, play a gam e in which*
everyone is the winner — or will,
they move into confrontation, a
game in which everyone is the
loser?"
Stressing vintage Reagonomics,*
the United Stales, supported by
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, will argue that those1
countries that have best combated
Inflation are best poised for recov­
ery.
The summit Is thus unlikely to
lead to dramatic pump-priming
measures that could lead to the
re-igniting o f inflation. At best, it
may result In "orientations" about,
how to deal with the four In­
terlinked problems standing in the
way o f recovery. These are:
—S p raw lin g budget d efic its ,
—The S7U0 billion mountain o f
debt ow ed by the d e v e lo p in g
countries, which threatens the
stability of Western financial insUtutlona
—The creeping trend tow ard
greater protectionism, the sin that
everyone commits and. as French
President Francois Mitterrand puts
it. "everyone views with suspicion
when others are committing ft."
Mitterrand said recently that "res­
toration of the conditions for a
stable monetary system wuh cur*
renries fixed to an adequate degree,
at economically reasonable values.
It an urgent task."

I

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S u n d b y. M a y a t. \m

paves And Have-Nots
Dog Racing Makes
Today
Divide
World
Alabama County Rich
B y D a v id T o r t o r a n o

EUTAW, Ala. (UPI) - Greene
County may have gone to the dogs,
but It has been a financial boon few
wilt dispute.
Rural, predominantly black and
poor, the county of 11,000 people
tossed aside any moral objection to
parimutuel racing In 1977 and
opted for the financial benefits that
a greyhound race track promised.
Six years later. Greene County Is
millions o f dollars richer, and the
only vocal criticism apparent Is that
maybe the county isn't getting Its
fair share.
"There’s not much talk anymore
about whether It's moral," said
Robert Brown, the former county
school superintendent who helped
sell the idea In the local referendum.
"In fact, those same people who
opposed It arc now smiling. It has
brought a lot of money Into the
county for education and the like."
T h e r e 's litt le d isp u tin g the
monetary benefits that have been
derived by the county's genera)
fund, the four Incorporated towns of
Eulaw, Boligce, Forkland and Union
and the hospital and education
boards.
Since the first $2 bet was placed
on an cight’dog race at Grecnelrack,
(he 4 percent lax paid to the county
has exceeded S3 million.
Gambling taxes account for 80
percent of the county's general fund
and 15 percent of the school board
budget.
County funds from Grecnelrack
revenues are distributed every six
months: last December the total was
$1.3 million.
Although the money has not built
any new hospitals or schools, one

school official said the county could
never have survived the cutbacks In
fe d e r a l fu n d in g w ith o u t the
Grcenetrack dollars.
"W e couldn't have gotten by
without It," said Winston Morris,
custodian o f funds for the Greene
County Board o f Education. "W e've
been fortunate." he said. "T h e
cutbacks would have put us In bad
shape.
"Most o f the money (revenue from
the track) coming from the school
board has been going to salaries."
said Morris. "W e ’ve got 25 to 30
teachers over the amount covered
by state-allocated funds, and we
couldn't have paid for them without
this money."
Morris said the amount for school
system salaries totals "about a
half-million dollars a year."
Forty percent o f last December's
Greenetrack allocation — 8520,000
— went Into the county's general
fund, and then was distributed to 10
agencies, Including law enforce­
ment. am bulance service, the
library and parks and recreation.
Mattie Atkins, the probate Judge's
office manager, said the track
money has helped pay for four
replacement patrol cars for the
16-member Greene County Sheriff's
Department.
It also has funded an eightteacher. 42-student day care center
In Forkland.
For the hospital board, last De­
cember's allocation meant $65,000
for "general operating expenses,"
said Ellen Lashley, business man­
ager for the Greene County Hospital
and Nursing Home.
Greenetrack Is a 440-yard sand
track that can accommodate 6,000

spectators In the grandstands and a
dining section called the "Kennel
Club." It has drawn visitors from as
far away as Mississippi, Tennessee,
Georgia and Florida who place their
wagers at computerized counters
only a few steps from the bar.
"W e do the best we can to create
as good an atmosphere os you can
come Into,” said Charles Bradshaw,
the track manager. "It's Immacu­
late. clean. Even with the drinking,
there's so little Intoxication. That's
the way we're gonna keep It. We
want a wholesome, pleasant opera­
tion.”
The operation, owned by a group
or Alabama investors, is overseen by
a three-member commission —
a p p o in t e d b y th e c o u n t y 's
legislative delegation — and its 25
employees. One member o f the
commission must be on hand for
each race.
They work with the 300 people
employed by the track to handle
maintenance, parking, security and
other operations.
From the glass-enclosed Kennel
Club, where visitors can Indulge In
dinner and spirits, the kennel ItscIT
Is visible. It Is the home o f 16 kennel
operations with at least 50 dogs
apiece. Bradshaw said there are
between 900 and 1,000 dogs on the
premises, and they are treated like
royally. Including a special highprotein diet.
The dogs are valued between
$1,000 and $60,000, depending
upon age and win record, said
Bradshaw.
"Afterall, a good dog can win a
lifetime purse o f some $180,000,”
he said. "You would expect them to
be treated well."

REALTY TRANSFERS
Shadowbay L td . to Southland Ltd.,
P o rtio n o t Sac. 4-11 I f ate.. 15,000
R ichard E. B u m iw o rth a M a ry E .
to P a tric ia Chun, Sgl., F ro n t N E cor.
of N W U o t Sac. u n i t ate . 1114,700
B e lA ir * H om o*' Inc. to Ronald L.
G la m p lctro A W f Kathaan A .. Lot I f .
Oak For»»t, Un. On#, &gt;77,000
P h illip J . M a u a y A W l Shirley to
R aym ond A . W llio n A W l C arolyn
E ., L o t 11. J tn n lfa r E ita ta t. t i n . 500
A ubrey A . A n tllle y A W l D o lo re t to
Rogar A . B la tta nba rga r. Lot 14. Blk
C. La ke H arney A c ra tte t, 134,#00
L o u lte W lllla m i, W id. to F red erick
Y a rn t A G eorgian#, I S3' o l N 111' of
E M ' of Lot 11, Jam e tto w n , 1100
(Q CO ) H enry J . B oll. Sgl. to
R andall R. W offord. Sgl.. N IIS ' of
N W U of SEto o l SEto o l Sec. I f 11 I f .
SIOO
W ayne H G ey A W f Brenda to
Law rence W. C a rro ll. J r., L t 1 A E lf
of vacated SI. on W A W I I ’ o f L o t I .
b lk 7, W e tt W iidm ere, Second Sac..
145.000
E ileen W llio n (F o rm . Ragan) A
Hb. T h o m a t lo Buddy E . Jorda n A
W l R ote. Lot «. B lk 1. Lake Ridge
P a rk . 155.000
W illie C. M oore A W f B elynda to
M aggie B H inton. S g l- Lot 7. B lk B.
F e llo w th lp A ddn, Sant., 435.300
T a i A uction Corp. In E d w a rd H .
W oodbery, J r.. Sgl., L o ti I M f B lk D.
San U ndo Spgt.. T r. 31,170,000
Kenneth R. B echtel to E dw ard J.
P a in t A W f D iane. L t 40 W alden
T e r r . 454,500
F ra n k E. L u b ln tk a t A w t Donna to
O avld L. M in e r A w f Bonnie M „ Lot
n . B lk A , C ou ntry C lub H it., Un.
0ne.44f.000.
Sharyn A . S te n ttro m . tg l, to
W in io n g D ev. C orp., L o t 7. B lk 4.
M a y fa ir, I t . 000
W ln ton g D ev. Corp. to J e ffre y B.
C u rtlt A w f P a tti F .. Lot 4 A 7. B lk 4.
M a y fa ir, 177,000
M able E p p t A Sarah to In a l E p p t
B lake. Sec 7 71-30. Beg US' N o f SW
cor. of E to of N E U of SWU etc..
S100.
F. Land Co. to Roland G. Trance A
w f H elen M .. Lot 11, Heron Cove.
477,400.
D o rit P. R lc h a rd t. tg l. to Ronald
D. M ille r, Un. 4, B eytree, cond., Sec.
4. In c. 441,400.
R u tfic Woods L td . P tr.. to
E d w a w rd Le al A W ilk ln io n , P a tric ia
R. Both Sgl.. L o t 4, C lu tte r I,
W ildw ood. 454.000
R ustic Wood# L td P tr. to G regory
E . B u rk e tt, ig l.. L o t I, C lu tte r C.
W ildw ood. P U D , 154,000.
G row th P ro p F. L td IV to L lle c a re
C enter* of A m e r.. In c., L o ll 454, 4Sf.
440 A 441. A lta m o n te La nd H otel A
N a vig a tio n Co. 13.5*4.400
A dolph R. H um cke. W id r. to M ilchel B. B |u g io n A w f T a m m y J - Lot
7. B lk J. Sky L a rk S //D 1/7*4 IS le t l
» p a rt *43.000
Sanog P tr. to A . Oan C h iih o lm ,
In d iv .. Lo t 45, Sanford C elery D ella,
S40J00.
..
Sanog P tr. to John J . Retd A w f
M a ry F ., L o t 14, Sanford C elery
D elta. M O M .
V itta C o m tr., In c. to C a rle * O r tli
A w f L a u ra , L o t 77 W ekivo C lub
E »t*..S oc. N ine. *144*00.
The H uskey Co to A lb e rt L.
H uskey A w f N ancy W .. L o t I . B lk C.
Sw eetw ater O ak*. Sec I I 454400
The H uskey Co. to A lb e rt L.
H uskey A w f N ancy, L o t 13. B lk C.
S w eetw ater O ak*. Sec. 11.4544*0.
Som e " L t 1* B lk C, Sweetwater
O aks. Sec IJ. 454400
The H uskey Co. to C um berland
B a ile y P a rtn e n h lp . L o t 13, B lk B.
S w eetw ater C lub. U n. I l l. t f t . f Q * .
The H uskey Co. to O u rra n c * Con
s tr. C o . In c ., L o t I I . B lk 0 .
Sw eetw ater O ak*. Sac. IX 441,WO
Joan W . R ichardson, sgl, to B ltfo rd
O . W to te m A w f M ild re d . L a i X B lk
B . C ol*nn aaw .433.0W.
T h o m a t A . P a lm A w f E itoaa to
G aorga A . Cat tric k , t g l A Susan L.
N elsan. sgfw L o t 1, B A A . H aw aii
C o m . l i t Sac , 0SC.S00
I Q CO) S y lvia P a rry H augM allng
la M a ry Lou La nd w a y. Bog t s r S of
N B c o r. L e t X W efto P e rm *. SMS.
M a x im B ld g . Cara- to B ab in w .
Jacfcaan A w f SSspAania, I R O N
a l l l * r a i lf lM f c l Wat i F a rm s.

a

I

j

&gt;&lt;mt* P M iU ps to R ichard T.
rra d a A w l 0 « U R . L t &gt; A NC y a t
s fc . B l A San Ian do Springs T r. 14
IM S .
Flo rid a H a m a c ra tto n , In c . to
I A to rto W . M M a r A w f K a lh lsa n S. U f
4, Shannon W est. 433AS0
F I. H a m a c ra fto r*. Inc., to B y ro n It.
| L a w r e n g . t g l -. l o t s. f

&gt;l

C arl E. B u rn e tt, w ld r. to E le fth o rla
Tarfcatas ( m o rr.l A hb. Spiro*. Lot
tS. B lk D. Indian H ills , Un. 3.451,000
Thom as F. A ng lin A w f P a tric ia to
R ichardo H. B a lle t U r 7 w f Fanny E .,
L o t 50 G ro m E s ft.. 5*4.000
A. W a lle r Tam pla J r. A J .T .
G lu ffrid * to Jam es A . M cA leer, Lot
1, B lk B. The Springs W hispering
Pines, Sec. One, 43COOO.
IQ C D) Lew is A . N orton to M a ry L.
N orton, Lot 174, L a k * H a rrie t E tts ..
SIOO.
Sprlngweod V III. A pt. Corp. lo
Roneld Juries, tg l., Un. 135 B SprIngwood V III., *33,700.
IQ C D) B eatrice W lllla m io n to
Jam es M . A erl Florence Fisher, Lot
IS. B lk B, F ellow ship. SIOO.
W ad* O. Brow n A erf M a d tlln e to
W ad* O. B row n A w f M adeline M „
Let 10. B lk I I , N o rth O rlando Ran
chesSac. 10/13 33 331100.
M a u rice N. S la rb lrd J r.. A w f E va
to Thom as J . L'ubrano A w t Diane N ..
L e i 17 The H ig h la n d * Sac. F ive.
1*0.000
C harles E . P ln tk to n A erf Peggy to
Jackson F . V an ryd er A erf E lia A .,
Lot 0, B lk 0 . Sweetwater O ak*. Sec.
ASI3SW 0.
A rea Ona Inc. A F I. H o rn ** Constr.
Co. to M ich a e l H. Webb A w f.
G aorgaln* R „ Lo t 77 Rapl. W yndham
Woods. *14.000
S pring* Lending V enture to Leland
C onstr., In c., Lot IS, Spring* Landing
Un. 3. S31J00.
Sam * " L I 157 Spring* Landing,
U n F our, 521,500
S p rin g ! Landing Van. to Ar-O e
H orn **, Inc., L o t 104. S p rin g ! Lend
Ing U n. 3 . 433,000.
M u tu a l F in . Co. to JOM ph W atkins,
L o t! 34 30, 34 37 A 5* Ol I f A 40.
113.000.
O lin A m e r. Hom es to Reece* J.
D elay A N ancy J . Bouchard. Lot I ,
C lu tte r A . D eer Run U n .33. (47,500.
N ancy M . H uckabon* (fo rm .
B rfn k h a u tl to M ich a e l B a s il* A w f
V ic to ria . Lot 3. B lk X T ie r 7, Sanford,
510.000.
F I. Housing C apitol Corp- to FI.
Resld C om m ., In c., Bog. SW cor. of
6 to o f N E to o f See 31 M l * e t c . , (L t*
I S The H ig h la n d * Sac. 7 A IIS /1 4 -1 7
s n t.to o .
M u rie l J . B yrne A hb. Them e* L.
to R udolf A . Von D * G re a t! A erf
H adw ich F „ L o t X B lk E . N orth
O rlon de Rancho* See. I, US,JO*.
K in g sherry B ld r i
to M ichael
C lan claru to A w f C ha rlotte, Lot IS.
P e lk a n B ay, S I M M .
The H yland G roup Inc. to Dennis
G. M a rtin J r. A w t P a tric ia , Lot 34.
D oer Run Un. SA. 144.100.
The R ytand G roup In c. to M u rra y
S. H lx to n A w f L a u ra L x l o t 54, D oor
R un Un. *B . 575,400
The R yland G roup In c., to H an rl D .
B ury. ig l.. L e t SS. D eer Run U n. IB ,
S71M0.
The H uskey Co. to B J . Sim on* Sr..
B J . J r., A D aniel C. S im on*. Lot 1.
B lk D. Sw eetw tor O ak*. 4S4JS0
(QCO) la b e l P oint P rop Inc. to
R .L . P o o iro t* A H a t e r In c.. P a ri of
T r. E . Sab* 1 P o in t. M Rev.. SIM .
IQ C D) R .L . P o o tro u A H u o te r
Inc. to Sam uel P . P e rry A w f W anda
V., p a ri o t T r. E , la b e l P o in t 3nd
R#V ,|10Q.
Santord J . G ould A P a u l B lg lln to
P aul A . O *vo id e r ( m o r r .l L e t* I A I
B lk 4 T ie r A . Santord S IXTH .
G overnor* P oint, L td . to M a ry
Podron. arid.. R o b e rt* P edron, ig l.,
G eraldine F u lle r, *g&gt; $ T h o m a t J.
A rm s tro n g A w f. M a ry J ., Lot I
G overno r's P oint. Ph I, S74JOO
F irs t to m . SVC. Corp- to T h om e *
A . S po or,T ru stoo W 7 4 'o f L t * A W 4 '
o f N SI* o f E 4 f o f A o fc x b lk A T lo r
A T re tto rd * M a p O f Sanf - IA M B .
Joseph A . W ebb A w l A o v o riy So
Derm is J . D 'E ra m o Truatoe, Bog. p i
on E r / w o f G ra n t SI . be in g m vt S
A o f N l* c o r a f Sac A ll- ID o le .,
S IM M .
The H uskey C o. to D o cce to rio o
C anO r. C orp - U f IX B lk B.
S w oo tw eto rO o k*. la c . I X B M B
Spring B un D ev. Ip D oftov A . M a y
A B a rb a ra G.. L e t V , S pring Run
P etto Homo#. H U M
E S Conotoy I I to A rm e d V . l a t e .
Trustee W 54T * f N W to o f SW U Soc
M H l i , to ts S aM ^ofc., S I M M W in te r tp p s D ev to M to C en tury
Hom o*. L o t t o . TMCPWtUa. U n. I I .
•M M E g u tty R e a lty la c . to O ro p a ry T .
M a w a r A V to totto AX. • * - . U * W l
D M N g y S p ria M .c n
J a d to n to
(Q CO ) WUUarn

Helen W rig h t, wid. to R obert A.
G oals* A w t Beth I., Lo t If7
W in dw ard Sq. Sec. Two. 143,000.
W ayne C. J orda hl A w l P h y lll* to
J e m s * L. B rockm an A w f Anna, L I
1*. I* * * W 7 35', A L o t I f, to u E
33 75' blk A , B ra n tle y H a ll E tta ta *.

Sw ootw ator
Oaks.
Sweetwater
Shores t A, *354,000.
FRC Lend ing * Atsoc. to D orothy
C h rltlm a n , ig l. L t ITS The Landing*,
174,100
R obert Snodgrass A w f J . Lynne to
Georgo F. W e rlle y J r. A w f Susan,
Lot f . J t n n llt r Estates. *135,000.
H enry
P.
F le lic n e r A
wl
W llh e lm ln a to O ougls* M a rk * A w f
Salty. Lo t SIS, W eklva H unt Club.
Fox H unt Sec. 3. *45.000.
R obert J . W alke r A w t M e ry to S.
Wayne Swearingen Im a r r .l A Stacie
Leapal. ig l., Lot 2, Queens M irro r
Addn CB. *57.000
D onald R. T a ylo r A w t U n d o to
Q uinton W. T a y lo r, A w l W ild * L.,
Lot 3. B lk B. Am ended P la t o l
B utton '*, *47,400.
Jane F u rn to r, ig l. to Seym our J
M und A w f Ire rw to Int., Un. S134A
Sandy C om , Cond . *53.700

1110.000.

De H om e* Inc. to C h a rlie L . Lane.
IV A w l E lton. Lot 70 S pring *
Landing U n .l. 1144,500.
JSI Dev.. Inc. to John W. Cole J r.,
A w l B a rb a ra J.. Lot 74 Wedgewood
T e nnl* V illa s . *71,300.
JSI Dev. In c., lo R ichard P. M ould
A w l B a rb a ra A .. Lot 4* Wedgewood
Tennl* V illa s , 147,500.
Comnnm u n ily H om e* Co. to M ich ae l
A. C olo A w f C erldad, L o t I f F a irw a y
O e k ie t Deer Run. S74.I00.
IQ C D) Le roy Long A w f Le la 10
A drienne J. Long, * g l„ to In f: Lot 37
Concord Woods V III., Soc. One, 1100.

He said growth rates In the non-oll-producing
African states would at best be 2 percent annually
for the foreseeable future. Population growth is
higher than that. It means Africa economically is
sliding backwards.
Kenya, with annual per capita Income o f $340.
ranks in the middle o f African nations ranging from
Chad ($110) to Libya ($7,000).
The number o f unemployed Kenyans Is loo large
to be acknowledged. A domestic servant takes home
$60 a month. Rent on a three-bedroom house In the
low-cost housing project or Bura Bum near Nairobi
costs $140 a month.
Other sample prices: A tube o f toothpaste. $1.13; a
kilogram (Just over 2 pounds) o f beef. $1.77; a boitle
o f beer, 60 cents; a Nairobi bus ride. 20 cents: a
kilogram of chicken, $4.20: a posh rental. $800 a
month.
Four out of five Africans earn their living from the
land. After taking population growth into account,
per capita food production fell by a fifth between
1960 and 1980. Food Imports increased six-fold.
Because governments have resisted currency
devaluations, a World Bank report says, "several
African countries now find that producers of
traditional export crops cannot be paid enough to
cover the costs of production." Cocoa In Ghana Is a
classic example.
As a result, farmers cither slop growing or they try
to smuggle their products lo other countries where
prices arc higher.
In recessionary times, aid has been declining, too.

B y B a rry Jam e s
U P I S e n io r E d it o r

LONDON (UPI| — While the leaders of the world's
"haves." in the comfort o f Williamsburg, seek to
coax life Into a budding economic recovery,
existence for the hundreds o f millions who own ami
control nothing grows more precarious.
Take some o f Black Africa's blackest statistics, for
example. Life expectancy Is 47 years, the lowest In
the world. Up to 20 percent o f children die before
their first birthday. Only one in four has access lo a
supply of safe water. Only one In three adults Is
literate.
At the end o f 1981, the World Bank reports, the
continent south of the Sahara was $45.5 billion in
debt.
Annual repayments of principal and interest were
running at $4.6 billion. Yet the price o f commodities
on which the continent largely depends to repay Its
debt were at their lowest In 30 years and interest
rales on those loans were at their highest ever.
Real incomes are falling In nearly half of the 50
member countries o f the African Development Bank.
The president or the bank. Wlla D Mung'Omba of
Zambia, gave a gloomy assessment of the conti­
nent's progress over the past decade.
"Economic retrogression and not economic devel­
opment was what took place," he said. "The
likelihood of a sustained decline In per capita
incumc levels In a number o f countries Is such as to
render almost meaningless the usual rhetoric on
development."

ASK
D R . SHARP

URGE

DON

APPLE
TREES

Bobby M . S lu rp DMD

Q. (MAT HMD CUBS RECEDE!
WHATCAN IE DONE ABOUT in
A. Rtcedmi (turn un be caused
byit lent 110diftermt lectorsot
mycombinationol these. Themost
commonire netted, improper cars
(plaqueendcalculus) crookedteeth
and bad bite (milocdusioA ind
tiaumj). and poor nutrition.
Readmy(urnsorgrngmi recession
nposts thetooth'* rootsurfaceend
occurswhenthemariinof thefum
shifts ibott or beloa the normal
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ae Celebrating Our
d Anniversary
In Appreciation. We Are Offering These
Money Saving Coupons

| Business Treats OHS Top Ten
; The McDonald's Restaurant In Sanford went all
; out to recognize the top 10 1983 Oviedo High School
: honor graduates. From left are Senior Guidance
| Counselor Mrs. M ary Lee M iller, students Dave
; Hemela, Paul L'Homme, Ed Dullmeyer, Cindy
: Newman, Becky DeNicola and David Butterfield,
; M c D o n a ld 's M a n a g e r C h e ry l D e F IlIp p o ,
• ■ M cD o nald's a c tiv ity representative Debbie

W EEK 1
Hanna, and Assistant OHS Principal Leon Merck.
Seated are Lisa Llewellyn, left, and Angle
Campbell. A 1970 OHS graduate, Ms. Hanna came
up with the Idea of honoring the graduates with a
dinner complete with table cloths and flowers.
Students not shown are Christine Unsworth and
Laura Cowglll.

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Try Our Bnakfast Hatter or Sunrise Sandwich
P h . 323-1990
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2506 S . Fre n c h A v e . V
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i Around
: LMH5
By
Joleae
Beckler

Elects
O ffice rs
Elections for the Lake
M a r y H ig h S c h o o l
1983-'B4 Senate were held
w ith m u ch s tu d e n t
participation.
Many o f the available
offices were highly and
heatedly contested.

1f i 1

The results have been
tabu lated. N ext ye a r's
Student Body members
are: J e ff Cham berlain,
p re s id e n t; C arl P etty,
v ic e - p r e s id e n t; A m y
M aher, sec re ta ry; and
Michelle Sawyer, treasur­
er.
Officers for Lake Mary's
first Senior Class are: Mike
Welppert, president; Laura
Glass, vice-president. Kim
Courson. secretary; and
Kasper Wang Is treasurer.
Lastly, for the Sopho­
more Class, John Morris la
president. Jackie Jeffers Is
vice-president, Katherine
McKee Is secretary and
Susan Kelly la treasurer.
T h e o ffic e r s fo r the
Freshman Class and all
homeroom representatives
will be chosen this fall.
The 1983 Spring Ball,
sponsored by the Student
Government, will be held
tonight from 8 until mid­
night in the cafeteria of
LMHS.
Admission will be free
and the fun will be plenty!

E V E R Y T H IN G R ED U C ED
So fas, Reel in e rt, Bedroom s, Lam ps
C h a irs, Dining Room s, TV 's, Bedding
To b ies, A p p lian ces, S leep ers,
Patio Furniture and Stereo s.

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B U S IN E S S
INBRIEF
Texas Telephone Firm
Adds Stromberg System
Continental Telephone o f Texas recently
placed In service Its largest System Century'
Digital Central Office with a Local Line Switch
in Burnet.
The new 3.000-linc Strom berg-Carlson digital
switch provides subscribers with a choice of
custom-calling features and push button dialing,
as well as both Centralized and Local Automatic
Message Accounting.
This Is the third digital switch that Strom*
bcrg-Carlson o f Lake Mary has placed In service
for Continental o f Texas this year.
The other DCO Systems arc In Wllmcr and
Deport.
Later in the year, the Burnet central office wilt
also serve as the host office for four new remote
line switches In the nearby communities of
Bertram. Silver Creek. Lake Victor and Hoover
Valley.
Strom berg-Carlson. a Plesscy T elecom ­
munications Co.. Is a leading designer and
manufacturer o f telecommunications equip­
ment.

American Boll Leases Site
On May 11. a lease was signed with Lincoln
Properties which provides American Bell’s
Corporate Data Systems Organization with
123.250 square feet of floor space al 200 Lincoln
Place Is loeted at 2301 Maitland Center
Parkway.
With this new location and locations In
Orlando Central Park and 850 Maitland Center.
American Bell will occupy a total or 566,000
square feel of floor space In the Central Florida
area.
American Bell’s 1.650 local employees provide
support for the company's national require­
ments for such functions as customer billing
and account processing, corporate accounting,
corporate payroll processing and administration
of corporate voice and data communications. By
the end of July. 550 of these employees will be
located at the new Maitland facility.

Cotton Named To Post
Stromberg-Carlson Corporation of Lake Mary’
has appointed Whit Cotien as director Df fiber
optics engineering, a new position resulting
from the company's entry’ Into the fiber optics
marketplace.
Reporting to Dr. David L. Hlnshaw, vicepresident o f engineering. Cotien heads (he
engineering segment of the business unit that Is
being organized to Introduce Stromberg-Carlson
fiber optic trunking and span lines In the Untied
States.
"T h is position demonstrates StrombergCarlson and Plessey's commitment to the fiber
optics market In this country." said Hlnshaw.
Cotien came lo Stromberg-Carlson from
M/A-COM Digital Communications Corporation
Inc. In Germantown. MD. where he was director
o f systems engineering in- the Lightwave
Communications Division. In this position, he
was responsible for new product development
for fiberoptic transmission systems. Previously,
he had been program manger or fiber optic
systems for Harris Corporation In Melbourne.

Sea W orld Lists Prom otion
William Dcitenbeck has been named senior
marketing representative for Sea World of
Florida, according to Richard B. Howard, vice
president and director o f marketing.
Deltenbeck, formerly editor and associate
publisher o f Florida Grower &amp; Rancher, will
assist in the marine life theme park's statewide
marketing effort. He also will be registered as a
lobbyist with the Florida Legislature where he
will represent Sea World In particular.

Top 500 Service
Firms Listed
NEW YORK (UPI) - Scars Roebuck &amp; Co. was the
nation’s No. 1 retailer for the 19th consecutive year In
Fortune magazine's Service 500 list nf the nation's
largest service sector companies.
The list, which ranks the 500 largest non-industrial
companies In seven categories based on assets and
sales, revealed few surprises W ednesday. The
Chicago-based Scars held the top spot It has enjoyed for
19 years.
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph was again the
largest utility. Phllbro-Salomon held onto the No. 1 spot
as largest diversified service company, Prudential
continued as largest life Insurer, and Federal National
Mortgage Association was again top diversified finance
company.
Citicorp of New York was the notable exception to the
status quo. however, sweeping past the San Francisco-based BankAmcrica to claim the top banking spot.
And UAL, the Chicago-based parent of United Airlines,
displaced CSX Corp. of Richmond. Va. as the top-ranked
transportation company.
Fortune said Its non-industrial rankings, published
since 1956, was expanded this year Into the Service 500
directory because of the growing Importance o f the
service sector. The service sector now generates
two-thirds of the nation's gross national product and
provides seven of every’ 10 non-farm Jobs, the magazine
said.
The Service 500 came through Iasi year’s economic
crunch In better shape than the Fortune 500 industrial
corporations whose earnings fell 27 percent. Fortune
said.
Broken down by Industry, sales of diversified service
companies on the list rose 6 percent and net income rose
9.4 percent. Commercial banks averaged gains o f 9.5
percent In assets and 5.7 percent In earnings.
Diversified financial companies had mixed earnings,
but assets grew 18 percent. Life Insurance increased by
9 percent, the smallest Increase since 1975, but assets
grew 9.6 percent.
Sales for the retail group grew 11.4 percent, but net
Income dropped 0.2 percent. Transportation profits fell
40.5 percent. Operating revenues for the utilities rose
10.7 percent and earnings rose 10 percent.

Quick Print
Shop Moves

Allan Meagher, left, demonstrates the Inner workings of a
printer during a recent visit to the new location of his Sanford
Quick Print business by members of the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce welcoming committee. The Quick Print
shop recently relocated at 308 E. Commercial St. In Sanford from
110 E. Commer lal. Learning a little about the print business,
from left, are Dennis Courson, chairman of the chamber board;
Martha Yancey, chamber goodwill ambassador; Wayne Keeling,
welcoming committee member; and Janice Springfield, former
chamber president.

Uncle Sam May Have Your Goods In A Vault
By Joey Ledford
Ms. Cross said a list o f the property owners and their
WASHINGTON (UPI) - If you or your family didn't get hometowns Is being prepared and will be published In
lo the bank before it failed In the Great Depression. don't the Federal Register sometime this summer.
despair. Uncle Sam may have some o f your goods
Until that list Is published. Treasury will not answer
stashed In a vault.
public Inquiries about Aunt Nellie’s long-lost sliver
The government has about 23,000 lots of property coffeepot or Uncle Ned's gold watch fob.
from United States banks that failed during the Great
"They (owners or their descendants) will have one
Depression of 1929.
year from the publication In the Federal Register to
"During the Depression, when hundreds of banks make a claim," said Ms. Cross. “ At the end o f the year,
failed, the keepsakes from the vaults o f failed banks we will look at all the claims.
were shipped to the Treasu ry Departm ent In
"W e will make every effort to find the person or the
Washington." said Rep. Doug Barnard. D-Ga., a member heir that has a right to the stuff." she said. "Anything
of the House Banking Committee. "But the property has that's left over, wc will probably sell at public auction."
been unclaimed for years."
Most of the property IS what you would expect to find
Lee Cross, communications director for the Com­
In a safety deposit box — stock certificates, deeds, silver
ptroller of the Currency, said that before 1933. anytime
(latwarc and some Jewelry, Ms. Cross said.
a national bank failed, a local receiver was appointed. If
the receiver could not find the safety deposit box owner,
But there are some oddities. Including a pair of false
the property was shipped lo the Treasu ry In teeth, an antique rtflc and a seaman's chest marked
Washington, where the goods wound up in a govern­ "property o f J.P. Jones," Barnard said.
ment vault, forgotten and Ignored for decades.
Ms. Cross said the Treasury Department did not try

United Telephone A lso Files
N ew Revenue Recovery Plan
In compliance with a Florida Public Service Com­
A sa result ot regulatory pricing philosophy, local rates
mission requirement. United Telephone o f Florida has were priced below Ihe actual cost o f providing this
Joined other major telephone companies In the slate In universal service.
filing a plan for a new form of revenue recovery’ as the
"With Ihe advent o f competition In the long distance
telephone Industry’ proceeds In the era o f deregulation communications business, competing companies are
and change.
able to price their rates below those charged by
The commission's order calls for all companies lo
telephone companies, since there is no need for
design an access charge plan lo recover the costs
competition to subsidize local service," Todd said. "T o
associated with the "access" to the ln-statc long allow telephone companies to compete fairly, the system
distance telephone network through local telephone of subsidizing local rates with long distance revenues Is
company facilities.
being changed significantly."
For decades, long distance rales have subsidized the
cost of providing local service to millions o f homes and
The result? Long distance rates likely will drop as the
businesses, according to Troy Todd, president o f United subsidy to local rates is phased down, while local rates
Telephone.
arc anticipated to Increase.

Home Show Juno 2-5

previously lo locate the owners because officials believed
they did not have the statutory authority to do so.
A rider to a banking bill passed last year granted them
the authority lo begin a search, said Ms. Cross.
"It wasn't clear what our legal responsibility was."
she said. "That's mainly why Ibis stuff has sat around
for 50 years."
She said the majority of the safely deposit box booty Is
paper.
"Obviously, a lot of this stuff was o f sentimental
value." she said. Hsllng such Hems ns babys' bracelets
and shoes, old rings and such.
For years, the goods were stored In the main vault at
the Treasury Department.
"It stayed there until sometime In the 70s." said Ms.
Cross. "It stayed there until Treasury put In computers
and needed a lot of space. Wc sent It to the Smithsonian
to see If there was anything of historical value."
She said the Smithsonian Institution expressed
particular Interest In one Item — a family tree that listed
six generations.

[a]E E LIQUOR 2
NKEI MM vm TMIMV. NITII. ITMi MCI

-SANFORDHWY. 17-92 South City Limits
Liquor Dept. Store &amp; Lounge

&lt;33

happy hour

11 OX. CAM
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Stroll’s
Stag Boor

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B o n iJ a o —

The showcase Is set to open Thursday. June
2. with an Industry-only day for builders. It's
opened to the general public on June 3-5.

Vodka

The event will feature more than 1UO booths
o f home products and services for everyone from
the new home builder to the weekend (lxup
man.

This year's show includes products for every
room in the house.
The show will be opened from 5-9 p.m. on
June 3 and from noon to 8 p.m. on June 4. On
June 5. hours will be from noon to 6 p.m.
Admission will be 92 for adults and 91 for
children under 16. The Expo Centre is located
near the Carr Auditorium In downtown Orlando
at 500 W. Livingston St.

N J

The Rheem* racc • Condensing unit was engineered to be the highest
efficiency air conditioner ever manufactured by Rheem. With SEER'S
ranging from 11.7 to 12 . 3, these units offer the discriminating
homeowner energy-saving comfort.
With the addition of value adding features, the Rheem "Superior"
RACC* units should provide efficient operation seasoh after season.

m in k s

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w in iw ii

Schsnlsy 90* Oin
Canadian Milt

Many o f the newest products for every room In
the house will be featured at the 19B3 Home
Products Showcase, an annual event sponsored
by the Home Builders Association o f MidFlorida.

"T h e Home Products Showcase is designed to
be a fun event." said Jack Hampton, chairman
o f the HBA’s Home Products Showcase Com­
mittee, "but It’s also informative. There'll be
products and services of Interest to almost
everyone, and with so many doorprizes to be
given away, there's a good chance you'll win
one."

r&amp; '.50'

OHboy's Oh
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-M M O n « Energy E fficiency t a t io t tS C E ■ i acco rding t o t e m
re q u ire d b y tn e D e p a rtm e n t o f E nergy

C o m p lin

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Breweries May Strlko
MILWAUKEE (UP!) - Members o f Brewery
Workers Local 9 at the Pabst and MUJer Brewing
Cos. have voted overwhelmingly to give the
union strike authorization.
The contract with the two breweries expires
Tuesday.
^
A union spokesman said negotiations were
continuing on a new contract.
Local 9 represents 940 brewery production
workers at Pabst and 1.300employees at Miller.
The votes were 710*18 at Pabst and 1.129-61
at Miller.

NANCW6 AVAHAME WITH APfROVED

PH. 322-8321
100 N. MAPLE AVE.
SANFORD

R U M ...,
UJUNIT I
BIANCO

M k iln L'A . ’ • *

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�SPORTS
Evening H e riM . Sanford, FI.

Sunday, M ay 2t, IH 1 -V A

Patriots Draw Raves In Spring Jam boree
Rams
NipDeLand;
Tumble To Hawks
B y Sam Cook

Herald Sports Editor
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — If Friday night's Lake
Brantley Spring Jamboree Is any Indication o f things to
come
Seminole County Is In for quite a year of
rock-'cm. sock-'cm football.
Lake Mary. Lake Howell. Oviedo and the host Patriots
all showed Rashes o f brilliance during their two quarters
o f action. DeLand joined the festivities to complete the
five-team competition which drew a close to a month of
spring practice.
And It couldn't have come at a more opportune time.
Last fall was a bummer for county football as only
Lyman, Oviedo and Lake Howell posted winning
records. Lake Brantley. Lake Mary and Seminole won
just three games among them and the Patriots two
victories were over the Rams and the Tribe.
The Patriots, which went Into last fall with Just two
starters returning, were drew most of the raves from
opposing coaches Friday. " I was really impressed with
Lake Brantley, especially their offense," said Lake
Howell coach Mike Blsccglla after losing to the Patriots.
8*7. "Th ey really looked good. Much better than last
year."
Amid a tumultuous Big Blue locker room, linebacker
Donnie O'Brian tried to explain the turnaround for
coach Dave Tullis' squad. "W e came through this
spring." said O'Brian who will be the top linebacker
since his two all-county cohorts, Mike Hill of Lyman,
and Tommy Johnson o f Oviedo, have graduated. "The
whole team improved, especially the offensive line. It's
gonna be the best in the conference."
You don't have to go much further than Allen
Armstrong or Greg Shatto to confirm that. Armstrong,
who is emerging as a superb tailback, and Shatto, a
determined fullback, ripped olT huge chunks o f yardage
behind a rejuvenated wall of humanity composed of
tackle Robert Maler, guard Bob Wittlck and right end
Carlos Ince.
"T h ey all come ofT the ball real well.” said Tullis about
his big three. "W e've been practicing hard. We Just
didn't luck out tonight. We still have to put tonight In
the proper perspective, it's Just a Jamboree, but I feel
good about what I saw.
"Every (county) team was better than last year." he
added.
That goes double for Lake Mary. The Rams, under
flrst*ycar coach Harr)’ "T h e Ram" Nelson, nipped
DeLand. 7*6. and lost to Lake Howell. 14*6.
"Lake Mary's defense came on strong." said Blsceglla.
"There's a big improvement. They moved the ball very
well and they're a lot more disciplined.
Blsceglla was also Impressed with Nelson. “ He's a
good game coach. After the quarter he said, 'W e'll shove
It In your ear next year.* He said something else
(unprintable) to tny assistant: I guess he had more
respect for m e," laughed Blsceglla.
Nelson, like his maturing ball club, was up for the
occasion. The colorful ex-Bishop Moore and Colonial
coach worked the sidelines with exuberance and his
Rams responded. And despite giving his troops a verbal
lashing after the two quarters, even Nelson had to admit
he was Impressed.
"1 had a tough time telling them they had to
Improve." chuckled Nelson. "This Jamboree was Just
perfect for us. We went the whole spectrum. We got
ahead of DeLand and held on to win, and then got
behind Lake Howell and came back with a touchdown.
"W e played brilliantly on defense on occasion. (Jeff)
Hopkins, (Bill) Caughcll, (Darren) Washington and
(Reggie) Anderson looked good at times. To go from
2A-3A to 4A in 20 days (spring practice) is quite a Jump.
We have to improve in every area (to be competitive),
but we had a hel laclous 20 days o f spring."
Which can also be said for Blsceglia's Silver Hawks
who moved the ball with case behind quarterback Darin
Slack. Troy Quackenbush, who runs Howell’s veer
attack, missed the Jamboree because o f a cartilage Injury
to his left rib cage suffered In the intrasquad game last
week.
Slack, a rifle-armed junior, picked apart the Rams'
secondary. He hit 6 of 10 passes for 122 yards. JefT
Solomon snared two for 70 Including a touchdown on a
33-yard slant. Jimmy Daniel pulled In the other TD from
nine yards out.
"Slack threw pretty well and our offensive line gave
him the time," said Blsceglla. "(Jay) Robey ran well. We
played a lot o f kids. I thought we did pretty well for just
two weeks practice."
While Lake Howell went airborne In the first quarter,
against Lake Brantley It turns loose Robey and Tony
Cardenas. Robey broke one for 3B yards behind some
solid blocking on the left side by guard Austin Manuel,
alternating tackles Rick Williams and Jim Royal, and
tight end Allen Jack:
Oviedo, the Jamboree's 3A entry, was plagued by
fumbles. The Lions were dominated by Lake Brantley

Lake M ary quarterback Ray Hartsfield Is off to the races with a DeLand — he was sacked several times — as the Rams beat DeLand and lost to Lake
lineman In pursuit during Friday's jamboree. The Rams' flashy freshman Howell,
had moments of brilliance — a 29-yard TD romp — and moments of dlspair
but salvaged a 0-0 tie. Oviedo lost to DeLand. 7-0. Nose
guard Kevin Ycntz delivered several good Jolts In the
opposing backfteld while Tim TurbyRcld broke up a
near touchdown toss to Rex Black in the last 30 seconds
to save the tic against the Patriots.
"W e looked pretty green," said Oviedo offensive
coordinator Ken Kroog. "But then wc never look very
good In Jamborees anyway. Wc‘11grow up by next fall."

wlngback reverse. "Lucarclll and Neal Wellon ran the
ball well." said Nelson. "(Kicker Joe) Dalton was having
a good night before he gbt hurt." Dalton added the extra
point for a 7-0 lead.
DeLand came right back when tailback Otis Robinson
bolted 31 yards for a touchdown around left end. The
Bulldogs sent James Patrick around right end In an
attempt to go ahead, but linebacker Hopkins nailed him
to preserve Lake Mary’s win.

Quarter One

Quarter Two
DELAND 7, OVIEDO O

LAKE MARY 7. DELAND 6
The Rams were blown out by DeLand last fall in the
Jamboree, botching two punts and falling behind by two
touchdowns before the Bulldogs ran a play front
scrimmage. It was a different story Friday as Jim
Sodoski recovered a fumble and Lake Mary marched In
to score on Its second possession.
Freshman Ray Hartsfield tossed a 37-yard pass to
Donald Grayson to set up the score at the DeLand 12.
Charlie Lucarelli tipped the final 12 yards on a

Oviedo received and was moving the ball behind
tailback Barry Williams, fullback J. W. Yarborough and
quarterback Charles "P o p " Bowers until WilllamB
coughed up the ball at midfield.
Ycntz Immediately dumped g B Terry Nettles for a
loss, but on the next play Nettles faked outside on an
option, then cut In for 38 yards and the quarter's only
touchdown. Charles Studley kicked the PAT.
Freshman Andrew Smith gained 10 yards on two

Friday’s Junior Lotfuo scares
Friday's Little National score
Sunniland 18, Cardinal Industries 11
Friday's Little A m e ric a * score
ramous Recipe 18, Seminole Petroleum 2

Friday's Pee Wes League scores
Vdcock Roofing 14. Butch's Chevron 3
:iem L. Shell 10, Gracey Construction 9
Knights o f Columbus put at least two runs
&gt;n the board In every Inning Friday night
vhlle Elks had only two big Innings as KOC
rent on to a 18-10 victory In Sanford Junior
xague action at Chase Park. Knights o f
Columbus remain In first place In the
econd half o f the season with a 44) record
ritlle Moose Is one game back with a 9-1
ecord. Rotary. 2-2. In the second half, won
iy forfeit Friday when Ball Motor Lines
Hdn't have enough players.
KOC opened with five runs in the first
inlng. Alonso Gainey led o ff with a single
nd Lawrence Aires drew a walk. Leonard
!ucas then lined a shot to left field that went
»r a three-run, Inslde-the-park home run. A
so-run triple by Edward Gordon provided
lie other two runs In the Inning for KOC.
The Knights took a 1QO lead with ftye
tore runs In the second Inning. Key hits

Quarter Three
LAKE BRANTLEY 0. OVIEDO 0
The Patriots went up and down the field twice In this
quarter but never could punch It over. Comerback John
LaPoria saved the Lions once with a Jarring tackle to
cause a fumble which Marty Tyler recovered at the
Oviedo 10. It came after the Patriots had marched 70,
yards on the hard running o f tailback Allen Armstrong!
and fullback Greg Shatto. Armstrong powered for 10 on!
a fourth and one to keep the drive alive at midfield.)
Shatto. who played for Lake Mary last fall, muscled for,
23 yards to the Oviedo 4 before LaPoria made his big
play.

BeeHAWKS.Pag* i l A .

R am s' linebacker Bill;
C augheil a tte m p ts to
s lo w d o w n D e L a n d
q u a rte rb a c k T e rry ;
Nettles a fte r the shlf
Bulldog had left Lake
M a r y 's D a r r l
W a s h in g to n (o n the
gro u n d ) g raspin g fc
a ir. N ettles ran for
to u c h d o w n , b u t th e
Ram s won, 7-4.

L a k e H o w e l l
quarterback takes a
breather as the defense
takes over. Slack threw
two touchdown passes
as the Silver Hawks
whipped Lake M a ry
a n d I o 5 1 to L a k e
Brantley In the spring
jamboree Friday night
In Altamonte Springs.

Horold Photos
Tom Vlncont

Knights Score Early, Often To Improve To
{nights o f Columbus 18, Elks 10
Rotary won by forfeit over Ball Motor Lines

carries on Oviedo's next possession, but a delay o f game
penalty on fourth and one cost the Lions a chance to
game at their 29 and they punted it away.
Yentz again yanked Nettles down for a loss and three
plays later but Greg Gilmore's punt sailed Into the end
zone to put the Lions In the hole again.

Included a RBI triple by Lucas and a
two-run single by Todd Revels.
Elks came alive In the third Inning with
five runs on three hits. The key hits were inning to take a 13-11 lead, a lead It never
run-scoring singles by Steve Warren. Henry relinquished. Key hits In the decisive Inning
Williams and Alex Wynn.
included a three-run triple by Merthie and
KOC added two runs In the bottom o f the an RBI triple by Tim Graham. Two runs
third to take a 1J2-5 lead, but Elks came were also forced In by walks.
storming back with five more runs in the
Sunniland put the finishing touches on
iop o f the fourth to cut KOC's lead to 12-10. with four runs In the fifth Inning and Tim
Singles by Warren. Williams and Joey Graham pitched shutout ball over the lost
Sheehan were the big hits In the Inning for two Innings to pick up the pitching victory.
Elks and Elks also took advantage o f four Behind Merthie, Graham had a pair o f hits
KOC errors.
and Mike Merthie added a home run. Hubert
KOC scored twice In the bottom o f the Williams had two hits Including a triple for
fourth and clinched the game with four runs Cardinal Industries.
In the bottom o f the fifth. David Rape picked
In Little American action at Wcslslde
up the pitching victory and also went 2 for 3 Field. Famous Recipe cooked up 14 runs in
at the plate for KOC. Lucas was 3 for 4 with the second inning and burned Seminole
four RBI while Revels and J.D. Paul also Petroleum. 18-2. Key hits in the big Inning
added two hits each. Warren was 3 for 3 for for Famous Recipe Included a double and a
Elks while Williams and Wynn added two triple by Gerald Morris, a double and a
hits apiece; Elks fell to 1-3 in the second half single by Anton Reid, a double by Geroge
and 2-12 overall.
Flson and singles by Mike Taylor, Mike
In Sanford Little National League action at Fetterhoff and Andrea Stokes. Famous
Bay Avenue Field, Anthony Merthie went 4 Recipe also capitalized on five Seminole
for 4 with a triple and a double to pace a Petroleum errors In the Inning.
10-hit Sunniland offensive attack In a 18*11
Seminole Petroleum managed five hits off
victory over Cardinal Industries.
o f a pair o f Famous Recipe pitchers, all five
Trailing. 11-6. Sunniland erupted for hits came In a two-run third Inning. Daniel
seven runs In the bottom o f the fourth Skipper’s double drove in both runs for

S a n f o r d B a s e b a ll

Sunniland Drops Cardinal
Seminole Petroleum.
For Famous Recipe at the plate. Morris
rapped four hits, Troy Rollins added three
and Leonard Richardson two. Taylor picked
up the pitching victory and Chris lim ite r
suffered the loss.
In Pee Wee League play at Fort Mellon
Park. Dcmetry Beamon hurled a no-hitter as
Adcock Roofing upended Butch's Chevron,
14-3. Beamon struck out five and walked
two as Adcock Roofing Improved to 7-1 for
the season while Butch's Chevron fell to 0*8.
A seven-run first Inning was all Adcock
R o o fin g n ee d ed . D am ien " M u s c l e "
Tillman's two-run single was the only hit In
the Inning, but, Adcock Roofing was Issued
five walks and moved up on five wild
pitches. A run-scoring triple by Beamon
and a two-run triple by Tom Royal were the
big hits in a seven-run second inning for
Adcock Roofing.
In Friday’s wroond game, Clem Leonard
Shell rode a five -run fourth Inning rally to a
10-9 victory over Gracey Construction. With
the win. Clem Leonard Shell upped Its
record to 7-1 and remains tied with Adcock
Roofing for first place. Gracey Construction
now stands at 3-5 with two games remain­
ing In the season.
A double by Tony LatUmore and singles
by Tony Taylor and Britt Henderson were

the key hits In the fourth inning for Clem'
Leonard Shell which also took advantage of;
four Gracey Construction errors in the'
inning.
Anthony Roberts picked up the pitching!
win for Clem l^onard as he allowed only!
one hit. struck out nine and walked 12.j
Quinn Byrd's home run was the only hit for';
Gracey Construction. Adrian Jones had aj
homer and a triple to lead Clem
Shell at the plate.

008 10-10 • T
BBS S4-1B 14 7
W P — David Rape. L P — Henry Williams, i

Cardinal
Baaallaad

SIT 100-11 0 S
140 TBs—10 10 |
W P — T im Graham. LP — ”

Williams.

4(14)0 0—10 IB
W P - M ik e Taylor. L P - C h r is Lassiter.
BO- 8 0
W P — Dcmetry Beamon.
Williams.

Clem L. Shell
Gracey Coast.

TT-14 0
LP —

111 8 -1 0 8
081

W P - Anthony Roberta.
Chlbberton.

�iOA—Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, F I.

Sunday, Mgy 2f, 1H3

Braw l With Tigers Helps M innesota Shed Tw inkles' Label
Ever hear o f the Minnesota Twinkles?
Billy Gardner has until he had a bellyful, So
have ail his players. They don’t want to hear
it anymore. The reason? They believe
they've shown they can play with the big
boys.
Gardner's Twins had the demeaning label
"Twinkles" pasted on them last season
when they fumbled and stumbled around
the American League's Western Division
most of the year, finally winding up last, 33
games out.
That was last year. But look at the Twins
this year.
For one thing, nobody considers them
patsies or m akes Jokes about them
anymore. For another, they're only four
games out o f first place in their division,
having Just completed their first sweep In a
near Incredible dry spell of 51 previous
series by taking three In a row from the
Baltimore Orioles.
The Twins have won their last four
games, nine o f their last 13. and are only
“two games below .500, but that's only part
of the story.
Second baseman John Castlno, batting
.315. leads the league In two departments,
total bases, with 98. and runs scored, with
37. First baseman Kent Hrbek. hitting ;314;
Is the league leader with 15 doubles and Is

third In RBI with 32. The Twins have two
others over ,300 In catcher Dave Engle at
.317 and designated hitter Mickey Hatcher
at .316. and although left fielder Gary Ward
is hitting only .250, he leads the league In
RBI with 36.
Offensively, the Twins might've been
stronger yet had outfielder Jim Eisenrelch
been able to stay with the club. The stocky.
24-year-oid St. Cloud. Minn., native hit .303
In the 34 games he played last season and
showed all the earmarks o f blossoming Into
one o f the best hitters In the league before
asking the club to put him on the
voluntarily retired list Wednesday because
o f a nervous disorder.
No matter how much Minnesota owner
Calvin Griffith has been criticized In the
past for his frugal spending policy or how
often the Twins were written off by others,
no one ever laughed at their farm system,
which has kept producing consistently.
Two of the men primarily responsible are
George Brophy. who heads the farm system,
and Ellis Clary, who handles special
assignments and knows practically every
kid in the country. If he doesn't, he’ll find
someone who docs, and quickly, too.
Next spring, the Twins will have some
more good looking prospects reporting to
them In Orlando. Almost guaranteeing that

Milton
Rlehman
UP1 Sporti Editor

Is the fact their Triple A Toledo farm club is
leading the International League, their
Double A Orlando club Is first In Us division
in the Southern League and their Class A
Visalia affiliate Is atop its division In the
California League.
You can see the difference in the Twins by
the way their players act and the way they
talk.
Reliever Ron Davis, who once campaigned
to be traded because he felt Griffith was
“ cheap." no longer talks that way. He wants
to stay with the Twins now because he
believes they can finish on top In the
foreseeable future.
Hrbek feels the same way.
When he was asked how come It took the
Twins so long to get some runs after they
waited until the fifth inning to score six In
Monday night's 12-4 bombing o f Baltimore,
Hrbek reminded his questioner the game

"W hat the hell are you doing out here?"
had started at 7:35 p.m.
Tiger
manager Sparky Anderson wanted to
"W e had to wait until the sun went
down,” he said. "W e couldn't see the ball know. "Y ou ’re outta the game, you belter
gctouttaheie."
before then."
"W hadd'ya mean?" Gardner demanded.
If you talk with Gardner about the Twins'
" T h e y 'r e m y g u y s , a r e n 't t h e y ? "
turnaround, he doesn't think It took place so
Kirk Gibson homered In the 10th Inning
much this season as ft did last In a defeat by
to
win the game for the Tigers, but the
the Tigers at Detroit. The game he’s
contest was exceptionally costly for both
referring to was played on May 14 of last
teams. For the Twins. Hrbek. Redfern and
year.
Al
Williams all emerged with Injuries.
"W e had two fights In that game and I
H rb ek 's 23-gam c h ittin g streak was
think that was the making o f us." he says.
snapped. More than that, his right wrist was
"Th at's when we got more aggressive and
injured to such an extent In one o f the
the kids decided nobody was gonna push
skirmishes, he had to sit out the next 10
'em around anymore."
days.
Gardner was ejected from that game In
Tiger right-hander Dick Rozema. who had
the fourth Inning, but a bit later on Tiger
taken a flying leap at Castlno, tore a
outfielder Chet Lemon charged Pete Rcdfern
ligament In his knee that sidelined him for
after the Twins’ right-hander hit him with a
the rest o f the season.
pitch on the arm and a free-for-all resulted.
Gardner says the Twins still haven't
Although Gardner was no longer In the
forgotten that game.
game, he wasn't simply going to stand there
"I think some o f the things that happened
In the dugout runway and be a mere
spectator. So the Twins’ 54-ycar-old manag­ In that game stuck with all of 'em ,"he says.
" I was Impressed by the way |h*y handled
er Jumped In to lend his players whatever
themselves after that ati(T by the way they
support he could.
came to camp this spring. You could tell
Later In the same game, Davis was
they didn't want anyone calling 'em the
pitching for the Twins and he ran a ball in
on Enos Cabell that hit him and touched olT Minnesota 'Twinkles' anymore. You could
sense they felt they could play with anyone.
another brawl. Gardner got Into that one,
I think they can now."
too.

Winfield Upstages Marvelous Marvin;
Expos, Vail Run Off Carlton, Phillies
NEW YORK — Whether the Yankees win or lose they
always put on a show.
Friday night was a big night Tor fights as Marvelous
Marvin Hagler pummelled
Wllford Scyplon to the
canvas for a fourth-round knockout. Dave Winfield,
however, wasn't about to be upstaged as he scuttled
with Oakland catcher Mike Heath and was promptly
banished from the game.
Oakland starter Mike Norris whistled a fastball past
Winfield's head In the first Inning and the 6-6 slugger
pointed an evil finger at the A's right-hander along with
a few choice words. Oakland catcher Heath then
Interceded and Winfield, using his superior reach,
arrested Heath's neck before both benches turned the
bout Into a battle royal.
Lost in the scuffle was a 4-2 Yankee victory. Oakland
Jumped on starter Ron Guidry for two runs In the first
on a homer by Steve Burroughs, but Guidry. 6-3. with
relief help from Rich "G oose" Gossage blanked the A ’tf
the rest of the way. Greg Nettles walloped a three-run
homer In the seventh to saddle Norris with the loss.
Most o f the fireworks, though, came after the game
when Yankee owner George Stelnbrcnncr Jumped all
over umpires Darryl Cousins and John Shulock.
"Umpires Cousins and Shulock. who are two umpires
who worked during the strike and who other umpires
refuse to talk to. have both been put on 'the same
umpiring team and it has resulted In a very poor team."
said Stclnbrenner.
Cousins, of course, had a comeback. "T h e guy
(Stclnbrenner) sits up In the stands and Judges us. If he
wants to be buddy-buddy with some of the umpires,
that's fine with me. He's (had a grudge) for us since the
strike. I know one thing you're not going to call balls
and strikes from on television," he said.
American League President Lee McPhail came to his
umps rescue, though. He said disciplinary action would
be taken against Stclnbrenner who made his remarks
during the game.

-M e n ’s S o f t b a llSANFORD M EN'S S O FT B A LL LEADERS
Standings
Team
W en
Leet
DeLuxe Bar...................................
17
0
Uncle Nick’s Oyster Bar..............................14
4
S &amp; H Fabricating......... .......
12
6
Pookle Bears........ ...................
12
7
Session Time.................
10
9
Express......................... ....;........ ............. 6
11
Cen. Fla. Reg. Hospital.................
7
11
MobUlte......................................
2
16
Harcar...............................
1
17
B attin g A vera ge
Ned Raines (DeLuxe)..........................................792
Marie Manning (8 &amp; H)....... ..............'................. 647
David Price (Unde Nick's)........... ......................647
Dean Krick (S Sr H ) U ................ .................965
Wayne Crocker (Poolde).....................
.593
Sonny Eubanks (Express)........... i .......... ..........645
Fred Aiken (Pookle).........................
543
Don Cauaseaux (DeLuxe)....... ................... ........933
Slim Washington (DeLuxe).... ...........
..909
Levi Raines (DeLuxe)...,................
.500
Carl Manning Jr. (S ft H)....;............ ..................900
David Lively (Uncle Nick's).... ......
...476
Doug Burleson (Pookle). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 7 5
Line Larson (Express)..... T '.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 6 3
Sam Raines (DeLuxe)
Wayne Ruaaell (Uncle Nick's)........... /............ ...446
Steve Lctchworth (Hospital)... . . . . . . . .444
Eddie Jackaon (DeLuxe)....................................443,
Russell Holloman (Session).... ..............
424
s*
i ir-, •v j 'CSc . * . it..'it’’, v-v ■**'-/&gt;• iV
H aaaaR w w 1
Eddie Jackson (DeLuxe)............................
12
Levi Raines (DeLuxe},...,..,........
.9
Don Cauaseaux (DcLuxe).*»**..a..............................6
Ned Raines (DeLuxe)...,....... ..............................,...7»
Leon Anderson (Express)............. .........................7
Fred Aiken (Pookle),. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Wayne Crocker (Pookle).................
......6
Doug Burieson (Pookle)..............
.«.«.««.,...9
, -- li-i &gt;j . ,4
J , ; .,-V " ,'1 \ f -* * ' &lt;
MobUlte knows bow to no (rim) one extreme to
another )n the Sanfw dM firsB oB hffh1-*-1^
On Monday the MobUlte crew
Harcar, 30-1, in a battle between two t w n a w w n i
had Just two wins between them. O n W e * m e * y . f

l

-

j.

I

LEADERS

A.L./N.L. Baseball
White Box 3. Rangers 2
CHICAGO — Left fielder Ron Kittle powered a two-run
homer In the second Inning while LaMarr Hoyt tossed a
six-hitter as the Pale Hose nipped Texas. Ex-SCC
standout Larry Parrish had two hits for Texas. Harold
Baines drove In a run for the Sox and Larry Sample
homcrcd for the Rangers.
Tigers 7-2, Twins 4-1
DETROIT — Larry Herndon ripped a 12th-innlng
home run as the Tigers swept the Twins. Hcrdon's
opposite-field shot came ofT Rick Lysandcr and saddled
the Twins' rookie with both losses.
In game one. Glenn Wilson and Enos Cabell drove in
runs In the seventh Inning as the Tigers rapped out 12
hits. John Wockcnfuss homcrcd for the Tigers.
Mariners 7, Brewers 5
Seattle won for the sixth time In nine games when It
erupted for four runs in the ninth to top the (laundering
Brewers. Julio Cruz drilled a two-out single to left to
provide the margin of difference. Steve Henderson roped
three doubles.

Angels 8, Indians 4
California won Its fifth straight when Bob Boone
singled home Daryl Sconlers from third base with one
out In the 12th inning. Rod Carcw had three hits for the
Angels while Luis Sanchez picked up his fifth win In six
decisions.
Orioles 7, Royals 4
Baltimore snapped a seven-game losing skein as Eddie
Murray and Gary Rocnlckc clubbed homers while Storm
Davis. 3-1, and Tippy Martinez combined on an
eight-hitter.
It was the Birds first win since May 19. Larry Gura.
who was off to a 4-0 start, lost his sixth straight decision.
Expos 7, Phillies 4.

D A V E W IN F IE L D

GOOSE GOSS A G E

PHILADELPHIA - For once Steve Carlton didn’t have
it.
Needing Just 11 strikeouts (o overtake new K-klngpin
Nolan Ryan, the Phillies' big left-hander lasted Just five
Innings as the Expos ripped him for 10 hits and four
runs cn route to victory. Carlton struck out Just two.
"I was gonna bunt five times, but I wasn’t going to be
the one to help him break the record," said Montreal's
Tim Raines Friday. Raines was l-for-3 with a run scored
and an RBI.
Raines walked to lead off the first and recentacqulsitlon Mike Vail followed with a two-run homer to
give Montreal the lead. Al Oliver and Tim Wallach
followed with doubles Tor another run. Scott Sanderson,
4-4. picked up the win and JciT Reardon earned his fifth
save.
Cab* 8, Braves 6
ATLA N TA — The Cubbies continued to bombard
Atlanta pitching as Jody-Davis slugged two homers and
Warren Brusstar gained his first win of the season with
3V» innings o f relief work. Lee Smith picked up his sixth
save.
Ken Smith hit his first homer o f the year for the
Braves.

Red* 9, Pirates O
CINCINNATI — Mario Soto blanked the Pirates on five
hits for his second shutout and Eddie Milner drove In
three runs as the Reds snapped a three-game losing
streak. Milner's two-run double In the fifth broke up
pitching duel between Soto and John Candelaria and
highlighted a seven-run outburst.

SCORECARD
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M o tt Im p ro v e d ..............................Bob K u llk
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Q (1-7) 75.40 -T (1 -7 4 ) *4441 B ig Q
O utstanding S p rin te r.......Showande
JTOpm
( I w ith a ll) 42 JO (7 w ith a l l) 4244
W H Ila m t
Mey 11- PhIlpdtIphI* *1Lot Angetot.
Seventh race — *», C i 44:71
O utstanding J u m p e r....L o ri C a rro ll
tpm.
5 Bonnie Raya
11 20 1.20 4.10
O utstanding T h ro w e r............A ngele
» Juno 7 - Lot Angelut et PhlMil
1 F la t O ut
540
340
French
phie.tp m
4 DC l Shogun
13.00
O utstanding D istan ce R unner
• Jim* t - Philtdtlphii «t Lot
Q l l - l ) 44.24 T (5 1 4 )1 ,1 7 1 4 0
...........................................C indy C eskell
Angtitt.4pm.
E ig h th r a c e - 7/1*. C i 44:01
“ A da m
DeMJno H u m a n ita ria n
i Juno I - Lot Angtttt el Pfciodti
7 A o rta B roa dfo ol
1.30 4.00 100
p h lo , t p m .
4 A ir C o n tro lle r
4 20 140 A th le te
A w a rd and S cholarship..... Donna
2 D u v a l* F rid a y
5.10
K ilb o u m o
Q (4-7) 17J O T (74 -1) I7J JO
L y m a n A th le tic Booster Scholastic
N in th race — 5/14. • : 11:77
SOUTHAMERICANSOCCERLEAGUE
4 Toa and C rum pet 12JO 4 1 0 4 4 ) A w a rd l t d
t t t P la ce ................. Shane H a rw e ll
EttNni
4 B o n ita B u rn e r
5 JO 4.30
L y m a n A th le tic Booster Scholastic
V LOF 0A RP PH.
5 M o u n ta in G ou rm et
340
' A w a rd
New York
4 1 N 12 II 54
0 (4 4 ) 54.40 T (4 4 -5 ) 224J0 0 .0 .
2nd P la ce ...................D a v id Jacobs
Toronto
I 2 15 0 11 45
(74)44.20
L y m a n A th la tlc Booster Scholastic
Montrtsl
J 4 12 tl 10 It
10th ra c e - 5 / 1 4 , A t llt O I
Chicogo
7 0 5 7 4 1*
2 Sargent B llk o
110 0 20 4.M A w a rd
3rd P la ce ....................J o h n Fisher
t O C 't Space Shot
i n
140
P lague (Bj i IO) — W illia m (T on y)
7 H e fty Rebel
240 B ro
oksO (1 4 ) 4 1 J 0 T (4-1-7) 11040
F o r y o u r supp ort o f Lym a n
I t lh r a c o — S /l4 .C :S 2 iO I
A th le tics P ro g ra m , M a y. l t d
IL o o k in S n a u y
1 4 0 5 JO 140
P iaquo ( I x l l ) — Kan B row n —
1 F la tte r
140 4.40
In a p p re cia to n lo r serving a t
• K in g P m B ea r
140 president o l L y m a n A th la tlc Boostar
0 11 1) I t J I T ( 1 1 4 ) 21144;
C lub, t i n ' l l
I (1 2 4 -7 4 4 4 -1 ) I W in n e r I4 J M J 0 .
P lague &lt; » * * ) - Don Hughes I it h ra c e — 7 /I t , O ; 45:14
F o r y o u r support o l Lym a n
4 C a ro n K ra m e r
1040 * 20 * 00
A th le tic s P ro g ra m . M a y, l t d
) I C M W in n e r Deg
100 IJ O
I P ete P e tr M e*
44 0
0 (1 4 ) n 4 0 T (* -&gt; 4 ) 1J44J0; B ig
Q 11444
A - 2 J 2 7 ; M e n d M tn iJ M .
UNITED STATES FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Dog Racing

Tulis
Teem Amerles
Temps Bsy
Ft. LsuderOsk

R U N S — M u rp h y.
Atlanta. 36; LcMaster. San
Francisco. 33: Garvey. San
Diego. 32; Evans. San
Francisco. 31: Guerrero.
Los Angeles, 29.
R B I b — Murphy.
Atlanta, 36: Hendrick. St.
Louis. 32; Brock, Los
A n g e le s . 29: D aw son.
Montreal. 29; T Kennedy.
San Diego. 29.
HITS — Thon. Houston.
56: Ocstcr, Cincinnati. 53;
R Ramirez, Atlanta. 53:
Bonilla. San Diego. 52: 4
arc tied with 50.
DOUBLES - J Ray.
Pittsburgh. 15: Bench,
C in cin n a ti 12: Ash by,
Houston. 11: Buckner.
C h ica go . 11: Daw son,
Montreal, 11: Evans, San
Francisco. I I .
T R IP L E S — Moreno,
H o u s to n . 5: D a w so n .
M o n t r e a l, 4 : R a in e s .
Montreal. 4: 6 are tied with
3.
H O M E R U N S Guerrero, Los Angeles. 11:
M u rp h y. A tla n ta . 1 1:*
Brock. Los Angeles, 9;
Evans. San Francisco, 9;
Kingman. New York. 9.
STOLEN BABEB Wilson. New York. 16:
L a c y . P itts b u rg h . 15;
M oreno. H ouston , 15;
LcMaster. San Francisco.
14; S Sax, Los Angeles,
14.
P I T C H I N G (4 d e ­
cisions) — Stewart. Los
Angeles. 4-0, l.OOO. 1.36:
McMurty, Atlanta. 7-1,
.8 7 5 , 2 .3 2 ; R o g e r s .
Montreal. 7-1. .875, 2.15;
A Pena. Los Angeles, 5-1.
.8 3 3 . 1 .9 1: P P e r e z .

Tire &amp; Muffler
340S FMNCH AVI. (17-93)
SANFORD - PH. 3314)930
U M lM W Iw .
Oh * M 774-1071

USFL

Award*

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ON
1

IIFITIMI OUARANTU

MUFFLERS
*14*s

NBA

Soccer

Atlanta. 5-1. .833,2.13.
STRIKEOUTS —
Carlton. Philadelphia. 77:
McWilliams. Pittsburgh.
62: Soto. Cincinnati. 56:
Bcrcnyl, Cincinnati. 55:
Rogers. Montreal. 52.
SAVES - S Howe. Los
Angeles. 7: Lavclle. San
Francisco. 6; Minton. San
Francisco. 6; DeLeon. San
Diego, 5; Forster, Atlanta.
5: Hume, Cincinnati. 5;
Stewart. Los Angeles. 5.
RUNS — Castlno. Min­
nesota, 37: Brett. Kansas
City. 33: Ford. Baltimore.
31; Boggs. Boston. 28:
McRae, Kansas City, 28;
Ripken, Baltimore, 28.
R B Ib W ard. M in­
nesota. 36; Brett. Kansas
City. 34; Rice. Boston. 33:
H rbek, M innesota, 32;
Kittle, Chicago. 31.
HITS Carcw.
California, 64: Castlno.
M innesota. 57: Boggs.
B o s to n . 5 5; Y o u n t.
M ilw a u k e e , 54: Ford,
Baltimore. 53.
DOUBLES Hrbek,
M in n e s o ta . 15: F o rd .
Baltimore, 14; Bcrnazard.
Chicago. 13; Brett, Kansas
City. 13: B Bell. Texas. 12:
McRae, Kansas City. 12.
TRIPLES - G Wilson.
D e t r o it , 5: C M o o re ,
M ilw au kee. 4: G riffin .
Toronto. 4: Herndon. De­
troit, 4: W infield. New
York. 4.
HOME RUNS - Brett.
Kansas City. 11: DeCInces.
California, 11: Castlno.
Minnesota. 9; LAParrish,
Texas, 9: Rice. Boston. 9:
Winfield. New York, 9.

IN S T A L L A T IO N A V A I L A B L I

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■7611................... 17JA
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�Ivtirtm Hsrshl, Sanford, Fl,

...Hawks Corral
Lake Mary, 14-6

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EMt
NATIONAL L E A G U E

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Toronto
MJIwaukio
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Clovoland *
Dotroil

Montrtal *IP hll*dtlpfcli.pp d, r*ln
P ttM urgh 4, Cincinnati*
Chicago S. Atlanta 1
SI. L a u lti. houiton]
San Francisco 1. Lot Angola* 1
F r l d t y 'i Oa m i i
(AMTHm i EDT)
Pittsburgh (C M o ia rla 14) a) Cinein
M i lli o n *
Chicago (m in o r , «) *1 Atlanta I P r t i
ill,1 :4 0 p m
Montreal I Lee A ll e l PhUadoighl*
(Dewy 411.1.OSp m
SI. Laud (Anduler )4 I e l te u to n
(N N k re J O .I M p m
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ID ra w c krA D .M M p -m .
San F ra n c lw (Hammakar * 1 ) at Lao
A n g te i IMFtkh i l l . » U pm .
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Chicago at Atlanta
San Francisco ol Lea Angtiot
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O v ie d o r e t u r n e r s
A n d re w S m ith (le ft)
a n d B a r r y W illia m s
'collide Will attem pting
to snare a kickoff (le ft)
a n d th e n c h a s e th e
loose ball (below ). The
Lions had trouble w ith
fum bles as they tied
Lake Brantley and lost
to DeLand in the Spring
Football Jam boree a t
B rantley F riday.
te r a ld PSseteo by T a m m y V incent

Ballon I. Toronto!
T a u t 1. Chicago)
Kansas Cttr L Baitlmara ]
F r l l i r ' t O a a iii
(A ll Timas EOT)
M inw io U (H a u n t 11 ate Flison ig )
at Datrsit (Morris ) i and Roiama 101, t
IX p .m .
ta lo n (Tudor } 1) at Toronto (Clancy

4!M:»p.m.
California IK Iu n A t) at Ckvatand
lllyltvtn*4|,M$p.M.

Oakland (Norris 441 at te n T o rt
(Guidry S I). Ip m.
Seattle (Parry 14) ot Mllwaukao
(McClurol F ),l:X p m .
T a u t (Tonone 10) at Chicago (te y t I
4 t.IX p .rn
B iltlm or* (Davis H ) at Kansas City
(Cure 4-1), l i l t m s .
le te d a y 1! S o u r
ta lo n at Toronto
M irw a so le elM ralt
Trie s at Chicago
Oakland at t e n Tart, night
Raltlmaro at Kansas City, night
Seattle el M ilw sA ea.nifM
California at Cleveland, night

Despite an influx of young talent. Al Sr. doesn’t
believe the era of the veteran Indy driver is over. He
recalls that nobody figured him a threat In 1978 when
he won Indy for the third time.
" A darkhourse can win It and it’ ll be fair and square."
he exphasizes.
Looking proudly at his son during a Thursday news
conference, the elder Unser said he was apprehensive
about the youngster's rapid advance In racing "until I
watched him win the Can-Am series and I knew he had
matured enough to race at Indy.
" I feel he is, percentage-wise, 100 percent better than
me at his age. In no way would I have tackled Indy when
I was 21. They would have chewed tnc •
nd spit me
out. I was 25 when I first came here."
On Sunday, experience, talent, desire and a stronger
car will determine who finishes ahead in the family race
feud.

mm#

- W o m e n ’s Softball-1
s Softball Leaders
;■
(S&amp;H)
Const ISH)
.

INDIANAPOLIS (UPt) - The en­
dorsem ents and publicity that
usually become by-products o f a
champion have failed to materialize
fully for 1982 IndlanapoliB 500 mile
champion Gordon Johncock.
The quiet. afTable driver, who won
his first Indy classic In 1973, reveals
that he’s been contacted by an
airlin es tn his home state o f
Michigan about to launch opera­
tions and a situation with a Detroit
auto manufacturer Is being worked
out. But there’s none o f Uic hoopla
that followed Rick Mears* 1979
victory.
J o h n c o c k a d m its he h asn ’ t
become the household name like
Mears and is a bit peeved because
he never received the recognition
deserving o f a champion.
" I ’m going to have to say that
Roger Penske has a lot to do with
Mears being In the spotlight." says
Johncock. "A s soon as Pcnnzoll
hooked up with Penske, you began
seeing Mears In television ads. That
really upset me because STP hasn't
done anything for me. We win the
greatest race any place and what do
they do with It? Nothing.
"It’s hurt me. It’s hurt them. It
definitely hurt me and I'm really
unhappy about the situation. Maybe
It's up to my car owner Pal Patrick.
Who knows? This may be more
personal for me than him.”
Johncock has been in the back*

Indy 500
ground this month because hts car
failed to achieve a 200-mile quali­
fying average and he isn't sure there
w ill be much im provem ent in
Sunday's race.
"W e ’ve ruined three cars here In
May trying to get the right car
w o r k in g ," exp lain s Johncock.
"Speedwise, we’ re lucky to reach
our present stage. We didn’ t have
much time to dial In before quali­
fying our car.
" I think 1 would feel a little more
comfortable if I had run 200 tn
qualifying. It means that you could
run 200 In some point o f the race
and you're much hiore capable of
running constant 198's at race
speed. That’s more than I will be
going. It'll be easier for the other
drivers than for me.
"Still, If you remember last year
the best I ran was a 203 and Mears
had a 207 in qualifying. Bill when It
came down to the race we were
working as well. From about lap
155. ( was working as even or better
than Rick. We’ ll be working on the
car all through Sunday's race. As
you know, when you're running
500 miles, you can make the
adjustments. You have the tim e."
Asked about race plana, Johncock
replies; "How do you plan race

Ploy te te r Golf wMi JACK WCKLAUS

Owtk
a n d la c k ti

O«tWMi't*f0fcl4taM«aR1aMl
M w te " « M O rM r“

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Al Unser Jr. has a unique
situation in Sunday's Indianapolis 500 mile race as he
competes against hts father, a three-time Indy winner.
" I don’ t think there's been anybody as young as Al to
come along with as much talent,” says his father, Al Sr.
"Owners used to steer away from young drivers because
they didn’ t have the smarts to stay away from the wall.
I'm Jusi sorry hts Uncle Bobby'ls not in the race. That
would have been something, wouldn’t It? It would have
been unique.”
Father and son, aged 43 (44 on race day) and 21
respectively, have raced against each other twice, the
most recent In Atlanta on April 17 when Al Sr. finished
second and Al Jr. was sixth. The two meetings erased
any concern the father had about his son racing tn
chsunpcars.
"Fortunately. I raced with my brother Bobby so long
that I'm used to having family in a race," says the elder
Al. "Besides, I'll be too wrapped up In my own
concentration to worry about my son.
Young Al says he's not worried, either.
" I won’t be thinking too much whether my dad's okay
because I've watched him race too many years, ever
since I was eight-years-old. Dad hasn't crashed In a long
time and the last time It happened I wasn't there. 1won't
w ony If he crashes until they let me know what's going
on."
Al Sr. expects the family racing tradition will prevail
for several more years. Just because hts son has
graduated to the Indy ranks and will perpetuate the
family name In the sport doesn't mean It will Influence
"an early retirement."
"Bobby retired a champion at 47 after he won at the
Speedway." says Al Sr. "I won't retire until I'm no
longer competitive. There’s always another victory here
to aim for.”
Both Unsers agree there are 10 or 12 drivers capable
and with the equipment to win Sunday's race. Their
qualifying speeds point up this factor. They also believe
there are bound to be many failures among the 200 mile
an hour drivers If they decide to stand on the throttle
throughout the race.

Endorsements Haven't Come For Johncock

STANDINGS

M, 1W-11A

Younger Unser
Has The Talent

Continued from 9A.
In the second Big Blue drive. Shatlo moved for 13. Bill
Black scampered for 20 and Chuck Stallings went for 10
as the clock wound down to 33 seconds.
Armstrong, who ran for 44 yards on eight carries for
the night, slashed to the 5, but Turbyflcld batted away
Kenny VanCaslcm’s pass to Rex Black to halt the drive.
Craig Marlcn’s field goal from the 22 with one second
left fell short.
Q uarter Pour
L A K E H O W ELL 14. L A K E M A R T 6
Not a whole lot o f defense in this one, but It was
exciting. After Lake Mary fatted to move, a short punt
gave the Hawks the bail at the Ram 42. Seven plays
later. Slack had them In the end zone. Versatile Bill
Lang had the key gainer, a 15-yard Jaunt. Slack zipped a
strike to sophomore Jimmy Daniel for nine yards and
the TD with 6:55 to go. Robert Kerr’s boot made ft 7-0.
Hartsflcld, who was too quick for DcLand. had his
troubles outrunning Lake Howell’s containment. After
he was sacked for the third time. Nelson jumped on his
case. "R ay made a couple of bonehead plays." said
Nelson. "H e was running to the sideline with the guy
when he knows he’s got to cut In. You have to realize
he’s Just 15 years old. I’ m glad It happened tonight, but
wc don’ t want It to happen again."
Joe Brandon picked off a Hartsflcld pass with a diving
catch at the Lake Mary 37 and four plays later. Slack
found Solomon on a slant in for 33 yards and a
touchdown. Kerr made ft 14-0 with Just 1:55 to play.
- The Rammics. though, weren’t dead. Hartsftcld.
responding to the tongue-lashing, tossed a 15-yard
strike to Billy Dunn and another 15-yardcr to Grayson
for a first down at the Lake Howell 29 with Just 43
seconds to play.
On the next play, the shifty frash rolled left and turned
" to corner. He dodged in and out o f tackles 29 yards for a
’ spectacular score. Wcllon swept the right side for two
' points, but the play was called back by a yellow flag.
An onsldes kick was recovered by Howell and Slack
' Immediately lilt Solomon for 37 yards to the 11. Three
Incomplctlons followed, although the third was Just ofT
Solomon's hands at the goal line.
Q uarter F ive
L A K E B R A N T L E Y 8. L A K E HO W ELL 7
This quarter had everything and It may be a prelude
’ to the county's top teams. Lake Howell, using a 28-yard
return by Lang, started at Its 30 and put together an
impressive nine-play. 70-yard drive for a touchdown.
' Robey, the county's most valuable player last fall, broke
loose for 39 yards to the Patriot 33 on the first play.
Cardenas. Robey and Cardenas again combined for 18
yards to the 15 before Slack hit John "N o Relation"
McKay at the 8 on a look In. McKay dragged a defender
to the 4.
Robey then powered to the 1. but a great hit by
O'Brian stalemated him at the six-inch line. Robey tried
' again, but Pat James crunched him for a one-yard loss.
Then from the two. Robey followed Manuel and Royal
into the end zone. Kerr kicked the lead up to 7-0 with
8:27 to go.
Brantley, nevertheless, was Just as Impressive when It
got the hall. Steve Emmons ran twice for 10 yards.
Armstrong added seven. Stalling chipped In seven and
Armstrong came back with five more for a first down at
the LB 41. Three plays later, VanCastren hit John Harris
. for a first down at the LH 35 and on the next play the
Hawks were caught faccmnsklng to set up the Patriots at
' the 14. Brandon came out o f nowhere to tag Emmons for
' a three-yard loss, but Sbatto broke Inside for 10 yards to
the 7. Shatto then hit for two more before Armstrong
followed an escort o f Wittlck. Mater and Ince Into the
1end zone for the TD from five yards out. Armstrong
came back on the same play over the right side for two
points and an 8-7 trad with just 2:18 to play.
The time, however, was enough for Slack. After an
Incompletion, he hit McKay for 17 yards to midfield.
Freshman Mike Kelly went four yards on a draw, but
two more completions made It fourth and six with 1:09
left to play.
Slack faded to pass, but for the first time all night hts
1 protection faded, too. Patriots Larry Frocmlng and
Chris Anderson swarmed in on Slack and dropped him
for an 11-yard loss to preserve the victory.
"Larry (Frocmlng)
was holding him (Slack).” said
Andcrean amidst thrjubllatlon. "I Just helped him.”
If this keeps up. Five-Star opponents will be the ones
needing the help.

Sunday. May

strategy? How do you know the
exact fuel mileage you can get out of
the car? How do you know how fast
you can run? As far as I’m con­
cerned strategy is planned as you go
along, lap by lap while the race la In
progress."
Having rookie Teo Fabl on the
pole won't affect any game plan
Johncock might have. He feels Fabt
has a lo t o f exp erien ce from
Formula One and Can-Am racing.
"H e’s had high speed experience.
If Fabl had come from Super Vees It
definitely would have bothered me.
He's pretty cool. 1 dont foresee any
problems at the start o f the race."
All Johncock wants is perfect
weather for race day. Stiff winds
might hamper some drivers and
cars. Such a situation occurred
earlier this month when • sudden
gust pushed veteran driver Johnny
Rutherford into the wall and he
suffered fractures o f both legs.
"However, If a car Is set up the
way you want. It takes a pretty
strong gust o f wind to put you out of
control and make you get Into
trouble," Johncock emphasizes. " I f
you have a car that Isn't properly
set up and you're making changes
here and there, It'a very bad to try
and get the car working properly
becauae you never know wnat'a
happening. At this moment, I'm not
even sure how my car will behave
under stressful conditions."

W

L
9

3
6 -4
7- 5
1-11

HR| U t t m l i n y Sue Ollmorr (S&amp;H) .556;
Tltfper (8H) .556; Sonia Cherry IE) .527:
Randall (El .517: Dee Hogan (S&amp;H) .500; Joie
(S&amp;H) .4571 Nancy Vanwormer (SH) .454;
Ptadanrla (S&amp;H) .443; Deb Anderson (SHI
,ynn8nrtth(B) ,375: Beth Corao(SH) .370.
M Mary Sue Ollmore (S&amp;H) 20; Dee Hogan
17: Joyce Randall (E) 15; Jole Boyles (S&amp;H)
nla Cheny (E) 12; Anna Nelson (E) 12; Deb
ion (SH) 11: Janet Hauck (SH) 11: Cindy
ftndandatSftH) 11; Beth Corso (SHI 10.
■ tta i Mary Sue Qdmore (8&amp;H) 20; Sonia Cherry
(E) 10; Dee Hogan (S&amp;H) 17; Cindy Pendarvls
(S&amp;H) 17; Jote Boyles (S&amp;H) 16; Deb Anderson (SH)
16: Joytx Randall (E) 15; Betty Turner (SH) 15;
Maxine Campbell (SH) 12; Anna Nelson (E) 11.
DanMaat Joyce Randall (E) 5; Maxine Campbell
(SH) 3:' Betty Turner (SH) 2: Mary Sue Gilmore
Boyles (S&amp;H) 2; Cindy Pendarvls
iry Sue Gilmore (S&amp;H) 4; Nancy
M ^ e H o g u i ( S &amp; H ) 2: Jole B oyk «
Cherry (E) 2.
• Sonia Cherry (E) 2: Jote Boyles
Sue Ollmore (3&amp;H) 2; Cindy Henry
4&amp;STM Dee Hogan (S&amp;H) 7-1: Diane
5*2; Betty Turner (SH) 5*3; CeCe
•d.-' - i . - • .
‘

�4

1 IA -E v »n ln g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, M ay » , m i

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Reporter A rrested In
Hitler Diary Fraud
HAMBURG. West Germany — A Jailed dealer
of Nazi artifacts has admitted he forged the
Hitler diaries and claims the reporter who
bought them for Stern magazine knew they
were a hoax.
After Konrad Kujau. 44. made his confession,
police arrested the fired Stern reporter. Gcrd
ilcldcmann. 51. and questioned him all day.
said Peter Beck, a spokesman for the stnte
prosecutor's office, Heidcmnnn faces possible
charges of fraud.
The newspaper Ulld Zeilung said Kujau. 44.
signed the confession "Yours truly. Adolf Hiller,
alias Konrad Kujau." The newspaper said Kujau
practiced for two years to perfect the old
German script used In the 62 phony volumes of
diaries.
Beck said Investigators today were still
examining papers, books and pictures con­
fiscated during searches of Hcldcmann's home,
office and luxury yacht — once the property of
Luftwaffe chief Hermann Gocring — and of
Kujau's home and shop selling military relics of
the Nazi era.
Stern, the country's most widely read
newsweekly with a circulation of about 1.6
million, has not recovered any of the 83.75
million it paid for the diaries. Kujau. in a
statement released by his attorney earlier, said
he received less than SI million.

Soviets Threaten NATO
MOSCOW — Tile Soviet government made a
veiled threat Friday to install nuclear missiles
on the territory of its Warsaw Pack allies If
NATO goes ahead with plans to install new
medium-range U.S. rockets In Western Europe
in December.
A government statement also threatened to
Increase the number of SS-20 missiles In the
European part of the Soviet Union. It warned
that the K rem lin w ould reco n sid er its
moratorium on deployment of these weapons if
the North Atlantic Alliance begins installing the
572 new U.S. Pershing 2 and Tomahawk cruise
missiles.
The United Slates and the Soviet Union have
been negotiating a reduction of medium-range
nuclear weapons In Europe for a year and a half
without any major breakthrough.

Latin Ministers To Discuss Peace Moves
By Frederick K ie l
Last week, the U.N. Security Council, including the
MEXICO CITY (UP1) — Four Latin American nations
United States, voted unanimously to approve the efforts
seeking peace In Central America open a new round of of the Contadora Group.
talks this weekend filled with self-confidence and
Mexican Ambassador to the United Nations. Porfirlo
buoyed by the approval o f the U.N. Security Council,
Munoz Ledo. said the U.N, decision meant thal Latin
They also sec their search for peace as a declaration of
America was no longer the "reserved dominion” o f any
Independence in foreign affairs by Latin America from
power, a clear reference to the Monroe Doctrine of the
the United States — a mood that will be reinforced if
United States.
their mission succeeds.
"For the first time since Its creation, the U.N. Security
Foreign ministers from Mexico. Venezuela, Panama
Council ... took a decision In a conflict strictly In Latin
and Colombia plan three days o f talks in Panama City,
America and of questions relative (o this zone." Munoz
starting Saturday, with their counterparts from the five
said In a visit to Mexico.
embattled Central Amcriran nations — Costa Rica.
Venezuelan President Luis Herrera Cumplns said Ibis
Nicaragua. El Salvador. Guatemala and Honduras.
week "the Contndora group's work thus far has been
The four countries make up the Conladora group,
named after the Panamanian island where they first met highly productive because it consists of a group of Latin
Americans that arc seeking solutions to Latin American
In January’.
problems, which wc must solve without undue
Appalled by the growing violence in Central America
and fears of U.S. military involvement, the four nations Interference or meddling by countries (outside the
determined to seek a way to end the violence, pointedly region)."
not Including the United States In their negotiations.
The Venezuelans believe that a success by the
They feared the explosion o f a wider Central American Contndora Group would be a major step forwartl for
war could spill over into Mexico In the north and Latin Americans to solve other tough issues that may
Panama in the south.
arise In the region, one official said.
Venezuela and Colombia, while not immediately
There is no clear sign, however, o f exactly how they
threatened, have the same overall objectives — to keep can satisfy the warring factions as well as the United
the United States out o f the region, bring peace to the States.
countries Involved and assert their leadership in Latin
The main combatants are Nicaragua. Honduras and El
America.
Salvador. Leftist Nicaragua is accused o f aiding

daughters. Miss Michele
S h a c f e r . U .S. Mari ne
Corps. Belhcsda. Md.. Mrs.
Sandra Paul o f Roseville.
Ohio. Mrs. Jo Ann Clouse.
Junction City. Ohio, and
Mrs. Cheryl Miller. Pit­
tsburgh. Pa.; and six
grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home
Is in charge o f arrange­
ments.
HRS. HELEN R.
BEAVER
Mrs. Helen R. Beaver.
89. o f 950 Mcllonville
Avc.. Sanford, died Satur­
day at the Sanford Nursing
and Convalescent Home.
Born March 4. 1894. In
South Carolina, she moved
to Sanford five years ago
from Birmingham. Ala.
She was a Methodist.
Survivors are one son.
W i l l i a m A. Reyno ld s,
Sanford: three g ra n d ­
children and six great­
grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral home

Continued from 1A

before. They Just knew
you was a farmer and you
was in trouble and they
brought stuff to help." he
said."They gave us en­
couragement and offered
to have a barn raising this
summer, but I had no
money for materials.

Salvadoran guerrillas. Nicaragua charges that Honduras
has allowed the CIA to set up Nicaraguan rebel bases on
Its soil.
Costa Rica, with no'army of Its own. fears growing
rebel activity along Its border will attract incursions by
the Nicaraguan army, the largest In Ccnlral America.

ERNIE &amp;DAVE

The skin came olT his
fingers, but he did not lose
h is h a n d s . " I t w a s
gruesome." he recalls. "T o
this day my hands are
kind of screwed up. They
arc very sensitive to hot or
cold.”
"Th e Irony ot It was that
"For three years we had
no gifts for Christmas, wc had worked hard all
nothing new; everything I morning getting the barn
made went into the farm. cleaned up for a Grade A
We made do with the In sp ection , and If wc
clothes wc had," said Eg- passed that would mean
gerlch. "I borrowed money that at last the farm would
to keep the farm going. My begin to be a paying pro­
dad has gone to Minnesota position. The Inspector
now to try to sell what Is was due in about an hour
left o f the farm . The and we were in the kitchen
814,250 Insurance money having lunch." he said.
didn’t even cover the value "M y son. who was home
on Christmas leave, looked
o f our cows.
"Our neighbors fought out the window and saw
the fire for 14 hours what looked like wisps of
straight In the cold and smoke above the barn
their wives brought food. I roof, but thought it might
cried like a baby, wc had be snow swirling around.
neighbors turn up to help
"T h e whole hay mow
us I had never even seen came down on the cows. If

is in charge of arrange­
ments.
MRS. ELIZABETH
WEBSTER
Mrs. Elizabeth Webster.
90. o f 815 Park St..
California. Pa., a winter
resident o f Kissimmee and
Lake Mary, died early Sat­
urday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Born
March 14. 1893. in Speers.
Pa., she was a homemak­
er.
Survivors Include four
daughters, Mrs. Dorothy
Norris, of Kissimmee. Mrs.
G l a d y s O l s o n ,
Youngstown. Ohio. Mrs.
Emma Jane Stevenson,
Newell, Pa. and Mrs. Ellen
Kagle of Lake Mary: two
sons. Harold Gregory of
California. Pa., and Sam
Gregory o f Brownville. Pa.:
seven grandchildren. 18
great-grandchildren and
one g r e at - gr e at
grandchild.
G ra m kow - G aines

Funeral Home. Longwood.
Is In charge of local ar­
rangem en ts, Funeral
services will be held In
California, P a .- ah a later
date.
LEEFILIPPAZA
Mrs. Lee Filippazo, 82.
of 112 Essex St., Alta­
monte Springs, died Fri­
day at Life Care Center.
Altamonte Springs. Born
Aug. 26. 1900. In Italy,
she moved to Altamonte
Springs from Pompano
Beach In 1972. She was a
retired machine operator
and a member o f St. Mary
M agdalen C a th o lic
Church.
Survivors include one
son, J o se p h D eM il,
Lon gw ood : one sister.
Jean Guerriere. Altamonte
Springs, and three grand'
children.
Baldw in- Fairch ild
Funeral Home, Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.
ROCCO D1PIERRA
Mr. Rocco DiPierra. 84 of
176 S. Maitland Ave.,
Altamonte Springs, died
Friday at Florida Hospi­
tal—Altamonte. Bom April
25. 1899. In Palaglano.
Italy, he moved to Alta­
m onte S p rin g s from
Manhattan. N.Y. in 1980.
He was a retired pizza chef
and a member of St. Mary
M agd alen C a th o lic
Church.
Survivors Include his
wife. Rosa; three sons.
J o h n C. . L o n g w o o d .
Angelo. Yonkers. N.Y., and
Tony. West Palm Beach:
tw o d a u g h t e r s . R e n a
Campanall and Frances
Rclvlnl. both o f Altamonte
Springs: four brothers.
M arc o . A n t o n i o and
Leonard, all o f Italy, and
Frank. Bronx. N.Y.: one
sister. Rose Gentile, Italy,
and 11 grandchildren.
Baldw in- F a irch ild
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
am m grm enu

M IC H E L I, M R S. L U C IL L K I.
— F u nere l M m to r M rs . L u c ille
E . M ic tttit. t i . o t m W ile y A m ..
S sntorS, who SioS T h urw toy, w ill
t o c e te b re tto M onday a t I p.m . o t
A ll S o u ii C atholic C hurch. R o ta ry
w ill t o re c ite d M onday o t 1p.m . o t
A il S d u lt C h u rch by tho R oy.
W llllo m E n n lt. S u rlo l In A ll Soult
C e m e te ry . B r it t o n F u n a ro l
H om o P A in chorpo.

H

■zn

* T

’■“ * 1

*

jf-

' w •■&gt;

ARE BACK IN
BUSINESS

we had discovered the fire for God and our love for
10 minutes sooner we each other. That is as
would have probably been much as a n yo n e can
ERNIE I DAVE ARE BUCK IN BUSINESS
under there."
expect.
WASHING HOUSES 1 TRAILERS
" W e 'r e a born-again
The volunteer fire de­
REASONABLE RATES.
family, and you Just don’t
partment arrived Just in
ERNIE BAUMEISTER
quit. I could never take
time to keep the house, the
FO
R
M
ER
LY IN R U I I N I I I FO R 77 YEAR S
welfare handouts as long
pig house and chicken
114
Plnecrett
Drlvb, Sanford, FL
coop from going up In as I have two good legs
CALL
322-7682
and
arms
and
n
sound
flam es. T h e pigs and
chickens were later sold to body."
get the money to come to
Florida for a new start.
"Ironically, the morning
before the fire, my oldest
son was sitting on the
water tank leaning back
against the barn. He said.
Limited Selection of O ne Bedroom A vailable
'Dad. you know. It's hard
to describe what this
means. You know 1 think
we've flnully made it. If I
had it to do again. I don't
think I'd have enough
strength.' Less than two
APARTMENTS
hours later, there was
nothing."
Where do the Eggerlchs
2600
CALL 3 2 3 -4 0 0 0
get the strength to carry
on after such setbacks? "I
think it’s the fact wc'rc not
• Cenlraf Heat &amp; Air
Custom Drapes
the type to give up." he
• Energy Efficient Heal Pump
Wall-Wail Carpeting
said, "You can't look back,
• Go* Heal A Hot Water
FrostFiee Refrigerator
and cry over spilled milk.
• Walk-In CloMti
Stove
Y du can’t let It get the best
• Recreational Facillllw
On-Site Laundromat
of you. Wc worked a lot
and lost a lot. but we've
got our health, we work
DOVAl AMOGAN
good together, and we've
(R e n ta l A ssista n ce A v a ila b le )
got our faith. The most
Important thing is our lnvefP R

A T T E N T IO N SENIORS and ADULTS !

th e

GEORGIA ARMS

G e o r g ia A v e n u e

RAS&gt;

o w u r rm r s i s t r n h
■t
•
r

u m s

1

SUNDAY THRU WED. ONLY!
U S M INSPECTED

PARK AVE. A Mtb ST.
SANFORD
OPEN 7 DAYS—I A M . » P.M.

SANFORDAVE.atdtflST.
SANFORD

Sirloin *
Steak 1 . 9 9
lb5

I A M .4 P.M . SUN. S-1

GW ALTNEY
HICKORY SMOKED

BOY

SHANK
HAMS

BEEF
PATTIES

16 CT.
3 LB.

69T.
B U TT

—

$499
A

is.
TENDER TRIM

STEAK

CLUB $ 4 |3 8 T-BONE
STEAK * 2 S STEAK * 2

\

wit

USD* INSPECTED
TENDER TRIM

BEEF
HAMBURG

*y&lt;

PORK
PATTIES
16 0 L B 0 T .
8 PAK

BOX

MUSHROOM, SALISBURY, PIPPER,
ONKM, CHUCKWACON

USDA INSPECTED
FULLCUT TENDER TRIM

Funeral Nolle*

\

SOURCE Tb# World

...Fam ily Rebuilds For The Third Time

AREA DEATHS
JAMES RICHARD
SHARPER
M r. J a m e s R i ch ar d
Shacrer. 59. of 228 Sunset
Drive. Loch Arbor, died at
his home Frldav. Born
Aug. 20. 1923. in Fort
Wayne, hid., he moved to
Sanford in 1980 from
Charleston. W.Va. He was
a retired U.S. Navy veter­
an and served during
World War 11 and the
Korean Conflict. He was
also retired as an aircraft
mechanic and from the
Columbia Gus System.
Charleston. W.Va.
He was a member of the
Lutheran Church of the
Redeemer. Sanford: the
Sanford Kfwanls Club, the
Fleet Reserve. B. Duke
Woody. Branch 147: Dis­
abled American Veterans,
Chapter 30, and the
Birdtnen o f America.
Survivors Include one
son. D a v id M ic h a e l
Shacfer of Sanford: four

C R IS IS ZO N E
Central American Trouble Spots I

U lA lli SAUSAGE

IS CT.
311.

GEOBEL
OR

OLD
MILWAUKEE
24,
12 OZ.
CANS

IB .

�•

1

*

PEO PLE
Cvsnlflf H m k t laaford, PI.

Ssaday, May l«» ir n - iB

A uguat W leboldt, who m oved to Sanford in 1929 an d
oponod up o photography atudio, taya, W h en I began,
w o uaod d ry plotoa m odo from g lo a t. A rtific ia l
lighting w a t done m o$tly w ith tla th p o w d er*9

A u g u st W le b o ld t
w i t h t wo of hi s
children, Lydia
Carlson of Dallas,
T e xa s, and Bill
Wleboldt of .Sanford,
was honored on his
100th b i r t h d a y
Wednesday, M ay 25
In th e p a rlo r at
B r a m T o w e r s in
Sanford. Friends,
children and grand­
children joined the
celebrant for the
m em orable oc­
casion, Wl e bol dt
w as b o r n In
G erm an y in 1883
an d c a m e to
A m e r i c a as
grocery store clerk
when he was 15.

i

Centenarian
H ard-W orking G e rm a n Im m igrant
Clim bs To G o a l O f A ll- A m erican
Bjr Katherine Burkett
Special To The Herald
August Wleboldt has seen a century o f change.
He has seen this nation both from the eyes of one
o f Its newest citizens, as a German Immigrant, and
one of Its oldest citizens, as a centenarian.
Wleboldt was bom In Cuxhaen. Germany, on
May 25, 1883. At the age of 15, he boarded a ship
to the United States. He came over with a man
whose brother owned a grocery store In Savannah,
Ga.
The store owner had asked his brother to find a
young man to employ, and Wleboldt was eager for
the chance.
" I had desired to come to the United States for a
good many years. My oldest sister, who lived here
lor the rest o f her life, had come to Chicago when
she was 16.
“ Quite a few people were doing tills at the time *
the opportunities were greater," said Wleboldt.
During a trip back to Germany in 1907, Wleboldt
ran Into Mlml Meyer, a childhood friend he hadn’t
seen for years. She had also Immigrated to the
U.S., and was In the service o f a family in
Washington. D.C.
Upon his return to the U.S., Wleboldt went to live
with his sister In Chicago, but kept In touch with
Mlml Meyer. In 1908. he entered one of the two

photography colleges In the U.S., in Effingham, HI.
Wleboldt married Mlml Meyer In 1913, and they
moved to a farm near Ft. Meyers, FI. It was
primarily a chicken farm but they grew other
things. On his dresser,. Jjc has a picture of Mlml
holding a monsterous squash they had raised
there.
All three o f their children were bom during the
time they lived on the farm. The family eventually
moved to Sanford, and Wleboldt opened a
photography studio on Park Avenue tn 1928.
The business was located In an old two-story
house. The family lived In one part, and a portion
was renovated to accommodate the business. “ We
tore down part o f the porch and built the studio,”
said Wleboldt.
Wleboldt said that photography has changed
drastically since he began.
“ When I began, we used dry plates made from
glass. Artificial lighting was done mostly with (lash
powder. About the time I went Into business, they
began to use electricity.
" I started with an arc-light that they used to use
for street lighting. They used carbons one foot
long. The carbons In the street lights had to be
changed every day,” Weiboldt said.
He ran the studio until 1953 when his son took
over. His son owned It until several years ago. “ I
had it for almost 25 years and my son had It for

W elb w lth er
- * - *.
c o n g ra tu la te
W leboldt w ith
birthday
g re e tln g t

m m m m * • v * ***

a*f*M PtMtM by lUflMrtM Swfcvtl

almost 25 years • that's almost f ift y years between
us,” Wleboldt said.
Upon retirement, he and his wife moved to
Casselberry. During this time, Wleboldt became
friends with Jimmy Birkenmeyer, a Casselberry
resident who recently celebrated his 100th hlrthday. "H e was 13 days older than me - he used to
call me ‘kid’,” said Wleboldt.
He and Mlml celebrated their golden anniversary
In 1963. In 1971, Mlml died, and Wleboldt moved
to Bram Towers a year later.
Wleboldt spends his days reading and looking
after his apartment. " I do my own cooking and
housework." Wleboldt boasted.
His apartment Is comfortably furnished and
decorated with souvenlers of a century of happi­
ness. His walla are covered with photographs of his
children, his wife, his golden wedding anniversary
celebration and even a beloved professor from his
boyhood in Germany.
The shelf In the coffee table Is lined with
religious books, and more than a few Bibles • some
In German and some In English.
Out of his window. Wleboldt can sec the Sanford
that he has seen change over the course of time.
“ That Winn-Dixie used to be a mule stable,” he
recalls. Wleboldt said that although the automobile
was the main means of city transportation when he
arrived In Sanford, he remebers talk about
streetcars in years before.
Wleboldt remembers the economic situation of
Florida In the early part o f the century.
"W hen we came here, during the mid-twenties.
Florida was having a boom. Everything was
changing quickly, and property values tripled. I
knew people who would buy property in the
morning, sell It In the evening, and make a profit.
“ Then the market Just dropped. People began
leaving the state as fast as they came. You couldn’ t
sell.
"Most property was for sale by the company that
owned the mortgage. They sold the property
whenever they had a chance. Rents were cheap,
too,” Wleboldt said.
He remembers a house he bought then at 815
Laurel Ave. for 82.000.
Wieboldt'a three children are spread over the
globe. His oldest daughter. Wllhelmlne Wleboldt. Is

a missionary In India. His son Wilhelm (Bill) Is a
Sanford resident. Lydia Carlson, his youngest,
works with a group o f Bible translators. She Is
currently living in Dallas. Texas.
Wleboldt has seven grandchildren and two great
grandchildren.

Relaxing In his apartment at Bram Towers,
August Wleboldt lives alone and boasts that he
does all his housework and cooking.

,

Hello Dolly! It's So Nice To Have You Back...

T h a t's the real C arol
C h a n n ln g , a ll r ig h t ,
g e ttin g a ll em o tio n al
over a bouquet of red
roses when she showed
up for a fashion show In
Seminole County. The
" H e llo D o lly " star tells
Burdlnes vice president
and regional m anager
H ow ard A . V o lp ert and
s p e c ta to rs w h a t h e r
late stage husband says
about m oney and
spreading It around.

m
By Doris Dietrich
Hello Dolly you back...

U's so nice to have

Carol Channlng. the vivacious
energetic star o f "H ello D olly"
visited Seminole County Tuesday to
attend a fashion show. Fashions tor
the Theatre, presented at Burdlnes
in Altamonte Mali.
Miss Channlng Is appearing as
Dolly Levy In the popular play for
: the second time at the Bob Carr

Auditorium In Orlando. A t her
previous appearance over four years
ago, Mias Channlng celebrated her
2.000th performance with flair and
fanfare, Including a huge cake
wheeled on stage after the finale.
Howard A. Volpert, Burdlnes* vice
president and regional manager
Central Florida, says about 400
chairs were set up in the Better
Dress Department o f the store and
the crowds spilled over Into other
areas. He estimates about 1,000

spectators attended the show to
meet Miss Channlng who was there
with her husband, Cart.
The wide-eyed comedienne told
the throngs that she wanted to be a
model In earlier days which even­
tually led to her rale In the theatre.
A n d th en th e w orld -fa m ou s
musical comedy star wowed them.
In h er w arm an d s p a rk ilo g
commentary. Carol quoted a few
famous last words from the play
regarding her late husband's sen­

timents about money • "it's like
manure. You have to spread it
around for It to do any good, and
that’s what Burdlnes Is doing to­
day."
The audience loved ltl
Mias Channlng was speechless
when she received a bouquet o f red
ro s e s frn m th e a s s o c ia te s o f
Burdlnes. She may be accustomed
to flowers after performing, but
flowers at an afternoon fashion
show set a new trend for the
appreciative actress.

While most o f the spectators were
attired In ligh tw eigh t summer
clothes on the sizzling afternoon,
Miss Channlng wore a mid-calf
length, long-sleeved, lace trimmed
e n s e m b le , fa s h io n e d a lo n g a
modified peasant silhouette, com­
plemented with boots.
Volpert was generous In his com­
plim entary rem arks about the
charming star. “ She's a very fine
gal." he said. "She's very accom­
modating and takes that extra mile.
She likes to do things for people and

&lt;
£
Is nice to kids."
Miss Channlng’s Jewelry dazzled
Herald staff photographer Tom m y
Vincent. “ She sure had a lot of
diamonds on ." he said, shaking his
head.
There's no doubt about it that
when Carol Chanulng portrays
Dolly Sunday at 2 p.m. in the final
Central Floria show, heads wljl
shake and turn as the petite,
doll-like personality struts her stuff.
And the inimitable Dolly will surely
dazzle the Cans * again and again.

�Engagements
Chrbtmai
In May

McAdams— Wiggins

L illia n M egonegal, a
m e m b e r of the Lake
M a ry W om an's Club,
shows her w reath th a t
won a th ird place rib ­
bon In the Christm as
C ra ft division a t the
F lo rid a Federation of
W om en's Clubs sta te
c o n ven tio n held* th is
month In Orlando.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. McAdams Jr., 2005
Glenway Drive, Sanford, announce the engagement
o f their daughter, Suzanne, to David Carl Wiggins,
son o f Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Wiggins. 201 Tangerine
Drive. Sanford.
Bom In Mt. Gilead, Ohio, the bride-elect is the
maternal granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis
William Noble, 401 Plumosa Ave.. Sanford, and the
paternal granddaughter of Mrs. Margaret McAdams.
Titusville.
Miss McAdams is a 1980 graduate of Seminole
High School where she was active In athletics. She Is
a graduate o f Bert Rogers Real Estate School and
also a graduate of Woody's Cosmotology Hairstyling
Instltute.She Is presently a student.

MraM HMi hr Kami Warwr

Her fiance, bom in Sanford, is the paternal
grandson o f Mrs. Thelma Wiggins. Jacksonville.
He Is a 1978 graduate of Seminole High School
where he played baseball and basketball. Mr.
Wiggins was drafted to the San Francisco Giants
from 1978-82. He is employed by Scott Smith
Oldsmoblle.
The wedding will be an event o f June 11. at 1.30
p.m., at All Souls Catholic Church. Sanford.

Atkinson—Arnett
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Atkinson, 2205 Bel Air
Blvd.. Sanford, announce the engagement o f their
daughter. Nancy Anne, to Scott Verlln Arnett, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Verlln M. Arnett, 122 Crystal View
South. Sanford.
Born In Philadelphia, the bride-elect Is the
maternal granddaughter o f Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Mcssick, Philadelphia, and the paternal grand­
daughter of John Atkinson. 604 Baywood Drive,
Sanford.
Miss Atkinson Is a 1981 graduate o f Seminole
High School where she was on the dance team for
three years. She is a radiologic technologist student
at Central Florida Regional Hospital where she will
graduate In June.
Her fiance, bom In Sanford, is the maternal
grandson o f Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Martz. Deltona.
Mr. Arnett is a 1979 graduate o f Seminole High
School where he was a member and president o f the
Drama Club. He attended Seminole Community
College and Is employed by Strombcrg-Carlson,
Lake Mary.
The wedding will be an event o f June 25, at 2
p.m.. at Grace United Methodist Church, Sanford.

Mr. and Mrs. James Lincoln Sanders. 671 Cortez
Circle, Altamonte Springs, announce the engage­
ment o f their daughter. Dawn Janette Gress. to
Richard Franklin Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Mathews Smith, 2014 Mellonvllle Ave.. Sanford.
The bride-elect Is the maternal granddaughter o f
Mrs. Evelyn Gramck. Altamonte Springs. Miss Gress
Is a graduate of Lake Brantley High School and
Jones Business College. She Is a court reporter

employed by The Reporting Company. Orlando.
Her fiance, grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. W-T.
Garner and the late Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Smith, all o f
Sanford. Is a graduate o f Seminole High School and
Florida State Unlvcrstty.Mr. Smith Is working on his
M.B.A. degree and Is employed In the finance
department of Martin-Marietta. Orlando.
The wedding will be an event o f July 16. at the
Church o f the Good Shephatd. Maitland.

A C S N e e d s M a ste c to m y P a tie n ts
Mastectomy patients who had surgery at least one
year ago arc urgently needed to serve as volunteers In
the Reach to Recovery’ program of the American Cancer
Society. Additional volunteers are needed for the
Sanford/Lakc Mary Unit.
The Reach to recovery program consists ol a one to
one visit from an individual who has experienced
everything the patient is going through. It Is a morale
booster welcomed by the physician for his patient, it Is
offered only upon the request of the patient's physician.
A larger corps of volunteers will enable the society to
schedule patient visits more rapidly to offset some of the
apprehension experienced so many times by surgery

I t ’s B e a c h

T im e !

Choose Your
Swimsuit From
The Varied Styles By

One Piece Maillots,
Boy Legs Or
Sheaths...
Two Piece
French Bikinis
Ail In Sm art
Patterns
Or Solid Colors...
And All Pleasantly
Priced!
_

patients,
______
Cancer Society at the Sanford office. 322-0849. between

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad
Sunday, June 19. is Father's Day.
The Herald is searching for the annual "Outstand­
ing Dad." but we need the help o f readers.
Write a letter and tell us In your own words why
you think a certain father is outstanding. First, write
your full name, address. Including street, city and
slate, and your telephone number at the top o f the
first page. Then, add the name, address and
telephone number o f the favorite dad you are
nominating. Please type or clearly print your letter
containing information about Dad.
Submit letters to PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich,
300 N. French Ave.. Sanford 32771, no later than
Wednesday, June 8, the deadline forjudging.

30 %OFF

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322-3J 19

P h ilip s

DtcoidHng D»i)
In Setku ss tlece Iff/
Ilf W. IMi it.

In And Around Lake Mary

SHS Flutist Honored
With National Award
G e o r g e and D i a n n e
Holding o f Pine Lan e
Drive, Sanford, must be
bursting with pride right
now over the honor their
daughter. Charlotte, re­
ceived from the United
States A c h ie v e m e n t
Academy.
Charlotte was chosen as
the 1983 National Award
winner for her participa­
tion and excellence as a
flu te p la y e r with the
S em in ole High School
Marching Band.
The criteria for selection
by the academy Is based
on the student's academic
performance. Interest, aptltu d e, lea d ersh ip
qualities, responsibility,
enthusiasm, motivation,
cooperative spirit, attitude,
citizenship and depen­
dability.
C h a r l o t t e was
nominated for the award
b y band te a c h e r Bob
McGuire o f Seminole High.
The academ y only re­
cogn izes less than 10
percent o f all American
nigh s ch o o l stu dents:
therefore, this honor Is an
award that very few stu­
dents can ever hope for.
The name o f Charlotte
Holding will appear in the
n a tio n a lly published
yearbook o f the United
States A c h iev e m en t
Academy. Charlotte's
o th er In terest Include
piano, swimming and Jazz
dancing.
Bob and E v e l y n
Donaldson o f Lake Mary
have had a lot to be
excited about this past
week. Their son, R.P.C.
Lawrence R. Donaldson, Is
finally returning to the
states from his Navy tour
In Italy. Larry, a religious
program chief, has been
s t a t i o n e d a b o a rd the
U.S.S. Puget Sound, which
was home-based in Gaeta.
I t a l y f o r the. l a s t
three-and-one-half years.
The Donaldsons had not
seen their son since March
o f 1982 and could hardly
wait for him -to show up
last Wednesday. Larry ar­
r iv e d w ith his tw o
children, Chris and Leslie
Ann, after a short visit
with his In-laws.
Larry's wife, Marsha, Is
still In Italy w h en she is
presently teaching e le ­
mentary school. At the
end of the school semester,
Marsha, along with the
family dog, Duke, will fly
Larry plans to finish up
his last three years o f
military service on shore
duty at the Naval A ir
Station Test Center in
Pensacola. When be re­
tires In June 1986, he and
his family will move to
L a M M a ry . W e lc o m e
H om e L a r ry , M araba,
Chris, Leslie Ann and
Duke.
Wayne and Carol Hof­
fman will be two o f the
proud parents to attend a
dance recttal being held on
June IB at the Concert
Hall o f Seminole GommuIty College.
Their daughter,

B e tty hand p ain ted
herself}. The money in the
box was donated to the
Hacienda Girls Ranch.

may be obtained by con­
tacting Cindy Brown at
322-7351. The breakfast
starts atSa.m.

Earlier in the month, at
the FFWC convention held
at the Hyatt Hotel In Or­
lando. club m e m b e r
Lillian M cgoncgal was
awarded third place In the
Christmas craft contest.
Lillian entered a brightly
colored Christmas wreath
she had made.

Students at Lake Mary
High School have been
cel ebr ati ng "R e d -G ra y
Spirit W eek " this past
week. Spirit week Is a time
for students to break
school dress codes and do
all they can to muster up
their school spirit.

There arc still a few
According to dance In­ t i c k e t s l e f t f o r t h e
structor Betty Vaccaro, breakfast being held at
girls from 10 of her classes Cafe Sorrento on June 6.
will be performing Jazz, The breakfast will honor
modem, tap and ballet the new officers of Lake
numbers. The recital will Mary Chamber of Com­
be free and the public Is merce. Special guest will
welcome. The recital will be S heri ff John Folk.
be from 2 - 4 p.m.
Tickets are 82.50, and

But it's not Just all for
fun. for the enthusiasm
that Is raised leads right
into the Seminole County
Football Jamboree, where
c o u n t y s ch o o ls g e t a
chance to compete in a
[ood oldfashloncd game of
ootball. Thi s' year the
Jamboree was held at Lake
Brantley High School.

who is a student at the
Betty Vaccaro School of
Dance, Is Just one o f the
students who will 'take
part In the more than 20
d a n c e n u m b e r s
performed.

Lake Mary W om an's
Club m em bers Alice
Moughton. Betty
Lindmcler. Betty Gregory
and Lillian Megonegai re­
cently attended a District
VII Workshop/luncheon In
Leesburg. The meeting
w a s to a c q u a i n t the
members with club Job
respon sibilities and to
meet and get familiar with
other leaders.
Highlights o f the meet*
In g w e r e t w o g u e s t
speakers. Tisha Blegel. a
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of
A .W .A .R .E . (alerting
women about resources
and en ergy) spoke on
Florida electric utilities
position and on proposed
add rain legislation,

S

H a ir
m

“ N ” P la c
.

SUM MER

1

U

4

I H

FITN ESS FUN

GVfl) " ROfTlPER/
Registration Is Going On
Right Now For The
First Summer Session
JU N E:

l 3

JU LY

16

Dr. Lenkala R. Mallaiah M.D.P.A.
h P ku td T tA m tm e* Th* Opmlug Of A M t» O flk
F # n * PneSc* * f G u tn m tm h $ y IS pttU U ng In
M m m m Of The Oigesdfs System).
TRIPLE COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER

315 Mangouatlna Ava.
Sanford, Florida

321-4570
Dr. Mallalah’s Deltona Office is
Relocating at 916 Deltona Blvd.
Daltons Point, Daltons, FI. 574-6149

�Evsalwt H tra M , U n fo n l, FI.

In And Around Sanford

Community Joins
In Celebration
For The Kings

.

Ashby Jones, center]
presents a love offering
to the Rev. Leo Kln(
and his wife, Rubye, a
a retirement receptloi
given In their honor
F rien d s and church
members showered th&lt; i
couple with lots of lovi
In the amount of abou
15,000.

Doris
Dietrich

AMERICAS FAMTT DRUGSTORE

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Rk iit

DEAR ABBT: How docs one answer
the senile elderly nursing home patient
who asks. "W hy am I here?"
My mother, who Is in her late 80s. has
been In a small, comfortable nursing
facility for almost five years. She Is in
fairly good physical health, but her mind
has been failing for 10 to 15 years.
There arc days when she doesn’t know
me. and nights when she gets up at 2
then I went back to bed, thinking the boy
would leave. At 4 a.m. he was still there,
a m. to prow l the nursing home
so I called my daughter out of the room
searching for her husband who has been
and sternly told her It was time her dale
dead for five years, but in her more lucid
momenta, she asks. "W hy am I living
went home. At 4:30, he still had not left,
so I went downstairs and calmly said. "I
here with strangers?"
think It's time you went home, young
She says she Is a "prisoner" and wants
man." I stood right there until he left (a
to live where she has more freedom. But
matter of seconds).
In order for her to be " f r e e . " a
Afterward I grounded my daughter for
still-productive member of the family
the weekend. Now she Is angry with me.
with other responsibilities would then
She says I "embarrassed" her. and
become the prisoner.
because o f me the boy will probably
How can I answer my mother? This is
■never ask her out again.
the heartbreak of my life.
GETTING OLD ’ Was 1 wrong? What would you have
M YSELF
done. Abby?
M IDW EST MOTHER
DEAR GETTINO OLD: An Increasing
D E A R M O T H E R t You w ere not
number o f people are experiencing the
wrong. I would have done exactly what
same kind of heartache.
you did. Only l‘d have done it sooner.
■ The fact that your mother is confused
most o f the time Indicates that she needs
DEAR ABBYt I am a 34-year-old
around-the-clock care and attention, and
divorced woman, raising five children
unless you can provide this In your own
alonr. My problem Is my 15-year-old
home, she is much belter o ff In a private
daughter. She skips school, lies, smokes
nursing facility. (Be glad you can afford
and runs away. My other children are
It.)
u ;
well-behaved and abide by my rules,
In her more lucid moments, take her in
which arc not too strict. I've been to
your arms, tell her you love her. and
counselors, social workers, priests, etc.,
explain honestly that she is where she Is
but nothing seems to help.
because o f your concern for her safety.
I don't know where else to turn. I love
I know It must be painful to send your
this child, but she refuses to cooperate,
mother who has nursed you. fed you and
and 1 don't want her attitude to rub off
sacrificed for you tq "live with strang­
on the younger ones. Where can I send
ers." but believe me. In your case. It Is
her to make her behave?
the most sensible solution for all con­
cerned, so don’ t feel guilty.
M Y ROPE
D E A R E N D t You c a n ’ t send a
D E A R A B B T : L a s t n i g h t my
15-year-old Incorrigible child anywhere
17-year-old daughter came home from a
to
"make her behave."
date at 1:IB a m. She Invited her date In
First, to find out whether her anti­
and they went to the family room to
social behavior is caused by a medical or
WQfch TV.
emotional
disorder, she needs to be
Knowing she was home lor the night. I
examined.
If
she's healthy and normal,
dropped o ff to sleep. At 3:30 a m. 1
try love.
awakened. I went downstairs to jum
Let her know that you love
the lights and found my daughter and
want
to be her friend. Open
her dale sleeping with the TV still off! I
and
your
heart.
woke them up and told them It was 3.30.

rtnof •
WO/ CMI
Limit 2 pscss

- liSEKCSyfifvj-sil.^ifJ

A reception Sunday. May 22, in
fellowship hall o f the First United
; Methodist Church, Sanford, honored the
‘•flev. Leo King and his wire, Rubyc. Rev
&gt;Klng is retiring June 12 from the
&gt;jninlslry as well as church pastor where
PEOPLE
•Jie has served 10 years.
&gt;J Nancy Tcrwillegcr. president of the
&gt;JJnitcd Methodist Women, estimates that
Ignore that 250 church members and
And now the Kings plan
.;Jrlcnds in the community nttended the
least for a day or two.
&gt;ievent headed up by Mabel Chapman,
^chairman o f the church Administrative
Melba and Meade Cooper will celebrate
&gt;2k&gt;ard,
their 50th wedding with a reception on
Appropriately, a king’s crown deco­ June 11. Invitations were sent out by a
lla te d the top tier of a unique retirement
daughter from Las Cruces. N.M. Those
iia k e made by
Mrs. Roy Wall.Othcr
receiving Invitations were Instructed to
&gt;3tccpsake miniatures, Including a rock­
RSVP regrets to Melba's sister. Winifred
i n g chair, decorated the work of art.
"B ill" Giclow at her home phone.
tj&gt; But the frosting on the cake was a
While the Invitations were cn route.
;W g e love offering the couple received
Bill was hospitalized In Daytona Beach,
•Jthat left Leo and Rubyc nearly speech­
as the result of a traglp accident. She has
less. According to church secretary
now been dismissed and is convalescing
Dottie Head, nearly $5,000 was collected
at the home of a daughter and son-infor the Kings. This amount Includes the
law. Bonnie and Henry Schumacher. Bill
church members, individuals, choirs and
asks that regrets be phoned to her at
the youth of the church who held bake
323-1961.
sales, car washes and other fund-mlscrs
Although Immobile, she seems in good
to contribute $100.
spirits and plans to attend the anniversa­
Rev King received a plaque from the
ry celebration. One of her concerns Is
church, presented by Boyd Coleman and
that she cannot use her right arm to
written by Jean Leonard. and a United
write "thank-you" notes for all the
Methodist Centennial plate.
kindnesses extended to her and her
On behalf of the Greater Sanford
husband. Walter.
Chamber of Commerce. Jack Horner
presented
Rev. King with a plaque
But as a Roberta Gatchcl Woman of
reading In part, for "distinguished and
the Year recipient. Bill Giclow will not
unselfish service to this community."
attend the annual celebration Wednes­
Ashby Jones led a "roast" and Sanford
day when the Klwanls Club o f Sanford
Attorney Ed Shlnholser read a j)oeni he
announces its 1983-84 woman of the
wrote. Also. Leslie McEwan wrote a
year and honors the 13 previous winners
poem which was framed on parchment
of the prestigious award presented to a
and Illustrated by Grctchen Lewis.
local woman nominated by a woman's
The retiring minister’s community
club for her outstanding community
services include the following: Golden
services.
Age
Games. Sanford Klwanls Club.
According to Robert E. (Bob) Daehn.
Seminole County Ministerial Associa­ Sanford Klwanls Club's special awards
tion. Oasis Workshop. Salvation Army.
chalrmun. the award was established in
Sanford Senior Citizens. Florida Method­
1969 In the memory of the Sanford
ist Children’s Home Itoard and the Brain
Klwanls Club benefactress Roberta
Towers Board, among others.
Gatchcl who catered Klwanls luncheons
, Overall chairmen of Hie reception were
for many years. He says the award Is
Nancy Tcrwillegcr and Nellie Coleman. . presented each year to the Sanford area
,Jean Norris was in charge of decorations
woman who has done the most for her
which featured live plants and arrange­ club and the community. Each woman's
ments Including two Iragc arrangements club Is given the opportunity to
. of roses — one pink, and one red.
nomlnutc one of its members, he says,
Mrs. Walter Carter and Mrs. Rupert
and a special committee selects tjic
..Strickland., contributed bouquets of winner from nominations,.
daisies. Mrs. L.M. Swain made the pastel
colored butter mints and background
Birthday gicetlngs to: William Tyre
piano music was provided by James and Patricia Dcarolph. May 23: Norma
Thomas, church minister o f music, and Ragsdale and Richard Fowler. May 24;
^Catherine Whclchcl.Thc women of the Anne Kanady. Am y Brough. Mary
church were floating hostesses.
Elizabeth Nance. Robert O'Neil and Jane
The Rev. and Mrs. King returned Cash. May 25: Betty Halback. May 26;
Thursday from the Florida Methodist Jeanette L. Kidder. May 27: Mary Laurel
Conference In Lakeland where Ills re­ (Laurie) Blair. May 28: Bruce J. Bauder
tirement was made official. "Th ey got rid and Jo-Annc VanLoovcn. May 29: and
of me,"he Joked. He was honored at a Mary Blair. May 30.
dinner, Rubyc received an orchid, and he
Happy anniversary to: Mildred and
received a button...and a well-deserved Joseph Nicholas. May 25: and Aria Jane
standing ovation.
and Raymond LundquIst.May 26.

Sunday, M iy I f , t H J - lf c

•XT- larger prim* on Kodak pape r

�t B - E v n ln g H trald , Santord, FI.

Sunday, M ay jf , m i

Adventist
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Assembly O f God

In n k i n
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Congregational

B R A S S TA C K S

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COMMCkTHXUL
CMR1TMN CHURCH

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NonDenominational

Catholic

N aiarene
FHKT CHURCH
OF m RAZAHM
m i l antaal I n .

Christian

Sunday
I Thessalonians
4:13-18

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M onday
Revelations
4:1-11

Plan* Maatnp R ai

Christian Science
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Tuesday
Revelations
5:1-14
W ednesday
Revelations
11:15-19

Whut docs u man mean when he says, “ Let's get down lo brass tacks”? He
means that he thinks it's time to discuss the rcul issue.

Thursday
Revelations
14:1-5
15:1-8

And that's always a go&lt;Hl idea! .\(tilling Is gained by “beating around tlie
bush.” Wise men seek the issue . . , and settle it!
In America there are millions o f people who attend and support the
Church. There ure other millions who do not. Whut is the reul issue on which
these two groups disagree?

Friday
Revelations
21:1
22:5

F4LWTT* maw
IlFtltT CHURCH
t i l l PtkMtta lit,
R i,m 4 Cr«k«f

Presbyterian

Tills is the issue; Is man the self-sufllclcnt master or his world, able to
overcome every problem by Ills own strength . . . OR is man Ute noblest
creation o f an ulUpowcrfuI God, weuk in the fucc o f life’s turmoil when he
stands alone, but strong when he joins heurt und hand witli God?

Saturday
Revelations
22:6-21

Church O f God

You’re u man and you've seen something o f life! Getting down to brass
tacks . . . are you stronger WITH GOD or without?

1 » | Hank*
I.M p ik U k m
Narury F k k H F«r
U k ik «

Eastern
Orthodox

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The Following Sponsors Moke This Church Notice And Directory Page Possiblei
ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H. H odges and Staff

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter

FLAGSHIP BANK
OF SEMINOLB and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

KNIGHT'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don KnlQhl &amp; Staff

OKEOOKY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HAROWARB
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

L.D.PLANTE, INC
Oviedo, Florida

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

HARRELL A BEVERLY
TRANSMISSION
David Beverly and Staff

THE MoKIBBIN AOENCY
Insurance

PUBLIX MARKETS
and Employees

JCPenney
Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemann and Staff

MEL'S
OULF SERVICE
Mel Dekle and Employees

8ENKARIK OLASS
A PAINT CO., INC.
Jerry A Ed Senkarik
and Employees

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

WILSON-EICHBLBERQBR
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff

W IN N-DIXIE STOP
and Employees

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

Resurrection Episcopal
To Buy Academy, Land
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Religion Editor

*• n
ma ......... wiiuuiiHiK tut: ruuii
You Serve Your Mind." Swindoll urges a mental diet
or something other than "media clutter" for anyone
wanting to Improve their outlook on life.

Spring Concert Scheduled
The Reddick Memorial First Born Church Choir
No. 1 will hold Its Spring Concert at 6 p.m. this
Sunday at King and Broadway In Midway. Theme
for the concert will be "A rc You Ready for the
Coming of the Lord?" The choir Is under the
direction of Minister Marlowe Smith. Elder J.J.
Llgon is pastor.

Schaefer Film Series
A film series called "Th e Rise and Decline of
Western Thought and Culture" by Dr. Francis
Schaefer, an American living In Switzerland, will
begin Wednesday at Trinity Assembly of God. 875
Elkcmn Boulevard. Deltona at 7:30 p.m. The films
will be shown and discussed for the next nine
weeks. This week's film Is entitled. "T h e Middle
Ages” and Is open to the public.

Vesper Service Slated
Dr. Jay T. Cosmato. pastor of the Seminole
Heights Baptist Church, announces a vesper service
to be held at 5 p.m. this Sunday at Lake Mary High
School auditorium. In addition to a message on
"Th e Abundant Life" by the pastor, the Seminole
High School Concert Chorus directed by Laurel
Ellmorc. also Seminole Heights choir director, will
sing several selections.
Fallowing the service the church youth and
members o f the chorus will be guests o f Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Deppcn. 2411 Oak Ave.. Sanford, for a
swim party. The usual Sunday night youth choir
and church training programs will not be held this
week.
The summer youth program begins with a Bible
study. Saturday. June 4. at 7 p.m. at the home of
Mr. and.^tllt-JlR\ Slllaway. o f 105 Kamblcwood
Drive.

Student Pastor Hired
The Presbytery of First Presbyterian Church of
Sanford has approved the hiring o f Richard
Danlelak, a Columbia Theological Seminary stu­
dent. as student pastor for the summer. He served
as a Roman Catholic priest for 21 years and left the
church to become married. Because o f his previous
background, the seminary is allowing him to finish
in one year. He will lie presented to the Presbytery
Tuesday night. His wife. Rose, has six children from
a previous marriage.
The Rev. Hugh Pain, who has been serving as
Christian Education consultant at First Pre­
sbyterian. will continue through June. He will
oversee the Vacation Church School July 18-24 •

Conference Speaker
Dr. E. Earl Joiner, professor and chairman or the
religion department at Stetson University. Delund. Is
featured speaker at the South Central Conference of
the United Church o f Christ, meeting this weekend
on the campus of Texas Lutheran College near San
Antonio. Pastor o f Baptist congregations for several
years In Florida and Kentucky, he Joined the Stetson
faculty In 1955. His Saturday morning address was
titled " A Baptist Talks Siralght to the United
Church o f Christ" and on Sunday morning he will
speak on "T h e Churches and the W orld" and lead u
discussion group.

Disaster Relief
In order to help alleviate some of the burden the
people o f Colombia have been suffering under Bluer
the catastrophic May 31 earthquake struck
Popayan, the Orlando Catholic Dioicese with the
help o f the Consul o f Colombia, is supporting an aid
campaign. Money collected will be used to buy tents
where people can set up house until the government
o f Colombia restores damaged areas. Seventy-five
percent o f the city and six surrounding villages were
destroyed. Some 250 persons were killed and
another 1500 injured. Seventeen churches, three
universities, three museums, the airport and more
than 2.000 homes were demolished.
Any other monies collected will be sent directly to
the Catholic Relief Services In Washington, which
will send them to the church In Colombia.
Contributions may be made In care o f Earthquake
Vlctlms-Hispanic Affairs Office. P.O. Box 1800.
Orlando. FI. 32802.

Women's Day
The Ml. Zion Missionary Baptist Church of
Sanford In Midway will host its annual Women s
Day program on June 5. The 11 a.m. speaker will be
Evangelist Viola Graham o f Sanford. The 3 p.m.
service will feature two of Ml. Zion's own. Ella Jean
Walton and Deborah Stunstrum.

DeBary Women M eet
The DeBary United Methodist Women will meet at
1:30 p.m. June 7 In the church parlor. Rebecca
Smith will show slides and tapes on the IFYfc
student program. Marie Fehd will conduct a
memorial program and Peg H a m r i e ! r h l T r o e ' o f
devotions. Esther Circle will be In charge of
refreshments. This will be the last meeting until
September.

Youth Fundraisers
The Community United Methodist Church Youth
Fellowship will hold a car wash and bake sale from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m- Saturday. June 4. al the church
located al Highway 17*92 and Plney Ridge Road In
Casselberry.

Centenarian August Wieboldt

Baptists Honor
Wieboldt At 100
Last Sunday was August Wieboldt Day at the
Casselberry Baptist Church, 770 Scmlnola Blvd.,
Casselberry, as the pastor, the Rev. Samuel Elliott, and
congregation went all out to honor their 100-year-old
member.
During the morning worship service a tribute was
given to Mr. Wieboldt, who lives in Bram Towers.
Sanford. It included u historical sketch, a congratulatory
message from President Ronald Reagan, and a special
presentation of a "m oney tree".
After the service a dinner was held in his honor in the
Crump Memorial Building next door to the church und
the guest of honor blew out the candles on his birthday
cake. "Only three candles?" he asked.
Appropriately chosen for the service was the 100th
Psalm and the hymns. "I Know Not Why God's
Wondrous Grace" and "Jesus Is Tenderly Calling
Today." both of which were penned the year he was
born. The other hymn. "How Great Thou Art" came two
years later. The choir sang "Seek Ye First the Kingdom
of God." based on Mr. Wleboldl’s faVorllc scripture
verse. Matthew6:33.
The pastor's sermon topic was. "Every Man Hus a
History."
In his comments in "T h e Pastor's Pen". Elliott pointed
out I hat In 1883. Ihc year of Mr. Wieboldt's birth. Queen
Victoria ruled Britain, Chester A. Arthur was president
of the Unlled States, and William the First reigned in
Germany, the land of Mr. Wieboldt’s birth. The Brooklyn
Bridge had Just opened the day before he was born.
A former Casselberry resident. Mr. Wieboldt continued
to attend the church even after he moved to Sanford,
riding the bus until his Sunday route was cancelled.
Since then he has gotten a ride to and from church with
his former neighbor. Mrs. M. Kramer.

The year-old Episcopal Church of
the Resurrection has agreed to
purchase the Sweetwater Academy,
kindergarten through eighth grade
p r i v a t e s c h o o l In s o u t h w e s t
Seminole County, and 10 acres or
land on Lake Brantley Tor an
undisclosed sum, according the
church’s vicar, the Rev. George VV.
McCammon.
The church is presently meeting
in the Forest City Elementary
School Tor Its 9:30 a.m. Sunday
services. He said the church plans
to build a sanctuary that will seal
250-300 persons on the new pro­
perty later this year as the first
phase o f church bu ild ing.
Meanwhile, the Church o f the Res­
urrection will continue to hold
sendees at the Forest City school.
The church office, however, will be
moved to Sweetwater Academy In
two weeks. McCammnn said.

As part of the agreement. Paul
and Jean Lcfffcr. from whom the
parish Is purchasing the school and
property, will continue to operate
the Interdenominational academy
until the church takes over the
operation for the 1984-85 school
year.
"There had been a lot o f Interest
In developing the wooded lakefront
property, but the owners considered
It 'God’s property’.” McCammon
said. "Being able to acquire the
school and the land for the church
was a beautiful marriage. They were
happy with the agreement and we
were happy."
"W e will spend the year getting to
know the faculty and students and
integrating a good program," said
McCammon."The academy now has
150 students and enrollment for the
coming year Is higher."
The Rev. Benton Ellis, head­
master of Tri ni ty Preparatory
School at Goldcnrod, and his staff

He said Resurrection, which
serves Sweetwater, the Springs.
Wrklva and Lake Brantley arens.
has between 200 and 300 members
and Is the fasted growing Episcopal
church In Central Florida.
A former Seminole Community
College trustee. McCammon was In
real estate and Investment in the
county b efore goi ng into the
ministry. He attended Virginia
Theological Seminary in A l e x ­
andria, Va., for three years before
becoming ordained 2'/4 years ago.
Registration is now open for the
Interdenominational summer camp
to be held at Sweetwater Academy
for boys and girls ages 5-14. The
cost ts S70 for a two-week session.
For information call the church
office at 788-3704.

Ritchey Joins Staff
At Central Baptist
Chris Ritchey will be Joining the staff of Centra) Baptist
Church this Sunday. He will be assisting the pastor. Dr.
Freddie Smith, in program ministries. He will also give
direction to the on going youth ministry.
He comes to Central irom a four-year ministry’ at
Heights Baptist Church. Pensacola. He has a back­
ground In associate pastor and youth work previously
serving at First Baptist, Sanford. Plttsboro (N.C.) Baptist.
He is a native of Columbus. Ga.. and ts married to the
former Elizabeth Jenkins of Pensacola. They have a
1W-ycar-old daughter. Hope.
There will be a reception following the 7 p.m. worship
service to welcome the Ritcheys.

M r. and M rs, Chris R itch ey end Hope.

Local Pastors To Lunch At Jail

Seminole County Jail Chaplain Charles "Chuck"
Pitroff and the Seminole County President's Council of
Good News Mission will host pastors of county churches
al a complimentary luncheon at 11:30 a.m.. Thursday
at the Seminole County Correctional Facility courtesy of
Sheriff John Polk and Jail Admlnstrator Jim Shoultz.
The speakers at the luncheon arc Harry Green, the
new president o f Good News Mission, an international
Jail ministry with headquarters in Arlington. Va.. and
— Jane Casselberry outgoing president and founder of the organization. Dr.
William Simmer.
Purpose o f the luncheon is to familiarize area
ministers with the work lhal the Chaplain Pitroff Is
doing and the need for community support particularly
from local churches.
Chairman of the President's Council, which Is giving
Aldersgalc United Mclhod- local leadership to the chaplain, is Dr. Freddie Smith,
Isl Church. Seminole, is pastor o f the Central Baptist Church of Sanford. Other
expected lo arrive here ott officers include Seminole Community College President
June 13.
Dr. Earle Weldon, vice chairman: Jenny Long, secretary:
and Ihc Rev. Thomas Shcllon o f Rolling Hills Moravian
T h e R e v . H a r r y A.
Goddard, pastor of Com­ Church. Longwood. program chairman.
Any pastor wishing lo attend should contact the
munity United Methodist
Central
Baptist Church office at 322-2914 or the
Church. Daytona Beach,
chaplain's office at 323-2550. ext. 22). to make a
has been usslgncd to First
reservation.
United Methodist Church
A S30.717 12-month budget to support the chaplain
o f Oviedo replacing ihc
Rev. Jennings Nceld Jr., and his ministry here prepared by the budget committee
who will be moving to of the council, consisting o f Weldon. Bob Gregory and
Judge S. Joseph Davis, lias lxrcn approved. However,
Killcarn United Methodist
the Jail ministry is supported entirely by voluntary
Church, Tallahassee.
contributions and receipts afe currently falling far short
D a r r y l B a r r s w a s o f the amount needed to meet the minimum budget.
assigned as part-time local
Income In March totalled 8427.16 front churches und
pastor lo the Trinity Unit­ Individuals, according to Pitroff.
ed Methodi st Church.
Sanford.

Bishop Hunt Assigns
Pastors To Churches
Three local churches
w e r c a in o n g t h o s e
assigned new ministers by
Blsltop Earl G. Hunt Jr.
Friday al the conclusion of
the five-day 141st annual
session o f the Unlled
M ethodist C h u rch 's
Florida Co nf ere nce in
Lakeland.
The Rev. George A. Buie
HI is coming lo First Unll­
ed Methodist Church of
Sanford to replace the Rev.
Leo F. King, pastor of the
church for the past 10
years, who is retiring In
Sanford. Rev. King's Iasi
Sunday will be June 12
nnd the 36-year-old Buie,
c ur r e nt l y pastor of

have agreed to act as consultants for
Sweetwater Academy during the
transition, according to McCam­
mon.

Chaplain Pitroff reported at the May meeting of the
council that during April, he had held three weekly
church sendees with an average attendance of 44: lliai
an average total attendance ut the four weekly Bible
classes was 42 and nine attended a film showing. There
were an average of 22 counselors, who counseled an
average of 68 Inmates each week. There were 24
decisions for Christ and an average of eight volunteers
graded 172 Bible lessons per week. He also did crisis
cbunscllng and social ministry with the Inmales'
families.
The chaplain is also available to speak on the Jail
ministry at local churches and groups.— Jane

Casselberry,

Hymn
Drama
The Rev. W hitney
D ou gh of M e t h o d i s t
Hour International w ill
present a H y m n -D ram a
at G race United M e th ­
odist Church, 110 W.
A irport Blvd., Sanford,
a t 7:30 p.m . this Sunday
t h r o u g h t h e use of
m ulti-m edia, music and
song. The program on
fa m ilia r hym nw rifers Is
open to the public.

Translations Reach 200
By Wycliffe Linguists
Officials of Wycliffe Bible Translalors
and Its sister organization, the Summer
Institute of Linguistics, hus announced
that linguists nnd minority language
speukers o f the two organizations have
completed translation o f the New
Testament into 200 Indigenous lan­
guages.
At u May 26 ceremony In Duncanville.
Texas, presidents o f WBT und S1L. David
Cummings and Kenneth Gregerson.
Jointly presented the officially designated
200th New Testament, a translation Into
the Ifangu language o f Ghana. West
Africa.
The linguists Involved in this Bible
translation project. British workers
G e o f f r e y and R o s e m a r y H un t,
participated In the event, as did three
representatives o f the Ghana Institute of
Linguistics, Literacy and Bible Transla­
tion. under whose auspices’ the Hunts'
work was completed. Unable to attend
were the three Hanga worker*, transla­
tion assistant SumbinI Abulu. cotranslator Alfred Usah Ad jci. and
translation checker David Gbaainanga.
A highlight o f the celebration was the
premiere performance o f an original
drama, "Beyond the Bookcase." written
and produced by WBT personnel. It
showrd 199 completed minority lan­
guage New Testaments completely filling

bookcase, wlm me 2 UO1I1 us the first
book placed In a large, empty bookcase.
pointing to the huge unfinished task---there are still 3.000 languages with no
Bible.
oik -

Through the combined efforts o f many
organizations the Bible or portions o f it
have now been translated Into 1.763
languages. This Includes the 200 New
Tcstumcnts and hundreds o f portions
produced through the efforts o f WBT and
SIL. Workers of these organizations have
begun linguistic studies in approximate­
ly 1.000 languages since the beginning
o f their work In 1934. Some 4,750
linguists and support workers are cur­
rently at work or In training, with
linguistic research and Bible translation
projects under way in nearly 800
languages lo 40 countries.
The Hangs language is spoken by
3.000 to 4.000 persons living In northern
Ghana. Although few have had much
formal schooling. Hanga adulls are
currently learning lo read and write their
own language in an "each one teach
one effort. Adjci and Gbaainanga sec
see
the literacy effort as a culturally ac­
cepted way o f spreading the Gospel.
Whereas there were no Christians and
no churches among the Hanga people
before the Introduction o f translated
scriptures, now small groups o f Chris­
tians are forming in the urea.

GOSATURDAY
SPELMAY
SING
28
7:30 P.M.
Among Them THE COOPERS.
THE REPRESENTATIVES And
LOCAL TALENT.

LAKE MARY CHURCH OF
TH E NAZARENE
Crystal Lake Ave.

Lake f&gt;

" Ye dwell in one world,
nnd have been created
through the operation o f
one Will. Blessed is he
who mingleth wUhallmen
inn spirit o f utmost
kindness and love.’'

�BLO NDIE

4B—Evening Hereld, Sanford, FI.

Sunday. May at, 1913

by Chic Young

3 Child's toy
Answsr to Previous Pur/la
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Mideatt
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program
alliance
□nn B oon
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(abbr.)
III 11 Ll AM AlHl tlAlD
agency (abbr.)
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n n n n n l*|v|o
13 Showary
A U N T lama
Compati
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point
charactar
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18 Smelli
10 Shred
20 Dapper
50 Frapp*
21 Commercial! 34 Sodium
22 Broke bread 23 Four score
51 Failure (2
symbol
24 Actor Sparka 24 Zero
37 Intsrrogstss
wda.. al.|
25 Prophat
52 Jack Tar a
25 Nob
30 Choir voice
26 Huitre
41 Osnisl
drink
26 A t well
32 Home
55 Spacewalk
43
Los
Angslts
27
Merriment
addition
(abbr.)
20 Big top
bsll club
33 Wildebeeat
46 Lavish party 55 Women's
35 Greek latter 30 Feminine
47 Flying ssucars
(tuffit)
patriotic
36 On the ocean
(sbbr.|
society (abbr)
31 Hoitila
36 Old woman
incursion
46 Eye infection 57 Farm davic*
30 Agaimt
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THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom
IfS N fcE , BUT WHERE
ARE THE S L E E V E S ? !

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44 Publisher
Graham
45 Powsrful
•xplosive
(abbr.)
46 Like an old
maid
40 Auctioneers
word
53 Small lizard
54 Marsh plant
51 Haart (Let)
59 Doll
60 M ika use of
6 1 One's salt
62 Noun suffix
63 Leganda
64 House pet

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BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffel ft Heimdahl

t r PO ESNt SEEM RAIS
(? U M M !N S A R A C E
A G A I N S T H IM

What The Day Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
MAY 29,1983

you’ve been trying to re­
solve. You should be able
to find the solutions which
have ben evading you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Keep your plans flexi­
ble today so that you'll be
able to make changes In
cpsc something more fun
comes up than that which
you o ri gi nal l y had In
mind.
SAGI TTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Look for small
ways to economize today.
If something is broken, see
if you can mend it yourself
or have It repaired instead
of replacing It.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec:
22-Jan. 19) Although you
may not be In the mood
early in the day, social.
Involvements will be lm- ;
portanl to ypu. Be sure to''
arrange something for the
evening hours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) Family members
will have difficulty keeping
secrets from you today,
especially If you feel In­
clined to probe. The truth ’
will not elude you.

Words spoken to you In
confidence will play an
Important role In the year
ahead. Information. thus
Imparted by friends can
help further your ambi­
tions.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) It's essential that you
first gain the confidence of
one whose help you now
need before requesting
assistance. Take time to
develop the association.
Gemini predictions for the
year ahead arc now ready.
Romance, career, luck,
earnings, travel and much
more arc discussed. Send
$1 to Astro-Graph. Box
4H9. Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to stac
your zodiac sign. Send an
additional $2 for the NEW
Astro-Graph Matchmaker
wheel and booklet. Re­
veals romantic combina­
tions and compatibilities
forull signs.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) Helpful results will
come today from a dis­
cussion with a friend who
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
knows how to analyze 20) Today will be more fun
problems in a realistic, for you If you mix with
practical manner.
friends who share similar LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) interests. Get togethef
Art In harmony with your with pals who are on your*
thoughts today, especially wavelength.
where your career aspira­
ARIES (March 21-April
tions are concerned. Your 19) You may only realize a
Ideas will work If given a modest return from some­
chance.
thing you do today, yet
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. y o u r p r i d e o f a c •
22) It's Important that you compllshmcnt will exceed
keep the lines of com­ anything profit could offer.
munication open with a
helpful contact who now
TAURUS |April 20-May
lives a considerable dis­ 20) Others put consider­
tance from you. Call or able value on your Ideas
write today.
today. One over whom you
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oet. think you have little Influ­
23) Focus your mind today ence will follow your sug­
on u domestic problem gestions to the letter.
ing today to persons o v e r 1
whom you have dominion.. I
This coming year you Even the lesser lights will
may feel Impelled to make rebel If they are ordered
some major changes In about.
your life. Once you com­
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.-.
mit yourself to a positive 22) Do not permit dark
course, proceed without thoughts to run rampant
looking back.
today, because they could
GEMINI (May 21-June cast a shadow over all or ‘
20) Lady Luck may lie your Involvements. A neg­
taking a day off. so It's ative attitude Is a liability.
best la avoid speculative
SAGI TTARIUS (Nov.
situations today. Without 23-Dec. 21) Don't let your
her help, the odds may be peers draw you into a
against you. Gemini pre­ situation today which you
dictions for the year ahead can't really afford. If you
haven't got the bread 10 arc now ready. Romance,
back you up, It’s best to
career, luck, earnings,
travel and much more arc back out.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec.
discussed. Send SI to
Astro-Graph. Box 489. 2 2 - J a n . 19) S u b d u e
Radio City Station. N.Y. t e n d e n c i e s t o d a y to
10019. Be sure to state seesaw where your ob­
your zodiac sign. Send an jectives are concerned.
additional S2 for the NEW The results will be hap­
Astro-Graph Matchmaker hazard if you fall to stick
wheel and booklet. Re­ to your course.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- .
veals romantic combina­
Feb. 19) You could be too •
tions and compatibilities
tough on yourself today to for all signs.
CANCER (June 2 1-July draw any conclusions
22) Don't permit old. un­ f r o m s e l f - a n a l y z i n g
resolved domestic issues thoughts. Think o f others,
not No. 1.
to surface today, especially
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
In front o f outsiders.
20) Be cautious where you
Something embarrassing
and unpleasant could re­ place your trust today,
especially when dealing
sult.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) with persons about whom .
Be very careful today not you know little. Don't be .
deceived by outward ap-.
to make hard tasks even
pearances.
m o r e d i f f i c u l t . I f coARIES (March 21-April workers suggest better
methods, try to be recep­ 19) In ventures today re^ ^
qulrtng a Joint effort, be
tive. not resistant.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. sure all parties understand
the ground rules. All must
2 2 ) A l e s s o n can be
make equal contributions.
learned In budgeting if you
TAURUS (April 20-Mayreview your financial situ­
20) Rather than to put*
ation realistically. Don't
forth a dismal effort today,
condemn yourself for past
ft’s better to temporarily
mistakes. Strive to correct
shelve frustrating projects.
them.
A poor altitude produces
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oci.
23) Guard against dictat­ poor results.

YOUR BIRTHDAY
MAY 30, IBS3

EEK &amp; M E E K
/

HOROSCOPE

IT S
ALL l2i&amp;4T
MB WAS A HANDICAP-

MB M AS I D B U N A M A R A I W Q N
w b ’r e r u n n i n g a
5 0 -Y A R p PASM .

w m il s

Ne lb East

Opening lead: ¥9

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Here is a Tour-spade
contract that is close to the
ul ti mat e in p la y and
rounterplay. Normal play
shows East taking two
hearts right away and a
spade l a t e r on Tor u
North-South game.
Expert East can lead his
singleton diamond at trick

I wo. get In with the acc of
spades, underload his top
hearts to West's eight and
get a diamond rulT.
Expert South can Toll
this play by a loser-onloser play. He plays A-K-6
o f c l u b s an d t h r o w s
dummy's second heart.
Now there ts no way to gel
West In to lead.
Great expert East can do
better. He jettisons his
queen and Jack of clubs
under the aee-king so that
West can win the third
club or at least force
dummy to ruff it.
Careless West can upset
East's applecart by play­
ing his eight o f clubs on
the six spot. Now poor
East must win that club
trick.
Finally, we come to the
plupcrfacl. East does get
rid of the queen and Jack
o f clubs, but West is smart
enough to make the croc­
odile coup of putting up
his 10 to shut out East's
nine.
We don't know if this
hand wasn’ t made up. but
the late Norman Bonncy
gave it to George ColTln.
who named it the rainbow
hand because o f Its many
colors.

G A R FIE LD

by Jim Davis
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�TONIGHT'S TV
©(MJKUNGFU
S H IP ) FOR THE CHILDREN'S
(D m CLASSIC COUNTRY

6 :0 5
0 2 WRESTLING
6 :3 0
(D O CSSNCW S
(D O NEWS

7 :0 0
0 ® IN SEARCH O F0 ) 0 HEEHAW
f f l O MEMORIES WITH LAWRENCCWELK
M (38) THE JCFFERSONS
© _(t0 &gt; UNOERSfA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
Q ) {•) SHA NA NA
Ml P*&gt; M O W "Little Olenl"
(1933) Edward 0. Robinson, Mery
Aktor. High society members suiter
a ion when ■ reformed gangster
tries to )oln their ranks.
0 (10) WOOOWRIGHTS SHOP
"Hsyrskers" Roy Underhill tonsifacts a garden rake. (R)

3 :0 0
0

(10) LA 8EMANA EN LA UQ I8LATURA
0 P ) WRESTLING

3 ’3 0
f f i' O PSA BOWLING $100,003
Denver Open (Hve from Denver.
Cofol
01(10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
"fading Out" Tony Brown looks at
thar rise m low-budget "triaxpioltaHon" hlms up to tha present-day
exqlusioa ol black! m major Holly­
wood roles.

4 :0 0
B ® BASEBALL Regional cover­
age ol Texas Rangers at Chicago
White Sox; Sen Francisco Qiants at
Los Angeles Dodgers.
PS) P4CREDIBLE HULK
0 (1 0 ) MONEYMAKERS
0 ( 9 ) POPI GOES THE COUNTRY
CLUB

ID

4 :3 0
ffl O
PGA GOLF "Memorial
Tmimameni" Third round (Hve from
Dublin OhioI
0 (10) INSIDE STORY Hoddtng
Cedar examines tha resentment left
by' Centralis, Pa residents victim­
ized by Ihe heaith-threelenlng hre
that has been burning In coal min­
ing tunnels under the town for over
20 years.

5 :0 0
f f i O WOE WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled Trevor B*bick / S T
Obrdon 10-round Heavyweight bout
(kve from Let Vegat, Nev). U SU S SR. Qymnaatica (from Lot
Angela*. CeMl. ■ preview ol the
Indianapolis 500,
IDP$)0AM EL BOONE
0 J tO ) WASHINGTON WEEK IN

0 P ) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
5 :0 5
02 LAST OP THE WILD

0

5 :3 0

(10) W ALL STREET WEEK
"Cloth** Maks The Woman "
Guest Brenda J. Gall, vice presld*it. M*rW Lynch, Pierce. Farm*

__

7 :3 0

B ® FLORIDA'S WATCHING
OJDPS) BARNEY MILLER
CD(8) MUSIC MAGAZINE

8:00

B®

MOVIE "C lw M 't Angel*"
C1075) K ite Jeckion, Farrah
Fawcett-Major*. A caaa ol murder
and robbery connected with rwlhleu vineyard owner* la Investigated
three young female detective*
D O N E NIGHT BAND A travel­
ing counlry-waatarn band la
shanghaied by a motorcycle gang
and forced to entertain at their
leader's wedding.
f f l O TJ. HOOKER Anew female
police commissioner Interferes with
Hooker's efforts lo and a truckers'

a

ID(35) MOVIE

"SI»1"(19U)Julie
Andrews, Richard Crenns. Gertrude
Lawrence, an Englishwomen who
becomes a Broadway Her, has sev­
eral emotions! relationship*
0 (10) THE GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION "Bsng The Drum
Slowly" Paul Newman, Albert Salmi
and George Peppard s i* In a tele­
drama about a young baseball play­
er who helps his terminally III Iriand
and Itammsl* through ona last
Mison

0

(9) BEST OF MIDNIGHT SPE­

CIAL

S TA R 4FA N O L1D ENTERTAIN­
MENT SPECTACULAR The Demo­
cratic National Committee presents
■ Mve, 17-hour extravaganza; start
scheduled to entertain Include Ed
Aener, Bee Arthur. Jan* Fonda, Hal
Linden. Helen Reddy. John For­
sythe. Kris Khstofterson, Jack Lammon. Mary Tyler Moore, Paul New­
man and Ben Vartan.

___ 10:00

FANTASY ISLAND A rock
star who witnessed a murder hides
out a t the butler to three slaters,
and a would-be entertainer gets the

(£ B

MOVIE

"Night Passage'
(1957) Jsmes Slewad. Audit Mur­
phy An outlaw deserts his gang
when Ihey hold up a train guarded
by his broth*.

000
(D O MOVIE "Were Fighting
Back" (test) Kevin Mahan. Paul
McCrane. A group of New York City
youths bend together to light crime
In Ihetr neighborhood. |R)
f f i O LOVE BOAT Julie s oncewealthy sunt learns that the It now
penniless, a woman competes with
• robot I * ■ handsome passen­
ger's silentions, and • couple meet
the surrogate moth* they hired. (R)
8 (10) THE GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION "Requiem For A
Heavyweight'' Originally produced
as pan of CBS’* Playhouta 90
a*iet. (hi* teledrama starring Jack
Palance gives a glimpse Into the
shabby world ol prizefighting
O (■) ALL-STAR TRIBUTE TO
ERNEST TUBS; AN AMERICAN
OAKMNAL A host ol country music
stars. Including Razzy Bailey, Merle
Haggard. Loretta Lynn, Marly Rob­
bins. Dottle West. Conway Twttty
and Faron Young, g ith * to pay
tribute to the legendary musician et
the Nashville Performing Arts Can-

6:16
O WORLD AT LARGE
6:30
(DAGRICUITUREUJJL

6sb0
Western bar. |R)p

1 0 :0 5
ID NEWS

1 0 :3 0

ID (W| StSKEL E EBERT AT THE
MOVIES
0 (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

11.-00

B ® FLORIDA'S WATCHING
f f l 0 LAW AND YOU
f f l B AQRKULTURE U JA.
(Q) WEEK IN REWW
0 (1 ) NEWS
6:30
B ® OPPORTUNITY UNE
( 3 ) 0 SPECTRUM
f f l O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

CD

O ® ® O
O NEWS
ID PS) SOAP
0 (10) ALFREO HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
O (!) MOVIE "Dragon Force" (No
Data) Mufung Kwak. Kyehee Kim.

D

1 1 :0 5

TUSHt "Summer Vacation"
Quests: George Thorogood end Ihe
Destroyers.

1 1 :3 0
B ® CELEBRATE AMERICA: A
STAR-SPANGLED ENTERTAIN­
MENT SPECTACULAR (CONTD)
MOVIE "The Getaway"
(1972) Stava McOuean, All
MacQraw.
f f i O MOVIE "Judgment At
Nuremberg" (1SB1) Maximilian
Schell. Spencer Tracy.
(ID PS) MOVIE "Circus Ot Hor­
rors" (I960) Anton (Wring. Erika
Remberg.

CD O

12:00

0 ® CELEBRATE AMERICA: A
STAR-SPANO LED ENTERTAIN­
MENT SPECTACULAR (CONTD)

805
02

Man" (IM G ) Dem y MMer, Cetera
Denova Tartan halpe a woman
burial
nlook
r w n for
vswv the
sim p sacred
w n w w aiwabwit a^eat'^mB
grounds.

7 :0 0 '

(1955) Tyrone Power. Maureen
O'Hara.

ID PS)

•1 :0 0

MOVIE "The Mummy's
Curse" (I944| Lon Cheney. Peter
Coe.
0 (9) LATE IS GREAT

1 :3 0
® O MOVIE "Susannah Ot The
Mounllet" (1939) Shlrtey Temple.
Randolph Scott.
0 (9 ) MOVIE "Who's Minding Tha
Mint?" (1967) Jim Hutton, Dorothy
Provine.

0®

2:00

CELEBRATE AMERICA; A
STAR-SPANGLED ENTERTAINMEMT SPECTACULAR (CONTD)

3 :0 0

D MOVIE "Indianapolis Speed­
way" (1939) Qale Paga, Pal
O'Brian.

3 :1 6
0 (9) MOVIE "Tha Great Taxas
Dynamite Chase" (197S) Claudia
Jennings. Jocelyn Jones.

a MO) S0UN0ETA0S "Doc Wop!
Doo Wopt" Tha root* of rack and

f f l Q ROBERT SCHULLER
f f l 0 PICTURE OF HEALTH
ID{$$) BEN HAOEN
® THE WORLD TOMORROW
0 P ) JIM BANKER
7:30
® e m U .D A M E L B
B
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OP ORLANDO
02) IT IS WRITTEN

S

0 (1 ) JAMES ROBISON
8:30
a ® SUNDAY MASS
f f l Q DAY OF DISCOVERY
f fl © ORAL ROBERTS
CLD PS) JOS* ANO THE PUSSY­
CATS
0 (S )L T . WEAVER

0®

THE WORLD TOMORROW

f f i Q SUNDAY MORNING

f f i O P R IM i OF YOUR LIFE
ID P S ) BUGS SUNNY AND

FftMENUS
0 (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
Featured: "Popeye Meeta Sinbad"
(1930). the tint color Popeye erect­
ed by Mas and Dave Flatten*; a
cartoon; selectsd Short*; end Chapt * 1 ol "The Phantom Empire"
(1935) H errin g Gene Autry and
Smiley Bumetle. (R)

0 ( 1 ) WAYNE KNIGHT
005
02) LOST IN SPACE
0 :3 0
O f f i MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
f f i O MORAL ISSUES
ID P S) THE JCTSONS
O P ) W .V. GRANT

1000
OffiHEALTHSSAT
f f i O EMNY / JET CELEBRITY
SHOWCASE
O P S )M O V IE "That'sThe8ptrll"
&lt;19451 Jack Oakle. Peggy Ryan. A
man returns from Leaven lo make
explanation* to hit wile on Earth.

0 ( 9 ) PETER POPOFP
1005
02) U Q H T IR SlOE

0

f f i CELEBRATE AMERICA A
BTAR-BPANQLIO ENTERTAINMBIT SPECTACULAR (CONTD)
f f i Q THIRTY MMUTES
f f i O FMBT EAPTPT CHURCH
0 (t0) COMPUTER PROGRAMME
0 P ) ABBOTT ANO COtTELLO

1 0 :3 5
02 M O W
"S *geen i York"
(1941) Oery Coop*, W elt* Bren­
nan. A ft* being raised In the moun­
tains ot Tennessee, a young man
becomes a World W * I h *o by tingie-hendedly capturing a German
position.

ffi O

11:00

BLACK AWARENESS
0 (10) LAST CHANCI GARAGE
Brad Sear* visit* a specialty shop
lo unlock Ihe secrets ol radiator
refitting. Q
0 P ) GREATEST SPORTS LEO-

908
OW BEKM REVNm

MO

f f l Q ALICE M elanesiaW andaTt
aid m e crazy plot to Meal a com-

roll
irfonranfiii
- i i nw N
v * oh
* g gieh
i i t etid
^ e in
ess D
apem
eve aew a

by hve of tha top group* of tha BOt
- Tha Mystics, Tha Caprta, Randy
and tha Rainbows, Tha Harp Tones
end The Jive Five.

3:30
CD O
N A GOLF "Memorial
Tournament" Final round (Mve from
Dublin, Ohio). (Starling time la subJed to change)

4:00
P&lt;) INCREDIBLE HULK
(10) EOUNOCTAQE "Full
Swing ‘ Lorraine Feather. Charlotte
Crossley end Stave March recreate
the vitality and romance of tha
awing ara music with today's tech­
nology and styls.
B(«)TAH ZAN

8

4:30
a ®

8:00
a ® VOICE OF VICTORY
® O rexh u m sard
f f l © B O B JONES
&lt;LD(*S)J0NNY QUEST

am. (Part 3) Q

v

B ® r 8 COMPANY

1 2 :0 5

D MOVIE "The Long Gray Line"

2 :0 6
(B&gt; BASEBALL Chicago Cuba at
Atlanta Brevet
300
B ® MOVIE "Three's A Crowd"
T IM E ) Larry Hagman, C J. Peaker.

OUTDOOR LIFE

4:46
CD a AMERICAN SPORTSMAN
Actor Sam Jonea will sail aboard
the "Intuition" In tha Newport.
Rhode Island to Bermuda race; San
Francisco Stars tight-end Ruu
Francis wNl travel lo Morocco lo
share a unique turfing experience;
actor Mark Harmon wtl participate
In the trapping end shipping ot big

500

0

ffi
SPORTSWORLD
Scheduled: Bruce J em * Track
end Field Classic (from San Jose.
CeM.|; the 400-met* Intermediate
hurdles (from Modesto. Calif.).
PS) DANIEL BOONE
(10) F1RMO UNE "A Tradition­
alist Look At Modem Europe"
Quest*: Prince Hubertua nr Loweneteln, Robert Uvlngsion ol the
Georgetown School of Foreign Ser­
vice.

8

0 ( 9 ) T H i INVADERS
505
(IS LAST OF THE WILD
5 :3 5
H
UNDERSEA W ORLO OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

600
O f f i f f i a ( S O NEWS
IDPStKUNQPU

0

(10) BROOKLYN BRIDGE

M usic, art, p o e iry end rare archi­
val m aterial are incorporated In a
docum entary tracing the develop­
m ent o l one o l A m * te a 's moat
enduring monum ents. (R|
O P ) THE AVENGERS

6 :3 0

0 (10) FLORKM HOMS GROWN
(FRO
105

10.-05

DM OW PUE-FRO

1 0 :3 0

(D O AS THE WORLD TURNS
0 (10) LAST CHANCt OARAGE

DNCW S

140

ID(SI) JM BARKER
0 ( W) THE GOOD NEIGHBORS

10*45
D SPORTS PAGE

1140
0

(10) SNEAK PREW W S Neal
Gebler and Jeffrey Lyons review
"Return 01 The Jedl," "Tough
Enough" and "Spacahuntar:
Adventuras In Tha Forbiddan
Zone."
O P ) BEST OF MDMQHT SPE­
CIAL

1105
0 2 JERRY FALWELL
1 1 :3 0

0

® ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK An Interview with Syfvealer
Stallone; a look at Rick Springfield 's Ural mods; ovar-40
actresses All MacOrew, Unde
Evens, Unde Gray and Joan Col­
lins.
(D O SOLID OOLO
ID (J8) W.V. GRANT

O PS) SPORTS ALBUM (THU)

2 :5 0
(D) PS) YESTERDAY'S NEWSREEL
(WED)

300

m m THE SUNSHINE SYSTEM THE IMS FLORIDA LEGISLATURE

Scott.
f f i Q M OW "Magnum Fores"
(1973) cum Eastwood. Hal Hotbroofc.
f f i o LARRY KMG Quest*: Ekia
bath Ashley; Beale i Serge KlaraMd. NaH-hunlars responsible lor
the deportation end trial ol Klaus
Barbie: Mr. T.

105
02 M OW "Fireball 500" (19S6)
Frankie Avalon. Annette Funlc*lo.

200
( S O M O W "A Hatful Ol Rain"
(1957) Don Murray, Eve Mwia
Saint.
f f i O CSS NMIMQHTWATCH

305
02 M O W "Top Met" (1935) Fred
Astaire, Glng* Roger*.

6 :3 6
02 NICS PEOPLE

(10) SESAME STREET Q
(S)MV-S
^

3 :6 0

700

f f i NO BMO IN CHINA
"Sesame Street's" Big Bird, hit
dog Barkley and s young Chinese
gkl Journey through CMne In search
01 the beautiful and legendary
Phoenix n
f f i 0 9 0 MINUTES
f f i O (BELEY'S BELIEVE IT OR
NOTI Featured: Ihe story ol the
supposedly haunted Orest Eastern
steamship; strange new musical
Instruments; monkeys; a look et air­
craft ol the tUOa to today's

( S O M O W "Deception"(1945)
Bette Davis, Claude Rein*

ID(Be) WILD, WILD WEST

0 2 WORLD AT LARGS (MON)

0
(10) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
Roseenne Cash end Sieve WarIn * we the featured pertormara.
O P ) M OW "Song Ol Norway"
(1970) Florence Henderson, Torelv
Maoritad Famous Norwegian com­
pos* Edvard Grieg finds true
romance and wide acclaim.

7 :0 5

6:10

0 2 NICE PEOPLE (WED)
5 :2 0
0 2 AGRICULTURE USA. (FM)

110) MYSTERY (MON)
(10) MASTERPPCI

02 WRESTLING

600

Oramatic developments ensue for dramatists on HBO in June. Top, In the
mystery 'Deathtrap', airing June 2 at 6 p.m„ a pair of playwrights
(Michael Caine, right, and Christopher Reeve) may not be play acting as
they wrestle with a scene. Meanwhile, In the warmhearted comedy
'Author! Authorl', to be broadcast June 10 at 8 p.m., a Broadway writer
(.Al Pacino) takes center stage at the dinner table as he confers wifh his
m m lly of five...only one of whom Is his own child.________________________

STAR-SPANGLED ENTERTAIN­
MENT SPECTACULAR (CONTD)
The Democratic National Commu­
te* present* a Kve, 17-hour extra­
vaganza; stars scheduled to enter­
tain include Ed Aarwr, Be* Arthur.
Jan* Fonda, Hal Linden. Helen
Reddy. John Forsythe, Kris Krietoftwson. Jack Lemmon. Mary
Tyter Moore. Paul Newman and Ben
Veraan.
f f i O STAR TREK
ID (SI) M O W "On The Town"
(1950) Gone KaKy. Frank Sinatra A
trio of sailor* teem up with a taxi
drtv* and an anthropologist lo llnd
a beeuiitul girl whoaa picture It dis­
played In the subway.
■M KROREAT CHEFS OP NEW

f f i O AROSE BUNKER'S PLACC
Archie's "Imported" kitchen help.
Raul end Jose, witness ■ mugging
outside the bar.(R)
ffi O
MATT HOUSTON Matt
investigate* a murd* that wsa the
result ol eevwel aentettonai Hones
pubkehed in a scendalout newapeP *-(R )
0D ( I I ) HEALTH MATTERS
"Weight Loss"
0 (10) OOSMOt "The Backbone
01 Nighr Dr. Carl Began examinee
human thought about the neevans
throughout history and attempts to
orgenix* what is eeen above us. (R)

| SAUSAGE
:e g g * c h eese
i BISKIT
! SAVE 30*

0 P ) M O W "Around The WorM
Und* The Sea" (IM S) Brian KaKy.
David McCatam. Bdanttaa plant
aarthquaksHaarnlng device* on tha
ocoan floor.

12:20
Continued from page 1A
The study bIbo showed that even
w Uhoul Sanford's sewage, the quality of
t ie lake's and river’s waters cannot meet
s ate standards for purity und that the
s al e standards arc too high in this
li stance.
The study was submitted to DER.
t nowlcs said, adding while some DER
c petals concurred with the O Connor
finding, they were not willing to reduce
those standards.
Even so, the commission unanimously
agreed lo file an appeal with the DER
district office in Orlando requesting the
change In regulations.
____
Meanwhile. Knowles said a 1976 study
estimated costs o f changing the sewer
operation to land spreading for a
9,4-rollllon-gullon-a day capacity at 814
million. He said at today's costs, that will
rise to 615 million to provide Und
spreading for'a 6 .5 -mllHon gallons-a-day
plant.
He said (he city would b a-c to
purchase about 2.000 acres at a price of
perhaps 635.000 an acre and would

larger pumps and pipes.
“ These factors would add to the 215.8
million estimate and the total would
become an estimated 617 million.“
Knowles said. “ And that cost Is not the
end. Seeking an annual debt cost would
Include a 30-year bond issue at 10.5
percent with bond Issuance expenses,
insurance. Rscal agent and the creation
o f a reserve, all bringing the bond Issue
total to approximately 620 million,
requiring an annual debt payment o f
62.2 million.
Knowles said present sewer rates
generate 6839.500 per year. “ Therefore,
the costs would require the existing rale
schedule lo be Increased by 2.6 times."
he said, adding the Impact c f this “ is not
light and It wlllhurt many people."
Knowles said an exam ple o f the
increases In sewer rates would be as
foliowa: those paying the minimum bill
o f 63.64 monthly would see an Increase
to 69.58 monthly; those paying 68.03
would sec their bills Increase lo 621.14;
those paying 66.60 would sec an in­
crease to 622.64 and thoae paying 69.16
would have a bill Increased to 824.11.

0 ® FANTASY
ff l 0QUKMMQ LIGHT
f f i 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
(LD PSJ THt FUNTSTONEB (MONWED, FRO

2 :3 0

O ffiN B C N E W S
ff i 0 CBS NEWS
( S O ABC NEWS

0

1040
® O TRAPPER JOHN. MO.
Trapper and Gonto teoe eaecutton
by a Tiring eoued aa prisoners of a
paramilitary leader, and Stanley's
hanoee gats cold Met. (Part 1) (R|
0 (1 « THE OOOO NBQHBORS
0 (9 ) SATURDAY NOHT

Q lS W tS

tll- M M ttl

�J

C o n tact Lon*
So lu tio n *
A re R e ca lle d

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando • Winter Park

DENVER (UP!) - The
322-2611
831-9993
manufacturer o f Serelne
contact tens solutions re­
RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
called Its products Friday
I t l m s .........................54c a lin t
HOURS
1 consecutive tim a s . M e * line
because the Food and
7 consecutive tin ts *. .44c s lifts
l:J0 A.M. — 5:|0 P.M.
Drug Adm inistration
10 consecutive flin ts d ie s lifts
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
found evidence of possible
S3.00 Minim um
SATURDAY 9 - Noon
bacteria contam ination
3 Lints Minim um
that could lead to eye
infections.
DEADLINES
"Th e bacteria was found
Noon The Day Before Publication
In samples from current
Sunday-Noon Friday
production at the plant,”
Monday5:30 P.M. Friday
said Mike Quinn, the FDA
compliance officer in Den­
ver. "That, coupted with
processing problems, re­
sulted In a decision by the
firm to voluntarily recall
everything they have on
• A B O R T IO N •
LO N ELY?
1st T rim e s te r ab o rtio n 772 w k *.,
the marketplace as a pre­
3 *H r. R ecorded Message.
* t » - M e dica id 1130,- 13 1* W k*.
U 11791002I
cautionary measure."
* 3 3 3 . M a d lc a ld * 1 4 5 ; G y n
The Serelne products
S ervice* *23; P regnancy te st;
fre e c o u n s e lin g . P ro le s ilo n e l
manufactured by Optlkem
c a re s u p p o rtiv e a tm o s p h e re ,
International may have
c o n fid e n tia l.
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
become contaminated due
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
N otice Is hereby g ive n th a t I am
W O M E N 'S H E A L T H
to processing problems
a n g a g a d In b u s in e s s a t 3 *0 9
O R G A N IZ A T IO N
and th e f a i l u r e o f
H ia w a th a A ve., Sanford, S tm ino le
N EW LO C ATIO N
C
ounty,
F
lo
rid
a
under
the
tlc
tllio
u
i
manufacturing equ ip ­
1700 W . C olonial D r.. O rlando
nam
e
o
l
L4
S
A
U
TO
SALES
and
m
a
t
305-091 0921
ment. said Denver plant
I Intend to re g is te r sdid nam e w ith
1*00731 35*1
manager Clair Homman.
th e C le rk o f th e C irc u it C o u rt,
Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a In a c ­
Homman said people
cordance w ith the provisions o l the
using the solutions would
F ic titio u s N a m * Statutes, to w it:
Section 0*5.09 F lo rid a S tatute* 1957.
have to have a scratched
Lost Dog. Look* Ilk * h e llh o u n d .
Law rence J . Samuels
comea or other eye injury
S ilve r black flu ffy h a ir, black
P ub lish M a y 39 and J u n * 5, 12, 19,
la c * . L a st seen in A rea o l 427 and
for the organism to cause
I9 U .
tS. C ountry C lub Road. Laka
DEH-1«t
infection.
M a ry . Tuas. E vening. 24th M ay.
Quinn said, however,
there was a "potential for
any wearer o f hard contact
lenses to get a serious
Injury."

IN V IT A T IO N FO R BID S
T H E H OUSING A U T H O R IT Y OF
T H E C IT Y O F S A N F O R D ,
F L O R ID A w ill r a c t lv * b id s lo r
S U B T E R R A N E A N T E R M IT E
T R E A T M E N T o l C a s tl* B re w e r
C ourt. W illia m C la rk C ourt, E d w a rd
“ It Is possible that the H ig g in s T a r r a c a a n d C o w a n
use o f these products, if M oughton T a rra ca u n til 2:00 P .M ., on
non-stcrlie, may cause an th e 10th day of J u n *. 19*3 a t the
A d m in is tr a tio n B u ild in g , C a s tl*
eye infection in injured or B ro w e r C ou rt, Sanford, F lo rid * at
compromised eyes." the w h ic h tlr- a an d p la c t a ll b id * w ill b *
p u b lic ly opened and road aloud.
company said.
Proposed fo rm * o l c o n tra ct docum a n l s , i n c l u d i n g p la n s a n d
specifications, e ra on tlta a t ih t
o ffic e o f th * Housing A u th o rity o f the
C it y o l S a n fo rd , F lo r id a . A d ­
m in is tra tio n B u ild in g , Castle B rew er
C ourt, Sanford. F lo rid a .
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Copies o l the docum ents m e y be
obtained by depositing *35 00 w ith th *
N otice Is hereby g ive n th a t I a m
H ousing A u th o rity lo r each set o l
s n g ig e d In business a t 114 E . C rys ta l
docum ents so obtained. Such d g p o ilt
___
O r., S a n fo rd , S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo rid a under the fic titio u s nom a of w ill be refunded to each person who
C 4A E N E R G Y S A V IN G SYSTEM S, re tu rn s th * plans, specifica tio n* and
and th a t I Intend to re g is te r said other docum ents In good condition
nam e w ith C le rk o f th e C irc u it C ourt, w ith in 10 day* a fte r b id opening.
A c e rtifie d check o r bank d ra ft,
S em inole C o u n ty, F lo rid a tn a c ­
cordance w ith the pro visio ns of the payable to the Housing A u th o rity ol
F ic titio u s N am e Statutes. T o -W it: th * C ity of Sanford, F lo rid a , U.S.
G overnm ent bends, o r a satisfa cto ry
Section *45 0* F lo rid a Statutes 1957.
b id bond executed by th * bidders end
/s /C lo o S , W illia m s
acceptable sureties In an am ount
P ub lish M a y 0. IS, 31.19,1941.
•q u a l to 5% o l the b id shall be
DEH-57
subm itted w ith each bid.
T h * successful b id d e r w ill be
re q u ire d to tu m ls h end pay lo r
IN T H I C IR C U IT C O URT. B IG * *
sa tis fa cto ry pe rform an ce and pa y­
T E IN T M J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT . IN
m ent bond o r bonds.
A N D POR S E M IN O L E C O U N TY.
A tte n tio n Is celled to th * provisions
F L O R ID A .
to r equal e m ploym en t o p p o rtu n ity ,
C A * I NO. *3-911-CA 4 9 -L
and paym ent o f not less then th *
D IV IS IO N :
m in im u m sala ries and wages sat
D U V A L F E D E R A L SAVIN G S A N D
fo rth in the S pecifications m u st be
L O A N 4 4 4 0 0 1 1 9 *7 I O N O F
p a id on th is p ro je c t.
JA C K S O N V IL LE , a corpo ration,
The Housing A u th o rity o l th * C ity
P la in tiff,
o l Sanford, F lo rid a reserve* the rig h t
to r * |* c t any o r a ll bids o r to w aive
any in fo rm a litie s In the bidding.
No b id shall be w ith d ra w n to r a
p e riod o f th irty (ID) days subsaquant
to th * opening o f bids w ith o u t th *
consent of th * H ousing A u th o rity of
the C ity o l Sanford, F lo rid a .
D ata: M a y 3a, 1141
T H E H OUSING A U T H O R IT Y
OF T H E C IT Y OF
SAN FO RD , F L O R ID A 3311151
B y: E llio t L. S m ith
In Sem inole County, F lo rid a ,
E xecutive D ire c to r
W a it 1141 lo ot of Lot IS, a ll L o t I* .
P ublish M e y 2*. 39end Junes, 1943
B lock «*. SAN LAN DO T H E SUBURB
OEH-I4D
B E A U T IF U L . P A L M S P R IN G S
SEC TIO N , os p o r p lo t thoroof os
N O TIC E O F
record e d in P ie t Book 1, p e g * *5 W,
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
p u b lic records o l Seminole C ounty.
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N B Y
F lo rid a
T H E C IT Y O F L O N G W O O O .
has boon file d ag ainst you; and you
F L O R ID A , th a t tho C ity C om m ission
are re q u ire d So serve o copy o f your
w ill hold a p u b lic hearing to consider
w ritte n deten t *s . If a n y, to ft on
enactm ent o l O rdinance i s i l , en­
E d w a rd S. Jones, p la in tiff's a t­
title d : A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
to rney, whoso address I* I t * D uval
C IT Y O F LONGWOOO, F L O R ID A ,
F e d e ra l B u ild in g , J a c k s o n v ille ,
A M E N D IN G O R D IN A N C E NO. 495
F lo rid a , 13303. before June I , lf03.
A N D A L L ITS A M E N D M E N T S O F
an d file th e o rig in a l w ith the C la rk at
S A ID C IT Y , S A ID O R D IN A N C E
B E IN G T H E C O M P R E H E N S IV E
Z O N IN G O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C IT Y O F LONGW OOO. F L O R ID A ,
M I D A M E N D M E N T C H A N G IN G
T H E ZO N IN G O F C E R T A IN T E R ­
R IT O R Y F R O M N-1 (R E S ID E N ­
T IA L S IN G L E F A M IL Y ) TO H
(H IS T O R IC A L D IS T R IC T ); PR O ­
V ID IN G A N E F F E C T IV E D A T E ;
R E P E A L IN G O R D IN A N C E S IN
C O N F L IC T H E R E W IT H .
Le g a l: LOTS I I I . 114 314 end 111
P ublish.
OEH-ft

B eing m o re g M ie ro lly described os
135 Jessup Avenue.
Sold O rdinance w o t placed on firs t
rea din g on M a y EX, 1941 ond th * C ity
C om m ission e d it consider to m * to r
fin a l p o s u g s and adoption o f to r th *
p u b lic hearing w h ic h w ill b o h o ld In
th o C ity H o lt, 173 W . W orsen Avenue,
Lang wood. F lo rid *, on M o nday, tho
IJN i day o f Juno. A O .. 1943. e l 7 : *
PJM. o r as ts a n th e m e (toe as possl
M o. A t the m o o tin g In terested p a rtie s
m a y s p p i ir a n d b a h o a rd w ith
respect to th o proposed O rdinance.
This h e a rin g m a y be continued fro m
lim a to tlm o u n til fin a l a c tio n Is
to k o n b y lh * C ity C om m ission.
A copy o f th * p r s p i n d O rdinance
Is posted a t th * C ity H a ll. Longwood.
F lo rid * , o n d r o p t a o ra on (II* w ith
the C la rk o f the C ity and ta m e m a y
faa inaeoctod by th e p u b lic .
A toped re co rd o f th is m o oting is
m o d * by th * C ity to r IN conven lon c*.

GAS A T T E N D A N T . Goad s a la ry,
h o s p lto llt a llo n . I w n k p a id
vacation a v a ry I m o n th *. F o r
In fo rm a tio n . C a ll 111-1*41 bo*
twoan I S P M . _________________

B eauty A d v lto r w a n ftd fo r now
M t r l* N orm an S tudio Sanford.
_Call fo r ap po intm en t. 333 3*31.

FA S T FOOD O P E R A TIO N
W ill tra in . E x ce lle n t s a la ry and
b e n a lit*. F o r In fo rm a tllo n C all
333 3***. betw een I S.
F u ll lim a P lu m b a r experienced
o n ly , p e rfe rre d licensed. C all

.J IH K ! _________________

C r e d it P ro b le m s ? R e c e iv e e
M a ste rca rd o r V isa, guranleed,
n o b o d y re fu s e d ; lo r I r e *
b ro ch u re send s e ll addressed
stam ped envelop* to C re d it D ata,
Box 3710*4, D allas. Texas 75337
o r c a ll a n ytim e 2U-33* 594*.
N ew O ffice now opening.
VORW ERK
1130 W. 1st St.

2 7 -N u rs e ry A
Child Cere
C h ild C ara In m y home.
D a lly and w ee kly rates
C all 1314351
C hild C ere in m y hom e. Age 1 4 up
M o n -F rl. D ays only. Fenced ya rd
____________ 3314577.___________ _
Reasonable R e te llI I. W ill keep
y our C h ild In m y home, Iro m
M F. 1 :0 0 -5PM. 332 9437.

31— Private
Instructions
* * * *331 3 3 3 3 * * * •
F o r S w im m in g In form ation.
_______ Jackie Caolo

33— Real Estate
Courses
REYES LICENSE EXAM SCHOOL

NEEDED AT ONCE
2 Large L a ka fro n t homo 3 BR 2
bath L R /O R /K It E x tra *.
3 Paola w ho w ill w o rk to ro p la co 3
w ho w ou ld not. C o ll 321-3022.
O F F IC E H E L P Sovorot p o tltlo m .
lu ll 4 p o rt tim e opening* a v a il­
ab le now. W ill fu lly tro ln . *39*09*.
___________________ _
O F F IC E H E L P F u ll lim a , m any
opening*, good d a rtin g pa y. C oll
I m m edio ts ty *29-4094.___________
O fflc a H «Ip Im m e d ia te o p a n ln g *,
no o ip o rto n c o -w lll tra in .
_____________339 44*4._____________
P o rt T im a . W oman en d M an. W ork
fro m hom o on ttlo p h o n o p ro ­
g ra m . E a rn *33. to *100 po r
w eak,depending on tim e a v a ilable. 377-330*.___________________
P a rt T lm o . N ig h t* and weekend*.
A tte nd ant. A le rt. In te llig e n t Indl-

have m echanical a b ility . Phona
to r appointm ent 371 *903.________
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D has
m a n y fobs available.
Both tw ip o r a r y and fu ll lim a .
C a ll today 373 54*9

P R O D U C T IO N
W ORKER
N e e d 5. S h o u ld h a v e i
c a rp e n try experience. *4.35.
W asting tim e and gas
A t o u r rep uta tio n

LOOK TO THE LEADER

P leas* C ell 323 0*09._____________
L O S T M t n 's S n a k e R in g In
B ah am a Jo e 's. Sunday n ig h t
3/33. R ew ard. 90* 1*304*3

25—Special Notices

A lta m o n te Spin®* J b d rm . k id *, lu ll
kitchen , y a rd S41J FaaJ39 7200
Sov-O n-R ontol*. Inc. R oottor

A ir . Cond. In ita lla tlo n D u ct and
S arvlca ta c h n id a n *. Sharp o n ly .
1 0 5 4 3 *3 3 # , 904 771 7791.

N o d o o r to d o o r. E d u c a tio n a l
supplies. G reat o p p o rtu n ity w ith
top com pany!
CUSTO M ER S E R V IC E .......(193 Wk
You e ra needed today. H andle busy
p h o n e s - a lu m ln u m p r o d u c ts
know ledge w ins 1
LA N D S C A P IN G .................. (140 W k.
Y ea r round w o rk w ith th is gro w ing
com pany, w ill tra in on heavy
equipm ent I
B O O K K E E P E R ...................*39* W k.
F a scin a tin g v a rie ty position. W ill
tra in on Invoices, e m ployer pays
e llb e n e flls l
D R IV E R ...........................................1*1
P a rt lim a , us* com pany c a r, m a le
o r le m a le , s ta rt Tuesday I

M A C H IN IS T .....................SSSeWk.
C o m p a n y w i l l t r a in on th a lr
m achines, It some background.
E xce lle n t b e n e llti and raises.
G A L F R ID A Y ........................IIM W k .
F rie n d lie s t c re w In to w n ! W ork
w ith fig u re s, lig h t typ in g , gre a t
fringes.

OVER 100 LISTINGS

DISCOUNT FEE-2 WEEKS
FRANCHISES AVAILABLE
H I FRENCH AVE 323-H76

N ext I week evening classes lo r
Reel E state License w ill begin
J u n * * , 1943. F o r tu itio n re lm
b u rs e m a n t In fo r m a tllo n c a ll
M lld ro d S . W ong 333 3300.
Topper Long bed lu ll sl*e p ick up.
N o h a ll da m a g e . No bro ke n
glass. WO. 331 2*05.

_

•

NEVER A FEE

A b lu t
k t im i lenrtess

H o n , Tues I Wed

100200

300 V IM F ro SI |F lm h « Bonk B u ttn o j
S*nkxd321-39&lt;0
R oofing S hlnglers by the
square. D eltona area
______ 333 75*3
TR U C K D R IV E R S Local 4 long
haul positions. H igh w age*. C ell
today *39 *09*
T Y P IS T 5 0 W P M E xp e rie n ce d In
d a te e n try , m e d ica l, pension,
p ro fit sharing. U n ite d Solvents

331 1*00__________________

W a itre s s e s 4 hostesses. Some
•x p e re ln c e p re fe rre d A p p ly In
person H o lid a y Inn 1-4 4 St. Rd
W anted 2 Ladles to r selling.
S tanley Hom e P roducts.

___

*4*4*13.

W AR EH O U SE W O R KER S M a ny
openings, fu ll lim e , good S tarting
pay. C all Im m e d ia te ly *39 *094

H e v * you trie d to c e ll us end th *
lin e ha * been busy? W ell, w e've
been busy I B u i w e now h e v*
m o re lin e * to serve you be tte r.
E n|e y yo u r M e m o ria l D ay H o li­
d a y, a * we w ill also and be o u r*to w atch M onday’ s paper lo r
some of o u r super |ob lis tin g *.
2415 French Ave
tin Sobikt B ld g .I
_____________ 331-5743_____________
C O N V E N IE N C E Store Cashiers.
Good sa la ry, h o s p lta llta tlo n , I
w ee k p a id v a c a tio n a v e ry *
m onths.
F o r Into c a ll M anager
a t:
A irp o rt B lv d .* * 3314151
C assalbarrg * * 319 1735
C alo ry A ve M 3334311
Lk. M a ry * t 33343*5

73— Employment
Wanted
A p p re n tice C arpenter |u * t com
p le le d Jab C arp tra in in g . Good
w o rk e r, strong bock, has own
tools. 171 5590.

1 0 5 -DuplexTriplex / Rent

103-H ou ses
Unfurnished /R e n t

91—Apartm ents/
House to Share

2 S m a lle r hom e*. 3 BR 3 bath,
L R /D R /K It.

La ke M a ry-3 b d rm . k id * c o rp e O to
laa*at29S. Faa 3397300
Sov-On-Rsntots. Inc. H e* lia r
3 B d rm . Ito ba th. S anford, L a k t
M a ry are a, Include* a ir condi­
tio n , a lt a p p lia n c e *, w a s h e r,
d ry e r hook up. 1330. M o. C all
130 7*09 AH . 1 P M .______________

I to w n h o u **7 B R IW b a th ,
I condo. 3 BR . 2 bath. Pool, Tannl*.
D AYS 37* 143*
E va*. 709 0331
C asselberry f r t a u tllltla * . t b d rm ,
no lo a ta , lok*S7SW k. Faa
(av-O n-R entals, In c. R e a lto r
a E ffic ie n c y A p t* a
We have e v e ry th in g . J u tl b rin g
lin e n * and d lih e * .
....................A ttic S lo rag a....................
................S ln g lr» to ry liv in g ................
................E n e rg y E ffic ie n t................
.............. L u th la n d tc a p ln g ................
e Sanford C ourt e
_____________333-3301._____________
Form atted e p a rlm e n t* to r Senior
C hiton s. 311 P a lm e tto Ave. J ,
Cowan N o phone c a ll*.___________
I b d rm a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le re n t In
exchange fo r re m od eling w ork.
E xperienced person w ith re ter
tn c e * req uire d. 333-3703,_______
I Bedroom F u rn ishe d A p a rtm e n t
*300 M o nth Plus D eposit t person
only, 3*9-3919.___________________

99—Apartments
U nfu rnished/R ent

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
A v a ila b le now elegant 4 spacious
d u p le x e s w ith la r g e s cre e n
p a r c h e s , s to r a g e ro o m s 4
c a rp o rt*. F u lly e q u ip p 'd - *3*0 to
*310 C all lo r d e ta il*. C entury 31
June P o rilg R ea lty 3211*71.

t b d rm a d u lt* L ig h t* 4 w it e r
tu m lih a d *50 da po *lt. W aakly o r
m onthly. 30-019*.

I l l — Resort/Va cation
Rental*
New Sm yrna Beach C ottage. to
B lo c k Iro m B ea ch . W aak o r
M o nth . 122 5713. E vening *.

Mayfofr C.C. WoBi To Idylfwiicte
d w n . 4 I t 721 • fir e p la c e 4 Fans.

V*w Screened Fool 4 Spa
X'Soior Hoofing, FamilyBoom,
ksndscapod. Storago Area 'osalblo Owner Financing i
Oood
Opportunity

BY APPOINTMINT
PH S M -4 6 9 0

B A M B O O C O V E APTS
300 E . A irp o rt B lvd . Ph. 333 *430.
147 B d rm *.. Iro m *340 M o. S %
discount to r Senior CH liens.
C a s s e lb e rry 1 b d rm c o m p le te
kitchen , pe tlo *230 Fee 339-7300.
lav-O n-R en te Is, Inc. R ealtor
G E N E V A G A R D E N * APTS.
1.3 4 3 B d rm . A pts. F ro m *3*5.
F a m llla s w elcom e.
M on. th ru Sat. 9 A M to 5 P M .
1505 W. 25th St.
333 301
L U X U R Y A P A R TM E N TS
F a m ily 4 A d u lts section. Poolside.
7 B d rm *. M a ste r Cove Apts.
333 7900
________Open on weekends.________
M a rin e r's V illa g e on La ke A da, 1
b d rm fro m *7*5. 1 b d rm Iro m
*310. Located 17 93 ju st south o l
A lr p o r f B lvd . In Sanford. A ll
A du lts: 3731*70.
M e llo n v H I * T r e e s A p t s . 440
M e llo n v lll* Ave. Specious m o d ­
e rn 2 b d rm t beth ap artm en ts.
C a rp e te d , k itc h e n e q u ip p e d ,
C H 4 A , adults, no p e t*. *335
__________ 331-1905. ________
N E W 1 4 3 Bedroom s. A d ja ce n t to
L a k e M o n r o * . H e a lth C lu b .
R ocquetball and M o re l
Sanford Landing S. R. * * 331*330.
R ID G E W O O D AR M S APTS
25*0 Ridgewood A ve. Ph.331 *430
1 .2 4 3 B d rm *. Iro m *3*0.

Unusual 3 level cedar and brkfc heme spedfiealy deelped far let 11, WAYSIDE WOODS... A private, restricted,
heavily weeded paradise which will retain Its nefanl at­
tributes tfcrouctout the years. Though United in size,
WAYSIDE WOODS is destined te be ■ premium Senferd

Sanford Specious. I B d rm . plus den
o r 2nd. B d rm . F u rn itu re . *3*0
A du lts. 1141 ?M3

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Lake M ery 3 bdrm 1 beth
garage *195 discount
____________ 339 37*4._____________
L a rg e 3 B d rm . H eat and e lr, *400
M o. R eference* req uire d.
333 1*4*.A f t e r ! P M .
W in te r Springs a room s, fu ll k ltc h
* n , a ir, p e tlo *110 Fee 319-7300
Sev-O w-Rentals,1nc. R e a lto r
1 B d rm . Specious hom e. Fenced in
y a rd . (17*. C e n tu ry 11. June
P o rilo R ea lty. 3334*7*

Ito w 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
Available Far Immadiata Occupancy

CONSULT OUR

55— Business
Opportunities
F o r Solo o r Looso. R estaurant fu lly
equipped. Soots 100. P r im * loco
Hon, In Sanford. 131 5454.
Im m e d le ts O ccupancy.
U N IQ U E O P P O R T U N IT Y
A re a (ra n ch Is* a v a ila b le lo r Sonlo rd p ro vid e * on o xco llont b u si­
ness o p p o rtu n ity . E xce lle n t cash
(le w end Investm ent re tu rn . Sue
c e s s fu l b u s in e s s p e rs o n m u s t
hove m anagem ent b a ckgro und ;
sole s a b ility h e lp fu l b u t n o t
necessary. 111,310. In ve stm en t
p lu s s m a ll e p o ro tln g c o p ilo t.
C ontact P aul M . K in g . (404 54*
*0 0 1 . C O N S ID E R Y O U R
F U T U R E II

*3—Mortgages Bought
A Sold

D oLend A rea. D a y 944 73*4391,
nights 3054741777.______________

H ELPW AN TED
G overnm en t Jobs fe d e ra l, state,
c iv il s e rv ic e . M a n y openings
a v a ila b le . C e ll (re fu n d a b le )
1*1 95**0 341 . D ept. (F LIT S lo r
d e ta il*. ________
H O U S E K E E P E R fo r A p a rtm e n t
com p le x, m ust be dependable,
a n d h e rd w o rk in g , a p p ly In
parson. I to lP M . M - F .
__________150 1 W. 35th S I__________
H o u sa p o rtn l needed Io r C h ris tia n
C h ild re n * H om e In Geneva. S ala­
ry plus roo m and bo ard . C oll
Don. 349 509*.
Ley- U p m e n lo r fib e rg la ss
m olds. E xperienced o n ly
____________ 1334341._____________
Lice n se d C osm e tologist noodod.
A p p ly In person. 111W . 17th Str.
____________ 322 0991._____________
M anagem ent T ra in in g -R e w o rd in g
e n try level p o sitio n In consum er
fin a n c e . W * a re lo o k in g to r
c orao r m inded In d iv id u a ls w ho
a r t a m b itio u s and en jo y w o rk in g
w ith people. G FC o tte rs on th *
|ob tra in in g , s e cu rity , challenge
e n d good e m p lo y e * b e n e fits .
G en eral Finance C o rp o rtio n 1*71
O rlan do D riv e F a irw a y P la ta
Sontord 33771. E O E /A A .________
N o ll Tech. W onted to r -new M e rle

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9 9 9 3

Custom B u flt a d d itio n *. P olios,
scree n ro o m s , c a rp o rt. D oo r
lo ck s, p a n e lin g , shin gle s, rero o fln g . F o r to st service, c o ll
333 *917, *45 7 *7 1 .________

C lM nlng Service

Kama R e g ain

P A R M A ID SER VIC ES
H ave you had yo u r hom o cleaned
la t e l y ? C le a n in g w it h t h *
personal touch. 31741II . «7G-43tl.

PO RCHES, ba th ro o m floors, rotten
wood raptocom ont, o il s m a ll |ob*
w elcom e. # 1 -0 0 1 .

Landscaping

Electrical
Electrical Service

Q u a lity
Fens, tim e rs , s e c u rity III* * , a d d i­
tio n * . now s o rv lc ts , In su re d .
M a ste r E le c tric ia n Jam es P au l.
133-7*59.

Fence

Lawn Service

FE N C E In sta lla tio n . C hain lin k ,
w ood post A r o ll, A te rm tone*.
Licans# A Insured. 1234191.

ap po intm en t. 3211*31,

CLARBNCI’t
APPLIANCE SERVICE

W * se rvice a ll m a jo r b ra n d *. R e e l
ro te s. I I y rs . exp. 1334111.

Health A Beauty
TO W E R 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a r r le ll’ s B e a u ty
N ook. 119 E . 1st SI. 3131741

Home Im provem ent
lio n s , c o n v e r s io n s , a n d
tlro pto co s. 3344194.

Carpentryby "BILL"
WOOD Artesian Control
carpentry, screened room-doors
etc Boa*. Roto*. 137-1*30.
c o i u e r t HOME REPAIRS
carpaafry, raellag, paiatiag,
wtodewrepair. #14*#
COMPUTE CONSTttlCTKM
N* job to small. Minor B major
repairs. License* Abonds*.
■Mitt
ROOM addlHtns. rt modeling

ELECTRICIAN

f r y w n i fHM«9 O H im fft tp rsyos#
f ln p iK u n if liil*

CARPEN TERre p a ir* and
Heme R e g a in
Hem* Repairs Shoot rock, painting, p a ttM , 4 gmral carpentry
IlYr*.Exa Raaa.333479*.
C erpet/F loer Coverings

^AABlfYhBUriBACR Rtl
’C iorp B ilfifo p o in tin g , plunfelfiQ
H * ImAa||B |m (a|| Ugau
nfnn npgifi

A J LA N D S C A P IN G
C om plete La w n M aintenance
# 1 4 3 *1
LA N D S C A P IN G ?
S h ru b s , g e n e ra l o rn k m o n to ls ,
Shod* trees. Top q u a lity p la n t*.
F ro * dot. t * t 5971. E m . Wknds.

A&amp;B ROOFING
3* y rs . experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Free Estimate* on Rooting,
Re Roofing and Repair*.
Shingles, Built Up and Tilt.

mw

romsdsllng. U years eapartsnea. #24*41.

F ill O lrt. E ast Sontord (35 p o r
load. G enova (34 p e r load (1 y a rd
toads) cheaper ra le s to r la rg e r
tru c k toed*. *4*50*0 o r **5*031.

Masonry
A ll B ric k , b lo c k, and stonew ork.
D r iv e w a y s , p o tto s , o n d
fira p lo c a *. # 9 4194.
B E A L C o n tro l* 1 m an q u a lity
o p e ra tio n . P o tto s , d riv e w a y s .
D a y s # IT U ) E m . M 7 t# l.
S W IF T C O N C R E T E . F o o te rs ,
' pools.
Chart. Stone. Froo EJ Htoor*
/ # 3 710*

Nursing C a n
OUR rateiar ! lower 1
LakovtowNursingContor
4ttE. SecondSt.. Sanford

O eesY our O ld O r N ew Root Leak?
( l i t does, c a ll D a v id Lao.
_________
3334455.
Morrison Roofing Co.
Specialising In shlngls
build up. Low , Low Ratos

EXPERT drossmaking, alfor

# 3 4 7 *3

Painting
Interior or kxtorlar Pointing Froo
cellmates. Romansbto 54* 9x 4
or 14*55)0.
P lastering/D ry W all
ALL Phase* at Plastering
Wootortng repair, stucco, hard
cato. aimutotodbrkfc. anon.
Pressure Cleaning
BOBS Painting A Pressure Clean
•«B Confrof Florida's Choice.
Spring Special 1 A 1 Bdrm.
Pressure cloaned A
witorormtod. (IN. Aik about
» llll.

Sprinklen/lrrigatieji
N W M U IIw T f

Tree Service
mjn, deedar alIw n *

asEttfisasr

�121-Condominium
Rontols

WX FLORIDA REALTY
O f SANFORD REALTOR

\B U T W n
JCANdET

BATEM AN R EALTY

THE BC)» }

3 B d rm . m bath custom fire place,
B la it s lid in g do o rs , lo a d to
P 'lv a c y ta n c a d y a r d . G oo d
assum abla m ortgaga. M (,M 0.
IM S S. FR EN C H
JJJOM I
A tta r Hours l i t 3 0 0 m m
Hidden Lake
Hemes fro m M 7.M 0
V ille i fro m M l,to o
F H A /V A M ortgages
R esidential C om m unities el
A m e rica

R E A L T Y , IN C .
R EALTO R
323-5774
15 Y E A R S E X P E R IE N C E

DREA M COME TR U E) Sunken
liv in g rm " le ts the m o od " tor
th is gorgeous 1 b d rm 1 bath sp lit
p la n hom e w /C H A A , dbl c a r
garage, custom decor end fenced
- . c o r n e r l o t In p r e s t i g i o u s
•* R a m b l e w o o d l F a n t a s t i c
X assum ption I No q u a lify in g end
. p ric e d to s e lll O nly SSI,000.

$ N E OP A K IN D I Gorgeous execu
V fiv e 1 e to ry 1 b d rm I.J bath home
In m in t condition. Huge panelled
• - fa m ily rm ., baem ed c a llin g s!
V O etached cebenna w /llv . rm .,
.* b a r an d ba th fo r a n te rta ln ln g l
&gt;;Over Vy acre lush A spacious
la n d s c a p in g I " N e - q e a llly in g "
&gt;• 111.500 down M l? M o. P rin c ip le A
'■ Interest 11% AP R O n ly 144,000
I. ’

K M T . PISH AND SW IM ON THE
"ST. JOHN'S R IV E R "I E x tra
la rg e oaks and palm s surround
t h i s 3 b d r m 1 b a th h o m e
* w /p a n e l led fa m ily rm and stone
(Irep la ce I Beat dock and covered
boat house w /e le c . lift! Cement
seaw all I 4 paddle tens! D bl car
detached garage I M any extras!
. W hat a v ie w ! O n ly llO f.H O .

S A N F O R O R E A LT Y
R E A LTO R
321
A tt.H n .M H ( 5 4 .M 1 4 ]4 3
JU S T M A R R IE D ? OR R E T IR IN C ?
Belore you buy see th is s p a rk lin g 1
b d rm 1 bath d o ll house. A ll kinds
o l g ra n t extras. C all fo r details
147.100.
TO G E T A W A Y F R O M TH E C IT Y
th is 1 llo r y 4 b d rm 1 ba th horn* Is
re a lly secluded n e ar Osteen on
a p p r o x im a te ly 1 a c re -n e e d s
w ork. Lo t us te ll you about It.

113.000

P R E S TIG IO U S M A Y F A IR Below
m a rk e t value this 3 b d rm 2 balh
home on be au tifu l corner lo t has
loads of potential MS.100
Salesmen needed.

STEMPER AGENCY INC.
______

M1-4W1

M A Y F L O W E R S P E C IA L C ol
u m b u s h lm s e ll w o u ld h a ve
choaen th is 2 s to ry beauty w ith
coxy fire p la c e 1 b d rm 1 huge
.b a th , w o o d e n d e c k s , s cre e n
p o rc h c o u n try k itc h e n , eesy
assum ption w ith no q u a lifyin g .
G reet location. P ric e MS.S00
SH AD Y O AKS Surround th is CB 1
b d rm hom o on gorgeous tot end
good location. Easy assum ption
and :.o q u a lify in g ! W hy ran t
w hen you con own I O nly S41.S00

W E N E E D L IS T IN G S
C A L L U S N O W II

323-5774
M M H W Y 17 (1

with M ajor H oopla

141— Homes For Sale

1 B drm . New roo t new ly painted,
*® 2 ****S P w cfi, fenced r » * r y a rd
w »h fru it tre e t. M7.100.

141— Hom M For Salt

OUR BOARDING HOUSE,

141—Hornet For Sale

MS W Lake M a ry B lvd.
Sulla B
Lake M a ry , F la . 14744
D R IFTW O O D V IL L A G E

T9 m w i

Lie. Raal E stata B roker
Mao Sanford Ava.

l

UP!

M l E l l t h Z-R Com. Lot IW x ** H
G araga 14 01 . O w ner w ill halp
Itnanca. 111,(00.

■WHAT '
I HAVE TH&amp;
PtfLLAR I
. FROMI5EP

H ALC O LBER T R EALTY
R E A LTO R
107 E . l llh S t
1»

.LEANPER^

KISH REAL ESTATE
U llF R E N C H A V E .
POOL P LA N N E D
1 B r.. 1 bath s p lit plan la m . rm .,
fo rm a l LR A O R, screened p a llo .
L a rge Inside u tility .M l ,000.
N IC E IN E A T I ALM O ST N E W I
1BR. 1 ba th, garage, plush carpet,
c e s te m d ra p e s , ge ed c lo s e t
space. Law m alntananca, a lu m i­
num overhang, see, S04.
COUNTRY
1 B r, l ba th. Big eet-ln kitchen ,
sunken LR w /b rlc k fire p la c e ,
double Insulated w indow s 4 ten
h e a t A e l r s y s t e m ,
e le d r lc / p lu m b ln g n e a r ne w .
Nice heme on la rg o lo t H t . lN .

REALTO R

321-0041

Lake M a ry C olonial stylo 4 b d rm 1
b a th fo rm a l liv in g A d in in g
room , gre at room , lake p rivile g e ,
oversized treed lo t. 112,500
____________ 1714414.____________
L A K E M A R Y under construction,
p ick your colors. 1 Bedroom , 1,
both O ver 7900 Sq. F t. liv in g
area. P riced to sell at ISMOO.
Land and Homes Reel Estate.

Lie. Real Estate Broker
2440 Sanlord Ave.

C O U N TY O lder 2 story w ith 4 lots
Z C -2 Assum able m ortgage a s k ­
ing 171,100,
W as 111,000 N ow 114.100 The
N ig h tm a re 4/B R I fireplaces. 3 7
acres. C ity w ate r O w ner says
m a k t otte r.

KO KO M O Toot Co., a t f i t W. F irs t
$1., Sanford, Is now buying glass,
new spaper, b lm e lo l steal and
a lu m in u m cans along w ith a ll
o t h e r k in d s o l n o n - fe r r o u s
m e tals. W hy net h im th is Idle
c lu tte r, Into e x tra dollars? W e a ll
be ne fit fro m recycling.
F o r details c a ll; 3131100
W anted to buy fro m p riv a te p a rty,
to to I I ft. C am per T ra ile r. M m
3110714._______________________
W E BU Y AN TIQ U E S
F U R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C E S .
1117140

221—Good Things
to Eat

E/SNPE
fR A C T |£ E 6
L A P I N S =»

141—Homes For Sale

i l l —Appliances

B E T T E R H E A L T H W IT H D IS ­
T IL L E D W ATER I M ake your
own 100% pure w a te r w ith a
hom e w ater d is tille r (or only
pennies pe r g a llo n . F o r In form a
fIo n - C a ll o r w lr t o C a r l O.
W illia m s S14 Orange D r. A pt. n
A ltam o nte Spr. F I. 11701014A471.
U P IC K B L A C K E Y E D PEAS
B R IN G C O N T A IN E R
H W Y 44-1M ile W est Sontord

M e ta l d e te c to r.G a rre tt AOS 1
V L F /T R
d is c rim in a to r w ith
gro un d cancellin g. L ists fo r t u t .
I m onth old. Best o ffe r o v e r t i l l .
C all m IM S a tta r 4 pm . 1720411
ask fo r Bud. M u st sell.__________

S ylva nla E n te rta in m e n t C enter.
A M F M . G a rra rd tu rn ta b le , 1J In
T V w ith new p ic tu re tube, w alnut
cabinet, w ith s lid ing doors to
conceal. HOP F irm . S74 M77.
U t il it y f r a ile r , e q u ip p e d U 10.
C ra fts m a n s e d g e r, new 1150.
Zenith B la ck and w h ite console
T V S7S, KU 574-1330.____________
W e b u y fu rn itu re , an tiq ue s o r
except consignm ents fo r auction
F lo T ra d e r A uction, n e - llie .
100 Lbs. o f A rg e n tin a Grass seed.
Valued at wholesale S IN . W ill
ta k e b e st o ffe r. N e v e r been
opened. Call a fte r 4 P M 111 M il.
100 B T U A i r c o n d i t i o n e r M o ntg om ery W arn ISO o r trade
to r 1 good running fans, M 7 1411

235—T ru c k s /
Buses/Vans

237—Tractors/Trailars

239—M o to rcy d ts/B ikM

/ Furniture
S eller m o tivated. Assum e M tg . o r
finance. 4 B d rm . 1 bath. Cant
H A , p riv a te b a ck ya rd . U1.000.
O w ner Associate. MI-0414. ____

510*055.__________________

LOCH AR BO R, la rg e 1 level. 4
B d rm ., 1 Bath, 5(4, 000
W .M a llc w w s k l, R EALTO R
______ 322 7(43 Eve. 1211317.
O P E N SU N D AY 1-4 PM.
104 V alencia Court
110th St. lo Locus! lo Valencia)
3 B drm . I'.-j Balh.
D oll house. N eat as a pin. Good
ne ig hbo rho od.O w ne r w an ts to
sell q u ic kly. M2.S00
Hostess Lynn K ra s l.
R E A LTO R ASSOCIATE.
The W A L L ST C O M PAN Y
44(1144 Eves. 704314

BJTEM A N r e a l t y
W E H A V E C L IE N T S
W A IT IN G FO R
YOUR REN TA L
-P R O P E R T Y
P L E A S E C A LL
323-3200

219—Wanted to Buy

R E A LTO R
101S. French Ave.

322-8478

L a rry ’s N tw A Used F u rn itu re
M a rt. 115 S an tord A ve . Ml-4111
COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
Zanlth 25” color T V In w a ln u t
console. O rig in a l p rice o ver S7S0.
B alance due l i f t cash o r p a y ­
m ents It? m onth. NO M O N E Y
DOW N. S till In w a rra n ty . C ell
M l 13*4 day or n lta . Free home
tra il, no obi ig illo n _____________
C ontem porary oak 7 d ra w dresser
and student desk 1171 to r both
Ken m ore p a rts, service,
used washers. 321-0H7
M O O N EY A P P L IA N C E S

W ILSO N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 RISE. FIR S T ST.
M l M il

24
HOUR Q 322-9283
_________ *-* _________
SU N LA N D ESTATES. 1 B d rm . 2
B a lh , la m lly ro o m , ta n c a d ,
n e a rly 1X10 sq. It. A ssum * great
loan P riced lo sell a t 144,100.
T e rry P u tty R ta lto r SM (700
U N D E R S I,000
1 b d rm dollhouse w ith alford ab te
m o n th ly p a y m e n ts . C a ll
O w ner B roker M l 1411.

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo
Good Used T V 's 111 A up
M IL L E R S
V le n d o D r.
Ph. 3110112

187—Sporting Goods
Indoor G un Range T u e t Sat. i0 -(
Sunday 1-4 Shootstraight Apopka
P la ie 1 00(4*42

321-0759 Eve 322 7643

A ir conditioner-w indow 20,100 BTU
S12S E l e c t r i c f u r n a n c e
1 5 K W M /H US H ot w a te r heat
• r gas 10 g a llo n u p rig h t U S
C oncrete steps H " high 120. A ll
In A-1 condition. MS M M
Baby C radla. like new. 145. Sears
10 speed g irls bike. E xcelle nt
condition. S30. F rlg ld a lre D rye r.
MO Seers e lr cond itione r 4100
B TU 110 V . M l. Phoenix lu lc e r.
C all M l M M ___________
B row n le ath er couch m ade by
Seers t!0 o r otter. 1 tw in b e d i lo r
SIS. C ell 3113114_______________
Com plete Beauty Shop Equipm ent.
I l l 4(41
C all A fte r 7 PM.
F o r Sale R easlauranl Equipm ent,
one GE e le c tric Iry e r w ith stand.
40 s e e lsp lym o ld booth, steam
tables, new gos fry e r.
C all H ( 5110(1.
______
GAZEBOS
10 Foot new 4 sided Redwood
G aiebos lo r sale Osteen G o ll
C lub M l ( M l
Kenm ore heavy-duty washer. Used
4 m onths. 1150 O lde r M odel
R e lrig id e ire re frig e ra to r. 171.
C all M l 4111
M E N S DRESS SHOES M M P r
A R M Y N A V Y SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave.
M l 17(1

Bed C redit?
NoC red
W E FIN A N C E
No C re d it Check- Easy Term s
N A T IO N A L A U TO SALES
1I10S. SantordA ve.
Ilia
3S11S. O rlando O r . ____ M 3 A

D A Y TO N A A U TO AU C TIO N
H w y n, I m il* west o l Speadwey,
D aytona Beach w ill hold a public
A U TO AU C TIO N e ve ry M onday
A Wednesday a t 7:30 p.m . It's the
on ly one In F lo rid a You sat the
reserved p rice . C ell (04 111 111 I
lo r fu rth e r d e te lli.
D e b a ry A u to A M a rin e Sales
across tha riv e r top of h ill 174
hay 17(1 Debary 444 4141_______
1(74 Chevy Vega 2 Dr.
MOO.
C all M l 4141 A lte r 4 PM
M G M idget 74. Good condition.
11500 o r best otte r. Evenings
e t t e r l. M ) 3317.________________
T w o Cars. P lym outh Volare wagon
77, vary good shape, no rust, 17
m ilt s p e r g a llo n , a ir , new
ra d la ls , cassette F o rd Thund e rb lrd , 71, a ir, leather, new
ra d la ls, lik e new. M l (1(4._______
1(41 Dodge D a rt lo r Sate.
tlS O F Irm .

121(102.

241—Recreational
V ehicles/C am p e n
C O LE M A N C A M P IN G T R A IL E R S
R .V . SALES H w y 44
New S m yrna Beech (04 423M71
E C O N O M Y I I It.S h a s ta M o to r
Homo. E xcellent condition. F o r
details. M l 47(1.

BUY JU N K C AR SA TRUCKS
F rom 110 to 110 o r more.
Call M l 1414 m o u
TO P D o lla r P aid lo r Junk A Used
cars, tru cks A heavy equipm ent.
M2WSO
W E PA Y TOP O O LLAR FOR
J U N K CARS A N D TR U C K S .
CBS A U TO PAR TS. 1(1-4101.

&lt;if Hitt civiif ay fofof a
Q U A L IT Y M U

F IL L D IR T A TO P S O IL
Y E LL O W SAND
C la rk A H lrt M 3 75*0, M l M i l

Y am aha Of Sam Mala
» ( H w y 17(1
Longwoed (34-4401
Clearance on A L L bikes
"V e n tu ra A V enture R o y a l"
In sto ck
A ll ISM M odels at dealer Invoice
M JM JUOO Total
Q T H K MOO Total
SR7JOH IS M + Tax
P arts-Sevrlce-AccaM orles

C M S

LOOK OVER THIS EXTRA FINE SELECTION,

211—Antiques/
Collectables

*1925 HIBISCUS COURT*
SANFORD, FLORIDA

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

M U ST SEE. One of a kind . 2/1
home, sauna, spa, oak cabinets
In kitchen , m any axtras. Owner
w ill help w ith finan cing. M 4 ,m .

W E LIS T A N D S ELL
MORE HO M ESTHAN
AN YO N E IN NO R TH
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY

(LO W LOW E Q U IT Y I Assum abla
Interest ra te , plus m any other
g re a t th in g s a tta ra d b y Shis
la ve ly 1/2, I y ear old hom e. C all
ta r details. 144,(00.

JUST L IS T E D 1 B drm . 1 Bath
hem e In Sanera w ith la m lly
roo m , fire p la c e , eat in kitchen.
Screened porch. Cent. H A w e ll
w a ll c a rp e t end m uch m ere.
177,140.

FO R E S T A T E . C o m m e rc ia l o r
R esidential A uctions A A p p ra is ­
als. C all D e ll's A uction M l S420

A majMtic, picturesque taste of yesteryear’s finest
residences! Unbelievable Spanish architecture, featur­
ing quarry tile A wood flooring, cathedral ceilings,
spacious rooms, formal living room 8 dining room,
parlour, screen/glass enc. sun porch w/fountaln,
fireplace, Ig. entry foyer, double enclosed garage
w/moid quorters, beautiful gardens on three land­
scaped lots I Restore A decorate to be a showplace of
Sanford! For previewing call today!

I l l H O M ER A V E . LONGW OOD
L a rgo 3 b d rm homa w ith ( x t r a t on
1 b o a u tlfu lly wooded lots O b v i­
ously super location P riced to
sell now 174,(00 by F H A /V A .
D riv e by (4 blocks S.E. ot 1-4 A
17 (21 C a ll lo r a p p o ln tm a n t.
{le tte r h u rry .

STENSTROM

153—Lots-Acreage/$«le

REALTY — REALTORS

322-2420

C A L L A N Y T IM E
1541S. P ark

322-2420

2 Couches end 1 ch a irs to m atch.
(110 ea. sal. R ocking C ha ir, M l.
R attan couch and 1 c h a in . 1100.1
O dd c h a in . UO aa. O ld bookcase
w ith key. 171. M l H IT .___________

C asselberry M o bile hom e lo t set up
w ith chain lin k fence. Cash o r
term s. 0(5 214]
O SAN FO R D I 4 A 440
2'( A c r e +■ • coun try home site.
O ak-pine to m e cleared paved. 10%
down 10 Y rs. a t 12%.
STENSTRO M R E A L T Y
R EALTO R S
O C a lllM 2420 A nytlm oO
ST. JOHNS R iv e r frontage, U s
a c r e p a r c e ls , a ls o I n t o r lo r
parcels w ith r lv s r access tlf.fO O
P u b lic w a te r, 20 m in . to A lto m onte M a ll Tl% 10 y rs finan cing,
no q u a lify in g . Broket
____________ S2I 4111

P ine ta ble , and 4 ch a irs, pine
hutch. Bassett table end 4 chairs,
new tables, end chairs, 4 piece
bedroom suit, k in g s ite bedroom
s u it, several oth e r bedroom suits,
h ide a bods, soles, odd dressers
end chests, pe tlo ta ble and 4
chairs. R attan table end 4 chairs,
m aple cofle e table. 1 end tables,
faookkcese. odd chairs, tables,
w ith m a tchin g chairs, m shogany
dro p le a l table, set o l bunk beds,
coftee tables, end tables, ba r
w ith 1 stools, m s r tle top coffee
table. Side by Side H arvest G old
r e frig s r a lo r , w llh w a te r dlspensor, guaranteed colo r end
B la ck end W hite T V ’s. M lsc.
household Items.

llfft it t

M n ik Y

Auctioneer Blen Gibson

S A N F O R D A U C T IO N
215 S. F R E N C H A V E .
Hwy. IT (1________________ 121 7140

155—Condominiums
Co-Op/Sato

STORAGE

D E L U X E 2 B ed roo m H i both
to w n h o u s a s . P r iv a te p a tio s .
F H A /V A and In ve sto r finan cing
available. Located on Ridgewood
o t t 1 1 th S’ . 15 M in u te s to
dow ntow n O rlan do v ia 1-4. near
17 (2. shopping, churches, end
schools. M odels open l a F rid a y .
S aturday and Sunday, o r c a ll
a n y t im e t o r A p p o in tm e n t.
157.(00.

3 Bedroom* 1Va B aths, Central Heat &amp; A ir Con
dltlonlng, G .E . Range, Wall-To-Wall Carpeting
One-Car Garage, Many Other Features.
* *3 9 ,9 0 0 Including Lo t.
Mortgage Am ount *3 5 ,8 5 0
*293 Pihkw H I InlettV F« Honlh

T h is Sale Is F ille d w ith y our every
h o u s e h o ld n e e d . C o m p le te
Bedroom sets, liv in g room , din
ing room . Soles end sleepers.
Book esses, dlnnelta. dro p leal
fa b le servers, B a r and stools
c o lle t and end tables. Lam ps,
pa in ting s, baham e sot, bamboo
set. p a tio sots, c h o irs, reel In te rs
c hin a cabinets. Now box springs
and m attrossos, assorted a p p li­
ances, b ike s gam es, assorted
antiques pieces, glsss p o rta lln
bisque and m u ch m uch m ore.

CASSEIBEHRY

W E A R E D E S T IN E D T O

BE

1!!!

THE GREAT SUZUKI
PRICE BLOW-UP!!

( IM 1 U U 7 4 D ays 1M S4W N ig h t

217-OAras* Salts
Stalls Key
VA FHA financing- 1&gt;S M l HOI- •
IM Down (ISO. Mo. buys a now 14

FHA 245 Plan III If Qualified

mff mml mm m our m ruu bct/uu
9 2 9 ’EMBASSY DR.. DELTONA

H 3 0 S h S 7 A S S * IH S W 7 3 M lS 3 6

E. Z. BANK FINANCING

4

�18B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. ___Sunday, May i t , I t 13
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BRIN G A l l Of YOUR M A N U fA C T U R IR S
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Evening H erald -(U S P S 481 -280 ) - P r lc e 20 Cents

75th Y « r , No. 249-Tutsday, Juno 7 , 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Crooms
School Board Set To Decide School Buildings1Future
The controversial question o f
what to do with the Crooms High
School buildings Is scheduled to be
resolved at the Seminole County
School Board's meeting at 3 p.m.
Wednesday.

W ill C ro o m s H ig h School
become an elementary school?
School Board members are to
decide Wednesday.

School Superintendent Robert
Hughes has recommended that
Goldsboro Elementary School be
transferred to the Crooms campus
and the facility be renamed Crooms
Elementary School. But that plan
has been opposed by members o f
the black community who want
both the Crooms school and the
Goldsboro school to remain Intact.
Hughes recommended a work
session be held on June 15 to decide

what to do with the Goldsboro
facility.
Additionally, he wants district
officials to study the attendance
zones o f schools In the Sanford area
In an attempt to establish com­
prehensive elementary schools 'n
the area.
Some students currently attend
Goldsboro for kindergarten, then go
to Southslde Elementary for first
through third grades and then
return to Goldsboro for fourth and
fifth grades.
, Originally, Hughes had favored
moving Sanford Middle School to
the Crooms facility, which will no
longer be used as a ninth grade
school In 1983-84 when Seminole

High School becomes a four-year
school.
But there was much opposition to
Hughes' plan, particularly from
Sanford Middle School Principal
Dan Pelham, who said the Crooms
facility Is not as good as the existing
Sanford Middle School.
So Hughes backed olT o f his
position and has proposed Instead
that property along U.S. Highway
17-92 across from the school be sold
by the board and used to finance
capital improvements at the school.
He said the state Department of.
Education will be asked to help
determine what the school's needs
are.
Hughes also proposes to sell 10

In support o f naming It for Mrs.
Reynolds.
Board members received 54 pages
But school board members have
of signatures In support o f naming
not expressed a consensus o f sup­
the school after former Oviedo and
port for Hughes' plans.
M id w a y p rin c ip a l W illia m L.
Jean Bryant wants to use Crooms Hamilton. He has also been sup­
as a vocational school and other ported by the, Oviedo City Com­
board members have suggested m ission and the East Central
their own \arlatlons on Hughes' Florida Regional Planning Council.
proposals.
. The names of Mary B. Groome
The school board Wednesday af­ and Velma Mitchell have also been
ternoon will also try to name a new submitted for consideration by the
elementary school planned for con­ board.
struction In Sanford this year.
The school will be finished for use
Mrs. Bryant has proposed the In the 1984-85 school year and will
school be named after the late replace Sanford Grammar. Hopper
educator Margaret Reynolds. Eight and Southslde elementary schools.
pages of signatures were submitted
— M lcheal Beha.
acres west of Crooms to fund capital
Improvements at that campus.

County
Favors
Gas Tax

x

t: •J v.
to
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Seminole County commissioners, stymied in attempts
to win approval from the county's seven municipalities,
may pass a gasoline tax on their own.
Commissioners agreed unanimously Monday after­
noon to pass a resolution of Intent to levy up to 4 cents
per gallon tax which could be used to upgrade county
roads.
The proposal would allow county stafT officials an
opportunity to gather information needed to distribute
the tax but would not obligate commlsloners to
Implement It.
In informal meetings with officials from the seven
municipalities, Commissioner Sandra Glenn's proposals
to divide the county tax have been opposed.
Officials from Sanford have said they favor a plan tar s
three cent tax to be spilt between the cities and the
county.

1

Kt,

*“'• viz tif -^
.
Hit 1

■" .......

The Oviedo City Commissioners voted Monday night
to support a 4 cent tax. Lake Mary and Casselberry city
commissioners have voted against the tax proposals.
Commissioner Bill Klrchhoff told Mrs. Glenn Monday.
“ You've done a good job o f going out and telling them
about It. 1 think we should pass a resolution o f Intent to
levy."
The statute approved during this session o f the
Legislature allows the county commission to Implement
up to 4 cents per gallon gasoline tax on Its own If an
agreement Isn't reached with the cities by July 1.
But they must pass the resolution o f Intent by July 15
and will make a decision by July 30.
If the county doesn't pass the resolution o f Intent to
levy the tax. cities representing 50 percent of the
county's population could put the gas tax Issue before
the voters.
So commissioners decided to go ahead with the
preliminary action and decide next month whether they
want the tax.
The public hearing has been set for July 26.
If approved, the gas tax would go Into effect Sept. 1
and the county would begin receiving funds Oct. 1.

G at fax could
hit gat pumpt
In Samlnola at
toon at Sopt. I.

Each penny o f the tax
would generate 9855.000
annually. Commissioners
can Implement 2 cents of
the tax by a majority vote
o f the five-member com­
mission. Four votes are
necessary to levy 3 cents
tax and a unanimous vote
is necessary to levy a
4-cent tax.

Without an agreement with the cities, commissioners
would be able to determine how the tax revenue Is
distribu ted follo w in g a form ula set up by the
Legislature, According to the formula, the dollars spent
by each municipality and the county on roads and
transportation over the past live years will be calculated
and each body will get its pro rata share o f the total
spent in the county during that period.

*. -

Commissioner Robert Sturm said the cities have
“ played politics" by refusing to make an agreement
with the county. Their inaction, he said, forces
commissioners to make what could be an unpopulr
decision on their own.
"W c have to look at our realities and request the entire
4 cents.” Sturm said.
Mrs. Glenn. Sturm and Barbara Chriatenaen have
been In favor o f a gasoline tax. Robert O. "B u d " Feather
been opposed to a tax unless a priority Hat o f roads
* * * * * !»• Klrchhoff has not yet
to be Improved Is
taken a stand on the issue.

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Around
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Bridge...... . .................m*4B
Calendar
3A
Classified Ads
4,56
Comics
86

Florida I I M M I t M l i n M I M I M M 3A
Horoscope.....................86
Hospital ,....**..,.............2A
V t t t e t t t t t t t t t t s t s s * •••****&lt;1A
Nation...

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H*r*M Slow Sr T w um v Vlacwrt

construction boom In Somlnole County It
evidenced by residential and commercial con­
struction throughout the county. A new shop­
A

ping center Is under construction along the west
side of U.S. Highway 17-92 just south of State
Rood 434 in Longwood. According to Seminole

County officials, building permits are up by
about 30 percent In the county over 1982.

Construction 30% Above Last Year

Boom Under Way Here
B y M lch ta l Beha
H erald B la ir W rite r
Seminole County has shaken free o f 1982’s
recession and is now In the midst o f a construction
and development boom, according to county officials.
Construction Is up by about 30 percent over last
year, said Building Official Don Flippen. In terms of
dollars, the construction permits have almost doubled
over last year's.
'
T h rou gh m id-M ay. the cou n ty had Issued
9433.987.86 In building permits so far in 1983. up
from 9253.059.13 during the same period in 1982.
i held back last _year." Flippen
said.
'Mostdeveicopersi
..
All areas o f construction including Individual
dwellings, residential developments and commercial
construction are Increasing. Flippen said.
The building boom shows no signs o f cresting.
Flippen said. "W e're slowly building up.'*
There are Indications that the boom may not reach
Its peak until the last three months o f the year, he

said. An analyst with the state Department of
Employment Services has predicted that housing
starts will skyrocket In the last quarter of 1983. The
boom is expected to last for about five years,
according to the analyst.
But Flippen said there are no plans to hire an
additional building inspector. "T o get new people and
train them takes about six months." he said. "B y that
time the boom may be over."
,
There Is also about a 30 percent Increase In the
number of developers bringing new projects to the
county for approval, according to land management
officer Herb Hardin.
Hardin said the most heavily Impacted area for new
development is along Red Bug Lake Road between
Winter Springs and Casselberry. That area has seen
tremendous gowth over the past few years and the
road is described by county and state officials as the
top priority for Improvement. The corridor along
Interstate 4 Is also under rapid development.

The rapid development In the county has some
negative effects on potential developers, the officials
said. The most common effect is delays. It now takes
up to a week to get building permits. The lag time Is
normally three days.
Longer delays are being experienced by developers.
Development plans are scrutinized by several county
departments and with more projects the delays are
longer.
The Seminole County Port Authority, for example,
recently reported a one-month delay In getting
approval to construct a new building at the port
complex west of Sanford.
Another effect o f the rapid growth Is that more
negative recommendations are received, Hardin said.
He said the county officials are reluctant to give
approval to projects which use county roads, water or
sewage systems without developer commitments to
pay the cost o f new equipment, highway signals or
new paving.

li­
Manhunt For Robinson Series Of Dead Ends; Pickup Found
The massive police manhunt resumed
today for Clarence Eugene Robinson, a
fugitive with a violent past and currently
the most wanted map in Florida.
Stole and federal authorities tracked
dozens o f leads Monday but ran into
dead
* * ends
* in their
* r search for Robinson.
who Is charged with wounding two FBI
agents last week and is suspected o f at
least three murder* in the last six years.
FBI spokesman Doug Jones said In­
itiated their search in
vcatlgstors concentrated
central Florida, where Robinson's sus­
pected hideout near the site o f the
shooting in Orange City eras uncovered
by agents Saturday. Robinson had reportedly lived In the Orlando area for the
past year.
A n ation w ide alert rem ained for
Robinson's anrat. Janes said.
Additional information on Robinson
was scheduled to be released at the
Volusia County Sheriff's Department
95s

DeLand headquarters today at 2 p.m.
S h e riffs Lt. Ed Carroll said the
department hoped to have on display
confiscated weapons believed to belong
to Robinson.
Early today a man who answered the
description of Robinson was stopped by
police in Georgia, but Jones said the
man ouly proved to be a look-alike.
FBI agents Monday searched a ranch
near 8 L Cloud and seized a pickup truck
and a cache o f weapons that they said
belonged to Robinson.
Some law enforcement agents have
called the stocky. 38-year-old Robinson
"th e most wanted m an" in Florida.
" I guess you could say that." said
Jones. " I d on ’ t know o f a police
department In the stale not looking for
him ."
•- 4 mi &lt;jq
The two agents Injured in Friday's
shooting at Kitchens' Restaurant in
Orange City were transferred out o f the

Intensive care unit at West Volusia
Memorial Hospital In DeLand Monday.
Both o f the Injured agents were
reported in stable condition.
Jones said wounded agents Thomas
Sobolewskl. 40. and Dennis Wlckleln.
42, arc progressing and said he has not
heard at this time that either will suffer
permanent damage from their gunshot
wounds.
‘ A u t h o r it ie s b e lie v e d th e y had
Robinson holed up twice In recent days
— first in a motel and then at a
campground — only to discover he was
either gone or was never there In the first
place.
Only hours after Friday's shooting,
police conducted a room-by-room search
of a Deltona motel, where a maid said
she saw a man fittin g Robinson's
description. Authorities found no trace of
the man
SW AT members Saturday surrounded

a t r a ile r b e lie v e d to h a ve b een
Robinson's residence for the past two
months. No one was found In the trailer,
but a motorcycle registered to one of
Robinson's many aliases was found
outside the motor home and authorities
were convinced Robinson had lived
there.
FBI agents said the pickup truck they
seized Monday was on a ranch near U.S.
Highway 192 and State Road 15. east of
St. Cloud. The truck contained a dozen
guns, bulletproof vests, false Identifica­
tion papers and other Items.
Robinson Is charged with first-degree
murder In the 1977 death of a Seminole
County reserve deputy sheriff during a
drugstore robbery In Longwood.
He also is suspected o f killing two
accomplices in the robbery.
An eighth-grade dropout and a former
professional boxer. Robinson has been In
and out o f Jails since the* mid-1960s.

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11

�t A— Evening Htrald, Sanford, FI.

Teteday, June 1 , HM

NATION

S tm ln ol* Board To Sp»nd $60,000 To Find O ut

School-Based Management: What Is It?
By niche si Behs
Herald S tiff W riter

INBRIEF
'It's Time For The Rich
To Pay Their Fair Share '
W ASH ING TO N (UPI) - House Speaker
Thomas O’Nciirs proposal (o have the rich share
"the burden o f Reaganomics" by limiting next
month’s Income tax cut to $700 already has
been rejected by the White House.
O’Neill, saying the money saved would help
reduce the federal deficit, said the plan Is an
attempt to find middle ground between those
who want to eliminate the tax cut altogether
and those who want to leave It Intact, but the
White House said it represents old Democratic
policies.
O’Neill said that someone earning $100,000 a
year would gain $2,300 from the 10 percent cut
in tax rates scheduled to take effect July 1.
"It is time that the burden of Reaganomics is
shared by those In the upper Income groups,”
he told reporters before the speech. "For two
years, this group has benefited mightily from
the Reagan tax program. ... It Is time that the
rich started to accept their fair share of the
burden."
Under O’ NriH’s plan, every taxpayer would
get a 10 percent cut In tax rates, but no one’s
taxes would be reduced by more than $700. He
said the limit, which would effect mainly those
earning more than $50,000, would save $6
billion In 1984 and almost $7 billion in 1985.

Explosion Injures 26
EL PASO. Texas (UPI) — The commander of
Fort Bliss says the Army should suspend the use
of an anti-tank weapon that exploded during a
training exercise. Injuring 26 soldiers, one of
whom was in critical condition today with “ total
body wounds."
Six of the other injured men were In serious
condition.
Officials at Ford Bliss said the shoulder-firing
LAW (Light Anti-tank Weapon) exploded Mon­
day. spewing fragments and flames Into a class
o f trainees.
Fort Bliss commander MaJ. Gen. James
Maloney suspended all training on the LAW
pending an Investigation o f the accident's cause.
"I would like to have the weapon (temporarily)
suspended across the Arm y," Maloney said.
"W e've had the LAW for many years and have
had some accidents with It before, but they've
all been minor."

WEATHER
N A TIO N A L REPORT: Violent thunderstorms that
hurled tornadoes, hall and winds as high as 70 mph
from Texas to New York, knocking out power to
thousands and blacking out TV stations In the
Washington area, moved Into the Southeast today. The
National Weather Service said the worst storms would
be concentrated along the eastern Gulf Coast and Into
the Florida panhandle. Georgia and the eastern
Carolinas. Widespread storms Monday knocked out
pow er In T exas and around W ashington. D.C.
Thousands o f homes In the Washington and Baltimore
area remained without power early today. District of
Columbia firemen had to rescue people trapped In two
elevators at a senior citizens apartment complex. There
were no Injuries. Tornadoes touched down in central
and southern Texas. One twister tore apart farm
buildings at Alazan, a tiny town near Nacogdoches.
Another snapped ofT power lines 10 feet above the
ground and blew them onto Texas 359 about 40 miles
Inland from Corpus Christ!. A tornado damaged mobile
homes at Freer and another touched down at Skidmore,
'both inland from Corpus Christi. Winds gusted to 70
mph at Laredo, and 4 Inches of rain drenched Batcsville,
75 miles southwest o f San Antonio. In extreme southern
Texas, hall the size o f baseballs pounded Alice and
Kingsville, and golfball-slzed hall damaged crops at
Cotulla. An evening tornado touched down near
Waycross. Georgia, and afternoon storms downed trees
and power lines near Binghamton In south central New
York. A flood warning remained in effect along the
South Platte River In northeast Colorado, where high
water closed some roads.

Implement the school-based manage­
ment.

It Is expected to take about 18 months
and $60,000, but Seminole County
School District officials plan to determine
what school-baaed management la and
how It can be used In county schools.
"It's going to be a long, Involved
process that could take as long at three
y e a rs ." adm inistrative trainee Dr.
Hortense Evans said.
Funded by a $60,000 grant from the
state Department o f Education, the
district's administrative staff will look at
existing policies and determine who has
authority for certain functions in the
schools, Mrs. Evans said. Those policies
will be taken back to the School Board
for whatever changes are necessary to

Seminole County public schools cur­
rently do not have a school-based
management program primarily because
school officials aren't sure exactly what
It Is. But by law the district should have
such a program, Mrs. Evans said.
The state Legislature required
lulred districts
to Implement school-baaed management
asi part o f the Accountability Act
Act&lt;o f~1976.
Mrs. Evans said the philosophy behind
the program is that “ planning for school
needs should be made aa close as
possible to where the the action is."
Ideally, principals and citizen commit­
tees should meet together to set each
school's priorities.

J K k L .M w g m N m
ElvaM. Quarry
ADMISSIONS

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Tanl A. Yaws
Mary A. Harriaan. OaDary
Mary L. Rirtk, OaMana
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EILuAattiO. Mrtaarty, OaAary
Inwat D. Carta, Pattawa
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VkyUD

E wiring Hmrid

It was back to the drawing board
last week for Seminole County
Commissioner Robert G. "B ud”
Feather after a plan to rezone 51.8
acres along the Wekiva River waa
rejected by commissioners.
And Feather has come back with
a new plan with a new name.
Feather's original plan called for
220 units to be built on 43 acres.
The new project, ups the acreage
and drops the number o f units to
180.

Then the work o f examlng Seminole
County's policies and planning pro­
cedures and studying school-based man­
agement programs In other counties will

Hla o rigin al project. W ekiva
Springa Village to be located along
Miami Springs Road, waa opposed
by more than 100 residents o f
neighboring developments.
Feather, who Is now the sole
developer o f the project has re­
named the development Sweetwater
Springs. He plans to build 96 cluster
homes per year for five years. The
homes will sell from $100,000 to.
$250,000. he said.
The original plan, rejected by

commissioners had Epoch Pro­
perties as co-developers and called
for apartments to be built on the
site. The apartments would have
been converted Into condominiums
in five years.
Feather is asking for a zoning
change on the property from agri­
cultural conservation to muTtlfamily residential.
He said he expects commissioners
to review the new proposal in
August.

Power Back On Following Storms
Thunderstorms Monday night
caused scattered power outages
throughout the Sanford area, ac­
cording to Florida Power ft Light
Co. district manager Bruce Berger.
The largest block o f customers
were in the Loch Arbor-Idyllwllde
area where the lights were out for
an extended period after lighting
struck a main power pole at 6 p.ra.
Repair crews worked until 4 a.m.
In some areas to repair storm
damage. Berger said. Areas where
outages occurred Included greater
Sanford. Deltona, and Chuluota.

The storm occurred after working
hours and emergency crews had to
be called In.

The problem began when light­
ning struck a concrete pole north o f
State Road 46A causing the in­
sulator and bolt to fell, but It waa
not easily seen, thus tt took some
time to Isolate the case o f the power
failure, Berger said, adding that
some customers In the area aUL not
have their power restored until 9:22
p.m.
In other areas, outages were
caused by such things aa lightning
striking transformers or striking
trees causing them to fell on the
power lines.

A p p ro x im a te ly 4.000 o f the
company's 21,000 customers were
affected b y outages o f varying
lengths o f time, Berger said. Most
had their power restored In less
than 20 minutes, but It took longer
for about 500 customers. Including
about 400 In the Loch Arbor area.
O f this 400, all but about 50
customers north o f Vlhlen Road
were back on line by 8 p.m., he said.

begin. But the hardest task will be
establishing an individualised plan for
Seminole County, Mrs. Evans said.
"School-based management in Orange
County isn't what it Is in Seminole
County. And It shouldn't be," she said.
"T h e needs o f the community and the
students aren't the same."
Mrs. Evans, said district officials want
to begin exam ining program s this
summer and by sometime next year
establish a school-based management
plan In several schools as a pilot project.
Several school administrators will also
be trained In school-based management
procedures.
The study Is scheduled to end In
January 1985 when district officials plan
to begin using the new system.

Doctor M ay Appeal
'60 Minutes' Ruling
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
— A Jury said CBS and
Dan R ather did not
show "r e c k le s s d is­
regard for the truth" in
a "6 0 Minutes" seg­
m en t th at lin ked a
d o c t o r t o a fr a u d
scheme, ruling against
the physician In a $4.5
million defamation suit.
"T h e verdict strikes a
b lo w f o r th e F ir s t
Am endm ent" CBS at­
torney William Vaughn
said Monday outside the
cou rtroom a fte r the
Jurors* 10-2 vote was
announced.
Dr. Carl Galloway, who claimed the network and
Its best known newsman had damaged hla personal
reputlon and humiliated him, and hla attorneys said
the ruling may be appealed.
Asked If he felt CBS had been vindicated by the
verdict. Galloway said, " I f you can vindicate
Incompetence, if you can vindicate ineptitude, then
they have been vindicated."
After three days o f deliberation, the Jurors ruled
the network, Rather and the producers o f the highly
rated T V program did not act with a "reckless
disregard for the truth" when Unking Galloway to
the scam in a December 1979 segment titled “ It's
No Accident.”

Video G am e Bandits Pull $300 Heist In Longw ood

Connette was driving hla Volkswagon Beetle down
Stefanik Road toward Howell Branch Rood when
Reichert, In his 1976 2-door Bulck turned onto Stefanik
Road from Howell Branch and had to atop to avoid
hitting Connette's car.
rvmiwftf ^cognized the Bulck as the car
had
nearty run him off the rood earlier in the evening.
He got out of hla VW, walked over lo the Bulck and
said ■wwi»thing to Reichert.
aatd Reichert
cursed and made threats. Connette then reached Into
n f m H iM m ip I f d fp ^

a g r t f gM H—

N il

Reichert suceeded In putting the car in reverse, dragging
Connette, with the car, Into a duster of tree* and
trapping him between the car and the trees until tbs car

l4 WNI.OMrtl.OrtM*

««

1.

Commissioner Plans To Try Again
For Residential Development OK

A male-female team Is playing video games In
Seminole County, but their object la not to put quartan
In the machines but to take them ouL
In Just one afternoon's work Monday, the pair netted
about $300 In quarters from Brucato's Dell and Game
Room. 1251 North U.S. Highway 17-92 at State Road
434, Longwood. according to a Seminole County
sheriffs report.
The pair cleaned out the coin box o f a pool table and
hit other video games as weU between about noon and
3:30 p.m.
"They're real professionals," said Chuck Brucato,
owner o f the dell.
Brucato said he observed the pair at the pool table and
saw the man crouched alongside the coin slot.
The woman, wearing a red dress, was standing
partially obscuring hit view. But he told deputies It
appeared the man was putting something under her
dress as she had It "hiked up a little."
When the couple left the deli, the coin holder o f the
pool table was lying on the fkx&gt;r emptied.
A count o f change in the store's video games showed
that play was extraordinarily light or the coin boxes had
been opened. Brucato said.
He said “ street information" tells him that the pair
have been working a coin box theft operation ail through
the state o f Florida.
"W e believe he (the man) has keys to the video
games." Brucato said. "T h ey aay hla father is a video
A R E A R E A D IN G S (9 a.m.): temperature: 79: game distributor in New York."
overnight low: 73: Monday high: 92: barometric
He described the couple aa about 20 or 2 1-vearsold.
pressure: 29.95; relative humidity: 90 percent; winds
“ The woman la either pregnant or that a where she
south at 10 mph; rain: 1.66; sunrise 6:27 a.m.t sunset stashes the cash," he said.
8:21 p.m.
But there's very little that can be done about them.
W EDNESDAY TIDES: Daytona Roach: highs, 6:22
"Even if you see an empty coin box aa they walk out.
a.m., 6:52 p.m.; lows. 12:10 a.m.. — p.m.; P o rt you've got to catch them lit the a c t " he said. "U 's a hard
C anaveral: highs. 6:14 a.m., 6:44 p.m.; lows. 12:01 thing to prove. If you go Into their house and find 500
O.m.. — p.m.; Bayport: highs, 12:32 a.m.. 11:50 p.m.; quarters, how are you going to prove they're yours?"
tows, 6:0B a.m., 7:02 p.m.
Brucato said be plans to fight the larcenous pair.
His staff will empty coin boxes more frequently. Locks
A R E A FORECAST: Mostly cloudy today with a 50
percent chance o f thunderstorms. Highs around 90. have been changed and they will be watching carefully
South to southwest wind 10 to 15 mph. Tonight partly for any attempts at tampering.
cloudy with a 30 percent chance o f thunderstorms.
Lows In the low to mid 70s. Wind south to southwest 10
Thomas D k » Reichert. 19. of 703 Bongart, Winter
mph. Wednesday cloudy with a 50 percent chance of Park, waa arrested at 8:58 p.m. Saturday and charged
thunderstorms. Highs In the mid to upper 80s.
with aggravated battery with a motor vehicle.
BO ATfNO FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Here's how a Seminole County sheriff's deputy
out 50 miles — Wind south to southwest 10 to 15 knots describes the Incident:
today and around 10 knots tonight. Wind becoming
Reichert was earlier reported driving recklessly and
variable 10 knots Wednesday. Seas 2 to 4 feet. Wind and almost hit a car driven by Bruce E. Connette head on on
seas higher near scattered thunderstorms.
SlefenlkRoad.

HOSPITAL NOTES

"Our district baa never done that,"
Mrs. Evans sakl. The prime reason for
Inaction is because no clear-cut un­
derstanding exists o f who would be
responsible for what function, she said.
"W e have 42 schools In this county
and there are probably 42 different
versions o f what school-based manage­
ment Is," the said.
The .School Board will be asked to
approve the hiring o f a program director
for the study at Its Wednesday meeting
and School Superintendent Robert
Hughes hopes to hire a director by July

STOCKS

■&lt;s■

Action Raports
*

N rt.
*

Winter Springs, said the pawn shop was ransacked an a
large quantity o f Jewelry, weapons, camera and musical
instruments waa taken.
The burglary occurred between 5:30 p.m. Friday and
8:51 a.m. Saturday, police report.

C o v rtt
* Palfe*

got stuck on s concrete block sign and Connette was
able to get away. The door o f the car was almost torn off.
The victim and Reichert then got Into a flat fight
which ended up In the street Connette knocked
Reichert unconscious before a Florida Highway Patrol
trooper arrived to break up the melee.
Reichert's Bulck waa heavily damaged due to the
Incident but troopers said they would not consider it an
accident scene.
Earlier In the evening, the arresting deputy said, be
hfft been dispatched to the in tfrw c+*n« o f Esstbrook
Boulevard and Astoria In regard to several cars driving
recklessly in the area. One o f the cars eras the same car
that the arrested Rdcbert waa driving, the deputy said.
Reichert waa released from the Seminole County Jail
on $8,000 bond.

A 33-year-old Longwood man and a 27-year-old
Winter Park man were arrested In aeparate drug busts
over the weekend.
Barry Lynn Parsons, 649 Warren Avenue, Longwood,
was arretted at 9:13 p.m. Friday at the Scotrian Pub,
U.S. Highway 17-92, Casselberry, and charged with
pose—Ion and sale of a controlled aubatancc. Lysergic
Add Diethylamide (LSD).
According to a sheriffs department report, Seminole
County Drag Task Force agents made contact with
Parsons on May 13 at the Scottish Pub where be waa
employed aa a bartender. At that time, deputies mid,
Parsons said he would be obtaining aomc LSD to sell the
next day. Parsons and the undercover agentgi agreed to
meet the next evening and a the agents purchased a
quantity of the LSDfor$4.
A teat of the aubatancc showed It to be. Indeed, LSD.
On Friday, agenta returned to the pub and placed him
under arrest
He was released from the Seminole County Jail on
68,000bond.
In an unrelated Incident David Waynt Lee. 2005
Lakemoot Avenue, Winter Park, waa arrested at 6:20
p.m. Friday at hla residence and charged with i
On Thursday, agenta of the Winter Park Drug Unit
purchased purported cocaine from Lea at Ida residence.
When a teat showed the aubatancc was. Indeed, cocaine,
the agents returned to Lae's home the next day armed
with a search warrant
Agents found a dear plastic I
the living room and
Lee a * *

A 23-year-old Sanford woman was knocked to the
ground as her purse was grabbed by a man in the
parking lot o f the Winn Dixie store, 3818 Orlando Dr.,
Sanford, at 7:40 p.m. Saturday.
Sanford police report the man netted $10 cash and
personal items belonging to Donna Schwarring. 120
B on ds Road, Sanford.
A 19-year-old Maitland man. recently moved to
Seminole County from Buffalo, N.Y.. is being held
without bond at the Seminole County Jail charged with
sexual battery o f a 12-year-old boy.
Mark Richard Ehlera, 702 Green Meadow Ave., waa
arrested at 5:54 p.m. Friday. Police said the man
allegedly forced the boy to perform sexual acta on more
than one occasion.

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the
following emergency calls:

•7 am.. 1600W. 17th 8L, rescue.
•2:10p.m. 1704 W. 14th St, car Are.
44B pjn ., 701W. 24th Place, rescue.
•6:51 p.m., 3101 Orlando Dr., rescue.
-11:42 p.m., Airport Bhrd. and Oriando Drive, rescue.
Friday
•1:14 a.m., 4th S t and Sanford Ave., rescue.
•5:28 p.m., 1201 Park Ave., rescue.
•9:54 pm .. 407 Summerlin Ave., rescue.
•11:12 p.m., 212 Pine Winds Dr., rescue.
•1240 p.m., 2942Orlando Dr„ rescue.
•11:22 a.m„ 401 Ventura Ave., grass fire.
-4:45 p.m., 960 MellonvfUc Ave., rescue.
•7:28 pm., 591 Lake Mlndle Dr., tree fire.
•7:48 p.m., 3500Old Orlando Rd., false alarm.
•7i09a.ro., 35 Gate House Court., rescue.
•1:36 p.m.. 90S Laurel Dr., rescue.
•9:: 11 pm.. Hardy Avs. and Country Chib Rd., rescue.
DOT ARRESTS
The following persona were arrested In Seminole
County for driving under the Influence (DU1) between
-P eter Mono. 34. o f Ashland. Maas., arrested at 10:11
pm . Saturday at the intersection of Bute Road 436 and
WUahire Drive. Caaaalbeny.
-Donna Scott Meager, 31, DeBary, waa arrested at 3:55
am . Sunday at Howell Branch Road's Sorrento
Apartmants In Winter Park, She waa also charged with
driving with a suspended driver’s license.
-R fch n d K. Wffitimann. 33. Sylvan Road. Sanford, waa
‘ a j^ li4 4 a ^ fotturday at State Road 46A and

Dickie Moerder, 37. of 505 . Burton Lane,
Sanford, was afredad at 1141 pm . Sunday at 1st Street
21, $f SIS Oak Avenue, and French Avanua la Sanford. She wm also charged
at 1261 ajn.
with Raring and attempting to dlude police and
n riitk igan n t ilili iliitnni
d m p d with tin h m gn y at 412
419 8. Sanford At
Sanford. He waa bang InM la the
-Janet Sue Cariock. 27. of 205 Charles Street. Winter
in Ueu o f96.000bond.
Springa waa annetsd at 2:1$ am . Friday at Lake
•1 6 M B
.Triplett Drive and Tuikawills Road, Casselberry.
O qutks arid U n observed rix empty beer cans lying
on the front seat of her car.
raid Eugene Hutchins. 37. of 286 &amp; Short Street
i h S hiiI i Tii
8:48 * ‘m* *
-yrid a a Btocher Spule. S7. of 1461 Qakhurrt Avenue.
Winter Park, was arrested at 943 pm. Thursday after

�FLORCA
INBRIEF
6 Die In Plane Crash;
FA A Searches For Cause
BAREFOOT BAY (UPI) — Investigators re­
turned today to the Indian River, where a light
airplane crashed and killed six Fori Pierce
residents.
The wreckage o f the single-engine Cherokee
aircraft, partially submerged In six feet of water,
was discovered Monday resting against a river
island.
The Federal Aviation Administration sent
Investigators to the site. 1W miles cast o f the
Summit Landing Marina and 2 miles north of
Sebastian, to try and determine the cause o f the
crash.
The plane apparently left the St. Lucie County
Airport In Fort Pierce Sunday, traveled about 30
miles and crashed Into the Indian River in
southern Brevard County, authorities said. The
plane's destination and exactly what time the
crash occurred were not Immediately known.

Will Patients Collect ?
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Attorneys for the
Insurance Department and two hospital groups
have made their pitches to the Florida Supreme
Court In a case that could throw Into question
the ability o f people who have won malpractice
cases to collect their money.
The Insurance Department was appealing an
adverse ruling from the 1st District Court of
Appeal In which the funding mechanism for the
Patient's Compensation Fund, the pool from
which excess malpractice claims Is paid, was
struck down as an unconstitutional delegation
o f legislative authority.
The two hospital groups had challenged the
statute after hospitals were assessed $10.5
million out of a 917 million total assessment for
PCF deficits In the 1977-78 and 1978-79 fund
years.
The department had limited assessments
against physicians to 100 percent o f the
premiums they Initially paid for coverage but
held hospitals liable for unlimited assessments.

Much Left Unfinished By
By Wayne Snow
All that remains now as legislators go
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Despite a Into a 10-day extended session are
strike by doctors, a year o f study, budget, education and water Issues.
countless hours o f committee meetings
The malpractice Issue died when the
an d le n g t h y f lo o r d e b a te s ,- th e relatively pro-lawyer House and the
Legislature failed In Its efforts to pass relatively pro-doctor Senate could not
medical malpractice legislation this year,
agree on a final bill.
When the bitter doctor-lawyer fight
The House version lowered coverage
came to an end — at least for this year — limits In the state's financially troubled
It took with It a measure that would have P a t i e n t 's C o m p e n s a t io n F u n d ,
allowed Insurance companies to send established a system for closer regula­
their policyholders to doctors and hospi­ tion of doctors and provided an arbitra­
tals offering lower rales.
tion mechanism to reduce the number of
The end of the 60-day regular session malpractice suits.
sounded the death knell for reams of
But It did not Include any o f the
other once-promtsing legislation as well.
changes in the legal system pushed by
R e in s ta te m e n t o f m a n d a to ry
the Florida Medical Association or South
automobile Inspections, an Increase In
Florida Physicians United, the group
the legal drinking age. mall-ln voter
that struck briefly last summer when
registration, a local-option sales tax to
faced with soaring malpractice Insurance
build county Jails, "unisex” automobile
rates.
Insurance rates and hospital rate-setting
The doctors liked the Senate version —
measures all died with the end o f the
which Included limits on general dam­
regular session.
There were others, many o f them ages, restrictions on punitive damage
possibly significant, that also failed but claims, structured payment o f future
In the confusion that accompanies the claims and an elimination o f the doctrine
end o f a session even legislative leaders o f Joint and several liability — but the
aren't quite sure what made It and what House found It too radical.
didn't.
In a final effort, the Senate repassed its
"I haven't had a chance to stop and main malpractice bill Friday minus the
assess and see what did not pass that cap on general damages and then
should have passed." House Speaker Lee amended the bill onto the hospital cost
MofTUt. D-Tampa. said at the conclusion containment measure.
of Friday's session.

In the end. the only malpractice
legislation that passed was a remedial
bill aimed at addressing constitutional
problems In the funding mechanism for
the state's largest malpractice Insurance
pool.
Rep. Fran Carlton, D-Orlando, made a
final stab at raising the drinking age
from 19 to 21 when she tried to amend
her bill anto a minor Senate bill Friday
morning.
Opponents raised parliamentary ob­
jections and Rules Chairman James
Harold Thompson. D-Quincy, called fora
delay until he could rule on the points of
order. He has yet to rule, thus killing
that effort.
Mandatory auto Inspections went out
at the midpoint of the session when the
House transportation committee killed a
bill by Rep. Betty Easley, R-Largo. It
Tailed again later In the session when
Senate Packers tried to amend It onto
another bill.
So did Insurance Commissioner BUI
Gunter's proposal to prohibit Insurance
companies from using sex, marital
status and scholastic achievement as
factors In setting automobile Insurance
rates.
Opponents said the Gunter plan would
result in unfairly high rates for women
and unrealistically low rates for men.
The bill never got out o f the House
commerce committee.

Gunter also wanted to allow tljc
Hospital Cost Containment Board to
have the authority to approve or reject
hospital budgets. The best he could get
was an amendment to another bill that
would have hts proposal studied for the
next year.
Ironically, a rival cost containment
measure that was more favored by the
Legislature died under the weigh o f the
Senate's malpractice bill.
Rep. A1 Lawson, D-Tallahassec, saw
his proposal to allow voter registration
by mall, a bill backed by minorities,
voted down In the House. Efforts to
revive It as an amendment to another bill
died moments later In the Senate.
The Senate amended onto a minor
sales tax bill a local-option sales tax that
would have given local governments
money to build Jails and other law
enforcement facilities, but the House
refused to go along.
Another bill, hailed by environmen­
talists us the worst environmental legis­
lation o f the session, died in the Senate
after winning approval in the House.
The measure, -which would have
allowed Industries to renew their water
dlscahrge permits If they could show
that the Installation o f pollution control
equipment was not cost-effective, was
labeled as a "keep on polluting" bill byopponents.

G .E .D . Tests O ffe re d
The G.E.D. tests leading to a Florida High School
Diploma will be offered at Seminole Community College
on June 27. 28 and 29. Eligibility for taking the tests
must be completed by June 16.
G.E.D. Test Orientation will be held on June 23 at 4
p.m. and 5 p.m. Students qualified to take the tests arc
encouraged to attend this class on “ How to Take and
Pass the G.E.D. Exams.”
For more Information on G.E.D.'s free study program,
persons may call Seminole Community College and ask
for the G.E.D. office.

CALENDAR

Tax Compromise Sought
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — House and Senate
conferees on water quality and hazardous
wastes legislation return to the bargaining table
today to attempt to work out their differences on
taxes.
The two sides neared agreement on several
minor Issues Monday but grew even further
apart on their respective proposals for funding of
water protection and hazardous wastes cleanup
programs.
The key difference Involves funding. The
House Is proposing a 0.75 percent tax on the
wholesale price o f dangerous chemicals, while
the Senate Is suggesting increases In the, taxes
on the generators o f hazardous wasted! , ’
In another difference, the House Is proposing
the state operate sites Tor the collection and
possible burning o f hazardous wastes while the
Senate believes the state should leave this up to
private Industry.

WORLD
INBRIEF

Israel General Says
War Won't Defeat PLO
United Press International
An Israeli general who helped lead the
Invasion o f Lebanon said Israel cannot defeat
the Palestine Liberation Organization or solve
the Palestinian homeland problem through war.
"Th e state o f Israel with Its large and glorious
army cannot destroy the PLO's military arm In a
military campaign. It will always have a place to
lice to," retired Maj. Gen. Avlgdor Ben-Gal said
Monday.
"From a political standpoint, I do not think
the Zlonlst-Palcstlnlan conflict can be solved
through force." Ben-Gal said on a television
special marking the first anniversary o f the
June 6 Invasion.
In Lebanon, the anniversary was marked with
mournful black flags, closed stores, a strike in
some cities and scattered demonstrations.

TUESDAY. JUNE 7
South Seminole Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m.. Lake
Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Seminole Halfway House AA. 8 p.m.. off U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford, closed.
Overeaters Anonymous, open, 7:30 p.m.. Florida
Power &amp; Light, 301 N. Myrtle Avc., Sanford.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8

Where's H u ckf

f-Bf+tr-graders at Casw lberry Elementary School Tw ain and seated, right, are Ureg Zarlklan as the
• presented Jhree performances of the musical, Judge; Denise Goddard as Deborah, and Billy
I M ark Ttoaln" recently for fellow students and Barto as M r. Thatcher.
r
parents. "Lance Davis, left, played the rote of M ark

Sanford Summer Rec Program
Set To Get Underway June 14
Donne Estes
Herald Staff Writer

MANAGUA. Nicaragua (UPI) - The United
States dented charges three U.S. diplomats
plotted to kill Foreign Minister Miguel d'Escoto
Tor the CIA. and said said it was considering
retaliation against Managua for their expulsions.
The three diplomats left Nicaragua Monday
night aboard a plane to Guatemala City. They
were scheduled to fly to Washington today.
The Nicaraguan government Monday expelled
Linda M. Pfclfel. political afTalrs officer. David
Noble Grelg, first secretary and Ermlla Loreta
Rodriguez, second secretary, for trying to recruit
a Nicaraguan double agent to kill d'Escoto with
brandy laced with poison.

Lakeview Students Design
Lake Mary Budget Covers
Six budget covers designed by four art students at
Lakeview Middle School nave been selected by Mayor
Walter Sorenson as the best o f 17 entries from students
In Sharon Thornhill's advanced art class.
The winning covers will grace the city staffs budget
recommendation documents to be distributed later in
the summer to each o f the five city commissioners and
the mayor.
The students who submitted the winning entires are:
Mart Wolnlak, two: Scott Smith, two; Dale Hansen, one:
and Robbie Semoe, one.
Each o f those students will receive a "certificate o f
appreciation" from Sorenson at the City Commission
meeting on June 16.

and conclude at noon. Munson said
all children participating must be
picked up by a parent oraguardlan.
In addition to daily activities,
special ceramics classes will be held
at the city's cultural arts building
on Fifth and Elm and tennis In­
struction with a fee o f 85 to each
student will be held at Ft. Mellon
tennis courts. Those participating In
the ceramics classes will also be
charged a 95 materials fee.

The Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment's seven-week summer recre­
ation program for children 6 to 12
years old will begin with registra­
tion and "getting acquainted" from
8 a.m. until noon on June 14 at the
Sanford Civic Center Youth Wing
and the Westsldc Center. 919
Persimmon Avc.
Jeff Munson, recreation superin­
tendent, noting that some 400 city
Teaching tennis will be Tom
youths registered for the program
Robare while Robert Robinson will
last year, said a bigger group than
teach the ceramics classes.
ever Is expected to take advantage
Sandra Orwlg will teach arts and
o f the program this year.
The various activities will be held crafts at the youth wing. The
materials fee Is 82.
at the Civic Center Youth Wing and
Activities scheduled at both the
at the Westslde Center, Monday
youth wing and the Westslde Center
through Friday, each week from 8
a m. to noon, until July 29. Each ’ Include movies; a four-square con­
test; backwards day. fire depart­
day's activities will begin at 8 a.m.

ment appreciation day: table tennis
contest, hat day . whamo pool
contest, police appreciation day,
"o rie n te erin g "; "W h en Knights
Were Bold"; Sheriff Appreciation
day; hot shot championship; sca­
venger hunt, group pyramid build­
ing, nature hike, bubble gum
blowing contest, sock day. talent
show, tug o f war, Chinese checkers
and chess contest and during the
final two weeks, the tournament of
champions, cabbage ball, hobo day.
s c a v e n g e r hunt and
Olympics.

S um m er

While Mike Kirby will supervise
the recreation program at the youth
wing and be assisted by three
part-time workers, Robert Robinson
Is supervisor o f the Westslde Center
program and assisted by three
part-time workers.

AREA DEATHS
K a la m a z o o , M ic h .; a daughters. Nancy Budley
Mr. Albert J. Wlnnell. daughter. G lo ria Iv ey , o f R o c h e s t e r . N . Y . .
61, of Indore, W. Va.. died Kalamazoo; three sisters. Machalla Cummings o f
T h u r s d a y i n W e s t Bertha Mae Williams, of Rochester. Miss Larbem
Virginia. Bom Nov. 15. Sanford; Minnie Davidson WUkerson of Sanford: four
and
1921. In Clay County, W. and Bessie Mae Raines o f great-grandchildren
Va., he was a coal miner Chicago. 111.; two brothers, n u m erou s n iec e s and
Charlie Ivey, Jacksonville, nephews.
and a Baptist.
Survivor* Include four and Eddie Ivey Jr., Rob­ Sunrise Funeral Home.
Sanford, is in charge of
d a u g h t e r * . E liz a b e th erta. Ga.
W lls o n - E ic h e lb e r g e r arrangements.
Salamone o f Casselberry.
F a y e T h o m p s o n o f Mortuary Is In charge o f
R ic h m o n d , V a .. D ec arrangements.
Fun«rol Notices
JAME8 SMITH
Brannon and Lcfa McCoy,
Mr. James Smith o f 711
IVEY, MR. HKS1I
both o f Maryland; nine
g r a n d c h i l d r e n ; f o u r Bay Ave.. Sanford, died — Funeral tervket ter Mr. Herie
Ivey, s, ol 111) Rceteveil Ave.,
gre a t-gra n d c h ild re n ; a Sunday at Sanford Nurs­ Senlord, who died Thundey, will
Convelescent he at S p m Wodnoidiy el me
sister, Mary Brown o f In­ ing and
Center. Bom in Madison, Springfield Mlwlenery Baptlit
dore.
Church, Coder Avenue end nth
Gramkow Funeral Home he had lived in Sanford for Street. Senferd. with the Sev.
Is In charge o f arrange­ 60 yea**. He was a retired Enedt Rivero, peeler. In charge,
farm contract n- lie was a •urlel In Reitlewn Cemetery.
ments.
Catling heure ter friend* will he
m em ber o f Zlun Hope tram J f p.m Tueodey et the
M is s io n a r y B a p t is t
chapel. Wllten Elchelberger
Mr. Herie Ivey. 59, o f C h u rch . S a n fo rd , and Martwaryincharge.
WIMNIU. MR. A LSIR T i .
1533 R o o s e v e lt A v e .. Evergreen Lodge No. 23.
Service* ter Mr. Albert J. win
Survivors include his nail. 01, ef Indore. W. Va.. adwdied
Sanford, died Thursday at
the Central Florida Re­ wife. Lanie; ond daughter, Theodor. will he held at Me
In Pattern Memeriei
gional Hospital. Bom April Mrs. Bernice Blankenship. greveilde
Park, tankard, el M n.m. Wed
15. 1924, in Thomaston, S a n fo rd : o n e b ro th er, neodey. Friend* may cell at
G a.. he
had been a Frank Smith o f Sanford; Gremhew Funeral Heme St f t
en Tuesday. Oremkew
resident o f Sanford since two sisters, Mrs. Rosa Lee p.m.
Funeral Heme. Sentord. Indierge.
1964. He was a retired Williams, St. Petersburg.
Carrsctlaa
construction worker and a Mrs. Willie Mae Smith o f
Inadvertently left out o f
Miami, one grandson. Ar­
Baptist.
Survivors include his thur Lee Harris Jr.. San the Hat o f survivors o f Mr.
wife, Mrs. Ethel L. Ivey, of Francisco.; three grand­ Jerry Dillard. 40. o f 1021

ALBERT J.WINNELL

U.S. Diplomats Expelled

Herald Mwte by Tammy Vinctnt

Sarlta Ave., Sanford, who
died Saturday, was his
stepfather, Walter Brown.
Sanford. His sister, Mrs.
Louise Brown. Lake Mary,
was erroneously listed as
Miss Louise Brown.

Casselberry Rotary breakfast. 7:30 a.m.. Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford Rotary Breakfast Club. 7 a.m., Skyport
Restaurant. Sanford Airport.
Sanford Kiwanis Club, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Serenades Senior Citizens Dance. 2:30 p.m.,
Sanford Ctvlc Center,'Sanford AVeriUe and Seminole
Boulevard.
Illlnlters, 7:30 p.m., Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N.
Lake Triplet Drive.
W elcom e W agon Retirees* Bridge, 7:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
West Volusia Stamp Club. 2 p.m., Jane Murray Hall.
United Congregational Church, West University Avenue,
Orange City.

THURSDAY. JUNE 9
Lake Mary Rotary. 8 a.m.. Lake Mary High School.
Greater Seminole Toastmlstrcss Club. 7:30 p.m..
Greater Seminole Chamber o f Commerce. 291 N.
Maitland Ave.. Altamonte Springs.
American Association of Retired Persons Chapter
1977 covered dish luncheon, noon. Sanford Civic
Center. Speaker, Hugh Pain.
Overeaters Anonymous, open, 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church. U.S. Highway 17-92,
Casselberry.

FRIDAY, JUNE 10
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
U.S. Highway 17-92, south o f Dog Track Road.
Casselberry.
Wekiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Wekiva Presbyterian
Church. State Road 434 at Wekiva Road, closed.
Rolling Hills Moravian Church AA. 8 p.m.. State Road
434, Longwood. Closed.
Sanford A A (Step), 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St.. Sanlord.
Tanglewood AA, 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church, Lake Howell Road.

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Evening Herald
(USPS 411110)

« O

l l A .

300N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, FLA. $2771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-Wtt
-

Tuesday, June 7, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; &lt; Months, $14.00;
Year, $43.00. By Mail: Week, $1.2$; Month, $5.2$; « Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

c I©**

A Clearer View
Of U.S. 's Future
If one listens to som e com m entators, A m erica's
industrial heartland w ill b ecom e a rust bowl by
the end o f this cen tu ry. If not sooner.
T h e y envision a "p o st-in d u strial" society In
which m ature Industries w ill have withered aw ay
and been replaced by new high tech businesses In
the Inform ation field.
In all likelihood, this Is a m isreading o f the
future. A t an y rate, that Is the view o f E.G.
Jefferson, chairm an o f the DuPont Co., a com pany
that has been one o f the nation's leaders for
decades.
A m erican s should heed w hat Mr. Jefferson has
to say.
In a r e c e n t s p e e c h to th e In te r n a tio n a l
Petrochem ical Conference, Mr. Jefferson said that
the narrow "p ost-in d u strial" view distorts the
situation with respect to basic goods-produclng
Industries — often called sm okestack industries.
He said that the notion that the core Industries
— steel, autos, m achinery, textiles and apparel —
arc destined to decline "strikes m e as a case o f
ru nning aw ay from our problem s rather than
facing up to them .”
He noted that "W e hear calls to accelerate the
pace o f transition, abandoning m ature capital and
labor-intensive Industries as 'losers' w h ile m ore
aggressively concentrating on em ergin g 'w in n ers.'
w h atever they m ay b e ." He added: " ! find such
view s m isleadin g."
Mr. Jefferson called for a clearer understanding
o f what high technology means, sayin g that " a
h igh ly au tom ated steel plant w ith the m ost
m odern Instrum entation, controls and use o f
robots Is c lea rly 'h igh tech ' and should be
recognized as su ch ."
• He urged that the public recogn ize that the
c h o ic e b e fo re us is n ot b e tw e e n d e c lin in g
sm okestack Industries and so-called high tech
In d u s trie s. " R a t h e r th an a b a n d o n c o r e in ­
d u stries." he said. "W e can and should m ake
them as advanced as we can. W e should bring
m od em technology to bear on all m a n u factu rin g."
Mr. Jefferson favors adoption o f an industrial
policy for the United States.
W hat he has in m ind is a policy that encourages
Im proved m anufacturing methods, prom otes in ­
dustrial research in colleges and universities, and
f a v o n m o re* in v e s t m e n t In In d u s tria l m o d ­
ernization and grow th.
- A t this tim e, the United States lacks a clear-cut
policy o f this sort.
. Mr. J e ffe rs o n is a m is s io n a ry fo r a n ew
aw areness o f the needs o f U.S. basic Industry.
If the Am erican people are to be prosperous and
fully em ployed in the future, his ad vice should be
heeded by Congress.

Pac-M an A t H a rva rd
You aren't goin g to find obscurantism ("o p p o s i­
tion to human progress or e n lig h ten m e n t") at
Harvard University.
' A three-day conference on video ga m es w as held
recen tly at the H arvard G radu ate S ch ool o f
Education in C am bridge, Mass. It w as partly
financed by the Atari Corp.. m akers o f Pac-Man.
|Educators at the conference agreed that video
g a m es h ave a p o s itiv e e ffe c t o n c h ild re n 's
learning. W orries that such gam es w ould h ave a
bad effect are totally unfounded, the experts
decided.
C om m u n ities around the cou n try h ave tried to
close dow n video-gam e arcades, argu in g that they
corrupt youth. T hat argu m en t has. been heard
before. Flret, it w as pool halls, then pinball gam es,
and n ow it Is vid eo gam es that are blam ed for
leading youth astray.
N oth in g to It. said the educators, w h o cam e from
qam puscs all around the cou ntry. V id eo gam es
teach intellectual skills in addition to develop in g
^am i-eye coordination, th ey said.
&lt; A n yo n e w h o has played Pac-Man and studied
d ie strategies for w in n in g free gam es w ould agree.
T h e com p u terized logic in volved is intricate.
'hose w h o m aster It m ust h ave a respectable
b illiy in Inductive reasoning.
» T elevision m a y h ave a du llin g effect on som e
Children, w h en the tube is used as an electronic
Dabby sitter hour a fter hour. But in teractive video
fa m e s , at h om e o r in the arcade, are another
atter — challen gin g, not soporific.
Joh n H arvard w as born nearly 350 years too
g o o n . O th e r w is e w e m ig h t h a v e see n h im
W elcom ing Pac-Man to the Yard w ith approbation.

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B y 8 am Cook

Rhonda Vazquez and Bill Brucato were
honored as the top athletes at Lake
Brantley High School recently for the
1982-83 sports season.
Vazquez, a senior basketball and softball
standout, was one o f the best all-around
cagcrs In Seminole County this past
winter. Vazquez received the Guy Garrett
Memorial Female Athlete o f the Year
award. Garrett was a well-respected coach
and teacher who passed away last year.
Another honor to come the blondehaired senior’s direction was the Slayfrcc
Wade Trophy Medals Club bronze medal.
The Stayfrec Wade Trophy Medals Club
was Instituted In 1981 to provide both
honors and Inspiration for the younger
stars who aspired to become a Wade
Trophy winner after their prep career was
over. The Wade Trophy is given annually
to the top female rollegiate eager. Vazquez

•^ o red 1.023 points In her prep career lor
an average of 11.8 points per game.
Brucato, meanwhile, capped a brilliant
w r e s tlin g y e a r by w in n in g Lyninn
Christmas Tournament, conference, dis­
trict and region championships at 149
peunds. Although wrestling was the lone
sport Brucato com peted In. his ac­
complishments were so overwhelming lie
was an easy choice for the Guy Garrett
Memorial Male Athlete of the Year award.
He finished with a 24-3 overall record
which was quite an improvement from the
past three years. "Billy was more serious
about wrestling this year and he was very
d eterm in e d ," said Kevin Carpcngcr.
Brucato was 7-9 as a freshman. 12-3
(mostly JV) as a sophomore and 13-7 as a
junior.
College football season Is still a few

months awny. but the University or
Central Florida Knights hnvc a prclty good
package deal for their season llckelholdcrs.
The Fighting Knights, who petitioned for
I-AA reclassification already this year, feci
they have the program on the upswing
with nlhlctle director Bill Peterson atid new
head coach Lou Saban at the controls. UCF
suffered through u miserable 0-10 season
Inst fall under Interim head coach Sam
Weir, who Is now at West Orange High
School In Winter Garden.
Regular season tickets for Just six home
games are going for Just $27. UCF students
and booster club members will only have
to pay $13.50. Local cor|&gt;orut!ons can buy
block seating (minimum 25 seats) for $17
per ticket.
For Information concerning season tick­
ets, call 275-2139.

W A S H IN G TO N WORLD

JA C K AN D ER SO N

Democrats
Face Early
Elimination

Teamsters
Boss Has
Bad Image
WASHINGTON - Jackie Presscr. the
beefy, street-smart. 56-year-old newlyelected president o f the Teamsters
Union, has promised to run "an open,
honest administration." He'll be given a
chance today to reveal his plans for
cleaning up the mobster-lnDltratcd un­
ion when he testifies before Sen. Orrln
Hatch, R-Utah, on proposed antiracketeering legislation. (
Justice Department files paint an
unflattering, though possibly unfair,
portrait o f Presser. They also provide
background material the senator might
want to quiz the new president about.
For exam pie:
— An April 28. 1977, Intelligence
report titled. "Labor Racketeering In
O h io," contained a list o f alleged
mob-related figures. Including "Jackie
Presser, a well-known corrupt union
labor leader (who) has continued to
build his public Image In the (Ohio)'
area. His goal Is reportedly the pre­
sidency of the International.*
— Another department report. "Orga­
nized Crime and the Labor Unions.”
written by attorneys Douglas Roller and
Peter Valra. states, "T h e organized
crime affiliations and involvement' o f
Presser through and Independent o f (he
Teamsters Union are well documented."
However, a source close to Presscr
told my associate Tony Capacclo the
report provides no evidence o f this
supposed documentation. "You don't
have even one guy saying. ‘ We have
Presser playing golf with a known mob
member.'" he said.
— According to a still-secret docu­
ment. Informant James "T h e Weasel"
Frattanno told federal Investigators that
"through the Intercession of Cleveland
organized crime group members, Pre­
sser agreed to allow (Fratlanno) the use
o f a mob financier to set up a union
dental plan In Warren, Ohio."
The Presser associate said that while
Presser and Fratlanno’s financier met
briefly, "Jackie threw him out o f his
office." and the mobster never "received
such a contract In Ohio."
— A n o th e r in fo rm a n t, C o m lllo
Mollnaro. a go-between for Ohio and
New Jersey mob families, told New
Jersey state troopers that Presscr was
his contact In about 1975 for arranging
loans through the Teamsters' Central
States Pension Fund.
Presser's associate said that no loans
were made from the fund In that period.
— In March 1979. eavesdropping FBI
agents heard Kansas City mob chief
Nick Civella voice his desire to get
Presser’s approval for Roy Williams —
later convicted o f bribery — to succeed
the union's then-president. Frank
Fitzsimmons. If Presser's position was
"p o sitive,” an FBI affidavit states.
"Civella wanted to see him " about
Williams.
W i l l i a m s d i d In f ac t s u c c e e d
Fitzsimmons, but Presser’s associate
said: “ Jackie Presser has never met
Nick Civella or dealt with him in his
life."
— A Labor Department affidavit states
that Its Investigators are currently
looking Into "allegations that Jackie
Presser did epibezzle the funds" o f two
Teamster locals by paying "no-show"
employees.

JEFFREY

ROBERT WALTERS

Everyone's A Winner
WILLIAMSBURG. Va. (NEA) If
misery loves company, here's good
news for those who regularly experience
the frustration o f sitting through long,
tedious meetings that Invariably pro­
duce only Inconclusive results:
The self-proclaimed "leaders of the
free world" conduct much o f their
business In that same fashion when
they gather once every year for the
highly ballyhooed Summit o f Industri­
alized Nations.
The heads o f state and their most
senior cabinet ministers spend count­
less hours haggling over the language of
draft communiques, a process that
virtually guarantees the final version
will be a least-common-dcnomlnator
document which ofTcnds nobody — and
contains nothing of significance.
In this country, the post-summit
analysis offered by the White House
emphasizes that President Reagan got
almost everything he sought at this
yea r's m eeting and considers the
four-day session to have been a major
success.
But the citizens of Great Britain, West
Germany, Canada. France. Japan and
Italy have been regaled with similar
accounts of significant coups and im­
portant victories achieved at the sum­
mit by their respective heads of state.
If everybody is as happy ns claimed,
it's probably considered churlish to
disparage the process — but surely
there's something slightly dubious If not
highly suspicious about an all-winners,
no-losers result.
To understand what occurs at such
events, it's necessary to keep In mind
that the principal participants ere all
highly ambitious, very successful,
especially strong-willed people repre­
senting nations and cultures which
often em brace radically disparate
perspectives and priorities.
They are also, however, spven o f the
world's best politicians who are fully
cognizant of the cardinal rule at such
events: Everybody can reap consider­
able benefits from the prestige, glamour
and hoopla surrounding the summit as
long as nobody creates annoying dis­
tractions. usually in the form o f tenden­
tious policy disputes.

This year's statement on the de­
ployment o f Intermediate-range missiles
with nuclear warheads In Europe was
touted by the U.S. delegation as
Reagan's major coup at the meeting
here — and it was Indeed a considerable
success to the extent that he convinced
his colleagues to agree to the issuance of
any document on the subject.
But the statement contains none of
the blustery saber-rattling rhetoric
favored by the president. Indeed, the
document Is wholly, devoid o f any
critical reference* to the Soviet Union.
Instead, It Is a curious melange of
statements alternately pledging the
maintenance o f "sufficient military
strength to deter any attack" anil
reaffirm ing *'our dedication to the
search for peace und meaningful arms
reductions."
The principal communique. "T h e
Williamsburg Declaration on Economic
Recovery." also offers something for
everybody while offending nobody. In
other words. It's the product of a typical
committee effort which breaks no new
ground but instead restates the obvious
In vapid language.
Drafting such statements Is. as every
committee veteran knows, no easy task.
On the night before the heads of slate
were to approve the final communique,
the "sherpas" (the fashionable term
here for senior staff members of the
various delegations) haggled over the
wording until 5 a.m.
In some cases, the mlddlc-of-the night
disputes revolved around whether to
make an ellptical reference to an Issue
or to Include no mention whatever of
the matter.
The private "political" discussions
held during meals and the informal
personal exchanges — not the drafting
o f the highly publicized communiques
— are by far the most valuable aspect of
summit meetings for the heads o f state.
As every longtime convention at­
tendee knows, the most fruitful dis­
cussions are held not in the formal
business sessions but instead In the
hotel corridors, bars and restaurants —
and that's approximately what occurs at
summits.

By C lay F. Richards
UPI P o litica l W rite r
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Before the
first vole is cast In the first caucus or
primary, events arc piling up that could
eliminate one or more of the six major
contenders for the Democratic presi­
dential nominal Ion.
By the time Iowa Democrats cast the
first caucus voles and New Hampshire
the first primary ballots, there may be
only two nr three candidates around to
consider seriously.
Ironically, this early demise for some
of the dark horse contenders comes in
the year Democratic National Commltee
figures struggled to rewrlje the calendar
to shorten the primary season and keep
all the action in u few short months of
1984.
But state political parties and labor
unions, battling for u bigger share of the
limelight, nrc stretching the presidential
political season into the longest one vet.
There has been almost no change In
the public opinion poll standings among
the Democratic candidates In the past
several months, except for an expected
rise In Sen. John Glenn's rating aguinst
front-runner Waller Mondale.
The others — Sens. Gary Hart of
Colorado. Alan Cranston or California
and Ernest Holllngs o f South Carolina
and forntcr Gov. Rcuhln Askew of
Florida — are little more than a blip In
the polls. None draws more Ilian 5
percent.
But from the view of many Democrats
und much o f the media, the difference Is
more distinct. Cranston Is seen as
waging — and so far winning — a fierce
battle with Hart for third place.
Cranston first won the straw (Mill ai
his home stale party convention In
California, then llnished ahead of Hart
and Glenn In the straw poll at the
Massachusetts state convention.
He Is spending heavily to make the
same kind of result In the Wisconsin
convention this weekend. Even If Mon-'
dale wins in Wisconsin us expected.
Cranston finishing ahead or Hart would
be significant because It wntdd be
viewed as one o f the most liberal
Democratic groups saying which Demo­
crat Is more liberal
The straw [Mills will go on over the
summer, fall und winter. A pattern of
Cranston finishing ahead of Hurt could
pretty much soften up the Colorado.
senator — and leave him broke — going
Into Iowa und New Hampshire.
Likewise, the straws could pretty
much finish off what little chance
Askew and Holllngs have. There were
4.000 delegates to the Massachusetts
convention und Holllngs gut 17 votes
and Askew 12.
The National Education Association —
the nation's largest union — picks Us
candidate In the fall und In DecernIx-r
the AFL-CIO Is llkrly to pick a can­
didate. If Mondale sweeps those two big
union votes, It could Ik- a signal to
liberals to abandon a long-shot Cranston
or Hart fora sure-shot Mondalr.
Likewise, if Cranston or Hart get
enough union votes to block a Mondale
endorsement, tt could boost either one
of them at lheex[M-nseof the other.

HART

Reagans Made Of The Right Stuff
Tears arc not my ordinary reaction to oxygenated blood, however, the sudden
a page o f prose, bul I felt my eyes filling decision was made to turn and head
when | read Lawrence Learner's words directly for George Washington Hospi­
on the assassination attempt upon tal.
Ronald Reagan In his new book, "Make
When they arrived at GW and Reagan
Believe.”
Mr. Reamer's account tells us more got out o f the car his face was ashen and
about the horror and pain o f those days hla eyes frightened, but he refused to be
than has been generally available. The carried Into the hospital. "It was as if
president was within minutes o f death. Ronnie thought that by an act o f sheer
He suffered horribly. He behaved with willpower he could exorcise the pain
alm ost unim aginable courage and that grew within him." He managed to
into the hospital, and said that he
grace, as did his wife Nancy.
that he couldn't breathe. His knees
The title o f the book. "Make Believe."
buckled,
and he was helped t o . the
Is something o f a puzzle. Mr. Learner
trauma
bay.
The X-rays showed the
seems to have the Intention of showing
that the Reagans live In. an artificial bullet to be near the hear^.
world or rich people — the millionaire
When Nancy arrived, the president
kitchen cabinet, the spectacular Inaugu­ had a tube In his chest, and the room
ration. etc. — but the book falls to bear was full o f ripped-away dothes. tubes,
out this notion, and. indeed. Its most blood. She became so frightened she
compelling chapter, the one cm the could hardly speak, but regained her
assassination attempt, tends to demol­ composure. Here is an especially mov­
ish it entirely.
ing moment In Mr. Learner's narrative:
At first the Secret Service did not
"Nancy aaw Ronnie lying on the
believe the president had been hit. narrow bed. an oxygen mask damped
"Rawhide not hurt, repeat, not hurt." on hla lace. Then, as d ie learned over to
the limousine radioed, using Reagan’s kiss hla forehead, she saw blood on his
code name. When he began to cough up Ups.

S

‘Honey. I forgot to duck.’ he said, Ihc
words muffled by the mask.

Gens. 'Most wouldn't have been able to
tolerate It."*

"It was a phrase that would have
broken many wives up. but Nancy
rem ained com posed. As she held
Ronnie's hand It was as if she were the
one transfusing him with lifeblood, nol
(he bottles hung above him..."

If courage la grace under pressure,
both the president und Ills wife surely
exhibited 11 during these burrowing
days, and the same qualities appeur
elsewhere In their lives. What Mr.
Learner has actually given us Is a
portrait o f a thoroughly udmlrablc
cou p le who love each oth er
extravagantly.

Reagan had lost a large quantity of
blood and it waa filling his chest cavity,
making It difficult to breathe. He was
drained, given transfusions and placed
on a breathing apparatus that made hint
fe d that he was suffocating. After the
operation, hit recovery was also an
agony, during which he contlnurcj la
show tremendous courage and dedica­
tion to his Job!
"A a for Ronnie, he was putting up
with enough to make a Quaker swear.
A n o th er bronchoscopy had to be
performed. Typically, wlten this pro­
cedure la done, the patlenl is given
Vallum intravenously. But because o f
trouble In the Mideast, the triumvirate
(Mecae. Deaver. Baker) asked that the
president nol be given any sedatives.
'He didn't bst an eye.' said (Dr. David)

I would like to return lor u moment to
Ihc thesis suggested by the title. "Make
Believe." About all II nmounls to Is a lot
o f oohlng and ahlng over Nancy's
dresses, tabic sellings and the like.
But the truth Is that the Reagans are
rich people and they behave like rich
people: lsn'1 Gucci supposed to have
any customers?
Most Am ericans arc not envious
people, and I doubt that (his Ihenie in
the book will eul much Ice. especially In
view o f the fact that ihc book's
page-by-page detail - especially the
parts dealing with Ihe shooting demolishes any notion that these un­
insulated or plastic people.

�SPORTS
Sanford Lassies, Juniors Pursue
State Championships A t 5 Points

Sam
Cook
Spirts EAtar

No 2nd Guesses: L.A.,
Expos, Angels, Yankees
As the major-league baseball season passes the
first-quarter pole, two o f my horses are In the lead, and
the other two are within striking distance.
Out West, the Los Angeles Dodgers are doing a good
Job o f holding ofT the Atlanta Braves (until tonight,
anyway) In the N.L. while the California Angels aren’t
having much trouble In the A.L.
In the N.L. East. St. Louis holds a one-game lead over
my choice — Montreal— while my A.L. East pick, the
New York Yankees, trails Boston by 2 14 games In
baseball's toughest division. Only S Vi games separate
the seven teams as of Monday.
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As the Dodgers surmised, Brock has more than
adequately replaced Garvey at first base. Despite hitting
Jusf .236. the left-handed slugger has 10 home runs and
32 RBI. Complementing Brock Is Guerrero who made
the move to third to replace departed Cey. Guerrero had
11 homers and 31 ribbles. That's a pretty good 1-2
punch. It'll be even better when Baker comes around.
The reason the Dodgers reign, though, Is pitching.
With Fernando. Welch. Hooton and Reuas, they throw
an ace at you everyday. Howe was having a great year
until his drug problems, but Stewart and Pena more
than take up the slack. The team earned run average la
2.79, more an a Vi run better than anyone In baseball.
The Braves, meanwhile, are Just a pitch or two (1 Vi
games) behind. Their pitching has surpassed expecta­
tions. Garber. Forster and Bedrosian comprise the best
bullpen In the game. Any one o f them could be the main
stopper on any team In baseball. Atlanta couldn't have
expected the contribution (13 wins) of McMurtry and
Perez. Maybe one o f them, but not both. Murphy Is the
best player In baseball. He's settled Into center field and
his 12 homers and 44 RBI are tops. And, he can steal
1you a base and run down everything around him.
Homer (9. 31, .304) has regained his stroke while
Ramirez (.295) and Hubbard (.300) are hitting out of
their minds, along with the best up-the-mlddle defense
In the league.
The Giants and Padres are being hurt by L.A. and
Atlanta's blistering pace, although San Diego's Garvey
(9. 31. .316) has held up his end o f the deal. They Have
lood clubs but Its tough to keep up when the people In
front o f you don't ever seem to lose. Houston ibid
Cincinnati cannot contend this year. Houston Is reaUy a
sorry bunch o f banjo hitters whose pitching stafT Is
growing old. The Reds have some good youngsters
(Redus and Householder), but their pitching will have to
come around. They have the arms with Soto and Price.
In the N.L. West, the Angels and Carew could make a
shambles o f the division are soon as Reggie starts
hitting. DeCInes (13. 31. .308 ) and Carew (.437) are
carrying the load. One look at the Angels' team batting
average (.272) and that o f the White Sox (.246) tells the
difference. And the Pale Hose pitching Is not up to par
either. Still, the White Sox are only 5 Vi In arrears.
Kansas City, despite spectacular starts by George
Brett (11. 34. .369) and McRae (3. 25, .342) Is no better
than third place. Pitching, once again, wUI be the
Royals’ problem. Stopper Leonard Is out again.
Oakland has pulled up to the .500 mark and Just four
games back. The A's. however, are not as deep as the
Angels. Texas, after a brilliant beginning, has started to
recede. It will continue. Minnesota and Seattle are much
Improved. If either plays .500 ball this year, break out
the champayne. If the Twins don't draw what they're
supposed to In the next two years, look for the Tampa
Bay Twlna In ‘85. The last major stumbling block was
hurdled and the old A1 Lopez Field will be razed and
construction on the new, 48,000-teat Al Lopez Field wUI
begin after the Super Bowl In 1964, according to an
article In the Miami Herald Sunday. Now. those people
are serious about baseball, right Orlando?
The Toronto Blue Jays are also serious, especially
Stleb. The hard-throwing right-hander has won eight o f
11 decisions with a nifty 1.66 ERA and 72 strikeouts.
He's the prime reason the Blue Jays were In a three-way
tie for first as o f Monday.
Baltimore, the soundest organization In the A.L.,and
Boston are right there, too. Look for the Orioles to break
away. Murray Is starting to crank up and when the
pitchers get healthy, the Birds are really tough.
The Yankees are In another transition period. This
time It's back to power. The power, nevertheless, hasn't
come at home where Winfield has Just one homer and
Kemp doesn't have any. OrlfTey. after a year's
conditioning. Is hitting .331. Cerone stinks and so does
all o f the pitching expect Guidry. Righetti and Rawley.
All o f whom happen to be left-handed. The Yanks ran off
six In a row. but then were swept by Seattle.
Cleveland, which acquired "S to rm in ' Gorman" for
Manning Monday, has a solid club, but It'll probably
take It another year to mesh. Milwaukee Is lost without
jqngera as It found out In the World 8eriea. Detroit has
Sparky Anderson who needs the Big Red Machine or he
can't win. Potential (Synoraym: Wasted) superstar Kirk
Gibson Is turning Into a Danny Alnge. He's talking about
giving football another try. He was an All-Big Ten
receiver at Michigan.
The Expos, meanwhile, continue to mystify their fans,
lawaon ..........
(8. 36.........
.332) carried
the team the first month.
Dawaon
.......
Oliver (.304 but less than lifetime average). Raines (.282
at 13 steals). Wailach (7. 18. .286) and especially
and Just
.230) _have not played up to snuff. When
Carter ((7.
7 , 20.
_________
l hey do. Montreal will be awesome, as predicted. The
Cardinals, o f course, are World Champions. But. the
Expos match up well with them and have better power
and starting pitching.
in there, but Morgan (.202).
The Phillies are hanging
hai
Rose (.258) and Fere* L286) aren't getting any younger.
The Cuba. Pirates and Mcts should have a nice fight
for fourth nlace.
No second guesses: Angels. Dodgers. Expos and
Yankees In October.

T on igh t's S ta te S o ftb a ll Tournam ent
at th e P l w Poin ts S oftb a ll Com plex
13 and under
Sanford vs. Freeway Oil, 5:30 p.m.
IS and under
Sanford vs. Haines City, 7 p.m.
Sanford vs. Haines City. 8:15 p.m..
If necessary
The Sanford Junior (15 and under)
and Lassie League All-Star (12 and
under) teams have both advanced to the
finals o f the 1983 State Recreation
Softball Tournaments tonight at the Five
Points Softball complex near Winter
Springs. The Lassie League All-Stars go
up against powerful Seminole Freeway
Oil at 5:30 p.m. The Junior League stars
face Haines City at 7 p.m. If Haines City
beats Sanford. It will be the state champ.
However, a Sanford victory would force a
second game which will also be played
tonight.
The Junior League squad upended
East Volusia Halifax, 17-11, In the
opening round of the tournament this
past weekend In Ormond Beach. Sanford
then dropped a 12-0 decision to
Southwest Volusia In the second game,
sending Sanford Into the loser's bracket.
Sanford came back with a 27-12 rout
o f Southeast Volusia In Its third game of

Girls' Softball
the day on Saturday. A 9-7 victory over
Ormond Beach on Sunday advanced
Sanford Into the loser's bracket final, a
rematch against Southwest Volusia.
Sanford got revenge on Southwest
Volusia by pulling out a 6-5 triumph and
advancing Into the finals against Haines
City, which hns yet to lose In the
tournament.
The Sanford Lassie League All-Stars
and Seminole Freeway Oil have already
played each other twice In the state
tournament and split. Freeway OH rolled
to a 19-7 victory In the first meeting
while Sanford came back for a narrow
3-2 victory In the second meeting.
In Its opening game of the tourney.
Sanford trailed, 8-5, going into the fifth
Inning but erupted for four runs to take a
9-8 lead and never looked back, rallying
to a 21-11 victory over Southwest
Volusia.
Lakoscia Kennon got things going for
Sanford In the fifth Inning as she belted a
two-run home run with one out and
Renee Ware on base. Latlcla Strickland
followed with a single and Patrcll
Pinkney stepped up and smashed a

two-run homer to give Sanford a 9-8
lead.
Southwest Volusia tied the game with
a run In the bottom o f the fifth, but
Sanford came back with six runs In the
sixth and udded six more In the seventh
to put the game on Ice.
In Its second game. Sanford met
Freeway Oil and dropped a 19-7 de­
cision.'Sanford scored six o f Its seven
runs In the top o f the first Inning. Key
hits Included a double by Lovetta Brown
and singles by Renet Ware and Chlnlta
Gilchrist. Seminole Freeway Oil shook
off the shakey start and held Sanford
scoreless until the top of the seventh
while taking a 19-6 lead. Tonya Colvin
and Shannon Kennedy had two hits
apiece to lead Freeway Oil which also
capitalized on eight Sanford errors.
Sanford came back In Its third game
with a 14-6 victory over East Volusia
H a lifa x . K a trin a S h u le r, L a tlc la
Strickland and Ann Perry had three hits
apiece to lead Sanford at the plate and,
after committing five errors In the first
three Innings. Sanford went the rest of
the game without a mlscue.
In game four, Sanford's bats exploded
for 34 hits as Sanford hammered
Southwest Volusia. 32-8. Strickland and
Shuler had five hits apiece. Strickland

with a pair o f homers, two triples and a*
double and Shuler with a home run and
four singles. Tina Roberts and Tracey
Mitchell added four hits each. Roberts
with a homer and a double and Mitchell
with four singles. Melinda Jackson.,
Tewana Chisholm and Adrian Hillsman
had three hits apiece and all added a
homer as Sanford collected six home
runs In the game.
A six-run second Inning propelled
Sanford to a 14*5 victory over Haines
City In game five. Strickland went 3 for 4
and clubbed another home run while
Shuler. Jackson. Chisholm. Perry and
Hillsman added two hits each. Roberts
also homered for Sanford.
In game six, Hillsman scored on a RBI
groundout by Kennon In the bottom o f
the sixth Inning as Sanford edged
Seminole Freeway OH. 3-2. Sanford
scored Its first two runs In the bottom o f
the fourth as Strickland laced a one-out
single and scored on a double by Shuler.
Shuler came around to score on a
sacrifice by Roberts. With the score tied
at 2-2 In the bottom o f the sixth.
Hillsman reached on an error with one
out and scored on Kennon's grounder to
shortstop to set up tonight's champion­
ship game.

Home
Run
Smile
Big Tony C u rry Is all
smiles after dubbing «
three-run home run oft
S u n n lla n d 's M ike
Merthle last week. The
round-tripper, though,
w a s th e o n l y h i t
M erthle gave up as
Sunnlland knocked off
R inker M a te ria ls ;
T h e re w e ren't any
home runs or 1-hltters
/Monday night In San­
ford as rain showers
washed out all baseball
and softball action: T h i
Sanford Little Ma|or
American League has
three games slated for
t o n i g h t as B u t c h ' s
C h e v r o n takes on
Seminole Ford, Adcock
Roofing battles Famous
Recipe and Flagship
B a n k goe s a g a i n s t
Seminole Petroleum. In
Sanford Men's Sottbalf
League p l a y , U n c le
Nick's Oyster Bar-S «■
H Fabricating, Central;
Florida Regional Hospls
t a I - M o b 111 to a n d
Harcar-DeLuxe Bar are:
the matchups. Action;
begins at 4:30 p.m . at:
Pinehurst Field. LIHIe
Ma|or plays starts at 5:
p .m . at Bay Avenue*
Field, Fort Mellon Park
and Westside Field.

Falcons Bolster Team With 7 Silver Hawks
If you're going to put together a championship softball
team — there's no better place to procure your talent
than a proven commodity.
With that In mind, manager Mike Averill and coach
Rodney Metz plucked seven members o f Lake Howell's
district champions for their 16-playcr Seminole Falcons'
18-and-under tournament team.
Leading the way are four Five-Star Conference
First-Team selections. Senior Erin Duffy, who will play
at Lake City Community College next spring, has been a
four-year starter for Lake Howell. She Is an excellent
outfielder and hits with power. Junior shortstop Mary
Johnson has been the top shortstop In the area for the
past two years. She. too. has started every year at
Howell. Sophomore second baseman Sandy Gillies Is
one o f the top young players in the area wh&lt;le Junior
pitcher Barbara Helm Is a steady veteran on the mound.
Other additions Include sophomore Eileen Thlebauth.
Junior Judy Millholen and senior Stacey Carpenter.
Thlebauth has a cannon for an arm and covers a lot of
ground In the outfield. Millholen can handle either third
base or catching. Carpenter la another solid outfielder
who wUI continue her career at Valencia Community
College.
While the Lake Howell talent is rich. It doens't drop off
any when you move on to the other schools. Lyman first
baseman Michelle Kuhri was a four-year starter for the
Lady Greyhounds and a four-time Five-Star. Flrst-Teum
choice. She wUI play at Western Illinois University or
Appalachian State next spring. Greyhound teammate
Kathy Richardson has been a standout pitcher for the
last couple years. The cagey left-hander wlU attend
Ffleffer. No. Car. next foil. Senior catcher ftm Gilliam Is
the third Lyman player on the roster. She will go to St.
Francis, No. Car. to continue her career.
Averill and Metz reached Into their backyard for four
players fiom Lake Mary. Leading the way la sophomore
Kim AvertU. Mike's daughter, who is one o f the better
all-around athletes in Central Florida. The strong-armed
shortstop had a aubpar prep year this spring, but is
expected to rebound this summer when most o f her
concentration will be on softball. She ran track and cross

Girls’ Softball
country, played basketball and softball for the
Rams.
Fellow sophomore Andrea Fenning Is a spray hitter
who will be used In the outfield and second base.
Sophomores Liz Stone and Stacey Adams will provide
outfield depth.
One player each from Seminole and Lake Brantley
was selected. County Basketball Player o f the Year Mona
Benton will vie for an outfield spot. Benton didn't play
softball this past spring, but did play as a freshman at
Crooms. Lady Patriot Michelle Brown will play outfield
and Infield. The versatile sophomore is a product o f the
Five Points' softball program, as are many o f the girls,
although she didn't play for the Patriots last spring after
playing as a frosh.
“ Our team Is strong defensively.’ ’ said Averill. “ If we
can Increase our hitting proficiency, we will be able to be
competitive with most o f our opponents."
The Falcons played in the Tampa Invitational
Tournament this past weekend and flniahed second to
the host team. It was a round-robin tournament In
which the only Falcon loss was a 5-0 setback to the
Tampa dub.
“ We had played two great games and we just came
out flat (In the loss to Tampa)." said Metz. “ But we did
beat the Satellite Beach team, which had some of the
players from the regional championship team (which
beat Lake Howell)."
Averill and Metz has set up a rigorous schedule which
they hope will lead to the Falcons toward qualifying for
the Metro. Regional and National tournaments. The
Falcons will take on Bradenton Saturday for a
double-header beginning at l JO p.m. at the Five Points
complex on County Road 419 near Winter Springs.
The next weekend (June 18-19), Seminole competes
In the eight-team Conway Invitational in south Orlando.
The following weekend (June ,25-26). the Faicoas will
play In the eight-team Merritt Island Isvttatic
Orlando Metro (July 18-10). Tuskalooaiu Ala.

�J

Tuotday, Jun« j, i f f )

Gorman Gone, Brewers Still Bangin' Walls
Molitor's 4 Hits Drive
Milwaukee Past Angels
MILWAUKEE (UPI) — Gorman Thomas may be gone,
but H aney's Wallbangcrs are still potent.
The Milwaukee Brewers traded Thomas, who tied for
the American League lead In home runs last year with
39. to the Cleveland Indians Monday but the Brewers
didn't seem to lack any punch, collecting 16 hits In a 9-7
victory over California.
Paul Molltor went 4-for-4 — Including two doubles and
a home run — as Milwaukee raced to a 91 lead after
seven Innings.
"W e got a lot of hits and runs and we needed every
one of them." Brewers manager Harvey Kuenn said.
"This game went from being a laugher to a noll-bltcr."
Angels manager John McNamara said, "W e made too
many mistakes at the beginning of the game. But we
came back In the last two innings and showed that we
don't roll over and die.”
Bob McClure. 2-7. the Brewers starter, worked 7 1-3
Innings to cam the victory-. Tom Tcllmann picked up his
fifth save. Dave Goltz surrendered six runs in five
Innings In suffering his fourth loss In as many decisions.
It was a busy day fbr the Brewers. They traded center
fielder Thomas, os well as pitchers Jamie Easterly and
Ernie Camacho, to the Indians for center fielder Rick
Manning and pitcher Rick Walts.
The club also announced that relief pitcher Rollle
Fingers, who has missed the entire season, will undergo
surgery Friday to remove a bone spur from his right
elbow.
But the high-scoring game still managed to raise
eyebrows.
"There were a lot of stats out there: a lot of cumulative
career base hits and RBI," said Brewers catcher Ted
Simmons. "When these teams meet there |s the
potential for an offensive show, and when It's realized
you get 9-7 ballgames."
The Brewers took a flrst-lnnlng lead when Molltor led
ofT with a single, stole second and scored on Cecil
Cooper's double.
California tied It In the third when Bob Boone led off
with his third homer of the year, but the Brewers went
wild, scoring two runs In the fourth and five In the sixth.

SPORTS
INBRIEF
Boston Globo —
W ill Roslgn From NFLRA
BOSTON (UPI) - Ed Garvey, the controversial
executive director of the National Football
League Players Association for the past 12
years. Is going to resign this weekend, the
Boston Globe said today.
The ncwspape^sald Garvey already has told
some of his close associates of his plans to
resign, and he will be replaced temporarily by
- Gene Upshaw o f the Los Angeles Raiders, who.
has been union president the past three years.
Upshaw would become executive director
until a fulltime successor could be selected.
Garvey plans to make his resignation public at
an awards banquet of the players association
Sunday In Chicago, the newspaper said. Garvey
will return to his native Wisconsin to work as a
deputy attorney general.

Chicago Lassot Loughory
CHICAGO - The Atlanta Hawks and the
Chicago Bulls have made a deal that with give
the Bulls their fourth coach In five years.
The Atlanta team has given coach Kevin
Loughcry approval to sign a contract with the
Bulls today In exchange for one of the Bulls'
second-round picks in the upcoming NBA draft.
Bulls general manager Rod Thom, who was
Loughcry's assistant when the latter coached
the New York Nets of the defunct American
Basketball Association, said Monday he was
optimistic Loughcry would sign the three-year
contract, reportedly offering him $250,000 a
year.
"W e don't anticipate any problems, but that's
what San Antonio thought about their coach."
Thom said, referring to the Spurs' problems
with current coach Stan Albeck.

A.L. Baseball
Molltor. who has hit safely In eight o f nine games
despite a nagging hand Injury, homered off reliever
John Curtis In the seventh to give Milwaukee its 9-1
lead, but California came back with six runs In the
eighth.
With one out. Tim Foil. Reggie Jackson and Doug
DeCInces all singled and Fred Lynn walked to force In a
run before Ron Jackson followed with a grand slam.
Bobby Grlch then belted a solo homer for the Angels'
final run.
T ig e r s 1 i , R e d B o x 6

They say a baseball team Is only a reflection o f Its
management, so It was no surprise that the Boston Red
Sox looked like a bunch of displaced persons Monday
night.
Early Monday the long-simmertng Internal squabbles
In the Red Sox' front office surfaced when Edmund G.
"Buddy" LcRoux seized control of the team and ousted
his ohe-tlme friend and partner. Haywood Sullivan, as
general manager. LeRoux then named Dick O'Connell to
replace Sullivan as general manager.
Sullivan, who with LeRoux and Jean Yawkey had run
the Red Sox for the last five years and served as general
manager, challenged the change, calling It "Illegal and
Invalid” and added he'd fight It In court.
LeRoux announced at a news conference that the
team's eight limited partners, upset by the bickering In
the front office between LeRoux and Sulllvan-Yawkey.
had voted to change the partnership agreement which
had been in effect since they bought the team In 1978
for about $15 million. The change, voted Monday, made
LcRoux, a trainer on the 1967 Boston championship
team, the newly created managing general partner.
"Th e whole thing stinks." Sullivan said.
So did the Red Sox. who played like a bunch of
sandlotters In losing to the Detroit Tigers. 11-6. The Red
Sox made three errors. Including two that led to runs,
and their best pitcher. Bob Stanley, was tagged for seven
runs and seven hits in 1 2-3 Innings.
"I guess I fell out o f my tree." said Stanley, whose
earned run average soared from 1.04 to 1.88. "Things
have been going pretty good. Tonight It didn't."

The Tigers pounded out 18 hits. Including four each
by Enos Cabell and Lou Whitaker, and won at Fenway
Park for only the fifth time In their last 35 games. Cabell
and Whitaker each hit a homer and Alan Trammell
added a three-run blast.

Yankees 6, Mariners 2
NEW YORK (UPI) — Steve Kemp wore a relieved look
on his face Monday night after the New York Yankees
avoided a four-game sweep by the Seattle Mariners with
a 6-2 victory.
"I mlsplayed two ftyballs earlier, especially the one by
(Domingo) Ramos In the eighth." Kemp said after hitting
a three-run. Inslde-the-park homer to highlight a
five-run eighth Inning that enabled the New York
Yankees to snap a four-game losing streak with a 6-2
triumph over the Seattle Mariners.
"It was hit right at m e." continued Kemp. "F or some
reason I didn’t think It was hit that hard. I took a step In
then couldn’t get back fast enough.
"People In New York let you know when they are
happy with you and when they are unhappy. They let
me know. I was glad to get the chance to redeem myself.
"I don’t want to make this an exdusc but with my
shoulder hurt all year I have not been able to drive the
ball until recently when I began to take certain exercises
which have Increased Its strength.
"I felt good In batting practice today, but when I came
up In the eighth. I Just wanted to gel a single and keep
everything going."
Kemp's blow off Bill Caudill made Ed VandeBcrg. 1-2,
the loser. Gaylord Perry went seven innings, scattering
seven hits, and had only thrown 76 pitches.
Perry's seven Innings gave him 5,248 for fourth place
on the all-time list, passing Warren Spahn who had
5.244.
Ron Guidry. 8-3. allowed six hits, walked two and
struck out seven in going the distance for the fifth time.

Orioles 8, Blue Jays I
At Baltimore. Cal Ripken hit a two-run homer and Leo
Hernandez cracked a three-run shot to lead the Orioles
to victory. The Orioles collected six hits. Including five
for extra bases, olf Luis Leal. 5-4. and helped Scott
McGregor to his seventh victory In 10 decisions.
McGregor allowed five hits, struck out two and walked
none. Cliff Johnson hit his 10th homer for Toronto.
There were no games scheduled In the National League.

Belcher's Next Pitch Tests Calvin's
Pocketbook; Ex-Sooner Lifts Texas
N E W Y O R K *C U P I ) - T i m
Belcher's next pitch will be to his
toughest opponent. Minnesota
Twins' owner Calvin Griffith.
Annually undermined by the
major league's most feeble pitching
stafT. the Twins opened Monday's
regular phase o f the summer free
agent draft by selecting the hardthrowing Junior right-hander from
Mt. Vernon (Ohio) Nazarenc College.
The Twins also owned the No. 1
selection In the secondary phase —
for players drafted previously but
not signed — and they chose
Arizona State outfielder Oddlbc
McDo'well. who 'led ’ the' Sun Devils
Into the College World Series by
blasting seven homers and knock­
ing In 50 runs In 63 games.
Under the stem hand of Griffith,
the Twins have developed a reputa­
tion for frugality and It's question­
able whether the club will ofTer
Belcher a six-figure signing bonus,
usually tendered to the No. 1 player
selected.

Baseball
clocked at 95 mph. was 5-4 as a
Junior with an ERA o f 2.86. He
pitched a no-hltter and a pair of
one-hitters.
The selection meeting began with
the first two rounds of the regular
phase, a special draft for clubs
which lost T yp e " B " ranking
players through the Re-Entry Draft
and the entire secondary phase. The
remainder o f the regular phase will
be conducted Tuesday and Wed­
nesday.
In the regular phase, teams
selected in reverse order of their
finish the previous season,'with the
leagues alternating choices. The
Twins picked first following their
60-102 mark In 1982. The selection
order for the secondary phase was
determined by lots drawn by the
league presidents.

"I'm happy for the Twins and I'm
happy for me,” said Belcher, a
6-foot-3. 210-pound Junior who
strpek out 93 batters In 66 innings
this spring. “ 1 had a pretty good
Indication the last few days that the
Twins would draft me No. 1 .1 know
they'll make an honest attempt to
sign me.

In the special draft, the Mets
selected pitcher Cal Schlraldl of the
University o f Texas and the Chicago
White Sox picked Wichita Stale
o u t f i e l d e r Russell Morman.
Schlraldl won his 13th game and
lowered his ERA to 1.74 Friday,
blanking James Madison 12-0 in the
Longhorns’ College World Series
"Everyone's Intention starting out opener.
Is to make it to the top and I know If
Cincinnati, selecting second In the
I show them enough, the Twins will regular phase, chose shortstop Curt
move me along up the ladder."
S tillw e ll, a sw itch -h itter from
Minnesota's club ERA o f 4.72 last Thousand Oaks (Calif.) High School
season was the poorest In the who batted .552 this spring. The
majors and the Twins' staff la last Reds announced S tillw e ll had
again In 1983 with a 4.84 ERA. signed less than 30 minutes after he
s
Belcber, whose fastball has been was chosen.

OMAHA. Neb. (UPI) - Jamie
Doughty went.to Junior college In
Oklahoma and seemed set to con­
tinue his collegiate baseball career
at Oklahoma State.
But no sooner did Doughty look to
be headed for the Cowboys, he was
no Sooner, period. The Inflelder
c h o s e to a t t e n d T e x a s , and
Oklahoma State now wishes he had
decided otherwise.
Doughty doubled to right center
field In the U th inning, scoring
Mike Trent with the winning run
and leading the top-ranked Long­
horns to a 6-5 College World Series
victor)’ over Oklahoma State In a
second-round w in n er's bracket
contest.
The Cowboys sent the game Into
extra Innings Monday night when
pinch hitter Kevin Jaglclo started a
two-out ninth-inning rally with a
single to left. Kevin Fowler pinch
ran for Jaglelo and scored on Scott
Wade's single, tying the game at
5-5.
Texas, 63-14, Thursday will face
the winner or tonight's meeting
between Michigan and Alabama.
Oklahoma State. 48-15. will meet
Arizona State on Wednesday In an
elimination contest.
Trent reached on a walk from
Oklahom a- State re liev e r G ary
Kanwlshcr. Doughty, who came in
to play third base In the eighth
Inning, followed with his game­
winning hit.

STANDINGS
W
21
2t
21
24
27
24
22

Baltimore
Bolton
Toronto
Milwaukee
New York
Detroit
Cleveland

Math r a c e - 5/1*. B: tu t
1 Flrtt Term
*00 440 M0
4 Linder
440 140
7 F lathy Artltt
540
Q ( M ) 114(1 T (04-7) 1144(1 DO
(011*544
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2 Can't Ge Far
1100 1440 *20
I Small With
540 120
4 It'll Ba Hart
440
Q (l-l) IS4(i T ( l - M ) 41740
I librae*-5/1*. A ill.lt
* Sargent Bllko
440 140 1.10
4 Doth A Foes
1(10 440
240
1 Antonia Milady
0(4411*4(1 T (M -l ) SM40
tM ra c a — S /)A C ili4 4
5 Southern Love
*.10 *40
0 Main Ambition
040
1 Em * Special
140

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27
24
21
22
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II

SI Loult
Montreal
Philadelphia
Chicago
Pitttburgh
New York

1
1
74
74
2
4

L
21
22
24
21
2*
21

New York 4. Seattle 2
Milwaukee *. California 7
T ia id a r ’ i Oamei
(All Timet EDT)
Milwaukee ICaidaetl 54) at Baltimore
ID Martinet)*).7 25pm.
Detroit (Wllcoi 541 *t Boeton (Tudor
1)1.7.15pm
Cleveland (Blyleven 4 4) at New York
(Rifhetti72).lpm
Mlnnetota (Sctirom 40 at Kama! City
(Renko4 4).| lip m
Ta u t (Honeycutt 71) at Seattle
(Stoddard44). tt 25pm.
Toronto (Colt 2 4) at Oakland I Karrit
4 51.1* 55p m
Chicago (Oofton 55) at California
(Zahn 5 2). 10 25 pm
Monday'l America* League Boitcoret
By Untied Pr*tl Internahan*!

SEATTLE
abrkM

NEW YORK
ebrbM

SHendtrtn If 2 ( I ( Randolph lb 4 1 2 (
BOSTON
RHelton If 0 ( ( ( Griffey cl
2 I 2(
abrbW
ebrbM
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Whitaker 2» 5 2 4 2 Remy 2b
4 11* Allen 2b
Cabell lb
5 14 2 Event rf
5 2 2 1 DHendrtn cf 2 ( I 1 Gamble Mi 4 I I (
Zitk &lt;r
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4I I 2
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M i t t Tolah
2) 4 II 4
Trammell it 2 I 1 2 Miller ph
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M M 110—1
Cedman c 0 ( ( (
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24 4 I) 4
E-Vanda Berg DP-Seedie I LO B 1(2 II* 254-11
112 Mt 0*1— 4 Seattle 1 New York * 75-Mercado
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Came winning RBI - Whitaker It).
-Nedlet 217). Kemp (4) S B -J Crui (221
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B» ion |. LOB-Detroit 4. Bolton I*. ! B IP M RERBBSO
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Whitaker (4). Trammell (2). 5 B I ( (
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lorg 2b
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ill H
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Game winning RBI - Dwyer It).
E-Garda. Upthew LOB-Toronto s.
Baltimore 4. 20-Dwyer. Lawentlem.
Ratnlcka HR-RIpken (01. Harnan*&gt;
()).Johnien(l()

Texas coach Cliff Gustafson was
proud of his Inflelder and said, "I
didn't think Jamie Doughty was an
unlikely candidate to be a hero. He
played in Oklahoma and that had a
little extra Incentive."

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Jordan Mathlet
Robert Mandhelm

Dobtolo P in d o fr youth
coach at Bowl America
In Sanford, presents
daft to right) Clint
Pindar. Mika S a lis
Storniy Fin ch and
Tyrone Williams their
trophies for winning the
Pushovers League. The
Meteors ware the five
to eight-year-old cham­
pions.

01

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Meteors

Pd.
.54)
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.447
.440
JO
247

Wett
Lot Angeiet
25 14 444
24 10 454 14
Atlanta
San FrandKO
21 24 520 74
San Diego
24 27 .471 11
Houtton
24 20 .444 124
Cincinnati
2) X 4)4 12
Manday'l Retuftt
(No garnet tcheduled)
T ie id a y ’ t Oamei
(All Timet EOT)
New York ISaaver 2 5) at Chicago
(Rainey 54). 7.2*pm
Pltttbwgh (Rhoden 2 51 at Montreal
(Lea) I).7:25pm
St. Louii (Fortch 24) at Philadelphia
(Carlton 4 51.7:25 pm.
San Diego (Show 421 at Cincinnati
(Soto7 2). 7:25pm
Lot Angeiet (Welch 4 41 al Atlanta
(Peret* 11.7.40pm
San Francitco IHemmater 42) at
Houtton (Knepper 1*1, I 25 pm
Wtdneidey'i Garnet
New York at Chicago
Lot Angeiet at Atlanta, twilight
Pifttburgh at Montreal, night
St Loutl at Philadelphia, night
San Diego at Cincinnati, night
San Francitco at Houtton. mghl

California
20 22 .54*
24 24 500 24
Oakland
22 24 m 4
Kantat City
Teut
24 24 4M 44
24 77 .471 5
Chicago
Mlnneiota
7) 21 .424 74
2) 22 i l l 04
Seadie
Mandey-I Rrtufh
Oakland it Cleveland. ppd. rain
Detroit II. Balkan*
Baltimore I. Toronto I. called In am inn.

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L PCI.
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2) 54*
22 54*
24 521
25 SI*
25 .510
21 451

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1140 440 110
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440
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1140 540 4.10
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1140 540 440
440 140
440

NATIONAL LEAGUE
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America* League
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Right Way
To Get GIs
to Write
Mailbox In Yorba Linda"
enlisted your help to gel
sons and daughters who
arc far from home ip the
military service to write
home. A ll the parents

TONIGHT'S TV

D&amp;OT
^

. .

AuDV
*

W anted was
note assuring them that ---------------------------------their children were ullvc and well.
. Your "T o Whom It May Coneern" message, addressed
to those In the military, was fine, but I submit some
additional advice:
Parents not receiving mail from (heir sons or
daughters In the military may write to the command
ehaplaln or commanding am eer at the m ilitary
member’s address. The ehaplaln will "unofficially"
counsel the serviceman or woman regarding family
responsibilities and encourage him/her to write the
parents. The commanding officer will "officially"
counsel the member and “ strongly" encourage family
correspondence.
Writing these officers will not result in any trouble for
the service member, unless he or she perslstrutly
refuses to follow the counsel given.

Sue Stevenson, right, receives the first annual "Pilot of the Year" award
from Yvonne Alday, corresponding secretary of the Pilot Club of Sanford,
and chairman of the awards committee. Mrs. Stevenson received the

DEAR CHAPLAINt I cannot Imagine n more effective
way to "encourage" our men and women In the military
to write home. One "official" counseling session with
the commanding officer should be sufficient.
Now let's hear It from a chaplain In Korea:
DEAR ABBY: I sympathize with "Em pty MuIIImix In
Yorba Linda," but what’s wrong with the parents?
Abby, soldiers have told me that their parents didn’t
even send them a Christinas card, but their pen pals
came through!
Tell Mom and Dad that their child away from home
needs their letters even though the young men and
women In the service don’t write home much. Being
away from home is a new experience for most of them.
Their days are often boring and monotonous: there isn’t
much to write about because they’ ve said it all In the
previous letter.
•I've had many soldiers tell me they hale to write home
because they're trying hurd to net grown up. and they
don't want to depress their parents by telling them they
fad homesick and blue, so they just don’ t write at nil.
. So. have a heart, you folks at home, and write anyway.

In And Around Longwood

Sertoma Goes All Out
For Gala Charity Night
The Longwood Sertoma Club has
special ]&gt;lnns for a "Charity Night"
program to be held on June 17. Members
are raising funds to benefit local child re n
with speech or Hearing Impalrmenis.

Ms to tfw totalitarian world anvtHonad 39 ware ago by author
q tor pi OnttR In Ns dfttatc work

“ 1M4 "
ffl 6

K o r O fl
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m

The elinrlty night program will be held
lit the Maitland Civic Center, beginning
at 7 p.m.. and will Include dining and
dancing.
Tile Sertomatts are asking for a
donation ofS125 for the night, and It will
Include cocktails, hors d’oeuvers. llte
buffet dinner and musical entertainment
by the Crossroads band.

HUBERT WADE JR.,
CHAPLAIN, KOREA
:-XEAR ABBY: "Been Through th Ringer’" complains
because concerned friends telephone constantly lo
Inquire about the condition o f n seriously III family
member. Because l have also been through Hie ringer. I
offer this solution:
Rent, borrow or buy a telephone answering machine.
Record your message on the tape. It should be brief.
Example: " (
)"s condition Is unebunged. and
we are still greatly concerned. No visitors at this time.
When we hear from the doctor, we will update this
message. Please leave your name and phone number so
we will know that you cared enough lo call. W e’ll get
back lo you as soon as possible. Than k you for
understanding why we are nol taking personal calls at
tills tim e."
Abby. you'll probably gel a thousand letters with this
same suggestion, but by publishing Just one, you could
lighten the burden o f thousands o f exhausted people.

Master o f ceremonies night will be
Stale Hep. Art Grlndlc. Highlights of the
program will be the presentation o f a
fully equipped 1983 Cadillac Coupe de
Vlllc lo one of the couples In attendance
plus at least 16 door prizes lo Inawarded.
On a nationwide level, (lie Sertoma
organization emphasizes speech and
hearing Impairments ns its major
philanthropy. Locally, funds raised from
litis charity night program will go
toward lyelplug to defray I he medical
expenses o f 6-year-old Jake Allen and
his family.

SMARTER NOW
DEAR SMARTER: Thanks for a helpful suggestion.

Jake, who Is both legally blind and
deaf, recently underwent costly surgery
lo help correct his medical problems.
Jake, his parents, uud a therapist will
travel to Los Angclcsln June for another
operation lo connect a coll that will allow
him In hear for the first lime In his life.
Then Jake will begin the long process of
therapy to teach hint what to do with the
sounds he will hear.

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad
Sunday. June 19. Is Father's Day.
The Herald Is searching for the annual “ Outstand­
ing Dad." but we need the help o f readers.
Write a letter and tell us tn your own words why
you think a certain father Is outstanding. First, write
your full name, address. Including street, city and
stale, and your telephone number at the top of the
first page. Then, add the name, address and
telephone number of the favorite dud you ure
nominating. Please type or clearly print your letter
containing information about Dad.
Submit letters to PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich.
300 N. French Avc.. Sanford 32771. no later than
Wednesday. June 8. the deadline forjudging.

Proceeds from charily night will also
be used lo provide special camp scholar­
ships for several Central Florida hearing
Impaired children.
Due to space, the charily night pro­
gram will be limited lo the first
300rcsrrvatlons. All donations are lux
deductible, and receipts and forma)
Invitations will be senl upon request of
the donor.
For more Information, call 869-4634.
or mall donutinus to the Longwood

HAW

DAYS Marion It

HRRpff ifraCfin uy «K3wtw9 vfpw*

Sertoma Club. Post Office Box 3154
Longwood 32750.
Suhul Point Elementary School has
elected the following persons to serve as
PTA officers in 1983-84: Denise Glttings.
president; Arllss Turner, first vicepresident: Cathy W lsi, second vicepresident; Robert Adams, treasurer:
Joan Palmer, recording secretary and
Joan Nodzon. corresponding secretary.
The PTA has recently sponsored a
Teacher Appreclailon Day with a shrimp
salad luncheon. Teachers were relieved
of the usual lunchroom duties by PTA
moms, so they could go to the luncheon.
All the school’s teachers, staff members
and custodians were honored for their
outstanding work throughout the last
school year.
Saba! Point’s kindergarten class has a
water day party planned for the last day
of school. Children will be allowed to
play in the sprinklers and romp through
mounds of shaving cream.
The youngsters also put on a play and
slng-a-iong for their parents on June 6.
and took a bus trip lo the Central Florida
Zoo.
Other end-of-year highlights were a
softball game between faculty and the
fifth grade all-stars, a fifth grade science
and ecology trip out to Discovery Island
at Disney World and the school's gifted
children "Book Awards."

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CD O TOON MEETMQ "Should
Florida Haw A SUM Lottary?"

10:00
■ ( S M C WHTTE M M R "Th*
Pop** And Thalr Art; Tha Vatican

JDFD99

This week, children will be delighted
tn attend two movies that the school will
run in the auditorium. "Cinderella." and
"T h e Apple Dumpling Gang."
If you have any news o f community
Interest, or Information o f events in (he
area, call me at 323-9034.

FAMILY DAY
SPECIAL

Ititch r ht Spirit!,

A U D A T W1DNKSDAY
i

T T - ‘J
~

A*

Thanks To
The A rm y

K&lt;

Salvation A rm y C a p ­
tain Michael Watars,
, from left, and his wife,
SA C a p ta in B e v e r l y
Waters, receive the G irl
Va Scout Certification of
”
A pp re cia tio n from
V M ary Blair, leader, and
3 C o n n ie L o m o n s , co*
v leader of G irl Scout
j
Brownie Troop 5f2.The
&gt; Sa lv at ion A r m y anI n o u n c e d p l a n s to
■
sponsor this troop dur■
Ing the 1993-W year.

3 pttctB d Qoktgn brown Famous Reape
Fn*d Chickgn, mashed potatoes and gravy
agamy ana slaw and two Ireah. hot McUis.

A i

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L

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I
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a
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M N IO tj

�IB - E v t n ln q Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, June 7, 1733

FRESH CHEESECAKE BAKED IN THE
OLD WORLD TRADITION!jjgSfe.
M M
AwtAtti m m u ocuaoSs* *

aunws
m
n
u
r

CUSTOM
BODY SHOP

GARAGE

Prepared by Advertfelng Dept, of ;

Evening Herald ]

Coil 322-2611 Howl

H I M S. OKIANDO AYE. &lt;17-92)
m m intrust)
tu m a m

HICHAM HOLLANDS

Review
• .RUT ro u t

B
U
StM
IStO
HTHt MOVf •

Herald Advertiser!

321-0149

DAVE’S UPHOLSTERY
H | |

• FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS

IN S W A N C I A G IN C T

Larga Selection of Material
Quality Workmanship
F rtt EsHmatts
Fraa Pickup
And Dalivtry

SAVE MONEY On Your
Home Owners A Auto•ee
The Answer “A PACKAGE
P0UCY WITH CONTINENTAL’

popup
3234142

490 N. 17-92

Suita 100

|

LO N G W O O D , FLA.
(305)862-1600

McLAIN, PIERCE AND ASSOCIATES
202 last First St

P|

Next To Sobik's Sub Shop

Sanfoi

1
f ' - '&lt; f.«

Mon. •Fri. 1:00 AM - 0:00 PM

f

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J1p,

1 't'-i.

-sjAoM ,

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Just Like The (iood Old Days
f

O D ld c

( E t n t ir o

W E ARE N O W T A K IN G
SUMMER CLOTHES
FOR C O N S IG N M E N T
BRING YO UR S IN N O W !

( J lo m if c t io u

Antiques • Collectibles • Crafts

133 West Bay Ave.
Longwood, FI.
Ind Streat South Ot Longwood Post Otllc*
HOURS: TU ES .-S A T. It AM S PM

f H. 3231421

830-5273

SPECIAL

CffOff STITCH • BOOKS • SUPPLISS
CANDLSWICK ■NSSDLS POINT • GIFTS
QUILT KITS • CSSWSL

i f CITRUS FERTILIZER

1

Fabrics • Claeses

$5o49

Liz Sutton/ Second Image employee, displays dress
P A T C H W O R K C O T T A G E Q U IL T S H O P

COUNTRY CLUB NURSE!
and GARDEN CENTER

OOT PAINTER
RAEHARPER
(309)321-6821

Country Club Rd. Sanford
(WestMthSt.) Ph. 323-Wtt-

iW

O fio r n h ifl’s !J n le rio rs C / c

p m

k

1 I '

20%

II
I 8

ON C U 3TO M

III llllfflj
H I
A

O f¥

II2 IS P )
1/

draperi es

■ I t

7U*

m

1 I ! ilj

C U S T O M B ID D IN G

■

UPHOLSTERY • DRAPERIES

■
■

7W E Celery Av#- So"*°rd
• Cuitom Draperlet

I It lr a r f H .

I

J sN K

• slip C oven

• Vortical Bllndi
• Wall Covering
• Altorotiont (Dropory)

A L L F A B R IC S
70S SUIT! K. HWY. 434
LONGWOOD BUSINESS CENTER

Second Image Has
Clothing For Women

222 E. 1st Streat •Sanford, Florida 32771

41

k

W

'

,
;

U U D FURNJTURf— FOAM CUT TO OSOfR f W ( 1

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SRM's FILED
ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

tP
O. ■ LA (A

775 N. Hwy. 17-92 Casselberry

% Wle Nertfc Of Dep Track Rd.
New Mam Ma«.-Fri. • AM-S:30 PM Sat I AM-3 PM
CAU FOR APPOiNTMCNT SS1-D 77

r HINTING
ALACE, INC.

1 0 a .m . to 5 p .n t. a n d o n F r id a y fro m 10 a .m , to 6
p .m . F o r f u r t h e r in f o r m a t io n , c a ll 3 2 3 - 9 4 2 1 .

Servlnp Sanford for 27 Yesrs
OPEN MON. THRU FR I.*-S

’’CALL BLAIR A N D C O M P AR E ”

323-7710 or 323-3866
2S10A O A K AVE. SANFORD

Leaf Bag Cart

*1o7*. &lt;

C *r9 tr • . I . P a rt A «*. 4 O tM

C o n c M aioantttdfo S tM t tor Mongo

ffra c e u &gt; -HAS
REOPENED HEfTFLORIST.
Stop By And Have A Cup Of Coffaa

SPECIAL THIS WEEK
CARNATIONS

/

Electronic he*m|tests«tf befew
(in it theOun/t Heeifli Ad Ctn
2701 SoOrtindoDr Sanford(Mondll Mir) end 120 S. Her. 1792
CtSKltotj Uondjj •frid»r thn
eeeh. H. Poemind B. Ftthet, en­
tiled by tie Niteml HtniNf Ant
Socetj oill te it theta eftrees to
perform the Inti
Afljooo oho ho trouble harm, or
undmUndmi it welcome to hm
I ted unrig the latest etectiMC
equipment todetermine be or her
portKuUr loti

Jim Lash’s Blue Book Cars

fnryooi iW d how•heormi ted
It leed once I fear rt there n »uj
trouble et oil heermf cieerlr [ten
poopto new euring o he«rm| nd
or thou ohohowteentdd nothm|
amWboBern hr thorncm fndwt
ibout the toted methodi of hootm| correcteel
Ibe bee heanoi ted erll be(nee
Meade; thruFriday- Hut weekH
the CaneChenr office ind Moodoj

The carpet
sj m l cleaning
" V
company
women recom m end.

OLD FASHIONED

DONUTS

VsDOZEN GLAZED DONUTS
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A DOZEN
DONUTS-ANY ASSORTMENT

41 AmlJrniBfT U M

2701 So. OriaadB Or.
Saolgtd
323-5702

17-92 A T LAKE MARY BLVD.-SANFORD

r « i • AM-MO PM 8 * 0 AM - 1 PM

120 Sa. Huy. 17-92

OFFER GOOD A T THIS LOCATION ONLY
c a ira iiM U JM iii, tm

�Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Evening Herald

We Will 8trip Any
Strnioht Chair,
$ Q
Metal Or Wood
O s U IJ

Herald Advertiser

3416 Ortande Or. (Hwy. 1762)
% MLlie f JeeCremona,SMfortf

Blue Book Value

VOLKSHOP

£.'-What Is Blue Book value? If you should need to
;buy. sell, trade, rent or service an autom obile. Jim
jpash's Blue Book Cars is all you need to know.
«S'Bluc Book value is Blue Book Cars offering 100
vehicles In stock ranging from $199 to $1,500 so
•IJrtat there Is a car for you r pocket book and taste.

VX IM O M B O M M H IH SI H I W l I

&gt;;;Becausc Jim Lash has been In the autom obile
b u sin ess for 28 years in this area and has operated
:j)is used car sales from the sam e location at 4114
Orlando A vc..(H lgh w ay 17-92 south o f Lake
•J5|ary Boulevard). Sanford, you can be sure he Is
hbt a "h e re today and gone tom orrow ” dealer. You
can depend on him to offer the best In service and
quality used cars.

Owfw UfftiU ti Platini Nmnc
M IN

W O M IN

S

S

CHIIDWIN

S

C

i Hutfacftn
^
? Neck Pun
j^ft 3 Should*) Pain

0 T HINC* 1

am

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a lim a

■

i a o with s u m or

MORI PORCHASS.

:-:Hls experience buyers hand pick his used cars
from new, car dealers, fleets and private Individu­
als , not In large lots. T h e y are then checked over
by the service departm ent prior to selling and
m ust pass rig id In sp ectio n . T h e y are then
r e c o n d it io n e d a p p e a r a n c e - w is e as w e ll as
m echanically. T h e detail shop throughtly cleans
the Interior, waxes, and buffs the cars and even
phints the engine before they go on the lot.

VERA’S ATTIC

L]

**■*&gt;« I "

LakaMart (M,.att«i. tM*
V|U A S AM lf

VI WA

S ATTIC

VlUA

4 Oiiticun RiMthmg
5 LOMtf Sack Pam
Hip Pam.

PamDown legs

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

[H I

#1

IN T M WINN DIXn PLAZA
M il NUT. IM I. su m o . n.

S AlTl(

VfUA

S ATTIC

323*574)

Mil $. Prtfldt At*., toflter*
IM r.ufr.m PITTA HUT)
All laMraac* Am I ^ m s U
A tc iftN With Ha Eitra
iM
Ovt Of P*&lt;k«t Eiptiuat
1 Dr. Ttwaut T m M I. CMraprattic PhytKlaa
FrM Rum M m Nat lacla* X « » n at Trtatmaat

COMPLETE LINE

The
Mare's Nest
GIFT SHOP AND DOLL HOSPITAL

“ W e w arranty our used cars for 30. 60. or 90
days depending on the m ake, m odel or y e a r." said
Steve Lash, general m anager o f Blue Book Cars.
Blue Book value is the Blue Book S ervice Center
with diagnostic equipm ent utilizing the latest in
electronic system s for w heel balancing, engine
testing, alignm ents, electrical and other m ajor car
com ponents.
N ow is the tim e to bring in you r car to the
experienced m echanics in the service center for a
check if you arc planning a sum m er trip.
Blue Book value Is J im Lash Rent-a-Car from
$9.99 a day and up. These cars com e equipped
with autom atic transm ission, air con d ition in g and
IdO free m iles each day. i f you r car is in the shop
•for repair or you arc tem porarily in need o f a
second car. Blue Book Cars offers econom ical
alternative transportation.

LA RGE SELECTION PRE OWNED
1
F.

A rt Supplies
OILS •ACRYLICS - W. COLORS

HAND CRAFTED QIFTS AND ACCESSORIES

Se&lt;tb)iifc
Jim Lash Blue Book Cars
employees ready to serve you
C a r Anr i B o a t S e a l s
B lu e B o o k C a rs is a o n e -s to p place
au tom otive needs. Call 321-0741 o r 830-6688.

S o l a Anr i C h a n R e f i m s h m g
ALL W O R K G U A R A N T E E D

For Your Redecorating Needs
You Can Call O n Nix Bedding
You can depend on N ix Bedding with Its m any
years o f experience In Sanford to take care o f you r
decorating needs. T h ere are three generations o f
businesswom en Involved In the operation at 709
&amp;. C elery Ave.
.T h e y Include Bertha N ix Dobson, ow ner, with 37
years o f experience in upholstery, draperies and
bedding; her daughter. Kathleen Corley, m anager;
and granddaughter. Karen Corley. a licensed
Interior decorator with 414* years experience.
*■ Nix Bedding has been at Its present location
since 1954.
Miss Corley w ill be glad to assist you w ith the
d ecor o f your hom e. She w ill even com e to you r
jiom e to m easure for draperies and bring alon g
ghbrlc sam ples to show you. She Is alw ays glad to
given you an estim ate at no cost or obligation.
£ Mrs. Dobson and Mrs. C orley are also on hand
jvhen you visit N ix Bedding to p rovide helpful
bints on color coordin ating and fabric selection
ft’hcn you drop in.
r N ow that w arm w eather is here again, outdoor
livin g and entertaining arc the order o f the day
pnd you w ill want you r porch and patio furniture
p o k in g its best.
&gt; N ix Bedding cna cov e r y o u r cushions to m ake
jfhem bright and pretty again. T h e y recover all
typ es o f cushions, both Indoor and outdoor,
d e lu d in g those for y o u r cam per. T h e y also
Specialize In slipcovers for you r furniture. T h e y
p a v e a large supply o f fabrics In stock as w ell as
Sample books from w hich to choose as w ell as all
(y^pes o f trims.
T h e y h ave a lot o f n ew sam ples o f upholstery
fchd drapery m aterials In the latest fashion colors.

» m e in fabric, alum inum o r plastic. You can get
h em in vario u s colo rs and to m atch y o u r
vallpaper, w hich Is also available from Nix.
T h e y also carry m ini-blinds and w oven wood

QUALITY ITALIAN a AMERICAN
TILi YOU CAN AFFORD I
Prices From f l i ' 6och (0“x8" p c )
3 3 9 -5 4 3 6
M IL tiN h lM t

_

•

Lrmwrr I H

m i

. u

2708 Sanford A vr

Sanford

Kendall
•tamp t coin c©., Inc. t I t l l i L
1306 Mwy. 17-93
CatMlbwrry, FI 33707
Opwn: Mon. • Sot. • 10-6, Stan. 1-5

y

V

M
|P

IS M M 1
• SILVER C O IN S B O U G H T 4 SOLD
• G O LD C O IN S • SILVER BULLION
• STAMPS • APRAISALS • SUPPLIES
i
•

'" I r a L

W ■■ S

;
/
J

Mod-Caro Surgical
and
Rasplratory Clinic
RENTALS ft SALES
• Whaakhalr*
• C o W o m y SupplM*
• Hospital led*
• Moitectomy Suppll#*

• Ratplrotory Tharapi
Equipment
• Sceathlng Machine)
* Oxygen

•Crutch**

MEDICARE APPROVED
n r L y H A
iTwiymin^ ivw
nranv pwiwn v-,w

"Wl DOJVHT

Bertha Nix Dobson# owner of Nix
Bedding# shows sam ples to Olive
Carnes# a customer.
equipped with casters.
N ix is open M onday through Friday from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. o r call 322-2117 lor an appoin tm en t In
yo u r hom e. T h e full-tim e s ta ff at N ix is alw ays
ready to serve you. Free pick-up and d elivery are
available.

VERY L IT H E M A R lU ir

fflto Creative Tile
\jg r
3 f 8M

E &amp; D UPHOLSTERY

/

H air «JVW Pla ce

�J

4B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, June 7, IM J

Cham ber Chief
D e n n i s C o u r s o n , p r e s id e n t of
Flagship Bank of Seminole and
chairman of the board of Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce, has
been elected 1983-86 president of the
C e n tra l Flori da Association of
Chambers of Commerce. Courson
was Instatted at the association's
quarterly meeting held last week in
Mount Dora. The group includes
chambers from Seminole and five
other counties.

Court Reinstates
Windfall Oil Tax
WASHINGTON (UPI| - The oil In­
dustry reacted angrily to a unanimous
Supreme Court decision reinstating the
wlndrall oil profits tax that will cost
producers tens o f billions o f dollars.
The Justices, voting 9-0, Monday
reversed a Cheyenne. Wyo., Judge's
ruling striking down the lax because Its
exemption for Alaskan oil discriminat'd
against other Btates.
H.D. Scoggins, general counsel for the
Independent Petroleum Association of
America, vowed to continue the fight to
overturn the levy, passed In 1980 to curb
oil producers’ profits stemming from
decontrol o f oil prices.

bypass concerns about dangers from
permanent waste disposal when It
licenses an atomic plant. This provoked
a favorable reaction from that industry,
with an At omi c Industrial Forum
spokesman saying n "cloud has been
tifled" from licensing decisions.

Association Chairman Kye Trout said
from his home in Bismarck. N.D.. the
decision was “ a major blow to an already
hard hit Industry.

While the windfall profits tax ruling
was being appealed, the U.S. Treasury
continued collecting the tax. reporting
net revenues through 1982 of $27.4
billion. Bui falling oil prices and business
tax breaks In 1981 reduced the govern­
ment's projected take of $66 billion
through 1988 to $58 billion.
The government had fought to have
the tax restored on grounds the revenue
Is crucial to controlling federal deficits.
Justice Lewis Powell, who wrote the
high court’s opinion, accepted the gov­
ernment's arguments, saying Congress
could not he faulted for determining that
Alaskan oil needed favorable treatment.
It had before it "ample evidence of the
d isproportions costs and difficulties —
the fragile ecology, the harsh environ­
ment. and the rem ote location —
associated with extracting oil from this
region." he noted.

"T h e continuation of this tax Is only
going to make it more difficult for
domestic producers to expand domestic
production. It virtually guarantees that
we will be hooked on foreign energy for a
long time to come."

"Nothing ... suggests that Congress
intended to grant Alaska an undue
preference at the expense o f other
oil-producing slates." Powell wrote,
noting that less than 20 percent of
Alaskan oil escapes taxation.

An opposite view came from Edwin
Rothchlld, assistant director of the CUI-

The exempted oil Is produced in
Alaska north of the Arctic Circle, which
nVspkreB from taxation by the Crude
Oil Windfall Profit Tax Act o f 1980.
In other action Monday, the court:

Describing the ruling as "a blow to the
energy security of the Untied States,”
Scoggins warned it will "cause marginal
oil wells to be abandoned.”
" W e w on 't accept i t . " he said,
explaining that other legal questions
remain at issue and may prompt other
suits.

the ruling because It shows "the gov­
ernment has every right to tax the
windfall profits earned by oil producers,"
In a separate decision Monday, the
high court said when licensing a nuclear
power plant, the government does not
need to consider what environmental
harm the reactor's radioactive waste
would cause if It leaked from storage.
The ruling, also unanimous, enables
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to

—Unanimously struck down a Ten­
nessee law that required mothers to flic
paternity suits against the fathers of
Illegitimate children wllhln two years.
—Agreed to examine whtehcr finan­
cially pressed Memphis. Tcnn. could lay
off white workers with seniority to
protect the Jobs of newly-hired minority
workers.

Way To Go
The 1983 recipient of
Stetson U n i v e r s i t y ' s
Algernon Sydney Sul
llvan Award Is Russell
D. Crumley, a senior
from Sanford. The
award is given to se
nlors who represent the
most o u tsta n d in g
qualities of leadership
and Christian faith at
Stetson. Presenting the
award is school provost
D r. Denton Coker.

Beach Boys Get White House Gig
; WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Beach
poys. who cmbarraMed Interior Secre­
tary James W alt and won friends In high
■places, will play at the While House this
Weekend, not far from where Watt once
Wanted to have such performances
•barred.
£ The White House announced Monday

2 hat the group, known for Its close
harm ony and lyrics o f California sumJtners. will play on the South Lawn
{Sunday during a reception benefiting the
{Special Olympics program for handljeapped young people.
(
t The contact was initiated by officials of
•the Special Olympics, but W hile House
rflkUls said the final decision was up to
he president and Mrs. Reagan, who
up for the Peach Boys in an earlier
With Watt.
"T h e president and Mrs. Reagan
it it would be a grand idea and
extended the Invitations," said Sheika
Tate, Mrs. Reagan's press secretary.
The appearance will be a fitting and
[somewhat ironic encore to the unrelated
[controversy generated this spring when
[WaU ordered rock groups banned from
flhts year's Fourth o f duly celebration on
: Washington Monument grounds.
The conservative interior secretary
7 rock bands on

; Watt aatd ihto year's
would be I

•

p

- x--ft’

-*

with patriotic music, fireworks and Las
Vegas singer Wayne Newton as the
hradllne jterformer.
But his view o f the Beach Boys was
disputed In short order by a succession
o f administration officials — from presi­
dential assistant Michael Dcaver to Vice
President George Bush and finally Ihe
president himself — and prompted a
quirk reversal of policy.
Walt, smiling broadly if somewhat
sheepishly, emerged from an April 6
meeting with Reagan carrying a plaster
fool with a hole in it that he said
symbolized how *'! shot myself In the
fool." W all told reporters he looked
forward to having the Beach Boys "In
Washington to entertain us again."
Up to 1.000 people — Including'
members o f the Cabinet and financial
supporters o f the Special Olympics for
handicapped children — are expected to
attend the reception, similar to one held
Iasi year at the vice president’s rest*
denor. It was not known whether Watt
will be among them.
The program begins with a brunch for
individuals who contribute at least $500
to llie Special Olympics program, then
moves on to the.world premiere o f the
movie "Superman 111" at 6250a ticket.
Those attending Ihe premiere will
travel on lo the White House for a picnic,
exhibition, and: remarks by Reagan,
"Superman” star Christopher Reeve and
Special O lym pics President Eunice
Shrivcr.

&lt;** '• 1 * *

Legal Notice^

Legol Notice

le g a l Notice

NOTICE
Nolle* li hereby glv*n thal tht
Seminole County School Board will
conilder the adoption ot Pollev_
•GxS* 2.072. Field Trip*, at the ragu
lar meeting on June 27. 11*3. to be
held In the Board Room el the
A d m in is tra tiv e O lllc a , 1111
M a llonvill* Avenue, Sanford,
Florida. Thlt policy provide* regula­
tion* applicable to all (laid trip*
Including supervision required, ap
proval nect**ary tor different dost I
nation*. Irantporlatlon arrange
mentt. an* number el chaperone*
required. The policy It alto accom
penled by the form* thal will b*
necattar* tor arranging Held trip*
Thlt policy It being Implemented by
Florida Statute 230.77 (71. Thar* will
be no determinable economic Imped
caused by adoption ol thlt policy.
Complete copies ol thlt policy a* well
a* the form* ere available lor
Intpectlon by any Inleretted periont
at the Admlnlitratlva Office at above
addret*.
Roland V. William, Chairman
Seminole County School Board
Publlth June 7, IH3.
DEI *

LEG ALD EP ARTM EN T
TH E BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISSIONERS
COUNTY OF SEMINOLE
* Separate seeled bids for Items at
listed below will b* received In th*
offtc* ol th* Purchasing Director,
Samlnol* County Services Building,
2nd Floor. 100 E. 1st Street. Sanford,
FL 32771, until 3:00 P M . Wadnet
day, June 22, ItU (local lima); at
which tlm* and data bid* will b*
publicly opened and read aloud:
Bid I 511 — Furnish (5) Refute
Trailers
Bid f 514 - Furnish (I) All-Wheel
Drive Tractor
Bid I 513 — Furnish Hardware tor
Chlorination System and Chlorine
Scale
Bid I SI* — Furnish Microfilm
Equipment
Bid I 525 - Furnish (1| Mobil*
Of flea Unit
Bid I 524 - Furnish Labor/
Materials lo Sandblast/ Repair/
Paint E.O.C. Bldg.
Bid * 527 — Furnish (I) Latter
Quality Printer
FOR BID I 52* ONLY: Successful
bidder will b* required to lumlsh
Payment and Performance Bonds;
each In th* amount ot 100 par cant ol
total bid amount; proof ol Insurance
will b* required. Bond forms will b*
lurnlthtd by th* Samlnol* County
Of flea ol Purchasing.
Th* following bid It (or Annual
Requirements. Successful bidders
may b* required to convey thalr bid
orlcat, contract (arms and condlliont
to munlclpalllits or other govern
menial agtncles wllhln 5*mlnola
County:
A/R-024 - *57 Rock Gravel Calcium Free
All work shall be In accordance
with specifications available at no
charge In Ih* Oltlc* ol th* Purchas­
ing Director.
Th* County reserves th* right to
re|*ct any or all bids, with or without
causa, to waive technicalities, or to
accept th* bid which in Its bast
ludgamant bast serves th* Interest ol
tho county. Cost ol submittal ol thlt
bid It considered an operational cost
ol Ih* bidder and shall not b* passed
on to or born* by th* County,
Parsons are advised that, II lhay
decide to appeal any decision made
at thlt mealing/ hearing, they will
need a record ot th* proceedings,
and. tor tuch purposes, they may
to antura that a verbatim
of th* proceedings is mad*,
which record includes th* testimony
and evidence upon which th* appeal
Is to b* bated.
JoAnn Blackmon. CPM
Purchasing Director
Samlnol* County
Service* Building,
2nd Floor
IOOE. 1st Street
Sanlord. FL 12771
1305) 373 4330. E«t. 1*1
Publish June 7,1(13
DEI 35

FLORIDA STATUTES 1*7.24*
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Bruce E. Ken*, the holder ot Ihe
following certificate* hat (lied laid
cert ItIcate* tor a tax deed to be
Htued thereon. The cartltlcala
number* and year* ol Ittuanca, th*
dttcrlplion ol Ih* property, and th*
name* In which II wat aliened are
at follow*:
Certificate No. 1}J; Year ol
Ittuanca 1*10,
DatcrlpHon ot Property: SEC 35
TWP 1*S RGE 30E BEG 7075 4 F T W
+ 710 F T S OF NE COR RUN E 3 F T
S 100 F T W 3 F T N 100 F T TO BEG +
BEG IIW.5 F T W + 710 F T S OF NE
COR RUN W 74.1 F T S 710 F T E 24.1
F T N 210 F T TO BEG
Nama In which attattad: Fla,
Urban Dev.Corp
All ol Mid property being In the
County ol Sem Inole. Slat* of Florida.
Unlett tuch cerllllcatt or certifi­
cate* thall bt redeemed according to
law Ih* property detcrlbad In tuch
cartlflcal* or certificate* will b* told
lo Ihe highest bidder at th* court
hout* door on th* 70th day ol June,
1*13 al 11:00 A.M.
Dated thlt 13th day of May, t**3.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
ol Seminole County, Florida
By: TheretoMacek.
Deputy Clerk
PubllihMay 17,34.31A June 7, lt*3
DEH 10*
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
FEDERAL REVENUE SHARING
PROPOSED USE HEARINO FOR
1*13-1*14 F E D E R A L R E V EN U E
SHARING B U D G E T FOR T H E
CITY OF LONOWOOO. FLORIDA
Th* City Administrator ol th* City
ol Longwood. Florida will hold public
proposed use hearing* lor tha
I*t3/t*t4 Federal Revenue Sharing
Budget on Friday. June 17, ISM at
10:00 a.m. Th* hearing* will be held
al Longwood City Hall, City Com­
mission Chamber*. 175 Well Warren
Avenue. Longwood, Florida 32750.
The public will be given th*
opportunity to make oral and written
suggestion* regarding possible use*
ol Federal Revenue Sharing Fund*.
FED ER A LR EV ENU E
SHARIHO BUDGET
Unused fund* available:.... I 1,010 00
Anticipated Amount ol Federal Rev
anue Sharing Fund* lo be received
tor Fltcal Year lftl/ U :..... M.7I100
Total funds:....................... 1*7,771.00
O L . TERRY
CITY CLERK
Publish June 7,1*(3
DEI-33
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO OF
PROPOSED CHANO ES AND
A M E N D M E N T S IN C E R T A IN
DISTRICTS AND BOUNDARIES OF
TH E IO N IN O ORDINANCE OF
T H E C IT Y OF S A N FO R D ,
FLORIDA.
Notice It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will b* held at Ih*
Commission Room In th* City Hall In
Ih* City of Sanford. Florida, at 7:00
o'clock P.M. on June 27, IM3, to
consider change* and amendment*
to the Zoning Ordinance ol th* City ol
Sanlord, Florida, a* follow*;
Th* Code ol th* City ol Sanlord,
Florida Appendix A. Zoning Ordi­
nance (Ordinance No. 10*7. a*
Amended) ARTICLE V. USE PRO
VISIONS Sec. 10 SC-3 Special Com­
mercial District.
Paragraph E Oft Street parking,
shall be amended to read at follow*
E Oft Street parking Required
oil tlreel parking space* thall b*
provided a* sat lorth In Article VI
hereol. aecapt that no off street
parking thall b*'required lor com
marclal u*e» with 1,000 Square leet or
las* Mint area located within MO teat
ol a city owned parking lot.
All part lei In interest and cllliens
shall have an opportunity lo bo heard
at said hearing.
By order ol the City Commission ot
Itw City of Sanford. Florida
H.N. Tamm Jr.
City Clerk
Publlth June 7.17. I*«J
DEI-30
U N I T E D S T A T E S , D IS T R IC T
COURT MIOOLC DISTRICT OF
FLORIDA ORLANOt) DIVISION.
C O U R T NO. •l-OfO-ORL-CIV-R
UN ITED STATES OF AMERICA.
Plaintiff, vs BOBBY J. LOWE and
CAROLYN L. LOWE, hit wit*, and
C ITY OF ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS.
Dalandants. - NOTICE OF SALE Notice It hereby given that pursuant
to a Summary Final Decree at
Forecloture entered on January 11,
lf U and Order to Sat Aside Sal* of
March 22. ton, by th* above anil tied
Court In the above causa, th* undartignad United States Martha I. or
ono ot hit duly author Ired deputies,
will tall th* property Uluot* In
Saminole County. Florida, detcrlbad
at: Lot i*. Orange Estates, accord­
ing to tha Plat thereat at recorded In
Plat Soak 14, Pag* 54. of Rm Public
Record* ol Samlnoto County, Florida
al public outcry to th* highest and
bast, bidder ter cash at t&gt; o'clock
noon on Tuesday, June It, tin at the
st daor at the Seminal* County
Courthouse. Sanlord, Florida.

Dated; Mays, tin
RICHARD L. COX. JR .
U N ITED STATES MARSHAL
M ID D L E D IS T R IC T OF
FLORIDA
ROBERT W -M ERKLE
U N ITE D STATES A TTO R N EY
MIDOLfi DISTRICTO P FLORIDA
PuMah May 1 7 ,1 0 1 $ J i m 7, i m
DCHS*

NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S
SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
by virtu* ol that certain Writ ot
Execution Issued out of and under
th* teal ol th* COUNTY Court ot
Orange County, Florida, upon a (Inal
ludgamant rendered in th* aforesaid
court on th* 4th day ol November.
A.D , 1M2. In that certain cat*
entitled, FAF Holding Co.. Inc., a
Florida corporation d/b/a Fattir*
Service, Plaintiff, v* Earl Lalffar,
Defendant, which alortiald Writ of
Eaacutlon wat delivered to me as
Sherlll of Semlnol* County, Florida,
and I have levied upon tha following
described property owned by Earl
Lalttar, said property being located
In Semlnol* County, Florida, more
particularly detcrlbad at follows:
Lot 45. APPLE VALLEY UNIT
FOUR, according to tho Plat thereof
as recorded In Plat Book 23. Pag* 17,
Public Records ol Semlnol# County,
Florida.
and tha undersigned at Sharitf ol
Semlnol# County, Florida, will at
It.90 A M . on th* |th day ot Juna,
A.D. 1*13. otter lor Ml* and tall to
tho highest bidder, tor cash, sublet!
to any and all ailstlng Hans, at th*
Front IWastl Door at th* slaps ot Ih*
Samlnol* County Courthouse In Senlord. Florida, th* above described
REAL property.
That Mid M l* It being mad* lo
Mtlsfy th* tarmi ot Mid Writ ot
Eaacutlon.
John E. Polk,
Sherlll
Samlnol* County, Florida
Publlth May 17.34.31. A Juno 7, with
tha M l* on Juna I. IN3
DEH 101
N O T IC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM ITM A Y CONCERN:
Nolle* is hereby given that th*
undersigned pursuant to th*
"Fictitious Nemo Statuta," Chapter
•45.0a, Florida Statutes, will register
with th* Clark o' th* Circuit Court, In
and far Semlnol* County, Florida
upon receipt of prool ot th* publico
tlon at thlt notice, Ih* fictitious
Nam#, to-wtt:
SANDLAKECENTER
under which wa aspect to angag* In
business al *10 Sand Lake Road and
•40 S.R. #34 North, Altamonte
Springs, Florida 32701.
That th* parties Interested In Mid
business enterprise are at follows:
s JEROME D. FEINSTEIN
t JOAN F EINSTEIN
BML INVESTMENTS,
o Florida ganaral
partnership
By: s WILLIAM J. GOODMAN,
managing ganaral
partner
PRN INVESTMENTS.
a Florida ganaral
partnership
By: S N A . ROSSMAN.
managlngganeral
Dated al Altamonte Springs,
Samlnol* County. Florida. May 12,
1*43
'
Publlth May 17.14, I I A June 7.1*43
OEH 111
Ftortd* Stohda* 1t7J4t
Natkaet Aaaiketiea
tar Ta i Dead
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Ematt L. or MaMko Hamass, th*
holder at the totla* big certificates
has Iliad Mid certificates lor a tax
dead to Be issued thereon. Th*
cartlfkate numbers and yaart at
Issuance, th* description at Ih*
preparty, and tha nama* In which 11
we* anataad areas tottows:
■ Certificate Na. in
Year at Issuance 1*74
OascytptIan at Property: LOTS 4 a
IB LK IM IIS C H S S U B O P B IP G I4
Nam* in which aaseated: Pika
GaargaW. Heirs
All at aatd property batof In tha
County at t amlnata, ttatoat Florida.
Uni*** such canintat* *r cartlfl
law tha praparty toaertoad to suds
cartmeat* t r cartlfkate* wtllbataW
to the Mgheit bidder at tha court
haute dear an tha IT * day a* Juna.
IIU e tlliM A JM .
Dated thlt ■todays* May. MM.
(SEAL I
Arthur H. Backwith. Jr.

Dark
atthaCtradtCaurtaf
lamtoato County. Ftarlda
ByiThareaaMacak.
Odpsdy Clark

PateWtlterBASIB JtotoT. 14. MBS

DEM-Ml

Art o o

A FFID AV IT UNDER FICTITIOUS
N A M C IT A T U T I
S TA TEO F FLORIDA
COUNTY OF POLK
Th* undersigned, D E N li L
FONTAINE, under oath. Myt:
It Is th* Intention ol th* un
dartlgnad to angaga In a business
enterprise under th* fictitious name
Of D IS C O U N T A U T O P A R TS
Located al *15 Watt Memorial Blvd
Lakeland. Polk County, Florida.
Those interested In Mid enterprise,
and th* extant ol th* Interest ol each,
Isas follows:
DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS, INC., a
Florida Corporation, 100%
DISCOUNTAUTOPARTS
By; DENISL. FONTAINE,
President
SWORN TO AND SUBSCRIBED
before mathltlOlh day ol May, 1*43
Amy Fulllngton
Notary Public
Sletaol Florida
at Large
My Commission Expires: Fab. 4,
l« 7
Publlth May 74,31A June 7,14,1*13
DEH 143
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
; HEARING
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by
th* Planning and Zoning Board ot th*
City ot Lake Mary, Florida, that Mid
Board will hold a Public Hearing at
•:00 P.M., on June 24, IN I, to:
Consider a request from Virginia
L. Schaat, (Jordan M. Scheat, Ralph
J. Hubert and Margaret W. Hubert,
that th* City of Lake Mary, Florida,
vacate and annul th* following da
scribed plat:
Lott I through 30. INTERSTATE
INDUSTRIAL PARK, according to
th* Plat thereof at recorded In Plat
Book 1*. Pages 71 and 7* ol th*
Public Records ot Samlnol* County,
Florida, and Including th* roads
therein.
Th* Public Hearing will b* held at
tha City Hall, City ot Lake Mary,
Florida, on I ha nth day ol Juna. t*(3,
at 1:00 P.M., or as soon thereafter as
possible at which time Inlarestad
parties lor and against th* request
will b* heard. Said hearing may b*
continued from lima to tlm* until th*
Planning and Zoning Board makes a
recommendation In lavor ol or
against th* request to th* City
Commission.
THIS NOTICE shall b* posted In
three (3) public places within th*
City of Lak* Mary, Florida, at th*
City Hall- within Mid City, and
published.In th* Evening Herald, a
newspaper ol gonarol circulation In
th* C&lt;ty ol Lak* Mary, In two weakly
Issues prior to th* afortMld hearing.
In addition, notice shall b* posted In
th* area to b* considered at least
fifteen days prior to tho data ot th*
Public Hearing.
A taped record ol this moating is
made by th* City tor Its convenience.
This record may not const Itut* an
adequate record tor th* purposes ol
appeal from a decision mad* with
respect to th* foregoing matter. Any
parson wishing to ensure that an
adequate record of th* proceedings Is
maintained lor appallat* purposes Is
advised to maka tha necessary ar­
rangements at his or her own
expanse.
CITY OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
sConnl*M*|or
City Clark
D ATED : June2.11*3
Publish June 7 ,14,i*u
DEI-41
Ftarlda Statutes 1*7.144
Nalka *1 Appl leal ten
Itf ygu pf §j
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Ernest L. or MaMko Harness, th*
holder ol th* following certificates
has Iliad Mid cartltlcatas for a tax
dead to b* Issued thereon. Th*
cartiltcat* numbers and years ot
Issuonco, th* description of th*
property, and th* names In which It
was assatsad are as lot lows:
Certlf Icata No. 440
Year ot Issuance: 1*77
Description ol Preparty: SEC It
TWP MS RGE 33E ALL SE to OF
NE to OF NW to N OF ST RO 44.
Nam* in which assessed: Graar
OilnE
All ol Mid property being In th*
County ol Samlnol*. Slat* ot Florid*.
Unless such certificate or cartlli
cates shall b* redsamad according to
law th* property described In such
cart IHeat* or carlltlcatas wilt b* sold
to.th* highest bidder at th* court
M o m door on tha 37th day ol June.
1*43 all 1:00 A M
Dated this 30th day ol May, t**3
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clark
ot Ih* Circuit Court of
Samlook County, Florid#
By; Theresa Macek,
Hanut* riark
Publish May 14.31A Juna 7,14. IMJ
DEH-141

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 11-14* CP
Division P BOBATI
IN REi ESTATE OF
RUSSELL EOAVIOSON.
DtcaiMd
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
The administration at th* estate *1
RUSSELL E. DAVIDSON, deceased.
File Number 42 3*0 CP. It pending In
th* Circuit Court for Samlnpl*
County. Florida. Probata Division,
to* address ol which It Samlnol#
County CourthouM, Sanford, FL
32771.
Tha name and address of th*
personal representative and at to*
personal repratanlallva’s attorney
are Mi forth below.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJECTIONS
NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREV­
ER BARRE0.
All Inter**tod parsons are required
to III* with thlt court. WITHIN
TH R EE MONTHS OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE:
(I) all claims against tot astato and
(t ) any ablactlan by an Interested
parson to whom this notice wat
mailed that challenges the validity ol
th* will, to* queilficattons al to*
personal representative, venue, or
lurtsdictton ot too court.
Dato at Ih* first publication of this
ot administration: Juno 7,

1*M
Hamath W. McIntosh
Partonal Rapreaanlallva
Attorney tor Pareonol
Represent*) Iw
o Tdouglai itenstrom
Stanstram, McIntosh. Julian.
Catbart A Whifham.PA.
P.O. Baa WO
laniard. F L 12771

Tetophena. (JM) satin

PaM* Juna f.ia. tin

M ia

Natto* to hereby given that l am
engaged In huaineMat PO Baa 1444.
Langawad. Fla. 87MM44. Seminal*
County. Ftarlda under to* fkllltou*
N W at CONDITIONED AIR OF
FLORIDA, and that I Intend to
regittor said mm* with Dark of too
Circuit Court, Florida In accordance
wtto to* prevision* at thr Fictitious
Name Statutes. to Wit: Section I 4SM
Florida Statutes l*S7.
/!/ Jama* H. Barnhart,
Pitollih June 7, M, J1, M 1*M
D E If

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

RATES

itim * ......................M e t lint
J consecutive times. S4ca line
7consecutive tlm**.. 44c a lint
10consecutive timat 42c a Ifn*
12.00 Minimum
3 Una* Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
Monday- 5:30 P.M. Friday

21— Personals
Ideas, Inventions, New Products
WANTEDI
Industry Pratantallon/Natlonal
Exposition.
Call 1 *00 51* 40W.XHI.
LonalyT Call or Writ* Bringing
People together Dating Service.
(Agtt 25 III, P. O. Box 1451
Wlnttr Haven Flordla 33110
1*13 2*3 7777.________________
14 Plec* Brilliant Balloon Bou­
quets, for Birthday Parti** and
Special Occasions. Otllverad by
a Clown or our Saxy Stripper.
(Mato or Fematol to Sanlord
Surrounding Areas.
BALLOON WIZARD. *04 775 4470
47 Yaar Old Gentle Black Mato
Would Ilka to maet slander at
tractive non drinking, non tmok
Ing tomato* Whit* or Oriental
lor Evening Dates from 35 to 50
Years ol Ag*. Sand Photo with
Phone Number to Box 155. C/o
Evening Herald P. O. Box 1457
Sanford Fla.32771.

31— Private
Instructions
Hannah Music latsons. Plano,
vole*, brass, woodwinds, banjo,
drums and guitar (private and
clast.) 323 *7*1._________
SWIMMING LESSONS. For In
form ation. V icki G o rm ly ,
Certllled Instructor. 132) 5200).
II Babies Drown Every 24 Hours
Inlanl Swimming R*M#rch
Certified and Insured Instructor.
Survival Swimming. 4M o-SYr.
Call Rosanrw Spain 33* til*.
• a • *322 3333* a a a
For Swimming information

33— Real Estate
Courses
KEYES LICENSE EMM SCHOOL
Neil I day accelerated class slarti
June 13, I**3. For tuition relm
bursement information call
Mildreds.Wang 323 3200

25— Special Notices
New Olllca now opanlng.
VORWERK
II70W. Itl SI.

27— Nursery A
ChlldCare
Babyill In my homa. 525. a weak.
Ages Jyrt.andup
373 5354
Will Babysit In my Horn*. Monday
thru Friday. Raatonabto Rales.
Paola Area Call Jody. 317 1571.
V a c a t i o n li m a I t H e r a t
$ T R E -T C H on* weak into two
by using Wan! ads.
__________

leg o l Notice
FLORIDA STATUTES 1*7.244
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, thal
Bruce E. Kan*, th* holder of the
following certificates hat Hied Mid
cartllicatas lor a lax daad lo b*
Issued thereon. Th* carllllcata
numbers and years ol Issuance. Ih*
description ol Ih* praparty, and Ih*
names In which II wat assatsad ar*
at follows:
Certificate No. 47; Yaar ol
Issuance ifto
Description at Property: W M 7 FT
OF LOT * W OF BRANCH'BLK Y
TOWN OF SANFORD P B 1PG 111
Nam* In whkh assatsad: Pollard
Herbert C.
All ol Mid properly being In Ih*
County ol Samlnoto. Statool Florida.
Uniats tuch carllllcata or cartlli
cat** shall be redeemed according to
law Ih* property described In such
certificate or carlllkala* will b* sold
to the highest bidder al tha court
house door on Ih* Nth day ol Juna,
1*13 at 11.00 A M
Dated this 13th day ol May. IMJ
ISEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clark ol Circuit Court
ol Samlnoto County, Florida
By: Theresa Macek,
Deputy Clark
Publish May 17,14. Jt 4 Juna 7, INJ
DEH 119
FLORIDA STATUTES 1*7.744
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX OEEO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, thal
Bruc* E. Kane, tha holdtr d tha
lot lowing certificates has (lied Mid
carltlkalat lor a lax daed to be
Issued thereon. Th* carllllcata
numbers and yaart d Ittuanca, Ih*
description d the property, and Ih*
names In whkh II was assessed are
as lot lows:
C a rlltlca la No. I f ; Yaar ol
Issuance 1*40
DatcrlpHon ol Preparty; LOT 24*
BOOK E RTOWN PB 4 PG ft
Nam* in which assatsad: Tram­
mel Daisy M at al
All d Mid properly being in Ih*
County ol Samlnoto. Stole ol Florida.
Uniats such cartlflcal* or cartlli
calas thall be redeemed according to
law th* properly described in such
carlllkala or cartllicalas will bo told
to tha highest bidder at th* court
house door on Ih* 10th day ol June.
I d ] at 11:00 A M
Dated this 1Jlh day d May. if*j.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk d Circuit Court
d Samlnoto County, Florida
By: ThtreMMacak,
Deputy Clark
Publlth May 17,24, Jl14 Juna 7, l**3
OEH III
FICTITIOUS NAME
Ndlc* It hereby given that I am
engaged In business al s ill S.
Orlande A v*., Sanlord, 22171,
Samlnoto County, Florida under th*
Iktlllout name d BARBERY COAST
and thal ■ Intend to register said
name with th* dark d th* Circuit
Court, Samlnoto County, Florida In
accordance with Ih* provisions of Ih*
Fictitious Nam* Statute*, to wll:
Section 3450* Florida Statute* ***?.
Bruca P. Halnamann
Publish May 24,214 Juna 7,14, l*M
DEH-141

55— Business
Opportunities
Small rtfall shop avallbale In
Longwood'* Historic district.
Rent, Including utilities. *325 per
month Call 131 seal.

63— Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
Wa PAY cash lor 1st 4 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg, Lie
Mortgage Broker 7M 15**,

71-H elp Wanted
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E
ASSISTANT
Typing 55 WPM. essential, short
hand a plus Immediate long
term openings
NCVfRArU

A b le s t
kapew i kerncee
Mon Thurt. *114 1:30 J 30
200 PM Fro Si

ACCOUNTING CLERK— ,-.. -*4.71

BE EMPLOYED 11
Top company needs your
keeping background Computers
aplut. Excallanllrlngat.
AAA EM PLOYMENT 333 5174
CITY OF LAKE MARY
CITY MANAGER
Population 305*. Orlando SMSA
Salary tlt.000 to 523.009 nagolla
blo depending upon qualified
lions. Appointed by 5 member
City Com mission; *140,000
budget; 20 employees Requires
executive and administrative ex
parlance wllh background In
public administration, engineer
ing. City planning, construction
or ralatad Helds, supplemented
by at toast 3 yaart progressively
responsible supervisory experl
enc*. degree desirable Sutmnll
resumes to CHy Clark, City ol
Lake Mary, P. O. Box 725. Lak*
Mary, Florida 32744. Resumes
mutt bt received by July I. I**J.

NOTICE
■IN O O

K N IG H T S O F
COLUM BUS
2504 Oak Ave..
Santord

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30
Win $25-1100

•INOO

Santoro v p w
Past t t lN
Binge Manday 4
Wednesday night
earlybird 7:11
Laditt Auxiliary
blnro
Sunday l:N f .m .
Lag Cabin
on tha Lakafrent.

WIN *S-»)00
INVITATION TO BID
Sailed bids wilt fa* received In th*
City Menagar's dike , City Hall,
Sanlord, Florida, lor:
One (t ) Hand-Held Electronic
Spaed Ootoctton Device
Dotal tod spadtlcattons are availWa In tha City Manager's oHk*.
City Hall, Sanlwd, Florida.
The sealed tods will ba received In
th* City Manager's dtka, Raom jgj.
City Han, Santord, Florid* not later
•Nan l : » PM. Friday, Juna to. ton.
The bids will b* publicly opened later
that tame data d 2:00 PM in th* City
Commission Chambers. Ream 117,
City Hall. Santord. Plerida.
Tha City of
rlghl to accept ar re|acl any and &lt;
bids In the bad intoret! pt tha City.
W.E. Know!**
City Manager
C ITV O F SANFORD
D A TE : 4/J/n
Publish June*, ttgj
DEI J*

DM you knew that your
club or organltatton can
appear In thlt listing each
weak tor only S 2 « par
waabT This is an ideal way
to inform th# public ot your
club acttyllto*

It your club or organlration
mould Ilk* to b t included In this*
listing call:
^
»

Evening Henld
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT

in m u

�I

71-Help Wanted
B A R T E N D E R . Exaorltncod.
, Apply In Person Monday thru
&gt;• Friday, lt-1 PM. Deltono.
Carpel layer/furnilure handler.
MI-1002
Ask lor Chuck
CLERICAL **•#HMimtstestw ******m ■*tM

BE EMPLOYED it
’ M

'
-

t company will train go gottor, with accurate typing,
Bonotlts. Coll nowl

j

|o

AAA EMPLOYMENT

MM174

Concession and Otllco Help tor
weekend work. Apply at Flea
World. Thursday and Friday PS
PM.
COOK (Dinner). Apply In person
Tuesday thru Saturday. 1 :X to
l:M P M . Deltona Inn.
-DR IV E R..........................54.M Hr.

BE EMPLOYED u
Tractor Traitor - local only. Soma
warehouse. Lots ot overtime.
AAA EM PLOYM ENT

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

71-Help Wanted

M l 1174.

Experienced Only Sewing Machine
operators. Over lock or Sergufi.
tor T- Shirt Division, Sergur
Hammer. Ampro Fashions. IX
Power Ct.Mt 1H0.____________
E fp o rltn co d phono solictor.
Excellent earnings. Seminole
County. Phono M2 4741 It-AM to
I PM. Ask for Marvin.
Groundsman. Experienced In cere
01 Grounds and Pool. Apply in
person. Monday thru Friday II to
2 PM. Deltona Inn.
Hairdresser-experienced. Follow­
ing preferred but not necessary.
Apply-Headliners 2M) French
Are. Santord. M t-im
Houseperenf needed tor Christian
Childrens Home In Geneve. Sala­
ry plus room and board. Coll
Don, la* 50ft.
Job* and Workers Meet In The
WentAdsI NeodA Job??
_________ READ ONI 11______
JU N E CLASSIFIED ADS BRING
T H A T E X T R A SUM M ER
VACATION MONEY TO YOUI
LATHE OPERATOR................ M l

BE EMPLOYED H
Local test growing company.
Needs your skill* raises, and
benefit*.
AAA EM PLOYMENT
M l 1174
Lot and detail man needed tor used
car’ lot. For appointment Coll
Ml 4875._____________________
Mature women with waitress expe­
rience. Needed. It AM to 1 PM.
Tuesday thru Saturday. TE A
Room In Longwoods historic
district. Bogin Juno 14. Coll
MI-4441 tor appointment._______
O FFIC E WORKER
Accurate
typing; handle Phone orders.
Complete (ring* Benefits. United
Solvents. M l 1400. .___________
Port Tim*. Women and Men. Work

NEED IX TR A IN C O M IT
WHY NOT SELL AVON I
273045* 3M-lttt.
Pgd-Tim o Pressmon-AMtlMW
experience, Call Ralph Jenson.
M l0074
PERSONNEL U N LIM ITED has
Immediate full time openings for
(4) Cooks and (S) Cocktail
Waitresses. Also counter Clerks.
end Qenerol Laborers. 377 544*.
RapMty growing tooting company
needs experienced Bookkeeper to
till new position, Applicant mutt
hire minimum ol J yr* experi­
ence and wma college account­
ing counts. Degree not neces­
sary, but preferred. Apply by
phene f l Mr. Carlisle. Ml-4774.
SECURITY GUARD
HELP WANTED
___________ 173 5252____________
Shtrp Individual. Experience In
Mens Clothing Soto praterrod.
Apply In person. HIS Santord
Plan.
Waitresses, Cooks and Dlshwoth
on. Apply between 1 PM and 1
PM. 1500 French Are.
O M ELET REVOLUTION.
Wonted 2 Ladles lor selling.
Stanley Homo Products.
___________ 445 4411.___________
5210 to 5500.00 W E E K L Y
PAYCHECKS (FU LL Y GUAR­
A N TEED ) working port or lull
lima at home. Weekly paychecks
mailed directly to you from
Homo Office every Wednesday./
Start Immediately. No experi­
ence necessary- National Com
pony. Do your work right In the
comfort and securty of your own
homo. Details and application
moiled. Send your name and
address to: K EYSTO N E IN­
DUSTRIES. HIRING D EPT. 11,
*450 FREDERICKSBURG RD.,
SAN ANTON 10, TEXAS. 7122*.

P R O D U C TIO N
W ORKER
Need 5. Should have some
carpentry taper lance. 14.15.

73— Employment
Wanted
Core lor the Eldtrely. Certified
Nurses Assistant. Home or Hoi
pltol. References provided. Coll
M l *740.

51— Apartmonti/
Houst to Short
Share rent and utilities. Employed
female 15 or older. 1 Bdrm.
dupiei. Coll oftert PM. 57* *eil.

SANFORD, Reas, weekly A Mon
thly rotas. Util. Inc. off. MO Ook
Adults 1441 70*3______________
SANFORD Furnished rooms by the
week. Reasonable rales. Meld
servlet catering to working peo­
ple. Unfurnished apartments. I
and 1 bedrooms, 323 4507. 500

Furnished apartments lor Senior
Cltlren*. I l l Palmetto Are. J.
Cowan No phone colls._________
Nice furnished efficiency garage
apartment. Private. *55. ws
plus deposit. M3M77.

DAYS 574 1414
Ere*. 70S 4111
Lake Mary 1bdrm 2 bath
garage U f 5discount
___________ 41*1714.___________
Older 1 bdrm. 1 bath home in nice
area. W/w carpet, appliances,
•cr. porch. 5125 mo. plus deposit.
MI-1050._____________________
Very beautifully restored 3 bdrm
h i bath. 1 story hom# new kit. A
bath natural wood staircase A
trim throughout, hardwood firs.,
frpl., CHA 5510 mo., sec. dep.
122 4*71 445 4441_______________
1 Bdrm, unfurnished house. 1275
mo. first A last plus 5100 sec.
dep. Adults only. 2400 S. Elm.
1210144.
______
_____

Traret Traitor lots ot Park Are.
Mobile Pork. 500 monthly.
A d u jt r N o g t^ M llO A l^ ^ ^

117— Commercial
Rentals
N IW

O F F E R IN G

Looking lor a Home* You'll Find
Your Dream House In the
HER ALP CLASSIFIEDS.

B A TEM A N R E A L TY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
24*0 Santord Av*.
HANDYMAN SPECIALI. County
4-1. Lot l50xlH.5U.M0.
l ' » ACRES. Trees, light pole.
Septic tank, and water. Terms to
qualified buyer. 511.tOO.

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

HALL

R E A L T Y * INC.
323*5774

r ea lto r

IS YEARS EXPERIENCE

DREAM COME TRUE! Sunken
living rm "sals the mood” for
this gorgeous 1 bdrm 2 bath spill
plan hom* w/CHAA, dbl car
garage, custom decor end fenced
co rn e r lot In presti gi ous
Rambl ewoodl Fantasti c
assumption! No qualifying and
priced to sell I Only 551.000.

105— DuplexTriplex/Rent
Available now elegant A spacious
duplaxa* with larga screen
porches, storage rooms A
cerporti Fully equipped. *3*0 to
51*0 Coll tor dotolls. Century 11
June Porilg Really M l 1475.
Large 2 Bdrm. air, haat, appli­
ance*. no pets, 5350 Mo. SIX
deposit. M l l l l l ._______________

By Ownor

SANFORD

MoyfabC.C. WaftToMyOwldO
Own.4Bt/BB•nrgptoe*0Font,
i spa

Low ratal, 1.0M to 40.000 Sq Ft.
Sprlnklered, heavy Industrial.

WAREHOUSE

ONE OF A KINDI Gorgeous execu­
tive 7 story 3 bdrm 1.5 bath hom*
In mini condition Hug* panelled
family rm., beamed celifngtl
Detached cabanna w/llv. rm.,
bar and bath for entartalnlngl
Over &gt;i acre lush A spacious
landscaping! “ Na-qualllylng"
511.500 down 5117 Mo. Principle A
interest 17% APR Only 505.000.
HORSE PLAYI Nice 1 Bdrm. homo
on ta acres, w/larg* pool sur­
rounded by hundred* of oaks and
plenty ol privacy and bring pour
horses! Excellent flnanclngl.
Only 57T.S0O.
BOAT, FISH ANO SWIM ON THE
"ST. JOHNS R IV IR "I Extra
large oaks and palms surround
this 3 bdrmn. 1 bath hom*
w/panelled family rm. and itont
lireplac*. Boat dock and covered
boat house w/etoc. lift. Cement
seawall) 4 paddto fans! Dbl. car
detached garage! Many eitrasi
What a view! Only 1)00,500.

OFFICE WAREHOUSE
Ovmar Financing

1500 to 11,000 Sq. Ft. Downtown, air
conditioned. Loads ol Parking.

■Y APfW NlfclNT
PH 323-44*0

141— Homes For Sal*

ROBBIES
REALTY

B A TEM A N R E A L T Y

R E A LTO R , MLS
IN I S. French
Suite *
Sanford. Fla.

Lie. Real Estate Broker
1440 Sanford Av*.

1condo. 2 BR. 2 bath. Pool. Tennis.

105— Mobile Home
Loti / Rent

55— Apartmonti
Untomnhod/Ront

I \?DR punishm ent #
^vTH E Y WATCH THE
EVENING NEWS

2544 S.FRENCH
1210211
Alter Hours Mf 1110 371077*
For Rent. 1 Brdm. tto both. 1345
Par month. For more Informallon Call M l 0404.Alter 4 PM.
IN DELTONA
1 Largo Lakafront homo 1 BR 1
bath LR/DR/KIt Extras.

Cash tor
Larry1!
Mart. H I Sanford Are. M1-41M
COLOR TELEVISION
Zenith IS" ester TV tn walnut
consol*. Original price mar tMO.
Balance duo SIW cath or paymontt Sit month. NO MONEY
DOWN. Still In worronty. Coll
M I S** day or nlte. FrM homo
trial, no obi notion.

______ g u m .______

141— Homes For Sole

W E N E E D LIS TI NG S
C A L L US NOW ! I

SH0PPIK CENTER

323-5774

1500 to MM Sq. Ft. Low rotes, on
17-52. Great visibility. The WT
Porks Co. Broker 420 *32*.

1404 HWY 17*1

CONSULT OUR

IKINESSSOWISUSIIM
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...

OSTEEN 5 Acres, high and dryWell and light pole. Owner hold­
ing. 172.500.
ALSO 1.7 Acres. Terms. tl*.*00.
FISHERMANS PARADISE. 3-1V*
C A H 15*11 screened pool,
workshop, 11*14. Beautiful
secluded area. Lot 75*550 on
Lake Monroe. 1104,500.
HANDYMAN SPECIAL!. County
4 1.Lot150xll4.mt00.

321-0759 Eve 322-7643
HALCOLBERT R EALTY
REALTOR
107 E 15th St.____________ 121 7132
Hidden Lake
Hemes tram 147,ISO
Villas tram *41.(00
F HA/VA Mortgage!
Residential Cemmunltlas ol
America
lll-fOft____________

M
m
UWlH
Catt Keyes

WE HAVE CLIENTS
W A IT IN G FO R
YOUR R EN TA L
P R O P ER TY
PLEASE CALL
323-3200
J*tW. Lake Mary Bird.
Suite B
Lake Mary. FI*. 1*744
DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE

KISH REAL ESTATE

2 4 HOUR ^

CONVENIENT
Completely renovated 1 Bdrm. I
bath, large eat In kitchen has
solid pine cabinets. Fireplace In
living ream. Decorator wall
paper throughout. Immaculate,
u sjte .
COUNTRYATMOSPHERE
Quiet and related area. Large
treed lot. Owner bos dona
•itonslve remodeling. 1 Bdrm. I
bath. Hug* front perch. STS,***.

R EA LTO R

321-0041

LAKE JE IU P
Waterfront Nearly S Acre*. Over
i* cleared. Owner *ay*‘‘Muit
Sell" *40,000 Owner financing.
GOLFERS OELIONT
Walk to Mayfair Golf Course from
this delightful, 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath,
homo In Loch Arbor. Below FHA
appraisal. 555.500.
JUST LISTED
This 1 bdrm. 1 bath "cutlt" could
bo |u*t what your'e looking lor.
Groat lor nawly married or
retirees. Close to Hospital.
140.000 FHA.

Bay t» "HBRALO" Claoelfted.

117— Sporting Goode
Indoor Gun Range TuesSet. 10-5.
Sunday Id Shootstraight. Apopka
Plata i eatom

322-9283

SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
J2JSJ24
Aft. Hr*. 122-4M4,173 045
Seller motivated. Assume Mtg. or
finance. 4 Bdrm. 1 both. Coni
HA, private backyard. 152.000.
Owner Associate. Ml -OO*.

Oebary Auto A Marino Salat
aerate the river top of hill If*
hoyty-HDoboryOOMSM

If f— Pots A Supplies

1 Bdrm. IVi both homo with Inside
utility ream. Impressive stan*
fireplace. Cathedral celling,
located on tree shaded let.

wf.toe.
Regltlerad. AKC Doberman pup*.
Black and Tan. Tall* docked.
Dew close* removed. Pupple
shot* and wormed. Bom April
4th. SIM. 121-5445.

The Wall St. Company
Button
321-5005
Looking lor a Home? You'll Find
Your Dream House In the
HERALD CLASSIFIEDS.

auto, air,AM. FM., power. Alter
0 Pm. Weekday* MI-4147.
IfTl Toyota Calico
G T. Hot.
chbeck. AM FM stereo. Auto.
Trane, air. M l-4147. Weekday*
after* PM.
I N I Dodge Challenger * cyl.
loaded, low mileage. Pay
bolonco Ot 57.M1.15. Coll 122*177.
U 4 door Chevy Impale. I owner,
rebuilt engine and various port*

213— Auctions
153— Loti*Acre* ge/Sete
FOR ES TA TE . Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Apprais­
als. Coll Dell's Auction Ul-SAM.

LtkefrontV* Acre, on Lake Don.
tM,700. Wm. Mallciewskl
Realtor 127 7SP.________
ST. JOHNS River frontage, IV*
acre parcels, atsa Interior
parcels with river access ttMOO
Public water, 20 min. to Aliamonte Mall 11% 10 yrs financing,
no qualifying. Broker
47*4*13____________

ESTATE SALE

155-Condominiums
Co-Op/Sal*
SANDALWOOD VILLAS-1 bdrm. 1
both condo, full opptloncao with
washer, dryer. Peel A Club
House.
For sole by owner.
124.100. call M l 5047,___________

Wednesday
1PM
Entire household consisting of one
complete French Provincial
bdrm suit with pester bed. One
four piece bdrm suit 0 mo. old.
Oreseors, chest o* draerers, pool
Iable, choirs, desks, metal cabi­
nets, glassware, nick nocks, and
late ol m ile, furniture too
numerous to mention.
A-l Auction lorries
U U S . Pork Dr. Santord
____________M U I R ___________ _

Bum */Vans
tm ctw vy Von
I cylinder S47S.
Call M3 4J77

JACK'S BOAT REPAIRS.
For all your Boating needs
104 E. Lemon SI. Santord.
(IPS MI-517* Day* M l 5455 Night.

241—Recreational
Vehicles/Com per*

157—Mobile
Homes /Sale
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC.
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
SKYLINE DEALER
FEATURING
Palm Baach Villa
Greenleaf
Palm Springe
Palm Manor.
Siesta Kay
VA FHA financing M U n-SIM .
New Homes starting at MfM. Easy
credit aid low down. Undo Roys,
Leesburg- US. *41 SOAIP-On*.
No deposit required. Wail toko
application by phone. Everyone
buys. Call tor Doug. Wo IInane*
oil. 104-717 0114. Open week
night* tol PM. ______________
No money down and 1 day* service
on oil VA flnondng. Short on
Credit? Cell and ask tor Tom.
Uncle Roy*. Leesburg. Open Id
Weekdays. (04 717-0114.________

315—Truck*/

215— Boats/Accessories

U l l FRENCH AVE
IMAGINATIVE DESION
This tpedewt 4 Bdrm., 1 bath ham*
offer*, bright eat In kltclwnm,
lam. rm „ fireplace, vaulted
ce llin g * . Separate in -le w
quarters. H*..M*.

223— MJscallanaovt

163—Waterfront
Propsrty/Sal*

Rambkwood. 4n I Acra. I M M
Cardinal Oaks. V I ItUfSO.
Ravont Break. 4/11144,550.
Forait City. 1/1 145,500.
BobM. Bill Jr. FA. Rooltor

Recquetbal! and Moral
Santord Landing S.R. u MUMP,
NEWLYWEDS WILL ARRIVE IN
J U N E - REN T TH EM A PLACE
NOW. ITS NOT TOO SOON.
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
1*0 Rldgowood Av* Ph.Ml 44M
1.1 A 1 Bdrmt. trom 1*0.
Santord Spoclout. t Bdrm. plus den
or 2nd. Bdrm. Furniture. 5140
Adulti. I MI7M3.
Santord Lake Mary area. Convr
nlantly located. N«w 1 Bdrm. I
bath many oitrai. Coll oltor 0
PM. Ml 4044, 171 4477. *1 *121.
Unfurnlihtd 1 Bdrm. I bath up­
stair*. Magnolia Aportmonls.
MOO MO. SIJO Socurlty deposit.
Rooltor *22M7I. Orlando.

1townhous* 1 B RIW bath.

NEVER A FEE

A b le s t

LUXURYAPARTM ENTS
Family A Adults taction. Poolside,
1 Bdrmi, Master Covt Aft*.
m i - tvoo
_______Open on weekends._______

1 Smaller homes, 3 BR 1 bath,
LR/DR/KIt.

57— Apartmonti
Fum ishtd/Ront

gram. Eern t il. to SIM per
week.depending on time available. 177 53M._________________

4 tN E V A GARDENSAPT1
1.1 A 1 Bdrm. Apti. From SMS.
Families welcome.
Mon. thru Sat. f AM to 5 PM.

THEYKE MURDER OH V 0 F COiHK/ME JA IL\f THEY 1J
FALSE ADVERTISING 1 ISN’T .THE HARD- f G E T
IN THIS STATE'AND -6 R0CK H0TEI ANY* J EXTRA
PAS5IN DFF TVW*0WL7\M0RE/THE NEW4 PRINKING
A5AHEALTHGLU0 IS ) WARDEN LEW I WATER
LIKE CLAIMIN’THE 0 \l) THEM KEEP A V &gt;
OH
CARTEL SPECIALIZES^ NEWSPAPER TC Y HOLIDAYS
IN CARBURETER F 2 / USE AS A FLY A ,
.'
RESEARCH! m s Y V SWATTER! w L ------------- -

GRAND OPENING SALE I
Frl-Set. June 10-11, Mpm
COLEMAN Campteg Traitors
R V.SALtS.-Wwy 44. MewSmyrna

217— Garage Salas
START Yeur garage taioaiw w l™
MAKE LOTSOF QUICK MONEY
Call THE HERALO u n t i l today.

243— Junk Cars

21f— Wanted to Buy
Need lit r e Casbr

OfEH HOUSE
INDIAN W000S
Fleetwood “ NEW" Delure 1 A 1
Bedroom, 1 Bath. Completely
Set up In o Beautiful Mobile
Homo Community . Includes oil
Amenities. Financing Avallabt*.
A Must see M FC Home - All for
tit.soon. SR 4t* A TuscewiHe
Rood. Winter Springs Flo. 3270*.
M7-1140.
1 Bdrm. furnished. AC. carport. At
Pork Are. Mobile Pork. 1212041
or M l MIS.___________________

KOK0440 Tool Co., at t i l W. First
If.. Sonterd. Is now buying gleet,
nowspepsr. bimetal stool and
aluminum cam along with oil
other kinds ol non-forroue
motets. Why not him this Idle
clutter Into extra dollars? Wo ell
benefit from recycling.
For details colli HI-1100
Wonted to Buy 1Wheel Adult Bike
In good condition.
___________ 111-SOP.___________
WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE A APPLIANCES.
1217140

231— Good Things
to Eat

Salesman needed.

STEMPER AGENCY IRC
___________ m-oeti____________
UNDER Sire*
1 bdrm dollhouse with affordable
m o n th ly p a y m e n ts . C a ll
Ownar Broker Ml 1411._________

155— Reel Estate
Wanted
Cottro Convertible Seta Bod

Dlol 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3
C

Health A Beauty
TW II'l IkAUTV SALON

Additions A
Remodeliisfl

FO RM ERLY Harrtetl’s Beauty
NeM. lie t . ta tS IM t-P g

•^ T t n r B t5oiw^g5i^^ t 5 C
. concrete, windows, odd o room.
‘ - Free estimate*. M1-A441________

AI
a h a llRBIblMktMlIIAlri
ng
m t in ip v f w n v n i

Roofing
Fill Dirt. East Santord SIS per
toed. Geneve tl* par load ( I yard
loadsI cheeper rote* lor larger
truck Mode. 140 5000or 145-4011

™ ^S p e5ryV ,U C r?™”
O O D A rte s ia n G e n e ra l
repentry, screened ream-dears
itc. Haas. Rates. M? MM.
IL L IR R 'S HOM E R EPAIR S
lerpMtry. roattng. palatlag,
*tedewreda*r.Mt-4SM________

Masonry

MMESMQCtSON
LF. BOHANNON

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

M

N

Y

Sa«fgr#s Siigi LgiEgt

* * ttf

WE LIST ANO SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLECOUNTY

* S ttB
**• • •
N

• M M

B

N

• ItfB
I t i M

I

G•fit I*1
#* it**** *****•••»•••**••*

• fff*

UN Tim A

Tack^aGT

SEWING MACHINE

s

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r u i n i n i f M wwv
v t Bamwi

m

rept^meeeiwwT^mj

*«•*•**■O,0 *

i

P iR M A lb lf ltv ^ l

H iv e won
wdWF Iim I uttur Ie m m rU en od

; lately? Cleaning w ith tBo
. personal lewdi. 1174115.4744311.

T

MANNING’S SERVICES
FE N C IN G -H O M C R K M W S
AND TREE WOAKMIdO*

M f f l
1 H

I

Electrical
Fane, timers, security IHos. addi­
tion*. now services. Insured
Master Electrician James Paul.
M375M

W M M D IX M .
iU iH

m o g m o w in A

Jm khebee

• • F t*

aad .. .

s w ig s

(MN1R7

,

CALL ANY TIM E
1M4S. Park
Roofing Co

nm m m
MIAMI

M

• B F f*

HtmaRapakt

B A J Accounting lorvtce. Reason
• able rets*. Pick up 4 delivery,
: »1 M a tte r « M .
*

;

R

LOOK OVER THIS EXTRA FINE SELECTION

GeaeBB • ■* a* f * * • * * * * • • &lt;•■i * t #* 14* • m

y

f

O O A U T V O B B O C A f tB

Does Your Old Or Now Root Leak?
It it does, call David Lao.
I l l -4455

I lob to email. Minor 4 meter
gnelrs. Licensed 4 bended.
_________ m a m ____________
&gt;OM oddltlons, remodeling
trywgll hung celling* (preyed.
iraplecM. n a tte r

• ™ ™ Z D w * N c r4
A P FL IA N C I SERVICE
W* aorvlca all malar brand*. Roo*.
• ratoi. !!yr*.*Kpg&gt;BM1-

experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Free Estimates on Rooting,
Ro Roofing and Repairs.
Shlngtos, Built Up and Tito.

(

322-9417

co m m CONSTRUCTION

: Applitnct Bopair

A&amp;B ROOFING

STENSTROM

l f l t t t f

" vw f

322-2420

M l *v

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4B-Ev*ntnq Harsld, Ssnlord, FI.

VOU KNOW WHAT
7 PEALLV BORNS
ft

u p t

E V E R Y B O D Y GIVES ME
ADVICE W HEN ! DON'T
S # L

4B Eitr*MftM«Y

Tutwtoy, Juga 7, m 3

PEALLV ?

L IT ME TffLL SOU &lt;
WHAT TO DO WHEN
THAT
HAPPENS...«R a

ra U F D R iT

M

1 Small lltard
4 Command*
9 Lara* date
12 High priattof
lira*)
13 Franch ri**r
14 Habraw lattar
15 Homatka

47
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1I £ £ 1 c a

I'M SETTIN G A NEW
DESK TDPAY. iTfc
GOING TD BE LONGER
TH A N YOURS

X HAP TO MAKE A BIG
FUSS A T THE CARPENTRY
SHOP BUT THEY FINALLY
SAW IT MY WAY
^

XKPEHTKY
SHOP

1

17

30 31

26

JUST QMf OFSACHS

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54

55

41

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46

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60

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HOROSCOPE
TOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNES. 1983

EEK A MEEK
B V T C W lS ft f O r T H lI U K E R

KT THE QUO OF THE BAR

WE RE WRD5 OF
A FEATHER"*
THROUGH ALL KINDS
OF W EATH ER .

32

36

38

49 BO 81

r JUGWEAP, PO SCO 1
B U Y EVERY MOVIE
M AGAZINE THAT ROUS
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ESPECIALLY WHEN
OUR JAWS ‘STICK
TO G E TH E R - „

Do not give up on things
fo r w h i c h you h a v e
worked long and hard.
T hey could come Into
rrultlon in the year ahead.
Keep plugging along famil­
iar lines.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) Normally you arc not
disturbed by outside influ­
ences. but today you will
be able to 'et more acI
compllshed If you work In
I
a quiet environment. Or­
"
d cr now: T he NEW
Astro-Graph Matchmaker
B
V
wheel and booklet which
I
reveals romantic contbinaI
1
lions, compatibilities for
all signs, tells how to get
along with others, finds
ris in g signs, hidden
by Ed Sullivan qualities, plus more. Mall
82 to Astro-Graph. Box
489. Radio City Station,
It wh
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
peanu
tional $1 for your Gemini
Jell/ sandwiches.
Astro-Graph predictions
for the year ahead.
CANCER (June 21 ■July22) Involving yourself In
new projects today will
help refurbish your out­
look. The more practical
they arc. the more suc­
cessful you arc apt to be.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
O t h e r s ma y be
o v e r w h e l m e d by
by Stofftl A Haimdahl Challenges today but this
Is not likely to be true in
UUP
\
your ease. You’ll welcome
A V g |£|sJ0\VN/1
situations which test your

— ------------------------------VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt.
^4

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■'

22) Critical developments
can be dealt with sueccssfully today If you keep
y ° ur cool and use your
common sense. Take time
sA
to deliberate.
C ul
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
f W
23) You're likely to be
better at managing thr

alTalrs of others loday than
you will be at handling
your own. However, this
will work to your advan­
tage.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22| Where Important de­
cisions arc concerned to­
day. you're not apt to be
wishy-washy. You'll know
exactly where you stand
a n d so w i l l y o u r
associates.
8 AOITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Put your pre­
cious hours to worthwhile
uses today. If you fall to
use y o u r t i m e p r o ­
ductively, your Inactivity
could later invoke feelings
of guilt.
C A P R I C O R N (D ec.
22-Jan. 19) You're a good
organizer today. When
you step In and restore
order to chaotic conditions
created by others, all will
be happy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) Although you
m a y be r e l u c t a n t to
com mit yourself today,
once you do you won't be
easily dissuaded from your
course of action.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Being restricted or
staring at the same four
walls could depress your
spirits today. Plan activi­
ties which constantly keep
you on the go.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) The art o f accumulat­
ing should work to your
advantage today In mate­
rial situations, as well us
In other areas. Use your
Midas touch.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Sometimes It's essen­
tial to focua on your
personal Interests. In order
to advance your cause it
may be necessary for you
to do so today.

m m m

Running: V^hat's
The Heart's Role?
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
really Into running and am
very interested In how It
af fects the heart and
circulation. I Know you arc
a consultant to the Presi­
dent's Council on Physical
Fitness h Sports. Could
you give me some specifics
on how running affects the
heart?
I know It makes your
heart beat faster and It
Increases the work o f the
heart but how does this
relate to how fast or how
far you run? People call
r u n n i n g an a e r o b i c
exercise. Why? What docs
the heart have to do with
air? I know your legs have
to be built up for good
running but how about the
heart? Is It built up too?
Can It be over built? Can
you have a muscle bound
heart?
DEAR READER - I am
glad to hear you arc follow­
ing a good exercise pro­
gram. Exercise Is really for
everyone who docs not
have a medical problem
that prevents It. But run­
ning Is not for everyone.
You have to build up to It
and a good training pro­
gram should Include
training for the heart Itself.
Yes. the heart muscle Is
developed and responds to
Increased exercise much
like the skeletal muscles
do to Increased effort.
There Is a connection
between the heart and
aerobics. You must have
oxygen for your muscles
to b r e a k d o w n b as i c
nutrient blocks such as
glucose and fatty acids In
the muscle fibers. The
muscles need this energy
to work. For each caloric
your body uses. 215 ml. of
oxygen must be provided.
That oxygen Is delivered
by your circulation. As
your oxygen requirements
Increase from exercise, the
heart must pump more
blood and that means
more work for the heart.
The work Is healthy If It
Is not overdone in the
wrong way. It strengthens
and even Improves the
metabolic cfTicicncy o f the
heart muscle. It helps
Improve the blood flow
through the small arteries

In the heart muscle Itself.
I have discussed the
specifics o f how exercise
affects the heart In The
H e a l t h L e t t e r 14-10.
Exercising Your Heart,
which I am sending you.
Others who want this
Issue can send 75 cents
with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
It to me. In care of this
newspaper. P.O. Box 1551.
Radio City Station. New
York. NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
m other and father are
constantly arguing about
sex. He wants It every
other night and she'd pre­
fer not to have any. She's
In her 50s and he Is In his
60s. She says he's
oversexed and he says she
doesn't love him anymore.
Could you please help
because I’m really worried
it's going to cause them to
separate. Is there a pill he
could take to calm his sex
drive or vice versa?
DEAR READER - Sur­
veys show that your fa­
ther's request Is not un­
reasonable and Is well
within the average range.
It Is not normal for a
woman In her 50s who Is
married not to be interest­
ed In or engage In sex.
There Is usually a reason.
The reason could be the
way your father treats her.
Or your mother may feel
d e g r a d e d rather than
loved dependi ng upon
what really happens. Or
your mother could have a
medical problem because
o f Insuf fi ci ent femal e
horm one production
which occurs In her age.
She should go sec her
doctor for an examination
and ask him about thfr
problem.
If she doesn't have a
medical problem , they
could both profit from
counseling to try to resolve
their differences.

EAST
.
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Evening H erald

75th Year, No. 240-Frlday, May 27, 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald-(USPS 481-280)-Prlc* 20 Cents

Pilot Project O f Local Firm, College

Schools Offer Summer Computer Program
By M ichesl Be ha
Herald S taff W riter
A pilot program In computers will
be offered to Seminole County
students this summer through
two-week camps at nine county
schools.
The program, sponsored by CACI.
Inc., an Altamonte Springs research
firm, and Rollins College, will use
Seminole County teachers to teach
the classes.
Doug Cameron, a senior associate
with CACI, told school board
members Wednesday night that the

program will be offered at Seminole,
Lake Mary. Lake Brantley, Lake
Howell, Lyman and Oviedo high
schools and at Lake Orlcnta. Forest
City and Sterling Park elementary
schools.
School board members voted
unanimously to support the pro­
gram which Is designed to expose
students and teachers to computer
assisted education programs and
will serve as a research project for
Rollins and CACI. Cameron said.
“ We hope to get children more
exposed to computers.” he said.

"This will give them hands-on
training and show them what
com puters can do for th e m ,"
Cameron explained.

The first camp will run from July
5 through July 14. The second
camp will run from July 18 to July
28.

CACI odlclals will select teachers
for the program from a list who
expressed Interest. Those teachers
will attend a 30-hour training pro­
gram over four weekends prior to
the camps.

The camps will run for four days
each week with students attending
either morning sections from 8:30
to 11:30 a.m. or afternoon sessions
from 1 to 4 p.m. The camps will cost
8130 per student.
Teachers will be responsible for
16 students In each section and will
be paid 8750 for each camp.

The training will cost teachers
8200 to $250 but will give them
cither three hours of graduate credit
or 30 hours of continuing education
credit.

The training Is based on curricu­
lum designed by Vlllanova Universi­

Builders Urge
Expansion Of
Sewage Plants
A multl-facctcd plan to meet Seminole County's
sewage needs through the year 2000 has been presented
by a group which studied the problem for the past six
months.
A report issued by the group this week said Seminole
County officials should push for expansion o f existing
regional sewage treatment plants and encourage the use
of septic tanks where possible to stretch sewage
treatment capacity In order to meet anticipaated area
growth.
The committee, which was directed by Howard
L cfk o w ltz. a represen tative o f the Mid-Florida
Homebuilders Association, also urged the county to drop
Its current flat 81,400 connection fee for sewage service
and replace It with a 84 per gallon connection fee based
upon expected sewage use. That change would be tied to
a county effort to lower the state's capacity requirement
from Its current 350 gallons per home to 250 gallons.
County officials use 84 per gallon capacity as a
. benchmark for construction costs of new sewage plants.
Connection fees are levied by the county to finance
expansion projects.
The panel’s report urged the county to work for the
expansion of the controversial Iron Bridge Regional
Sewage Treatment Plant from Its current 24 million
gallon per day treatment capacity to 40 million gallons.
That expansion would create an additional 3.6 million
gallons of capacity for Seminole County and would meet the growth needs of the Tuscawllla. Lake Howell and
Econlockhatchee development areas.
The report also urged the county to participate In
expansion o f Altamonte Springs’ regional sewage plant.
That facility has been approved for a 2.5 million gallon
Increase and the city has asked the county to participate
in the expansion program.
The group also proposed the expansion of Sanlando
Utilities. That firm provides sewage service in the
Longw ood and A ltam on te Springs areas. That
expansion, along with expansion of the Altamonte plant,
would provide sufficient capacity for growth in Forest
City and Weklva. the report said.
Construction of a 2.5-mllllon-gallon facility near the
Heathrow planned unit development outside Lake Mary
Is also proposed. That facility, the report said, would be
sufficient for growth In the Paola. Lake Monroe. Big Tree
and Heathrow areas.
But the homebuilders group feels the $4 per gallon
connection fee will provide the biggest Impetus for
Innovative developm ent o f sewage conservation
systems.
Under that proposal, if a developer can show that
houses or apartments will use less than the 350 gallons
the state Department o f Environmental Regulation uses
as a guideline, the developer would have to pay less for a
connection fee.
The homebuilders had complained about the $1,400
connection fee when It was established last fall.

ty and Is designed to be selfdirected. Each student will be able
to follow a curriculum based upon
their own Individual computer liter­
acy level.
Exactly what will be taught dur­
ing the computer classes Is being
developed now.
Timex Computer Corp. will pro­
vide Timex 1000 computers with
extended memory for the training
and funded development o f the
workbooks which will be used at the
camps.
Schools hosting the camps will

receive 81.000 from CACI for the
use o f their facilities and CACI will
assume all Insurance liability,
Cameron said.
T h e n in e S e m in o le C o u n ty
schools arc among 40 chosen to
participate In the pilot program.
Rollins College officials will study
the camps and the progress of
students to evaluate the curriculum
provided by Vlllanova. Cameron
said.
Depending on the success o f the
pilot project, one result o f It could be
additional computer classes In the
regular curriculum.

Civil Service
Board, City
Battle Issue

Donna Estes
H erald S taff W riter
The city of Sanford and the Sanford
Civil Service Commission are locked in a
struggle that exceeds the problem of one
e m p lo y e e w h o s e f i r i n g b y c it y
supervisors has been overturned twice
by the board.
"T h e issue Is no longer a single city
employee." City Manager Pete Knowles
said. "Th e Issue is the board's lack of
following a standard procedure and their
own rules and regulations."
In fact, according to Knowles, the
employee who was the subject of the
controversy, has another Job.
City Attorney Bill Colbert agrees with
Knowles.
"That the board could come to a
decision against the city which Ignored
the evidence before them is amazing."
Colbert said.
"There was no evidence for anyone
but the city. The burden o f proof shifted.
There was no evidence to support the
other side, yet the board ruled for the
other side." he said.
Noting that a change in only one vote
is needed to reverse the board's decision.
Dr. John Darby, chairman, said, "It's a
legal question. An attorney (Gordon
Frederick) on the board gave the opinion
that the hearing could only Involve the
one charge — Insubordination and dis­
graceful conduct." Darby said.
As to whether the board could make
the employee's past record cumulative
with his latest conduct. Frederick in­

This A ll Souls School classroom is a ll a buzz as Betty Reagan shows a
hive of bees belonging to her and her husband, Don, of Lake M ary. She
demonstrated the bee hive and told a ll about bees and how honey Is
made to students during three program s Thursday.

TO DAY
Action Reports................2A
Classified Ads
10,11A
Dear Abby..................... 9A

fEditorial...................
Florida................. :...
Horoscope.................
Hospital.....................
Nation........................

People............ ...............9A
Sports.............
Television.......
Weather.........
World.............

dicated It could not. Darby said, noting
one board member Is seeking additional
legal counsel.
"T h e majority o f the board felt that his
entire work record should not be In­
cluded. The minority felt that It should.
It's just that simple. The whole thing
hinges on the work record. The city
presented both, his Insubordination and
disgraceful conduct, plus entire work
record." Dr. Darby said.
Civil service rules provide for dis­
ciplinary action based on an entire work
record.
Darby, chairman o f the Civil Service
Board for the past 15 years, said during
his years o f service on the board he has
never known o f it to be divided on an
Issue as It Is on this one.
There have been only eight appeals to
the board over the past 25 years.
Including the two over Bernard Mitchell.
Frederick would not comment about
the disagreement with the city. He
pleaded Ignorance of the cause of the
disagreement with the city.
Darby and member Bill McQuatters
voted to uphold the city’s firing of the
employee, while Frederick, a former
state legislator. Dr. Luis Perez and
Donald Jones voted to restore the
employee to his Job.
While Darby notes that a change In
only one vote is necessary to reverse the
Civil Service Board decision, the board

Bee C IVIL Pag* 2 A

SCC Netters Near U.S. Title
The boys' tennis team o f Seminole
Community College edged closer to Its
second straight National Junior College
Championship Thursday by advancing
all of Its singles and doubles teams into
the final round at Ocala.
The Raiders, who took their third
straight state championship a month
ago. lead the field with 30 points. Tyler
(Texas) Junior College Is next with 28
while Central Florida is third with 26. No
other team is in contention.

"They're very close to clinching It."
said John O'Neill. Ocala Star Banner
sports writer. "T yler has lost two singles
players while Central Florida has lost
two singles players and a doubles team.
SCC hasn't lost a thing."
The Raiders of coach Larry Castle will
discontinue the program after this
season. They won their first national
championship last year. Singles finals
will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday while the
doubles follow at 11 a.m.

School
Board OKs Administrative Changes
phased out and will be replaced by a new position,
director o f transportation. The position will report to the
assistant superintendent for facilities and transporta­
tion. The new Job will have the same pay scale as the old
one. 836.011 to 844.794.

positions, particularly computer services employees,
receive higher salaries with one or two years o f higher
education than many teachers with bachelor's and
master's degrees.

complex off Fulton Shoot 1$ slated to bo complotod by Juno 10, replacing
fh t old city warehouse on West Sixth Shoot. And It's not costing the city
•n y money. In on arrangement worked out by A.B. Tommy Peterson Jr.
with • client, Dole Gustafson, the city property w et traded In exchange for
the new steel building built to city specifications. City Manager W. E.
"P ate" Knowles says the new facility w ill meet the city's needs much
better than did the old one and in addition by its location ad|acent to other
city service buildings If will be much more convenient. While the old Sixth
Street warehouse was broken Into frequently, the new building will be
more secure, he says.

Another new position, director o f facilities planning
and construction, will be phased in. replacing the
current director o f auxiliary services. The auxiliary
services post has been vacant since the retirement o f Mel
Tennant several months ago. The Job has .a salary of
•36.011 to $44,704.
The remainder o f the Job descriptions are primarily
changes In Job responslbllltes or assignments to new
supervisors.

Mrs. Warren said qualifications for all director and
supervisor's Jobs should be equivalent to other Jobs In
the same classification. The propsed Job descriptions
Included varying years o f experience required for Jobs at
Assistant Superintendent for Facilities Benny Arnold
the same level o f responsibility.
will now also supervise the transportation department.
At Mrs. Warren's suggestion, the board Wenesday Program Director o f Special Projects Sammy Tomlin will
night agreed after lengthy discussion that directors report to Assistant Superintendent for Instruction Dan
must have a minimum o f three years o f experience.
Dagg rather than Assistant Superintendent for Business
The board also voted to split the duties o f the and Finance Roger Harris. Program Director o f Staff
administrative assistant to the superintendent Into two
Jobs.
A new position — public Information officer — will be
created at an annual salary o f $24,789 to $32,227.
The public Information officer will be responsible for
handling community relations and responding to
Inquiries about the school district.
The administrative assistant's post pays from $36.011
to $44,794.
Ralph Ray, who lias announced plans to retire in
January, now holds both Jobs.
The director of federal programs position will be

�lA - g v t n lw i HeraM , Sanford, FI.

Friday, M ay 17, 1HJ

NATION
IN BRIEF
Indictm ent Spurs Probe
In Hospital Infant Deaths
SAN ANTONIO. Texas (UPI) - A murder
Indictment o f a nurse suspected In a baby's fatal
overdose o f a muscle relaxant could boost a
related Investigation Into other baby deaths at a
hospital where the suspect worked, officials say.
Bexar County District Attorney Sam Mlllsap
said Thursday the indictment In Kerr County of
Genene Jones, 32, a licensed vocational nurse,
could encourage witnesses to come forth for his
Investigation o f similar deaths at San Antonio’s
Medical Center Hospital.
A Kerr County grand Jury Wednesday charged
Ms. Jones with fatally Injecting Chelsea Ann
McClellan with succlnylchollne. a muscle relaxer. Kerrvlllc Is about 60 miles northwest of San
Antonio.
The Kerr County Indictments allege Ms. Jones
Injected the McClellan girl and seven other
children with the muscle relaxcr or other drugs.
The other young victims suffered seizures but
survived.
Ms. Jones also was employed at MCH's
pediatric care unit. The mysterious deaths of
Infants and children there occurred between
1978 and 1982.

Tylenol Suspect Convicted
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI) - James W. Lewis
could receive up to 30 years In prison for his
mall fraud convictions and still faces two more
trials. Including one In Chicago for trying to
extort 81 million from the maker of Tylenol.
It took the seven-man, five-woman federal Jury
only about an hour Thursday to decide Lewis,
36. was guilty on six counts of mall fraud In a
1981 credit card scheme In Kansas City.
The former Kansas City tax consultant was
accused of using the name and background of
his former tax client John E. Ryan to obtain 13
credit cards.
Lewis also faces a July 25 trial In Chicago on a
charge of attempted extortion undertaken last
fall after seven people died from taking
Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced with
cyanide. He Is accused o f sending a letter to the
makers of Tylenol demanding 81 million "to
stop the killing.”

WEATHER
NATIO NAL W EATHER: Thunderstorms stretched
from western New England to the Carollnas today while
frost and freeze warnings covered parts of New York.
Pennsylvania and W est V irgin ia. The floodin g
Mississippi rose toward a crest at Vicksburg, Miss.
Thunderstorms bringing large hall and high winds were
widely scattered over the Great Plains and upper
Mississippi Valley. At Jackson, Miss., the ffoodlng Pearl
River began to fall from Its crest of 39.5 feet. Forecasters
said it would fall to 38 feet by Saturday and then drop
even faster, letting some o f the 6.000 Jackson residents
forced to evacuate to return home next week. The
Mississippi River was expected to crest near 49.3 feet
today at Vicksburg, about 6 feet aboave flood stage,
causing more flooding In an area where 300 families
already have been forced to flee. Thunderstorms from
the Great Plains to the Atlantic Thursday dumped hall,
shot lightning and spun ofT tornadoes. Injuring at least
four people. A cold front chilled the East and Midwest.
Tornadoes struck North Carolina, Alabama and New
Mexico. A tornado in North Carolina demolished a gas
station in Alamance County. One person wras Injured
slightly by flying debris. Violent thunderstorms
pounded the South Carolina coast, damaging houses
and Injuring at least three people. One man was Injured
when high winds toppled a tree onto his truck. Two
workmen at a Charleston construction site were
hospitalized for minor burns when they were hit by
lightning. In the Plains, a tornado touched down at
Tcxlco. New Mexico Thursday night. Severe thun­
derstorms dropped large hall at Lewisville and Atlanta.
Ark. and golf ball-sized hail at Antlers. Okla. and
Fairfield and Newcastle. Neb. Grand Island. Neb. was
buffeted by 65 mph winds. Four Inches of rain fell In
three hours in Latimer County, Okla. and 2 Inches In an
hour at Clark County. Ark. A cold front that chilled the
Midwest and East Thursday caused frost and freeze
warnings today over western New York, western
Pennsylvania and the northern mountains of West
Virginia.
A R E A FORECAST: Mostly sunny and quite warm
today with high upper 80s to low 90s. Wind variable 5 to
10 mph. Tonight mostly fair with lows in the mid 60s.
Variable light wind. Saturday partly cloudy with highs
In the mid 80s to near 90. Forecast for remainder of
Memorial Day weekend: partly cloudy with little
temperature change.
BOATOfO FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Variable winds 5 to 10 knots today
becoming northeast to cast around 10 knots tonight and
easterly Saturday. Seas 1 to 3 feet. Mostly fair.
A R E A R E A D IN O B (9 a.m .): tem perature: 78;
overnight low: 63: Thursday high: 90; barometric
pressure: 29.93: relative humidity: 64 percent: winds
north at 5 mph: rain: none; sunrise 6:29 a.m.. sunset
8:16 p.m.
S A T U R D A Y TIDES: O s y to M Beach: highs. 10:04
a.m., 10:27 p.m.; lows. 3:54 a.m.. 3:42 p.m.; P art
C aaavaral: highs, 9:56 a.m.. 10:19 p.m.: lows. 3:45
a.m.. 3:35 p.m.: Bajrpart: highs. 3:49 a.m.. 2:26 p.m.:
lows. 8:55 a.m.. 9:52 p.m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
A O M iU t O t t l

Mavis A. Own
•e
--—**m
etmwW
Oar# C.

William0. Pattartan. Oaltona
Lillians. ivrha.LahaMarv
Jama* Fraaman, Lata Monrea
RuMN. LuSanf, Otiaan
Latvia I. OacaU.OrtanSa
MtCNAAOIt
Martha B. Parker, tenters
MUWaSK. tcSmNi. Oattana
Clarence 0. Fauae.Miami

4 Jailed In Altamonte Springs Cocaine Deal
About 820.000 worth o f cocaine was seized by
Altamonte Springs undercover agents Thursday as they
arrested four persons attempting to make a drug deal at
the Interstate Mall off State Road 436.
Police were lipped by an Informant that a man known
as "P lchle" from the Miami area was In Altamonte
Springs to sell cocaine. Surveillance o f a rendezvous
with a prospective purchaser revealed the suspects' car
contained approximately eight ounces of cocaine and
several concealed handguns.
Stopped by uniformed police officers, the four
occupants o f the vehicle were detained while a search
warrant was obtained from Seminole County Court
Judge Wallace Hall.
A subsequent search o f the vehicle turned up about
314 pounds o f cocaine and two handguns.
Arrested at 1:25 p.m. were Leandro Hernandez, 28.
also known as Plchle. and his wife. Raquel Hernandez,
22. both o f Miami Springs; Ivonne Del Carmen Alonso.
18. o f Hialeah; and Manuel Gonzalez, 24. of Miami. They
were being held at the Seminole County Jail today In lieu
o f 810.000 bond each charged with trafficking in
cocaine, poscssion o f a controlled substance. Except for
Gonzalez, they were also charged with carrying a
concealed firearm.
Police said a .357-magnum handgun was discovered
In the purse belonging to Raquel Hernandez which was
on the front seat of the car In easy reach o f her or her
husband, police said.
The other handgun, a .32-callber weapon, was found
In a purse belonging to Ivonne Alonso. She was seated in
the right rear scat o f the vehicle with her purse on the

...Civil Service Issue

RING STOLEN
A friendship ring described as a thin band with an j
encircling heart design, and an AM-FM cassette player;
and dual speakers wwere taken from the car o f Glenn;
Eric Aldlnger o f League Circle. Casselberry. The theft J
occurred between 9 p.m. Monday and 3 p.m. Tuesday,;
police said.
!
MISCHIEF ON BOARD
Vandals who broke Into the Sanford Boat Works on *
Celery Avenue between May .14 and noon on Tuesday!
had a field day Inside Richard M. Powell's 28-foot!
Bay liner boat.
Powell, of Orlando, reported an oil plug was taken o u t!
of the starboard side engine causing oil to leak Into the j
bilge. They also turned on the freshwater pump and for j
their trouble left with two radios — a 99 channel V FH !
and a 40-channcl CB.

Action Reports
Fires

★

★

Courts
it Police

floor of the car at her feet, police said.
The cocaine, with an estimated bulk value of 820,000.
more If sold In smaller Increments, police said, was
found under an armrest between the rear scats of
Leandro Hernandez's 1977 Cadillac. The armrest was
between Ms. Alonso and Gonzalez.
A box o f .357-magnum ammunition wa9 found In Mrs.
Hernandez's purse, police said.
CARS BURGLARIZED
Three cars parked behind 306 Elm Avenue. Sanford,
were burglarized between 11:30 p.m. Tuesday and 8:25
a.m. Wednesday, police report. Two stereos and two
speakers belonging to Patricia Zaccuour were taken.
GR ILL GONE
A gas grill valued at 8180 is missing from the front
parch at 800 Rosalia Drive, Sanford. The grill, property
o f Herbert D. Patton, was apparently stolen between
4:45 and 5:05 p.m. Wednesday, police said.
AMPHETAMINE SALE
Ronald Harold Lccp. 32. of 130 Grandbcnd Avenue.
Lake Mary, was arrested by Seminole County Drug Task
Force undercover agents early Saturday after allegedly
selling one of the agents a capsule of speed, deputies
said.

FIRE CALLS
Fire Department

The Sanford
following calls:

responded to the

Tuesday
— 1:35 p.m.. rescue. 1421 Valencia Si.
:
—4:01 p.m.. rescue. 121 E. First St.
—7:35 p.m.. rescue. 1301 Oak Ave.
—9:22 p.m., car fire. 4th Street and French Avenue.
— 11:16p.m.. rescue. 105 KridcrRoad.
W ednesday
— 12:33 a.m.. rescue. 300 E. Airport Blvd.
— 12:17 p.m.. rescue. 2540 Jewett Lane.
—6:39 p.m.. car fire. 1901 Country Club Circle.
—9:05 p.m.. accident. 25th Street and Hardy Avenue.
— 10:03 p.m.. grass fire. Auto Train compound, 600
Persimmon Ave.

Continued from Page 1A
will be given that opportunity Tuesday night.
A hearing has Been scheduled by the board for 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at city hall to consider the city's request
for a rehearing on the issue.
On Colbert's advice the commission has unanimously
authorized the attorney to appeal to the courts'If the
board refuses to reverse It's decision.
In recommending the action. Colbert assured he
wasn't "sabre-rattling," but may be under a deadline to
flic court action within 30 days o f the May 12 hearing
and thus would be out o f time If he waited for the
authorization until the commission's next meeting June
13.
According to city records. Bernard Mitchell, the man
whose case brought the current problem to the forefront,
often had problems with city supervisors over a two-year
period. The record says he was transferred three times.
While working in the water department, he apparently
gave additional time on his own to some water
customers who were delinquent paying water bills and
In some cases accepted payment from customers.
There is no suggestion (hat any o f the money went
astray, but the city has a policy forbidding such actions.
On March 1. Mitchell was dismissed for Insubordina­
tion. Three days later, he appealed the dismissal to the
five-member appointed Civil Service Board which
overturned the firing and. Instead, gave him a 30-day
suspension without pay.
Mitchell returned to work April 1 and was fired five
days later for the same reason, after a new occurrence,
and because o f his overall work record.
Knowles said the man refused to obey an order from
his supervisor and called the supervisor a "village Idiot"
In front of other employees.
The city accepted the first board action. But after the
second hearing, Knowles sent the board a memo citing
what he believed were errors by the board In making the
second decision. " I was trying to be sure they
understood the problem," Knowles said.
"Testimony Is to be taken from both aides and the
board Is to follow the facts as presented In sworn
testimony." Knowles said. The board is supposed to give
an answer to all the charges and It didn't. The board
should abide by Its own rules and state law and It didn't.
There has to be a confidence that the board is fair and
open. The board is supposed to represent the public. It Is
not a labor board."
Colbert Bald he Is "amazed” by the board.
"T h ey didn't rule on the whole charge. They violated
their own rules and state law about public meetings by
going Into executive session," he said.
The legislation which created the Civil Service Board
was sought by the city 34 years ago. The Idea at the
time was to give city employees some security.
Knowles said when he first came to Sanford 30 years
ago. there was a poor relationship between the Civil
Service Board and the city and that he worked with the
board to get a better understanding.
At the hearing Colbert represented the city and called
five witnesses. Including Knowles. Assistant City
Manager Steve Harriett, and three supervisors under
whom Mitchell had worked over the two-year period. All
testified under oath. Colbert said, adding that there was
no testimony from Mitchell or anyone else on his behalf.
The board then went Into executive session behind
closed doors. Colbert said, and within an hour
announced Its decision overturning the firing.
Meanwhile, Mitchell got a Job elsewhere.
"When I appear next week (at the hearing). I'll ask
them to reconsider and 1 hope they do. This may be
partially a misunderstanding. I hope we can resolve
this." Colbert said.
Darby, board chairman for the past 15 yean, said,
"T h e Civil Service Board Is supposed to be an
Independent body and to the best o f Its ability render a
fair decision both to the employee and the employer.
The board voted to put this man back to work. The vote
was 3 to 2. It's no secret that Bill McQuatters and I voted
the other way."
Darby, who heads the U n iversity o f Florida
Agriculture Research and Education Center olT Celery
Avenue In Sanford, added, "T w o o f us thought the city
had ample evidence to discharge and three thought the
city didn't have sufficient evidence. It all boiled down to
one fact and that was w h eth er the man was
Insubordinate, guilty o f disgraceful conduct plus his
entire work record."
Explaining the testimony before the board, Darby said
apparently Mitchell did not use profanity, but talked
loudly to his supervisors In a belligerent and argumen­
tative fashion. Darby said Mitchell hod a history o f this
type conduct. The minority thought it warranted
dismissal, he said.
The term "disgraceful conduct" comes from rule 6 o f
the Civil Service Board. Dr. Darby said, adding If the
employee were to be found guilty he would be subject to
dismissal.
Darby said since the board Is not a court, the members
didn't feel they were doing anything wrong by going into
executive session.

FRIDAY 9 A.M.-6:00 P.M.

SATURDAY 9 A.M.-6:00 P.M.

2 DAYS ONLY

PRE-MEMORIAL
DAY SALE

EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE IS ON SALE!

LISTED BELOW ARE JUST A FEW OF OUR SAVINGS FOR YOUll
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swnSsn tt Ms NSSW MscSAw Fla*** Banks....

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B U M Flamy *•*••*•*»•«**»»«*•■••#**&gt; .. MSWtM
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FRIDAY 1

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1 1 0 0 S. FRENCH A V I.
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e v tB lM H tra M , Ssitford, F I.

FLORCA
Space Shuffle Challenger
Preparing For Launch

Senfencing Rules Passed
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Both the Senate and
House have passed by wide margins legislation
that would drastically change the way Judges
sentence convicted criminals.
Under bills approved in both chambers
Thursday. Judges would have a narrower range
of sentences they could impose for specific
crimes and would have to make greater use of
enhanced probationary programs for non' violent criminals.
Sen. Don Childers. D-West Palm Beach,
labeled the Senate's bill a form of "prison relief*
that would result in felons going to prison less
often and for less time.
Proponents countered that the guidelines
were the only alternative to a costly and
unworkable program of prison construction.
The state is under a federal court order to bring
; Its prison population under control.

im - IA

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — House and Senate negotiators!
may get together today and begin to try meshing a]
budget that raises the corporate profits tax to pay for
school Improvements with a no-new-taxes spending
plan.
The Senate formally rejected the House's corporate
tax Increase Thursday, but House members were
undeterred. They went ahead and passed an 911.5
billion spending plan that depends on the tax hike Tor
part o f Its funding.
Senators formally rejected the education Improvement
package and $180 million business Income tax increase
passed by the House Wednesday. They stood firm for
their "R AISE " bill which doesn't require tax increases
this year, although it could down the road.

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — The space shuttle
Challenger was In place today on Us launch pad
where it will blast Into orbit June 18 with three
■satellites and the nation's first female astronaut.
The Challenger inched its way to the pad from
the 52-story Vehicle Assembly Building Thurs­
day. The painstaking 3V&amp;-mllc Journey for the
white stub-winged orblter began shortly after
noon and ended about seven hours later.
Technicians and engineers immediately
began making the mechanical and electrical
hookups. When that chore la completed,
workers will begin preparing the Challenger for
the commercial cargo It will carry Into space.
Key objectives of the stx-day mission are to
launch two communications satellites — one for
Canada and one for Indonesia. In addition, Ms.
Ride and fellow mission specialist John Fabian
will use a 50-foot mechanical arm to launch an
experimental German-built satellite and then
retrieve It several hours later, another first In
America’s space program.

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Gov. Bob Graham
' has reluctantly accepted a bill pushed through
the Legislature's appropriations chairmen to
reduce his ability to change the state budget
between sessions.
Graham and legislative leaders have feuded
over the budget the last few years and wound up
in court several times. Morgan and Johnston
have been angry with some or the decisions
. Graham has made to modify the budget after It
was enacted into law and Graham has been
upset with some o f the proviso language
legislators have been putting into the spending
plan.
The governor has had some fairly broad
authority to make changes in the budget after It
has become law. Some actions have required the
concurrence o f the Cabinet. Others have not.
The new law requires Cabinet concurrence on
a two-thirds vote for some of Graham's budget
changing decisions to take effect.

V,

Senate, House
Odds Over
Spending Plan

IN BRIEF

Graham 's Pow er Curbed

F r tO y , M sy

The House refused to back down a short time later,
the procedural step necessary for a conference commit­
tee to begin work on a compromise school enhancement
program.
And a short time later, they voted 93-25 for a proposed!
budget that provides about $300 million more for
education than the-no-new-taxes budget approved by;
the Senate a week ago, with most of the money
generated by the higher corporate profits tax.

Finicky
Bui Fun

W

M orris the 9-Llves cat assumes a fa th e rly role as spokescat for national
Adopt-A-Cat M onth which w ill be going on In June at the Seminole County
Humane Society. The cam paign Is designed to find homes fo r the cats and
kittens In the shelter. Everyone who adopts a cat in June from the shelter
w ill receive an adoption kit. The shelter at 2001 E. 25th St. In Sanford Is
open Monday through Sataurday, 10 a.m . to4 p.m .

A conference committee on education likely will begin*
work today, with conferees on the budget gearing up;
over the weekend.
The conferees will work frantically trying to reach;
agreement in time for adjournment the end o f next week;
as scheduled, but it is doubtful the Legislature will go!
home on time.

h e n y o u h a v e th e se

e n e rg y s a v e r s a d d e d ,
w

e lt s u b t r a c t

p a r t o f th e c o st.
m

Guns, Porno
lijised To Purchase
$tolen Food Stamps
* -V"‘

WMF'

MIAMI (UPI) — Federal agents have accuseed 29
trailers of buying Btolcn fbod stamps with cocaine,
machine guns and porno movies.
♦ Twenty-three o f the 29 people cltarged have been
arrested, and authorities are looking for the others.
&gt;; During the one-year-invesllgatlon dubbed "Operation
JEltaml." Secret Service agents offered stacks of food
Mamps to merchants and other willing dealers.
;-;tn 90 separate transactions, the agents said they
A id ed $160,000 worth o f stolen stamps for cash at half
fifee value, or used them to buy drugs, weapons,
blrctronlc equipment and sexual paraphernalia and
X rated movies.
gfeecret Service agents said the Investigation did not
tyjyolve “ needy individuals."
^ 'C erta in ly these are not the people that need to buy
fcod with food stamps." said Secret Service agent
ponald Szego.
&gt; Twelve o f the arrested were arraigned before a federal
Magistrate early Wednesday on charges o f illegal
Mafficking in food stamps, which carries a maximum
penally of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Others
j$crc additionally charged with conspiracy.
Investigate!* said most o f the men worked by
iselves rather than through an organized network.

LENDAR
FRIDAY, MAT 17
I Group AA, 8 p.m„ Messiah Lutheran Church.
Ilghway 17-92. south o f Dog Track Road,
erry.
va A A (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Wekiva Presbyterian
, State Road 434 at Wekiva Road, closed,
turning Hills Moravian Church AA. 8 p.m., State Road
$34, Longwood. Closed.
Maranatha New Life Center Revival. 7:30 p.m..
Sanford Civic Center.
»; Sanford AA (Step). 8 p.m., 1201W. First St., Sanford.
»:T«n$lcwood AA, 8 p.m.. St. Richard’s Episcopal
“
i. Lake Howell Road.

SATURDAY, MAT 18
Fry sponsored by the Men's Club, 5-7 pm .,
gationai Christian Church o f Sanford, 2401 S.
TA ve.. Sanford.
Iwood Sweet Com Festival. Ponkan Road Zell wood.
It. rides, and arts and crafts.

•*£

SUNDAY. MAY $•

:*Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m.. Florida Power and Light
building. Myrtle Avenue. Open discuasion.
:■ “Seminole
........................
Halfway House
.... AA.
“
5
“ p.m.. o -----ff U.S.Highway
Higl
IT-92 on Lake Minnie Road, Sanford. Open.
;; Maranatha New Life Center Revival. 10:30 a.m. and
j 30 p.m.: dinner at 1 p m .. Sanford Civic Center.

4 *

MONDAY. MAY SO

C: Sanford Rotary Club. noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Mature Dating Service. 1 p.m.. Deltona Public Library.
“ 11 Providence Boulvard, De‘lion*.

ft.
Rotary

Club o f Longwood. 7:30 am .. Caasidy'a
Restaurant, Longwood.

C e ilin g In su la tio n

An Efficient Heat Pump

An Efficient Vbter Heater

Solar FUm

F P L w ill actually p p you to conserve electricity
four ways:
O u r 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.
O u r Ceiling Insulation Incentive. FPL will pay up to
$300 towards the cost of having ceiling insulation installed.
O u r W a r Heating Incentive. FPL will pay up to several
hundred dollars towards the cost of having an inefficient water
heater modified or replaced with a solar water heater; water
heating.heat pump or heat recovery &lt;ystem.
O u r S o b rF lh n Incentive. FPL will pay up to $150
towards the cost of haying solar-reflective film installed.
lb qualify for the last three incentives, work must first be
recommended by an FPL Home Energy Audit
W ig cvcryooe benefit from W t-W 2 s e “incentives?
*s.
This program benefits you and all our customers. Because it
cosU less than the oil necessary to generate Uk extra electricity
used fay inefficient homes.

A free Home Energy Audit w ill provide more inform ation. To
arrange for one, send us this coupon or call the Watt-Wise Line
weekdays 8 to 5.

Call 1-800-432-6563
I want to schedule a free Home Energy Audit to get more
inform ation on the following U htt-W ue Cash Back incentives:
□ Ceiling Insulation

□ Cooling &amp; Heating

□ W ater Heating

□ Solar W indow Film

NAM E.
ADDRESS.

CITY—

FL ZIP.

DAYTIME TEL
Mail to: Energy Conservation Department
Florida tower &amp;Light Company
P.Q Box 029100, Miami, F1.33KI2

4V.

n

a

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w a u i «
-"■T’Tij iv.T, i
•*■; tsi'll—

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�A&gt;
IDS

Evening Herald
(U S P S 4 1 -M O )

300 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30V322-261lx 831-8883
Friday, May 27, 1983-4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publliher
Thomas
Managing Editor
me* Giordano, M
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.29; 6 Months, $21.00;
r, $49.00. By Mail: Week, $1.29; Month, $9.29; 8 Months,
1.00; Year. $97.00.

•ex A n d The
\nsurance Actuary
I E ffo rts to re q u ire In surance com p a n ies to
tsregard sex In setting Insurance rates are goin g
f&lt; rward on tw o fronts. T h e Suprem e Court o f the
l nlted States has been asked to declare that
s ;xual d is c rim in a tio n In setting such rates is a
v olation o f the civil rights or women.
M eanwhile, Congress Is debating a bill which
v ould require insurance com panies to set all rates
oh a unisex basis.
T h is Is the age o f the emancipation o f wom en.
1 lie d rive for equal rights makes an y reform
a tractive if it seem s to confer benefits on wom en.
It has taken great pressure by w om en 's groups
t( make em ployers and insurance com panies
n cognize that the health costs o f wom en should
b : fully covered by disability and m edical plans,
ir eluding the costs associated with childbirth.
The cam paign to equalize insurance prem ium s
p ild by men and wom en has gained support
b cause it Is seen as another part o f this great
ejusade for w om en ’s rights.
[As Insurance com panies have been forbidden to
prracticc racial discrim ination In fixin g premiums,
it seems to m any that they should be forbidden
also to practice discrim ination on the basis o f sex.
But there is a difference. Race is hard to define.
It is inherently repugnant in our culture to inquire
o f a person as to his or her race. Th ere arc m any
persons o f m ixed or uncertain races. Som e people
m ay elect to change their racial identity, if there is
any such thing.
Transexuals aside, w e can hardly say the same
for sexual identity. In almost all cases, it Is
determ ined at birth and rem ains unchanged
throughout life. It is a biological fact that human
beings are created either male or female.
W hen insurance com panu actuaries categorize
human beings according to sex, they are not
conferring rights upon cither sex. If It is an
actuarial fact that wom en have a higher life
expectancy than men, w hy should that fact not be
taken Into consideration in setting prem ium rates
and pension payments, even though it m ay result
In higher rates or lower m onthly paym ents?
It w ould m ake as much sense to require
insurance com panies to refrain from practicing
age discrim ination in insurance rates.
But would we require a 20-year-old to pay as
high a rate for life insurance as an 80-year-old,
despite the diiference in their life expectancies?
Car insurance costs you n g m ales m ore than
yo u n g females, because the males have a higher
accident rate.
iShould the rates be reduced for the men and
rdised for the wom en, regardless o f the loss
statistics? W e don 't believe so.
S om e w ho have striven m ightily for equality for
w om en do not believe that the courts or Congress
should forbid insurance com panies or annuity
salesm en or pension planners from taking into
account the sex o f individual insureds, annuitants
and pensioners.
T h ere Is nothing Inherently unfair or im proper
in grouping people according to sex for statistical
purposes. And determ ining insurance rates is
m ore a m atter o f statistics than o f social policy.
' If the Suprem e Court docs not require the
insurance industry to set all rates on a unisex
basis, neither should Congress.

Pleatm W rit*
L etters to the editor ere welcom e lo r
bitcation. A ll letters m ast be signed end
ilnde n m oiling oddress end. If possible, o
telephone nnmber. The Evening Herald re•nerves the right to edit letters to ovoid libel
end to eccommodete space.

C

BERRY'S WORLD

By Diane Petryk

Keren Coleman has come a long way In
her 14 years with the Seminole County
school system, but she still clearly recalls
her first day as a teacher in 1969.
As she stood before a new group o f 5th
graders at Sanford Grammar School, in the
days before air conditioned classrooms, the
blades o f an electric fan grabbed the comer
o f her new 940 dress and gradually ate
most or it — to the astonishment o f alt the
children.
"One little girl's eyes opened so wide,"
she said. "I'll never forget it."
Eventually, she extricated the dress, but
from that day onward could never remove
wide-eyed children from her heart.
After teaching 12 years In grades from
5 th ' to 8th, Mrs. Coleman still has a
yearning to help direct young Inquiring
minds. But she also had a need to change
experiences and take on a new set of
challenges.
So although there arc no children with
wide-eyed looks at the district office, as an
administrative trainee Mrs. Coleman said
she has learned that education is truly a
team effort.

W ASHINGTO N WORLD §le)H
R

Fitting
Locale
For Summit

By Helen Thornes
UPI W hite House Reporter
. W ASH ING TO N (UPI) - Colonial
Williamsburg may be a fit setting for a
gathering of world leadere trying to
solve some o f the key global economic
and political problems of the ‘80s.
It epitomizes the early revolutionary
history o f the United States and its great
leaders of that era, Including George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson and
Patrick Henry. They had courage, dar­
ing and boldness to face their present
and future.
In that 18th century atmosphere the
heads o f seven governments will sit
down to swap views on the problems
that loom large today.
The contrasts between then and now
are sharp. Perhaps one or the biggest
changes in the world since America's
beginnings and today is the need for
global cooperation for mutual security.
Isolation and "n o entangling alliances"
preached by the nation's first president
are a thing o f the past.
In today's world there appears to be a
consensus that no nation can go it
alone. No nation Is self-sufficient, and no
nation can live without collective securi­
ty or powerful friends and allies.
While the thrust o f the Williamsburg
summit will be on economic recovery,
hovering In the background are the
world's political problems and EastWest tensions that have Increased the
dangers.
Such subjects will be discussed at
meal times, according to aides, rather
than at the conference table.
Undoubtedly European leaders have
many questions for Reagan about U.S.
Intentions In the nuclear arms negotia­
tions.
Am ong them there is still some
grumbling that he is not showing
enough flexibility at the bargaining
table with the Soviets In Geneva. In
recent days. Reagan's defenders have
had to stress his dedication to arms
control.
Even former West German
C h a n c ello r H elm u t S ch m id t has
challenged Reagan's nuclear control
stance.
Reagan has said that at the summit
the leaders will reaffirm their position
that the United States should go ahead
with the deployment o f Pershing-2 and
cruise missiles in Europe.
But there is no question that the
leaders are hoping there will be some
breakthrough in the Intermediate range
missile negotiations that would make
deployment unnecessary.
Reagan Is shrugging off threats of
retaliation from the Soviets If the
missiles are deployed In Europe to offset
Russia's SS-20 missiles.
In a recent interview with United
Press International, he said he "can't
b elieve" that the Soviets mean to
retaliate. And he emphasizes that the
missiles are being deployed "at the
request o f our allies."
"A ll o f our allies are In agreement on
going forward with the deployment." he
said.

ocky mtnNlrtfe-NfA'S*

" I t ’s a partnership we all share —
administrators and teachers," she said.
And she added, her new Job Is actually
"a dream position" because it's multi­
dimensional.
She e x p la in e d . T ra d itio n a lly , a d ­
ministrators rose from the ranks, usually
after working their entire career in Just one
school under one administrator.
S em in ole C o u n ty's a d m in istra tive
trainee program, however, gives a broader
view, allowing the trainee to work under
many different administrators, each with
their own style.
Last year Mrs. Coleman, 37, worked in
school level administration at several
centers Including Lake Man' High. Crooms
High, and Lakevlew and Jackson Heights
middle schools. After discussion with
Superintendent Bob Hughes, it was de­
cided she should spend a second year os
administrative trainee — this time at the'
district office.
Hughes assigned her to be the district
staff's liaison with news media, repre­
sentative to the community and designee
to parent groups such as the Seminole

County Councils o f PTAs and Seminole
County Schools Advisory Councils.
A ll th is has k ep t M rs. C o lem a n
extremely busy. She estimates It Involves
at least three evening meetings a week,
following a usually brisk daytime schedule
talking to the press, organizing meetings,
giving speeches and promoting Seminole
County Schools. The latter a personal
commitment to a system she holds close to
her heart.
" I believe In Seminole County Schools,"
she said. "I'm a product o f the Seminole
County School system. My husband and I
have our two most precious possessions,
our children, in the Seminole County
School system. I believe In the quality of
education here."
It must be that belief that drives dynamo
Karen.
The superintendent says:
"Karen Coleman is an extremely positive
and energetic person. She's well organized,
competent, efficient. She can accomplish
many tasks in a short time and has
devoted hours and hours spreading the
word about Seminole County schools."

• •*»*««««

KNew TMe HifteR DiaRies
IvieRe FaKe THe MiNUTe T Reap
Ike PaRt aBout luvaMNG ftiaNp
To iMPRegs Jopie FogTeR.

WILLIAM RUSHER

Deprogram The Liberals
NEW YORK (NEA) - Personally. I’ ve
always agreed with Barry Farber's
contention that we ought to keep a few
liberals around "Just for breeding
purposes," but the current ridiculous
oversupply of this pesky species Is a
serious problem. They are so numerous
that they often manage to elect politi­
cians beholden to them to high public
office and. of course, their near-total
dominance of the media Is common
k n o w led ge . W hat ra b b its are to
Australia, liberals are to America.
But now comes word o f a new.
promising solution to this long-standing
problem. As so often. It simply Involves
applying to this new area a technology
perfected and long used successfully In
another field.
In two words: deprogram them.
Take Dr. Susan Wlrth, a professor of
English In her mld-30s (with a Ph.D. In
Spanish) who was walking one day in
1980 to a class she taught at Alemany
C o m m u n it y C o lle g e C e n t e r in
downtown San FranclBco. Back in
Pennsylvania, where she came from,
she had helped organize anti-nuclear
groups, in San Francisco, she went
steadily downhill. Joining a thing called
the African People’s Solidarity Com­
m it t e e an d a c t u a lly b e c o m in g
chairwoman o f the Coalition to Fight the
Death Penalty.
But her plucky mother knew Just
what to do. As Dr. Wirth walked along
that San Francisco street, a rented van
(later traced to her mother) drove up
beside her and two men shoved her
inside. More than a month later, In a
telephone interview with a reporter. Dr.
Wlrth stated that there were three more
rescuers (she called them "thugs")
inside the van. She declared she had
been handcuffed to a bed for almost two
weeks, gagged and deprived o f "food,
drink and sleep on occasion." and
warned that she would be thrown Into a
mental Institution If she didn't cooper­
ate.
Dr. Wlrth Identified the noted re­
ligious deprogrammer. Ted Patrick, as
the leader of this attempt to moderate
her political views, adding that his
accomplices told her he was charging
927,000 for his services. Sadly, In this
case, the cure didn't "take": Dr. Wlrth is
still a liberal and describes her mother
as remorseful. But Just Imagine the

political consequences If only half of
such deprogrammings worked!
Nor Is politics the only new area in
which deprogramming Is being tried.
There was Stephanie Rlcthmillcr. 20. an
Ohio woman whose parents suspected
she was having a lesbian alTalr with the
girl with whom she was living. In this
ease, deprogrammer Patrick w a s actual­
ly Indicted along with two other people
for kidnapping Miss Rlcthmillcr In front
of her home and taking her to Alabama
and holding her there for six days,
during which one of his co-defendants
allegedly made sexual advances to her
and raped her — apparently - in an
attempt to change her mind about
homosexuality. The Jury, however, ac­
quitted Patrick on all charges, and the
other defendants on all but the abduc­
tion charges fas to which they couldn't
agree), prompting the Judge to remark
that the verdict "showed a Jury will
permit their moral evaluations to enter
into their legal conclusions."
In other recent cases, deprogrammers
have tried, for husky fees, to un-kink the
minds o f young adults seized with such
mental aberrations as affiliation with
the (evangelical) Assembly o f God
Church and the Roman Cuthollc
Church. In one Instance, they kid­
napped a married couple and suc­
cessfully deprogrammed the wife but
failed with the husband. The marriage
was destroyed of course, but that's life.
And now. If I may abandon the
Ironical mode, let me invite you to share
my outrage at this sort of thing. It all
began — remember? — a few years back
with the efforts of certain foolish parents
to deprogram their adult children,
w h o m t h e y b e lie v e d h ad b een
"brainwashed" by the Moonies and
other new religions that It pleased the
parents to call “ cults." Now we arc
apparently all fair game for any
money-grubbing busybody who dis­
approves of our religious or political or
even sexual attitudes. Law-enforcement
authorities have been slow to prosecute
such cases, because Juries are often
reluctant to convict. But the episodes
discussed above, and others like them,
are a disgrace to a free society, and we
had better develop a firm resistance to
all manifestations of this kind o f thing
before It becomes a major blot on the
American record.

SCIENCE WORLD

Sporadic
Blindness
A Mystery
By Patricio llcCorm sck
UPI Health Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - Doctors are at a
loss to explain a disorder that plunges
some victims Into sporadic blindness.
It Is c a lle d b e n ig n e s s e n t ia l
blepharospasm. Victims wink, blink or
squint a lot at first and then find eyelids
clamping shut. Spasms around the eyes
affect muscles that control lids. The
spells of blindness are o f unpredictable
duration.
"It is much more common than we
thought." said Dr. Roswell Eldrldgc. a
neurogcneticist at the National Institute
o f Neurological and Communicative
Disorders and Stroke.
E ld r ld g c c r e d it s th e r e c e n t ly
e s t a b l i s h e d B e n ig n E s s e n t i a l
Blepharospasm Research Foundation
with helping to locate victims across the
country.
Eldrldgc, who attended the first an­
nual conference sponsored by the
foundation, said Its efforts at bringing
patients together gives the scientific
comunlty a chance to look at greater
numbers o f victims o f the disorder once
thought rare.
Doctors on the foundation's medical
advisory board say blepharospasm Is
often misdiagnosed. This Is because of
the relative lack o f awareness.
As a result, the disease sometimes
mistakenly Is diagnosed as a psychiatric
problem. But it actually crosses other
specialties: neurology, ophthalmology
and neuro-ophthalmology.
D ru g th e ra p y w ith d la z a p a m .
levodopa and mcthyldopa has led to
occasional success but only rarely,
foundation medical advisers say. A
surgical approach Involves cutting of
areas o f the small facial nerve branches
of the orbicularis muscle. It brings short
duration Improvement In some patients.
Dr. Joseph Jankovlc, head o f the
movement disorder clinic of medicine In
Houston says blepharospasm Is often a
misunderstood ronditlon.
"It may be present alone, but It may
also be part o f a m ore ge n era l
neruologlcal syn d ro m e ." he says.
''T h e r e f o r e . I b e lie v e that
blepharospasm should lie evaluated by
a neurologist to exclude the other
diagnoses."
Some related conditions associated
w i t h b le p h a r o s p a s m I n c l u d e
P a rk in s o n 's d isease and ta rd iv e
dyskinesia — Involuntary movements of
the face,
.
Dr. Robert B. Wilkins, director of
ophthalmic plastic and reconstructive
surgery at the University o f Texas
Medical School In Houston says patients
with essential blepharospasm who come
to his office "have usually been from
doctor to doctor, seeing psychiatrists,
neurosurgeons and so forth.
"These people arc desperate bccau#
they are essentially blind and have
d ifficu lty carrying out their daily
routine. Women have trouble with
housework and both men and women
have difficulty or find it Impossible to
drive their cars."

JACK ANDERSON

Soviet Savvy Blew Pipeline Sanctions
WASHINGTON - When President
Reagan m eets allied leaders this
weekend in Williamsburg. Va.. he may
discover in a very personal way that he
was snookered into dropping the Soviet
pipeline sanctions — by a combination
o f friends end enemies. Some o f the
culprits will be sitting right in the
conference room with him.
As I reported last November — when
Reagen announced the end of the
sanctions he had imposed in January
1982 — the Soviet leadership had
outguessed the White House at every
step of the game. Probably with the aid
of the KGB a intelligence network, the
Kremlin leaders anticipated Reagan's
moves end checkmated him with the
■kill of chess masters.

"F or h m n 'i sear ! DO N'T HONK YOUR
HORN A T ANYBODY. Ho m ight p u ll r gun End

•hootyou.”

The CIA played Into the Kremlin's
hands by producing two shoddy In­
telligence estimates on llkdy effects of
the sanctions. Then the agency com­
pounded its errors of Judgment try
following the recommendations of an
American company that stood to gain
millions if the sanction* were lilted.

Finally, the State Department was
evidently persuaded by our European
allies that if the sanctions were lifted
they would Join the United States in a
broad agreement on trade with the
Soviet bloc. Secretary o f Slate George
Shultz convinced Reagan this was the
case. The president will find out this
weekend Just how empty the allied
leaders' assurances were.
My associate Dale Van Alta has pieced
together a story o f guile, greed and
Incompetence from secret documents
and in terview s over the past six
months Here are the details:
As I reported In November, the
Kremlin figured — correctly — that
Reagan would Impose sanctions on
pipeline technology if the Russians
cracked down on the rebellious Poles.
Knowing their own timetable for the
crackdown, the Soviets rushed to nail
down contracts for pipeline equipment
with Western suppliers. The (Inal con­
tract was signed in Moscow on Dec, 14.
1981 — the day after marital law had
been declared In Poland, and two weeks
before Reagan announced the sand Iona.

The one U.S. company whose pro­
ducts were considered by the Soviets to
be vftal to their pipeline wus General
Electric. And GE obviously stood to
make a bundle if the sanctions were
lifted. Knowing this, the CIA relied
heavily on GE for Information on how
the sanctions were working — or not
working.
A GE representative, in fact, coordi­
nated and controlled a two-hour CIA
briefing for White House and State
Department officials In early 1982. His
presentation naturally favored dropping
the sanctions, and It went substantially
unchallenged by the CIA.
In August 1982, the CIA produced an
Intelligence estimate that dumped all
over the sanctions. Upset by the report,
National Security Adviser WUUam Clark
wrote CIA Director WUUam Casey in
September and asked him to reconsider.
Examination o f the CIA's August
estimate shows It was a poor effort. It
shows complete Ignorance o f the terms
o f the contracts the Soviets were then
rushing to completion.
T h e C IA s la b d r a s t ic a lly u n ­

derestimated the value to the Soviet! of
their gas pipeline to Western Europe —
obviously a vital consideration In
assessing the degree of punishment
Inflicted by the sanctions. The CIA
figured the Russians stood to make
about 95 billion a year after completion
o f the first pipeline segment. Bui other
intelligence estimates put the figure at
98 bUllon-910 billion a year.
Even worae. the CIA didn't even
address the question o f Soviet gas sales
when two more strands o f the pipeline
ore In place — estimated by others at
930 bllUon-940 billion a year In badly
needed hard currency.
Clark got the second estimate i #
asked for. It was essentially a Justifica­
tion o f the first one. With the C IA firmly
against the sanctions, Shulls was able
to persuade Reagan they should be
lifted. Aa a facc-tavlng gesture, it was
announced that the European ulUcs
would Join tn a tough general agreement
on trade with the Soviets. The president
wUI try to hold the allies to their
promise this weekend.

�M

W&gt;WW»!»IN

Last 3 Days Saturday -Sunday- Monday

B o ys’ sw im tru n ks.

G irls ’ sw im su it.

Sale S6 Reg. $8 Poplin swim trunks with
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nylon-lined Big boys' sizes S.M.L.XL.
Little boys' sizos, Reg. $7 Salt S.2S

Sal* 11.25 Reg. $15. A beach-bound beauty
she's sure to love. Color-spliced tank swim­
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Sal* 10.40 Reg. $13. Morro Bay boxer swim
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of poly/cotton/nylon. Men's sizes S,M,L,XL.

Sal* 11.20 Reg. $14. Poplin swim trunks with
contrast-color piping. Zip-front, button-tab
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for men's waist sizes 30 to 42.

C a r seat
and stroller.

S a le 39.99
M e n ’s s p o rty shorts.
Just one example from our.cool collection:
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poly/cotton oxford with coordinating belt.
Men's waists 32 to 42.

Men’s Sport Shirts
Harbor Breeze
Solid-Patterns
Reg.To *13

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f i l l

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for greater convenience. Has
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covered cushioned seat.

Our new wawe of swimwear.
S a le 1 3 .9 9 to 2 2 .5 0
A sampling from our antira collection of
ocean currents for misses and Juniors. More
In store, at saving* from 25% to 40%.
Missas’ print maillot. Reg. $26 Bale 11.69
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�i

SPORTS
&lt;A-Evtning Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, May 27, m i

Lyman
Outruns
Sem inole

By Chrle Plater
Herald Sports W riter
APOPKA — At times Thursday night,
Seminole High looked like contenders.
The Tribe flashed signs o f a productive
offense while a few bone-crunching
tackles had the defense as fired up as
possible.
Unfortunately, sandwiched between
the outstanding plays was the same kind
o f Inconsistency that plagued coach
Jerry Posey's team during an 0-10 1982
campaign.
On th e o t h e r h a n d . L y m a n 's
Greyhounds unveiled a potent running
game In the early going and a defense
which held back a last-second Seminole
scoring drive as the 'Hounds claimed a
14-6 victory In the first half of 1983
spring footnall Jamboree at Apopka High
School. Osceola Kissimmee surprised
Apopka. 6-0. In the second half.
"W c felt coming In that it was very
Important for us to win this game."
Posey said. "When you finish last in
your league, you have to Jump on every
chance you get."
Lyman received the opening kickoff
and gained 35 yards on Its first four
plays from scrimmage to move the ball
into Seminole territory. The Tribe’s
defense then rose to the occasion as Fred
B rin s o n ta c k le d L y m a n 's A v e r y
Mcrwcalhcr for an eight-yard loss and,
on the next play. Tim Lawrence sacked
quarterback Tony Johnson for a fouryard loss. After an Incomplete pass, the
Greyhounds were forced to punt as the
Tribe's defense withstood its first lest or
the evening.
Flashbacks of the past season came
back on Seminole's first play from
scrimmage as Lawrence took the handoff, broke Into the Lyman secondary,
and. while canylng the football like a hot
loaf of bread, was stripped of the ball and
Lyman's Ron Beasley recovered at the
Seminole 32-yard line.
A gain of 11 yards by Karl Simmons
and one o f 16 yards by Phil Gcrmano
gave Lyman a first and goal on the
Tribe’s five. Two plays later. Tyler
Hughes busted In from one yard out as
Lyman cashed In on Seminole's mlscuc
with 6:18 remaining In the first of two
quarters. Steve Abemcthy added the
extra point for a 7-0 Lyman lead.
A penally on the ensuing klckolf
nullified a fine return by Dexter Jones

LAKE BRANTLEY SPRING JAMBOREE PAIRINGS
Q eartar east Lake Mary vs. DeLand
Quarter twot Oviedo vs. DeLand
Quarter threat Lake Brantley vs. Oviedo
Quarter fourt Lake Howell vs. Lake Mary
Quarter fleet Lake Howell vs. Lake Brantley
All eyes will be on the quarterbacks more than
usual tonight when four county teams conclude
their spring practice with the Lake Brantley Spring
Jamboree at Altamonte Springs. First kickoff is
7:30 p.m.
The quarterbacks will draw the attention
because two o f them — Lake Howell's Troy
Quackenbush and Darin Slack — are battling for
the no. 1 Job while three others are untested
commodities.
See QUARTERBACKS, P ag* ?A.
Lake B raatlsy Jam boree Startara
I n i luU 1 UirtNO E,
Postion
Kama
Horn!
Split end.......
Tackle...........
Guard........... ........... Bob Wfttlck..... .................
Center...........
Guard...........
Tackle...........
Tight end.....
Flanker.........
Quarterback...
Fullback........
Tailback........
Kicker...........

L y m a n 's A v e ry M e rw e a th e r b re a ks loose fro m B rian Brooks w hile W illiam Wynn tries
8S to catch
and the ofTcnse failed to make a first
23 and 10 yards to give Seminole a first
down on Its second possession of the
and goal at the Lyman nine. On the next
night. Rob Cohen then shanked his first
play, Clifton Campbell scampered In for
punt attempt and gave the Greyhounds
the score with 4:25 left to play. Cohen's
extra point attempt was wide left as
good field position.
Lyman held on toa 14-6 lead.
Key plays In Lyman’s second scoring
drive included a 12-yard pass completion
For the second straight possession.
Seminole's defense hung tough as the
from Greg Pilot to Mike Battle and a
12-yard run by Mike Henley. Henley's
Tribe gave up Just three yards on three
run gave the ‘Hounds a first and goal at
plays. With 2:40 left in the game.
the eight and. on third down. Beasley
Seminole still had a chance to tie the
took It over from the one for Lyman’s ' game. Lyman’s Jody Foster made It a
second TD. Abcrnethy added the point
little harder for Seminole as he boomed a
after as the Greyhounds took a 14-0 lead
55-yard punt and gave Seminole a first
with 10:46 remaining In the second
down at the 20 with 80 yards to go In
quarter.
Just 2:35.
A loss of 13 yards on Seminole's first
On second down. Mike Futrcll tossed a
play after the kickoff, put the Tribe In a
short pass to William Wynn who made a
hole It couldn't get out of. Cohen's
spectacular open-field run. gaining 45
second punt o f the night went off the yards to the Lyman 35. A screen pass
side of his foot and traveled about 15 from Futrcll to Lawrence was good for
yards before going out o f bounds.
nine yards and another pass from Futrcll
The defense then created the first
to Wynn went for 12 more yards as
break of the night' for The Tribe as Seminole got down to the Lyman 19
Johnson was jolted by a group of with 36 seconds left to play. Lawrence
S c m in o lc s . fu m b le d , and T r a c y
gained three yards on first down, but
Holloman smothered the loose ball for
Futrell’s next two pass aitempts were
the Tribe In Lyman territory.
incomplete to force Seminole Into a
Lawrence then broke loose for runs of fourth down with less than 20 seconds

left In the game. Futrcll then tossed a
screen to Jones who gained only five
yards, two yards short o f the first down,
and Lyman ran out the clock to ice the
victory.
“ Both teams moved the ball pretty
well," Posey said. "But. the score should
only have been 7-6. We gave them one
touchdown. On defense, we tried to
make too many arm tackles."
Lyman gained a total of 84 yards
rushing In the two quarters with Mike
Crespo’s 24 yards leading the way.
Henley added 23 yards on three carries
followed by Germano with 19 yards and
Mcrlweather with 15 yards. Germuno.
who runs the .40 In 4.7, had a sparkling
25-yard TD run called back by a penalty.
The Greyhounds only attempted two
passes and complclcd one for 12 yards
for a total of 96 yards of olfcnsc.
Seminole compiled 65 yards rushing
with Lawrence's 53 yards on seven
carries leading the way. Futrcll com­
pleted five o f 10 passes for 78 yards.
Wynn, who was out all last season with
an Injury, hauled In three passes for 64
yards. Seminole rolled up 143 yards of
total offense.

Convey Joins Cheeseman, Jaeger In 'Golden Mile'
Billy Convey Joins the fun Saturday night when Lake
Howell's Ken Cheeseman and Winter Park's Brian
Jaeger renew their rivalry In the mile run at the
prestigious Golden South Classic Saturday at Winter
Park's Showaltcr Field. The mile should begin between
7:30 p.m. and 8 p.m.
Other county participants include state champion
Convey, a senior from Ransom Everglades, has a high Jumper Lori Carroll and state champion hurdler
4:11.0 mile to his credit which Is three to four seconds Schowondn Williams. Both are Juniors and coach Larry
slower than Cheeseman and Jaeger. Convey, however, Baker said he felt they peaked perfectly for the state
runs against 2A competition primarily and will get a meet where Lyman finished second. Williams will have
much-needed push Saturday night against Junior an adjustment Saturday whereas the hurdles will be 440
Cheeseman and senior Jaeger.
yards as opposed to the 330 she Is used to.

Prep Track

Lyman's Anjeanettc Cleveland, who finished second
In the slate long Jump, will also compete. Sophomore
Angle French will throw the discus. She was third at
stale. Lyman will also have Its 440 and mile relay teams
running.
Seminole's Charlta Medlock Is coming off her
career-best long Jump, a IP-6 In the Slate Heptathlon.
Crystal Caldwell will also compete, running the 440
dash. The Tribe boys will have sophomore Clifton
Campbell In the 440 dash. Campbell has clocked a 48.4
this year. — SAM COOK.

Position
Split end...........
Tackle..............
Guard...............
Center..............
Guard..... ...... .
Tackle.,,
Tight end.........
Flanker.............

N a mbar

Rich

LION DEFENSE
End................
End................
Nose Guard....
Tackle............
Tackle............
Linebacker.....
Comerback.
Comerback,

Punter

V .
.... ;.... ;:.^.69
................ 65
............ ,...[17
......... .61

.....Bobby Lomax.,
.... E. J. Rouaaoux,
.....Tim Turbyfleld.
Andrew Smith.....
....Ed Norton........
Sean McCullom...,

Lake Howell Jam boree Starters
_
SILVER HAWK OFFENSE
--Jeff Solomon
Rick Williams.

Center.......
Guard.......
Tackle......
Tight end..
Slot back...

Sanford Baseball

«

r

•••■*••••»**60
....... ....76

........ ;,8 P
... .... (U
............ Troy Quackenbuah......;,,....I6
........... *...... J®y Robey..... ................ 44

meter** *•••*:&lt;

Chavers had two hits each for Adcock Roofing. Koke had
three hits for Flagship Bank while James Jackson and
Blake had a pair o f hits eacL.
"Steady Eddie" Charles came through In the clutch In
At Fort Mellon Park Thursday, Seminole Ford scored
a big way Thursday In leading Adcock Roofing to a 8-5 19 runs In the third Inning en rout to a 30-1 rout of
victory over Flagship Bank In Sanford Little American Atlantic Bank.
action at Bay Avenue Field. After being tagged for five
Seminole Ford had nine hits on the day. and cashed In
runs in the drat inning, Charles regained his composure on 24 walks Issued by Atlantic Bank pitching. Jonny
and shutout Flagship Bank the rest o f the way.
Williams triple and homered to lead Seminole Ford at
Charles helped his own cause at the plate as he went 3 the plate while both Doug Spain and Kyle Faulkner
for 3 Including a RBI-double In the fifth Inning that put ripped a pair o f doubles.
the finishing touches on Flagship Bank. Charles' hitting
Spain also picked up the pitching victory as he hurled
and pitching heroics vaulted Adcock Roofing Into sole a one-hitter, struck out four and walked a meager two.
possession o f first place as the Little American League Joe Moore's single In the third Inning was the only hit
season comes down to the wire.
ofTof Spain.
After Adcock took a 3-0 lead in the top of the first
Inning, Flagship Bank responded by rallying for five
runs on five hits In the bottom o f the first Inning. James
Jackson led ofT with a single and Tye Koke followed with
a single to put runners on first and third with no outs.
In Pee Wee League action at Chase Park. Tony
One out later. Ronald Cox and W.L. Gracey rapped Lattimore cracked three hits and picked up Ihe pitching
run-scoring singles and Travis Pickens walked to load victory as Clem Leonard Shell outsluggcd Butch's
the hues. Robert Jackson then walked to force in one Chevron. 14-13. Clem Leonard Shell scored five runs In
run and two more scored on Rubin Blake's single.
the top o f the third Inning and took a 14-6 lead Into the
Adcock Roofing lied the game at 5-5 In the lop o f the bottom o f the Inning when Butch's Chevron rallied for
second inning as Erskine Howard and Von Eric Small ■even runs, but fell short o f tying the game by one run.
slugged consecutive singles and Charles and Patrick
Jimmy Conaway had the hot bat for Butch's Chevron
Daughtcry followed with RBI singles.
as he clouted a pair o f homers while BUI Parlance and
Then, the pitchers took over. Flagship's Cox shut out Lonnie Jonea added one homer apiece. Tony Taylor
Adcock Roofing in the third and fourth Innings while added a triple for Clem Leonard Shell.
Charles was breezing through the Flagship batting
Kokomo Tools erupted for eight runs tn the second
order.
Inning and held on for a 13-7 victory ov?r McRoberts
in The score remained at 3-5 until the top o f the fifth Tire.
Inning. With one out. David Rusher singled and Marvia
Ronnie McNeil slugged a triple and a double for
Howard followed with a triple that turned out to be the Kokomo Tools while Lawrence McIntyre added a pair of
game-winning RBI. Erskine Howard then drilled a triple doubles. Michael Dillon rapped a home run and Coney
for a 7-5 Adcock lead and Charles stroked a two-out Bennett added at triple. Bennett also picked up the
double that made the score 8-5.
pitching victory as he struck out alx and walked seven.
Flagship Bank couldn't sustain any rally after the first Bennett only gave up one hit. that being a two-run
Inning. In.the last two Innings, the fifth and sixth. homer by Demetris Milter In the first inning.
Charles retired the side in order. Charles finished with
eight strikeouts and three walks, a’l three walks were in
310 030 0 -3 14 0
the first inning.
/,
300 900 0 -9 ■ 1
Bth'nd Charles' three hits, Small. Howard and Tony
Steady Eddie* Charles. LP - Ronald Cox.

LION OFFENSE
Kama

Fullback........... .... J. W. Yarborough............
Tailback.
Kicker.

Wideout.
Tackle.

Charles Overcomes Unsteadiness
To Pitch Adcock Roofing Into 1st
T b o rid ijr 'i Little Am erican scores
Adcock Roofing 8. Flagship Bank 5
Seminole Ford 30. Atlantic Bank 1
Thursday's Pee W ee League scores
Clem Leonard Shell 14. Butch's Chevron 13
Kokomo Tools 13. McRoLeris Tire 7

PATRIOT DEFENSE
End...............
End...............
Tackle...........
Tackle...........
Linebacker....
Linebacker....
Linebacker....
Rover.,...........
Comerback....
Comerback....
Safety....... .
Punter...........

•**•#«••**Jtotjcrt. Kerr..... ....,....*.*.....22

SILVER HAWK DEFENSE
...... Puitfie.............................. .
End...........
■Greg Deramo......................74
■Oreg Pagan........ ..............73
Tackle...... .
•••Pal I.aco&lt;c....... .... ..75
Linebacker...
......Chuck Bogge.,.................71
Linebacker...
ladt Johannewneyer. . . 51
Comerback..
.... -Joe Brondon.... ..............23
Comerback.,,
..... Robert Kerr...................23
8afety.
....Bill I ^ ng ..........i.&lt;............ .93
Safety,,,.,..,.,,
Chris Qwynn
......31
Punter..........

in :

.

Lattimore Leads Shell Win

'•tHIIIHJ e ff Reynold*.
•i.... -Mike GUvank...
...... .... W Adea.
......Ned Kolblomeen •&lt;
........Cornell Young...
.........Ma rk S v a rtr. Ml

'Stwdy E d d lt" Charles wasn't so steady until It
counted Thursday night against Flagship Bank.
Charles, the ace of the Adcock Roofing staff,
sattlad down after the first inning to pitcher
Adcock Info first placo.
33(19) 1—30 § 3
00
0 1— i t s

Atlantic Baak
, WP

-

D oug Spain

LP

-

CleaL. Shell
■atch’aChevron
WP -

Tony Lattimore.

E lbert

W illia m s.

333-14 7 0
337-13 3 0
LP

— Willie Williams.

303- 7 1 O
33h—13 • 0
WP — Coney Bennett. LP — Demetris Miller.

" " » * * * " -***.»i Cl

lt*t•

*aJD
-Joe D illon............ ........... I
■
I D ETENU

�Yaz's HR Backs O ff Steib
U nited P r e ie International
Recovering from traction. Carl
:*;* Yastrzemskl knocked Dave Stleb on
his back.
"Today was the best I have fell all
year." Yastrzemskl said Wednesday
night after hitting a two-run homer
to help the Boston Red Sox to a 7-2
victory over Toronto that handed
; Stleb his first toss In the month of
May.
" I felt super." added the 23-year
• veteran, who was backed with a
two-run homer by Jim Rice and a
solo shot by Dwight Evans. " I Just
hope I can keep It up now."
Yastrzemskl was playing in his
seventh game since returning from
a back Injury that had him in
traction for 10 days. Stleb entered
the game with a 5-0 record and 0.58
ERA for May. He hardly fared as
well, lasting only three InningB as
he was raked for five hits and five
runs by the Red Sox In watching his
record drop to 8-3.
"H e had nothing, no control, no
velocity and he was behind the
batters all night. He Just didn't have
his good stuff.” said Toronto man­
ager Bobby Cox. "But tonight was
his first bad outing o f the year. I’ll
take one of out 11 anytime."
Boston reliever Bob Stanley stole
‘ the pitching spotlight, combining
with starter Bob Ojeda on a fourhitter. Stanley. 4*2, gave up Just two
hits over 5 1-3 Innings.
" T h e key to the gam e was
, Stanley. It's Just that simple.” said
Boston m anager Ralph Houk.
"Stanley's been doing that all year.
He's Just been outstanding.”
"Bob's Just been fantastic." said
Yastrzemskl. "He can do so many
things — pitch long relief, short
relief ... Without him. we wouldn't
be where we are now."

Baseball
"Going In there with a five-run
lead really helps," said Stanley. "I
Just have to go out there and throw
strikes.
"I don't want to Jinx myself but
right now I'm in a really good
groovy. I'm getting the ball to go
where I want'it and'Ihc gitys Arc
making the plays behind me. It's a
great feeling."
The Red Sox took a 1-0 lead In the
first when Evans rachcd Stleb for
his seventh home run of the year.
R oyals 8 , O rioles 2
At Kansas City, Mo„ Frank White
backed the combined seven-hit
pitching of Steve Rcnko and Mike
Armstrong with a three-run homer
In the third, sending Baltimore to its
seventh straight loss. Rcnko Im­
proved his record to 4-3. Mike
Boddlckcr, 1-2, took the loss.
Rangers 3, W h ite 80s I
At Chicago, Rick Honeycutt, 6-3.
permitted two hits over eight In­
nings to help the Rangers snap a
four-game losing streak. Larry Par­
rish, who had three hits, had an RBI
single In the third and singled to
start a two-run eighth. Floyd Ban­
nister fell to 2-6.
Cardinals 8 , A stros 3
After seven years in the Mels’
farm system. Dave Von Ohlen's free
agent hopes were to reach St. Louis.
He found, however, the Cards
stacked against him.
"I feel super. Getting that first
major league win is a thrill," Von
Ohlen said Thursday night after
hurling 5 1-3 Innings o f solid relief
In the Cardinals' 5-3 victory over
the Houston Astros.
"I have been mainly a short relief

pitcher in the minor leagues and I
have never doubted I would make
the big leagues."
George Hendrick drove in three
runs with a double and Bruce Sutter
picked up his fourth save o f the year
for the Cardinals. Hendrick has 32
RBI, second only to Atlanta's Dale
Murphy.
Von Ohlen. 1-0, allowed one
earned run. three hits, no walks and
struck out three. Before the game,
the 24-ycar-old left-hander had
pitched only three innings in four
appearances. Von Ohlen was de­
clared a free agent last winter after
spending seven seasons In the
minor leagues.
Cubs 8. B raves I
At Atlanta, Paul Moskau and Bill
Campbell scattered 11 hits and
Larry Bowa scored three runs to
pace the Cubs. Moskau. 3-2. struck
out five and walked one in allowing
nine hits o ve r seven innings.
Campbell went the final two In­
nings. allowing one hit. Phil Nickro
f
e
I
1 t
o 1
*
4
P ira tes 6 , Reds 4
At Cincinnati. Mike Easier hit a
homer and knocked In three runs
, and rookie right-hander Lee Tunncll
combined with Manny Sarmlcnto
and Kent Tekulvc to pitch the
Pirates over the Reds. Tunnell, 1-1.
pitched 5 1-3 innings before being
knocked out during a three-run
C in c in n a ti sixth in n in g.
Giants 5, Dodgers 3
At Los Angeles, JcfT Leonard hit
two home runs to offset a pair by
Rick Monday and lead the Giants.
The decision gave San Francisco a
9-4 record on a 16-game road trip
and snapped a four-game Dodger
winning streak. It was the 2,000th
regular-season game in Los Angeles
for the Dodgers.

Sixers Tighten Clam ps To G o Up 2-0
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - The sad thing about the NBA
Is that great defensive players don’t make the headlines,
or cam the mill Ion-dollar salaries, or find their feats of
daring repeated on those television promotions.
Although Billy Cunningham made his fortune as a
player for his proficiency at putting the ball In the
basket, be has preached the gospel of defense ever since
taking over as coach o f the Philadelphia 76crs, ridding
the team of those who thought defense meant relaxing
between possessions.
At no time did this philosophy look any better than
Thursday night. The 76crs. having lost Moses Malone
for nearly six minutes of the fourth quarter due (o foul
trouble, tightened the defensive clamps on Los Angeles
for a 103-93 victory over the Lakers and a 2-0 lead in the
NBA championship scries.
Little-used Earl Cureton. filling In for Malone. Joined
guards Maurice Cheeks and Andrew Toney and
forwards Bobby Jones and Julius Ervlng in performing a
defensive clinic for a frenzied Spectrum crowd of 18.482
and a national television audience.
The Sixers posted seven steals — two each by
Cureton, Jones and Toney — in the final quarter and
held the Lakers to Just two field goals in a span o f five
minutes on their way to a commanding lead in (he
best-of-seven series, which resumes Sunday In In­
glewood, Cailf.
Most o f the fourth-quarter happenings took place with

NBA Final
Malone, the team's leading scorer and rebounder in the
post-season, on the bench. The Sixers led 83-79 when he
left after picking up his fifth foul with 7:58 remaining.
By the time he returned, with 2:24 left to play,
Philadelphia's lead was 95-87 and climbing.
"I think when you're playing defense it’s kind of
contagious with, players." Cheeks said. "Someone
makes a good defensive play and it carries over to the
next guy. I think our break was really dictated from the
defensive end. We make some steals and rebounds so we
can get out and run."
"W e got better wcakslde help and got a few steals and
layups." added Toney. "Earl played great defense
coming In. Once we got the defensive boards, we were
trying to run. We wanted to play Karccm (Abdul-Jabbarl
tight when he got the ball. It was a great defensive
quarter."
Even though hr was consistently double-teamed,
Abdui-Jabbar scored 10 o f his 23 points In the final
period but the Lakers may have been victimized by
relying on him too much. The rest of the team scored
but eight points, six coming on a pair of three-point field
goals by Bob McAdoo after the game was out of reach.

\ B e t s in g e r B r o t h e r s M a k e
| F l o r i d a 's 'S e l e c t ' T e a m ;
| F .C . U n it e d H o l d s S i g n u p
The (Inal selection for the Florida State
Under 17 Select Soccer Team was held
■ In Tampa over the weekend and two
players from the F.C. United Soccer Club
were selected as members o f the 16player squad.
There were 50 players up for the 16
spots on the team and brothers Jerry
and Jeffrey Bctsinger. both 14-year olds
who played for coach Larry BetsInger'B
F.C.U. 460 Sting, made the final cut and
earned the right to represent F.C. United
on the stale team.
The Bctsinger brothers will be attend­
ing the 1983 Region 3 Boys Select Team
Camp, hosted by Northeast Louisiana
University at Monroe. La.. In June.
Jonathon Brooks. 12. a player on Ron
Brooks' F.C.U. 270 Jr. Sling, was
selected to play on one o f two teams to
be formed In the under 15 age division.
The under 15 team hopes to compete
this summer on an Interstate level.
F.C. United Soccer Club will hold
registration for the Fall season on
Saturday. June 4. from 9 a.m. until noon
at Red Bug Park behind the office. All
playera that are currently registered with
F.C. and plan to play In the Fall, need to
re-regtster at this time. New youngsters
with birth years between 1965 and 1978
are also eligible to register. Prospective
players ana a parent or guardian must
be present. New players are to bring a
photostat o f their birth certificate. All
players need to bring two recent photos.
Registration fees are 833 for one player.
855 for two players and 875 for three
players per family.
In F.C. action this past weekend, the
040 Firebirds played lta beat game or the
seaaon in a 3-1 victory aver Southeast
Orange 002. Early In the first half, led
wing Marvin Turcotte brought the ball
down the center o f the field and beat the

Soccer
goalie to score the first F.C. goal.
Southeast came back with a goal to tic
the score, but Michael Plltl brought the
bait down the right side and put It in
unassisted from 18 yards out as the
Firebirds took a 2-1 lead by halftime.
F.C. United continued to control the
game In the second half, with halfbacks
Chad Bowersox. Russell Herrcll, Eric
Spires and Peter Romano doing a nice
Job o f getting the ball to the forwards.
Midway through the second half, the
Firebirds set up an excellent passing
play when the ball was sent from left
wing Turcotte to right wing Amin Saldl,
to center forward Clayton Von Camp,
back to Turcotte who fired a strong shot
into ihe left side o f the net for the third'
score.
Defenders Philip Richmond. Salim
Ani. Robert Wcstcnbcrger and Brian
Ellerbc prevented Southeast from scor­
ing again, while goalie Jamie Riddle
made several important saves to insure
the Firebirds' victory.
Scores fo r th e w eek o f 8/2l i F.C.
960 3, Downtown Orlando 960 3: F.C.
660 5. Winter Park 661 0: F.C. 661 2.
Downtown Orlando 962 0: F.C. 560 16.
Osceola Youth Soccer 681 1; Pine Hills
482 1. F.C. 480 0: Winter Park 481 2.
F.C. 360 1; F.C. 240 2. Sanford 180 0:
F.C. 270 won by forfeit over Maitlaud
181: F.C. 280 3. Winter Park 181 3: F.C.
160 2. Maitland 201 1: F.C. 040 3.
Southeast Orlando-002 1; F.C. 060 3.
Ddwntown Orlando 002 0: F.C. 080 1,
Maitland 082 1: F.C. 760 4. College Park
080 0; Downtown Orlando 803 3, F.C.
830 1: Southeast Orlando 801 1. F.C.
840 0: F.C. 8G0 4. Winter Park 801 1.
C lab Totals: 10 wins. 4 losses. 3 ties.

B e ll's H o m e r R in g s U p W in F o r K iw a n is
Tonya Bell slammed a home run and
two singles Thursday to lead Kiwanis
past Sanford Housing Authority. 24-8. in
Sanford Junior League Softball action at
Fort Mellon Park.
In Thursday’s first game. Medco
Pharmacy forfeited to Rocky’* Texaco.
Kiwanis made It easy for winning

pitcher Cassandra Frederick by scoring
eight runs in the first Inning and cpming
back with nine in the second for a 17-0
bulge before SHA finally put a five-spot
on toe board In the second.
Rcvonda Wallace continued her hot
hitting with two doublet and a single
while Melissa Plnder added two singles.

Friday, May tl, ( W - 7A

E y e in g HersM, Sanford, FI.

/vT

LARRY BOWA

J IF F LEONARD

NATIONAL LIA O U K
In )
W L PH. 0 0
St. Laud
31 14 J74 _
Mont r i l l
I t 17 U ) 1
Phitadtlphla
I I 17 J t l 1W
Pllttburgh
to i t a n SH
Chicago
14 34 .400 7
N*w York
I) 34 J t l 7W
W «t
Lot Angttat
34 t l .707 _
Atlanta
17 tJ 441 lta
San Frandtce
a 3) i n 7ta
Cincinnati
W a AM llta
it it m it
Houtton
San Dtago
17 14 .41) t l
Thartday'i R ttu ltt
Montrtal at Phitadtlphla, ppd. rain
Plltiburgh 4. Cincinnati 4
Chicago J. Atlanta 1
S I.L e u ltlH a w ta n )
San Francises S. Lot Angttat 3
F r id a y '* O a m ti
(All T h an EOT)
Pllttburgh (Cantatarta 34) at Cine In
n itl ( Sato 4-1), 7:3) p.m.
Chicago (Dainty 4 41 at Atlanta (P arti
L I), 7.40 p m
Montrtal (Lta 31) al Philadelphia
(Danny 4 3), I OSpm
St Loud (Andu|ar 34) at Houtton
(N ta k ro ltl.l U p m.
New Tort (Saavtr 33) at San Diaga
(D riva ck yt)). 10:0] p.m.
San Frandtco (Hammakar 4 31 i t Lai
A ng tlft (Welch 331. )0:U p m

A M IS IC A N L I A O t ll
(M l
W L PO.
14 17 J U
Ration
11 11 J41
Toronto
Mllwauka*
31 13 SR
Bath mart
31 M 31)
30 31 H I
Haw York
11 a 443
Ctavotand
t l n -430
D ttrolt
Wwt
14 11 371
Calitornta
11 3) 334
Oakland
» 10 314
T tta t
t t I I 314
Kantat City
I t 1) .477
Mlnnttata
11 14 H I
Chicago
17 M 371
Saaftta

0B
—
I
1
1
4
)
lta
—
1
1
lta
4
7
lta

Beaton 7, TaranNl
T t m l Chicago I
K a n u i city 0. Baltlmort 3
F r id a y '! O a m ti
tflnm w ta (H a w s 31 and Filton 14)
at Detroit (Worrit 31 and le ttm a 141,1.
1:34 p.m.
Batten (Tudor 33) at Toronto (Clancy
4 3), 7:31p.m.
California (Kiton 01) at Cleveland
IBIyleven44),7:Up.m.
Oakland (Nerrti 44) at New York
J Guidry 3 )).Ip m .
1 IIIN IS m u l 14) I t Milwaukee
(McClure 17), 1:34 p.m.
T e u t (Tpnana 141 f t Chicago (Huyt 3
4), 4:30 p m

Army, wss a member o f Mainland's-27-2 ,----losses to Seminole) powerhouse which battled
Payne's Seminotes toolh*hd-nall all season.
The 21-year-old guard should add a touch or
maturity to Payne's squad which won 20 games (n
his Initial season. Payne averaged 15 points and 6.5
assists a game for the 1980 Buccaneers. The 6-1
freshman also grabbed five rebounds and set a
school record for free-throw percentage. He made
the All F ly-S tar Conference First Team and also
was accorded honorable mention all-slate status.
"H e's so quick." said Payne. "H e came out and
played the other night with us. He's really suited for
the Junior-college game. He handles the hall well
and shoots well. He can really get up and down the
floor."
Prince Joins John Hosey (Spruce Creek). Calvin
Bryant (Seminole). Lenny Grace (Boone). Mike
Tolbert. (Oak Ridge) and Mike Phillips (Grovcland) as
the 1983 recruits. Phillips was a 2A (list-team all
stater. Grace was named to the 4A second team.
Tolbert was a 4A third-team choice and Bryant Was
an honorable-mention selection for the past two
years. -B AM COOC

BOX SCORES
Thurtday'i N it t m l L u g w la itc a rtt
By (Mtad Pratt Iwtantattawal
PITTSBURGH
CINCINNATI
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ATLANTA

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SAN FRANCISCO

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BOSTON

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7 13 0 ) 3 3 )
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...Quarterbacks
Continued from O A .
Lake Mary's Ray Hartsfleld. a running back last
year, is Just a freshman and every snap he takes
will be beneficial, according to Harry Nelson, the
Rams' new coach. "This Jamboree is probably
more important to us than the other people," said
Nelson.
Oviedo coach Jack Blanton will be looking for
some progress from his new quarterback, too.
Charles "P o p " Bowers, a sophomore running back
last fall, will guide the Lions' quarterback fortunes.
Blanton lost Just about all of his offensive line and
he's looking for his young players to mature. "W e
might not do real well in the Jamboree." said
Blanton. "But we should grow up over the
summer." Blanton has the county's top two
rushers returning In fullback J. W. Yarborough
and tailback Barry Williams. Both rushed for over
800 yards last year.
The fourth quarterback under the spotlight Is
Lake Brantley’s Dennis Groseclose. The 6-0
sophomore received his baptislm under fire last
' fall.
AG (ik jM f (aaAlaaia
TburtO ay n ig h t m u l t i
F l r t l r t e # - 1 /1 4 ,0 ; 31:77
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O (3 4 ) 1444 T (34 -3) 11140

Sometimes it s a lawn mower,
sometimes it s not. SNAPPER s
Hi-Vac* rider changes with
the seasons.
- ^
In the
■h
■]
L*
■J
spring, it s a
“ I
life saver,
coming to
\ _____I
the rescue of
your lawn by removing harmful
thatch with the optional SNAP­
PER Thatcherizer.
In the summer, it s the ulti­
mate grass cutter with the
powerful Hi-Vac system that
sets up grass for a smooth,even
cut. Optional bag attachments

F I

are a rear-mounted grass catch­
er. a twin-bag catcher, and a
trailing,30-bushel Bag-N-Wagon.
Come fall, it s a powerful
vacuum machine^picking up
leaves, pine straw, twigs and
similar lawn debris
And it doesn't hibernate in
winter. Thanks to an optional,
front-mounted,two-stage snowthrower. There’s even an op­
tional front-mounted blade for
light dozing or snow removal
See your SNAPPER dealer
today for the versatile,all *

S N A P P E R

Dog Racing
11IS r s e t - 1/14. B : 11:33
4M on ty W o n d tr
1140 1040 040
1 Odd S M i W inder
100.30 1130
3 B onds T lo s r
140
0 (1 4 ) 133.40 T (31 -3) 403.40
I l N i r o t S - 1/14, C: 33:40
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140 340 140
O R D 'lM M n lo M
140 140
3 BC F lrs c rs s c k tr
440
O (141 3440 T (34-3) 13) 44; Sopsr
0 (I-3-7-34-3-44) s s u H o s in
I H S r iC S - H , C: 40:37
4 Hon) Luck
4740 10.10 140
3 E a ty L u rs
340 140
1 D tlo ra n RsSsI
340
O 14-3) 110.00 T 114-3) So* 33140
BJoQ (1 4 ) (4 3 )03 140
A — 14001 NaadlS 0344.340

SANFORD
A AC
LAWNMOWU
Country Club M .

SANPOtD
SAW A M o w n
IS M l b Avenue

I

Stleb ( L I I I
I 5 J 3 3 t
Morgan
3 1 33 4 1
G titel
3 0 0 0 1 3
Stleb pitched to 1 batten In «lh
WP-Morgan T -l:3 a A-14.3d

SMITTY'S
•r.

00
00

�.

B L O N D IE

M -E w w lH fl H tra M , Sanford, FI.

Friday, M ay 27, 1913

b y C h ic Y o u n g

6UM 8TBA0/VD U

TOOK ATHRE6-HOUP

i

•

47 Environment
Answer to Previous Puula
agency (abbr.)
I Waight uniti 48 Gum tree
62 Roughly
5 Ending
56 Spotter
12 Queer
57 Upiet
13 With ice
cream,ai pia 58 Because
59 Rica fields
(3 wda.)
14 Follow exactly 60 Musical
□m oon
□ □ □ □ □ □
-----Couth
symbol
15
nnnnnn
nnn
16 Aorta
□□u n
r .in n n n n n
DOWN
18 Das Vatarland
nnn
□ □ □
□□□■■i
□on
□ n n c in u u
QB Bradshaw
|i-}H|sr~l i | » j * l
o
10 Desire (si.)
Preach
□
|w|o|a| l i l t l T i
20 One or more
Creed
type
22 Nila queen,
23
Jump
46 Make a
Clairvoyant
lor short
Cage
of
an
24
Housetop
choice
26 Singer
elevator
feature
48 Persian
FiUgsrald
Mournful
25 Stench
26 Leading
nymph
poem
27
Fireplace fuel
29 Insect
50 Soviet Union
Vault
28 Branches of
32 Aquatic
(abbr)
Sully
learning
inimal
Atomic
51 Prospectors
29 Clenched
34 Macao coin
particle
find
35 Debtor's note
36 Vary thin
10 t ^ ! i P,Ur,, C,n' 30 Western weed 52 Coffee
31 Chinese
container
37 By means ol 11 Comedian
currency
53 G#n„ ic
38 Searches
Sparks
”
40 Outbreak
12 Greek letter 33 Make into law
39 Required
..
42 Timbre
17 Conference
41 Flower child 64 Coniunct.cn
43 Dry.at wine
site, 194 5
43 Ointment
(G ,r &gt;
44 I possess
21 inherent
45 Blood vessels 55 Certainly
(contr.|
character

ACROSS

1

2

3

4

12

13

14

15

16

17
19

29

30

31

27

9

10

11

22

23

24

25

28
34

33

37

39

41

40

42

44

43 &lt;
47

/ yiMINX ARCHIEf I BET A
DOT FELLA Tpy TO TAKE,1

8

36

38

by Bob Montana

7

18

32

35

52

6

20~ 21
26

ARCHIE

5

53

49

46

54

55

45

46
51

50
56

67

58

59

60
AT

HOROSCOPE
W hat The D ay W ill Bring ...

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffdl A Hcimdahl
ACTUAL# 1 MAVENY
SEEN AIMING IM DAYS
taa

D n o m n 't

TOUR BIRTHDAY
M AT 38, 1983
S evera l Im portant
friendships will be dcvcloped this com ing year
with pesons you already
know casually. These re­
la tio n sh ip s w ill p rove
advantageous.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) Your mate may be a
bit more capable In han­
dling your Joint Interests
than you will be today.
Don’t take over at the last
minute and gum things
up. Order now: The NEW
Astro-Graph Matchmaker
wheel and booklet which
reveals romantic combina­
tions, compatibilities for
all signs, tells how to get
along with others, finds
r is in g s ig n s , h id d e n
qualities, plus more. Mail
$2 to Astro-Graph. Box
489. Radio City Sttlon.
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
tional $1 for your Gemini
Astro-Graph predictions
for the year ahead. Be sure
to give your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) You’re a good worker
today, but only up to a
point. When you begin to
tire or lose Interest, you’d
be wise to put your tools
away until tomorrow.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You’ll be warmly received
at any social gathering
today, but It’s also Impor­
tant to know when to
leave. Don’t wear out your
welcome.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) Family members and
relatives will be eager to
help you today, provided
you don’t make unreason­
able demands. Keep your
request In bounds.
LIB R A (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) You are likely to grasp
the essence o f Ideas more

quickly than those with
whom you pal around to­
day. Just because you’ rebrighter, don’t lord It over
them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Continue to be prudent
and conservative In your
financial affairs. Ignore
extravagant urges which
m ay direct you to do
otherwise.
S A G I T T A R I U S (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Others will be
quick to notice today If
you arc a trifle cool to
those who can’t do any­
thing for you, while being
warm and attentive to
those who can.
C A P R I C O R N (D e c .
22-Jan. 19) Your instincts
will be on target today, yet
you may not use them to
your maximum benefit.
D on ’ t m ake d ec isio n s
against your better
Judgment.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20
Feb. 19) If you attempt to
mingle with a new crowd
today, you could experi­
ence some uneasy mo­
ments. Stick with familiar
faces and places.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Overcome tendencies
today to switch courses
Just when your goals arc
within reach. Near misses
will be o f no value.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) You are cpable o f
doing what you set your
mind to today, but there’s
a chance that, after you
achieve your goal, you
m ay not d e r i v e full
benefits.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Owing to the efforts of
oth ers, th in gs w ill be
made easier for you today.
However, you, In turn,
must also share and do
what you can for them.

TheDangers Of
Excess Magnesium

DEAR DR. LAMB - I
recall that you had n
column once about how
m a g n e s i u m c ou ld be
harmful. I have been taking an antacid that con( a |ns m agn esiu m and
wonder If It Is safe for me.
As I recall, you men­
tioned that magnesium
could cause symptoms of taken as soon as the
old age. What arc these symptoms appear. A few
symptoms? I am 67 and days after the magnesium
feel Just (Inc. How can I tell
Is slopped, the kidneys
if 1 am getting too much catch up and so the cause
magnesium and what can of the patient's symptoms
I do about It?
cannot be Identified. Hap­
DEAR READER - This pily most early cases can
Is a neglected topic, but an be cured by o m i t t i n g .
Important one. The origi­ m agnesium con tain in g
nal work was reported by
medicines. Other antacids,
doctors from the Universi­ can be used if needed. And
ty o f Connecticut Health
taking laxatives Is a ques­
Center.
tionable habit al best.
For young healthy peo­
Magnesium Is discussed
ple the magnesium in ant­
acids Is not likely lo be In The Health Letter 17-6.
harmful, The small por­ Nutritional Aspects oF
tion that is absorbed Is Minerals, which I am sen­
eliminated through the ding you. Others whon
filtering action o f the kid­ want this Issue can send ,
75 cents with a long. ■
neys.
But as people get older stamped, self-addressed
the kidneys lose the ability envelope for II to me. In ^
to filter out magnesium as care of this newspaper, :
efficiently as before. If I’ .O. Box 1551, Radio City
older people use a lot of Station. New York. NY
10019.
medicin es containing
magnesium, there may be
DEAR DR. LAMB a slow build up of magne­ When I was 12 years old I
sium in the body.
had a testicle lowered. I
This can cause drowsi­ am now 59 and It is giving
ness, poor coordination, me some trouble. It feels
weakness, a feeling of like It docs after nn exami­
warmth, unsteadiness and nation by u doctor. It also
other symptoms. The poor goes up to the abdomen. It
c o o r d i n a t i o n and un ­ is a nuisance type thing
steadiness may lead to but I wonder If I should see
falling and injuries from a doctor. Also, what could
the fall.
this progress to? I'v e
The worst culprits in heard It could tie cancer­
causing chronic magne­ ous.
sium toxicity arc probably
DEAR READER - It Is
laxatives containing mag- frequently said that an
ncsium. Two tablespoons, undescendcd testicle can
or 30 milliliters, of milk of become cancerous, but the
magnesia contains 1.000 risk is quite small, unless
milligrams of magnesium it Is associated with other
— three or four times the abnormalities that you do
normal dally dietary In­ not have.
take. Unfortunately, antac­
The sensation you have
ids and laxatives conlatn1n g m a g n e s i u m a r e may be from a hernia In
commonly used In copious the canal that the testicle
amounts by older people descends through. And Ihc
and arc provided In nurs­ testicle probably pushes
in g h om es. No doubt up into the canal under
many cases of magnesium (he skin but not back Into
the abdominal cavity.
toxicity arc overlooked.
See a doctor and find out ;
To make the diagnosis a
blood sample must be why it Is bothering you.

Dr.

Lamb

&gt;

W IN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
V-17-11
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♦ AKQ4
♦ A K 42
WEST
EAST
♦—
♦ Q 107 3
*97652
*106 43
♦ 10 32
♦ J96
♦ J 109 7 6
♦ Q8
SOUTH
+ KJ9M542
* —
♦ 175
*5 3
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wctl

North Eatl

I’au
I’m

7*
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South
4*
Double I’au

Opening lead: *J

By O sw ald Jacoby
and Jam es Jacoby
The late Bill Huske, who
was editor o f The Bridge
World magazine In Its ear­
liest days. Invented to­
d a y ’ s hand. In o t h er
words, he made It up to
show the ul ti mate In
trump coups.

A trump coup becomes a j
grand coup when you ruff j
a w i nn e r - In o rd er to j
shorten your trump hold- •
Ing. A double gmqtl-coup j
is the ruffing of two w'In- j
ners.
H e r e i s II u s k c ’ s
q u ad r up le grand- coup &gt;
with four winners being &gt;
ruffed. East's double tells;?
South that he almost sur-"
ely holds all four missing
trumps. South sees some;?"
very slight chance that he"
can handle that bad break.
At trick tw-o he ruffs a
heart. The next six tricks
arc diamond to dummy,
heart ruff, until all four’/
hearts have been ruffed ''
while East has had to
follow suit.
'
Now comes a club to
dummy. Again East has to
follow suit. Now it Is a '
four-card ending. A club Is
led and East must ruff.
South overruffs, leads a '
trump to dummy's ace
an d p l a y s a c l u b o r '
diamond.
Il makes no difference ’
what East plays. South1
makes the last two tricks
with the king-jack o f
trumps.

by Jim D a v it'

�!1

PEOPLE
Evanlng H srald , Sanford, FI,

Gardening

D elay To Water Causes Permanent Lawn Dam age
J. Jasa
County Extension
Director
S3-25P
E x tm

the year when they should be
reaching thetr peak.
If this year Is typical, we should
start receiving summer type thun­
dershowers along with higher hu­
midity. These showers can be er­
ratic so lawns will still need periodic
irrlgalon, but how can you tell when

a lawn needs water?
The most efficient way to water a
lawn Is to apply water when it
begins to show signs o f stress from
lack o f water. The following signs
arc Indications o f water needs: spots
In the lawn that have turned a
bluish gray color: footprints that
remain In the grass long after being
made; many leaf blades folded In
half: and soil sample from the
rootzonc feels dry.
Prolonged Uiy periods - f high
temperatures, strong winds and low
relative humidity cause these
symptoms. Also, lawns wllh poor
root s y s t e m s r e s u l t i n g from
nematode nr fungus damage, can
show moisture stress much sooner

K

ABET

DEAR ABBTt I am the wire o f a
clergym an (please don’ t say which
denomination or what town).
My husband visits members o f his
congregation few a variety o f reasons. It's
part o f his Job. He is a very busy man
who is well-respcctcd in the community.
As a matter o f policy he never telephones
In advance to make an appointment for
his visits. He doesn't want anyone to fuss
or go to any special trouble for him. so he
Just drops In unexpected!).
A few women have told me that while
they appreciate my husband’s visit, they
would prefer thst he call in advance to

evaporation and during very hot*
periods can “ scald" the lawn.
Watering In late afternoon or late
morning may be detrimental If It
extends the time the lawn is
naturally wet from dew. The best
time for lawn Irrigation Is In the
early morning hours or at night.
Lawn Irrigation should be sched­
uled to avoid peak residential water
demand If using municipal water.
More detailed information on lawn
irrigation can be found In publica­
tions available from the Cooperative
Extension Service office.
All Seminole County Agricultural
Extension services programs arc
open to all regardless of race, color,
sex or national origin.
11

School Dance Depicts j
Rooftop O f The W o rld
Decorations Tor "Rooftop
o f the W orld." Jackson
He i gh t' s eighth grade
dance, were "out of this
world."
The gymnasium was
truly transformed with a
life-sized statue of liberty,
a make-believe but recog­
nizable Eiffel tower and
many other extraordinary
decorations including a Gottlieb, president of the
organization. Mrs. Bemlce
disco box complete with a
Duncan, director of Com­
flashing strobe light.
munity Services. Will be
As approximately 200
the special speaker for the
students streamed into the
June meeting.
building, they quickly
Her topic will be "Com ­
noticed the refreshment
municable
Diseases" and
table that held a 4-foot
long cake decorated by she will also discuss the
services available through
l un ch ro om at tendant .
the S e m i n o l e C o un t y
Alberta Norton.
Health Department.
Mrs. N o r t o n ' s
masterpiece was decorated
The lait week or school
In the school colors, blue
will be a busy one at
and white with flowers
Geneva Elem entary.
adorning the top of the
"dancing floor" created for Tuesday. June 7. at 6 p.m.
the Other cake decorations The fifth grade will have
the annual dinner celebra­
— a 4-inch plastic disco
tion as the students pre­
couple and a 45 record.
pare to make the transi­
Underneath the fancy
tion from elementary to
icing was cake to please
middle school. Following
everyone — three flavors
the dinner there will be a
— chocolate, cherry and
p r o g r a m In t he
vanilla.
auditorium.
Rick WUshaw. the disc
T h e m o n t h o f May
Jockey from DAKIS in
became so overcrowded
Altamonte Springs, was
with events that the annu­
busy taking and playing
al "May Day Play Day." a
requests all evening as the
eighth graders danced
b l i s t e r s on t h e i r
"twinkle-toes."
This year's three hourlong dance will bring fond
memories for years to
come. Probably one stu­
dent will remember the
night a little more vividly
t
h
a
n h
1 s
classmates. Robert Bpslon
won the fantastic door
prize o f n large AM-FM
portable stereo radio.

Lou
Childers

M rs. James Stephen Prendergast
45 th Avc.. Braden Ion. The bride will enter Manatee
College In the fall.

Uncle Sam Wants
You Or Your Dog
DEAR READERS: Just when I think
I've heard everything. I get a letter from
the Department o f Defense Dog Center at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, asking
me to help recruit dogs for a rewarding
career In the military!
Dogs are needed to be trained for
guard duly, narcotic detection and
explosive detection work.
Some facts: The dog must be between
the ages o f 1-4. weight a minimum o f 50
pounds and can be either male or female.
G erm an shepherds and Rottweiler
breeds are desired. The dog does not
have to be purebred or registered, but It
must have the predominant features of
the breed It represents.
The Defense Department will pay *250
per dog. If you have a dog that you think
qualifies, write to: D.O.D. Dog Center.
Detachment 37. Lackland Air Force
Base, Texas 78236.
You will receive a form to Dll out. If
ypur dog qualifies, take It to a local
military veterinarian to be evaluated and
examined. The examination Is free. H
you use a private veterinarian, you must
pay the charges.
; If your dog passes his physical, a large
rectal crate will be provided for shipping
purposes. All you have to do Is take the
dbg to the airport and put It In the crate,
i f Is then flown to Texas at government
expense.
•So If you want to do something
mtrlotlc for your country, send your
dog,

summer. If rainfall occurs, Irrigation
should be suspended according to
the rainfall amount.
Water should not be applied at a
rate faster than It can be absorbed
by the soil. If the sprinkler applies
loo much water It runs olf and
watered Is wasted. Avoid extremes
In watering frequency and amount.
Light frequent waterings arc Ineffi­
cient and encourage shallow root
systems. Excessive Irrigation which
keeps the root system saturated
with water is harmful to the lawn
and encourages certain weeds such
as water sedge and dollar weed.
The time of watering Is important.
Watering during the middle of the
day can waste water by excessive

In And Around Geneva

Miss Waddell
Marries In
Sarasota
Gayle Marie W addrll and James Stephen
Prcndcrgasl were married May 21. ut 3.30 p.m., at
the Sara Bay Baptist Church In Sarasota. The
bride's uncle, the Rev. L. Trevcttc Weeks of
Orlando, performed the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
(Harriett) Waddell. 8502 Pennsylvania Avc..
Sarasola. and formerly o f Sanford. The bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Prcndcrgasl.
724 Magellan Drive. Sarasola.
Given In marriage by her father, the bride chose
for her vows an original formal silk organza over
taffeta gown fashioned along the empire silhouette.
Venlse lace encrusted with seed pearls lavishly
embellished the round neckline. Rccmbroidcrcd
luce appliques enhanced the full sheer sleeves and
fitted bodice. The full skirt gracefully cascaded Into
a flowing chapel train accented with Venlse lace
medallions and bordered with wide laec-trimmed
ruffles. A forward lace headpiece held her tiered
veil o f Imported Illusion,
Dawn Best of Baton Rouge. La., attended her
sister as matron o f honor. She wore a rose-colored
gown, empire styled, with Venlse lace accenting
the neckline A ribbon belt accented the floor-length
accord Ian pleated skirt.
Tammy Hamclin o f Sanford, and Sally Vlrlck of
Sarasota, were the bridesmaids. Their pastel blue
gowns were Identical to the honor attendant's.
Michael D. Cipriani o f Cortez, served the
bridegroom as best man.Ushers were Ronald
LelTler nnd Tom Morehouse o f Bradenton.
The reception was held at Ramada Inn. Sarasota.
The newlyweds are making their home at 3512

than those with good root systems'
Watering Immediately when the
lawn first shows signs of stress is
the most economical way to water.
Since delay can cause permanent
damage. If the turf is allowed to turn
brown, It will take a long lime to
recover.
The amount or water to apply at
any one time varies with the
amount o f water already present In
the soil, the water holding cpaclty of
the soil, and drainage characteristic.
An efficient watering wets only the
turfgrass rootzonc, docs not satu­
rate the soil, and docs not run off. A
simple watering schedule would be
to apply % inch of water two or
three tlms per week during the

let them know he Is coming.
What Is your thinking on this, Abb)'?
MINISTER’S W IFE
DEAR W IFE: I think everyone has the
right to know when a visitor Is coming
regardless o f who the visitor Is.
A visitor Is always more welcome
when the host or hostess has had an
oppoi luillty to prepare I could he wrong.
And If I am. I'm sure to hear from those
who take an opposing view.

DEAR ABBTt It's my turn to air my
gripe. 1am a single young woman who Is
a secretary. Where I work, whenever
someone leaves the company, we give
that person a little golng-away party.
This Involves punch, a cake, gift, etc.
Anyway. It's up to the secretaries to see
that the work gets done. This includes
collecting money for the cake, gift, etc.
There are 64 people In this office, and
about one-third o f the people here do not
donate a dime, but they are the ones who
take the biggest piece o f the cake and
have the largest signature on the card!
Today I tried to collect from the
penny-pinchers (after the party was
enjoyed by all) and got a lot o f sour looks
and excuses.
Any suggestions?
MONET COLLECTOR
DEAR COLLECTOR! Perhaps this is
one custom whose time has came — and
gone. Instead o f the entire office enjoying
a "golng-away" party for which a third
do not contribute, perhaps just the dose
friends o f the honored one could orga­
nise a no-host private luncheon. Suggest
tt.

Flagler
G raduate
Harold Wal t er
LcRoy Jr., has been
awarded a bachelor of
arts degree In recre­
ation ma na g eme nt
from Flagler College.
St. Augustine. He Is
the son o f Mr. and Mrs.
Harold LeRoy Sr. of
Sanford.

tradition at the school for
years, was postponed io
June 8.
The gamulct o f sack
races, relay races, balloon
bursts, biill tosses, etc.,
will kick off ut 9 a.m.
sharp and run until school
dismisses at the early hour
or 11:30 a.m.
Then on Thursday. June
9. at 9 a.m., kindergarten
through second grade will
receive their awards, and
on Friday. June 10 at 9
a.m.. grades 3 to 5 will be
honored. Parents arc In­

Mrs. Jo Ann Wllsonv-1
teacher at Geneva Ele^
mentary School, and h^r
husband were Involved tjp
an accident last week thdi
totaled the truck thby wci#
getting ready to trade. TWr,
Wilsons were not hospi­
ta li ze d. but both ai'e
"bruised and sore" an-j
cording to a source at ttybj
school, Mrs. Wilson has]
been resting at home since!
th e a c c l d e n t . S h e Is!
expected to return to worn
this week.
y

I
Americani George Herbo and Frink Samuelion in 1896
became the only two men in hiitory to row scroll the

ERNIE &amp; DAVE * * * *£ 5 5
ARE BACK IN
BUSINESS

i •

P.1L1]

ERNIE t MVE ARE BACK IN B U S IN E U ^ ^ ^ H S
WASHING HOUSES A TRAILERS AT^
REASONABLE RATES.

E R N II BAUM IISTER
FORMIRIV IN SUSINISS ION 17 Y U M

114 Plnecreit D rive, Sanford. F I

C A U 3 2 2 .7 6 B 2

H EAT P U M P BONUS

S P E C IA L

The regular monthly
meeting o f the Geneva
Citizens Association will
be held Monday. June 6 at
8 p.m., in the community
hall.
According to Mr. Arnold

Jtnt What Yaa Hava
Haaa Asking FarSavaral Styhs Ta
Ckaaaa tram la
Stiff 3/4 Ta i$

*21** Ta »24H
J u st A rriv ed

PERSONAL SLACKS
Fashion Colors
Sixes 6*20

U S S A V IN G B O N D S
J

ISO BOND WITH PUftCH Att O f M OB
tlOO BONO WITH PURCHASE O f 3BQF
OFFER ENDS JUNE 30, W j

//•you put off writing letters because
y OU don’t gnow wtun to say, send fat

Abby's complete booklet on letterwriting.

vited both days.

Your Neighborhood

flM M H M B a R N B M B S B E a R a a K

D o n 't let ou r unpredi ctabl e
Florida weather confuse you when It
conics to maintaining lawns and
dooryard plants, particularly In re­
gard to soil moisture.
Late winter and early spring rains
provided more than adequate sot]
moisture. No supplemental water
was required, and lawns were gen­
erally In excellent condition. The
rains abruptly stopped In late April
with no significant rain for over a
month.
In addition, the humidity has
been low and temperatures quite
warm which results In severe
moslturc stress If watering Is ne­
glected. This Is the main reason for
so many brown lawns at this time of

&lt;

�V -'

10A—Evtnlnq H tr iM , Sanford, FI.

Friday, M ay 77,1»I3

Dan Rather Testifies
In '60 Minutes'

Logoi Notice

legal Notice-

CLASSIFIED ADS

N O TIC E
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT IN AN D
T O T H E P U B LIC
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
N o lle * I t X r e b y g lv tn M a t a
F L O R ID A
P ub lic H earing w ill X X ld b y I X
CASE NO.) U-1M-CA-07-B
Planning and Zoning C om m ission In
F IR S T S T A T E S A V IN G S A N D
toe C ity Com m ission Room, C ity
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N O F O R ­
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1
H a ll, Sanford. F lx ld a a l 7:10 P .M .
LOS ANGELES (UPI) LA N D O .
x
Thursday.
J
u
x
1,
IT
U
to
c
o
n
s
ld
x
Newsman Dan Rather,
P la in tiff
I X follow ing change and am end
v l.
target of a $30 million
m e nl to toe Zoning O rdinance o l I X
THO M AS W. C O L L IE R , JR ., and
C ity o l Sanford, S a m lx la County,
slander suit filed by a
R H O N D A C O L L IE R ,
F lx ld a .
D efendant!
doctor linked to Insurance
S a n fo rd C ity C odi,, O rd in a n c e
N O TIC E O F SALE
1 :1 0 A . M . — 5 :3 0 P .M .
fraud in a ' ‘60 Minutes"
11077, Append I« A, A rtic le 10 E .
N O TIC E I t g ive n th at p u rtu a n l to
M O N D A Y th r u F R ID A Y
O il S tre e t P a rk in g In lh a SC-1,
segment, testified he was
the F in a l Judgm ent entered the 17th
S p tc la l C o m m e rc ia l O ls lr le l X
S A T U R D A Y f • N oon
certain the physician's
d a y o f M a y, l f t l In C iv il A ction No.:
am ended by c X n g ln g Section 10 (E )
n iU -C A P t-B . In the C irc u it C ourt
clinic "was phony from
as follow s:
In S em inole C ounty, F lo rid a . In
one end to the other."
IE ) O H -S tratt P a rtin g
w h ic h TH O M AS W. C O L L IE R . JR .
R equired o il-s tre e t p a rkin g spaces
and R H O N D A C O L L IE R are lha
Rather, who took the
shall X pro vided a t M l fo rth In
D e fe n d a n t!, a n d F IR S T S TATE
witness stand Thursday,
A rtic le V I X r e o t, eacepl I X I x
S AVIN G S A N D LO A N ASSOCIA
CBS "60 Minutes" pro­
o il street p e rkin g * X I I X re q uire d
TIO N O F O R LA N D O I t the P la ln lltl,
l x co m m e rcia l u m s w ith 1.000 sq. It.
I w ill M il to lha h lg h e tt and b e t!
ducer Don Hewitt and the
x le u ta le * area lx * le d w ith in 000
b ld d x l x c a th In lha lobby a t the
s e g m e n t's p ro d u c e r,
feet o l a city-ow ned p a rkin g lot.
o a it door o l the Seminole Conty
The P la n n in g A Z o nin g C o m ­
Stephen Glauber, are de­
C ourthouM In Sanford, F lo rid a a l
m ission w ill subm it a recom m enda­
fendants In the suit filed
11:00 a .m . on the 14th day of June,
tion to I X C ity C o m m ission s la v x
IN 3 . th e fo llo w ing d e tcribe d ree l
by.Dr. Carl Galloway, who
o l, x against, I X requested change
p ro p e rty M l fo rth In the F in a l
claims he was defamed In
x am endm ent. T X C ity C om m ission
Jud g m e n t:
•
w ill X ld a P ublic H earing In I X C ity
LO N E LY ?
Lot I f o l G R IF F IN WOODS, C ity
the disputed 1979 seg­
C o m m liilo n Room In the C ity H a ll,
24Hr. Recorded Message.
o l C e tM lb e rry , Sem inole County.
D a n R a th e r
ment, "It’s No Accident.”
Sanford, F lx ld a a t 7:00 P.M . on
__________ 1113 273 0021__________
F lo rid a . X c o rd in g lo I X p la l thereof
During the "60 Minutes" report, which was shown to a t recorded In P la t Book 24, Page 47, J u x T3, 170) to consider M id rscom
m
endalion.
the Superior Court jury earlier In the trial, Rather held P ub lic R ecord* of S e m ix le County,
AM p a rlie s In Interest and c lllie n s
up' a phony treatment report obtained by a CBS DF Ai xTIda.
Shall have on op po rtun ity to X heard
E D th lt lllh d e y o f M a y, 1753
a t said hearings.
undercover operative and said It was signed by (S E A L )
L O S T M e n ’ s S n e k t R in g In
B y x d e r o f I X P la nn ing and
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H , JR .
B sham a J x ' s . Sunday n ig h t
Galloway, who once worked at the clinic under
Zoning Com m l** l x o l I X C ity o l
C lx k
S/22. Rew ard. *04 143 0*42.
Investigation.
Sanlord. F lo rid a th is 4th day o l M ay,
o f tha C irc u it C o x t
tin .
“From the time we went there to the time we left there
B y : E lt e n x F. B uratto.
J.Q. G allow ay,
Deputy
Clerk
was no doubt that this was Dr. Galloway’s office and his
C X irm a n
P u b llth M a y 10,17, IN 3
medical clinic and that It was phony from one end to the DEH-117
C ity o f Sanlord
New O lllc t now opening.
Planning and Z x ln g
other." Rather testified.
VO R W ERK
C
o
m
m
lts
lx
E O F IN T E N T IO N TO REOII2 0 W . 1st St
"•There was no doubt In my mind that this clinic was a NIITOETIC
Publish
M
a
y
13,77,17*3
R F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
phony specializing In turning out phony medical TO W HO M IT M A Y CONCERN:
D E H -75
reports, and that we had one signed by the doctor."
N o lle * I t hereby given th a t I X
u n d e r l i n e d , p u r t u a n l lo lh a
Rather said.
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
" F lc lllio u t Nam e S le tule,” Chapter
O F TH E E IG H T E E N T H
Galloway testified earlier his signature was forged.
•45.07, F lx id e S tatute*, w ill re g ltto r
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
C hild C ar* In m y home.
Rather said he also felt certain the story was accurate w ith t X County C om ptro lle r, In and
IN A N O F O R
D a lly and w ee kly rales
l x S e m ix le C ounty, F lx id e . upon
because another CBS operative had gone to an attorney receipt
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY. F L O R ID A
__________ C all I I I 0250.__________
o l proof o l I X pu blica tio n o l
CASE NO. 13-1II3-CA-1J-K
Involved In the scam and was given a card with the t h lt n o tic e , th e llc llt lo u t nam e,
Child C ara In m y home. Age 3 A up
J U D IT H B. H AR RIS,
Mon F rl. D ays x l y . e #nc#d ya rd
attorney's name on one side and Galloway's on the to w it :
P la in tiff,
____________
3314377.___________
I.C .A . H O LD IN G C O M PAN Y, a
other.
—vs—
N ew J e r u y g e n e ra l p e rtn e rth lp
Reasonable
R a to tlll. W ill keep
"1 had taken It that the card screed as a signal to the under w hich It Intend* to engage In JA C K R. HUDSON. SR . a lto
your C hild In m y home, fro m
know n a* JA C K R . HUDSON.
lawyer from the doctor that this woman (the CBS b u t l x t t o t Lake E m m a Road. Lake
M F. 0:00 5PM . 122 7427.
Defendant.
ry , S e m ix le County, F lx ld a .
operative} can become one of our. quote, victims." he M aThat
W ill babysit c h ild re n in m y home
NO TIC E OF AC TIO N
I X p a rtia l In te re tle d In ta ld
TO : JA C K R. HUDSON. SR., a lto
ages Infant fa 4 y rt. C oll X to re
said.
b u tln e tt e n te rp rlM are a t fo llo w *:
know n a t JA C K R. HUDSON, and
7PM 322 2030.
On his way to lunch. Rather refused for the second
G A B R IE L W ARSHAW SKY
A L L O T H E R S W H O M IT M A Y
IL
A
N
K
R
E
IT
N
E
R
consecutive day to answer reporters* questions, saying.
CONCERN.
Dated a t F o rt Lee. Bergen County,
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D lh a l an
"My court testimony will speak for me. I hope you'll New
J e rM y th lt 10th day o l M ay.
action to quiet tltla to t X follow ing
understand."
ll* 3
p r o p e r ty In S e m in o le C o u n ty .
I.G .A . H O LD IN G CO M PAN Y
F lx ld a :
a New J e rM y g e x r e l
* * * * 3 » U 3 I* * * a
LOT » . BLOCK 13. NORTH O R ­
p e rtn e rth lp
F x S w im m ing I n lx m o t lx .
LAN D O FIR ST A D D IT IO N , a c e x d
^_ _ _ J*cM e C *o » o _ _ ^_
B y : / l / G A B R I E L
Ing to I X P la t I X re o t r x x d e d In
W ARSHAW SKY,
P la l Book 12. Pages 23 and 14, P ub lic
G eneral P artner
R e c o rd * o l S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
B y :/* / IL A N K R E IT N E R ,
(OCD) John B. Lancaster to
F lx ld a .
E * t of Lot 25to A W IS’ o t 17, Town ol
G
eneral
P
a
r
t
x
r
V irg in ia J. Lancaster, Lo t I t . B lk B.
Long wood, t U . r o
X * been tile d a g a lm l you and you
P
u
b
llth
M
a
y
I
I
.
10.17
1
J
u
x
3.1753
Laka K athryn P ark 5th Addn. (100.
are required to serve a copy o l your
The Spring* to M ich ae l A . Chlap
DEHM
C lifford D. Jordan. Ind. &amp; T r. to p e n t. Sgl.. Lot I I . W oodbrldge at lha
w ritte n defense*, it any, to It x J.
KEYES UCCNSE EXAM SCHOOL
Donald E. Straughan 1 w t C onitanca Spring*. Un. 111,511.100
DON F R IE D M A N o l F R IE D M A N l
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
N eel I week evening classes tor
i R ichard M . G ilm o rt, T r. B, rapt,
F R IE D M A N . P .A ., P la in t iff* a t­
F a m o u i Recipe F r. Ch. o l Senl.,
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY, F LO R ID A
Real E state License w ill begin
p a rt of N orth O rlando F irs t A Jnd l x . to Robert G. S ullivan A W f
to rney*. whoso address I* 127 W e il
C A IE N O .U -m t-C A -O f-E
J u x 4. 17*1. F x t u l l l x re im ­
Addn. 1500
C hurch Avenue. Longwood. F L 31750,
M e rgu erette. Lot IH 1 4 0 . Sanford
C IR C U IT C IV IL
b u rs e m e n t In lo r m a tllo n c a ll
C liffo rd Jordan. Ind. A T r. to H eight Addn, ( le tip e r tl. lio o
x x X f x e J u x 7,1713, and Ilia I X
U S H OM E F IN A N C E CORPORA
M lld re d S . Wang 123 3200
Donald E. Straughan A w t Con
x l g i x l w ith t X C lerk o l th l* C ourt
C reig M a te ltlt A W f C r lt to J a m e t
TIO N , a D elaw are C x p x e lio n .
ita n c t. T r. A. r tp l. pa rt o l No. O rl. O. H ill, Lo t 7, B lk F, S um m e rtel
P la in tiff e lt h x X f x e service x P la in t iff*
l i t and In d Addn. SHO
N orth. Sec. I. *15.000
a t t x x y x Im m e dia tely t x r e a l t x ;
v t.
C liffo rd Jordan, Ind. A T r. to
o lX rw Is e a default w ilt X x le r e d
J a m e t A . E d ito n J r A W t B arbara
BAR R YA PEEPER,
R ichard M . G ilm ore T r. C. R tp l
to A lb e rt J . N ettlero de A W f Re­
O elendenl against you f x I X re lie l dam ended
P art o l N orth O rl. l i t A In d Adn. becca, F rom SE c o r. of G ovt. Lo t J.
In t X C om plaint or P e lf llx .
N O TIC E OF SALE
ssoo.
D A T E D x M a y 3.17*3
F x Sale o r Lease. R estaurant fu lly
S x . 14 I t I f etc. 5 x r e t m /l, tlt.o o o
N o tic e I t h e re b y g iv e n th a t,
M a rk la fo m a ro A w t D etwrah to
IS E A L I
(OCD) G raham D H u tto n A W l
p u rtu a n l to I X O rd e r o r F in a l
equipped. Seats 100. P rim e tocaDonald O. la fo m a ro A w t G anaviavt. M a rce lla to G raham D. H utton A W f
AR TH U R H. B E C K W IT H . JR
Judgm ent entered In th lt ceuM , in
t l x . In S a n lx d . 123 5454.
E '« of Lot t , Seminole Garden*. M a rce lla , Le t I t . Long wood. 1100
C
tork
o
l
t
X
C
irc
u
it
C
ourl
I X C irc u it C o x t o l S e m ix le County,
^ ^ ^ r m x d la te O c e u g a n e j^ ^ ^
14,000.
B
y
:
P
a
tricia
Robinson
(O CD I Thornet A. W h itt to ThomF lx id e . I w ill M il t X pro pe rty
Vinton H. Lassiter A w f N orm a D
A * Deputy Clerk
a t W hite, T ru ite e , F ro m NE c o r. ol
tlfu e le d In S e m ix le County. F lx id e .
to Paul A. H tthcock A w f C arol A .. S Sac. la 21-30 ate.. S100
Publish M ay 4.13. 20.27,17*1
d e tcrib e d a t:
I I ch. o l W 10 ch. o l W U of SWU ol
D E H 52
M a rk
S chllta
to
Carm en
Lot 7, B lx k C. O AKC REST, ec
a t I t l t X . Wt.OOO
Stolgelm an A A u g u t 'lx G u tie rre i.
c o rd in g to th e p la t th e re o f, a t
LEG ALAO
D a v e i l x . to B ruce M . F u rino A Lot 17. B lk A . M obile M a no r In d S x .,
rerecorded in P la t Book 13. P aget 47
TH E BO AR D O F
BUSINESS W A N T E D B y x &lt; v a t*
w t Rodin L. Lot 1A . R cplat ol
11/44 al, 57.500
and 40. o l I X P ub lic R o c x d t ol
COUNTY
C OM M ISSIO NERS
P arty. A ny s m a ll business e x Springdale tat,tOO.
E m o ry G. P u te y to M a rth a P utay,
S e m ix le County. F lx ld a .
tld e rtd . W ill p a y up to 30 K
C O U N TY O F S E M IN O LE
M a r. l x . to O aford Dev. Corp., Lot 15 A E 7V o l I t , B lk B. W ett
at public ta le , to I X h lg h e tt and b e t!
S e p a ra te se a le d b id * lo r th e
Down. Good te rm s , x X la n c t.
pa r. A : th at p a rt ot W 1*J' of E U of A ltam onte H it S x . 5.1100
b ld d x . l x c a th , at I X fro nt door ol
L im ite d D em oll t l x o f I X S e m ix le
W rite P o tt O ffice Boe 111 San
NEVA A E J I . f o f SWWof N E U So. of
1QCO) Peggy H. R yboil to A rlan
I X S e m ix le County C ourlhouM In
C o u n ty S e rv ic e * B u ild in g (O ld
I x d F la / 32772 O K I. A ll inquires
L k H ow ell L n .. In Sec I t 11-10 et al. R. R e x her A Hb. W illia m J ., to Int:
S a n lx d , F lx ld a . at IIC u A M ., on
S e m ix le M e m o ria l H ospital). FC-4J,
w l l l X answered.
tlOMOON U o f SWU of N E U S x . 7*1112.
J u x 14.17*3.
w ill X received In I X office ol
Hagan H ornet Inc., to D a v id B. 1100
(S E A L)
P u rc X tin g . 2nd F lo x , R o u m llla t
O iv jn A w f M a ry S. Lot a ]. Grove
A r t h x H B eckw ith, J r
(QCO) Don N ew tom A Kathleen to
B uilding. 100 E . F irs t S lreel. San­
Estates. S7l,*C0
C lx k ot I X C irc u it C o x t
J a m e t L. Thom e* A Deida R „ S
lx d . FI. m i l u n til 1:00 P .M .. I x a l
EAJ H ornet l x . to D avid B. Ol ton t i a f f ot N 140' of Sto o l N Vi of N W U
B y : E le e n x F. B x a tto
tim e . W e d x td a y . J u x 21. 1703: at
A w f M a ry , L o t I I : F ro m SE cor. of o l S E U o f S x . lt 20-31. %100
Deputy C lx k
w hich tim e and dala b id * w ill X
Lot U7 B lk D. D. R. M lfc h e llt Survey
P u b llth M a y 10.17.1753
W * P A Y c a sh lo r I t l A In d
C om m unity H ornet Co. E tc. to
p u b licly opened and read aloud. Lale
o l M o te t E Levy G ra n t 1/5 e ft., Ju d ith Borgallo, Sgl.. Lot 41,
D EH 111
m o rtg a g e s . R a y L e g g , L ie
b id * w ill X returned unopened to
tu u o o .
^ to r tja je ^ r o k e r N O IJ tT ^ ^ ^
F a irw a y O e k t et D e x Run F lr t t
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT,
Sam# A t Above *■ L t ao B a rc la y
Rep . t f 7.000
IN A N D FOR
A b id bond In an am ount o l x t less
Wood*, t e l .ooo
W llh e lm in a C. M e riw ether. W ld to
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY, FLO R IO A
than five percent (5% ) of I X to ta l
A m a rl F lr t l Dev. to C atalina
L o ll M . Sloan. -to In t: Beg 2124 3' ot
CASE NO. I3-I54-CA-07-P
bid am ount shall accom pany each
Hornet l x . . L o ft I S. A 0. D oer Run
N o f SW cor. of S E U etc., S x
SOUTHEAST B A N K . N A .,* tc .
b idd er's proposal B id s e cu rity m ay
U n .IIA . 145.000.
20-17 I t . 1100
AA A E M P L O Y M E N T
P la in tiff,
X 'n lha I x m o l cashier's check
W ingfield D ev. fo R aym ond C.
RCA fo T h o m a t E. Siabo A W f
DISCOUNT F E E
TE R M S
vs
made payable to I X Board ot C o x ty
Johnaon A W f Anna T , Lo t 15. C indy. L o f 14, B lk H. Hidden Lake
1717 FR EN CH A V E .
122 517*
LE O N A R D R. F R A Z IE R , a /k /a L.
C o m m ls ilo x rs , S e m ix le C o x ty ; x
Un 1C, 544,300
W in gfield N orth , ta t ,000
RUSSELL FRAZIER ,- S Y LV IA C
GAS A T T E N D A N T . Good salary,
a b id bond w ith Surety satisfa cto ry
F rederick L . P a rk e r A W f Janice
• a t A ire H ornet, l x . to Denial J.
F R A Z IE R , a / k /a S Y L V A N IA C.
h o t p lla llt a llo n . I w eek p a id
to I X C o x ty . A c o m b in a llx o l any
Law ton, J r. A W f P a tric ia A ., Lof 257
to John 6 Shaw A W f S ylvia. Lo t 1U
F R A Z IE R , h it w ilt , at al.
v a c a llx every 4 m x l h t F x
o l I X Ix m e r I t x l acceptable, bid
Wefclva H unt Club. Fox H unt Sac. I . Bal A ire H lllt, Un. 1.544.500
In to r m a llx . C a ll 12 1 1441 X
D tto n d x ts
g u ara nty s X II X In a tin g le , accept
ta t.to o
George W. D a rro w A W l Dianna lo
tween 7 5 P M __________________
AMENDED
able In s tru m x t. T X C o x ty w ill
R ic h a rd W. P o tt A W f M a rg a re t, Lof
Bienvenldo R iv e ra A w f M a rla to
N O TIC E OF AC TIO N
accept only such surety com pany x
A
ir.
C x d . In s ta lle tlx D uct and
I I W tk lv a H unt C lub. Foe H unt, S x .
B le n w n td o R ive ra J r., tg l , Lot I I
TO : Leonard R. F ra ile r a /k /a L.
com panies a * a ra a u th o rli* d to w rite
Service technicians. Sharp x l y .
\,mm
li e u W l l ’ l A a ll a f II . B lk 50.
R u tt e ll F r a ile r : a n d S y lv ia C
bonds o l such ch a ra cte r a id am ount
XS410 2211.704 775 7271.
Sanigndo The Suburb B ea utiful.
H . M ille r A Son* to John W . Tiger
F r a i ix . a /k /a S ylvanla C. F ra ito r.
u n d e r lh a la w s o l I X State ot
A W f F rance*, Lot 50 T u tk e w llla
P a lm Spring* Sac.. S77J00.
h it w ife , 2404 N x d u u t Avanua.
F lx ld a , and a t are acceptable lo t X
P oint. 574.400
J rim D u m a to B room H oute. l x ,
San lo rd. F lx ld a
L e g a l N o tic e
County,
A lb e rt L . G ate*. J r., eta I to
U n .f IM A Splngwood V III. Cond .
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D 1X1 an
N O T E : Bids m ust a lto Include
M e rle n d Spicher A W f L ith e M . Lot
MS.
a c tio n t o f o r e c lo ie m o r tg a g e
evidence o l paym ent and p e r lx
IN TN E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
s e n t . Un. 1150, D e ttln y S pring*. 444. Spring O a k t Un. V . 444 000
pursuant to p r o m lu x y
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY. F L O R ID A .
m in c e bonding ca p a b ility fro m an
Irw
in
J
.
Jaeger
to
F
.
Duane
m ortgage ha * been M M again t l you,
S17,
acceptable suraly and c e rtifica te s ol
F R O B A T I D IV IS IO N
Turney A R ichard, T r u t te at, to In f;
B ld r i , l x . to Brandon
and you are re q uire d to t e r v t a espy
Insurance equal to x aaceadlng
F fto N w m b x IM tf
NW
o
f
N
E
U
o
f
N
W
U
S
x
.
17-11-11.
S trik fu ro t. l x Lot 12, The Spring*.
o f y o x w ritte n defam e*. II any, to II
D ivision P r e X t*
a m o u n t c a lle d lo r u n d e r th e
5100
W hR pering P in e*. Sac. Tw o. SI5I.000
on P la in t iff* A tto rne y, Raym ond J.
IN R E : ESTATE OF
specifica tio n*. Upon aw ard. t X sueIrw
in
J.
J
a
e
g
x
to
F.
Duane
F
O rl. fo J anie L . W lllla m to n .
R otolle. whose address l i Post O fllc *
C A R R IE M A E O L IV E R ,
c a ts fu l b ld X r w ill X re q uire d to
Sgi Un. i n . W in dw ard S q . Sac. Turney A R ichard Jaeger, T ru tto o t,
Baa 111, O rlando, F lx ld a 0 (1 1 , on x
D tc * # t* d
execute paym ent and pe rform an ca
to
Inic
SWU
o
f
S
E
U
o
f
S
x
.
411-31A
Tw . I I L M
before J u x 30, io n , and to f l i t I X
NO TIC E OF A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
bonds, each In t X am ount of 100
E
to
o
f
W
f*
o
f
Sto
o
f
N
to
o
f
S
E
U
of
H w a rd I. W ilto n A W f V iv ia n to
x l g i x l w ith I X C la rk o f t o ll C ourt
T X a d m ln is tr a llx o l to e estate af
p tre a n t o l t X to tal b id a m o x t. Bond
R or ltd M . M c E lm u rry A W F E laine. S x . A l l 11,5100
e lt h x b a fo rt tx v lc e on P la in tiff*
C A R R IE M A E O L IV E R , deceased.
I x m * w ill X H - r n lt X d b y I X
A tto rn e y x im m o d le to ly th e re a fte r;
F ile N um ber d 077. Is pending In toe
C o x ty and x l y those I x m * w ill X
o th x w lM a d e fa u lt w ill bo antorad
used
C irc u it Court f x Sam lnoia C o x ty ,
L e g a l N o tic e
L o g o i N o tic e
a g a lm l you l x toe ra iia f d a m a nd id
F lo r id a , P ro b a ta D iv is io n , th a
As lim a Is e l to * essance. It I*
In tX C o m p la ln l.
address of w hich Is Sam lnoia County,
expected I X I aw a rd I lf aw ardad)
F lx ld a , Sanford, F lx ld a 33771.T X
W ITN ESS M Y H A N D A N D SEAL
w ill X m a X x Tuesday. J u x I t .
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
IN T N E C IR C U IT COURT O F T N I
names and addresses X to# personal
O F TH IS C O URT, On I X 25th day of
I l l ] a t I X re g u la r Board o l C o x ty
OP T H E E IG H T E E N T H
E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
re p re s e n ta tive 's a t t x x y a ra w l
Com m ission m eeting
M ay, t f f l
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N TY.
to rto X le w .
(S E A L)
Specifications w ill X a va ila b le a t
f ■ fU N O L C C O U N TY, F L O R ID A
F L O R ID A
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , JR .
A ll interested p e r i x t ara req uire d
Of J u x I, 17*1. o l I X O ffice of I X
C d A c fto a N *.: M -IH 7-C A-07-L
C IV IL AC TIO N NO. (1 -im -C A -M - E
to file w ith th is c o x t . W IT H IN
p ro je c t a rc h ite c t, H elm an, H urle y
C lark of lh a C ourt
F IR T F ID E L IT Y SAVIN G S A N D
IN R E i T H E M A R R IA G E OF
B Y : Eva C rab tree
T H R E E M O NTHS O F TH E F IR S T
C h e rv il Peacock / A rch ite ct s, Suite
LOA I ASSO CIATIO N, ale.,
K C R Y A N A G R ITTA N 1,
M DosH/ty Ctorfc
P U B LIC A T IO N O F TH IS N O T IC E ;
101, 1155 Louisiana A vanua, W ln tor
___
P la in tiff.
P etitio ne r
P a rk . F I. a m (305444 24541 up
( I) t i l c la im * a g a lm l toe estate and
P u b llth M a y 17 and J i n 1. 10. 17,
(1) x y o b ls c llx b y x Inte rested
IW 3
deposit o f 1100.00 p x sot, w ith p a rtia l
R O * R T F . S C H IF F E R . a t a l.,
G IO V A N N I G R IT T A N I,
p e r t x to w hom N ils notice was
OEM 157
ro tu n d o l *4000 p x com plete sot
m a ile d to o l challen ge * to * v a lid ity of
r e tu rn e d u n m a rk e d (re u s a b le ).
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N
N O T IC E TO T H E P U B L IC
N O T IC E OF AC TIO N
I X w ill, to * q u a lific a tio n s o l too
S pecifications ora ava ila b le to r re ­
T l i R O B E R T F . S C H IF F E R and
YOU A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
TO :
personal representative, venue, x
view x l y in toe O ffic e X P u rch e tB A I IA R A A N N S C H IF F E R a/fc/e
M a t on lh a IM h d a y o f June, io n . a f
G IO V A N N I G R IT T A N I
I x t s d lc t lx o tto * court.
B A I U U U A . S C H IF F E R
7:00 p .m , a f C ity H a ll In to # CJfy o f
V IA R O M A IIT R I T T O I
X o C o x ty reserves toe rig h t to
A L L C LA IM S . D EM AN D S. A N D
Rl H D E N C E : U N KNO W N
Sanford. F lx ld a . to o C ity C ouncil af
B A R I, IT A L Y
O BJEC TIO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
re je c t x y x a ll bids w ith x w ithout
Y | J A R E N O T IF IE D
C ity a f Santordi F lx ld a , w ill
YOU A R E H E R E IV N O T IF IE D
cause, to w aive te ch nicalitie s, x to
B E FO R E V E R B A R R E D
actk i to faradaaa a f
conduct a p u b lic he arin g r ega rd in g
th a t a 'P e title n N r Dtoaafutian a l
P u b llc a t lx o l th is N o lle * has
accept I X b id w hich In Its lu d g e m x l
(o lii r in g p r a p x t y in S a m lx la
lu w e nca o f If* F irs t M ortgage
M a rria g e has bean Ilia d age to il you
X g x x M a y lf. lfO .
t o s t s e rve s ih e In ltr s s t a t t X
Com y , F lx ld a ,
' '
al
an d th a t yea ana re q u ire d to t a r t * a
Personal R tp rts e n ta lly * :
C o x ty . Cost o f s u b m lllo l of Ih is b id
U U . B la ck A . S P R E A D IN G O A K
capy a f y ear w ritte n d e ten te*. M any,
O W EN P IT T M A N , J R .
I* considered x opera I i x a l cost of
V IL ACC. T H E SPR IN G S, a w a rd
J u n e l , i n i . In th e a g g re g a te
I t a n F R A N K L . S C H IA V O .
403 A u lln Avenue,
too b ld d x and shall not X passed x
mg lh a p ia tR w ra e fa e record ed In
p c f c f lM an tau M a t I 4 N M O , the
A ffa rn e y to r F a H lio n x . tt E .
s o x borne b y to t C o x ty .
O viedo, F lx ld a
p i # S a a k i i . P a g e d f . P u b lic
A
41
S lra at, O rlande. F le rM a am 1, i
A n o-------m fy a-WP erson* o r * advised th at, If they
R a i r d f a f S e m in a l# C e v n fy .
S a w to M * *
R e to rt June IBOto. N O , an d Hk
decide
to
appeal
x
y
decision
m
e
*
P
ersonal
R epresentative:
Fk
Ti
a rfg to a l wHh lh a C N tk d M a C ou rt
a t t o ll m e e tin g /h e a r ing. th ey w ill
HARVEY M A L P E R
hat
i - - --------------------,
PI PPinWrl
U S E a st le m e r x l l v d ,
naod a re c o rd a f toe proceedings,
1to s e n * a copy a f yaur KWr MTV ■nrtll
acquU itton. c a m tru ctia n .
a re a lto r, afharw toa a
A lterna nts Springs, F I 12701
and. to r such purpose, they m a y
M any, to M an
•
l
i
h a aatora d agatoaf m
Tetephons: (305)134 *11)
need to x s u r a lh a l a ve rb a tim
P A l$ . H . BO W EN . Swann A "
riv in g la c ilit y to
r a lto l dem a nd ed in it
P uuilsh M ay 27 and June 3, M. U .
re c o rd a f toe p roceed ings Is m o d i,
F .A ., P la in t iff's a tto rn e y ,
IV ■
w h ic h re c o rd includes toe te stim o ny
g ad d ra a t N F O . “
m W m Wt M V r ltC f MU P W rp e n and o v ld x to upon w hich toe appeal
W ITN ESS m y ha nd an d the te a l a t
D E H 155
______ i. F la rto a JMU as
I
H
ig
h
w
a
y
IM
J
.
In
toe
d t C ou rt an MiN lh a I i to d a y o f
is to X based
i to * M a d da y a l Juna. H t t and
C
ity
a
l
San
lo
rd
.
F
lo
rid
a
.
A
t
the
M ay, IN I.
J a A m B lack m x . C P M
t i a a r t g t o a iw t m ih a a x k a f t o N
lh a C tfy C ouncil o f to e C ity
(S E A L )
P urchasing D irecto r
o
t
ta
n
k
,
F
lo
rid
a
,
w
ill
cam
l
d
x
a
F IC tIT IO U S M A M I
A R T H U B H . B E C K W IT H , JR .
O ffic e o t Purchasing
N oftca is hereby g ive n to o t I a m
A * C la rk a l lh a C ou rt
M d F lo o r. W E . Firms S tra ti
engaged k i b u t l x t t a f I I I J asm l x
B Y : C yn th ia P ra e to r
Sanford. P I.H 7 7 I
R ? ., C a s s e lb e r r y , F la . 1 * 7 *7 .
tirin g la c ility w ill
A * O opufy C la rk
1105) m 0 3 * . E lf . 141
Sam lnoia County, F lx ld a x d x to e
ra o p a rtfy a n d w a lla ra
F u A M i M a y l A » 1 7 A Jim a JL H B
P ub lish M a y 77.17*}
f l r t l ile u s nam e o f H A Y W O R LD and
a f F lo rid a a n d i n
a l lh a
O
E
M
in
W NESS m y I
-to a t I Iflttn d to r a g is tx Mdd na m e
d t o u t liv in g can
w r t a n M lf W R L IN B
w ith to * d a r k a f lb * C irc u it C o w l,
it o R ttS to to a f
ISC L)
lo m tn o li C ounty, F lo r id * m * c w ho w ilt * * ! to
fto A * . A rty l
lU ^
Nu |i J
A T H U R R B E C K W IT H . JR .
rdanca w ith to * g r e v M M a f M e
C l [R K O F T H E C O U R T
F ld iito u * N a m * Stafutos. to a d ti
toaNaad.
C yn IN a P ra e to r
Sect ton W M F lo rid a S tatutes H » .
H .N . T a m m , J r..
Tham aaT. F o rg u a x
I M a y &gt;7 and A m i A to, 17.
P ub lish M a y V oM M m l to. &lt;7,
1m s *
* w
D E H I5 J
O C il M
• - H ia l

Seminole

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

Orlando • Winter Park
8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

RATES

1 t i n e .......................54c o
ico n M cu tlvR tlm H . 54c b lint
1 consecutive flints.. 44c a lint
10 consecutive timts 43c a lint
&gt;1.00 Minimum
3 L ln ti Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
Ntonday-5:30 P.M. Friday

21-Personals

23—Lost 4 Found

25—Special Notices

27—Nursery A
Child Care

31—Private
Instructions

REALTY TRANSFERS

33-R eal Estate
Courses

55—Business
Opportunities

57—Opportunities
Wanted

63—Mortgages Bought
A Sold

71—Help Wanted

\

JSSsar-

O w cijm ci

71-Help Wonttd
A P P T . SETTERS
A g g re s sive , good phone v oice,
bubbly pe rso na lity. W * w ill tra in .
S alary plus co m m listo n .
s e v e r a l I m m e d ia t e ly . C a ll
JoAnn. 322 7774.___________
A U T O M E C H A N IC S F u ll tim e ,
high wages, w ith x w ith ou t tools
O .K. *27-4074.
Body M a n -m in im u m 5 years t x x
rle n c e . Im m e d ia te o p e n ln g O sLand A rea. D ay 7047300073.
nigh ts 305 574 1777.
Bookkeeper/S ecretary. P a rt lim a .
I p a r t x o lllc t , e xpe rien ce d,
references. C all 123-4720.
Boys A G irls Ages l i l t E a rn e x tra
t u r n this sum m er C all 327 4474
ask f x P rls c lll* ._______________
C A B IN E T M A K E R S . E X P E R
L a m l x l x t , Assem blers.
Countertop, H ard w a re. 137-3741,
CASH IER S A C LE R K S F u ll A p a rt
lim a openings, good pay scales,
x experience x c c e s s a ry .
____________ 427-4074.____________
Com pan i x to c a r* l x e ld e rly lady.
L ive In pre ferre d, room A board.
s a la ry. Ask to r T im 471-1710.
C O VER G IR L M O D E L TY P E S
(O ver I I ) No E xperience Neces­
sary. F R E E T R A IN IN G
C ali
D iana Hansen a l 111*) 145 3000 x
W rite : COVER G IR LS , N A K E D
C IT Y , Box 2000. R OSELAW N,
IN 44177 0301.__________________
Custodian' w x k x . P a rt lim a , day
position, experienced In c la x in g
o fllc # areas A m a n u fa ctu rin g
p la n ts . C a ll P s r s o n x l D ept.
121-3100. E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity
E m p lo ye r. __________
D AYC AR E Im m e d ia te openings,
lu ll A port lim a available, good
s ta rlin g p e r 427 4074.
FAC TO R Y W O R KERS Im m e dia te
openlgs. high wages. Some w ill
tra in . C all 427 4074.

M A N IN 40 *
To X lp clean upstairs p x c h .
1710414.
Need e x tra Income. We need you.
C all f x co m p u te d # t* lli.
____________ 2271I5S.____________ _
N E E D E X T R A INCOM E?
W H Y NOT S E L L A V O N !
________ 222-7457 221 1725._________

NEWHOMESALESMAN
Need Im m edately in D eltona. W ork
fro m M odel H orn*, d ire c tly I x
bu ild e r. D lra c t knowledge and
•x p a rla n c e o l F H A fin a n cin g
required. L ib e ra l c o m m ls tto n t
(d ra w possible). Phone 704-7)0
0151 x 305 574 5*70 ash to r M r. C.
O FFIC E H E L P Several p o ll I tons,
fu ll A p a ri d m * openings a v a il­
able now. W ill fu lly tra in . 427
4074.__________________________
O FFIC E H E L P F u ll tim e , m any
openings, good ita rtin g pay- C all
im m e dia tely 427-4074,____________
O ffice H elp Im m s d la to openings,
no experience w ill tra in .
____________ 117 4404.____________
O lder wom en to liv e In. Room and
board Ira * In exchange f x look­
ing a fte r 4 to I c h ild ra n liv e days
a week. Weekends fra *. Lake
M a ry area. HI-0411_____________
P a rt Tim a. W omen and M en. W x k
tra m home x telephone pro
gra m . E arn S2J. to 5100 p x
week.depending x tim e a v a il
able. 277-5100.__________________
P a rt T im *. N ights and weekends.
A ttendant. A le rt. In tellig ent ind!
v ld u a t needed to look a lte r
am usem ent center In t X S a n lx d
P la ta . M ust X neat in appear
a n c t, m a tu re , b o n d a b lt, and
have m echanical a b ility . Phon*
to r appointm ent MI-4701.________
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D h a t
m a n y |o b t available.
Both te m p o ra ry and fu ll tim e.
C all today 122 5*47
R E T IR E D C A B IN E T M A K E R
To do s m a ll re p a irs x A ntique
Stool. 122 0414,__________________
Roofing S h in g ltrib y t X
square. Deltona area
___________ 121 7501.____________
T r a c tx T ra ile r D riv e r I x local
p ick up w x k . M in im u m o l 1 y rt.
experience w ith good d riv in g
record . Soma D ock w x k r e ­
q u ite d . C all Stan S X w 122 0251
I x appointm ent.
TR U C K D R IV E R S Local A long
X u l p o s it ix i. H ig h wages. C all
today *27 *074.__________________
T Y P IS T 50WPM E xperienced In
da ta x t r y , m e d ica l, p x s l x ,
p ro fit s X rln g . U nited S o lv rn ti
121 1400._______________________
W a itre s s e s A h o s te s s *! Some
e xpe reln c* pre ferre d. A p p ly In
p x i x H olida y In n 14 A St. Rd
W AREHOUSE W O R KERS M any
o p x ln g i. lu ll tim e , good s ta rtin g
pay. C all Im m e d ia te ly 417 4074

W O R K FIN D ER S INC.
IN D IV ID U A L IZ E D TER M S

FAST FOOD O PE R ATIO N
W ill tra in . E xcelle nt sala ry and
X x l i l t . F x In lo rm a tito n C all
123 3444. X tw e e n O I.

H * v * you trie d to c a ll us and I X
lin t X l been b u t y l W ell, w e've
b e x b u ty l But we now have
m ore lines to serve you X tto r .
E n|o y y o u r M t m x la l D ay H oti
day. as w * w ill also and X sura
to w atch M onday's paper tor
some o l ou r super job listings.

F ile M a in te n a n c e C le rk w ith
pleasant pe rso na lity, desired to r
Sales C o m p a n y. A c c u ra c y a
m ust. T ypin g X lp fu l. Telephone
Lind a. 322-1443 F x appointm ent.
F u ll lim e P lu m X r experienced
x l y , pe r ta rre d licensed C all
***♦ 447____________
.

H ELP W A N TED
C O R R ESPO N DEN T liv in g In I X
W in te r Springs-law to
are a to w rite a w eek!
f x The H era ld Irens your heme
a b lia l u a n la wi
In ugwqge
u in vutrt
PMtoRIISAJisi
w^^toeai
fit weed■# ■
m in i have
X a
a H a ir I
ay# X news. C all D arts D ie tric h
a lte r 3 PM . d a lly . 122 2*11.
H O U S E K E E P E R f x A pa rtm e nt
com plex, m u tt X dependable,
a n d h a rd w o rk in g , a p p ly In
p e r tx I to lP M .M F .
_________ 1505 W 23th SI._________
House parent needed l x C h ristia n
C hildrens Hom e In G e x v a . Sala­
ry plus room and board. C all
Don 347 5077.__________________
L a y Up m an I x lib x g la ts
m olds. Experienced x l y
____________ 323 0141.____________
Licensed C o tm e to lo g itl needed
A p p ly In p x to n . I l l W. 27th S ir.
____________ 322 7771.____________
M anagem ent T raining-R ew arding
x t r y level p o s t fix in consum er
fin a n ce . W * a re lo o k in g lo r
c aree r m inded In divid uals w X
are am bitious and enjoy w x k ln g
w ith people. GFC offers x the
Iob tra in in g , secu rity, challenge
an d good e m p lo y e * X n a llt s .
G eneral Finance C o rp x tto n M i l
O rlando D riv e F a irw a y P la ta
Santord 32771. E O E /A A

1415 F rench A v *
(In S o b lk iB ld g .l
■___________3213743_____________
C O N V E N IE N C E Store Cashiers.
Good s a la ry, h o s p ita llia tlx , I
w eek p a id v a c a tio n e v e ry *
m x th s .
F x in to c a ll M anager
a t:
A irp o rt B lvd. 4* 31)4151
C astalberrg 44 117 1715
C alefy A v * 44 121*111
Lk. M a ry 44 3 2 2 0 *5

73—Employment
Wanted
C e rtlflte d N u rta s A id * w ill c a r* l x
loved o n * In y o u r hom o. SAM
3P M . C all 12)0447 a lte r 4PM.

N O T IC E UMOER
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
STATU TE
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C ER N :
NO TIC E I t hereby given to s t to *
u n d e r s ig n e d p u r t u a n l la lh a
"F ic titio u s N a m * S ta lu to " Chapter
045 07. F lx ld a Stafutos, w ill re g is te r
w ith the County C o m p tro lle r in and
to r Sam lnoia C ounty, F lo rid a , upon
receipt of pro of o f toe p u b llc a tlx o l
th is n o lle *. I X fic titio u s nam e to ­
w n:
COPY PLUS
under w hich see expect to engage In
business a t 70) Douglas Avenue,
Sulla B , A lte rn a n t* S w in gs, F lx ld a ,
22750.
T X p a rty Interested in said bu t)
n o t* en terp rise It as M to w t:
LONGWOOD
D U P L IC A T IN G , IN C .
B y : M ich a e l F. H ow ard.
President
P u b lish M a y to , 17 and June 2. 10,
io n
P * H IM * i c t i t i o m t U M I -------------N otice I t hereby given to o l I am
engaged In business a f 2400 H ighw ay
a l Z U n g wood. F L 2I7M , Sam lnoia
C ounty, F lx ld a u n d x F a f lr t llla u t
nam e o f LONGWOOO IN SU R AN C E
A G E N C Y , a n d to o t I In la n d to
re g is te r said nam e w ith I X C la rk of
to * C irc u it C ou rt, la m In al* C ounty,
F tor Id# In accord an ce w ith to# provisions o f I X F ic titio u s N a m * S tat­
ute*. T a -W lt: ta c t ton 04507 F lx ld a
Statwto* 1757.
/ t / L a r r y R .M c R a a
PuM Itoi M a y 11 10, 17 and J un* 2,
HB*.
O C H -to

91• i .

” J
fc .ep.tobxs

RIDGEWOOD ARAM APTS.
2510 Ridgewood A v *. Ph.123 *420
),2 A 3 B d rm s . tro m *20 0
S a n lx d Spacious. I B d rm . plus d x
x 2nd. B d rm . F u rn itu re . S2M
A du lts. I441-7M1.

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
C a ts a lb e rry 3 b d rm kids, a p p li­
ance. p x c h SITS F * 0 137-7200
la v -O n -R x ta ts , In c. R ealtor
IN D E L T O N A
3 L a rge L a k e fr x t hom e 3 BR 3
X th L R / D R / K I t E x tra s .
2 S m a ller homes, 1 BR 2 X th ,
L R /O R /K II. N .
I tow nhous* 1 BR 1to X t h .
I condo. 2 B R , 2 X t h , Pool, T a x is .
D AYS 574 1414
__________ E ve*. 7*7*251__________
La ke M a ry 1 b d rm 2 X t h
garage S17S discount
____________ 1171724.____________
Large 1 B drm . H eat and a ir, 1400
M o. R eference* required.
122-1447. A lte r 5. P M .
S a n lo rd 1 b d rm , k id s , fenced.
C *rp o rt, p a llo 1300 Fee 127 7200
la v-O n-R gq jo It, In c. P a * Her
1 B d rm . Spacious ho rn *. Fenced In
y a rd . 5175. C e n tu ry 21. Juna
P x i l g R ealty. M 1 P *7(

105—DuplexTriplex /R ent
A v a ila b le now elegant A spec tout
d u p le x e s w ith la r g o s c re e n
p o r c h e s , s to r a g e r o o m s A
carpo rts. F u lly equipped 5340 to
5300 C all l x d a ta !It. C x tu r y l i
June P x ilg R sa lty M l (471.
Santord 5 room s, kids, pets, fu ll
k it., n o t* * * * 5315 F x 13* 7200
la v-O n-R en tals, Inc. R ealtor
2 B d rm . I B ath duplex. C x f . H A.
carpeted, c a r p x t. a ll appliances
W a t h t r / d r y s r h o o k -u p . S354
M onth. 447 51)2________________
7 B d rm . Ito X t h S x to r d , Laka
M a ry are a. Include* a ir condl
lio n , a ll a p p lia n c e s , w ashe r,
d ry e r hook up. 5150. M o C all
l i b 74(7 A ft. 5.PM .

107—Mobil*
Homts / Rent
C asselberry p riv a te to t, 2 bd rm .
kids, a p p l.S 2 S 5 F x 3)7 7200
S av-O nR entafe, Inc. R x lt o r
I b d rm ad ults L ig h ts A w a t x .
furnished 150 d e p o t!I. W eekly x
•
m o n th ly. 323-01*4
]

121—Condominium
Rentals

j

.

}

SIlghth!nTSr^#mvIi!^e*r
garage, a ll appliances (450Ato.
222-0141

141—Hom*s For Sal*
M i F10I I M REALTY
OF SANF0R0 REALTOR

t■
1 B d rm . N aw ro o t n a w ly pa In tod. i
screened p x c h . lanced r e x y a rd '
w ith tr u it trees. 547.200.
f
3 B d rm . Ito X t h custom tlre placa, *
g la s s s lid in g d o o rs , fe ed to ‘
p r iv a c y la n c e d y a r d . G oad
a u u m a b l* m ortgage. (47,(50.
\

Lie. R a ti Estate B roker
2440 S a n lx d Avo.

C O U N TR Y H orn * to share, n x
sm oker*, references, s ite plus to
U til. 303444 *014_______________
W anted Senior la d y x re tire d
couple. To share house w ork In
jx d jx g # to r r e n tjto M * tt^ ^

C O U N TY O id rr 2 s to ry w ith 4 tots
Z-C-3 Assum able m x tg a g * a sk­
ing 171.500.
W a t M l . 000 N o w 554,500 The
N igh tm are 4 /6 R 0 fireplaces. 1.7
x r e t . C ity w a fe r O w ner says
m a x o tte r.

93—Rooms for Rant

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

Room f x rent. G x l l e m x p ro
rre d . SIS w eek. Couple 540.
T s lp X n e 122 S044______________
IFOR D. R eat. w eekly A M on
fitly ra to t. U lit. Inc. a ll. 500 Oak
A du lts t -041-7003.

H id d x Lake A rea . 4/2, pool, (a m i­
ty room , ta X v Ia w , I acre tot. Bob
M . B a ll J r. PA . R ea lto r. 12141 10
JU S T M A R R IE D ? OR R E T IR IN G ?
B efore you b u y s x th is s p a rk lin g 2 &gt;
b d rm I X t h d o ll house. A ll kind s ?
o l g re a t ex tra s . C all f x d t t a llt
047.500

C asselberry 3J room s, kids. pets,
a ir 1225. F t * N 7 7200
Sav-On-Rawials, | i k . R aattor
# E fficie n c y A p t i*
We X v * e v e rything Just b rin g
linens and d is X s
.................A t t ic Storage....................
.............. Single story liv in g ................
— ........E ne rgy E ffic ie n t................
.............. Lush landscaping................
* Santord C o u rt*
323 1)01
F urnished ap artm en ts
C ltin n s . Jig P a lm e tto A v t. J .
Cowan No ehona c a ll*.__________
I b d rm a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le r x t In
exchange f x rem odeling w ork.
Experienced p e r t x w ith referan co t req uire d. 322 1703.________
Bedroom Furnished Apart:
U O O M x th Plus D epot!
I l f I pa
o n ty .is a - im .
Lo ve ly i b d rm I b e fh w ith screen
p x c h . N a w ly d e co r a t X C all
123 2247x121-4747______________
SandlawttMt
1 B d rm -1 Bath. A C , Pool, S275.

TO G E T A W A Y F R O M T H E C IT Y
th is 1 sto ry 4 b d rm 1 X t h h o rn* is
re a lly secluded near O t t o x x •
a p p r o x im a te ly 1 a c r a - n t e d i
w x k . Lat us to ll you about If.
135,000
P R E S T IG IO U S M A Y F A IR -B tto w
m a rk a l value th is 2 b d rm 1 X t h
h o rn* on X a u tlfu l c x n x tot h a *
toads o t po te n tia l 144.500
Salesman nasdad.

STEMFER AGENCY INC.
_____________ 122-47*1_____________

to m
B tU R w

C a K K q c s
FO R A L L YOUR
R E A L E S TA TE N E E D S

323-220$
99—Apartmants
Unfumlshad/Rant

BAM BOO CO VEAPTS
M E . A irp o rt ll v d . P h 221*410
IA&gt; B d rm *., fro m 5240 M o l %
fscouwf f x Santor CHfeons.
G BN BVA BAROENS A P T i ~
I J A 1 B d rm . A p is. F ro m SMS.
F a m ilie s w elcom e.
M X . th ru ta t. 7 A M to 5 P M .
IM S W. IM h St.
222 20W
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
L
U
X
U
R
Y
A
P
A
R
T
M
E
N
TS
N o lle * to hereby g iv e n to a t I am
F a m ily A A du lts
| - g r | T f In b w ln a s f a t 2575 S.R.
2 B d rm *. M aai * t x Cava A pts.
71402, W in ta r P a rk . F id . *2772,
122 7700
Semlnato C ounty, F lo rid a w id o r Ms* j
fic titio u s n a m * a f A Q U A P R E ­
SSURE C L E A N IN G and N idi I In lan d I M a rtn a rto v illa g e x Laka A d * . I
t * ro g to tcr s a id na m # w ith to# CNrfc
SArm fro m 5245. I b d rm fro m
t l n ig C ir c u it C o u rt, S a m ln a la [
Located 17 77 |u rt south a f
A lp o r t B lv d . In Sanford. A ll
C ounty, F lo rid a In i
to * p ra v to to n t o f to * F ic titio u s Nam a
A dutts. a ia tT o
S ta fu to s , to a r il: Sect ton M M * | M s ll o n v li ls T r a c e A p ts . 4*0
F lo rid a Statute* 1717.
M a lta nvltto A v *. Spac ious m a d ­
a m I b d rm I bath

r r "—

N E W I A 2 B rd ro o m t. AdJocenTto
L a k e M o n r o * . H a a llh C lu b ,
R a c q u a tX II a X M o re l
Santord L a X I x S . R .N M t-4 2 2 0 .

BATEMAN REALTY

97—Apartmants
Furnished / Rant

le g a l N o lle *

C a ts tlb e r r y 1 b d r m c o m p la t*
k lt c h x , pa tio S210 F m
7200.
Sav-O n-R M rtalt, In c. R ealtor

1544 S.FR EN C H
2220231 ‘
A tto f H ours 1171710 221-072*
&lt;

91—Apartments/
Housa to Share

W E H A V E C L IE N T S
W A IT IN G FO R
YOUR REN TA L
FRO PERTY
PLEA SE CALL
5 4 * W L * X M * ry S tv d .
S u it* I

■AAanr.Fig.aiM
DRIF TWOOOVILL L A G f

iin |!

i

wo
mtomft --Uto-yX
u A i f m -- *•

99-Apartmants
Unfurnlshtd/Rent

71—Hilp Wanted

’ • - - ■»•

1

�BATEMAN REALTY

X U FR E N C H A V E .
R E A LT O R
SX1-0041

701 E - IItti Z-R Com. Lo t tX x M M
G a ra g * 1 4 x » . O w ner w ill halo
finance, tt*.W O .

FO O L P LA N N E D
1 B r., 1 b a th w i l t plan fa m . rm .,
fo rm a l LR A D R , icrea nad pa tio .
Largo Inside u tility .M ta o o .

321-0757 E w 322-7443

w

KISH REAL ESTATE

L ie . Real E ila t * B roker
IMO Sanford Ava.

p

ANOTHER.' YrtKTfc AkN V
E X T R A

f/ j7

Y0U

i

H M PH !

W U R

BER3REANPAI
P IN N E R S

API

N IC E I N R A T I A L M O S T N E W I
1BR. 1 ba th, garage, plush carpet,
c u s to m d ra p e s , g o o d c lo s e t
&gt; space. Low m aintenance, a lu m i­
num overhang. S IM M .
CO U N TR Y
1 B r, 1 ba th. B ig ea t-ln kitchen,
sunken LR w /b ric k fire p la ce ,
double Insulated w ind ow * 4 ton
h o o t A a i r s y s t e m ,
e le c tr lc /p lu m b ln g n e a r n e w .
N ice hom e on la rg o lo t 14*,W0

REALTY, INC.
323-5774

R E A LT O R
I t Y E A R S E X P E R IE N C E

M I5 T A K E

O N I O P A K IN D I Gorgeous eaeculiv e 1 Story ] b d rm i.s bo th home
In m in i condition. H ug * panelled,
fa m ily rm ., beam ed ce ilin g s!
Detached cabonna w /llv . rm .,
b a r and bath to r e n tertain ing |
O ver Vi a cre lu th A spacious
la n d s c a p in g I " N * - q u * llt y ln g "
(11.SM down U I7 M o. P rin c ip le A
In te r**! 11% APR O nly SSI.000

SU N LAN O ESTATES. 1 B drm . 1
B o th , fa m ily ro o m , fe n c e d ,
n e a rly 1X0 sq. ft. Assum e great
loan.P riced to M il a l *44,500.
T e rry P u tty R e a lty *14 *700

W E LIS T A N D S E LL
MORE HOM ESTHAN
A N Y O N E IN NORTH
S E M IN O LE COUNTY

M A Y F L O W E R S P E C IA L C o lu m b u i h l m i e l l w o u ld h a v e
chosen th is 1 story beauty w ith
c o iy fire p la ce 1 b d rm 1 hu g*
b o th , w o o d e n d e c k s , scree n
p o rc h c o u n try k itc h e n , easy
assum ption w ith no q u a lify in g
G reat location P ric e 14*.W0

W ayside D riv e A O range B lvd . 1
scree toned A t. A re a o f nice
hom es, convenient to 1-4 and
M o rk o m Woods Rood O w ner
financing 151,100. B roker
____________ &gt;41-5415.____________

155—Condominiums
Co-Op /S a t*
D E L U X E 1 B edroom iv s ba th
to w n h o u s e s . P r iv a te p a lle t .
F H A /V A and Investor financing
a vailab le . Located an Ridgewood
o i l 15 th S t. 15 M ln u to s to
dow ntown O rlan do v ia 1-4, near
17 *1, shopping, churches, end
schools. M o d tl* open I d F rid a y ,
S aturday and Sunday, o r c a ll
a n y l l m t f a r a p p o ln tm a n l.
(57,WO.

321-5005

A F F O R O A B L E C O UNTRY L IV INO a t It* host in th is im m e cu
to t* 1 b d rm hom e screened
porch, la rge lo t, c lo t* to 1-4 and
w a lk * te S y lv a n L a ke P a rk

323-5774

• SANFO RD 1-4 A 4 4 *
U s A c re + • coun try hom e s it* .
O ak-pin * to m * c le a rtd -p a ve d . 10%
down 10 Y rs .e t 11%.
S T E N S T R O M R E A LT Y
REALTO RS
• C all M l1 4 » A n y tim e *
ST. JOHNS R iv e r frontage, iVi
a c r e p a r c e ls , a ls o in t e r io r
parcels w ith riv e r access (1 *,*M
P u b lic w a te r. X m in . to A ltom onte M a ll 11% X y r t financing,
no q u a lify in g . B roker
6 X 4033

322-2420

td fo r lo t I I , W A V S tP t W O O O t.. A p riv a te , r e s t r ic t * ,
tN a v H y w w M p a r a d r e v M c fc w il re la te its la t e r a l a ttr tb o tr e tfc r w g b r e t tfco p a r s . T b re g b R arito d la s in ,
W A V S IK W O O O S Is d re tb M d to b o a p r e a h r e S a a fM d

Cash fo r good used fu rn itu re .
L a rry 's N ew A Used F u rn itu re
M a rt. PS Sen lo rd Aye, m a m
COLOR T E L E V IS IO N
Z e nith 1T cater TV In w aln ut
console. O rig in a l p rice o ver 1750
Balance due l i t * cash o r pay
m e n u ( I t m onth. NO M O N E Y
DOWN. S till In w a rra n ty . C ell
M l-S )*4 d a y o r n il* . F ree home
tr a il, no ob lig ation ._____________
C ontem porary oak 7 d re w dresser
and student desk (175 to r both
111-0414.
Kan m o re p a rts, service,
used w ashers, m o**?
M O O N E Y A P P LIA N C E S

D R IV E A L IT T L E . SAVE A LO T.
One o t the States oldest end
la rgest dealers. O u r ow n fin a n c ­
in g . M a n y m odels to choose
fro m , Including 14x70 1 B d rm . 1
b a th , d r y w e ll, g a rd e n tu b .
S t!,*tS . U ncle Roys M o b il* Hom o
Sales. H w y 441. Leesburg
___________*04 7170134.___________

P a lm Beech V illa
P a lm Springs
Siesta Key
V A FH A finan cing. M j W M M .
(500 Down ( I X . M o. buys a new 14
w ide tra m Uncle Roys M obile

Good Used T V 's (15 A up
M IL L E R S
141*O rlando D r.
Ph. 333 0353

221—Good Things
to Eat
B E T T E R H E A L T H W IT H D IS ­
T IL L E D W A T E R ! M eka your
ow n 1M% p u r* w ater w ith a
hom e w a te r d is tille r to r only
pennies pe r gallon. For In fo rm a ­
tio n - C e ll o r w lr t e C e r t D .
W illia m s 51* Orange D r. A p t. 11
A ltam o nte Spr. F I. 117010144471.
U P IC K B L A C K E Y E D PEAS
B R IN G C O N TAIN ER
H W Y 44-1M il* W est San lo rd

A ir conditioner-w indow 30,500 BTU
(1 1 5 E le c t r i c lu r n a n c *
I5 K W M /H (IS H o i w a te r heal
e r gas 10 g a llo n u p rig h t (15
Concrete it e p i 15“ high ( X . A ll
In A-1 condition 14*54*4.________
B row n le a th e r couch m a d * by
Seers (50 o r o lfs r. 1 tw in beds to r
(35, C ell 111 U K . _______________
Com plete Beauty Shop Equipm ent.
3X4*61
C all A fte r 7 PM .________
F o r Sale R ta s to v ra n l E quipm ent,
on * GE electric fry e r w ith eland.
40 seats p ly mold booth, steam
tobies, n tw gas fry e r.
C e llU * S510VS.
_________
GAZEBOS
10 Fool new * sided Redwood
Gazebos to r ta le Osteen C o lt
C lub 333*5*3
*3*3

117—Sporting Goods
Indoor Gun R ang* Turn-Sat. to-*
Sunday 1-4 Shootstrelght Apopka
P la ta 1-0M-0441.

F IL L D IR T A TO P SOIL
Y E LL O W SAND
C la rk 1 H lr t 333 7500,3333*73

177—Pots A Supplies

Opportunity

BY APPOfNTM II
PH 323-9490

C iT ft t t

213—Auctions
A uctio n E v e ry Sat. nigh t F lo rid a
T ra d e r A uctio n, Long wood 33*
l i t * . So# o u r b ig o d ln Set, paper.

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

QeaUfy IlectrlcaTse^k#
ALLTYPESCARPENTRY
Custom B u ilt a d d itio n s. P olios,
K ro o n ro o m s , c a rp o rt. D oor
lo ck s, p a n e lin g , shin gle s, rarao fln g. F o r fa st service, c e ll
M 1 4 *1 7 .M H 1 7 t._______________

237—Motorcyclat/BIka*
M * H w y 17*1
L o n g w o o d A U -M ]
Clearance on A L L b ik e *
"V e n tu re A V en ture R o y a l"
In sto ck
A ll l t d M odels a t de aler Invoice
MJ50J IS M Total
Q T 10 K M M T o ta l
SR 250H t*5A+Tax
P a rts S e vric» A cc*e e e rie *

241—Recreational
Vehicles/Campare T.

D A Y TO N A A U TO AU C TIO N
H w y *1. I m ilt west of Speedway,
D aytona Beach w ill hold a public
A U TO AU C TIO N every M onday
A Wednesday * 1 7 :X p m . It's the
only one In F lo rid a . You set the
reserved p rice . C e ll *04 155-1111
lo r lu rth e r details.
_______
1*74 Chevy V eg * 3 D r.
S500.
C ell M l 4145 A lte r 4 PM .
M G M idget 74. Good condition.
(IS M o r best o ffe r. Evenings
a lte rs , H I-M 57.________________
Tw o C a rt. P lym o u th V olara wagon
77, very good shape, no rust. 17
m ile s p e r g a llo n . a ir , new
ra d ia l* , cassette F o rd Thun
d e rb lrd , 74, a ir, leather, new
re d le ls. lik e new, its -T IM .
a l C hevrolet Coup*. Inside conv
p le fe ly re s to re d . Runs good.
Needs pa in t. (1,000 F irm . 373
1407 A ft. 4 P M

c it t N fR r

C O LE M A N C A M P IN G T R A IL E R S
R. V . SALES H w y 44
New Sm yrna Beech *04 4M-*575,
E C O N O M Y I I ll.S h a s ta M o to r
Hom e. E xcelle nt cond ition. F o r
d e tails 10-47*1.

TOP D o lla r Paid to r Junk A Used
cars, tru cks A heavy eq uipm e nt. —
J U N K C AR S

f

OSSAtSTV T t f CARS

f

LOOKOVERTHIS EXTRAFINESELECTION.

|

IM S TOYOTA MUIX
, . M a
S tock* M l t U ............................................ ’1771
1 *7 1 TOYOTA CU1CA
M ul
Stock * 0 0 2 7 ................................................ *9
999
t ( 7 * TOYOTA CEUS40A
. . . . .
Stock 'M A M A ............................................ V
MV1
1003 TOYOTA COOOOA
. . . . .
Stock *0 0 0 0 ................................................ '1779
M AS V.W. BAM
Stock* S0A A 40............................................ *1
779

M A S F O ttU U N O T 4 *4
_ _ _ _
Aleck * 3 0 T A IA ..................................... *
11,|VI
1070 TOYOTA COROUA
_
Wage*. Stock '3 0 I 1 0 A .............................. '17V8
MOO TOYOTA CUICA
. . . . .
Stock * 0 0 1 0 ................................................ *4
499
MOOCANAMAM
___________
stock * A A z i .
....................*7999
M A I TOYOTA C O X A
________ j .
Aleck *1 0 3 7 ................................................ *9
7V9

Stock
....................................... *9
999
1100 BOOM COLT
t . m w
Stock * 1 0 2 1 1 4 ......................................... '1,478
1000 TOYOTA
. . . . .
C e ra te ............................................................f4999
M SA M T W N 2 M W t
. . . . .
Stock* M 7 A 1 4 ............................................ *9
979

1001 TOYOTA CORONA
___________
Stock * M B 2 M ............................................ *9
979

SSte
™
?1
*.....................»9T99

MOO TOYOTA H M C B A Itt
___________
stock *0014 ................................................ * 9 9 9 9

M A I TOYOTA C M SSXA
______. ____
tto c k * o o o M .............................................. *9
999

M U TOYOTA COROUA
A O r, Stock - S O N ..................................... * 9

_

799

M TSV.W .R AO O rt
. . . . .
Stock * 0 7 1 0 ................................................ '1771

Q U A L IT Y

M TA TOYOTA CtUCA
. . . . _
Stock ' M A M .............................................. '8878
M A I TOYOTA C000NA
. . . . .
• M T A 4 A ....................................................... *1
798

U M R

TRU CKS

M U TOYOTA
. . . . .
L e a d e d ....................................................... * 9 1 9 9

B A LA N C E O F I E STATES
N ic e e a rly A m e ric a n couch A
c h o ir, Spanish type counc, 1
d ln n a tt* M ts. TVs A stereo*, set
o t B o v a r lo n d in n e r w a r * ,
b e a u tifu l la m p ta ble , au tom atic
dishw asher A cloth #* washer,
IS.00 B TU a ir conditioner. Plus a
lo t to o to c trlc fans. A ll kinds of
m iscellaneous Horn*.

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

X M 100 04-4*04

Bad C redit?
No C redit?
W E FIN A N C E
No C redit Check-Easy T erm s
N A T IO N A L A U TO SALES
1 IX S. Sanford A y *.
111 4075
3051 S. O rlando D r.
m a lt *

MOO COtSSXA WAGON
. . . . .
Stock *307411 ............................................ *9
999

CONSULT OUR

O fb a r y A u la A M a r in a S a l* * 5
ocrae* Ilia r lv a r la g a t M il |» f
hay I t *1 D eb ory 444A M I
71 T h u n d e r tlr d . L o a d e d , w l r a ,

W * b u y fu rn ltu ro , an tiq ue s o r
except consignm ents fo r auction
F ie T ra d e r A uction. 33*311*.
W heelchair. Lika new. Reasonable.
Also antique*.
_________ C ell H I -0440.
11 F t. C abin C ruiser, V olvo engine,
170 H p ..w lth tra ile r. M ust be seen
to appreciate. * * ,« » . I l l 1114.

!
I

153—Lots-Acreaga/Sala

111—Appliances
/ Furniture

K tn m o iT h e J v i^ u t'y w eth er” J te d
4 m o n th *. *150. O ld e r M o d *I
R t fr lg ld a lr * re frig e ra to r. (71.
__________ __
C all m a w .
Lo uw rey organ w ith Leslie speaker
M M . A ntique d in in g rea m suit
c irc a 1*40 sideboard, china eabl
not, table A 4 c h a lre -b a tl offer,
ty p e w rite r*. 1H4013.

M e ta l d a ta c to r.G a rre lt A O S 1
V L F /T R
d is c rim in a to r w ith
ground concol'ln g. L is t* fo r 141*.
I m onth old. Bost o ffe r o v e r u j j ,
C all I M 1105 o ffe r 4 pm . M 1M J1
ash to r Bud. M u st *e ll.

KO KO M O Tool Co., a t * t l W. F irs t
St., Sanford, Is now buying gloss,
new spepor, b im e ta l stool end
a lu m in u m cons along w ith o il
o t h e r k in d s o l n o n - fe r r o u s
m o tels. W hy not tu rn th is Idle
c lu tte r In to t i t r o doiiersT W * o il
benefit fro m recycling.
F o r d e tells c e ll; 1X1100
W anted to buy fro m p riv a te p a rty.
14 to I t ft. Cam per T ra ile r. Phone
MI-1714.
___________
W E B U Y AN TIQ U ES
F U R N IT U R E S A P P L IA N C E S
1117140___________

•
3

WE NEED LISTINGS
CALL US NOW! I

N E E D to sail yo u r ho u st q u ic kly I
Wo con o tte r guaranteed sal*
w ith in M d a y s. C a ll M l- 1411.

Uaad G a ra g * Sal* C learing out.
F rid a y A Saturday a ll d a y. 110
M o re S ir. Sanford M I-45U .
Y a rd S ale-S u nla nd E s ta te s 104
La ke D ot O r., Sanford Saturday,
M a y » I X to S :M o ld book*,
records, houiehold Item s, and
mi»C. Som ething to r eyeryon *.
Y a rd S al* Saturday and Sunday
M lie a lla n a o u * Ite m *. 117 La ure l
D riv e M H 1 M ._________________

o

U1.SK.

159— R e a l E s fa tft

Wanttu

YOUR I D E A L COM BI N ATIO N
L a rge ] BR home w ith e x tra rente!
In c o m e , g a r a g e w o r k s h o p ,
g a rd e n spot, b e a rin g c itru s ,
la rge corne r lo t, no c ity ta x **.
D riv e by 1M I S. P e rk A v *.. then
c e ll lo r ap pt. P ric e d 154,*00
O w ner w ill hold m ortgage. Y o u 'll

SHAD Y O AKS S urround th is CB 1
b d rm home on gorgeous lo t and
good location. Easy assum ption
and no q u a lity In g I W hy ren t
when you can ow n I O nly (4I.S00.

_________1*0* H W Y 17 «

1S3—Loti-Acrtagt/ Sa!•

24 HOURJ9 322-9213

p lan hom e w /C H A A . dbl ca r
garage, custom decor and lanced
c o r n e r l o t In p r e s t i g i o u s
R a m b lt w o o d ' F
“ a n ta s tic
assum ption I No q u a lify in g and
p rtc a d to M ill O n ly SSIAM.

2 1 7 — 0 * ra g e S tie s

C lf f t lt f
H w y
Phone

H it

O t f N f RT

17-91
8787

Lunqw ood

S a n fo rd

f

0

71

' f Q

f A

01 1 S &gt; I S i l * '

Phone- 311 86 01

1- IW 1

"&lt;

A&amp;B ROOFING

Fans, tim e rs , s e cu rity lit* * , addl
Hons, new M rv lc e s , Insured,
M a ster E le c tric ia n J e m ** Pout.
m is t* .

X

y r* . experience. Licensed A

FO R E S T A T E . C o m m e rc ia l o r
R esidential A uctions A Appealse l*. C all P e ll's A uctio n M l 54X.

322-9417

CAS SI LBE Ki n

C A O L E A K R E P A IR . R epairs e ll

VAwlR*i BEAUTY SALON

217— Garag* Salas

WE A R E D E S T IN E D TO BE

RnanctrgAvaltoM*
D riv e w a y s , p a tlo t, and
tlraptocoo. 1X 41*4._____________

Applianca Rtpair

T H E

CLARENCES
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
We service a ll m # |# r brands. R oot.

^ehrtJS^rsjjx^niWlL^^^
ImiaUahonRepai!

M o rrlee n R oofing Co.
S p e c ia lis in g In ih ln g t o s a n d
b u ild up, lo w . Lo w R oto*, 14 hr.

tlraotoces. 33*41*4
C arp oatry b y “ B IL L "
WOOD A rle s ia n G eneral
c a rp e n try , tcraen ed room doors
etc. Boa*. Rates. P 7-1 4X

D ffA P S S B Y o i A s i k

G R E A T

P R IC E
M O V IN G SA LE I Sat. M lh . *-5.
S M S . P a rk A va. a lf A irp o rt B lvd .
Same tu rn !to re . M toc. Cash only.
M a y in g Sato O r ts s a r t, c h a irs .

1 4 9 9

1349

ln5?SrI^x5r5rK5S*n7I

1999

■C W ee-am p

2299

issnssTTS?
I I Y r t. E xp. Reas 1 0 4 7 *1

Carpat/FtearCavariftgs
I * Y re. Ix p -S a to t. tn s to lL ra p a lri.

rjcaX^dUHrjSnyhj^

P A R M A ID S E R V IC E ^

S U Z U K I

B L O W - U P ! !

able ra te *. P ic k u p A d e liv e ry .
M l 1441 a fte r 4P M .

We buy dlracf. Far pareanal

1!!!

E.

Z.

B A N K

i

�*

HA -Evsnlr&gt;g Horstd, Ssnlord, FI.

Friday, M ay jy , i« u

WORLD
IN BRIEF

Slaying Could Spark Pressure
For U.S. To Leave El Salvador
B y M ic h a e l W . D ru d g e

R *llet Collector Adm its
H e Forged H itle r D iaries
HAMBURG. West Germany (UPI) — Konrad
Kujau, a Nazi relics dealer, has confessed that
he forged the Hitler diaries that cost Stem
magazine nearly $4 million, a Justice Depart­
ment spokesman said today.
Spokesman Peter Beck gave no details of the
confession, but the Blld newspaper said the
44-year-old Kujau. In a wry touch that demon­
strated his ability at forging, signed the
confession "A d o lf Hitler."
Beck also announced the arrest of Gerd
Hcldemann. the Stern reporter who claimed he
tracked down the diaries In a three-year hunt In
West and East Germany. Austria. Switzerland.
Spain and Latin America.
Heldemann. 51, called a “ bloodhound of a
reporter" by Stem before he was fired, was
arrested Thursday on suspicion of fraud. Beck
said.
Beck said Hcldemann was arrested because
Kujau's confession indicated the reporter knew
the diaries were forged and the story he told
about getting the bogus Nazi leader’s diaries
from East Germany was not true.
Heldemann has said he paid Kujau S3.79
million of Stern’s money for the diaries, but
Kujau has said he received only $ 1.02 million.

Q uake Deaths M ount

SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador
(UPI) — The first slaying of a U.S.
officer In El Salvador could have
been carried out to heighten Ameri­
cans' fears o f another Vietnam and
pressure a pullout o f all U.S.
advisers, observers said.
Navy Lt. Com m ander Albert
Schaufclbcrgcr, 33. o f San Diego,
Calif., was shot and killed In a
university parking lot Wednesday
while waiting for his Salvadoran
girlfriend.
U.S. A m b a s s a d o r Deane R.
Hinton, citing similar murders of
two policemen last week and the
reported slayings this week o f 13
captured soldiers, said leftists were
most likely behind the “ terrorist
act."
The motive for killing an Ameri­
can adviser, one political observer
said, might have been to Increase
American fears of a "new Vietnam"
and spark a debate that could lead
to a U.S. pullout from El Salvador.
The strategy would be to take

U.S.

a d v a n ta g e o f the " V i e t n a m
syndrome" among those Americans
who opposed that war and now
believe that no U.S. soldier should
be asked to risk his life without
congressional approval.
"T h e American public, and the
Congress, are not enthusiastic
about Reagan administration policy
now and having an adviser killed
would probably augment that sen-

A n a ly s is
tlment." said the observer, who
requested anonymity.
Either the left-wing or right-wing
might have killed Schaufclbcrgcr In
order to provoke a U.S. pullout,
another Western observer said.
The observer said rightists, con­
cerned that a moderate government
willing to negotiate with the rebels
could win December elections,
could have staged the assassination
to spark a U.S. pullout, hoping to
bolster their hard-line position and
abolish American-backed land re-

Knew

TOKYO (UPI) — The United States knew o f Japanese
experiments on World War II prisoners o f war —
including live dissections and freezing alive — but kept
silent, a Judge who presided at the Tokyo war crimes
trial said.
P ro fesso r Bert Rollng. wh o represen ted the
Netherlands at the trial of Japanese soldiers and
politicians, said he only learned of the atrocities five
years after they occurred.
Initially skeptical. Rollng now thinks reports of
experiments conducted In Manchuria under Lt. Gen.
Shlro Ishll arc true and were ordered by top Japanese
officials.
"T h e court was never Informed." Rollng told a news
conference. "Th e United States knew about these things
(b u t)... It was kept secret from (the Judges) because they

TOKYO (UPI) — Rescue workers searched
Japan's northern coast today for survivors of the
nation's worst earthquake In 35 years, a
powerful Jolt that triggered tidal waves and
killed at least 43 people. Police said 59 others
were missing. 77 others were reported Injured.
The tidal wave — or tsunami — reached the
eastern coast of South Korea, where it killed
three more people, ofllclals said.
The quake, measuring 7.8 on the Richter
scale, caused an estimated $1.2 billion In
damage stetchlng 500 miles from Hokkaido In
the north to the district of Ishlkawa In central
Honshu. Japan's main Island.

forms.
The radical Popular Liberation
Forces rebel group. In a communi­
que delivered to a local radio station
Thursday, allegedly claimed re­
s p o n s i b i l i t y for k i l l i n g
Schaufelberger.
But the guerrillas, on their own
radio stations, failed to take respon­
sibility for the slaying.
In Washington. President Reagan
vow ed the murder would not
diminish his commitment "to con­
tinue both economic and the mili­
tary aid which we’ re giving."
An embassy spokesman said
Schaufclbcrgcr was deputy com­
mander of a six-man military group
that coordinates U.S. military aid to
El Salvador and that la not Involved
In training carried out by the other
47 American advisers.
His death was the first killing of
an American soldier In El Salvador
since U.S. military advisers were
sent In early In 1981 after a major
guerrilla offensive killed 1.000 peo­
ple.

M i d d le E a s t B r a c in g
F o r B io lo g ic a l W a r
LONDON (UPI) — The Middle East, one of the most
volatile regions In the world, Is one o f the first Third
World areaa bracing for biological war. said an
authoritative military survey.
New acquisitions by countries such as Iraq and
Libya have followed a pattern adopted after Soviet
forces reportedly started using "yellow rain" and
other chemical weapons In Afghanistan, said
Christopher F. Foss, editor o f Jane's Military
Vehicles and Ground Support Equipment 1983.
"Libya In particular worries m e," Foss said. .
"During the Inst year the number of reports of
deliberate employment o f yellow rain and other
such agents by the Soviet forces In Afghanistan and
elsewhere has continued to grow." his 843-page
volume said.
Confirmation o f the Soviet action "is almost
Impossible to come b y " although It "seems certain,"
Jane's said.
"Yellow rain" Is an anti-personnel chemical
weapon. Mujahideen rebels and diplomats In India
and Pakistan have said Soviet forces use the
biological warfare weapon against rebels fighting the
Soviet-backed Afghan regime.
In response to the reported Soviet action. Jane's
said "Already many nations In the Middle East and
elsewhere are acquiring NBC (nuclear, biological
and chemical) defense equipment." Jane's did not
name the countries Involved.
Jane's said the developing countries were able to
get certain Items, which NATO’ nations have been
shedding In favor o f more advanced equipment.

O f Bizarre Japanese Experiments On POW
wanted to have all the results of these experiments." he the) Japanese government," Rollng said.
Pressed to elaborate. Rollng said the experiments were
said.
Author Secllchl Morlmura documented activities at ordered "b y the Cabinet or at least the defense
minister."
the now Infamous 731 camp In his 1982 book. "The
"T h e emperor (Hlrohito) was out of making decisions
Devil's Gluttony."
...
If I remember, there was only one Instance In which a
Prisoners, mostly Chinese. Korean and Russian but
question
was put to the emperor without a (prior)
Including other Europeans and Americans, were killed
by gas and poisons: Injected with typhus, cholera, consensus." he said.
That was the decision for surrender after the atomic
plague and other germs: dissected alive and frozen tobombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Rollng said.
death. Morlmura said.
The testing was mostly bacteriological and biological
In nature, but some prisoners were byrned to death with
flamethrowers or ripped apan by grenades. Morlmura
said.

G O S P E L S IN G
S A TU R D A Y M A Y 2 8
7 :3 0 P.M .

The experiments, believed to have killed 2.000 to
3.000 prisoners, were "ordered from the highest level (of

Among Them THE COOPERS.
THE REPRESENTATIVES And
LOCAL TALENT.

Crew Of Ill-Fated Nile River Steamer Detained
ABU S1MBEL. Egypt (UPI) - Egyptian officials
detained crew members of a Nile River steamer for
questioning on charges of negligence that led to the
deaths o f at least 187 people. Including 60 Sudanese
coeds, a newspaper report said today.
Another 130 passengers were missing and presumed
dead, officials said Thursday, raising fears the death toll
would mount to more than 300.
The officials said 325 people were rescued — many
after swimming ashore — after the aging steamer Tenth
o f Ramadan and two barges It was towing were reduced

to hulks of twisted metal in a gas explosion on
Wednesday.
The vessels were heading toward Sudan when the
accident occurred on Lake Nasser. Africa's largest
man-made lake located behind the Aswan Dam.
The newspaper Al Akhbar said Attorney General Atcf
Zakl ordered the vessels' 42 Egyptian crewmen arrested
for questioning.

Because of the 104-dcgrec heal, the dead — many of
them charred beyond recognition — were quickly buried
In two mass graves, one for men and one for women,
near the twin temples of Abu Slmbel.

LAKE MARY C HU RC H OF
TH E NAZARENE
Crystal Lake Ave.

Lake Mary

Some survivors charged that crew members had been
drinking and had brought gasoline on board Illegally to
sell on the black market In Sudan.

AREA DEATHS
I. LUCILLE E.
MICHELS
Mrs. Lucille E. Michels,
82. of 700 Wiley Ave..
Sanford, died Thursday at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Born May 10,
1901 In Howcry County,
S.C., she came to Sanford
from there in 1942. She
was a member of the All
Souls Catholic Church of
Sanford.
She Is survived by her
husband. Aton: six sons,

Ted o f Brunswick. Ga.:
John of Fort Collins. Colo.,
Ralph. N ell. Paul and
Henry, all o f Sanford:
seven daughters, Miss
Elizabeth Michels. Mrs.
Mary Ann Scnari and Mrs.
Josephine Von Herbulls.
all of Sanford. Mra. -Jac­
queline Dclgnan of Griffin.
Ga.. Mrs. Edna Snavcly of
U m a t i l l a . Mrs. H e len
Betancourt of Trujillo Alto,
Puerto Rico, and Mrs.
Carolyn Cacclatorc. of In­

dian Harbor Beach: four
brothers. Roy Owens of
Apopka. Lawrence Owens
o f Rlchton Park. III.. Nick
Owens o f DcLand, and
Jack Owens of Marietta.
Ga.: tw o sisters. Mrs.
Eathcl Michels of Grant,
and Mrs. Mattie Varecn of
Ocala: 60 grandchildren:
38 great-grandchildren.

ELOIBER. CHERRY
Mrs. Elolsc R. Cherry.
75. of 3511 Washington
St.. Sanford, died Wed­
nesday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Bom
A p r i l 1, 1 9 0 8 , I n
Switzerland. S.C.. she had
been a resident of Sanford
for 60 years. She was a
homemaker and member
of the Benevolent Aid So­
Brlsson Funeral
ciety and Mount Zion
Home-PA Is In charge of M i s s i o n a r y B a p t i s t
urrrangcments.
Church.
Survivors Include two
sons. Nathaniel Claitty of
Madison. Issac Claitty Jr.
o f Hopkins. S.C.: three
daughters. Alma Eudell of
Sanford. Dorlctha Clyde of
S im sbu ry. Conn., and
Lula Mac Robinson o f
San for d: four s isters ,
Adlinc Gunter o f Miami,
Rachel Tyson o f W est
Palm Beach. Elizabeth
A n d r e w s and E l no r i a
. . t _____ i S t f W —
W o o d s , bo t h of
Switzerland. S.C.; three
b r o t h e r s . D a v i d and
Abraham Spann.
S a v a n n a h . G a.. and
William Spann o f Riviera
Beach: 25 grandchildren
a n d 20 g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
W ils o n - E lc h e lb e r g e r
Mortuary Is In charge of
funeral arrangements.
AUDREY P. HOFF ATT
Mra. Audrey P. Motfatt.
79. o f 137 Springwood
...
Circle, Longwood, died
Thursday, at Florida Hoopltal-Altamonte. Bom Feb.
17. 1904. In Maryland, she
moved to Longwood from
Pennsylvania in 1967. She
was a homemaker and a
2225 W .
ID ,
Methodist.
Survivors Include a son.
John D., o f Richmond.
Va.; a daughter. Mrs. June
M. B e c k e r o f W in t e r
Springs..
C o x - P a r k e r F u n e ra l
Home. Winter Park, is In
itu v'* %Vf
r
i'V'‘
charge o f arrangements.

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QUANTITIES LIM ITE D -Q U A N TITY R10HTS RESERVED

�I

Evening Herald

LEISURE

f

Complete Week's TV Listings

A ctin g Up Is For
B y J a n e C a ss e lb e rry
H e ra ld S t a ff W rite r
In elem entary schools all over the county school
age youngsters have been donning greasepaint and
costumes to present theatrical productions for the
benefit o f proud parents, teachers and schoolmates.
But while the kids arc taking their bow s to the roar
o f applause and the snapping o f cameras, not many
realize the m any hours o f effort that go Into these
shows.
In addition to the hours the children put In
learning their songs, dances and lines, and the time
given by the school teachers and stafT toward
p olish in g the p ro d u ction , there are m a ny
behind-thc-scenc volunteers w ho help make It
possible.
Parents and volunteers from the Sem inole County
S ch ool D ivid en ds w ork side by side m akin g
costumes, sets, props and applying make-up for the
shows.
One o f these dedicated Dividends Is Sgt. Richard
Odell o f Lake Monroe, a Sem inole County sh eriffs
deputy for the past 10 years. W hen W ilson
Elementary School fourth graders recently pres­
ented "M elvin , the M agnificent.” a play about a
circus. Odell used his skills as an am ateur makeup
artist to change the boys and girls Into clowns, a
Hon. a panther, a chim panzee and a baboon, as well
the ringmaster and performers.
He had som e experience doing Halloween makeup
for friends and was recruited to help at W ilson by a
friend. Debbie Muse, a fourth grade teacher's aide.
"B ecause o f the m akeup they could really get Into
the play and could really be proud o f their
performance.” he said. "W e worked on the show for
three or four weeks getting costumes, props, sets
and makeup ready and on the last week w e worked
to 11:30 or 12 every night. W e started at 9 a.m. on
the day o f the play and finished the first makeup at
11:45 a.m. For the P T A show at night it took from
6-7:30 p.m. to put on the makeup. W c spent six
hours that day on Just makeup alone. It's som ething
you can't hurry with all the different layers o f
m akeup."
On the day he was Interviewed Odell was getting
ready to take his m akeup to the Gingerbread House
nursery where they w ere observing circus month to
give the children each a clow n face.
Cindy Muse o f Sanford worked as a Dividend In
kindergarten and second grade at W ilson last year
and earlier this year until her schedule at Sem inole
Com m unity College Interfered. W ith a day o ff from
SCC. she could be found back at Wilson. " I love the
kids out h ere." she said. " I went to school here and
guess I'll never leave. I used to ride the school bus
and gel o ff here to help Debbie and then I got Into
the Dividend program through Sem inole High and
was able to get school cred it."
Form erly on the dance team at Sem inole High

\Bandit' Bono
Susie Bono, Sonny's w ife, recently
returned from a trip to India w here
she In te rv iew e d a young bandit
queen and won her permission to
play her life story on screen. A
model bent on becoming an actress,
Susie saw It as the opportunity of a
lifetim e. Read about her adventure
on page 2.

Y
o
u
n
t N ot-So- Yo

H w a M M a t e b y T a m m y V tn c a a t

Fourth grade students from Wilson E lem en tary
School, w ho p e rfo rm e d ‘ in " M e lv in , the
M a g n ific e n t," had as th e ir m ake-up m an
Sem inole County S h eriff's D eputy R ichard
Odell. He is just one of m any people here who

have an unusual leisure activity for a hobby.
They enjoy acting up, and helping youngsters to
act up. A ctually, they volunteer to help
youngsters to produce plays at area schools.

School, from which she graduated last year. Miss
Muse helped choreograph a show at W ilson that was
called. "T u b b y the T o a d ."
Libby Dalby o f Paola works five days a week at her
regular Job. But when she isn't w orking there, she
volunteers her tim e helping at Wilson. Her last
project wus helping to make costum es for the
kindergarten production o f "T h e U gly D uckling."

T h e play was presented Tuesday.
Mrs. Dalby said. "M y little girl Angclu Is only In
kindergarten, but she can read and everythin g else.
It's a very good p rogram ."
Mrs. Nancy Antonclli o f Longw ood Is also a
Dividend volunteer at W ilson at least once a week
and wus the narrator for "T h e Ugly D u ckling." She

See VOLUNTEERS, page 3

Beatle biography
Yes, there's another. This one sup­
posedly behind-the-scenes look at
the Fab Four. There's the poop on
their drug use, musical tiffs, and
sexual adventures. It's all in 'The
Love You M ake' which has recently
hit the bookstands. The author tells
his story on page 2.

B arbara Woodhouse, the guru of dog
training whose book, video cassette
and television shows have m ade her
a household nam e to an im a l lovers,
doesn't have a dog. N or a cat. N or a
bird. No pets at a ll. F am e has her
dashing about so she doesn't have
tim e for them . Page 3.

�2— Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

F rid a y , M ay 27. 1 » 3

Susie Bono C allin g O n Bandit Q ueen
B* V ernon Scott
U P I H ollyw ood Reporter
HOLLYW O O D (UPI) - Susie Coclho Bono, wile or
entertainer Sonny Bono, flew to Indin last month to
win the confidence o f an imprisoned woman bandit
and gain permission to play her life story on screen.
It was a bold adventure for Susie, whose parents
are both Indian-born. A native o f England, reared in
Boston and W ashington. D.C.. Susie Is a model bent
on becom ing an actress.
Last February she read a newspaper account o f
bandit queen Phoolan Devi. 24. who surrendered to
police after being Involved In an ambush in which
20 men were slaughtered.
For Susie it was the opportunity o f a lifetime.
Susie is a slender, stunning looking, dark-skinned
young woman in her 20s with flashing black eyes
and Jet black hair.
Susie would be labeled “ eth n ic" In casting offices.
It would be difficult to cast her as an Am erican girl.

Bo Derek she Isn’ t. But Susie possesses her own
exotic beauty and her English Is flawless.
She also is bright as new paint, volatile and
talented.
The moment she spied an Indian woman as a
cause celeb. Susie pounced on the possibilities of
building a m ovie around Phoolan and her adven­
tures.
Susie had never been to India, did not speak the
language and. until recently, had been half-ashamed
o f her heritage. As a youngster she wanted to be the
girl-next-door cheerleader type.
It was with trepidation that Susie set out to meet
Phoolan, imprisoned at the small town o f Gwalior,
400 miles from New Delhi.
En route to Indin, Susie stopped by Paris to pick
up Indian-born French journalist Rakcsh Mathur to
act ns her guide and Interpreter.
“ W e waited In Gwalior six d ays." Susie recounted.
"D u rin g that time I did a lot o f research on Phoolan.

She was n dneoit. that's an Indian term for bandit
gang m embers involved in long-running feuds.
" I learned Phoolan was married o ff by her parents
to a 40-year-old man when she was only 11. When
the marriage ended she was kidnapped by dacolts
ami raped. She eventually became the mistress or
the gang leader.
"W h en the leader was killed. Phoolan became the
bandit queen and swore revenge for her lover’s
death by wiping out his dacolt killers."
Susie eventually was admitted to the prison and
befriended Phoolan, winning her confidence and
permission to write Phoolan’s story and star in a
film version.
"W e became good friends. In fact, by the time I’d
finished interviewing. I felt as ir we were sisters. I
even sm uggled a camera Into the prison and took
some wonderful pictures."

Beatles1 Inside Story In The Love You M ake 1
H O LLYW O O D (UPI) Did you
know John Lennon and Yoko Ono
were heroin addicts?

W ere you aware that Ringo Starr’s
drum m ing was dubbed by Paul Mc­
Cartney?

Do you care that more than one
Illegitimate child was fnthered by the
Beatles?
Did you know Ringo was the only
Bcatle not Involved in drug busts?
The inside story o f the celebrated
singing group is told in a new book.
" T h e Love You M ak e." by Peter
Brown, w ho was with the Beatles from
the beginning.
Brown was an executive o f NEMS
(North End Music Store) in charge o f
looking after the personal and pro­
fessional needs o f the Beatles when
they began In Liverpool.
He rem ained an integral part o f the
group, a founder and ch ief executive
officer o f Apple Corp. (pun Intended)
until the Bcatle breakup.

A Dock sick Rib and Restaurant

In addition to Lennon. McCartney.
Starr and G eorge Harrison, four other
young m en com prised the tight Inner
circle that rode the musical gravy
train to the end o f the rainbow.

The Twilight Catch
daily from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

There was Brown, official Beatles’
m anager Brian Epstein. Nell Asplnall,
the official road manager, and Mai
Evans. Beatle bodyguard and road
manager.

$ 5 .9 5

Cup o f Seafood Chowder
Crock of Cheese with Crackers
Tossed Salad or Cole Slaw

"T h e eight o f us formed a very
closed group to protect the Beatles,”
Brown said. "E pstein wanted It that
way and so did the boys.
"N on e o f us spoke for publication
about the private lives o f the Beatles.
It was self-protection against being
misquoted. It was an unspoken un­
derstanding am ong the eight or us.”

Florida Grouper
fresh when available —
pan-fried or broiled to perfection
Choice o f Potato or Rice
Hot Bread and Butter
Ice Cream Crepe with Strawberry Sauce

B row n, h o w ever, w as p revailed
upon in 1979 to write what amounts
to an official account o f the Beatles.
He discussed the project with the
B e a t le s I n d i v i d u a l l y — b e f o r e
Lennon's death — and received their
blessings. He Interviewed all four at
length, along with their w ives and-or
girl friends.

N ow F e a tu rin g N ew D in n e r M en u

Brown drew from his appointm ent
calendars over the years, contacting
hundreds o f people w ho had com e In
contact with the Beatles.

Tony Perez at the Keyboards
^

4H f
*•1

"T h e principal reason I wrote the
book and broke the bond o f silen ce,"
said the erudite Brown, "w a s to put a
stop to the Inaccuracies and false
accounts that grew up around the
Beatles.

— Tuesday through Saturday —
Playing Your Fa write Dinner Music

Sta* of Sanford
Lake Monroe M arina
3 0 5 /3 2 3 *1 9 1 0

ly c w g itw u

“ H I ■*■*..!.

m

“ The distortions were plentiful. By
1979 I egfgfyed the luxury o f a proper

perspective o f what went on during
the Beatles’ years as a group.
“ I discussed the m erits o f the book
with John. Paul. Ringo and George
and they agreed to cooperate. They
encouraged their w ives, ex-w ives,
friends and business associates to
cooperate. All this was nine years
after the breakup.
“ The breakup, ol course, ts one o f
the most interesting questions sur­
rounding the group. Usually Yoko.
Joh n ’s wife, and Linda Eastman.
Paul's wife, are blamed for the final
break.
“ That is only partly true. John was
miserable being a Bcatle and wanted
out. He and Yoko w ere badly hooked
on heroin. I tell about that In the book.
“ There are m any Interesting revela­
tions. Including that on tw o albums
R ln g o 's d ru m m in g w a s s e c r e tly
dubbed by Paul after Ringo would
leave the studio for the night. Th e
next day he’ d hear the drums and
say. ’T h at’s not m e!'
“ Ringo was furious and quit the
Beatles. When he returned he discov­
ered Paul had almost covered his
drum set with thousands o f flowers.”
Before em barking on his promotion
tour for “ Th e Love You Make,” Brown
sent copies to Yoko, Paul. Ringo and
G eorge. He said h e's received a
positive response from Yoko but has
not heard from the three surviving
Beatles.
“ John was killed about a year after I
started the book,” Brown said. “ I
expect Paul. R ingo and George will
react favorably. T h e y ’re over 40 now
and mature enough to handle the
truth.”
Brow n guessed m ore than 100
books have been written about the
Beatles, Individually and collectively,
all without their cooperation or aproval except the Hunter Davies 1967
iography which fell short o f their
breakup and subsequent m isadven­
tures.
Even Brown’s book is not legally
authorized because the Beatles failed
to demand approval o f its content
before "T h e Love You Make” was
published.
“ The book is selling w ell.” said a
pleased Brown. “ It's am azing how
interest In the Beatles keeps surging.
T h eir records still sell In the tens o f

�E w n ln g H srsld , Sanford, F I.

F rid a y , M a y 27, I W - 3

Woodhouse Teaches
Old Dogs New Tricks

I C B S I O r la n d o
(N B C ) Daytona Beach
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O r la n d o P u b lic
B r o a d c a it in g S y i f c m

In a d d itio n lo th e c h a n n e lv lis te d , c a b le v it io n s u b s c r ib e r s m a y tu n e in to In d e p e n d e n t c h a n n e l 44,
S t. P e t e r s b u r g . b y tu n in g to c h a n n e l • ; tu n in g to c h a n n e l I I , w h ic h c a r r ie s s p o r ts a n d th e C h r is tia n
B r o a d c a s tin g N e tw o r k ( C B N ) .

Specials
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Of The Week
lain Induda Ed Atnsr, Bm Arthur.
Jana Fonda. Hal Undan. Halan
Reddy, John Forsythe. Km Krislonerson, Jack Lemmon, Mary
Tyler Moore, Paul Newman and Ban

(101 THI

TELEVISION
Slowly" Paul I
and Oeorge f

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TELEVISION "Requiem For A
nvavywQni ungnMy proguevo
aa part of CBS'a Playhouse SO

By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Barbara Woodhouse Is the
dog lady of TV. She's writ­
ten a book, "No Bad Dogs,"
and she has a video cassette
called
"Quick
Dog
Training." She says the book
Is really to show how to
teach a bad dog to be good,
while the cassette Is
designed to show how to
teach a dog that has never
been trained at all.
As anybody who has seen
her on TV knows, she has an
incredible rapport with
dogs. But she says it isn't
Just dogs, it is the animal
kingdom in general. And
even the insect kingdom.
Once, in Gambia, in Afri­
ca, she came across a pray­
ing mantis and, on a dare,
taught it to sit up and lift its
arms (or whatever those
things are) and even to
move to a different place so
it would be in a better light
for pictures. Not long ago,
an English newspaper chal­
lenged her to train a pig.
Within half an hour, she
says, that pig could heel, sit,
stay and ao other nidlmen-

horn a prominent

Barbara Woodhouse

She's had animals of one
sort or another all her life.
But, at the moment, she is
animal-less. She and her
husband, a retired physi­
cian, used to live on a farm
and they had all kinds of
animals then.
"When I was sick," she
says, "my goats would come
upstairs so I could milk
them when I couldn’t get out
of bed. My dogs would help
in the garden and turn the
lights on and off."
But she travels so much
now she can’t maintain any
animals. It is something of a
pUy, but its' the price she
ys for fame. She believes
r ability to get along with
animals Is a gift, for which
she has no explanation. She
says that nooe of her chil­
dren has the gift, but she
thinks perhaps one grand­
daughter, now 9, may have
it Perhaps, it is a gift that
skips a generation.
Even though her favorite
dog was Juno, a G nat Dane

G

Ush movies sad was unions
throughout the British Isles,
she says German shepherds
ire the smartest of the
breeds. Terriers of all sorts
and Afghans are probably

Sports On The A ir

Volunteers Make It
has been w orking on costumes and her son Daniel
was In the cast tn the role o f a hen. “ He wasn't too
thrilled about It at first. W hen he tried on his tights
and leotard, he objected saying. ‘T h ey'll think I'm a
girl', but h e's all right now and m em orized his
lin es," she said.
"B ein g In the production la a health experience,
especially for m y son, w ho was a little bit on the shy
sid e," said Mrs. Antonclll. Tt has helped him to
com e out o f h im self knowing that there is going to
be an audience o f people. There la a spirit o f
coo p era tio n w o rk in g togeth er w ith the other
children one-on-one.
"T h e y become a little prouder every day aa It
improves a little each day. They get a good feeling
about themselves. They'll feel they've accomplished
som ething." she said.
The productions involve music, drama, dance and
art and they are all Interrelated.
Wilson, with its 260 students, is fortunate to have
a stage in Its sm all auditorium, something the newer
schools don’t have, according to Emily Wllkeraon.
curriculum representative-primary and public rela­
tions chairman.
She said in order to get the Golden School Award
from the school system, W ilson has to have had 520
hours contributed b y Dividend volunteers, and they
had passed that earlier this year. T w o o f the school's

P &amp; H teiuki to v e p u t iR m o m lb E iL a W b Q u tv e a c h .'

�4— Evening H erald , Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , M a y 27, m 3

F R ID A Y

M a y 27

EVENING

URDAY

EE) (I) NEWS

6:00

10:30
1)08) I LOVE LUCY
0 ) NEWS

O fflff lO fflO N E W S
(I I) (36) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
CD (10)OCEANUS
0D(«)OET8MART

10:35

OX NEWS

6:05
(12) ANOY GRIfFTTM

_

11:00

-^-*—
■W
priw
nW
l

6:35
m O O M OPYLE
7:00
J fflU E DETECTOR
CD O PAL MAGAZINE A profile of
Coemopokten editor Helen Gurley
Brown; an Interview with reigning
Indianapoka 500 champ Gordon

11:30
O f f l TONIGHT Host: Johnny
Carson. Guests: Carl Reiner. Ellen
Greene.
f f l Q HOGAN'S HEROES
f f l Q ABC NEWS NtGHTUNE
OJ)(98) THE ROCKPORO PILES

_

02)

7:30
ENTERTAINMENT TONtGMT

fl ®
A look at The Kinks (Pari 1); an
Interview with David Frost.
fflO T IC TA C dbu O H
( 2 ) 0 PAMS.YPEUO
BARNEY MILLER
UNTAMED WORLD
MARY HARTMAN. MARY

ax

Atlanta Bra

. m

_

C

T H IS W E EK S S P E C IA L I
2

PIECES OF FRIED

LIM IT ONE COUPON
L J 1

i

'

O F F M W F l i f S JUNE 6 , 1963

12:30
0 f f l SCTV NETWORK'S)
D O ONE ON ONE
OX (38) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

1:00

M O W "Tha Trouble With
Angels" (igee) Rosalind Russell.
Haytey MHts.
“ (98) NEWS
(8) LATE « GREAT

7:35
Chicago Cuba at

1:30
CD C*) M O W "RoNarbail" (1975)
Jamas Caan. Maud Adams.

8:00

O GD MOVC "The Sound Of
Music" 4IB6S) Julia Andrawt. Chrislophar Plummer. A would-ba nun
baeomaa governess to an autocrat­
ic Austrian widower s seven mis­
chievous children, in whom aha
InstiMs her love of music. (R)
f f l O THE DUKES OP HAZZARD
Boss Hogg accuses Luka and Bo
of stealing Ids stash of stolen furs.
&lt;R)
(Z) a BENSON Banson leaches
an economics course that Kraus
has to pass In order to keep her
M &gt;(R) □
OX (U r M OV* "Welcome To
Arrow Beech" (1977) Laurence Har­
vey, Joanna Pallet. A young woman
visiting the Santa Barbara beach
house ot a polite, soft-spoken older
man discovers that her host has a
darker aide to his personality.
® (10) WAS!PHOTON W O K IN

Coupon Good Only At
M il FKIBCH NVL
MICNMT 17-92
SMFDBO. FIX
122-11]]

CHURCH’S
FRIED
CHICKEN

12:00

ffl O

—^

2:00

JS ® H D C 5 ***
f f l O ROCK W ROLL T O N ffl
2*05
OX M O W "Frankenstein Created
Woman" (1967) Peter Cushing.
Susan Denberg
_
3.00
0 f f l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
A look at Tha Kinks (Part 1); an
interview with David Frost,
ffl O MOW
"The Com is
Green" (1979) Katharine Hepburn.
Ian Saynor. Directed by George
Cukor.

—
a ®

NEWS

3:30

4:00

a ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
„

ox-------

L O U N G E A P A C K A G E STORE
13 NICHWAY 17-92 - DiBMY

W

M

U

M

U

L M

illlM

a u

NOW PRESENTING
W ELLS FARG O BAND
W ednesday Thru S atu rday

llv ls

SWAMP OPERA
S (J N D A Y /M O N D A Y &amp; T U E S D A Y

M onday Night Jam Sosslon:

668-8267

m 9.00
9 ) a DALLAS J R. tries to push
his mother and Bobby Into opening
Jock's wta, and Lucy's depression
prompts Pam to tall Bobby about
his niece's condition. (R|
CD O M O W "The 8ms Of Dorian
Qtey” (Premiere) Belinda Bauer.
Anthony Perkins. Destruction, trag­
edy and murder follow when a
young woman trades her soul to
retain her youth and beauty, r i
® (10) BERNSTEIN / BEETHOVEN
Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna
Philharmonic perform the "Lsnore
Overture" and Symphony No 4 In B
Flat Major, Opus 60. (R)

Lunch, Dinner, Entertainment-All
Found In O n e Place...Mr. Cap's
An all-you-can-eat hot luncheon
buffet with salad bar for $2.95 is but
one reason Sanford residents are dis­
covering the recently remodeled res­
taurant. Mr. Cap’s at the corner of 27th
Street and Sanford Avenue.
This attractive bar and restaurant
was opened seven months ago under
the capable ownership of Nick and Dot
Capaccio. who have become Sanford
dwellers.
The luncheon buffet is served five
days a week from 11:30 until 2. On
Saturdays, sandwiches may be ordered
for lunch. The restaurant is closed to
the public Sundays, but m ay be
reserved in entirety for private parties
up to 175. It has been the scene of
wedding receptions, birthday parties,
retirement, anniversary and bowling
banquets, among others.
Dinner is served to the public six
nights a week from 5 until 9:30 and
features seafood, steaks and Italian
dishes with prices beginning at $3.95.

ALL th e f is n y o u c a n e a t

J

7:369:75

NOW

OPEN

24 H O U R S

ffetef Ran ®
* *

from Westfield, Mass., the
"happy in Sanford, thank
bring to this community a
31 years restaurant experi­

Their restaurant is best described by
Mr. Cap as a "place to come and have a
good time.”

CHIP ft DALE

W C C TU U , ULAD.
DOLL, TEA OR COFFEE

PLAZA ■ 1 *169*

If s os for as
you con go.

3

3

—

ftm

iw n m

S A*.
SPJL
Don

Family
Restaurant
A Lounge
^
O P

C om er O f
S an fo rd A ve.
ft 27th S t

LU N C H S M O R O A S B O R D
A L tY O u ’ M

___ ________

T

2 ' "

* 2 . 0 5

S a n d w ich M en u A v a ila b le

D IN N E R S P E C IA L S
• p .m .fo 9 p.m .

MEAT LOAF
LASAGNA

$A95
4

M e n Sanad Wtfc Patala Or Spaihctti, Salad, Broad I Buttor

SUNDAY BAI
E N T IR E R E S T A U R A N T C A N B E R E S E R V E D !

.... JECKYLL 6 HTK

O * 17-91 • 11911. Preach Ave. la slerd
_ One Biech iaath Of Plisa Net

322-5149

_
7.-06
OX BETWEEN THE LINES
7:30
0f f l O S M A N 'S IELANO
( }j Q
---------MINUTES
—I1THIRTY
CD (8) WEEKENO OAROENER
7:36
OXROMPER ROOM
8.-00
THKPUNTtTONt FUNNIES
S S POPEYES OLIVE
2 )0
(96) HERALD OP TRUTH
10) LAP QUH.T1MQ
9) PET ACTION UNE
-

• :0®

OXSASOALL BUNCH
Sutton.

0:30

ISC'THE 8IIIRT TALES
_i *
_ PAC-MAN / LITTLE RAS­

CALS / R O M NON
0JH|9S&gt; GRANO PRK ALL-STAR
®O0)OU*.TW Q
® (•) AMERICAN MVESTOR
_
8:35
“ BeachBlankatBingo"
( ,e*S) Frankie Avalon. Annatta
FunicaHo. SkydMng and kidnap­
ping ara part of tha fun and Irolic ot
tha taan-aga baach aat.

0.-00

I®
f f l O M E A TlA LLSa SPAGHETTI
(96) M THE PRESS BOX
OOJFLOROA HOME GROWN
(•) REAL ESTATE ACTION UNE
0:30
ffl
BUGS SUNNY / ROAD
ffll

1(h00
OSOOOEYOOO/PUPPY n
W) MAOC OF ON. P A IN T *#
10:30
a ®
THE GARY
•HOW
fflO T H E DUKES
OX (98) THREE STOOGES
gMMOJ^OREAT CHEFS OF NEW
0 (S ) THAT TEEN SHOW

_ _

S*tvtteUtuHMt and
fcMteuvuuttOfuCcCe

Quaat: Oon

(W FM H C H C H V
(• ) THE SBK3LCTON REPORT

!5

4 B ’s

&lt; *
II*
NICK MOLTE M

f f l 0 MORK A MMOV / LAV
4 SHIRLEY------------ •’ LAVe" NB
) VAL DC LAO
) PICTURE OF HEALTH

i

BAR-B-0 RIBS
VEGETABLES. SALAD, ROUS

m im

fiSiKSSSSa.

FOR A BUCK

10:35

OX MOVIE "A Tima To Love And A
Time To Die" (1951) John Gavin.
LRo Putvar. Tha trauma and devas­
tation ol war encourage* romance
bacauas of a need lor companion.

* 4
rn*y ir e is

0:30
THUNOARR
SPECTRUM
SPACE WOETTE8
(98) FtSHtNO TODAY
7.-00

S om e ABBoy
* W
IBbM
A'
WVW WJV H

THURSDAY SPECIAL

31ashdanu

) OILM AN'S ISLAND
I LAW ANO YOU
— _ ) OR. SNUGGLES
OX O ) (8)1

jP Z fa ? - STARTEVERY MORNING
RIGHT WITH US!

m m n K R ir

H8 HRS m
a

d V

DOMED FROM D-D P.M .
^ i J ^ * ^ 6 I L F M M E WD, BOAST OUCtt
W O t11* ^ j j W S . S O D I M F OB SCALLOPS
ENTERTAINMENT 6 T IL ?
TO M A ER M A

E D D lV k lU R P H Y ^
It a convict, . j a

® O R TODAY M THE LSM8LA-

Hailing
Cap’s are
you,” and
wealth of
ence.

SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

99*

f f l Q WEEKENO SPECIALS "The
Horae That Played Cenlerheid"
Animated. A horte show* a toeing
major league basebaN team how
tha game *houid be played. (Part 1)
(H )Q

6:00

2016 S. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD
322-0520

Family dining is a comfort in the
interestingly designed dining areas
where the Cap's unusual bottle collec­
tion provides colorful eye appeal.

• M IAT
• POTATOCS
• MUSH TXAY
• FBttH VCCKTABIIS
• BISCUITS
• o c s s c r r « b iv h a c k
A l l
BO M B tV
a* m
mciuomc

.

VEGETABLE,

R E S T A U R A N T IN S A N F O R O
I BLOCK H W Tin iF W H * NUT

.»

Served 6:30 PM Friday Only

SALAD, BOOS

O O LO K N L A M B — T H E F A S T E S T O B O W IN G

5:25
HOLLYWOOO ANO THE

OX WORLD AT LARGE

Prime rib is available on Friday and
Saturday nights.
Free hors d ’oeuvres and reduced
drink prices are offered at happy hour
from 3 until 7 daily.
For music lovers. Strings and Sticks,
featuring Randy Stanley, “ the Willie
Nelson of Sanford,” play Friday and
Saturday nights beginning at 8. W ed­
nesday night is jam session night with
the action beginning at 8 and drinks
remaining at their usual modest prices.

NAVE A HOME-STYLE SUPPER!!

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

mom

12:00

f f l WRESTLING

(5) O OILM AN'S PLANET

5:30

F a v o r it e s

4:05

CD (0) M o ve
"Blue Knight"
(1973) William Holden. Lee Remick
A Los Angelos policeman must
decide between staying on the
force or marrying the woman he
loves.
6*30
® O AT EASE A Jealous stats
trooper suspects that Val is having
an affair with his girlfriend.
®
( * ) WALL STREET WEEK
Clothes Make The WomanQuest: Brenda J. Gall, vice presidw LM err* Lynch. Pierce. Fenner
A CMTWtn.

6 :0 5

STARS

12*)5
OX M O W "Night Gallery" (1069)
Joan Crawford, Barry SuHivan.

AND

—

ffl O

CHICKEN (MIXED), WITH
ROLL

® O M O W "Kanaaa City Mae•acre" (1975) Dale Robertson. Bo
Hopkins.

EDO) HOUSE CALLS

5:00

OX NICE PEOPLE

_
11:30
aX THECATUNS

(D O JOKER'S WILD
Oj) (96) THE JEFFERSON8
JjO) MACNE1L / LEHRER

_ ^

ORtakt" (1988) Polar Cubing, Ray
Cattla. Human* ara threatened by
robot lika craatura* in this tuturlstic
society.
AFTERNOON

0 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

O f f l f f l Q QQ Q NEWS
01) (38) BENNY HILL
f fi (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
CD (•) M O W "Crucible Of Hor­
ror" (1970) Michael Gough, Yvonne
Mitchell. A sinister man is deter­
mined to drive his wife over the
brink of sanity.

6:30
O fflN B C N E W S
( 3 ) 0 CSS NEWS
f f l O ABC NEWS Q
® (K » u nd erstand ing hum an
BEHAVIOR
EDO) ONE DAY AT A TIME

7.-05
CAROL BURNETT

M a y 28

1001 S. Flinch An . SanfBrd

322-7898
SAPPY HOUR
N M L -fri. 11:30-7

The B est Ita lia n Foo d ft O rig in al PIZZA

Imported Italian Wines

V E A L P A R M IG IA N

Fret Baca r a w wi i 87
Cnteftoinini in our kwnge-

Frankie ft M ib b j ,
Wed. 1 Thutt nights
ON THE GUITAR

I7 T 1 S E R V I N G L U N C H
M O N -FRI

S 3 2520 S FRENCH AVE
PAUL KAUDETTE 5 ^ H W Y 17 92 SANFORD
FRI.. SAL NIGHTS
C 3
323-6470
J

O

BUGS BUNNY / ROAD

IX (i8 ) MOVIE "Air Fore*" (1943)
John Garfield. Arthur Kennedy. On
December 6. 1941, tha bomber
"Mary Ann" leave* tor tha Pacific
with H* craw battling again*! enor­
mous odd*.
S (10) MYSTERY! "Father Brown:
Tha Head Of Caeear" Father Brown
a guRt-atrtcksn young woman
who etote a prtoalaa*• icoin
____from her
brother1* coRactkxi, and I*
being blackmailed by a mysterious
stranger. (R )[p
12:30
fflQ S O U O O O LO
f-f l O
_ AMERICAN
----------EANOSTAND
Guaatr Simple Minds. Naked
Eye*.

1:00

_

0 f f l EABEEALL Regional cover­
age of Boston Rod Boa at Toronto
Bkjo Jays; Pittsburgh Plrsta* at
Cincinnati Rads.
0 (10) HERTS TO YOUR HEALTH
"Smoking: Hazardous To Your
Health" Dr. Norman Kaplan mtd Or.
K. Joy Robertson look at what madIcal science realty knows about
smoking (Part 1)
® W MOV* "Tha Last Oinomut" (1977) Richard Boons. Joan
Van Ark. WhNs hunting tha last liv­
ing dinosaur, tha world's richest
man bscomsa trapped m a time
warp whara ha la pursued by a
primitive Irtbo.
150
f f l O STAR TREK
ffl O
ROY I N FESTIVAL
PARADE
0 (10) LAST CHANCE GARAGE
Brad Sears visits a specialty shop
to unlock the secrets of radiator
refitting, q j

-

1:30

OX THIS WEEK M BASEBALL

2 *0

0 (10) COMPUTER PROGRAMME
_
2:05
OX BASEBALL Chicago Cuba at
Atlanta Braves
2:30
f f l O MOVIE "Tha Three Musk­
eteers" (1974) Oliver Read. Requel
Welch, in 17th-century Franca,
three dashing adventurers coma to
tha aid ol King Louis XIII whan they
learn that his crafty cleric, Cardinal
Richelieu, la hatching a nasty plot
isthlm
(98) M O W
"Uttta Giant"
(1933) Edward Q. Robinson, Mary
A*tor. High society members sutler
a Jolt whan a reformed gangster
tries to Join their ranks.
0 not w ooow R M H ra sh o p
"Hayrakars" Roy Underhill con­
struct* a garden raka. (R)

r

3.-00
0 O O U A EEMANA EN LA LEO0 (9) WRESTLING

ffl

3*30
PEA BOWLING 8100.000
Open (Uva from Denver.

Colo.)
0 not TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
"Fading Out" Tony Brown looks at
Ih* rise in low-budget "btazpiottation" him* up to tha prsaanl-day
exclusion of blacks in major Holly­
wood role*.
4.-00

ffl * * * — “

ago ol Taxaa Rangers" al Chicago
While Sox; San Francisco Giants at
Loo AngMao Dodgers.
OJ) (98) MORBOMLI HULK
(8) POP1 GOES T m COUNTRY
4:30
ffl O
POA G O L F ________
Toumamant" Third round (Nvo from
Dublin. Ohio).
0 (10) M M X STORY Hoddmg
Carter axaminos tha roaantmont ton
by Centrake. Pa. residents victim,
in d by tha hMlth-thraatsning fra
that has bean burning In cool mm-

�F rid a y , M a y 27, W 3

6— Evening H erald. S tn la rd , F I.

M ay 29

SATU RDAY
log tunnoli under the town lor over
20 years.
CD (•) AU8TIN CITY LIMITS
ENCORE

ORtOINAL A host ot country music
stsrs. Including Razzy Bslley, Marls
Haggard, Loretta Lynn. Marty Rob­
bins, Oottle Weal. Conway Twltty
and Faron Young, gather to pay
5:00
CD O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS tribute to the legendary musician el
Scheduled: Trevor Berblck / S.T. the Nashville Performing Arts Cen­
Gordon 10-round Heavyweight bout ter.
(live from Lae Vegaa, Nev ); U S 0:30
US S R. Gymnastics (Irom Los O ® CELEBRATE AMERICA: A
Angeles. Call!.); a preview of the STAR-SPANGLED ENTERTAIN­
Indianapolis 500.
MENT SPECTACULAR The Demo­
OB (36)DANIEL BOONE
cratic National Committee presents
0 (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN ■ live. 17-hour extravaganza; stars
REVIEW
scheduled to entertain Include Ed
CD (I) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
Asner. Bee Arthur, Jane Fonda. Hal
Linden, Helen Reddy, John For­
5:05
sythe, Kris Krtstotterson, Jack Lem­
(Q) LAST OF THE WILD
mon, Mery Tyler Moore, Paul New­
5:30
man and Ben Veraen.
S&gt; (10) WALL STREET WEEK
10:00
''Clothes Make The Woman"
Guest: Brenda J. Gall, vice presi­ CD O FANTASY I8LAN0 A rock
dent, Merrill Lynch. Pierce. Fenner star who witnessed a murder hides
out as the butler to three slaters,
A Smith.
end a would-be entertainer gets the
CD (!) NASHVILLE MUSIC
chance to overcome her stage
5:35
fright In Judge Roy Been'* rowdy
G2 MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
Western bar.(R)Q

10:05

EVENING

G D Q NEWS

10:30

(L D (W )K U N Q F U

6EM10) FOR THE CHILDREN'S
O (•) CLASSIC COUNTRY
6:05
&lt;B&gt; WRESTLING
6:30
®Q CSSNEW S
CDO NEWS
7:00
• (9 M SEARCH 0F_.
®0H H M AW
( D O MEMOR W WITH LAW*
WORLD OF
IO0USTIAU
I (S) SNA NANA
7;30
0 1®® FLOMOAW
FLORE
WATOMNQ

(□) (35) StSKEL S EBERT AT THE
MOW S
8 ) (tO) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE

11:05
(Q) TUEHf “ Summer Vacation''
Guests George Thorogood and the
11:30
O ® CtlFERATl AMERfCA: A
STAR-SPANGLED ENTERTAIN*
MEHT SPECTACULAR (0ONT*0»
® O M O W “The Getaway"
(1673) Slava McQueen, All

«a.l- A

• 3 ) MOWS “Chaise's AngeN"
(16T6) Kata
Jackson,
Farrah
----—-------

rvm vu’MBforv,

a q m

by three young Nmoto doh
O NI ISBHT RAND
country-western band Is
by a motorcycle gang
and forced to entertain at Web

02) AGRICULTURE U.EJL

6:00

® FLORIDA'S WATCHING

S

O LAW ANO YOU
® O AGRICULTURE U.SJL
OS WEEK IN REVIEW
CD (•) NEWS

6:30
O ® OPPORTUNITY UNE
(J) O SPECTRUM
® O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

7.-00

B ® r S COMPANY
(II) O ROEERT SCHULLER
® O PICTURE OF HEALTH
OS (35) BEN HAOEN
OS THE WORLD TOMORROW
CD (•) JIM BAKKER

7:30

CDO

STAR TREK
© (36) MOVIE “ On The Town"
(1950) Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra. A
trio ol sailors team up with a taxi
driver and an anthropologist to find
a beautiful girl whose picture Is dis­
played In the aubway.
0 (10) GREAT CHEFS OF NEW
ORLEANS
a ( « ) M OW "Around The World
Under The Sea" (1055) Brian Kelly.
David McCaflum. Scientists plant
earthquake-warning device* on the
ocean floor.

O ® (LI) (35) K-J. DANIELS

13:30

®
O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN ® O WALL STREET JOURNAL
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
IT » WRITTEN
B (10) THE GOOO NEIGHBORS

as

1:00

a ® VOICE OP VICTORY
® OREXHUMSARO
® O B O S JONES
) (35) JONNY QUEST

®
a
NBA BASKITBA
“ CtiimpkoniMp Q im t
phla 76ers vs. Los Armies Lakers
or San Antonio Spurs (Starling time
It subject to change)
BtUOAHCS OUTDOORS
D (MM MASfO OF DECORATIVE
PAINTMfQ

a

6:30
B ® SUNDAY MASS

(3) O DAY OFOMOOVSRY

f f l O ORAL ROBERTS
01 (36) JOSH ANO THE FUSSY*
CATS
a m l t . w ia v s r

1:30

®

a
USFL FOOTBALL
Philadelphia Stars at Boston
I (10) MAGIC OFAMMAL FAINTB

0.-00

1:36

■
“ Judgment At
(1N 1)M ubnlU an

3 *0
B ® OSUSRATE MMRTI A
STAR-SPANSLEO INTERTAiN*
TAOULARtOONTDI
0 “Mr. And Mrs. Ho

Hooker's aRorfa to and a truemro
m i .(R)

(HOWM0VW "Start" (1*06) J«*o
W" who
haaaav

tjursru'fcs
1Paul Newman, Albert S
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phy- An
whan Way hold up a trabi i

CD •
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MoCrans. A groxgiol New YorkCtty
youwa band topssher to SgM crime

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CD •

LOVE BOAT Jude * once*
waaMhy aunt laama Wat aha la now
pannbaas, a i
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AES OF
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M* Medrame Marring Jeok
Pslsnce ■Nat
(pves a
saNm
aSmpsainio
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03) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
EVENING

6:00
O ® ® O ® O NEW 8
0 1) (35) KUNG FU
0
(10) BROOKLYN BRI0GE
Music, art, poetry and rare archi­
val malarial are Incorporated In a
documentary tracing the develop­
ment ol one ol America's most
enduring monuments. (R)
0
the AVENGERS

m

6:30

10:00

®
O TRAPPER JOHN. MJ).
Trapper and Gonzo face execution
by a bring squad as prisoners ol a
paramilitary leader, and Stanley's
fiancee gets cold leal. (Part 2) (ft)
0 (10) THE GOOO NEIGHBORS
0 (6 ) SATURDAY MONT

10*5
03) NEWS

0 ® NSC NEWS
® 0 CSS NEWS
® 0 ABC NEWS

10:30

QT) (36) JtM SAKKIR
0 (1 0 ) THE GOOO NEIGHBORS

6:35

10:35

03) MCE FEOFLS

(Q SPORTS PAGE

7.-00

a

0:30
® a ALICE Mel enkste Wendell’s
eld In a crazy plot to steel a com­
petitor's secret recipe.
OS (36) JIMMY SWAOGART
® (6) MUBICANA

®
SIG BIRO M CHINA
"Sesame Street's" Big Bird, Ms
dog Berkley and a young Chtneee
gbf )oumey through China m i
ol the beautiful and leo«

® aso&amp; N u m
® a RIPLEY'S BCUSVE IT OR
NOT) Featured: the story ol the
auppoeadly haunted Great Eaatsm
btetrumanta; monkeys: a look ai abcreft ol the 1M0o to today**
(OtraHghts. (R)

Om W ANUVNBT
a &lt;m AUSTW CITY UMTS
Cash and

1 1 *0

S®®amws

(10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Naal
GaMar and Jeffrey Lyons review
“ Return Ol The Jedt," “Tough
Enough" and "Spacahunlar:
Adventure* In The Forbidden
Zone.”

ties

0J) JERRY FALWtLL

11:90
W SKAn

Stakone; a boh M
lleld'a tlrat movla;

Smiey Burnette (R)
a m WAYNBKMSHT

1 3 *5
0 M O W “ The Long Gray Line"
(IN S ) Tyrone Fewer, Maureen
O'Hare.
IS fSM M O W "The Mummy's
Curas" (1*44) Lon Ohanay,

©
Mo

S
OS (SR M O W "That'i Tha Spirit"
(1*46) Jack Oakfk, Paggy Ryan. A

I (M LATE IE GREAT

m

Of The

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TO

(36)

n « p ii

a (M l OOSMOS "Thai
Of M m r Or. Cart

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1J0

a ® M O W “Throb* A Croart"
(1666) Lorry Nagmen. EJ.

(1034) Shirley

ARar remarrying, a man
dial Mo km wdt new

B N M O W "Who's Mbtdbtg The
M lntr (1NT) Jim f
“

1 *6

“FbabaR SOT (1*66)
FrankN Avalon, Annalfa FuMoako.

too

by kve of Vie togareuee of Vw '10*
- Tha Mi M c i. iW Carrie. I
and dw fWnbowa, ThoHerv T&lt;
andTha Jtvaftve.

P y ^ O M M . (S ferfbf bme N aub*

B » MOW "The Greet Te
PywmWe Chase” (1*74)
Jw loji, Joowyn Jono&amp;
3:40
® B MOW “The EMM
(1*4*) Tyn
O'Hara.
_ _ 4 * 0
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a young man
i o World War Iheroby skv
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to hak&gt; a local houoawda ® • _

of Vie
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[FAMINE NATION
WTN OAW)

Mom. (R)

® a NSWHART ONk rakwlandy
4 *0
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(16) SOUNOf

CroaNey and

a^ e p a n g h b 1 n rn m m t
MMTBPSCTAOUUR |00WrDl

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•J O
a ® M O M “ The Legend Of
WNka Far Woman" (ItS t) Raguat

® a M O W "A HNM Of RMn”
0*67) Don Murray. Eve Mwle
8iW »

Inlhaglory andtragodyel horpeo- g* unue *T a M »M M n iM
giro Mat greet Hand at UMo SR ” — "
™r

3:15

1*6D T O u w i i

SSnEtt t w

0 *5
03) WEEK M REVIEW

ter 1 of “ The
(1*05)

way*' (1*3*)
CBrtan.

ms?

5:05
OS LAST OF THE WILD
5:35

(1M6L the flrst
ad by Mas and Dave

a ® rm w r it e amemoa: a
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sr:

8

0:00

® O THE JEFFERSONS George
agrees to a partnership with an
epparantty Isthertess boy lor a
father-son tournament. (R)
® B INDIANAPOLIS 600 Same
day coverage ol the 67th running
(from Indianapolis. Ind.).
B (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
“ Sons And Lovers" Paul expertoncM eanfUctlna fstllnai bttisan
his deep ettedlon lor Ms mother
end his growing attraction to Miri­
am. (Part 3 )Q

1.-00

( E B T j !HOt&amp;SR A im

*rjr

OD (36) JERRY FALWELL

IS M
ATE lil — Ok: A
•NTBRTAN**
rAOULARfOOHrOf

W

® 0

5:30

B ® CELEBRATE AMERICA: A
STAR-SPANGLED ENTERTAIN*
MENT SPECTACULAR (CONTO)
The Democratic National Commit*
tee presents a live, 17-hour sxtravaginia; stars scheduled to enter­
tain Include Ed Asner, Bee Arthur,
Jane Fonda, Hal Linden, Helen
Reddy, John Forsythe, Kris Kristofferson, Jack Lemmon, Mary
Tyler Moore, Paul Newman and Ben

) THEWORLDTOMORROW

OS (SSI M O W “Circus Of Hor­
rors" (1SS0) Anion DMrtng. Erika

boo

02) WORLD AT LARGE

11:00
S (3) ( S O (D O NEWS
(It) (35) SOAP
S )(t0 ) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
0 (!) MOVIE “ Oregon Force" (No
Date) Muaung Kwek, Kyehee Kim.

MocOroo.
® o

M S R m So

5:15

6.-00

(Q) NEWS

6:00

MORNING

5:00
8
®
SPORTBWORLD
Scheduled: Bruce Jenner Track
and Field Clastic (from Ban Jose,
Call!.); the 400-meter Intermediate
hurdles (from Modesto, Calif ).
(16) DANIEL BOONS
(10) FIRMS UNE “ A Traditionallat Look At Modem Europe”
Guests: Prince Hubertus zu Lowenstain, Robert Livingston ol the
Georgetown School el Foreign Ser­
vice.
B (I) THE INVADERS

m
u r i i u s ^ ____
^ a T S V i i i n i '^ v s i n i if t t
hJRJW M m *m vNM W .s(M

G O G U ID E
Zcllw ood Sweet C o m Festiva). May 38 and 29,
P on kan Road. Z e llw o o d . M usic b y "M o th e r 's
C h o ice " and "C ou n try F e ve r", arts and crafts.
Jam es E. Strate Show s rides and concessions. C om
Eating contest both daya.
T a e K w on Do exhibition o f Master Y.K. K im to
benefit Orange County Parental Hom e at G reat Oaks
Village. 7 p.m., M ay 38. Rollins College O ym . W inter
Park. A lso dem onstrations by m ore than 200 o f his
students and a national sparring championship.
Advan ce tickets available at Altam onte Mall agency.
qhudrcn under 7 fm * '* u h parin't.1'
......
*'

W.*.

■b^r.iewaRM1
- ft :.'

IS
•

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&gt; -'t *•?'

:

�Evening H e rald , Sanford, F I.

P r(d ay, M a y 27, 19U-7

Daytime Schedule
MORNING

0 0 ( 1 ) MOVIE
(SB) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
CD (10) SESAME STREET g

6:45

) O NEWS
) (10) AM. WEATHER

5:00
O (D NSC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)

6:05
OX WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

5:10
OX NICE PEOPLE (WED)

5:20
OX AGRICULTURE U.8.A. (FRI)

5:25
CD O HOLLYWOOD AND THE
STARS (FRI)

5:30

ax rrs yo u r b u siness (m o n &gt;
ax WINNERS (TUE)
5:40

ax WORLD AT LARGE (WED)
6:45

ax WORLO AT LARQE (THU)

_ m

8:05

7:00

0X MOVIE

O ® TODAY
CD O MORNING NEWS
QD O QOOO MORNINO AMERICA
OX (JB) TOM AND JERRY
®(10)TOUF11
0 )0 ) HEALTH FIELD

9:30

_

10:00
O f f i THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
(D O MARY TYLER MOORE
(10 (36) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

7:15

f f i ( 10)A.M. WEATHER

„

OX (SB) WOOOY WOODPECKER
&lt;D (10) SESAME STREETa
QD (I) JIM BANKER
W

7:35

„r

8:00

11:00
O f f i WHEEL OF FORTUNE
1Q THE PRKE IS RK1HT
I Q LOVE BOAT (R)
108)86 LIVE
1(10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
)(S) MOVIE

M (IS) FRED FUNTSTONE AND

5:50
aX WORLD AT LARGE (FRI)

„
3:05
OX MY THREE SONS

6:00

6 ( S r 8 COUNTRY
CD O C M EARLY MORNING
NEWS
. (AS) 10 MMUTI WORKOUT
U iflP W l

6*30
0f f i e a r ly to d ay
(1) O

CM

EARLY

11:05

8:30
M (SB) O W A TW A C l OOA8TEA

0XTHECATUN8

(MON-WED. FRI)
® (10JTHE SUNSHINE SYSTEM THE IMS FLORIDA LEGISLATURE
(THU)
(D (•) RICHARD HOGUE

®DREAM HOUSE
&lt;K) MOCPMOCNT NETWORK
MWS
g ) 110) POSTSCRIPTS

6*36

11:35

11:30

9:00
O ffiR IC H ARO SIMMONS
(D O DONAHUE

OX NEWS

9 ® 1

0 ® m

BM
OX M O W "Man* Fevortte Sport"
(1004) Rock Hudson. Paula Pranllaa. A writer Is made to oat Ms
words whan ha proclaims hknaad to
be a firsthand expert at Milng.

6:30

S
i:
m9

ABC NEWS □
0(1O)OCSANUBV
(DONE DAY AT A TIME
0:35
OX FATHER KNOWS BEST

0 ® FAMILY TME AMs leave*
Ms )ob at a small grocery store to
work lor a now, ultra-modern
supermarket. (R)

7:00
0 ® UBOETSCTOR
f fi O PEI. MAQABNE Husband____
oootin rtvtr.

i party on • WM-

8S

0 (S) HOUSE CALLS

7.-06
O O R S m AGREE

* --

7:30
TiOTAOOOUQH
FAMA.YFEUO
BURNEY M E IE R
UNTAMED WORLD
MARY HARTMAN. MARY

7:36
6.-00
! BROWN? Animated. Tlw
~~A | A U U
vfwiia of
wono v w lift
11 •ni rwwn*
ma

oerwo w »n ynim orown ■na in*
i (tu­

n u rs

f eatured: a man lumps Bom an
at 10,000 M at without a
p a d to
; a French
-(R)

OX (AS) M O W "Than Cad H Mur­
der'* (1071) Jim Hutton, Lloyd

m

■

rtlie e trrM ia

h n m e

n ■ i in ■

O B E M iru U E H U tTW P p TTn p

nsnt )ust bslore she Is to most e
famous doctor In SeouL (R)
m 0 M O W "Ghost Dancing”
(Premiere) Dorothy McGuire, Bo
EL

0 00O w

M O pR w s l, « WO W

d lA g H A a .

m ir O jrTW fiT*

Mas e city-owned reservoir In a
n ite te e d
H
I
Bee.
QfinonifKJ
invnpt
polo
future of hor vttfoy*8 precious
a

S W

OX ANDY QRMFITH

___ . . . . . _____

-

M rU n

0 ® ENTGRTAERMIT TOMQHT
A vteit with The Lottarmsn on lour.

rn 0

— M AgNA

Pentagon computer error promotaa
Judy to a genera) during the annual
War Gama*. (R)

M 0
0 ® MOW
Eye* Of Laura
Mars” (107t) Faye Dunewey. Tom­
my Lee Jons*. A chic photographer,
renowned tor shooting rsther
bizarre scenes. Is tsrrlflsd by payCrMC VWOfH Of Mr iMtlQl DvOng
murdared.(R)
f f i 0 M*A*S*H Hot Ups glees

I jo fd ir t who

S

ffi °

Q ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
m O ALL MY CHILDREN
OX
MOVIE
0 (1 0 ) MOVIE (MON, TUE)
O (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
QMD)
O (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
(THU)
O (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

(M)a (S)

2:60

ax

(U ) YESTERDAY'S NEWSREEL
(WED)

CD (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)
(•) SP10CR-MAN ANO FRIENDS

0 ® PEOPLE’S COURT
f fi Q M*A*S*H
m ONEW S
0 (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

ax

9

3:05
3'30

ax (SS) TOM ANO JERRY
M a y 31

0

11:30
0

9K»
®
REMINGTON BTEELI
Remington and Laura loin Murphy

■i nwtosfjt nomsoomang wnwi in

msistST‘ m

7K»

IM S
0

MOW

-The Hound Of The

w w i a s M

i a n i ,

12:30
®

0 (B ) ONE DAY AT A TSM
0:36
0 FATHER KNOWS BEST

LATE MQHT WITH D A W
actreee Car-

0 ® U B DETECTOR
® 0 PAL MAGAZMI BaoebeH
legend* porudpat* in the Cracker(ack OM Tima Baseball Classic;
me
meet a "Star Wars” qUz kid.
~ 0 J0KSR-SMLD
(X ) THE JEPFERBOMB
(10) MACNBL /

1

phi* 7A*r* vs. Loo (
or Ban Antonio Spun
(Z) 0 T1W T B COMPANY Janet
and Tarri try to salvage Jack's
chance to operate Me own restau­
rant. (R )Q
0 m AMERICAN PLAYHOUBI
•Northern Lights" Tha nrst Scan-

7:06
0

uX (AS) LOVE, AMERKAN STYLE

BREEI I ACRES

7:30
0 ® BNTBtTAEtMENT TONMHT

IKK)

m 0 M O W "The Plod Piper"
(1942) Monty WooOey, Anna Baxter.

A visit with Dabney Cotaman on
ihe set ol his new series.
I TIC TAG DOUGH

1 :*0

0 ® ENTBRTt P E W IT TO tSEN T
A

jMdi The la ttarman on tour.

UNTAMED WORLD
MARY HARTMAN, MARY

*0 0

0 ®

(D 0 S T O S Harry's marital prob­
lem* compncata vtoiat's chances
tor • big promotion. (R)

10KM

0

®
ST. ELSEWHERE Or.
Cavsnaro has to brask tha now* to
a young coi^ts that thair axpectad
chM win bo bom with Down's Syn­
droms, and Or. f
to k

(D 0

HART TO HART Jammer's

let invotvee tha Harts In a troubled
man's deadly fsntaalai (R) r

10:30

0 EASEBALL Atlanta Bravo* at
Pittsburgh Pirate*

) I LOVE LUCY
I TODAY St THE I

AmBwi

12KK)

m O HOGANS HEROES
0 (C) HARRY O

12:06
0 M O W "Tha Viking Quean”
(1X7) Don Murray, Adrienne Corri.

12:30
®

LATE MOHT WITH 0AVK)

and Stow AEon. ccmedian Gary
Mutadaar. actor Dabney Cotsman.
QD 0 QUBtCY Tragedy etrikas a
vigdanta group formed by
brother* In their crimo-riddan
-*
‘-ktimhnn4 M
nomDOrnOOO.
iff)l

( D 0 ONE ON ONE
0 (M ) L O W AMMBCAN STYLE

1KK)

CD 0 M O W ‘The Little Prin­
ce**" (193V) Shirley Temple, Rich­
ard Greene.

1:30
ffi 0

*MM BACK ALIVE
Eontaena I* out to murder Bui*,
but who and lor what i

1:40

MOMNXAM E WIPE An

2:30
0 f f i ENTBRTABSMENT TOMQHT

A vieit with Dabney Coleman on
these* of his new eerie*.

2:36
(D 0 M O W "The Mad Room"
(1909) SloHa Stevens. Shelley

3:00

0 f f i NBC NEWS OVERMQHT
CEE NEWS M B HIW ATC H

3:35
O
MOW
"Fort Meaaecre"
(1990) Joel McCree, Forrest Tucker.

6.-00

4:00

® THE A-TSAM Member* of
the A-Taam are takan prisoner
whan thay try to raecu* a young girl
trorn a redgioue-paramiatary ouft.

NBCNM EOW RM EHT
MOW

0TH 8CATU NS

m9

P9PV

0 f f i N M NEWS O V W M G H T

10:35

4:10

( D 0 M O W "AppointmentWith
A wear" (1975) Jowme Pettet. Sri-

R S S S whS

0 (! ) SATURDAY M O HT

0

®

1130

THE M E T OP CARE0N

HoaL' Johnny Canon. Guests: R-B.
--------------t (R)

*40
r O

5:36
OX STARCADE (MON)
OX BEWITCHED (TUE-FRQ

attempt la made on the Me of a
musician whoa* moat recant com­
position had been dedicated 10 Sal­
ly. (R)
2 *5
0
MOW
"Slaughter Trail"
(1981) Brian Donlovy, Gig Young.

8:30

11KW

0 M O W "Two Rage Want"
(1 M 0 ) Unda Daman, Joseph Cot­
ton.

5*30

Q

7:36

0

6:05
OX OOMERPYLE

0 f f i NBO NEWS OVERMQHT

RupirVOnftlOn Of 8 rofTwnC0 f*OV0-

a ) 0 OOt UMBO A young men le
m urdered directly a ila r W ring some
••range financial advioo from a
•••m m gly wealthy unde. (R)

S

dee farming m a ttIB North Dakota
whiter ora the aubRcte of John
Henson and Rob Hasson's Nm. (R)

0 (B ) HOUSE CALLS
Me pstn

5:00
f f i MORK AND MINDY
OTHRETS COMPANY
C D O ALL IN THE FAMILY
OX OS) CHIPS PATROL
0 (1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS &lt;R)
9 (0 ) THE INVADERS

OX FUNTIME (TUE-FRI)

Ingenuity that goes into making a
wMdUf* film. (R )n
(S) EASEBALL California
Angela at New York Yankees

1* « &gt;
(X) 0 TRAPPER JOHN, MO. A
netting surgeon tram CMna and a
IS-year-old deaf-mute frustrate

4:35

OX THE AOOAMS FAMILY

TUESDAY

^

4:30
OX (36) SCOOBY DOO

3:00

2:00

OXTHECATUNB

4:05

OX THE FUNTBTONES

0 f fi FANTASY
f f i Q QUNNNG UOHT
m O GENERAL HOSPITAL
ID (55) THE FUNT8TONES (MONWED. FRO
(SS) BUGS BUNNY ANO
FRIENOB(THU)
CD (10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
« (1 0 ) COOKIN'CAJUN (TUE)
9 (10) CREATIVITY WITH BILL
MOYERS (WED)
0 (10) COMPUTER PROGRAMME

O AS THE WORLD TURNS
(10) LAST CHANCE GARAGE
(FRO

2:30

930

m

OX MOVIE (TUE-FRI)

10:40

3:35
0X HECKLE ANO JECKLE AND
FRIENDS

8

S

"The Private History Of A Cam­
paign That Faded" Pet Hlngie stars
1:30
In an adaptation of Mark Twatn'a 0 ® N B 0 NEWS O V W N ttH T
d t if l i n n w l i w w f l
edE
'Seim'
nGinnillcio rOTIfiBCfnCf Of 1118
brief and t-ghrrtiTvt career in tha —
1:®0
Contadarata mania during the CM O M 0 W "G -M an” (IM S )Jam aa
Cagney.
Ann
Dvorak.
War. (R)
(D 0
ONE DAY AT A TIME
Barbara gets a
tha eve of her and Mark's i
(Port 1)(R)
KhOO
(D 0
CARNEY A LACEY Chria
and Mary EaSi are asNgnsd to

2:30

0 (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
9 (0 ) BATMAN

m o CAPITOL*
4:00
fD (10) BOUARE FOOT GARDEN­
O ® EMERGENCY
ING (MON)
CD O HOUR MAGAZINE (MON.
(10) MONEYMAKERS (WED)
TUE. THU. FRI)
(10) HISTORY OF WINGS (THU)
CD (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE® O CHILDREN S MYSTERY
THEATRE (WED)
PAINTING (FRI)
a MERV GRIFFIN
2*35
rt D(35) SUPERFRIENDS
® (10) SESAME STREET Q
OX (SS) LAUREL AM) HARDY
(MON)
CD (9) MV-3
OX (M&gt; SPORTS ALBUM (THU)

1:05

11:36

h m a

“

S

akimnua la murdorad by «*a l
aa sms to be a ghost (R)
®
0
NBA BASKETBALL

_____

8;30

9

1.-00

B ® THE BEET OP CARBON
Moat Johnny Carson. Guests
Christie Brinkley (R)

and a pregnant dog.

axi

OX BASEBALL (MON)

11.-00
® 0 I
Y MILL
TUAOAYMQHT

880?

Memorial In Washington, D C. □
0 (8) M O W "The War Bswean
Mon And Woman” (1072) Jack
Lemmon, Barbara Harris. An
eccontrtc cartoonist marrtaa a

O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
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WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

(M )l LOVE LUCY
(9) NEWS

June 1

______ 10:35

I
n
Jun&lt;* 2

a ® ® 8
5JJ(98) BENNY HILL
® 0 0 ) ALFRED HfTCHCOCKPRE-

53) NEWS
•

EVENING

® (10) SAUOI ARABIA "ON. Monay And PoNtlca" Tha (Inal apiaoda
of tha aartaa investigates tha Saudts
as an smsrging auparpowar - what
Ihsy inland to do wtth thatr powar,
thair objectives in tha Mtddls East,
and how thsy Intaract with tha Unitad Statas. (R)
CD (9) MOVIE "8Nant Night,
Bloody Night" (1973) Patrick
O'Naai. Astrtd Msaran. A sma« town
la Inhibitsd by a sscrat In Its past.
830
® O SMALL A FRYE Nick and
Chip aaarch lor an old tailor's
daughter who holds tha ksy to find­
ing a missing ont mWon dollars

e.-oo
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(26) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
[10)OCEANUE
[9) GET SMART
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____

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53) I DREAM OFJEANNtE

6:30
B ® NBC NEWS
(D O C M NEWS
_ ABC NEW# □
:WtOCEANUEV
ONE DAY AT A TIME

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6:35

53) FATHER KNOW* BEST

MO

• ® THE FACTE OF UFE Tootta
Idas to covar up tha lad that aha
has dsvatoptd a hearing problam.

7:00
B ® U E DETECTOR
CD B P.M. MAGAZINE A report
on the lataat developments to cure
baldnaas focutaa on hair trampiantt; an animal Irainar who acts
at surrogate mothar to orphanad
•too babies.
® B JOKER'S W U )

LOUIBE MANORCLL: DIA­
MONDS. BOLD ANO PLATINUM
Chat Atkina, Barbara Mwidre*.
Jarry Asad, Mai TMs and Johnny
Rlvors art among tha Bars faaturad
In this ratroapacthm look at music
from tha '20a to tha praaant.

(10) MACNCIL
MACNEIL / LEHRER

® 0 TALES OF THE BOLD MON­
KEY Jaka Mas to loam which
mombar of a powar-hungry trio
flrtd tha arrow that woundad PrtnceesKoJi.

O m H O U tS CALLS

7:05
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7:30

B (10) TN I GfUUM OONCERTB
Tha Lot Angetee Philharmonic,
undar tha diractor of Maaatro Carlo
Marta Gkianl, parforms Johannas
Brshms' 8ymphony No. 1 from tha
Music Cantor In Loo Angolas.

■ ® EMTERTAMMSMT TONKkHT
An Interview wtth Mickay GMay.
• TIC TAC OOUBM
OFAME.VFBUO
BARNEY MILLER
UNTAMED WORLD
MANY HARTMAN. MARY

„

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• ® BUFFALO BILL (I .....
Buffalo. N.Y. tsfk-ahow' hoot
Blttlngar (Oabnay Cotaman)
controversy
on Na TV
progrwn
_- ____ ___
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in g 10
for the batlar Ufa ha Mats

7:36

53) BA9SBAU. Atlanta Bravaa at
Pittsburgh Ptralaa

___

6:00

a

B ® REAL PEOPLE Faaturad: a
■gMhouaa M b r , a pat worm; a
mala ami T-ahirt conlaat; a barbershop lor babiaa; tha plight of kldnappad children. (R)
® B *ORRO AND BON Zorro

m

_

S ® ® O ® O NEWS
OJ) (29) BENNY HILL
8) (10) ALFRED MTCHCOCKI
o rw rt

O (9) SATURDAY NIGHT

11:30
B ® THE BEET OF CARBON
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests:
Palrtdt Msense. Peis Barbuttl. (H)
Q HOGANS HEROES
O ABC NEWS MOHTUNS
(29) THE ROCKFORO FEES
„
T 1;35
5Z&gt; THECATUNE

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12:00

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murder. (Ft)
0(S )H A R R YO

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12:05

53) MOVE "Harvey" (1991) Jamas
Stewart. Josephine Hua.

12:30

1(9) GET SMART

a m ONE PAY AT A TOM

_

_____1:10

1:30
I®

2:15

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G. Robinson, Fergus

(1969)

8:35

53) FATHER KNOWS BEST

7.-00
a ® UE DETECTOR
® D P H MAOADNB A woman

® O 0YNA8TY Fallon M o w s a
Roaring TwanUaa party. Kryotlo Is
Maggorad by an anoountar wtth
M arti JenNnge. and Kirby confronts
her notorious p a st (R )q

a ® NBQ

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u e m m u c iim

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or Sen Antonio 8pura (If ntests try)

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LETTBRMAN Quasi:
Robert Klsln.

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THE DIFFERENT
WAOKS M THE MNJTARY "From Gold Bars To Sifvsr
SMra" Top block mMtary offlcars
are proMsd In on oaamination of tha
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(R)
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T77" (1946) Jamas 81swart. Helen
Wabar.

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a 35 -yaar-0M coed. (R)

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1:30
B ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

_________1:40
® B M0CL0UD McCloud fans in
•ova wtth a murder auapact. (R)
2^0
a ® SNTWfTAFfMSNT TONMHT
mtarvtaws wtth Mbs Love of Tha
Beach Boys and Doan Torrance of
Jan and Dean.

-

NMNIWATOH

2:40

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Jeff Hunter. Anna Francis.

3.-00

3.-00

4.-00

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4.-00

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10:35

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4:50

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11.-00

1ABfvstmgttts 4 Rt

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12:05

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* ’ ' i to buy a gun for protection

4:45

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Y m ir D octors FrascrJpfJgn Filled

yo u r

_

53) HOVE "Man Of A Thousand
Facoe" (1997) Jamas Cagney. Dor­
othy Malone.

CD

Expensive
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12.00

a HOOAN-E HEROES
(9) HARRY O

B ® GRIME A BREAK Tha Chief
haa to donate one of Na kidneys to
tavo Ma brother's Ma. (R)

m iw a- ful aM oi y ,

Test y m s e d

WHITE O LAM LBN9SS
1NCLUOBSPRAMB

11:35

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Chaplin.

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OuituU
VISION and FASHION

—

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put* together aN tha Siamants
teamed to ttNa point In order to
actuafty ” aaN a courts." Q

(29) THE

1 1 : 0 0

™

® O ABC NEWS MOHTUNE
OX (26) THE ROCKFORO FILES

® a
stores; s promt of a real Me prtvata

.

® THE BEST OF CARSON
Host: Johnny Carton. Quests
Charles Nelson Ramy. Richard Lew­
is. Cathy Mortarty. (R)

quarry of Nail agents.

2:30
I ® OfTBRTi
An
®&lt;

a

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S IX .

OQRI

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cal Magnet Of Santa Mass" (1977)
Michael Burnt. Susan Blanchmd.

tha movies
a
m MOW
"Rogue ____
(1979) Pater O'Toole. John Stand­
ing. A man who made an unsuc­
cessful assassination attempt

6*05

5 2 1DREAM OF JEANME

„ —
1:00
® a M O W "Qoodbye Again'
(1M1) Ingrid Bergman. Yvaa Mon­
tand.

10:30

_

® tto &gt; U N o e w T A i ^ ^ a
BEHAVIOR

i

• ® O U B C Y Tha County Medi­
cal Eaarnmar'a ofhoa la auad for
Nbal whan Quincy Bats punk rock as
a contributing factor m tha staying
of a young man. (R)

SD m TODAY M THE I
TURK_____

e «)
a ® (s a ® a iH
0!) (26) CHARUTS ANGELS

a ®
LATE MOHT WITH OAVB
LETTBRMAN Quest: Jim Paterson,
the "Playboy Advisor."
® a ONE ON ONE
OX (99) LOVE. AMSRBAN STYLE

KhOO

■r nl BbiiMuu* **** ° ° * * Butch~
® B THE FALL BUY Coll and
Howie try to retrieve a beautiful be*
Jumper a *o la the etar of a women s
robsr skating team. (R)
OX (99) M O W "Tha Carey TreatRiant" (1972) James Cobum. ,*ennifar O'NoM. A pafhofogM lights to
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75th Year, No. 248-Monday, June 6, 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(USPS 481-280)—Price 20 Cents

Fugitive
Gunman Who Shot Two FBI Agents May Still Be In The Area
By If (cheat Beha
And Britt Smith

Sanford, but a lour-hour. room-by-room search which
saw motel guests evacuated turned up nothing.
The search for a man suspected of gunning down two
On Saturday night, the search moved to a KOA
FBI agents In Orange City has been expanded campgruund off State Road 15-A not far from the site of
nationwide but Investigators say they feel the man Is the shooting after the FBI learned Robinson had been
still In Central Florida.
staying in a camper there for 2V4 months. As
With the manhunt entering Its fourth day. authorities ambulances and fire trucks stood by. several residents
today said they were following several leads In the case, were evacuated. Heavily armed. Oak-Jacketed officers
but admitted that Clarence Eugene Robinson, wanted moved In around 10:30 p.m.. firing tear gas through the
on murder, armed robbery, drug and ball-jumping windows. But the trailer was empty. Robinson had again
charges, may have eluded them again, as he has done eluded his would-be captors.
for the past 5V4 years.
Found Inside, however, were several rifles, shotguns, a
"W e don’t know where he is. but the focus of the silencer for an automatic weapon, and several boxes of
Investigation remains Central Florida." FBI spokesman ammunition. But the handguns and police scanners
Doug Jones said.
Robinson is believed to keep with him were gone.
Following Friday morning’s shooting at Kitchens'
Also discovered In the camper were gun magazines,
Restaurant In Orange City In which FBI agents Thomas self-defense manuals, out-of-state license tags and a
J. Sobolewskl. 40. of Jacksonville, and Dennis G. copy of a book by former FBI Top 10 fugitive and robber
Wickleln, 42. of Ocala, were wounded, law enforcement Jack Clouscr. an ex-Orlando police olTlccr known as the
officers threw up roadblocks and began an Intensive "Florida Fox". Clouscr eluded police for u decade,
search for the man they call "T h e Bear."
taunting them with letters mailed from around the
By Friday afternoon, they thought they had him country before tiring of the chase and surrendering in
cornered in the Deltona Inn off Interstate 4 north of 1974.

According to the FBI and neighbors at the camp­
ground. Robinson kept three cars — a white Oldsmobllc
bearing license plate XME-196 which he was driving
following Friday's shooting — and, two Cadillac El
Dorados, one silver and one maroon.
Despite a massive search, none o f the three vehicles
has been located.
The camper and the Oldsmobllc are registered to Jerry
Lee White, one of Robinson’s known aliases.
Jones said the trailer has been towed from the
campground, located near 1*4. and the contents arc
being examined for clues to Robinson's past and
possibly future movements.
Robinson. 38. a native of St. Augustine. Is suspected of
masterminding the Dec. 29. 1977. robbery o f the
Longwood Village Pharmacy In which reserve Seminole
County sheriff"s deputy George Pfcll was killed.

6 feet tall. 200-220 pounds, with brown hair, blue eyes
and possibly a beard. He has vowed not to be taken
alive. He told a waitress at the restaurant where the FBI
agents were shot that he always sleeps with a gun
strapped to his arm. said Joyce Kitchen, wife o f the
restaurant owner.
A federal warrant was issued Saturday charging
Robinson with assault on a federal officer. Sobolewskl
and Wickleln were listed In stable condition today at
West Volusia Memorial Hospital In DcLand. One o f the
agents was shot In the stomach, the other In the back
and leg.
The agents were shot In 8:24 a.m. while attempting to
arrest a man Sobolewskl believed he recognized as
Rdblnson during a chance meeting outside the restau­
rant on U.S. Highway 17-92.
After the agents Identified themselves, the suspect
reportedly fired three shots from a .45-callbcr pistol he
had concealed under a newspaper. Neither of the agents
fired back.

lie is also suspected ol murdering two accomplices In
the robbery after they cooperated with authorities to
convict Pfrll's killer. Terry Melvin Sims. 40. of
first-degree murder.
According to Jones, Sobolewskl and Wickleln were in
Robinson, a former professional boxer, is described as Orange City Investigating an old bank robbery case.

How To Keep Junior Buckled Up County May Study
Utility Purchase
Diane Petryk
Herald Staff W riter
(Second of two parts).

You’re ready to comply with Florida's new law
requiting safety seats for kids In cars, but how do you go
about getting one — the tight one?
There are several things to consider.
Of primary Importance Is the age and size o f vour
child.
The law. which takes effect July 1. will require that
infants and children through age three be restrained In
safety seats or other separate carrier and for children 4
through 5 years a separate carrier or scat belt may be
used.
Child safety scats come In several shapes and sizes
because different stages o f a child's development require
different types o f protection. There Is no "best" scat
according to the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration.
Scats should be convenient for the adult securing
them, suitable to the child and fit the scat belt system o f
-s m i w f l r 1ly-

nrr f“

By Micheal Beha
Herald Staff rlter
Seminole County commissioners will
be asked Tuesday to approve funding for
a study o f the possible purchase of
Sanlando Utilities Inc.
Environmental Services Director Ken
Hooper is also asking that a report on
sewage capacity be accepted by the
county and steps be taken to provide
additional sew age capacity In the
county.
Hooper Is asking commissioners to
approve a $36,500 work order for the
Orlando consulting firm Post. Buckley.
Schuh and Jernlgan to study the
acquisition or the south Sem inole
County utility.

- ncd

nance adopted lust fall, the county has a
$1,400 fee based on the premise that
construction of new sewage treatment
facilities costs $4 per gallon. The com­
mittee proposal would keep the cost at
$4 per gallon but would reduce the fee If
developers could show that their houses
or apartments would use less than the
standard 350 gallons per day.
Hooper is also asking for a second
w ork o rd e r fro m th e c o n s u ltin g
engineers. The $8,000 work order would
be for design o f a forced sewer main
along State Road 520 near Oviedo. The
main would serve a rapidly growing area
near the Iron Bridge plant.
Commissioners will also be asked to
take action concerning a 121.000 bill

INFANT CARRIERS — Until they weigh about 20

le e S A F E T Y , page 2 A

developers who recently Issued their
report on the county's sewage needs
after a six-month study.
The report urged the county to push
for expansion of existing regional sewage
treatment facilities to provide capacity
for the area which are expected to
experience rapid growth In the next few
ye a rs . T h e c o m m itte e su p p orted
expansion of the Iron Bridge Regional
Sewage Treatment Plant near Oviedo
and the regional treatment plant owned
by Altamonte Springs to provide capaci­
ty in the Tuscawtlla. Lake Howell, Forest
City and Weklva area.
Hooper Is also asking commissioners
to approve a change In the county's
sewage connection fees. Under an ordl-

TO D AY
Safer than In his mother's arms Is this 2-year-old in a special safety
seat. The boy Is safest riding backward until he Is able to sit up well. As
he gets older, the safest place for the tot Is in the back seat. Florida
officials are encouraging parents to use the child restraint seats and
have adopted a law which will go Into effect July 1 to mandate that
adults place youngsters In a safety seat.
.

Action Reports....... ..... 2A
Around The Clock... ..... 4A
Bridge...................
Calendar............... ..... 3A
Classified Ads
2,3 B
Com ici.................. ..... 4B
Crossword.............

Lake M a ry To Vote On Road Tax
By Donna Bates
Herald Staff Writer

Ti

i

Lake Mary citizens arc being
oaked to vote on a proposed special
tax o f $1.50 per $1,000 assessed
valuation o f real property to raise
funds for road work on the Sept. 6
city election ballot.
City Commissioner Ray Fox urged
that the matter be on the ballot,
saying at the $1.50 rate, the city
would realize about $100,000 a year
for the special needs.
‘I want a vote by the people and
we'll take our direction from that."
Fox said. His suggestion was unan­
imously approved by colleagues
Thursday night.
The revenues from the special tax
would go to pave dirt roads and to
pave existing asphalt roads.
In other business, the commission
turned down a proposal to buy a
square block o f property with build­
ings on the east side o f Country
Club Road.while retaining Its option
to purchase two adjacent lots to city
hall on1 the west side o f the road.
rood.
An historical commission o f live
members was named by the board
and the City Commission agreed
unanimously to waive a $35 site
plan review fee as requested by the
Community Improvement Associa­
tion.
In addition to the special question
on the ballot, the three city com­
mission seats held by Fox. Charlie
Lytte and Burl Pertnchlrf will '
be voted on in the city election.

him the money because he waamreod to
change drawings of proposed renova­
tions at the Seminole County Court­
house after commissioners changed their
minds on what the renovations should
be.
Director of Public Services and Devel­
opment John Percy said county officials
felt they were making comments on
preliminary drawings by Sobel, pari of
the normal proceedings between a client
and a consultant.
Sobel already has been paid $35,000
for his services In helping commissioners
design space In the courthouse and the
old Seminole Memorial Hospital.
County officials estim ate the re­
mainder of Sobel's bill at about $14,000.

During the 10 years the city has
existed, this year will see the first
city election to be held In Sep­
tember. In the past, city elections
were held in December, but the new
city charter approved by the people
last year changes election times to
September to coincide with the
state's first primary election. There
Is no state primary election this
year.
Candidates for the three com­
mission seats will begin qualifying
on July 5 and the qualifying period
will end July 28. said City Clerk
Connie Major. '
Persons appointed to the Histori­
cal Commission are: City Attorney
Robert Petree: Margaret Green;
Virginia Anderson: Colin Keogh, an
unsuccessful commission candidate
last year and a member o f the board
o f trustees for the Lake Mary
Cemetery: and Lillian Megonegal.
wife o f City Commissioner Russ
Megonegal.
The City Commission some weeks
ago agreed to appoint an historical
commission as recommended by
Petree. The city attorney in urging
the appointm ent noted that a
number o f 19th century documents
will be (ailing Into the city's hands
when It ultimately takes over own­
ership and operation o f ihe Lake
Mary Cemetery as requested by the
trustees. He said an historical
commission could see to It that
those documents are saved
Petree was (bunding president o f

the Central Florida Historical Soci­
ety some years ago.
Concerning Ihe offer from Ottls
SJoblom. a member o f a pioneer
Lake Mary fam ily, to sell the
property to the city for $200,000,
Megonegal said he didn't think the
city was Interested. But he added
the city Is Interested In retaining its
option to purchase the two lots
adjacent to city hall. The two lots
are currently being leased with
option to buy and used for parking.
The option permits the city to buy
the lots for $30,000 or at an
appraised value.
Dick Fess, president of the CIA
was on hand to request the fee
waiver for site plan review o f the
Sroposed
■d community building to be
ullt by
&gt;y the civic improvement
a ssociation at the city-ow n ed
Crystal Lake Beach Park.
The commission approved the
waiver o f the $35 fee without
w aitin g for Fess to make the
request.
The commission also accepted a
p a y p la n r e c o m m e n d e d b y
Megonegal. But the board agreed
that Mayor Walter Sorenson will
name a committee to Include one
city commissioner, a clUsen. a
member o f the city staff. City
Treasurer Madeleine Minns and
Sorenson to study the plan and
p r e a e n t n o le s s th a n th r e e
alternatives to the commission for
plugging current city employees
into the ualary ranges.

Dear Abby......... ..........IB
Deaths.............. ......... 2A
Dr. Lamb.......... ......... 4B
AA

1A
Florida
Horoscope......... ......... 4B
Hospital............

Nation.....
2A
People.............
Sports..............
Television........ ...........IB
Weather...........
World..............

Mon Charged In Murder

L$k$ M ary High School began preparing for
great football tradition when P rincipal Don
Rleynoldf, center, and Chuck Schmitz, right, vice
president of the school's booster club, broke
ground for a new stadium. Master of ceremonies
for the ceremonies Friday was booster club
president Don Ames, lett. The stadium Is expected
to cost about 1200,000 and will be funded by the
boosters and local companies.

An argument over the alleged sexual battery o f a
girlfriend lias left unr Sanford man dead and another
charged with murder, according to Seminole County
sheriffs deputies.
Jerry Dillard. 40. of 2608 Hartwell Ave.. was found
dead o f a gunshot wound to his head at 9.-48 a.m.
Saturday. Ronald Wayne Mixon. 35. of P.O. Box 213 E.
Highway 46. Sanford, was arrested In connection with
the shooting. Police have charged him with murder. He
is being held without bond at the Seminole County Jail.
Dillard's body was found next to a pick-up truck In the
front yard of Mixon's residence, a blue and white trailer
on the dirt road northwest o f Lake Jessup Bridge off
State Road 46E.
Deputies said Dillard and Cecil Simpson. 33. o f West
Cameron Avenue, Sanford, arrived at Mixon’s home to
collect money Mixon owed Simpson.
Dillard and Simpson were partners In the ABC Roofing
company. 300 Art Lane, Sanford.
Deputies said Simpson apparently re« &gt;.tved payment
from Mixon Inside his trailer. But after the two men
went outside, deputies said. Mixon discovered Dillard's
presence.
Deputies said an argument ensued over an alleged
rape by Dillard o f Mixon's girlfriend about one month
ago.
During the argument. Dillard reportedly said to Mixon:
"Let's finish this once and for ail."
Mixon then allegedly retrieved a shotgun from his
trailer and returned outside. The argument continued
and the shotgun went o ff Dillard was shot In the head.
Mixon then wen: inside the trailer and called the
sheriffs department.
Simpson, an eyewitness to the shooting, said today he
knew nothing or an argument between DUIanl and
Mixon concerning an alleged rape.
Dillard, he said, was "a good person and like a brother
to m e."
He said the circumstances of the shooting will
probably all come out in court.

— B y Dtaa* P e try k

HPJKjrag
t**:t&amp;

1

'.O'*
&gt;4 s

pounds. Infants require a carrier which Is tub-shaped, a
bed that cradles the child in a semi-erect position. The
Infant is held securely In the carrier by means of a
harness and the carrier Is secured to the seat by the
adult seatbelts already In the car. The carrier faces
backwards to protect the baby's head from the
dashboard and windshield. Although accident statistics
show the rear seat Is safer than the front, many parents
feel uncomfortable placing the child In the rear seat
facing the rear where they cannot see the child. Since
the carrier does face backwards, the front passenger seat
is considered an acceptable alternative. It Is most
Important, however, that Infant carriers never be used
facing the front of the car and that they be securely
fastened down. A very young or small baby may ride
more comfortably with small blankets or towels placed
Inside the carrier supporting his sides.
CONVERTIBLE MODELS — Some infant carriers
convert to child scats so that they can be used from
birth until the child weighs about 40 pounds. For
economic reasons a convertible model may be a sound
choice. If you decide to buy a convertible model,
consider carefully models that require a top anchor
strap. To use this type of seat In the front seat the rear
seat belt must be used to secure the device. To use this
type of seat In the rear seat requires that a hold be
drilled In the rear window shelf or cargo area). When
correctly used top anchor straps add extra stability and

.

.

Jr . . . • : -

.

I-

w I-tyT
•x

v * V ?-**-■

JL'XiW*M

�*A— Iv w lH f Heraid,Sanford, FI.

Mewday, June t, m s

NATION

...Safety Seats Offered At Nominal Cost
Continued from page I A
allow less head movement in a crash.
But ir you do not Intend to properly
anchor the top strap everytlmc you use
the seat, do not buy this type o f restraint.
There are convertible models that do not
require a top anchor strap.

INBREF
Economic Future: High
Unemployment, Taxes
WASHINGTON (UP1) - The president's chief
economic adviser, Martin Feldsteln, Issued a
gloomy forecast for the economy today that
Included high unemployment for several years
and Inevitable tax Increases.
Feldsteln, speaking to a conference o f bust*
ness executives sponsored by the American
Stock Exchange, stuck to his predictions the
economy Is recovering with vigor but warned
that even a strong recovery cannot last with
record*breaklng federal deficits.
"Even a very robust rate o f growth cannot
solve the deficit problem," he said. "Moreover,
continuing growth at 4 percent a year Is not
likely to be possible If deficits remain at 5
percent o f gross national product."
Feldsteln said that even If this year meets the
administration’s economic expectations of 4.7
percent growth tt will still take four or five years
for the unemployment rate to drop to around 6
percent.
"Shrinking the budget deficit will require
additional tax revenue In the years ahead, a
conclusion 1 have come to accept only slowly
and reluctantly." he said.
The basic reason Is that the sharp fall In the
rate of Inflation since 1981 and the erosion of
earnings through the recession "have caused
the tax share of GNP to decline more rapidly In
the past two years than anyone could have
expected."

Budget In Trouble
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate Republican
leader Howard Baker says widespread dissent In
Congress means there Is only a 60-50 chance a
budget resolution will pass.
Senate Republicans and House Democrats this
week begin the dlfTlcult and perhaps Impossible
task o f drafting a hlgh-tax 1984 budget plan
that can pass the House and Senate without
President Reagan's support.
By a 50-49 vote, the GOP-led Senate on May
19 passed a budget resolution that Included $9
billion In tax Increases — an amount Reagan
said la too much. On March 23, the Democratdominated House passed a budget plan that
Included $30 billion In tax Increases. Now. a
Senate-House conference committee must draft
a compromise plan.
Senate Republican moderates, seeking to
shrink huge federal deficits, want higher taxes
and lower defense spending than Reagan wants.
But conservatives want no tax Increases for fear
higher taxes would abort the economic recov­
ery.

TODDLBR SEATS - For children
who weigh more than 20 pounds and
can sit up by themselves, there arc two
types o f seats. The shield type consists of
a seat with a padded and slightly flexible
Impact shield that comes up close to the
child’s stomach and then bends away
from the face and chest. The safety scat
Itself Is held In place by an adult lap belt
which Is fastened around the shield. An
advantage o f this type o f seat Is that
parents do not have any harnesses or
buckles to deal with. Children can learn
to climb In behind some shield models
with the seat already secured in place.
However, the reverse Is also true.
Children can learn to climb out of them
when the car Is moving. Therefore this
type o f seat is only recommended for
well behaved and disciplined children.
An alternative to the shield Is the
harness seat. This type of seat secures
the child to the seat with a five-part belt
system. This type o f scat Is slightly more
complicated to use than the shield, but
they are harder for an active child to
wriggle out o f and may allow more
freedom of movement within the scat.
Some newer models o f safety seats
secure the child with a combination of
shield and safety harness.
It Is Important that you note whether
the seat you have chosen requires a lop
anchor strap. Again, if it docs and you do
not foresee using It faithfully, select
another model.
BOOSTER SEATS - A new type of
seat being marketed is the booster,
designed to fill the gap between when a
child outgrows the standard safety seat
and when a child can use the adult belt
only and still Bee out the window. Some
models can be used for smaller children,
a little as 20 pounds, but cannot be used
for children greater than 65 pounds.
It Is extremely Important to note that
booster seats should only be used with
upper torso support, either by using the
tap and shoulder belt, or for maximum

safety, by using the body harness
Century 100 by Century Products. A
supplied with the booster seat In the
5-point harness: belt goes through frame
back scat. The body harness Is secured
behind child (as In all Century seats).
In the same manner as the top anchor
Century 200. Infants and toddlers are
strap. A booster scat without upper torso
protected by a large pad to which the
support is less effective than using the
shoulder straps are attached; bottom of
adult lap bell without the booster.
pad snaps Into the seat between the
child's legs.
AD U LT S A FE T Y BELTS - Adult
Century 300. A 5-polnt harness; spring
safety belts should be used for children
loaded armrest tray pops up when not
who have outgrown their safety scats.
anchored.
The belt should be snug and as low on
Safe-T-Seat 78-A by Cosco Peterson. A
the child's hips as possible. The shoulder
5-polnt harness; belt goes through frame
harness should never cross a child's face
behind child.
or neck. Parents or drivers should check
Safe 'N Easy Recliner 313-A, Cosco. A
to see that the child's head will not hit
5-polnt harness; belt goes through slots
the dash In a sudden stop. Pillows or
In platlc shell behind child.
cushions should not be used to boost a
Safe-T-Shleld 81-A. Cosco. A 3-polnt
child because they can slide out allowing
harness for Infantgs; toddlers are pro­
the child to slip too far down under the
tected by a large, heavy shield which
belt.
drops down into position (parents must
Another Important point to consider Is
take care to keep toddlers' hands away
whether or not the scat you have
from side locking mechanism when
selected has been crash tested. A
lowering shield); belt goes through frame
shopping guide to safety Beats has been
prepared by the Office o f Public Educa­ behind child.
A stroseat 9100 by In tern ational
tion o f the Am erican Academ y o f
Manufacturing. A 5-polnt harness; belt
Pediatrics. The academy recommends
goes through frame behind child.
parents select only a car seat from the
Hi-Rlder by Kolcraft/Baby Dri. A 5list below, since scats now In production
point harness; optional separate shield;
must have been proved effective In
belt goes over shield or through shell
simulated crash tests.
behind child.
TOR INFANTS:
Care Scat by Questor/Kantwet. A
Dyn-O-MIte by Questor/Kantwet. Suit­
5-polnt
harness; belt goes through slots
able far Infants up to 17 pounds and 26
in plastic shell behind child.
inches.
i
One Step by Questor/Kantwet. Infangs
Infant Love Seat by Century Products.
and toddlers are protected by a spring
Suitable for Infants up to 20 pounds and
loaded shield; strap between child's legs
26 Inches.
snaps
to shield holding it In place;
FO R IN F A N T S AN D TO D D LER S
shoutder straps attached to shield; belt
(C onvertible):
These scats are designed to be used In goes through frame behind child; top
anchor strap must be used.
backward facing position for infants and
Wee Care No. 597-A by Strolce. A
forward facing for older children.
5-polnt
harness; belt goes through frame
Bobby-M ac D eluxe II by C o llier
behind
child; top anchor strap must be
Kcyworth. A 3-point harness for Infants
used.
and toddlers; attached safety shield and
Wee Car No. 599-A. A 5-polnt harness;
pivots Into place for toddlers; lap belt
spring
loaded armrest pops up when not
goes over shield.
Bobby-Mac Champion. A 3-point har­ attached to strap between child's legs;
belt goes through frame behind child:
ness for Infants and toddlers; separate
top anchor strap mjst be used.
shield must be snapped into place for
Travel Tot No. 369 by Welsh. A 5-polnt
toddlers: lap belt goes over shield.
harness;
belt goes through frame behind
Bobby-Mac Super. A 5-point harness;
child.
no shield; belt goes through frame
behind child; child sits higher than In
FO R T O D D LE R S O N LY:
Deluxe or Champion: top anchor strap
Designed for use only in forward facing
must be used.
positions by children at least old enough

AUA

R E A D IN G ! (9 a.m .): temperature: 78:

overnight low: 71; Sunday high: 90; barometric
pressure: 29.97; relative humidity: 87 percent; winds
south at 12 mph; rein: .33: sunrise 6:27 a.m.. sunset
8:26 p.m.
T U M D A Y TIDES: Daytoaa Beach: highs. 5:30 a.m..
6:00 p.m .; lows, 11:22 a.m., 12:07 p.m.; Port
Canaveral: highs, 5:22 a.m., 5:54 p.m.; lows. 11:14

a

.

m

.

.

11:58 p.m.; Bayport: highs. 11:18 a.m., - p.m.; lows.
5:24 a.m., 6:20 p.m.
t Partly

cloudy today with a chance
o f afternoon thunderstorms continuing through Tues­
day. Highs In the low 90s, lows in the low 70s with light,
variable winds s
BOATING FOE EC A P T : Winds from the south at 10
knots, seas 3 feet through tonight

HOSPITAL NOTES
M arts*.
U n S a B .L

March A.

Manrl.Qyw
Mary S “

M r iH

Five children left without adult supervision for Just 10
minutes and a loaded gun added up to tragedy for a
Sanford area family Sunday night.

Action Reports
Flrtt

*
*

C o u rts

* Polk 9
According to the boy's grandmother. Pauline Knight/
45. o f 2441 E. 21st Street. Midway, the boy and other
children frequently played at the Williams Avenue
and 9.
residence.
Adrian's grandmother said funeral arrangements have
At the time o f the fatal shooting there were five not been made for the boy because police are still
children playing there together, she said. They Included investigating the incident and had not yet released his
a 12-year-old girl, an 11-year-old boy. a 5-year-old girl, a body.
1-year-old baby and Adrian.
According to a Seminole County sheriff's report.
Mrs. Knight said she has been told the 11-year-old boy 20-year-old Anthony Bradley o f 21st Street. Midway,
pulled the trigger o f the gun that killed Adrian, but she discovered Adrian’s body and called police.
The boy was taken to Central Florida Regional
does not know how he obtained the weapon or how it
came to be loaded. She said she didn't know a gun was Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival,
kept In the house, which belongs to the mother-in-law o f according to a deputy's report.
Mrs. Knight said she Is not angry about the shooting
her daughter. Harriet. She said there had been an adult
with the children at the time, but he left to go to the death o f her grandson.
"I guess It was made to be." she said. "It hurt but
store "fo r JuBt 10 minutes."
what can you do? You have to pray through It."
Adrian's mother, Venelta Knight. 23, was taken to a
INNKEEPER ASSAULTED
doctor this morning for a sedative, Mrs. Knight Bald.
A Fern Park motel manager was assaulted with a ftetVenelta is the mother o f three other children, ages 1,3

J E R R Y P flf L A R P

Mr. Jerry Dillard, 40. o f
1021 Sarlta Ave., Sanford,
died Saturday at Lake
Jessup Mobile Home Park.
Bom In DeLand on March
1, 1943. he had lived in
Sanford alt o f his life. He
was a m em ber o f the
Central Baptist Church
and a roofing contractor.
He Is survived by fou,
sons. Jerry David and
Kevin, both o f Sanford.
Chris and Jerry Jr. o f
Hartaell, A la .; m other,
M rs. M a rga ret D illa rd
Brown. Sanford; sister.
Miss Louise Brown o f Lake
Mary; a brother, Thomas
Dillard Jr. at Apopka; sev­
eral nieces and nephews.
Brlaaon Funeral Home la
is In charge o f arrange­
ments.
d A R L M J . P L LTTE
M r. C h a r le s J o s e p h
Platte. 81. o f State Road
426, Oviedo, died Friday
at Lutheran Haven. Bom
Dec. 14. 1901. in Chicago,
he moved to Oviedo from
Anonka, Minn, in 1977. He
was a retired bank execu­
tive and a Lutheran.
Survivors include a son,
W illiam E., Lon g wood;
brothers. Joseph Miller o f
ticago, Frank Miller o f

ovlna, Calif.; two grand­
c h ild r e n : fo u r g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w l n - F a l r c h i l d
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs, is in charge of
arrangements.
G E O R G E L .B N T D E R

Mr. George L. Snyder.
91, o f 229 Valencia Road,
DcBary, died Friday at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Bom Oct. 18,
1891. in New York City, he
moved to DcBary from
Longwood in 1957. He was
a retired accountant. He
was a member o f Masonic
Lodge No. 540 FA AM,
Canal Winchester. Ohio.
Mount Vernon Commandery No. 1, Aladdin Shrine
Temple Royal and Select
Masters Council No. 8. the
Ohio Priory No. 18, all o f
Columbus. Ohio, and the
DeBary Wayfarers.
He Is survived by his
wife, Adelaide L.
A ltm an -Lan g Funeral
H o m e . D e B a ry . Is in
charge o f arrangements,
sa w jjs u ifa
Mr. Phillip Mele, 72. o f
1351 Queen Elaine Drive.
Casselberry, died Sunday
at hi* home. Bom August
30, 1910, in Youngstown.
O h io , h e m o v e d to

e.Bswt use Mary

Casselberry from there In
1979. He was a retired
steel worker and was a
C a th o lic . H e w as a
m em ber o f the United
Steelworkers o f America.
Survivors Include his
wife, Anna: a son, Phillip
E.. Maitland; a brother.
Joe o f Ravenna, Ohio; five
sisters, Mrs. Phillis H art
Mrs. Mary Mesartch, Mrs.
E liza b e th H agen b rln g,
Mrs. Janet Ignazlo. Miss
C a r m e l M e le , a l l o f
Youngstown: two grand­
children.
B a ld w in - F a lr c h lld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs, Is In charge o f
arrangements.

NEMRODJ. NOWELL
Mr. Nemrod J. Nowell.
64. o f 619 Mockingbird
Lane. Altamonte Springs,
died Saturday at Florida
H ospltal-O rlando. Born
July 1, 1918, In Magog.
Q u eb ec, he m o ved to
Altamonte Springs from
-Wichita Falls. Texas In
1973. He waa a retired
quality control engineer
and a Catholic. He waa a
veteran o f World War 11.
Survivors include his
wife. Cathy; a daughter.
Mrs. Donna Provencher,
Paisley; three brother*.
James D. o f Schenectady,
N.Y., WUUam N. o f Adams.
Mass,, Lloyd o f Oxford.
E nglau d; th ree g ra n d ­
c h ild r e n ; o n e g re a t*
Beyer* Funeral Home.
Umatilla, la In charge o f
arrangements.

i

tt

Safe-T-Rlder Booster by Century Pro­
ducts. For children from 20 to 65
pounds. In the front scat It must be used
with a lap-shoulder belt. For the back
seat a lap belt and special harness must
be used. The harness must be anchored
to a bolt In the package shelf behind the
child.
According to a Florida Highway patrol
spokesman police will strive to enforce
the new law, but as with any driving rule
Infraction, Issuance o f tickets will be up
to the discretion o f the officer at the
scene.
If an offtcer sees a child riding in a
motor vehicle unrestrained, said Florida
H ig h w a y P a tro l spok esm an G ene
Hutlgreen, the driver could be ticketed or
Issued a warning.
While use o f approved safety seats
are required by the law. he said the
decision as to whether a child Is properly
restrained will be a "Judgement call."
"T h e officer will probably apprise the
individual." Hultgreen said. "Just like In
any other situation, we're going to give
the public the benefit o f the doubt.
"A fter all. correction Is what we're
after — not to penalize people.
"A n officer will be within his rights If
he chooses to write a citation, or if hr
chooses to give some friendly advice and
let the driver get on home."
COST: The American Academy of
Pediatrics advises that the same car seat
may sell at a wide range o f prices In
stares In the same area. The seats may
cost between *40 and 8100, according to
a Red Cross spokesman. It is a good Idea
to comparison shop for the best deal.
If you would like to rent a safety seat
instead o f purchase one. the Central
Florida Chapter o f the American Red
Cross Is Involved In a safety project
called K.I.S.S. (Keep Infants Seated
Safely) which is providing car seats at
nominal loan cost.

and knife Just after 8 p.m. Wednesday by a Irate
customer.
Police said Jen y M. Elrod. 601 South U.S. Highway
17-92. was struck by a guest at the Pine Grove Hotel
after he told the man he could not supply him with a
larger cottage.
The tenant, who appeared to be Intoxicated, struck
Elrod over the left eye and pulled a lack-handle pocket
knife and threatened him.
Police said the assailant's wife pulled him off Elrod
and they got In their car with their two children and
drove off, leaving their belongings at the motel.

RUDE AWAKENUIQl
A 90-year-old Sanford woman was awakened by an
Intruder early Thursday at her mobile home in the
Spring Hammock Trailer Park.
Julia E. Allen told police she was awakened by a light
In her bathroom at about 3:30 a.m. and then saw a man
standing In her hallway carrying one o f her suitcases.
When she screamed the Intruder fled, police said, but
not before he had rummaged through closets and old
purses. It has not been determined If any Items were
removed.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Key Club or
T-Bone

A REA DEATHS

STOCKS

\

Tot Guard by Ford Motor Company.
Child alts behind large shield which Is
held In place by vehicle lap belt.

Boy, 7, Shot, Killed Accidentally A s Children Play
Seven-year-old Adrian Knight o f Lincoln Street,
Canaan, east o f Sanford, was found shot to death in a
bedroom o f the home o f his aunt. Harriet Simmons o f
2070 Williams Ave., Sanford.
•

NATIONAL WEATHER: Forecasters warned rising
temperatures today could Increase the snowmelt
sending disastrous floods and mudslides across Utah.
Storms dumped up to 6 Inches o f rain on Texas, forcing
a small evacuation and leaving 6 feet o f water on roads.
Showers and thunderstorms today stretched from New
Mexico to Louisiana and from Illinois to western New
York. Louisiana officials maintained a constant vigil
over 140 miles o f Mississippi River levees for seepage
pushed by thunderstorms that swept from Texas and
Colorado to the Atlantic Sunday. The storms spun off
half a dozen tornadoes, and 60 mph winds and golfball
sized hall were common across the southern Plains. At
least 10 people died In weather-related weekend
accidents. A 16-year-old Louisiana boy died and another
man was Injured when lightning struck their boat at
Bayou Benoit. La. A man drowned In a flooded
basement In Salt Luke City, five people died in a two-car
accident In Pennsylvania during a rainstorm and three
died In a collision on a fog-shrouded highway In
northern Indiana. Nearly 6 Inches o f rain fell In central
Texas by early today. About 40 people were evacuated
from Brown wood, many from a housing development for
the elderly, and another evacuation was possible In
nearby Groavenor. The worst o f four tornadoes In Texas
Sunday was one o f two near Brownwood, where the roof
was tom ofT a church and mobile homes were
overturned. Thunderstorms flooded streets In Pueblo.
Colo.

to sit up alone.
C h n d Love Seat by Century Products.
A 5-polnt harness: belt goes across seat
In front o f child; top anchor strap must
be used.

------ ------ m i o * '
----------- w t w

Deltona, died Saturday at
Florida HospitalAltamonte. Bom June 21,
1928, in Germany, she
moved to Deltona from
Chicago In 1979. She was
a retired machine operator
and was a member o f St.
Vladimir Ukranian
Church. Apopka.
Survivors Include her
h u s b a n d , J o h n ; tw o
daughters, Anita O'Neill.
Deltona, Gretal Stokes o f
Chicago; a sister, Betty
K n a u e r o f W a lt r o p .
Germany; a brother. Karl
Goppner o f Stadstelnach,
G erm any; three grand­
children.
B a ld w in - F a lr c h lld
Funeral Home. Apopka, is
In charge o f arrangements.

Funoral Notlco
D iu saasu tjiaav
— Funrst tarvfce* tar Mr. Jarry
DlllarS, «, of IKI Sarlta Ave..
Sartor* whoS M laturiay. will ha
a* II a m MMnatSay at Sritaen
Funeral Hama wits tho Rev.
FraMo Smith afnrtatto*. Burial
will ha M QahtowmMemorial Fart.
Viewing will ho from M p m
Tuaaeey. S rlita n Funeral

PARK A V I. A isth ST.
SANFORD

J 2 M

OFKN1DAVf—* AJM.-T P.M.
SANFORD A V I. St atti ST.
SANFORD

■ A.M.a P.M SUM. SI

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2 9 :

The

M eaning o f
a Funeral
A funeral it about e human being. It eayt
that someone lived, was loved, end will be
missed. We believe it should be as special
as we can make I t

Homa-MIndWfB.

SIM A Week
Part Time
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Webster. Am erica's mast pop­
ular dictionary company needs
home worker* to to update
local n a ilin g n«f«
dress, dale o i both to Webster,
Dept. 9028, 1681 Bayvlcw
Ave., Suite 101. Toronto. On­
tario MAG SC I.

4- anc dollar far
Mrs. Quads
msfl/Oivti
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f u n e r a l home

t JO WEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD

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TELCFHONC 3773713
WILLIAM L. GRAMKOW

�gvtwlnt Htrzld, iiirftri, Ft.

City Clerk Elevated To Pott

Lake Mary Gets New Manager
By Donna Estes
Herald Staff W riter

IN BRIEF

Beginning tod ay . City Clerk Connie Major will
become Lake Mary's acting city manager and her salary
will be raised accordingly.
She is to retain the position until the Lake Mary City
Commission appoints a permanent city manager to
replace resigned Phil Kulbcs.
And City Commissioner Burt Perlnchicf advised his
colleagues "not to act hastily" In naming a replacement,
adding the board also "shouldn't be stampeded or
pantrked Into making that decision."

Baby With Rare Breathing
Disorder Can G o Home
MIAMI (UPI) — A state agency has cleared the
way for 6-month-old Anthony Plater-Zabcrk to
go home for the first time In his young life.
The Infant has had to remain In Miami
Children's Hospital since birth because hts
family's insurance policy does not --pay for
at-home care, even though It will be much less
expensive than his *4,500-a-week hospital bill.
Little Anthony suITers from Undine's Curse, a
rare breathing disorder. He cannot survive sleep
unless hooked up to a respirator, doctors say.
Anthony's parents learned Saturday that the
state Department o f Health and Rehabilitative
Services (HRS) will provide the hours o f home
nursing care that Blue Cross-Blue Shield of
Florida says regulations won't permit it to pay.
"W e ’ll be able to get the baby home very soon.
In the next few days, as soon as a respirator is
Installed in his home." said Dr. Ian Jeffries.
Anthony's doctor.
Since January, Anthony's doctors have
wanted to release him from the hospital and
send him home, where breathing equipment
could be Installed and night nursing care
arranged for about 82,500 a week.
Blue Cross-Blue Shield said the family's
8250,000 medical Insurance only pays for
hospital treatment and won't cover home
nursing care — even If It is less expensive.
Max Rothman, HRS district administrator,
said money to pay for the home care will come
from HRS's Children's Medical Services Pro­
gram.

'

He moved Mrs. Major's appointment as acting city
manager, with her rate o f pay pro-rated to that of the
current city manager during the period.
Pcrinchlefs motion was unanimously approved.
Noting he felt strongly about Mrs. Major's Interim
appointment. Perlnchicf said, "There Is no one In the
city's employ who knows the lntcrworklngs of the city
like Mrs. Major.
Mrs. Major Indicated after the meeting that she Is not
Interested In the permanent appointment.
While she serves as city manager, her salary will rise
from about 8288 a week to about 8423 weekly, which
has been Kulbes' rate o f pay.

Mrs. Major was first employed by the city on May 1,
1977, as a clerk typist. She was named Interim city clerk
for four months In 1978 and was named permanent city
clerk In February 1979.
Prior to moving to Florida. Mrs. Major, a native of
Albert Lea, Minn., was employed by the U.S. Army
Corps o f Engineers in Detroit Mich., for seven years as a
stenographer-typist. The youngest from a family of
seven children, she has two daughters, Shari and
Shelley, and a son, Scott. Her husband is employed by
Ryder Truck Rental.
Pcrinchief praised Kulbes for his service to the city.
Kulbes. who will leave the post o f city manager In the
next few days, was presented s plaque by city officials
during ceremonies earlier Thursday. While his resigna­
tion isn't effective until June 30. he la taking vacation
time and accumulated compensatory time.
In related action, the city commission voted to request
Vince Butler, the city's building Inspector who works on
a part-time basis, to give more time to the Job until a
new city manager is named.
Mayor Walter Sorenson said the vacancy in the city
manager position will be advertised In the Evening
Herald, other area newspapers and the Florida League of
Cities Municipal Record and notices of the vacancy will
be sent to area universities and community colleges.

3 Women Shot Protecting 2 Men In Belfast
BELFAST. Northern Ireland (UPI)
— Three women were shot and
wounded as they tried (o protect
two men from masked gunmen who
burst into their home, police said.
They said the shooting occurred
shortly after 9:15 p.m. Sunday
when four gunmen broke into an

apartm ent in a predom inantly
Roman Catholic district o f West
Belfast.
One o f the gunmen opened fire on
the four women and two men In the
apartment, police said. The men
were unharmed but three o f the
women were hit in the legs.

The women were rushed to a
hospital where their condition was
described as "comfortable." Police
withheld their Identities but said
they were members of the same
family.
The gunmen escaped on f o o l.

M»wd«y* Jywt l, 1W -3A

STAY C O O i THU
SUMMER AND
SAVI U f TO

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I k ON QUALIFYING
H I gcnerai ELECTRIC
ml CENTRAL AIR
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l JS JO Y

GRAPEFRUIT
M K t M I'W M IU tA

Eastern 'Over The Hump'
MIAMI (UPI) — Eastern Airlines officials say
the acceptance of a wage concessions package
by the airline's 16,000 non-union workers will
save 8200 million by 1984 and help avert a cash
crisis that could have closed down the company.
Approval o f the plan by the non-union
workers, who represent more than 40 percent of
the company's 39,000-mcmber work force, was
announced by Eastern Sunday.
Lenders to the airline had linked some 8200
million In credit to acceptance o f the wage
concessions package — and to an Improvement
in the long-poor relationship between manage­
ment and labor.
The action is expected to defuse a potentially
dangerous finan cial crisis that Eastern officials
said could have shut down south Florida's
largest corporate employer.
"I think that would put us over the hump."
Eastern Chairman Frank Borman said o f the
proposed package last week. "That would
certainly satisfy the lenders."
E arlier this year. E astern reported a
860.7-mllllon first-quarter deficit, and Borman
told employees last week that the company lost
about 81 million a,day during May.
In the Sunday. announcement, officials said
management and other non-union personnel o f
’ the Miami based-airline had voted by a nearly
7-3 margin In divert 10 percent of their wages
Into two in-house Investment programs.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
13 A re Killed In Bus
Accident In West Bengal

’

NEW DELHI. India. June 6 (UPI) - A bus
caught fire In the eastern state o f West Bengal,
killing 13 passengers and injuring 40 others,
police said Monday .
The accident occurred Sunday at Bolepur.
where the late Indian poet Rabindranath
Tagore's Shantlnlketan university is located,
about 100 miles (160 km) north o f Calcutta.
West Bengal's deputy Inspector-general of
police S.S. Bindra told reporters in Calcutta 12
persons died instantly, one died In hospital and
eight of the 40 people injured were seriously
burned.
The cause o f the fire was not Immediately
known, but Bindra said police are checking a
report that explosives were loaded In the bus.

i

CALEN DAR
MONDAY, JUNE 6
Free blood pressure clinic. 2-4 p.m.. Seventh and Elm.
Sanford Seventh-day Adventist Church Community
Service Room.
Fellowship Croup AA. 8 p.m.. Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center. North Triplet Drive, Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St. Closed.

TUESDAY, JUNE 7
H obbycrafl Class Introduction, 10*11:30 a.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
Longwood Sertoma. noon. Quincy's Restaurant.
Long wood.
Rotary Club o f Longwood, 7:30 a.m.. Cassidy's
Restaurant. Longwood
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on Lake
Monroe.
Winter Springs Sertoma. 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress.
Sanford Senior Citizens picnic, meet at Sanford Civic
Center at 10:30 to go to picnic site.
South Seminole Masonic Lodge. 7:30 p.m., Lake
Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Seminole Halfway House A A. 8 p.m., o ff U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford, closed.
Overealers Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m., Florida
Power A Light. 301N. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE •
Casselberry Roiary breakfast. 7:30 a.m., Casselberry
Senior Center, 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford Rotary Breakfast Club, 7 a.m
Skyport
Restaurant. Sanford Airport.
Sanford Kiwanis Club. noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Serenaderi Senior Citizens Dance, 2:30 p.m..
Sanford Civic Center. Sanford Avenue and Seminole
Boulevard.
Illlniters, 7:30 p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N.
Lake Triplet Drive.

FPL will pay up to $300 if you have a participating
contractor install ceiling insulation or add to your existing
insulation to bring it up to FPUs recommended level.
\bu get money back on your installation novs and
your new insulation will also pay you by lowering your
cooling costs now and for years to come. And an FPL
representative will personally check to see that the completed job meets our rigid standards.
lb find out if you qualify for this V\btt-Wise'“
incentive, call us now for a free Home Energy Audit
This program benefits you and all our customers.
Because it costs less than the oil necessary to generate
the extra electricity used by inefficient homes.
So help your house stay cooler for less. And collect
up to a cool $3001

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A free Home Energy Audit will provide more information. Tb
for one, send us this coupon or call the Wktt-WUe Line
8 to 5.

1-800-432-6563

I want to schedule a free Home Energy Audit to get more
information on the following Watt-Wise CashBack incentives:
□ Cooling &amp; Heating
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NAME
ADDRESS

CITY

FLZIP

DAYTIME TE L
Mail to: Energy Conservation Departm ent!!
Florida ftm er &amp; Light Company
P.Q Box m m Miami. FL33KB

w

-TV- V

!•■

nr

•- -’ -.'It*.

w

�Evening Herald

t .* 0." * *

(usps a im )
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-0993

•'

The auction, held April 16 at the district
warehouse In Lake Monroe, was a success,
according to Purchasing Supervisor Don
Coleman.

Monday, June 6, 1983—4A

&gt;
*
m

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

More than $9,000 was made In the sale,
which cleaned out Junk stored at the
warehouse for years, Coleman said. The
total profit was $9,128.87 with another
$743.63 going to the auctioneer.

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;

Y e », $45.00. By MaU: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,

cv

$30.00; Year, B7.00.

The Censors,
The Censored
T h e Iro n y Is so th ick you cou ld s ca rcely
pen etrate It w ith a p iercin g m etaphor. T h e
nation 's form er spy m aster, A dm . Stansfleld
T u rn er — the m an who. as director o f the CIA
under J im m y Carter, enforced an outrageous
agen cy gag rule — Is him scir being gagged by
those w ho now run the shop. T h e C IA ’s censorship
com m ittee, the Innocuously named Publicatlrns
R eview Board, has taken exception to several parts
o f a book Tu rn er is w ritin g on the craft o f
Intelligence.
W hat m akes T u rn er’s case so Ironic Is that It
w as under his tenure that the C IA won a m ajor
Suprem e Court decision d en yin g Frank Sncpp, a
form er agen cy operative, the earnings from a book
he w rote because he d idn 't clear It with his form er
em ployers. T h e prepublication review rule that
snared Snepp has since been expanded by the
adm inistration to effectively ga g any official with
access to classified m aterial — not Just C IA
personnel — from e v e r publishing an yth ing that
bears even Indirectly on his o r her governm ent
service, w ithout first subm itting it to the censors.
M ore than that, the adm inistration wants to make
It a crim e, not m erely a civil olTensc. to publish
uncensored material.
T u rn er has com plained that the deletions made
. b y the agen cy have no basis, since the material is
not classified and poses no threat to anyone. An
aide to the adm iral put it m ore bluntly: T h e cuts
are nit-picking and quibbling, he says. Right or
w rong, that coihplaint touches on a basic flaw in
the govern m en tal policy. It gives arbitrary power
to the censors who. for w h atever reason, can gut a
book not necessarily because It reveals strategic
secrets but because It m ay cast som e political or
adm inistration figure in an unfavorable light. Or,
the censors sim ply m ay not like the author.
T u rq er Insists the m atter will be resolved by
negotiations, but hasn't ruled out litigation. In
fact, to com pound the Irony, the attorney he has
retained, A n thon y Lapham . was the C IA ’s c h ie f
counsel when It w ent to court against Frank
Snepp. Suing could, o f course, cost the adm iral a
lot, som ething Snepp would know about. Asked
for his reaction to T u rn er’s plight. Snepp couldn't
h elp seeing ‘ ‘poetic Justice In the fact that the
architect o f the C IA 's censorship should now be
feelin g the h eat."
Beyond that, though, there's also the lingering
a re g u la tio n — so fa r upheld In
b y federal courts — that has
the potential to censor far m ore than classified
■ inform ation and to Intim idate countless persons
who, hesitating to tangle with the Intelligence
: elite, w ill keep quiet w hen speaking out could be
In the public interest.

•

Truth Or Treason?
S om eth ing very strange has been happening at
Radio M oscow. A n announcer there, one V ladim ir
D anchev, referred to the S oviet presence In
Afghanistan as an "In v a s io n " on five separate
occasions betw een M ay 18 and M ay 23. On May
24. Mr. D anchev disappeared and has not been
seen since.
Radio Moscow, o f course. Is owned and operated
b y the Soviet governm ent. And the official Soviet
line on the presence o f 105.000 Russian troops
figh tin g In Afghanistan is that they w ere Invited
I there by the legitim ate A fgh an governm ent to help
• suppress "b an d its and forelgn-supported coun• ter-revolutionaries."
;
For an y Soviet citizen, much less an announcer
; on Radio M oscow, to suggest that the Soviets
' invaded Afghanistan, Installed a puppet govern| m ent, and now face popular opposition from the
' A fgh an people constitutes the kind o f Ideological
; h eresy the K rem lin view s as treason. A ll the m ore
so if the offendin g statem ents w ere made In
• English language broadcasts beam ed around the
• w orld.
W e do not know, and probably w ill n ever know,
: w h eth er Mr. D anchev was actin g on his ow n or
' sim p ly reading what had been handed to him
| w h en he broadcast the on ly truth Radio Moscow
• has e v e r put out about what is really happening in
! Afghanistan.
;
But eith er w ay. it is obvious that som eone in the
\ v e ry citadel o f S oviet disinform ation sacrificed his
j career and perhaps even his life for the sake o f a
; courageous dissent from the K rem lin 's bloody w ar
! o f conquest in Afghanistan. Incarceration in a
f labor cam p or a m ental hospital is the very least
: that Mr. D anchev or his scriptw riter can expect.
;
j
;
;
•
;
t
I
•

j

BERRY'S WORLD

**m**Am
I

r?r ror tnmm arguments on romgn
WOimMf 10# WOftn NW9Q,
...—
.

?

The results are In from the Seminole
County School Board's experiment with an
auction to dispose o f surplus county
property.

By M lcheal Beha

Coleman said the profit was the largest
ever made by the district In a surplus sale
and the expenses were lower than ever.

The auctioneer provided all the help for the
auction,.In previous sales, school board
employees were paid overtime lo help.
The school board has also worked out Its
problems concerning field trips.
The board had experienced difficulty
earlier this year in approving some field
trips because the sponsors weren’t pro­
viding a great deal o f information about
their proposed trips.
The solution: let principals and district
supervisors oversee field trips.
The new policy, approved recently by
the school board, gives principals the
authority over field trips. But overnight
and out-of-county trips must also be

approved by the district supervisors.
To make things easier, a list o f approved
trips was established. Included In the list
arc Sea World, Marineland. Silver Springs.
Central Florida Zooi Kennedy Space
Center. Cyprus Cnrdcns. Circus World,
Orlando International Airport and other
attractions the board deemed lo have
educational value.
Permission to visit sites not on the
approved list must be made at least 30
days in advance.
The new policy also Includes a standard
parental permission form and teachers are
ex]&gt;ected to submit a detailed itinerary for
their outings.

ROBERT WALTERS

ROBERT WAGMAN

Captive
Candidate
Decried

Hispanics:
Key To
Victory?
WASHINGTON (NEA) - It's no coin­
cidence that two o f Ronald Reagan's
most recent out-of-town trips have been
appearances before Hispanic groups.
White House strategists now believe
that the Hispanic vote may be the key to
a Reagan victory in 1984.
Reagan's visit to Miami's "L ittle
Havana" for Cuban Independence Day
— and his harsh words for Fidel Castro
— followed his San Antonio trip to
celebrate Mexico's independence. In
b etw een , the president pardoned
Wutergale burglar Eugenio Martjncz. a
major hero In the Miami Cuban com­
munity, and appointed a Hispanic Judge
to the federal bench In Texas.
There arc more than 15 million
Hispanics in the United States, and they
form a major voting block in three states
that might prove crucial to a Reagan
re-election effort next year.
Despite Its protests to the contrary,
the GOP lias ull but counted out the
black vote In 1984. At the same time.
Republicans do not believe that Reagan
will draw the same white blue-collar
support In the Midwest and Northeast
that he did in 1980. Thus, to be
re-elected, he must count on almost all
of the electoral votes across the South
and into the West — and the pivotal
states will be Florida, Texas and
California, all o f which have large
Hispanic populations.
Traditionally. Hispanics, like most
minorities, have voted Democratic.
However, Republicans believe that
filspanlcs. more than any other minori­
ty. arc potentially receptive to the GOP's
conservative message. Dr. Tlrso del
Junro. a Los Angeles physician and
former chairman o f the California Re­
publican Party, b elieves that Rembllcans can make major Inroads Into
Ilspanic communities natiqnwldc.
"Hispanics, whether they are Cubans *
In Miami or Mexican-Americans in
Texas or California, all share a common
heritage o f close family and church
tics." he says, "and they are very much
pro-law-and-order.

f

“ They basically are a conservative
people. This is what they stand for and
this is what the Republican Party stands
for. There should be a natural attraction
between the GOP and Hispanics.
"Our Job." he says, "is to make
known in the Hispanic community what
we stand for and that we care about
Hispanics. If we can do this, we will get
considerable Hispanic support at the
polls."
The GOP’s problem is that Hispanics
— especially those In T exas and
California — arc at the lower end of the
economic scale and thus have been
among those most hurt by the re­
c es sio n . T h e y m igh t ag ree w ith
Reagan's social and foreign policies, but
they arc likely to vote against his
economic policies. The GOP's best hope
seems to be that, by Election Day, the
economy will have improved and social
issues will outweigh economic ones
among Hispanic communities.
Reagan received about 30 percent of
the Hispanic vote In 1980. The percent­
age was higher In the affluent Cuban
areas o f south Florida and tower In the
barrios o f Texas and California. Recent
private polls taken by the GOP have
shown erosion o f Reagan’s support
among Hispanics in the past few years.

OUR READERS WRITE

SANTA FE. N.M. (NEA) - A growing
number of concerned Democrats arc
warning that their party's next presi­
dential nominee must avoid becoming
the captive o f special interest groups —
but there's no evidence that the can­
didates arc listening.
The most recent exhortation against
narrowly based appeals designed to
obtain the political support o f selected
constituencies was offered here In late
May at a meeting of the Association of
State Democratic Chairs.
T h e w a r n in g w a s e s p e c i a l l y
noteworthy because It was voiced by
leading political advisers to the two men
who vied for the presidential nomina­
tion at the party’s 1980 convention —
Hamilton Jordan. White House chief of
stalf under President Jimmy Carter, and
William Carrick, senior political aide to
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.
Decrying the likelihood that current
Democratic presidential contenders may
be "chewed up by special interest
groups," Jordan referred lo the time
remaining prior to the 1984 Democratic
National Convention in San Francisco:

Miss Florida Speaks Out

" I f the next 14 months is dominated
exclusively by candidates responding to
those interest groups, we will not win
the 1984 election."

reinforced my commitment to those
who are so often forgotten and taken for
granted. Whether we were on stage
performing or visiting them In hospitals,
they arc undoubtedly am ong our
country's finest Americans.

Echoing the belief that Democrats
"c a n ’ t appear to respond only to
demands from special Interest groups"
but must Instead "develop a universal
message ... that will appeal to all regions
of the country and all interest groups."
Carrick added:

As reigning Miss Florida for 1982, I
am writing you and your fellow editors
throughout Florida to express through
each o f you to the people of Florida my
thanks for the experience o f repre­
senting them over the past twelve
months.
Although a native o f Apopka. I have
come to love so many parts of our
beautiful stale that I thought It might be
appropriate to remind Floridians o f the
treasures jUiat lie between our beaches.
From th e' Gold Coast and Miami,
through the attractions and ranchlands
o f Central Florida to the horse breeding
farms o f Ocala, the beautiful beaches of
the Panhandle and the commerce and
industry o f North Florida, our state
oilers its residents and visitors alike a
package o f lifestyles unmatched by any
other state I know of.
The "Miss Florida" program is more
than a beauty pageant. It is an opportu­
nity for a young woman to assume the
responsibility of representing three and
a half million people. I have enjoyed that
responsibility and only wish every
Floridian could experience the Joys of
listening to the stories of our senior
citizens, the ambitions of our young
people and the satisfactions of our
tourism hosts and hostesses as they tell
visitors about Florida.
As Honorary State Chairman of the
Arthritis Foundation, I have been
challenged with dual roles. I came In
contact with many arthritis victims who
had lost hope with this, so far. Incurable
disease. Many sufferers are now en­
couraged by positive thinking and the
constant medical breakthroughs In con­
trolling this number one crippling
disease.
In October, I was asked to perform
with one of America's finest enter­
tainers. Mr. Bob Hope. What a thrill to
share- the stage with this legendary
giant. The U.S.O. tour for the enlisted
men and women throughout Florida

Many of your readers know me only
through a surge of publicity surround­
ing a simple traffic accident which
occurred Just after my being named
"Miss Florida." I suppose that must be.
but If I can reach out to those people,
through this letter, to let them know
that a million and one other — certainly
more positive — experiences have been
mine as a result o f serving as "Miss
Florida." then I will give up my crown a
little less reluctantly.
Florida is an incredible slate full of
equally incredible and fulfilling people.
If I have achieved only the spark of
helping fellow Floridians to realize that
simple fact, then 1 have served my state
well. I know I have tried. God bless you
and your readers and please give your
attention to the future Miss Floridan.
They, too. will have an important story
to tell after traveling our stale from the
Gulf to Atlantic and from the GeorgiaAlabama border to the Everglades.
Deanna Pitman
Miss Florida 1982

Pleate Write
Letters to the editor ere welcome
for publication. A ll letters most be
sign ed end In clu d e n m a ilin g
address and, If possible, a telephone
number. The Evening Herald re­
serves tbs right to edit letters to
avoid libel and to accommodate
space.

"T h e s e traditional constituencies
have got to recognize that the Democrat­
ic Party cannot be dominated by a
continuing dialogue with them" lo the
exclusion of developing and sustaining

a broader political base.
The only specific reference to a
particular constituency was contained
in a humorous allusion offered by
Jordan: "T h e temptation (for the can­
didates) Is to go to speak lo the
left-handed widget-makers of Southern
California, make some promises and
leave."
The country's Democratic politicians
are universally aware, however, that the
problem is posed not by widget-makers
but Instead by members of minority
groups, labor unions and others who arc
determined to extract a high price from
the candidates In return for their
continued support of the party.
Only one week prior to the meeting
here, similar warnings were voiced by
two other Democratic leaders at a
Washington meeting o f the Democratic
National Strategy Council.
"I'm concerned ... that some presi­
dential candidates already have begun
an ardent courtship o f narrow Interest
groups." Rep. Glllls W. Long. D La.,
chairman o f the House Democratic
Caucus, told participants at that meet­
ing.
I
"B y taking that route, they arc
sending precisely the wrong signal to
the public. The American people in­
s tin c tiv e ly know that can did ates
beholden lo special causes are likely to
have little political flexibility and even
less stomach for making the tough
decisions that confront u s." Long
added.

JA C K ANDERSON

Einstein Was Persona Non Grata
WASHINGTON - Albert Einstein, the
physicist whose genius led to develop­
ment o f the atomic bomb that helped
his adopted country win the war with
Japan, was never fully trusted by the
U.S. government.
In 1940, the Army denied Einstein
clearance to work on the Manhattan
Project — which. Ironically, grew out o f
his famous letter to President Roosevelt
suggesting that a nuclear bomb was
possible and should be built before
Hitler's scientists developed one.
After World War II. Einstein was the
constant subject o f "Internal security"
Investigations by the FBI, Army in­
telligence. the State Department and the
Immigration and Naturalization Service.
In dealing with the man whose theory
(Emc2. energy equals mass times the
speed o f light squared) was the fun­
damental concept o f nuclear energy, the
g o v e rn m e n t gu m sh oes d evised a
formula o f their own: Das2. disloyalty
equals association tim es suspicion
squared.
Einstein was both a pacifist and a
"Joiner." He lent his name to a number
o f groups and commuters be believed

were sincerely trying to promote world
peace. Several were officially regarded
as subversive, and his association with
them w as enou gh to arou se in ­
vestigators' darkest suspicions.
The sordid, self-contradictory and
almost laughable reports on Einstein
comprise a file o f some 1,800 pages in
the FBI files. It took my associate Dale
Van Atta more than three years to pry
all but about 300 pages out o f the FBI
under the Freedom o f Information Act.
Here are some o f Use highlights o f the
Einstein dossier:
— Eternally suspected o f communist
sympathies. Einstein In 1B48 was of­
fered a chance to work In the Soviet
Union and have “ whatever funds,
laboratories, buildings: equipment,
books and assistance he might need."
according to a report from the U.S.
Embassy In Moscow.
Einstein's
was s
— in
Hebrew — to
Stalin, expressing
appreciation for the offer, but asking:
"W h y a re J e w is h s c ie n tis ts not
permitted to hold prominent posts?
Why are ap p aren tly un n ecessary
ohstarifs placed in the way of Jewish

response
Josef

letter

scientific and research workers? Why
were certain Jewish professors o f medi­
cal science... not elected to the recently
created Medical Academy?”
The Implicit charges o f anti-Semitism
were at first denied, and the Soviets
repeated their offer to Einstein. But
Stalin had his secret police investigate
the scientist's charges, with astonishing
results: "Certain high Soviet officials
were discharged for anti-Semitism. The
professors named by Einstein were
elected to the Academy."
— Another "Russian connection" set
the FBI agents on one o f their many
fruitless Einstein trails in April 1949.
An Informant told the G-men that the
Einstein family was "scared lo death
over the fact that a son Is In Russia and
may be held as a hostage to force someparticular action on (he part o f Prof.
Einstein."
This story was repealed In many FBI
reports, and wasn't laid lo res! until six
years later, when ihe FBI learned that
one Einstein son was In this country
and the other was In a W estern
European mental Institution. Neither
had ever been lo Russia.

- Army Intelligence agents dutifully
ran down an accusation by a former
Berlin dress shop owner who claimed
Einstein was a communist. The agents
reported that the woman "did not make
a favorable Impression as to her reliabil­
ity." In fact, she was an "amateur
m a th e m a tic ia n " w ho was m iffed
because Einstein hadn't replied to her
letter asking his help on a system that
would enable her to win a Berlin
gambling pool.
— Another wild goose chase began
when an Informant told the FBI that
"the Dr. Einstein o f the theory (was) the
brain (hat was setting up Hollywood in
(he 1930s for the big communist push."
The best the G-men could produce on
this was a 1954 report on Einstein's
friendship with Charlie Chaplin and
architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
«
!
!
“ " W ,July 37. 1955, that the
FBI issued a final recommendation after
all logical Investigation had been
con d u cted ." T h e recom m endation:
Close case."
It was high time. Einstein had died
three months before at the age oT76.

�i

SPORTS
Evsnlng MtraM, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Juno «, 1M3-SA

Moose Tangles
With Knights
In Big 1 Friday
There’s a big game on tap this
week In the Sanford Junior League,
but fans will have to wait unltl
Friday for It.
In the 5 p.m. game Friday at
Chase Park, Moose tangles with
Knights o f Columbus. The outcome
could decide the second half race, or
Just serve to confuse It more. KOC Is
6-0 in the second half, Including a
win over Moose which is 4*1.
In today’s action. Moose plays Ball
Motor Lines at 5 p.m., while Rotary
takes on Elks at 7:15. Rotary, which
forfeited its last game and won by a
forfeit the game before that, hasn't
seen action In two weeks. Rotary
has dropped to 2*3 In the second
half race, but Is still tied for the
overall best record at 11*4 and will
appear In post season play as
first-half champs.
With four starters still on dls*
dpllnary holdout. It is not known If
Rotary will be able to field a team
against Elks tonight.
In Wednesday's action. Ball Motor
Lines plays KOC at 5 p.m., while
Rotary Is scheduled to play Klwanls
at 7:15.
David Rape o f Knights o f Col­
umbus continues to lead the league
in both hitting and pitching. Al­
though his batting average dropped
78 points when he took the collar
Friday night. Rape Is hitting .630.
Steve Warren of Elks went two for
four Friday night, boosting his
average to .816. But. as a late
addition to the team he does not
have enough plate appearances to
challenge for the batting title.
Rape Is 4-0 as a pitcher while
Jason HcfTlngton o f Rotary Is 3-0.
Terry Miller leads the league in
pitching victories with six. but he
has three losses.

* ■■

«
»

Junior League B a ttin g A n d Pite h ln f S ta tistics
Team batting: Rotary (R) .349:
Knights o f Ctmu
iumbus
....... (KOC)
- ' k‘ l .336:
'i iiitf

Junior League
Moose (M) .315; Klwanls (K) .259;
Ball Motor Lines (BML) .183: Elks
(E) 182.
Leading hitters: David Rape (KOC)
.630: Terry Miller (M) .511: Eddie
Korgan (R) .488; Oscar Merthle (M)
.457; Leonard Lucas (KOC) .444;
Mike Edwards (R) .440: Alonzo
Gainey (KOC) .432: Dwayne WUlls
(K) .432: Ron Blake (R) .417; Craig
Dixon (R) .406: Mike Henry (E) .400;
Arthur Hersey (K) .383; Steawart
Gordon (KOC) .378.
Runs: Leonard Lucas (KOC) 33;
Terry Miller (M) 32; Gary Derr (Ml
27; Mike Edwards (R) 27; Alonzo
Gainey (KOC) 25; Eddie Korgan |R)
22; Danis Littles (R) 21: Craig Dixon
(R) 20; David Rape (KOC) 20; David
Goldslick (M) 20.
I
Hits: Terry Miller (M) 23; Oscar
Merthle (M) 21; Eddie Korgan (R) 20;
Dwayne Willis (K) 19; Alanzon
Gainey (KOC) 19; Arthur Hersey (K)
18; David Rape (KOC) 17; Leonard
Lucas (KOC) 16; Ron Blake (R) 15.
Doubles: Arthur Hersey (K) 8;
Terry Miller (M) 8: Leonard Lucas
(KOC) 5; Mike Edwards (R) 5: Eddie
Korgan (R) 5; Dwayne Willis (K) 4:
Stewart Gordon (KOC) 4; Oscar
Merthle (M) 4.
Triples: Steawart Gordon (KOC) 6;
Leonard Lucas (KOC) 4; Terry Miller
(M) 4; Anthony Davis (BML) 3:
Alonzo Gainey (KOC) 3; Reginald
Bellamy (K) 2; Walter Hopson (K) 2;
Craig Dixon (R) 2: Ron Blake (R) 2.
Home runs: Terry Miller (M) 7;
Oscar Merthle (M) 2.
Leading pitchers: David Rape
(KOC) 4-0; Jason Hefflngton (R) 3-0;
David GoldsUck (KOC) 5-1; Craig
Dixon (R) 3*1: Todd Revels (KOC)
3-1; T e n y Miller (M) 6-3: Reginald
Bellamy (K) 3-2; Leonard Lucas
(KOC) 3-3.

MtraM MM* feyTammy VMcmrt

Moose right-hander Terry "The Cat" M iller leads the Junior
League with six victories. He has lost three times. The Moose has a
chance to knock off first-place Knights of Columbus Friday. KO C Is
unbeaten during the second half.

Bandits Sign Redskins' Dean
TAM PA (UPI) - Fred Dean, a ■ ■■ ■ ■ —
........... ■ ■■
starting guard for the Washington
Redskins In last year’s NFL Super
Bowl, signed a contract Sunday that
extends through the 1985 season tomey, Spencer Kopf. ‘Fred w h s no;
with the Tampa Bay Bandits o f the even considering leaving the NFL
United States Football League.
until Washington made that ofTcr.
Dean Is expected to play next
"He had no option .-ar clau se in
Sunday at Chicago against the Blitz.
his contract." Kopf said. “ Wc nego­
The 6-3, 255-pound Dean became tiated that out of It."
a Tree agent at the end o f the 1982
"T h ey (Redskins) offered me a
season and said he went shopping c o n tra c t I d id n ’ t th in k good
when the Redskins made an offer he enough,” Dean said. "1 asked by
considered Insulting.
attorney to ask around. He did. Here
"W e never changed from our lam .
request and the Bandits came up
“ The Bandits made It worthwhile
with the deal." “ *■* " — •* f_____»• i__

7•

Advances To District AAU
Seminole Cook’s Comer placed four players
In double figures Saturday night to drop Lake
Brantley Mlckey’a T-Shirts. 68-59. to win the
AAU 17 and Under Sub-district Basketball
Tournament at Seminole High School.

Skipper Ripper

HwaM W w fi fcy Tammy Vhwwt

Seminole Petroleum's Daniel Sklppar doesn't get cheated at the
plate, that's for sure. In the top photo, Skipper cuts loose against
Poppa Jay's as catcher "Steady Eddie" Charles reaches for the
ball. In the second photo, Skipper rips away and fouls off the pitch.
In the third photo, however, it's a big swing end a miss as Skipper
follows through with all his might. Skipper's Seminole Petroleum
—
------------------a
t 5 atW
teem takes on Flagship
Bank Tuesday
nightestsldeField.
at 5 at Westslde Field.
Poppa Jay's plays Cardinal Industries, the only team to beat the
Little M e [or League powerhouse this season, at 7 tonight at Fort
Mellon Park.

USFL

Cook’s Comer will play Oakceola. a combi­
nation of Kissimmee Osceola and Orlando
Oak Ridge cagera. Tuesday night In the
District Tournament at 8:15 at Osceola High
School. The Voluaia-Lake winner takes on the
Orange North winner at 6:30 p.m. Oakceola Is
lead by Osceola All-America Frank Ford, who
scored 25 points In Oakceola’s win Friday.
The 6-4 Auburn-bound eager la eliglbile for
the tournament because he started school a
year early and la Just 17 years old. according
to Seminole Cook’a Corner coach Chris
Marlette.
Cook’s Comer broke to a 13-11 drat quarter
.lead agalnat Mickey’s T-Shirts but was
hampered aa 6-3 center Willie Mitchell picked
up two quick fouls and missed much o f the
early going.

DeLuxe Bar
U ^ N to js O y «r B «

Basketball
Cook’s Comer oulscored Mickey's, 17-12 In
the second eight minutes to take a 30-23 lead
at halftime. A 21-15 third-quarter blitz
opened up a 12-polnt lead and the locals
coasted home from then.
"W e had the game under control the whole
w ay," Mariette said. "W e missed a lot
shots, though. We should have scor
more points. But Brantley really
They played real hard, they've Improved a
lot." During the prep season. Seminole
handled Lake Brantley easily every time they
played.
Leading the way for Cook’s Comer was
forward William Wynn with 14 points. Guard
Bruce Franklin added 12 while Mitchell and
sophomore forward Kenny Gordon chipped In
10 each. Eric Trombo led Mickey's T-Shirts
with 12 while Greg Courtney dropped In 10.

Harear

Ned Raines. DeLuxe Bar....
Leonard Anderson. Exprea
David Price. Uncle Nick’s..
Marti Manning, Fabricating •

Dean (trick. FabrtcmUng.....
Way nr Crocker,
Croc’ -----“ “ Bears.......
Pookic
h*u.ii«.h«.S64
Levi--Raines,
DeLuxe Bar.
Bar......
-------- . DeLuxe
. W . . H H W . M 4 ,
Causaeaux. DeLuxe Bar.« . 6
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sett WashlngtonDeLuxe Bar.,..........i...;„....v463
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le Jackson. DeLuxe Bar..,..;../.;.....i,;«.M‘&gt;.‘;.iA.diB
id Lively. Unde Nick’s - ....
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CariManningJr,. Fabricating.
Wajrne RusaeU, Unde Nick's...
Hospital.
••»***« MMeMM•*•*#*»*&lt;*•*#*!

Jordan's 4 TDs Corral Stallions; Noah Sweeps Wilander
'
TAM PA (UPI) — Birmingham Stallions had the ball
' longer and ran more plays, but the Tampa Bay Bandits
came up with the "b ig plays” and ran roughshod over
the Stallions Sunday.
When the key United States Football League Central
Division game ended on a sweltering-hot afternoon, the
Bandits had won 45-17 and now lead the division by one
game with four games to play.
Jimmy Jordan, starting his lin t game after missing
two with a bruised shoulder, completed 16 o f 31 passes
for 223 yards, but four o f them went for touchdowns. He
’ played only three quarters.
Birmingham went Into the game leading the USFL In
‘ sacks with 43. but came up with only one agalnat
' Jordan.
' "T h ey beat ua at the line o f scrimmage." said
‘ Birmingham Coach Rollle Dotsch. "T h ey neutralized
‘ our front-line people and that enabled them to move the
1’ ball either on the ground or In the air."
‘ ‘Simply put. they came up with the big play, and
'' when a team keeps coming up with the big {day like
' that, it’s tough to atop them, plus it takes a lot out o f the
opposition when that happens to you ." said Stallions
t:defensive back BUly Ccsare.
u One big play for the Bandits was a 73-yard run In the
second period by Gary Anderson In which it appeared he
dived Just Inside the goal line flag to score. But he waa
ruled out o f boundaat the 1 and two plays lateracored.
Another big play came with 8 seconds to go In the half
. when Jordan passed 29 yards for a touchdown to Eric
:• TruviUion to give the Bandits a two-touchdown halftime
lead.
Still another big play came In the third period after it
..appeared Jordan has paaaed for a 25-yard touchdown to
Anderaon. One official signaled a touchdown but he waa
■overruled by another who said Anderaon landed out o f
bounds In the end zone.
On the next play Jordan rilled a 25-yard touchdown
l over the center to Willie OUllsple.
Jordan also had touchdown passes o f 11 and 26 yards
to Danny Buggs. Greg Boone ran in from 7 yards out
ti

Roundup
and Zenon Andrusyshyn kicked a 40-yard field goal.
Birmingham workhorse Ken Talton. who finished with
103 yards on 24 carries, scored both Stslllon
touchdowns on a 1-yard run In the first period and a
2-yard run tn the fourth.
Scott Norwood added a 24-yard first period field gbal
for Birmingham.
Anderaon. playing in Just his fourth professional
game, had h it best performance with 146 yards on 16
carries. He also caught three passes for 19 yards.
" I didn't know that It wasn't a touchdown.” he said o f
his 73-yard run. " I was on my way to the sidelines. I
thought 1had scored."
PARIS (UPI) — Yannick Noah showed it la possible to
attack and win on the slow red clay surface o f Roland
Garros, scoring a 6-2.7*5.7-6 (7-3) victory over Swedish
defending champion Mats WUander Sunday to become
the first Frenchman in 37 years the capture the French
Open Tennis Championships men's crown.
Noah, succeeding where the likes o f Jimmy Connors
and John McEnroe have failed In their bid to end the
U.S. drought here Tony Trabert waa the last
American winner In 1955 — secured the 990,000 first
prize with a dazzling aggressive display.
WUander. who had scored 23 consecutive points on
his way to his serolft" * 1 elimination o f McEnroe two
days earlier, could not counter Noah’s superb volleying
In the 2 hour 24 minute centercourt battle.
The 18 year-old Swede's favorite weapon, the double
fisted h xrh h ^d ps—»"g shot, was off and this allowed
his 23-year-old opponent to attack at the net
Although Noah, the aon o f a Cameroon national and
French mother, waa brought up on slow clsy. he Is
essentially a serve-and-volley player, much the same as
the two world-leading Americana. »

But Noah, an athletic 6-foot-4 with a Rastafarian
hairstyle, can play from the baseline if forced to, and
even managed to beat WUander at hta own game for long
stretches during Sunday's clash.
The Frenchman, discovered playing with a homemade
racket 13 years ago by former U.S. Davis Cupper Arthur
Ashe during a goodwill tour In Africa, la on a hot streak
now. having won a third successive Grand Prix
tournament.
BETHESDA. Md. (UPI) — Fred Couples didn't realize
things were different this weekend, but his wife could
tell — even from 3.000 miles away.
Just after playing In a tennis tournament
California. Debbie Couples watched her husband on
television In the third round o f the Kemper Open
Saturday afternoon and saw a different man.
Sunday afternoon, she was in the Washington
suburbs watching him get his first PGA Tour victory,
surviving a five-way playoff.
" I aaw him walking with a different attitude, a
calmness." she said. " I had seen him on T V before and
he always looked loose and carefree. He looked more
serious this time, so I hopped a plane and (lew aU night
to get here.”
Her husband made U Interesting, not only
but for everyone else, including himself.
Starting the day lied for the lead wtth Scott
at 6-under par. Couples Joined the mass retreat
Couples, Stmpaon and Taiwan's T . C. Chen all backed
up to the pack, finally reaching hock to pull Gil Morgan
and S o n y Jaeckd. who had finished play more than an
hour earlier, into the playoff.
Ttw quintet Ued at 1-under par 267 after 72 botes over
Congressional Country Club's 7.173 yards o f hills, deep
extra bote U&gt; drop out oT the
Couples then drilled bto 5-iron tee shot two feet left o f
the cup on the 16th and had only to tap In to get the
972,000winner's check.

V :/ j t *\'Z

Leonard Anderson, Express.........

�tA —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Juna a/IN)

Raines’
Gauge

United Press International

T im Raines singled
home two runs to
r u n h is h it t in g
a» streek to flv$ gsm et
t »$ th e M o n t r e a l
$ Expos overpowered
the Sen Francisco
G iants, 12*9, Sun­
d a y . Th e v ic to ry
kept the Expos one
sme behind the St.
ouls Cardinals In
the National League
East. Raines, who
missed three games
last week with a
p u lle d h a m strin g
muscle, Is currently
hitting .282. He Is

E

Oame*..,......

second In the league
with 4 triples and
trails L A ' s Steve
S a x (19) b y s ix
stolen bases. Raines
has been the N .L.
stolen base champ
the past two years.

• * * • • *■ ( I # *«*••**

Runs
t««i««••*******»«••»•»•!•*■••*■**••••••«
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ppf

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■fm
Doublco........................................... .
Home Runs..... ............... ............ ........
Stolen Bases..........................................
Caught Stealing.................................. .
Errors........ ..................................

STAN DIN GS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
t *»1
W L gd.
St. Laufl
17 71 J4)
Montrul
M » 341
PMMtlphia
)1 14 .447
Chicago
77 If .440
Pittsburgh
11 If 31)
Nr* York
11 )1 347
WmI
U 14 414
Let togtto
&gt;4 II AS4
Attonte
Sm Frencitce
71 14 SN
Sen Dlege
]4 17 471
Houston
14 to 444
Cincinnati
1) to .4)4
M l^ s Itttoh
Chicago). Pittsburgh!
St loultl. Atltntl)

HoustonI, Cineinn*II ]
No* York*, LMAngeles 1
PMtodtlphl*). San Diego
McntrMl II. Son Francisco »
Today's Gomes
Nogjinn scheduled

OB
—

1
44
4
14
f4
—

14
74
11
114
1)

AMERICAN LEA0 UB
East
W L BO. OB
Boston
to 77 .140 —
a 77 sat —
Toronto
Ballimort
a t) 151 —
Nt» York
a is .SIS 14
MihnoukN
IS 14 J » 14
Detroit
to IS JSS 1
Cleveland
to to 451 54
West
Colltornio
» n 377 —
Ooklond
a M .j* 4
Kernel City
to 14 .44* 44
Ttus
la a 4M J
14 V 471 J4
Chicago
Minnesota
to 11 4N •
Seattle
» D 411 14
M ir 'i Resulti
Kernes City 71. Chicago } i
Oaklandi f, Cleveland I I
SeattleI. Nt* York I
TorontoI. Baltimore)
Minnesota IS. Boston4
MlIwouUo S. Colltornio 4
Oftroll J. Tout 4.10 Inning!
Todays'! Comot
Dftroltot Bolton. Mipm.
Torontoot Baltimore, IU pm
Oaklandot Cleveland. J:Up m
Soottioot NewYork, I pm
ColtomltotMil«*ukoo.O:1Sp.m.
Only gomot scheduled

IN BRIEF
Patience Finally Pays Off,
M iller Wins Virginia Classic
WHEELING. W.Va. (UP1) - Alice Miller is a
Arm believer in patience, and that virtue meant
almost 810.000 in prize money Sunday for
winning the West Virginia LPGA Classic — a
tournament decided a record Afth straight time
in overtime.
All along, fellow pros had assured Miller that
her day of victory was at hand.
‘T v c been trying not to think about." said the
27-year-old Marysville, Calif., golfer, who
dropped In an eight-foot putt for a birdie on the
fourth hole of a three-way sudden death playoff
for her Arst LPGA triumph.
"T h e harder you try. the harder it Is to win,"
she said. "It’s a relief. The pressure Is taken off
me. Patience wins In the end."
With the putt, she assured herself of a
922.500 paycheck In the three-day. rainplagued tournament on the hilly. Speidel Golf
Club course.
She defeated Lori Garbacz. who bogeyed the
fourth playoff hole, and Debbie Massey, who fell
out on the third hole with an even par while the
other sudden death contenders carded birdies.
The trio wound up the 54-hole event at even
par 216.
Other big Anlshers Included Hollis Stacy, the
1981 and 1982 champion, who shot a on­
e-over-par 217, and LcAnn Cassaday and
Anne-Marie Palll. who shot two-over-par 218.
Miller's victory increased her 1983 earnings In
1983 to 893.537. third highest on this year's
tour.
Massey and Garbacz collected 812,600apiece.
The tournament also marked the Arst time
Miller had been Involved In a playoff.
This marked the Afth year in a row the West
Virginia Classic moved Into a sudden death
playoff, setting an LPGA record.

Handley Wins Tucson Open
TUCSON. Ariz. (UP1) - Bob Handley used a
string of seven 200-plus games to claim the top
among today's flve finalists competing far
110,000 first prize in the PBA's Tucson
Open.
Handley, from Pompano Beach. Fla., rolled
games of 245.233. 268. 268. 259. 234 and 221
In Friday's action to emerge the leader, despite a
faltering 146 in the fifth game, when he said be
“Just went to sleep a little bit."
He edged Hugh Miller of Seattle by three pins
for the top spot.
Jim Houles of Daly City. Calif., the leader
entering the Anal eight games of match play,
dropped to third, followed by Hike Aulby of
Indianapolis and Steve Cook of Roseville. Calx.
Veteran Earl Anthony was the alternate. In
sixth place.
Handley qualified (or the finals far the fourth
straight time. He has won three tournaments
this year, each time as (be top seed.

r

Cubs15-Game Streak Takes Heat Off Elia
A.L./N.L. Roundup

CHICAGO — A month ago manager Lee Ella or the
Chicago Cubs was about to be run out o f town. Now, If
the Cubs keep going the way they are. he could probably
Meta 4, Dodger* 2
run for mayor.
At Los Angeles, Mookle Wilson made two game-saving
EUa, In a At o f temper after a tough loss, came down
catches
and also singled in the go-ahead run with one
hard on Cubs' fans and the news media last month and
came very close to being fired. The Cubs were playing so out In the eighth Inning to lift the Meta to victory.
badly that Ella was having a great deal o f trouble Wilson's liner to center drove In pinch runner Darryl
Strawberry from second base to break a 2-2 tie.
curbing hla frustrations.
But things have turned around suddenly for Ella and Cardinals 8, Braves 3
the Cubs. The team is playing aggressive baseball and
At Atlanta, doubles by Tom Herr and Keith Hernandez
has put together a five-game winning atreak.
highlighted a four-run ninth Inning that helped the
Rookie Craig Lefferts gained his first major-league Cardinals beat the Braves for the first time this season In
victory and Jay Johnstone's homer Ignited a three-run seven games. John Stuper, 7-2. was the winner but left
Afth Inning Sunday that helped the Cubs defeat the after Dale Murphy hit his 13th homer In the eighth.
Pittsburgh Pirates, 3-1, and complete a sweep of their Doug Bair relieved and earned his first save.
four-game series.
Astro* 6, Reds 3
"W e played aggressive baseball, especially on the base
At Cincinnati, Kevin Bass' two-run, pinch hit double
paths," said Cubs' shortstop Larry Bowa. who singled
touched off a four-run seventh Inning that sparked the
and scored In the llfth. " I f we keep playing like this,
Astros to victory. Held to one hit — a bunt single by
especially against teams In our own division, there's no Terey Puhl — by Charlie Puleo through six Innings, the
telling how far we can go."
Astros capitalized on three successive walks by Puleo to
In Am erican League action. Oakland swept a touch off their winning rally.
double-header from Cleveland 6-3 and 8-0, Minnesota
crushed Boston 10-4. Toronto^ beat Baltimore 5-2. Brewsrs 5, Angels 4
Caught leaving base too early, Ted Simmons later sent
Seattle nipped New York 8-7, Milwaukee edged
California 5-4, Kansas City downed Chicago 7-5 then a baseball AWOL.
"T h e hero-goat thing did cross my mind," Simmons
lost 5-2 and Detroit nipped Texas 5-4 in 10 Innings.
said Sunday after atoning for an earlier mental error
Expos 12. G lu t s 9
with a two-run homer with one out In the ninth Inning,
At San Francisco. Andre Dawson led a 20-hit attack giving the Milwaukee Brewers a 5-4 victory over the
with flve hits, Including a homer, and scored four runs California Angels.
to pace the Expos' victory. Dawson had his ninth homer
Robin Yount opened the Milwaukee ninth with a
o f the season, two doubles and two singles to raise his single off reliever Luis Sanchez and was sacrificed to
National League-leading batting average to .347. Tim second by Cecil Cooper. Simmons then tagged reliever
Raines singled once In four trips to drive In two runs for Andy Hassler, 0-2, for his fifth homer and helped Moose
the Expos.
Haas to his fourth victory In five decisions.
"T w o years ago I knew he (Hassler) threw a slider, but
Phillies 2, Psdres 1
At San Diego. Joe Morgan and Garry Maddox homered I didn't know how," said Simmons. "N ow I feel I have an
to help the Phillies snap a six-game losing streak. Both idea. It's Anally rubbing off on me and I'm hitting more
homers came off Ed Whitson, 0-3, and made a winner of consistently."
Home runs by Reggie Jackson and Fred Lynn had
A1 Holland. 1-0.

helped the Angel* to * 4-3 lead.

Mariners 8, Yanks** 7
At New York. A1 CoWens drove In three runs, two with
a homer, and Orlando Mercado's two-run triple keyed a
four-run fifth as the Mariners took a third straight game
from the Yankees. Ken Griffey homered twice and had
five RBI for the Yanks before 55.593 fans, a regularseason mark for the new Yankee Stadium.
At Minneapolis, Gary Ward, who leads the A L with 40
RBI, hit a two-run homer and a triple to pace a 13-hlt
Twins' attack. Winner Brad Havens. 4-5. allowed 13
hits, walked three and atruck out four In recording his
first complete game o f the year. Bruce Hurst fell to 4-4.
Jim Rice hit his 12th homer for Boston.

Bln* Jays 8, Orlols* 2

Porter
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - LeRoy
Porter won the 25 lap late model
feature on Saturday night at New
Smyrna Speedeay. Lee Faulk, who
challenged Porter lap after tap,
finished second. He was followed by
Jack Cook. Joe Middleton and
professor Duke Southard.
Defeating a large field of thunder
cars, "Bad” Barry Ownby drove the
Magnolia Motors Firebird to victory
In the 35 tapper for the thunder car
division.
The 50-lap Mid Season street
stock championship went to Rick
Clouser. Tony Caustta won the
four-cylinder Anale. while Dale
Clouser continued to dominate the
spectator racing events.
In street stock action. 30-year
veteran race driver Homer " D ’
Saint" Franklin took the lead on lap
three and managed to hold ofT
Clouser till lap 36. when a quickly
deflating right front tire caused him
to drift high In the turns, allowing
Clouser to get by for the lead and
the win.
During the thunder car feature,
d ivision 's high point man Joe
Coupaa traded the lead with Ownby.
with the lead pair performing very
well In heavy traffic, till Coupaa lost
a wheel. After a race long duel.
Don'L Burkhalter Jr., finally took
second spot away from Jerry Fitch.

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At Arlington. Texas. Kirk Gibson, who earlier singled
and doubled for two RBI, led off the 10th with a home
run to lift the Tigers. Olbson hit a 1-1 pitch from John
Butcher. 2-2. for his third home run o f the season,
m iking a winner o f Aurello Lopez. 4-2.

A 'a0 -9 ,3-2
At Cleveland. Mike Heath's two-run double capped an
eight-run ninth that rallied the A's In the first game.
Matt Keough. 2*3, earned the victory in relief. Rickey
Henderson hit a three-run homer and Wayne Gross a
two-run ahot behind Steve McCatty's first victory o f the
season In the nightcap.

Royals 7*3,5*8
At Chicago. U.L. Washington slammed a three-run
homer In a four-run eighth and the Royals hung on In
the opener. Dan Qulsenberry. 2-1, hurled the final three
Innings for the victory. Tom Paclorck's two-out,
three-run double In the eighth lifted LaMarr Hoyt, 6-6, In
the nightcap. Mike Armstrong fell to 2-3.

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Rudd Claims 1st Grand National
There were no injuries In the race,
but three cars — Including that of
defending race champion Tim
Richmond — were badly damaged
early In a crash.
Several other caution flags were
caused by the cracking of new
pavement on (he 2.62-mUe. nineturn road course. A new surface
compound began to break up In one
of the turns -upd
dogf-ni of
m echanical problem a for the
drivers. The paving had been laid
down In the past month and
apparently had not settled properly.
Eight drivers led during the race,
with defending Grand National
champion and pole-sitter Waltrip
taking charge of the Ant three laps
before being overhauled by Rudd,
who tod the next nine laps. Thirdgeneration NASCAR driver Kyle
Petty. Geoff Bodlne, Canadian
Trevor Boys. Joe Ruttman and Giant
til tod briefly before Rudd took
control of the race for good on the

Rudd averaged 88.063 mph in the
240.2 mile race, the slowest winn­
ing time ever in NASCAR events at
Riverside as the race was marred by
several caution flags with 31 of the
95 laps being run under the yellow
flag.
“The damn car Just ran super all
day long,” Rudd said. "J never
really had to extend the car aU day.
except one time when Darrell
(Vraltrtp) got up on me. Then 1could
aee he was having problema and 1
tucked off when I aeen some
dfatanoe between him and me.”
Finishing second was BUI EUioU
of Dawsonville, Ga. Third was Harry
Gant of Taylorsville, N.C. followed
by Dale Earnhardt of Muust O s.- f l t k l M ,
Rudd who has been on the Grand
N-C. and Dick Brook* of Dlhrmsris,
N.C.
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SCORECARD

FOUR CYLINDERS

F irs t h ea t (6 la p s )- l. T o n y
Caasatta. Ormond Beach,
Fourth and fifth were Pete Stare and t Second heat (6 Iaps)-1. Steve
Freund. Port Orange.
Eddy Perey.
Feature (20 laps)-l. Tony Caaaata.
Ormond Beach; 2. Milo Vldlc, Or­
LATE MODELS
First heat (10 laps)-l. LeRoy lando; 3. Bob Pickard. New Smyrna
Beach; 4. Ike Roland. Orlando; 5.
Porter, Orlando.
Steve
Freund, Pori Orange.
Second heat (10 lapel-1. Jack
SPECTATOR RACES
Cook. Ormond Beach.
Top Eliminator (One on One)-l.
Feature (25 lapa)-l. LeRoy Porter,
Orlando; 2. Lee Faulk, Orlando; 3. Dale Clouser, Melbourne.
Feature (5 laps)-1. Clouser.
Jack Cook. Ormond Beach; 4. Joe
Middleton. So. Daytona: 5. Duke
The 18-race Invitational Quali­
Southard, New Smyrna Beach.
fying Series for the richest NASCAR
Lap Leader: Porter: 1-25.
late model sportsman race o f the
THUNDER CARS
y e a r m o v e s to N e w S m y rn a
First heat (8 laps)-l. Pete Stare. Speedway on Saturday night. June
18th, with the running o f the Miller
Second heat (8 Iaps)-1. Barry Time 50-lap late model Charlotte
Ownby, New Smyrna Beach.
qualifier.
Feature (35 Upa}-1. Barry Ownby,
A top Acid o f late model drivers la
New Sm yrna Beach; 2. Don'L expected to be on hand to vie for the
Burkhalter Jr., Orlando; 3. Jerry $1,500 winner's purse, and an
Fitch, New Smyrna Beach; 4. Pete invitation to compete In the Miller
S tarr, C ocoa; 5. E dd y P erry. T im e 300 at C h arlotte M otor
Titusville.
Speedway on Saturday. Oct. 8th.
STREET STOCKS
1983. Special events for the thunder
F eatu re (50-lapa Mid-Season cars, street stocks, four-cylinders
Cham pionship)-1. Rick Clouser. and spectator drags are also slated.
Melbourne; 2. Mike Keith, Orlando;
Leading the Hat o f potential win­
3. Jerry Reary. Orlando: 4. Ben ners will be LeRoy Porter who has
Booth, DeLand; 5. Homer Franklin, already picked up 11 New Smyrna
Sanford.
checker flags so far this season.

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$24,530 for his victory. He had
finished second flve times In Grand
National races and bad won four
pole positions this year, but it
seemed the first win would never
come.
"It still hasn't sunk In." Rudd
'I Just kept waiting for some­
thing to break. That's been our luck
in the past. We've broken down In
the last four races."
In a preliminary race, the Warner
Hodgdon 200. Hershcei McGrtff of
Bridle Vail. Ore., captured Ant place
In a 1980 Camaro at an average
speed of 98.037 mph.

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RIVERSIDE. Calif. (UPI) - Ricky
Rudd, who at the age o f 18 plunged
straight Into the big leagues — the
NASCAR Grand National circuit —
with little training, has Anally
arrived.
The-26-year-old's persistence paid
off Sunday when he recorded hit
first Grand National win, powering
hla Chevrolet to a seven-second
victory in the NASCAR 400 at the
Riverside International Raceway.

„

Tlgsrs 0i Rsagsrs 4

Brock Pleased With Win,
UNESCORES— LEADERS
But Not With Scorekeeper
OMAHA (UPI) — Arizona State Coach Jim Brock was
pleased with an elimination round victory over Maine in
the College World Series, but criticized the official scorer
for denying Sun Devil pitcher Doug Henry a possible
no-hltter.
Home runs by Barry Bonds and Don Wakamatsu
backed the one-hit pitching o f Henry to lead Arizona
State to a 7-0 triumph that knocked Maine out o f the
scries Sunday.
In the first elimination round game, Steve Cottrell and
Kevin Kunkel combined Tor a four-hitter and Stanford
eliminated Jmaes Madison from the double elimination
tournament 3-1.
Arizona State. 43-23. now plays Stanford. 41-16-1. In
an elimination contest Wednesday.
The only hit o ff Henry came in the third inning when
BUI Reynolds slapped a one-out single to rightfleid.
"W hen you have something of the magnitude o f a
College World Series no-hltter In question, the official
scorer should use every avenue o f Judgment before
making a decision," Brock said.
"When the play occurred, we all assumed it was
error." Brock said. " I t was nothing but blatant
arrogance on the part of the official scorer not to took at
that play again."

,

At Baltimore. Buck Martinez slammed the first grand
slam of his career to power the Blue Jays. Martinez
ripped a 3-2 Tim Stoddard pitch to snap a 1*1 tie and lift
Jim Clancy. 5 4. Joey McLaughlin notched his fifth
save. Storm Davis fell to 3-3. John Lowensteln hit his
seventh homer for the Orioles.

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Miss Hart, 5.5. Baggs
Repeat Wedding Vows

Water Safety Program
Set For A ges To 14

Melanie Sue Hart and
Stephen Scott Baggs were
married May 14. at 3 p.m.,
at the Sanford Alliance
Church. The Rev. Peter H.
Courlas perform ed the
double Ing ceremony.
The bride is the daugh­
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken­
neth J. Hart. 900 Willow
G ro v e S t.. A lta m o n te
Springs. The bridegroom
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
B.D. Baggs. Route 4. San­
ford.
Given In marriage by
her mother and father, the
bride chose for her vows a
form a l w h ite o rga n za
gown
highlighted with
Chantilly lace trim. The
bodice form ed a lacetrimmed capclct above the
f l o u n c e d s k i r t th a t
cascaded Into a graceful
chapel train. A lace and
seed pearl capulct head­
piece secured her fingertip
veil of Imported illusion.
She c a rrie d a form a l
cascade o f white roses.
Illy - o f - t h c - v a llc y and
assorted spring flowers.
Anne Sledge of Latrobc.
Penn., attended the bride
as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Karen
W illiams, sister o f the
b r id e g r o o m . B a rb a ra
Taylor and Hala Georgl.
T h e y w o re m a tc h in g
gowns In rainbow colors
and carried bouquets of
spring flowers.
R i c h a r d Ba g g s of
G a in esville served his
b ro th er as best man.
Groomsmen were Brent
McCall, Brian Huffman
and Bernard Hart, brother
of the bride.
Flower girl was Brianne
Williams and ring bearer
was Daniel Hartzapplc.

The Seminole YMCA announces the first In a
scries o f Aquatic Programs to be given for the
residents o f Sanford and nearby areas.
Exploratory work begun several weeks back when
the Y responded to a request made by Rosalia
Moracc and the Sanford Junior Woman's Club.
Sparked by the club's interest and the untiring
efforts on the part o f Mrs. Moracc. coupled with the
excellent cooperation of the Holiday Inn on Lake
Monroe and the Cavalier Motor Inn for the use of
their pools, registration Is now being accepted for
children ages 3 months - 14 years.
In an effort to make all residents of Seminole
County "water safe." the Seminole YMCA will
utilize programs developed by the National YMCA
Organization and taught by certified Instructors.
The Aquatic Program begins the week of June 13
with classes Monday, Wednesday and Friday at the
Holiday Inn. a 4-wcek course for $12. and Tuesday
and Thursday at the Cavalier Motor Inn. 4-wceks for
$

10.

For a complete description of the course and
other Information, call the Y at 862-0444.

Cosmetic Surgeon Speaker
Pankhurst, an organization established to bring
women together through development, service,
education and leadership, will hold its regularly
scheduled meeting at 12 noon. Thursday. June 9. at
the Cookery, located on the campus at Seminole
Community College.
Dr. Richard Nazareth, a plastic Burgeon, will be
the guest speaker. He will show a slide presentation
on cosmetic surgery.
Pankhurst provides a forum for growth and the
sharing of Ideas and talents. Women who arc
interested In joining the organization or making
reservations for the luncheon meeting may call
678-3392 after 4 p.m.

Sanford Seniors1Picnic
The Sanford Senior Citizens Club will meet for a
picnic and swim party Tuesday. June 7. According
to Wilma Rascy. members will meet at the Sanford
Civic Center, beginning at 10.30 a.m.. to form a
transportation pool to arrive in sections at the
Winter Springs home of Lucille Gunter.
Mrs. Rascy reminds members to bring swimsuits
Including old-fashioned sults.Therc will be enter­
tainment and surprises, she says.

Woman's Club Meeting

6:30

■ (BMC MUM
( T ) Q CSS NEWS

CENTRAL CIRCLE
After the May meeting, members o f Central Circle of
Sanford Garden Club Journeyed to Walt Disney Village
for luncheon and a fashion show.
Following a proposal by Jackie Partain. it was decided
to continue meeting during the summer months.
Members will have a picnic each month In a different
area. The first picnic will be June 9 at Big Tree Park.

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad
Sunday. June 19. Is Father’s Day.
The Herald Is searching for the annual "Outstand­
ing Dad." but we need the help of readers.
Write a letter and tell us In your own words why
you think a certain father is outstanding. First, write
your full name, address, including street, city and
state, and your telephone number at the top of the
first page. Then, add the name, address and
telephone number of the favorite dad you are
nominating. Please type or clearly print your letter
containing Information about Dad.
Submit letters to PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich.
300 N. French Ave.. Sanford 32771. no later than
Wednesday. June 8. the deadline forjudging.

Who's Cooking
Ths Herald welcomes suggestions for
Cook O f The Week. Do you know someone
you would like to see featured In tkis spot?
Novice cooks, ns well as nustsr chefs, add
s different dimension to dining.
Plesso contact PEOPLE odltor Doris
Dietrich about your nows and views on

two years ago. my father,
who was only 55. started
to forget the sim plest
things — such as his own
telep h o n e num ber. " I
must be getting senile.'* he
Joked.
He grew Increasingly
confused and forgetful,
which frustrated and de­
pressed him. When he
cou ldn 't find his way
h om e from w o rk one
evening, we knew some­
thing was terribly wrong.
W e t o o k h im to a
psychiatrist who Immedi­
ately referred him to a
neurologist. The
d iagn osis: A lz h e im e r's
disease, for which there is
no known cure! We had
never heard of this disease
and were surprised to
leant that approximately 2
million Americans pres­
ently suffer from It.
Our father can no longer
drive and, o f course, he
had to quit his Job. He Just
stays home doing nothing.
He has become childish
and completely dependent
on Mother. His physical
health is fine, but he has
the mentality o f a 2-yearold. Mother must watch
him day and night. She
even has to diaper him.
and she’s about to crack
under the strain.
W e feel so helpless.
Abby. I can't describe the
heartbreak we're endur*
Ing. How do other families

O ® NNS NEWS OVERMOHT

7.00

0 (?) UK OETICTOR

114 W. P in t St.
(Weisfca SeSdUg)

1294111

Behind the scene* on Gary
Bu m v ' i now movW
QD B C S 8 NCWS MBHTWATCH
(S O
MOW
-For Ho m o 's
8ofct" (1090) cotton WaM&gt;. Joan

OlflL (MOW. WED
AN WATCH (TUt)

Bwwtt

3:00

O 0 D NBC NEWS OVERMOHT
0 9 ) NBC NEWS OVERMOHT

o

4:10

(S
MOW
"Th# Beechcom bar” (IBM) Chart#* Laughton.
Elsa Lanchastar.

4:15

02 M O W "WM Racar*"
Fabian. MimtyFarmar.

0(10) UNTAMEDWORLD
III
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REP ft!
jwf mm
11V UAOnJAkl
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HARTMAN

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iT U K O ffl

(IMS)
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OCD miooay
ft) O THf YOUNG ANO
restless

7:35
02 ANOYONFFITH

6.-00

M r. and Mrs. Staphen Scott Baggs
Following a reception at
the .home of the bride­
g r o o m 's p a re n ts , the
newlyweds departed on a
wedding trip to the east
coast beaches and Sea

cope with this? Can you
send some Information
about A lzh eim er's dis­
ease? What Is it. und what
can be done about It?

DESPERATE IN
LONG ISLAND
DEAR DESPERATE:
Alzheimer's disease (pro­
nounced ALTZ-himerz) Is
a disorder of the brain that
causes loss of memory or
serious mental deteriora­
tion.
W ith in the last few
years, concerned friends
and f a m i l i e s of
A l z h e i m e r 's d is e a s e
v ic t im s h a v e b an ded
together to form a national
support group. The pre­
vention or cure o f the
dleasc is still unknown.
However, medical care can
r e l i e v e m a n y o f th e
sym ptom s, and proper
guidance can help the patlent and family cope with
the Illness.
Do you remember Rita
Hayworth, the beautiful
a c tr e s s w h o m a r r ie d
Prinrc Aly Khan? She is a
v ictim o f A lzh eim er's.
Today she can no longer
recognize her own name.
Her daughter. Princess

FREE EAR PIERCING
1
With Purchase Of Earrings

•..#«* m/Jva*&gt;A rtf *t •* |

2:30

O ® WTERTAMMENT TONttHT

O M O W "Sitting Pretty" (1B4B)
CStlon Webb, Robert Young.

O
QD (.OVE, StONIY Sidney
btconwt )**&gt;ou* when Pent aafct
Metropolitan Opara baritone Shor­
ts Mimas to portray a down at bar
birthday party
(!) O SQUARE P C M Patty and
Lauran try to Incrtaaa thatr popu­
larity by puling a aortas of prank*
on Wasmawaa High School. (It)
® O BASBSALL California
Angola at MNaraukoo Brewer*
52 (M ) M O W "D-Day. Th# Sixth
Of Juna- (IBM ) Hobart Taylor.
Richard Todd. As thalr roiaa m th*

World.
They are making their
hom e In D cBary. The
bridegroom is employed as
vice president of Cult!Quip Corp.. Lake Monroe.

Yasmin. Is a hard working
member of this organiza­
tion. which provides help
to families through educa­
tio n . re s e a rc h and a
quarterly newsletter that
c o n ta in s v a lu a b le In ­
formation. The organiza­
tion wants to hear from
the families of Alzheimer's
disease victims in order to
help them.
For a free packet of
helpful Information, write
to: Alzheim er’ s Disease
and R elated Disorders
Association. 360 North
Michigan Ave.. Chicago.
111.60601.
It Is a nonprofit organi­
zation. so please enclose a
lo n g , s e lf- a d d r e s s e d ,
s t a m p e d (5 4 c e n t s )
envelope. There Is comfort
and support from others
who have learned how to
cope with this terrible af­
fliction.

again I read your words of
praise for girls who gave
up their babies for adop­
tion. You say they are the
“ ultimate example of un­
selfishness."
I had a baby out of
wedlock and decided to
keep him and raise him
myself. Does that make
me "the ultimate example
o f selfishness?"
1 decided to keep my
baby when it was the
unpopular thing to do. I
quit school, got a Job and
struggled through It alone.
Later I met a fine, un­
d ersta n d in g man who
married me and adopted
my son.

S A N F 0KD
( ONTWOl

PAIN
( UNI)

DEAR THANKFUL!
When I call the unwed
mother who gives up her
c h i l d “ the u lt im a t e
example o f unselfishness.''
I do not mean to imply
that all who keep their
babies arc "selfish." Each
case Is unique. Yours has a
happy ending. Unfortu­
nately all do not.

ax mow

1:30

GDO AB TH« WORLD TUNNB

0 (10) LAST CHANCf OAHAOS
(FRO

2:00

0 ( 7 ) ANOTHER WORLD
(7) O ONE UFK TO U V I
® (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
m (B0) PORTRA1TE M PAETELB

9 ) 0 CAPITOL

O (10) SQUARE FOOT OARDSMMORION)
0 ( 1 0 ) MONEYMAKERS (WED)
O (10) MAOIC OF DECORATIVE

(M) THE FUNTSTONBS
(10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
(10) 0O0KBT CAJUN (TUB)
rota man Army recruiting Mm. (R)

MO

O 9 ) M O V*

"Act 0( L o n "
(1000) Ron Howard. Hobart Foxworth A young man I* put on trial
tor murdar attar honoring the wtshaa ot Na parmanantty paralyxad
brother. (R)
(D O M*A***H Hawkay* and
B J. aaarch lor a cur* to Winch**
tar * anoring, and Col. Pottar look*

"Wagnar'a Ring: Ootterdemmarung. A d r* Hagan, son o lth e
Nibahmg. plot* Siegfried's death In
outer lo avanga hi* lather and
regain th* ring.

9:30

CDO ONE DAY AT A TIME

10:00

CDO CARNEY A LACEY
52 (M) M0EPCN0SNT NETWORK
NEWS
0 ( 1 ) NEWS

OX NEWS

0 ( 10) SESAME STREET Q
8 (I) MY-J
^

4:05
02 THE FUNTST0NSB

4:30

10:25
10:30

52 (M) I LOVE LUCY
O ( B ) EYEWITNESS AMERICA

11:00
DBAR ABBTt Time and

Unfortunately, 1 was not
able to have another child,
so I am doubly grateful
that I kept my only child.
T H A N K FU L IN

'

1:30

6:36

Today we have a happy
teen-ager who knows the
truth.

t

8 (t) ONC M Y AT A TRIE
Q F A T H t t KNOWS BIST

LA S T
2 D AYS

Sanford Moat Unlqua Boutlqua
t o * oycui • owbu*

1:10

( S O COUJMSO (ft)

S(10|00MNUt^

DEAR ABBTt About

Garden Circle

(12 (SB) EYEWITNESS AMERICA

fflO A K N I W I a

Help Available For
Alzheimer's Disease

The Woman's Club of Sanford will meet June 8 for
the monthly luncheon meeting when officers will be
Installed. A covcrcd-dlsh social for members and
guests will be held at the clubhouse on Tuesday.
June 7. are p.m.
&lt; ««.&gt; • ..

• , I*

TONIGHT S TV

52 (M) BCOOBY OOO
. 4:35
OX THE AOOAMS FAMILY

5.-00

0 (7) MORK ANO MMOY
0 ) 0 THREE* COMPANY
(7) O A U M THE FAME.Y
OU(M)CHIPS PATROL
® (10)M*TERROOKRS(R)

* T«ro cycles-regu lar and
permanent press.
* Standard capacity, single
speed wssher.

* Three enter level selec­
tions 1styou match the
water level to most etas
* Three wssh/nnss tem­
perature combinations
with energy saving oold
water selections.
• Activated soak cycle.
* Filter-Flo • System helps
trap lint
• Durable porcelain enamel
finish on'.op, lid, tub sad

* Unbalanced toedcontrol
system

�i

I

U - t v u l n i HfiWI, Sdnford, FI.

Monday, Junt I, m i

Conflict Of Interest
Bill Dead For Now

lagql Notlca

legal Notlca

legal Notice

legal Notlca

CLASSIFIED ADS

CITYO F L A K E M ARY,
DIVISION CNOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
FLORIOA
•IDDINO
REQUIREMENTS
OF
S
H
ER
IFF’
S
M
L
E
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN that
CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR SEMINOLE ADVERTISEM ENT FOR SEALED
HEARINO
•IDS;
by virtue ol that certain Writ of
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCE R N :
P R O JE C T T IT L E (S ) AND
Execution issued out ol and under
CASE NO.53-M15-CA-17I
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN by
to* seal of Ih* Circuit Court of
IN R E i FORFEITURE OF 1974 LOCATIONISli
A bill co-sponsored by Seminole County's state Reps. BUICK V.I.N. 4B17D4L114043 AND L A K E HOW ELL HIOH SCHOOL Seminole County, Florida, upon a toe CIIY Commission ef toe City et
Lake M ary, Florida, that said
M EDIA CENTER RENOVATION
final ludgomenl rendered In Ih*
Carl Selph and Bobby Brantley to require public officials U.210.00 CASH
Commission will held a public hear­
OWNER; THE SCHOOL BOARD OF
•loreMld court on too 37th day ol
NOTICE OF
ing el 1:00P.M., on July II, H D , te:
to publicly state conflicts of interest and forbidding them
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIOA
July, A.D., INI, In tool certain com
FO RFEITU RE PROCEEDING
H i m * ........................M e a l i n g .
Consider a Petition to dote,
AVAILABILITY OF P U N S AND
entitled. Anthony LoRutto and
to vote on matters from which they could personally TO:
3 c o n s e c u tiv e t in t * * . S 4 c i Wng
vacate, abandon, discontinue, dis­
S
P
E
C
IF
IC
A
T
IO
N
S
;
Docum
anlt
Francos
LoRutto,
hit
wlto.
Plaintiff,
LOUISJAM ES DANIELS
benefit was effectively killed by the Florida Senate.
claim and lo renounce any rlghl el
7 c« n sg cu ttv e tlm g s . *b c b Hi m
available al the following:
•vt- Wlntor Springs Mobil* Homes
35H Country Club Drive
1:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
toe City e l Lake Mary, • political
DAIMW OODOERRYBERRY
While Selph and Brantley successfully amended a
Corporation,
Defendant,
which
10 c o n s e c u tiv e tim e s ( l e a f in g
Orlando, Florida
MONDAY
thru
FRIDAY
subdivision, and toe public In end to
P A V E L C H A K , AR C H IT EC T S,
aforesaid Writ of Execution wot
House o f Representatives bill to Include the conflict
13.00 M in im u m
LARRY CRAIG POHLMANN
Ih* following described rlghtt-ofP.A.
SATURDAY 9 • Noon
delivered to me at Sheriff ol
221 Spanish Trace Drive
1 L in t s M in im u m
provision, the bill passed in the House and was sent to a
way, to wit:
250
S.,
Hwy.
17-93.
Suits
200
Semlnolo
County,
Florida,
end
I
hove
Allemont* Springs, Florida 22701
Crystal Lake Avenue. Westward,
Senate committee where It died.
CASSELBERRY, FLA. 12707
levied upon the following described
and
from to* easterly Line of Let 0, Block
TELEPH O NE: 305*14 2110
DEADLINES
property owned by Wlntor Springs
With time so close before the end o f the session, Selph
211 Coachman Court
14, Crystal Lake Winter Hemet
Mobile Homos Corporation, M id
Sanford. Florida 12T7I
Noon
The
Day
Before Publication
and Brantley attached an amendment to a Senate bill
Subdivision, as recorded In Plat Book
THE SCHOOL BOARD
property being located In Seminole
all others who cltlm an Interest
3, Pages 114 114. e l the Public
Sunday -Noon Friday
last week, sending that bill back to the Senate for further and
OF SEMI HOLECOUNTY
County,
Florida,
more
particularly
In the lol low Ing property:
R e co rd ! e l Sem inole County,
1211M ELLO N V ILLE AVE.
described as follows:
consideration with the amendment. However, Selph said
Monday -5:30 P.M. Friday
On* (1) 1174 Bulck, V.I.N.
Florida, terminating at tha shoreline
SANFORD, FLA. 12771
A tra d of land lying In Block B end
a Senate sponsor o f the amended bill refused to agree to 4B27D4LH4M1; and 54.210.00 Cash.
ol Crystal Laka;
TELEPH
O
NE;
MS-322-1252
D
ot
D.R.
Mitchell's
Survey
ol
tho
Steven 0. F it Idmin. Assistant City
AND
the amendment and the hill without amendment was Attorney
D EPO SIT FOR P LA N S AND
Moses E. Levy Grant, according to
lor tho City of Altamonte
Thai portion ol toe twenty (30) loot
too Plot theroof a t recorded In Plot
returned to the House.
Springs, Florida, will appear before SPECIFICATIONS; A refundable
alley running westward from the
deposit Is required from ell Interest
Book 1, Pago S. ol the Public Records
"Th e legislation is dead this session," Selph said, the Honorable Dominick J. Selfl, ed parties to Include sub contractori ol
easterly line ol Let 7, Block 11,
Semlnolo County, Florida, Mid
21— Personals
31-Prlvato
Judge ot the Circuit Court. Eigh­
adding he and Brantley plan to sponsor Identical teenth Judicial Circuit on Friday, In the amount ol SM.OO/m I. Terms el tract being more particularly de­ Crystal Laka Winter Homes Sub­
Instructions
division. as recorded In Plat Book 2,
the refund ere outlined In the con­ scribed os follows: A ll of Loft 34.17,
legislation next year.
July I. It*3. at 9:30 A.M., tor the
Ideas, Invent Ions, New Products
Paget 114 ■11*. ol the Public Records
tra c t docum ents. L im it It 5 M, 59, *0. 14, 74 and that part of Lol
Selph reported good news for the counties and cities of purpose of tiling a Rule to Show sels/contractor.
WANTEDI
of Sem inole County, F lo rid a ,
73
lying
Eattorly
ot
too
Southeasterly
Hannah Music lessens. Plano,
why the described property
Industry Presentation/Nelional
terminating at toe shoreline of
the state, however. A bill pushed by Selph granting Cause
SPECIFIED BONDS; All bidders
•xtentlon of tho Westerly line of Lot
voice, brett. woodwinds, banjo,
should not be forfeited to the us* ol,
Exposition.
Crystal Lake;
will
be
required
to
provide
*
Bid
74
across
M
id
Lot
73,
all
lying
and
cities and counties exemption from gasoline taxes has or sold by the Altamonte Springs
drums vtd guitar (private and
C a ll! *00-31* *050,X*31.
AND
Bond
In
the
amount
ol
S%
ot
the
total
being
In
M
id
Block
"D
"
ol
D.R.
class.) 333 *7*1.______________
won approval o f both legislative bodies and Is on Its way Police Department, pursuant to Sec- amount of the bid by on* of the Mitchell's Survey ol tho Levy Grant.
That portion af Sixth Street, runn­
Lonely? Call or Write Bringing
lions 932.701-.704. Florida Statutes
SWIMMING LESSONS. For In­
ing north Irom (he northerly
to the governor's office.
following methods: Bid Bond tram
People
together
Dating
Service.
Seminole
County,
Florida
and
that
(19*3). The vehicle end cash were
fo rm a tio n . V ic k i G o rm ly ,.
right-ot-w ay line o l Lakevlew
Bonding Company. Cashiers Check,
(Ages » (* ). P. O Box 1451
part ot Lot 24, Block B, ol D.R.
silted by the Altamonte Springs
Certified Instructor. 13315700),
Avenue, terminating al the shoreline
Certified Check. The Bind Bond shell
Winter
Haven
Flordla
33**0.
Mitchell's
Survey
ol
tho
Lovy
Grant,
Police Department and are currenlly
ol Crystal Lake.
be drawn In lavor ol the Owner, end
11
Babies Drown Every 14 Hours
1-*I3
193-7177._______________
lying
South
and
West
ol
Slot*
Road
being held by that Agency. II no
The Public Hearing will be held el
such Bid Bond shall guarantee that
Intent Swimming Research
No. 41*, Seminole County, Florida.
14 Piece Brilliant Balloon Bouclaimant comes torth to dispute the
the City Hell. 15* North Country Club
the Bidder will not withdrew hit bid
Certified and Insured Instructor;
(Lett Road)
queti, lor Birthday Partita and
pending forfeiture proceedings at the
Rood, Lake Mary, Florida, on the
for a parlod ol M calendar days after
Survival Swimming. *M o-S Yr.
and the undersigned et Sheriff ol
Special Occasions. Delivered by
above mentioned date and time, the
21st day el July. H U . et 1:00 P.M. or
the opening ol the bids. A 100% Seminole County. Florida, will at
Call Rosanno Spain. 139-4*7*.
■ Clown or our Sexy Stripper.
undersigned will request a Final
as
soon
thereafter
at
possible,
a
l
Performance and Payment Bond will
11:00 A.M. on the 14th day of June,
(M ile or Female) to Senlord
* * * • 372-3332* • e •
Order of Forfeiture perfecting the
which 11m* Interested partial for and
be required tram the successful
A.D. 19*2, offer for m Io and M il to
For Swimming Informal Ion.
Surrounding Areas.
A fund-raiser, dubbed the "Great Celebrity Talent rlghl. title and interest In Mid Bidder.
against
toe
recommended
request
tho highest bidder, tor cash, tub|ecf
Jackie Caole
BALLOON WIZARD. 9(4 775 &gt;120.
vehicle and cash to Iht Altamonte
will be heard. Said hearing may b#
P U C E FOR OPENINO OF BIOS:
to any and all existing liens, at toe
Show," has been scheduled by the campaign committee Springs Police Department.
42
Year
Old
Gontla
Black
Mala.
continued
Irom
time
to
lime
until
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY SCHOOL
Front (West) Door of too stops of too
I H ER EB Y CER T IFY that this
for Fred Streetman for 8:30 p.m. June 10 at Lord
Would Ilka to meet slender at­
33— Real Estate
final action It taken by tho City
B O A R D O F F I C E ; 1211
Seminole County Courthouse In SonNotice and Its eccemenylng plead
tractive non drinking, non smok­
Chumley's Pub In Altamonte Springs.
Commission ot tha City ot Lake
M ELLO N VILLE AVE.; SANFORD,
lord, Florida, the above described
Courses
Ings ere being served pursuant to the
ing lemelet. White or Oriental
Mary, Florida.
REAL property.
Streetman is a GOP candidate for the Seminole notice provisions ol Sections FLA. 32771.
for
Evening
Oates
(ram
25
to
50
This
notice
shall
be
potted
In
three
DATE FOR OPENINO BIDS;
Thai M id salt Is being made to
County Commission seat currently held by Robert G. 93J.70i-.704, Florida Statutes (IM2), June
Ye a n ol Age. Send Photo with
public placet within the City ol Lake
12,1913
M litfy the terms ol M id Writ ol
KEYES LICENSE EMM SCHOOL
this 2nd day o( Juna. 1M).
Phone Number te Box 155. C/o
"B u d" Feather, also a Republican.
Mary, at Ih* City Hall and published
TIME FOR OPENINO BIDS; 2:00 Execution.
Next 4 day accelerated c lo u tlarts •
STEVEN 0. FIELDMAN, Esquire
Evening
Herald
P.
O.
Box
1457
In
the
Evening
Hereto,
a
newspaper
P.M.
John E. Polk.
Acts to perform in the show Include: State Rep. Bobby
June 12. 19(1. For tuition reim­
Assistant City Attorney
Senlord Fla. 17771.
ol general circulation In toe City ot
The Owner reserves the right to
Sheriff
bursement Information call
City ol Altamonte Springs
Brantley, R-Longwood, on the drums: State Rep. Art
Lake
Mary,
two
limes
at
least
fifteen
waive minor informalities In the
Seminole County, Florida
MlldredS. Wang. 323 2200
Post Office Box 1215
Grindle, R-Altamonte Springs, a soft shoe dance: Sen.
days prior to the date ot tho public
opening of bids and r*|ect all bids or Publish May 23.30. A June 4. I) with
23— Lost A Found
Orlando. Florkla3J*02
hearing.
award
the
Contract
to
the
lowest
the Mle on June 14.1901.
Toni Jennings, R-Orlando, County Commissioner
305/435 3*04
55— Business
A taped record of toll me*ling It
responsible bidder.
DEH 134
Barbara Christensen and Ingrid McCollum, wife of U.S. FOWLER, WILLIAMS,
.ost Sliver Chain necklace w/
made by the City lor Its convenience.
DATED
THIS
DAY;
May
24,
1913
Opportunities
ANOAIRTH
violet stone. Sanford Shopping
Rep. BUI McCollum, R-Altamonte Springs, a song and
This record may not constitute an
OWNER: THE SCHOOL BOARD
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE
Professional Association
_Jtre*Jtewxrdi ***&lt;* 0 9 4 ^ _ _ _
adequate record lor purpose ol
OF S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
dance routine: Jim Stelllng, past president o f the Empire Building
UTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN ANO
appeal Irom a decision made by toe
Small retail shop avallbale In
FLORIDA
FO R S E M IN O LE C O U N TY,
Seminole County Young Republicans, as Carnac the 29 Welt Central
City Commission with respect to the
Longwood't Historic district*
Publish May 2*. M, A June 4.19*3
FLORIDA
25— Special Notices
P.O.
Bo«l2IJ
Great; County Commissioners Bob Sturm and Sandra
loregoing m a ile r. Any person
Rent. Including utilities. *125 por
DEH-150
CASE NO.a)-l40*-CA-*4-K
Orlando, Florida 32(02
month. Cell *31 4441.
wishing to ensure tool an adequate
IN R E i THE M ARRIAGE OF
Glenn, performing magic.
(3051 435 34*4
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
New OK Ice now open Ing.
record ol tpe proceedings Is main
JO CELYN PETER ADAMS, a/k/a
Streetman said tickets for the event are $35 each and Publish June*. 13,1913
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
VORWERK
tailed tor appellate purposes It
R I C H A R D S IM O N J O C E L Y N
63— Mortgages Bought
DEI
31
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
I120W. 1st St.
may be reserved by calling 339-8822.
advised lo'meke the necessary ar
PETER ADAMS.
INAND FOR
A Sold
Pelilloner rangamants al hit or har own
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
expense.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
and
27—
Nursery
A
CASE NO. 13-117-CA-at-L
CITY OF LAKE M ARY.
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
M ICH ELLE ADAMS.
V* PAY caih tor lit B 2nd
Child Cere
SAM CHARLES M E INER,
FLORIDA
IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
Respondent
m ortgagai. Ray Logg, Lie.
as
Substitute
Trust**
s Connie Ma|or
FLORIDA
NOTICE OF ACTION
Mortgage Broker 7*17599
and not Individually,
City Clerk
The following persons were arrested In Seminole
CIVIL ACTION NO. 12-3931 CA49-E
TO:
Babysit in my home. 125. a week.
Plaintiff,
DATED;
May
27.19*3
F
I
R
S
T
F
A
M
I
L
Y
F
E
O
E
R
A
L
M
ICH
ELLE
ADAMS
County for driving under the influence (DUI} between
A g e slyrt. endup.
vt.
Publish June*, II, 19*1
71-Help Wanted
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA
10 Stockwell Road
__________ 321 5154.__________
Monday and early Thursday:
H. JA Y PHIZACKLEA
DEM I
_________
TION, a Corporation under the Laws
London, S.E.4
Will
Babysit
In
my
Home.
Monday
and
C.
SAMANTHA
PHIZACKLEA,
—Santo Cllona. 66. o f 697 Sable Palm Circle. ol the United State* ol America.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
England
thru Friday. Reasonable Rates.
CABIN ETM AKERS. E X P E R
hlswlta.
Plaintiff.
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
YOU ARE H ER EB Y notified that
Altamonte Springs. He was arrested at 11:11 p.m.
Lamlnatort, Assemblers.
Peole Area. Cell Jody. 323-1571.
Defendants.
v*.
IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
an action for Dissolution of the bonds
Countertop, Hardware. 139 5942. •
Monday at State Road 436 and State Road 427 after DELCO, INC., a Florida Corpora
AM END ED NOTICE OF SUIT
FLORIDA
of your marriage to tho Petitioner.
Te; The Defendants,
CITY OF LA K E M ARY
being Involved In an accident.
lion, JOHN R. DELONG, and TONY
CIVIL OIVISION
JO CELYN PETER ADAMS, o/k/a
H. JA Y PHIZACKLEA and
CITY M ANAGER
CASE NO.: (3-I405-CA-1I-E
R IC H A R D SIM O N J O C E L Y N
—Gary Monroe Howe, 28, of 280 Lake Triplett Drive. L . B A S T A N Z I O d / b / a T
C. SAMANTHA PHIZACKLEA.
Papulation 1059. Orlando SMSA.
BASTANZIO IRRIGATION,
IN RE: THE M ATTERO F
PET
E
R
AO
AMS.
has
been
(lied
Casselberry, was arrested at 4:03 p.m. Tuesday after he
hit wilt, and all others
Salary Ste.OQO to 522.000 negotlaFICTITIOUS NAME
Defendants
SHERR RUANE.
against you In the above slated court
whom II may concern.
ble depending upon quatilica
overturned his vehicle near Lake Triplett Drive and
Notice it hereby given that I am
and you are required to serve a copy as the natural mother ol
MORTOAOE FORECLOSURE
YOU ARE H ER EB Y NOTIFIED
lion*. Appointed by 5 member
engaged In business at M l) French
of your written defenses. II eny you CHELSEA NICOLE BELCHER.
NOTICE OF SALE
Secret Lake Park. He was also charged with reckless
that an action lo foreclose a
C H y C o m m ission ; 5110,000
Av*., P.O. Box V, Sanford. Fla.
have, upon William A. Greenberg,
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45
NOTICE OF ACTION
driving.
budget; 20 employees. Requires
33771, Samlnoto County, Florida un
Notice is given that pursuant to ■ Mortgage has been tiled against you
Esq , 2*2 U.S. Highway 17 *2, P.O. TO:
executive end administrative ex­
—Bernard Lamar Covington. 57, of Veto Beach, was Summary Judgment dated June 3, end you ere required to serve a copy Drawer K, Fern Park, FI 32730 on or
d e r the f ic t i t io u s n am e o l
Larry A. Belcher
of your written defenses. It any, to ft
perience with background in*
J E R N I G A N ’ S IN S U R A N C E
1301Mein Street
arrested at Grace Boulevard and State Road 436 at 1:32 1913. In Case No. I3 J955 CA 09 E of on CHARLES E. M EINER. 24 Wall before the 30th day of June, 1N3 and
public administration, engineer­
AGENCY, end that I Intend te
the Circuit Court ot the Eighteenth
Davenport, low#
file the original wlto toe Clerk of this
a.m. Thursday. Police stopped his sliver Volkswagen Judicial Circuit In and for Seminole Street. Orlando. Florida 22MI. At­ Court either before service on Plaining, City planning, construction
register said name with the Clerk ol
You ere hereby notified that •
torney lor F.lalntlff, and Ilia the
or related fields, supplemented
the Circuit Court, Seminole County,
after it hit a median marker.
County, Florida. In which FIRST
fill's attorney or Immediately to«re- petition for change ol namo hat been
with the Clerk ol the above
by at least 3 years progressively .
Florida in accordance wlto the pro
after; otherwise a default will be tiled on behalf ol your natural
—Thomas John Gasklll, 29. of 5054 Downing Street. FAM ILY FE D E R A L SAVINGS AND original
styled Court on or before June 20.
responsible supervisory expert
visions ol the Fictitious Name Stat­
LOAN ASSOCIATION I* the Plaintiff
against you tor toe relief daughter, C H E L S E A N IC O L E
Orlando, was arrested at 2:03 a.m. at Interstate 4 end DELCO, INC., JOHN R. D E ­ 19*3. otherwise, a Judgment may be entered
•nee, degree desirable. Submnll
ute*. To-Wit; Section *45.09 Florida
BELCH ER, to change her name to
demanded fn toe Petition.
entered
against
you
lor
the
relief
resumes to City Clerk, City ot
one-half mile south o f State Road 436 oiler he was LONG and TONY L. BASTANZIO
Statutes 1957.
WITNESS M Y hand and teal ol CHELSEA NICOLE RUANE, by
demanded In the Complaint.
Lake Mery, P. O. Box 735, Lake
d/b/a T. BASTANZIO IRRIGATION
/S/Jamet R. Jarnlgan
Petitioner. SHERR RUANE, end you
this court on tha 24lh day ol May.
observed having daoBuKy maintaining a single lane.
WITNESS
my
hand
and
teal
ot
ar* the Defendants, I will M il to the
Mary. Florida 1274*. Resumes
Publish May 33. 30 and Juna *. 1),
•re required lo serve a copy ol your
1*13.
—Lloyd Allen Reed, 23, of 605 Norrh Lake Blvd.. highest
M
id
Court
on
this
l)th
day
ol
May.
and best bidder lor cash In
must be received by July I, &gt;90
19*3.
(SEAL)
written defenses. If any, to It on Gone
Altamonte Springs, was arrested on Interstate 4 In Lake the lobby at the West Front door ol 19*3.
DEH-132
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
H. Godbold, Petitioner's attorney,
Concession and Office Help tor
(SEAL)
whose address It Maguire. Voorhlt A
Mary at 2:03 a.m. Thursday after police received the Seminole County CourthouM in
C LER K
weekend work. Apply el Flee
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT, IN AND
Semi nola County, Florida,
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
Well*. P.A., 1(0 Perk Avenue North,
World. Thursday and Friday 9 5
numerous complaints about his vehicle weaving. Police Sanford.
Clark ol Ih* Circuit Court
between the hours ol 11:00 o'clock
FO R S E M IN O L E CO U N TY,
Suite 3A, Winter Perk, Florid* 137*9,
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIOA
PM._______________________ ■
Seminole County, Florida
said he was also charged with driving without a valid A.M. and 2:00 o'clock P.M. on June
FLORIDA
on or before Juno 79, 19(1, and tile
BY: SuMn E. Tabor
DENTAL,................. ..... ........ 551
By: Eve Crabtree
29,
19*3,
Iht
following
described
CASE
NO.
13-141)
CA-04-K
Deputy Clerk
toe original wlto toe Clerk ol this
driver's license.
Deputy Clerk
property M l forth In the Order ot
IN RE: THE M ARRIAGE OF
court olthor before services on
Publish May 30, * June*. 13,20. IN)
Publish May 14,23, M * June 4 .19«3.
Summary Judgment:
M ICHAEL BYRON WIDMYER,
Plalntlll's
attorney
or
Immediately
DEH
14S
DEH 104
Experienced chalrslde assistant
Lot 44. ot TUSCAWILLA, UNIT *,
Husband,
thereafter; otherwise a default will
needed. Buty local Dentist X
_~d
according to tha plat thereof, at
be entered against you tor the relief
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S
Rays • plus I
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
recorded In Plat Book 24, pog* 72, ol
SARAH ANNE WIDMYER,
demanded In the petition.
SALE
J
e
r
r
y
M
i
l
l
e
r
,
a
t
a
x
CORAL SPRINGS (UP1)
FLORIOA
the Public Records of Seminole
Dated on May 24,19t3
Wlto.
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN that
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
111 5174
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
— A novel scheme to specialist with the state County, Florida.
NOTICE OF ACTION
(SEAL)
by virtu* ot that certain Writ ol
HEARING
DATEOJune). 1903
THE 5TATE OF FLORIDA TO;
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Execution Issued out ol and under
E xp e rie n ce d phone s e llc lo r.
dodge federal Income tax­ Department o f Revenue.
TO WHOM ITM AY CONCERN:
(SEAL)
Clerk
M ICHAEL BYRON WIDMYER.
the m *I ol the Circuit Court ot
Excellent earnings. Seminole
es popped up in this north
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN by
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
whose residence it
ol the Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida, upon a
County. Phone 332 4243. 11 AM to
' ' T h e law does
the City Commission ol tha City of
Broward County commu­
unknown.
Clerk
final judgement rendered In the
By: Susan E.Tebor
1PM. Ask lor Marvin.
specifically require that
Lake Mary, Florida, that Mid
ol the Circuit Courl
YOU AR E H E R E B Y NOTIFIED
aforesaid courl on the 5th day of
Deputy Clerk
nity last week, but Internal
__*55
OENCRAL
OFFICE
Commission
will
hold
a
public
hear­
th e s e o r g a n iz a t io n s
By SuMn E. Tabor
tool SARAH ANNE WIDMYER hat
April. A.D., &gt;9*3. In that certain cast
Publish May 30. B June*, 13.20, l t d
Revenue Service officials
ing at 1:00 P.M., on July 7,19*3, to
Deputy Clerk
tiled a Petition In too Circuit Court ol
D EH -144
entitled. Pick Point Enterprises,
claiming these benefits,
Consider a Petition to close,
said It won't work.
Publish June*. 13,1913
Samlnoto County, Florida, lor dis­
I n c ., P l a l n t l l l , -vs- Jo se p h
Put your skills to uto, In tolt local ;
such as being tax exempt,
vacate, abandon, discontinue, dis­
DEI-21
NOTICI
solution ol marriage, and you are
Birm
ingham
,
Defendant,
which
Letters began arriving
prestigious company. Excellent •
claim
and
to
renounce
any
rlghl
of
that they be organized and
required to serve a copy ol your
OF SHERIFF'S SALE
•loreMld
Writ
of
Execution
was
benefits and ralsetl
for Coral Springs residents
tho City of Lake Mary, a political
written defenses, it any, on K E N ­
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN that
delivered lo ma a t Sharlll ol
operated exclusively fnr
subdivision, and the public In and to by virtu* ol that certain Writ ol
whose names begin with A
NETH
W.
MclNTOSH,
Esquire,
ol
Seminole
County,
Florida,
and
I
have
CITYOFLONOWOOD.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
333 5174 I
religious and not private
the following described rightsofExecution issued out of and under
STENSTROM. MclNTOSH, JULIAN,
levied upon the following described
through F. They contain
FLORIDA
way, to wit:
GRADER OPERATOR............55* I
purposes." said Holger
toe seel ot the COUNTY Court ol
COLBERT B WHIGHAM. P A., At­
p
r
o
p
e
r
t
y
o
w
n
e
d
by
Jo
s
e
p
h
NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARINO
TO
an Invitation to become a
That portion ol toe fifteen (15) fool Orange County, F tor Ida, upon a final
torney tor Petitioner, whose address
Euringer. IRS public afCONSIOER ADOPTION OF PRO­ Birmingham, M id property being
alley running East and West through
chartered branch o f the
judgement rendered In toe aforesaid
It Post 0(1 ice Box 13)0. Senlord.
located
In
Seminole
County,
Florida,
POSE
D
OR
Dl
NANC
E
f a i r s o f f i c e r in
Block
4),
Crystal
Lake
Wlntor
Homes
Landscaped contractor needs your •
court on toe «to day ol July, A.O.,
Florida, 3177113)0, and III* the
more particularly described as
Disciples o f Divine Rights
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN;
Subdivision,
ot
recorded
in
Plat
Book
skills. Permanent! R altetl
|
Jacksonville.
INI, In that certain case entitled.
original with the Clark ol tho
follows:
NOTICE
IS
H
E
R
E
B
Y
GIVEN
by
church and avoid paying
2. Pages 11*11* of too Public Re­ Sun Bank, N.A., l/k/a Sun First
above tty tod Court on or before Juno
Approximately tlv boxes (34 to a
the City ot Longwood. Florida, that
cords ol Seminole County, Florida
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
323 51?* I
taxes to Uncle Sam.
National Bank ol Orlando, Plalntlll,
JO. A.D. IMJ, otherwise a default end
the City Commission will hold a box) "Nltellght" Lighted Footballs,
more commonly known as:
-vt- Donald C. Saunders. Defendant,
Houseparent needed ter Christian &gt;
ultimate judgment will be entered
The letters were signed
public hearing hi consider enactment being stored at Dave Jones Wrecker
Between Lakavlew Avenue and which aforesaid Writ ot Execution
Childrens Horn* In Geneva, tala &gt;
agalnat you tor toe relief demanded
Service, Fern Park, Florida,
ol Ordinance No. M L entitled:
by the Rev. Mario DiPetto,
Seminole Avenue from 4to Street to wet delivered to mo at therm ol
In toe Petition.
ry plus room and board. Cell '
and the undersigned at Sheritl of
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
7th Street.
FICTITIOUS NAME
the 60lsh head o f the
Seminole
County,
Florida,
and
I
have
Don. 349-5099._________________•
WITNESS my hand and official
Seminole County, Florida, will at
THE CODE OF THE CITY OF
The
Public
Hearing
will
be
held
at
Nolle*
l
i
hereby
given
the!
t
am
••vied
upon
toe
following
described
tnel ol said Court on tolt u to day ol
11:00 A.M. on tha Jtlh day ot June,
Disciples.
Jobs end Workers Meet In The .*
LONG WOOD, FLORIDA, BY THE
the
City
Hall,
15a
North
Country
Club
engaged In business at 107 O n Plnar
property
owned
by
Donald
C.
Seun
May,
A.D.
ISO).
IN), offer lor m &gt;* and sell to
Want Adi I Need A Job??
I
DiPetto says his fee — Lana, Lang wood, Seminole County. ADOPTION OF CHAPTER II. AtheD highest
Road. Lake Mary, Florida, on the 7th der*. M id property being located In
(SEAL)
bidder, for cash, subject
READ ONIII
LA R M SYSTEMS'* RELATING
day
ol
July,
l««3.
al
1:00
P.M.,
or
at
$2,000 — to set up the Florida under the fictitious name ot "A
Semlnolo
County,
Florida,
mor*
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.
to any and all existing Hens, al tha
TO THE P R IV A T ELY OWNED
JU N E CLASSIFIED AOS IR IN G 'x
toon thereafter e t possible, al which particularly described as lol lows:
EXPO T V. SERVICE and that I
Clerk et Circuit Court
Front (Wost) Door at tha slept ot tho
ta x -a v oid in g church
T H A T E X T R A S U M M E R -!
lime
Interested
parties
tor
and
Intend to register Mid name with the ALARM SYSTEMS; PROVIDING
The
V*
interest
ol
toe
defendant
in
Semlnei* County, Florida
Seminole
County
Courthouse
In
SenDEFINITIONS,
IMPOSING
UPON
VACATION MONE Y TO YOU I :S
charter is a bargain. Any clerk ot the Circuit Court, Seminole
against tha recommended request to* following described proparty, to
By: CorrtoE. Buettner
lord. Florida, tha above described
THE OWNER OR M ANAGER OF
will be heard. Said hearing may be wit:
LABORERS
Deputy ciorfc
lawyer setting up a church County, Florida In accordance with THE PREMISES THE RESPONSI
personal property.
provisions ot lb* Fictitious
Lol 32, Stock II. Eat (brook Sub­
That M id Ml* It being made to continued tram time to lima until
STENSTROM, MclNTOSH, JULIAN,
in a similar manner would the
BILITY
OF
DEACTIVATING
final action It (alien by toe City division, Unit Six. according to to*
Names Statutes, to wtt: Section
COLBERT B WHIGHAM, PA.
Mtlsty
the
terms
of
M
id
Writ
of
ALARMS
UPON
NOTIFICATION;
charge 10 times as much
Commission
o
l
too
City
ol
Lake
Trainee, tor very busy roofing &gt;
MSS* Florida Statutes l»S7.
piet
thereof
a*
recorded
In
Plat
Book
Poet Office Box 1330
REQUIRING CORRECTIVE AC­ Execution.
Mary,
Florida.
B ill Isaacs
company. Start Immediately I
'
The circulars say that
12,
PogoMandB*.
Public
ijarafdaof
FlegsBlp
Sank-/Suite 13
John E. Polk.
TION AND THE FILING OR R E ­
THIS NOTICE shall be potted In Seminole County, Florida, and to*
Sanford, Florid* 33771-1J30
Sheriff
residents need not give up Publish May 23, M b June t. II. IM3
PORTS;
PRESCRIBING
FEES;
three public places within toe City of undersigned as Sharlll ot Seminole
DEHISS
AAA EM PLO Y M EN T
333 5)7*
Attorney tor Petitioner
Seminole County, Florida
PROVIDING FOR DISCONNEC­
their current religion to
Lake Mary, a l tot City Hall and County, Florida, will at 11:00 A M. eh
P o lis h May 30,1 Juna*,)). w, 1st)
Publish
Junt
4,
13,
20,
27,
I9U
with
Lot
and
detail
man
n
iiM
d
ter
used
TION
OF
ALAR
M
SYSTEMS;
R
E
­
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT, FOR
pttollthad In to* Evening Herald, a toa I4to day et Juna, A.D. ISO. after
create a church.
DEH-It*
car let. For appointment Call
STRICTING THE USE OF T E L E ­ tho M le on Juno 31.1NJ.
5EMI N O L i COUNTY, FLORIDA
newspaper
ol
general
circulation
in
tor
Mto
and
tall
to
toe
highest
H14D7S.
Those who are at a
PHONE ALAR M DEVICES; PRO­ DEI-13
C A t l NO.tS-USF-CA-M-0
too City ol Lake Mery, two limes ol bidder, tor cash, sub|*ct to any and
NOTICI O F PROPOSED HEARING
VIDING PENALTIES; PROVIDING
for a doctrine "m ay make McCAUGHAN MORTGAGE COM
FOR THE 190-110* BUDGET FOR
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE Hast fifteen day* prior to to* del* ol all existing liana, a l toa Freni (West)
SEPARABILITY,
CONFLICTS
AND
T N I R E V E N U E SHARING TRUST
EIOMTSENTN
JUDICIAL the public hearing.
Deer a l toe steps ot toe Seminole
up an innocuous doctrine, PANY, INC..
AN EFFEC TIV E DATE.
Plaintiff.
FUNO FOR THE CITY OF SAN­
CIRCUIT, IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE
A taped record ol tolt mealing It County CourthouM In Sanford,
such as: sun worshipping,
Said Ordinance was placed an first
FORD, FLORIOA
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
mode by toe City tor it* convenience. Florida, to* above described R EA L
reading an May 23.19*3, and tha City
renouncing violence, re
M ICHAEL ROBERT WYNN A
NOTICE te hereby given toot a
CASE NO. M-IOtf-CA-tt-L
This record may not constitute an
NOTICE UNDER
Commltaian w ill consider same I
SHEILA
A.
WYNN,
Public Hearing will be held at tot
FREED O M SAVINGS ANO LOAN adequate record tor purposes ol
FICTITIOUS N AM E LAW
noundng drug consump­
That said sate l i being made te
final passage and adoption otter the ASSOCIATION,
Defendants
Commission Room In Ih* City Hall In
formerly COM
appeal from a decision made by toe satisfy toe terms et u ld Writ et
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN that
tion. renouncing smoking TO;
public hearing, which will bo hold In
to* City ol Sanford. Florida, a l 1:00
toa undersigned, desiring to angage
BANK/ SEMINOLE COUNTY, a City Commission wlto respect to toe Execution.
tha
City
Hall,
17*
West
Warren
A
v
*
.
M
ICHAEL
ROBERT
WYNN
o'clock P A A on Juna I*, it t l, to
Florida capital stock association.
o r no plzxa-eating on
loregoing mailer. Any person
In business under to* tlctllteus noma
John E. Polk.
Long wood, Florida on Monday, tha
A SHEILA A. WYNN
conalder m at at the funds of toa
of SAN SEBASTIAN..SQUARE al
Plaintiff, wishing to ensure tool an adequate
Sheriff
Mondays." according to
n th day of Juna, A.D., IN L at 7:M
12) Bethune Circle
Revenue Sharing Trust Fund to b*
Suite "C ". *99 Slate Road 434, bt too
' of toe proceedings it mainSeminole County, Florida
p.m., ar a* soon thereafter os
the circular.
Sonfard. Florida 33771
by toa City
CHy at Altamonte Springs, Florida,
ALPH A II D EVELO PM EN T COR
ter appellate
is Publish May 33. JS. B Juno (, 11 wlto
possible.
At
the
meeting
interested
NOTICE
OF
ACTION
"Since there are no laws
f t toa City Commtoaian a* toa City et
intends to ragtster to* oatd name
to make Bit
PORATiON. INC., a Florida cor­
a f­ to* saloon June 14,1901
YOU AR E NOTIFIED that an parties may appear and b* heard poration,
Santord, Florida.
with too Clerk at too Circuit Court at
and
ORION
REAL rangemerits a l Ns
OEH-131
or regulations regarding
action for torecloeure of a mortgage with respect to the prapaaed Ordi­ ESTATE VENTURES. INC., a expense.
A ll partial in Interesl and cilltant
Samteate County, Florida.
religion, such as the ap­ on the following property
nance. This hearing may be can
•ball have an opportunity I* submit
Florida corporation.
CITYC
Doted at Miami, Florida, tote Uto
ITYO F L A K E M ARY,
NOTICI OP
tlnuad
from
time
te
lima
until
final
written
comment*,
or
to
Be
Lai
M.
ACAD
EM
Y
MANOR.
Unit
day
ef May. ltd .
Defendants
pearance, size, or location
FLORIOA
PUBLIC HEARING
aalA
action
Is
taken
by
the
City
Cam
I
n
i
h
i
g
,
t Connie Major
NOTICE OP SALE
/•/John Michael Gamer
o f a church or the size o f 1, according to the plat thereof as mission R . i
TO CONSIDER
recorded la Plat Baa* 13. Pa#* *3.
W.E. Knowles
City Clerk
/ V C . A. Moore,
Notice It hereby given that,
A CONDITIONAL USB
A capy el it* r- apeted Ordinance
the congregation, what is Public Records of Samlnoto County.
City
Manager
pursuant to an order of a Final DATED: May 37,19*3
/*/Robert A. Kappen,
Notlca is hereby given Hurt a
is pooled al the City Hall, Longwood.
CHy et Santord.
preached or for how long,
Judgment of Foreclosure entered In Publish June*, IJ, lit )
Florida
KO FFEN A WATKINS
Public Hearing w ill be h e * by toa
Florida,
and
capias
are
pn
Ills
with
hat boon tiled against you. and you
Attenwy far Applicant
to* above captioned action, I will M il DEI-1*
there can be no inspectors
Planning B Zoning Commission In
the
Clark
at
tha
city
and
sama
may
Publish June*. I«3
are required to te n * # copy of your
i property situated In Seminole
P j* H » h M a ya » B Ju n * 4 .,2Lt9B3.
toa City Commission Hoorn. City
to enforce non-existing
D EM *
written detente* la If. It any, an be Intpactod by the public
County. F torid* dnertoad at:
FICTITIOUS NAME
Hall, laniard, Florida at 7:M P M .
A
taped
record
of
M
is
meeting
Is
lava." It continues.
JOHN C. ENGLEHARDT, PJL., ISM
Loft 1-4,4 to, Black A, Let* 1,4 and
NOTICE
en Thursday, June IB 1*03. to
iv y the City tor Its convenience.
East Livingston Street. Orlando,
A ll, Block B, and tots M l, Block C.
Notice la hereby given tool toe co n tM v • request ter a Conditional
DiPetto insists what he
This
record
may
not
constitute
an
Florida m o . PtaWHF* attorney, an
COACH LIGHT ESTATES, Section undereignad Intend* te engage in
U*R I* a OC-B General Commercial
is doing M legal. From the ar defer* July II, 1MJ. end « * the
al
III, according to to* Plat fheraot at bualneM at 3*U Orlando Orfva,
District.
from • decision made by tha
point of v iew o f state original with tha Cterk at tote Court
tordri In Plot Boak 25, Pad* as. of Samlnoto County, Florida, under toe
Legal description; Late I B Grace
to the
either defer* service an lha P la in
t
Public
Racardt
a
l
Samlnoto
fictitious
name*
at
FR
C
ST
IQ
E
Une Court, P B 1 PO**
taxes, be may be. officials
m ra attorney, ar imiwdletoty
County, Florida,
IM
P
O
R
T
S
,
P
R
E
S
T
I
G
E
BM
W
,
Addrttt: t i l l * . First Street
. • default edit vetoing to ensure that an adequate
ef public Mia, to toe highatl and best PRESTIO E HONDA, end P R E
C o n d itio n a l Us* Requested;
y w to rd w ra U tf record af toe proceedings It main
i “Generally speaking. It a
tu to r tor cash af too weet front door STIOC MOTORS, and teat tee un
Automotive repair shop.
tor appellate purpeees is
at too Seminole County Cnurthouv In
A ll parties In intereal and cto n ra
to make tot necessary or­ SanlonL Florida af 11:M A M. on
name wflh Rm Clerk oTtee Circuit shall have an M pvtvnltytebahaard
tax exemption)
al Ms ar har awn
WITNESS my hand and teal at this
Juna 37, IN).
Court, Samlnoto Cavity. Florid* In at said hearing.
articles of inChurl « i June A M V.
Oatod tots 3rd day ef Junt. tm .
accardancosvHBRMprevtalana at tha
By trd tr of the Planning A
lis t day af May, A.O.
(SEAL)
Fictitious Name Statutes, Te-wit:
astatementof
Commission at to* City *1 | _ .
Arthur H. Beckwith Jr.
ARTHUR M. BECKWITH, JR.
Section M M * Florida Statute* IMF,
Florida tot* J it! day ef May. 11*3.
CITY O f LONGWOOO
C L E R K O F THECOURT
A t Clark af Circuit Court
N.R. AUTOMOTIVE, INC.
JjQ. Callaway, Chairman
OtoMML. Tarry
By:
fueCrdtorae
copy of tta
By Cloanar P. Burraito
By: NORMAN BRAMAH.
City at Sanford Planning
CHy Clerk
Deputy Clark
ox.
would be
P s to ito Ju M A tfB )
P u b tt o J u n e i.lL K .r 7 .H C
Publish Junes, 11, IN)
PuMMiMayll.3J.M B Juntt.m i
PubUshJapprove It.
OEM *
D E I»
D E IM
DEN IU
DEI 3*

Seminole
322-2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

Orlando • Winter Park
831-9993

RATES

GOP's Streetman Sets
June 10 Fund-Raiser

Several Charged With DUI

Legal Notice

BE EMPLOYED'i

Tax Dodge Won't Work

•

BE EMPLOYED!!

BE EMPLOYED'*

legal Notice

BE EMPLOYED!!

legal Node#

"C

I Hi

ItT1
\

'-v

BICOM B AN INSTANT
MILLIONAIRE!
30 M illion Won Monthly
And Paid Out In Full,
Tax Free By Canadian Government
Sand For P M I Brochure
Sanies a HandUng DapL
366-110 W, Broadway
VaneouMr.SC VIZ 4*

i:

�I

71— Help Wanted
Experlmcad Only Sewing Machine
operator*. Over lock or Sorgwri,
for T- Shlrl Division, Sergur
Him m tr. Ampro Posh Ions, no
Power Cl. m 2310
M A K A O I* m i N £ B „.H J00 MO.

BE EMPLOYED11
Want to laarn about proclout
9*mi&gt; Any rolall wins. Salary,
commission, bonaritsl
AAA EM PLO Y M EN T
m ills
Mature woman with wallrott o p t
rltnco. Halted. 11 AM to 1 PM.
Tuesday thru Saturday. TEA
Room In Long woods historic
district. Begin June Id. Call
M l dMt lor appointment.______
M EED EXTRA INCOME?
WHY NOT SELLAVO NI
_______ m - a t iin iiS T t ._______
OFFICE W ORKER • Accurals
typing; handle Phone orders.
Complete fringe Benefits. United
Solvents, 331-1400.____________
Part Time. Women and Men. Work
from home on telephone pro
gram. Earn 125. to 1100 per
week,depending on time available. 777 5500._______________
Part-Tim e Pressmen AMI250W
Experience. Call Ralph Jenson.
322 0 0 7 4 ______________
PERSONNEL UNLIM ITED hat
Immediate lull time openings for
Id) Cooks and (5) Cocktail
Waitresses. Also counter Clerks.
and General Laborers. 322 5441
SECURITY GUARD
HELPW AN TEO
__________ 3331212_________
Sharp Individual. Experience In
Mens Clothing Sale preferred.
Apply In person HIS SenfBPd
Plata._____________________
Wanted 2 Ladles for telling.
Stanley Home Products
__________ 001 4*12._________ _

WILLING TO WORK
Hard work, mean boss, good pay I
Call 321 3021______________ __

WORKFINDERS
INDIVIDUALIZED TERMS
G e llin g discouraged looking?
Everyone knows |obt are hard to
find, right? We know where they
are. and can usually place you In
the job o l your cholcelm mediately
3dl5 French Ave.
fin Sebtks Bldg.)
___________321 57*3___________
12 50 to SS00 00 W E E K L Y
PAYCHECKS (F U L LY GUAR
ANTEEOI working part or lull
time at home Weekly paychecks
mailed dlrnclly to you from
Home Office every Wednesday./
Start Immediately No eiperl
ence necessary. National Com
pany Do your work right In the
comfort and sacurty of your own
home. Details and application
mailed. Send your name and
address to; KEYSTO NE IN
DUSTRIES. HIRING DEPT. 33.
WO FREO ERICKSBURG R D .
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS 7*71*

72— Employment
Wanted
Care tor the E Merely. Certified
Nurses Assistant. Home or Ho*
pital. References provided. Call

91— Apartment*/
House to Share
COUNTRY Home to share, non
smokers, references. ttSO plus ' i
Util 305 001 aOU

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

91-Apartments/
House to Share

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

**wm rent and utllitlat. Employed
tamale 35 or older. 2 Bdrm.
_gjjgje». Call after o PM. *74*tH.

Furnished apartments for Senior
Clllions. 311 Palmetto Ave. J.
Cowan No phone cells._________
Lake Mary. I Bdrm. Furn. Apt.
Utility bldg, and patio Too small
for more than single working
man. J37-3130._______________
Nice furnished efficiency garage
apartment. Private. S55. week
plus depot It. 333-IS77.

NYHAT PQ
Y0U THINK

3 Large Lakefront home 3 BR 2
bath LR/OR/KIt Extras.

1condo. 2 BR, 2 bath. Pool, Tennis.

D ELU XE 3 Bedroom 7W both
townhouMi. P riv e t* patio*.
FHA/VA and Investor financing
available. Located on Rldgowood
o il 2Slh St. 7S M inutes to
downtown Orlando via 1-4, near
17-12, shopping, church#*, end
schools Modal* open t* Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, or call
anytime for appointment.
S57.100.

DAYS 574 1434
Eves. 7*10351

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
Available now elegant A spacious
duplsess with large scraan
porches, storage room s A
carport*. Fully equipped. 5300 lo
53*0 Coll for dotallt. Century 31
June Poolg Realty 322 1071.

G

141— Homes For Sale

SANFORD

OFFICE WAREHOUSE
2500 lo 12.000 Sq. Ft. Downtown, air
conditioned. Loads ol Parking

SHOPPING CENTER

KISH REAL ESTATE

3 Bdrm. New root newly painted,
screened porch, fenced rear yard
with fruit trees. 147.300.

HERE IT III
The "old" Sanlerd home you have
been looking ter. This one hat
Iour bdrms. and an extra room
tor sewing, etc., hardwoods Hr*.,
eat In kitchen. S4t.2M.

2544 S FRENCH
372 0231
Alter Hours 331 3110 33? 0771

BATEM AN R EALTY
Lie Real Estate Broker
3040 Sanford Ave

141— Homes Fo r Sale

OSTEEN 5 Acres, high and dry.
Well and light pole Owner hold
ing.S22.500
ALSO 7 7 Acres Term* 114.100
FISHERMANS PARADISE. 3 I’ i
C A H 15x31 screened pool,
w orkshop. 13x30. B e a u tifu l
secluded area. Lot 73&gt;550 on
Lake Monroe. *104,100
HANDYMAN SPECIALI. County
4 1. Lot 150 « 17a S31.100

|HAROLD

HALL

R E A LTY * INC.
r ealto r
323-5774

321-0759 Eve

25 Y IA R S E X P ER IEN C E

322-7643

Hidden Lake
Homes tram *47,140
Villas tram 041,100
FHA/VA Mortgages
Residential Communities el
America
___________333 1111___________
JUST M AR R IED ? OR RETIR
ING7
Before you buy see this sparkling 2
bdrm I bath doll housa. All kinds
ol great extras Call for details
547.500

DREAM COME TRUE! Sunken
living rm "set* the mood” lor
this gorgeous 3 bdrm 7 bath split
plan homo w/CHAA. dbl car
garage, custom decor and fenced
c o rn e r lo t In p r e s tig io u s
R a m b lo w o o d l F a n t a s t ic
assumption! No qualifying and
pricod toselll Only 154 COO
SHADY OAKS Surround this CB 3
bdrm home on gorgeous lot and
good location Easy assumption
and no qualifying! Why rent
when you can own! Only 043.100

TO GET AWAY FROM THE CITY
this 2 story 4 bdrm I bath home Is
really secluded near Osteen on
approxim ately I acre needs
work Let us tell vou about If.
515.000

W E N E E D LISTINGS
C A L L US NOWII

PRESTIGIOUS M AYFAIR Below
market value this 1 bdrm 2 bath
home on beautiful corner lot has
loads ol potential 548.500.

323-5774

141— Homes For Sale

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

3 Bdrm. H i bath custom llreplace.
glass sliding door*, lead lo
p riv a c y fenced yard Good
assumable mortgage H i,150

1500 lo 5000 Sq. Ft. Low rate*, on
1712. Great visibility. The WT
Parks Co. Brokor 025 4321.

102— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

2573 FRENCH AVE.

DUALITY EXTRAS
This heme exceeds gracious III*
style, weed and beam celling, eld
fashioned llreplace, large eat in
kitchen, decorator wall paper.
W e ll la n d sca p e d grou n ds.
tfi.S*0.
POOL
This lovely 3 Bdrm., 3 bath hem* it
lust strokes away from Mayfair
Coll Count. Wood fenced bock
yard afters privacy tor cooling
e ll In the sparkling pool. Itt.tM.
WOODEDACRES
This lovely l ' i acre treed parcel
comet complete with a J bdrm.
Its bath hems with fireplace In
lam. roam, big oat in kitchen and
cool screened patio. All at the
opprxtled value el Il2«,00e.
V E R Y LIVEABLE
3 Bdrm., 2 bath, large living area.
Walled pool and patle In back.
Vacant and ready ter your fami­
ly te en|oy. S47.N0.

REALTO R

Q

L k . Real Estate Broker
2040 Santord Ave

STEM PER AGENCY INC.
__________m-em_________ j

HANDYMAN SPECIALI. County
4 I Lot l » x 124 531,100

321-0759 Eve

Mm

222-7642

ORIVE BY 3513 OROVE DRIVE.
Fresh paint In and out
new
carpel Perfect 3 Bdrm Starter
Home Only 537,000. Owner will
assist with FHA/VA financing

ly Ow ner

B eUliH

Cotf Keyes
W E H A V E C LIE N TS
W AITING FO R
YOUR R E N T A L
PROPERTY
P LEA SE CALL
323-3200

CALL BART

Moyfob C.C . W aft To MyftwBd*
Hem .« b u m • flie p fo c e a Fane.
New Screened Pool a Spa
WfSoiar Heating. Family Room.
IMndocapod. Storage A rea .
Possible Owner Financing .
O ood
Opportunity

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR____________ 371 7415
Great Location Good condition 3
Bdrm I bath Cent. HA Large
shady lot. excellent financing.
W ALLACE CRESS REALTY
REALTOR 373 5012
H ALCO LBERT REALTY
REALTOR
207 E. 75th St.
373 7137

IY APPOINTMENT
PH 321*44fO

541W Lake Mary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary. Fla. 34744
DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE

CONSULT OUR

IMIESH U I I
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

m

u l

.

JUNE P0R21G REALTY

Salesman needed.

BATEM AN R EA LTY

321-0041

LOCH ARBOR, large 1 level. 4
Bdrm . 7 Bith. $14,000
W. Mallerowtki. REALTOR
372 7153 Ev*. 377 33*7_____
Long wood For Salt by Owner
Four bdrm. 2 blh. great rm.
15x32 screened porch.lireplece.
colling Ions, over 1/1 acre lot.
Beautifully landscaped . wood
privacy fenced t *. astumbalbe
mortgage. *71.100 331*000

340* HWY 1713

NEW OFFERING

REALTOR
807 5. French A vo.

MLS

322-8671
Ramblewood. 4/21Acre. 141000
CardinalOakt 1/2 5134.100
Ravens Brook 4/251*4.100
Forest City. 2/2 541.100
BobM. Ball Jr. PA. Realtor
__________ 321 4111___________

R O B B I I ’f
RIALTY
R E A L T O R . M LS
21*1 5. French
Suite 4
Santord. Fla.

24 HOUR 9 322-9283
SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
1215124
A ll Hr* 333 4134.331 4345
Seller motivated Assume Mtg or
finance 4 Bdrm. 2 bath Cent
HA. private backyard. 557.000.
Owner Associate. 3210134

STENSTR0M

Custom Built additions. Patio*,
screen rooms, carport. Door
locks, pantllng, shingle*, re
- rooting. For last service, call
223 8117.3*51371.______________ _

BATHS, kitchen*. resting. Mock.
'* concrata, window*, add a room.
F re e o*l Im ale*. 37384*3

We handle The

Fsnct
weed peat S rail. S term tenet.
License* Insured. 323-4111.

Health* Beauty
“ t O W E T S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harriett's Beauty
Neck. I l l E. 1st St. 3131747
JU NE CLASSIFIED ADS BRING
THAT E X T R A SUM M ER
VACATION M O NEY TO VOUI

Whole Ballet Was

BLURkCMH
1227129
F InaneIna Available

Appliance Repair
—

m a iw w

A P P L IA N C I tS R V IC *
We service all major Lrend*,
rat**. I1 vts.* x»3JJ«J31.

B * J A t counting Sofvtce Raoeon
. able rate*. Pick up S dallvory.

Horn* lmprovtm*nt
^argaSryETffiF*
W O O D A r la s la n G a n a ra i
carpentry, screened room doers
o k . Rees. Rates. 377 3*30.
C O L L IE R 'S N O M E R E P A IR S

carpentry, reeling, paiotlog.
iiilaBiuiragilr.Mt-aaa______

COMPUTE CONSTRUCTION
No job ta small. Miner S major
repair*. L icensed A bended.
__________ 33M UI___________
RO O M additions, rem odeling
dryweil hung ceilings sprayed,
tlreplece*. rooting
333 4532

Cleaning Service
1

P a A MAID

s e r v ic e s

la t e ly ? C le a n in g w ith the

t Electrical
fane. Umars, security lltwa. odd)
• liens, new services. Insured.
Master Electrician James Paul.
333 »*51

Homs Repairs
^h3n!*hTJ!nr

S

A general carpentry
W Yrt. Bap. Reel 323 *753.
M a li type*
* electric 373 eon
Ne
lae smell Home repairs and
remodeling 23 year* eiperl
ence .323 5545

C h lpptn dal* sofa, mahogany
vanity 4 carved matching chair*.
Duncan Phyf* tabta and * chairs,
oak dresser*, cedar chest, china
cabinet with table and 4 mat
chlng chairs, drop leal table,
tables and ch a irs, several
bedroom suits, odd chest, dross
ars, small drop front desk,
rockers, cofloo tables, ond
tobies, sofa* and chairs, small
offlre dask, bar stools, hide a bad
wall hanging mirror, recllner.
hall trees, selection ol new tan*,
guaranteed color, ond black and
whit* TVs. mlsc. household
Items.

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 12. I mil* watt of Speedway,
Daytona Bdech will hold a public
AUTO AUCTION every Monday
A Wednesday at 7:10 p.m. If* Ihe
only ana In Florida. You eat the
reserved prke. Call *04 255 B ill
lor further datall*.
Debary Auto A Marina Salas
K re ss the river top ot hill 174
hay 1712 Dabary «MB5*B
Dodge Dart
74 Exrallant ru *nlng condition.
________ 51200 373 1777.________
1171 AMC Concord D. L. 7 door,
auto, air,AM. FM.. power. Alter
« Pm Weekdays 123 4147.
1171 Toyota Ctllca
G.T. Hat
chbKk. AM FM stereo. Auto.
Trans, air. 323 41*7. Weekdays
attar* PM._________________
IN I Dodge Challenger 4 cyl.
loaded, low m ilea g e Pay
balance ot 57435.3*. Call 322 *577.
84 4 door Chevy Impel*
rebuilt angina and various parts
replaced. Body and Interior, good
shape 372 48*2______________
73 Thundarblrd. Loaded, wire
wtwol*. now tires, dean. 33* 1100
or *34-4*05.__________________
71 Sunbird Super Coupe, a spaed
AC.. P.S., AM • FM tap*, new
redials. *7.300 372 724*________
71 Malibu 4 door, air. extra dean,
white well tires, wire wheels,
radio and haatar. 5115 down with
credit 221*100814 4405

WE LIST AN D SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

Landclearing
“

■ T u SiT h OG MOWING
No |ob too large or small.
^ ^ ^ C a lllT ^ T * * ^ ^ ^ ^

Landscaping
^ “ TjLANDSCAhNG
Complete Lawn Maintenance
33) 4341

Lawn Sarvica
F H ^ Ir^ e s ^ a n to ^ J^ o r
load Geneva 524 per lead (5 yard
leads) cheaper rale* tor larger
truck toad*. 3413M0or 3*5 8031Mow Edge Weedeal
Clean up and light hauling
111 0150__________

Masonry
B E A L Concrete t man quality
operation. Pallus. driveways.
Pays 331n a Eve*. 327 1321.
SW IFT C O N C R E T E . Feelers,
driveways, pads, floors, peel*.

Roofing

A&amp;BROOFING
23 yrs. experience. Licensed *
Insured.
Free Estimate* on Rooting.
Re Rooting and Repair*
Shingles. Built Up and Tila.

JAMESANDERSON
6.F. ROHANNON
______ 32^9417______
Does Your Old Or Now Root Leak?
li lt does, call David Lae.
__________ 223 4455__________
Morrison Roofing Co.
S p e d a lliln g in shingles and
build up. Lew. Lew Rales. 74 hr.
service. 7551372_____________
Root Maintenance
Repair work New work
Trey or George ter Free E li.
305 3*55*40.

Sawing

Nursing Cara

D RAPES B Y D EBBIE
Reasonable rote*
331 SH0

Lokaview Nursing Center
t i t E Second SI.. Santord
^ ^ ^ ^ 321*7*^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Painting
Interior or f alerter Painting. Free
estimate* Reasonable 34*1354

Plastaring/Dry Wall
IT^T'hale^or'piasterTng
Plastering repair, .lucco. hard
cote, simulatadbrkk 321 5112

GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC.
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
SKYLINE D EALER
FEATURING
Palm Baacti Villa
Greenlaal
Palm Springs
Palm Manor.
Siesta Key
VA FH A financing 3013331200
New Homes starting al 51*15. Easy
credit and low down Undo Roys.
Loesborg US. 441 104 757 0324.
No deposit required. Woll taka
application by phone. Everyone
buys. Call tor Doug. Wa finance
all. 104-757 0324. Open week
nights top PM. _____________
No money down and 3 day* service
on all VA financing. Short on
Credit? Call and ask for Tom
Undo Roys. Leesburg Open * I
Weekdays 104 757 0324________

OPEN HOUSE
INDIAN WOODS
Fleetwood "N EW ” Deluxe 2 A 3
Bedroom. 2 Bath. Completely
Set up In a Beautiful Mobile
Home Community . Includes all
Amonllles. Financing Available.
A Musi see M FG Home - A ll for
*21.100 00. SR 411 A Tutcawllla
Road. Wintar Springs FI*. 32701
327 1140
1x35 MOBILE TRAILER. GOOD
CONDITION. Now Dlnotto sot
and ca pel Call 1415111.

159— Real Estate
Wanted

323 7140

217-Garage Sales
START Your garage Sale* nowII
M AKE LOTSOFQUICK MONEY
Call THE HERALD 322 2411 today.

219-Wantedto Buy
Naed E itra Cash?
KOKOMO Tool Co., al l i t W. First
St., Santord, Is now buying glass,
newspaper, bimetal stael and
aluminum cans along with all
other kind* ot non-ferrous
metals. Why not turn this Idle
clutter into extra dollars? W* all
benefit trom recycling.
For details call; 171-MOO
Wanted to Buy 3 Wheel Adult Bike
In good condition.
__________ 323 **43.__________
WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE A APPLIANCES.
3217140

225-Truck*/
Buses / Vans
1172 Chevy Ven

4cylinder 5475
Call 123 1577.
.

241— Recreational
Vehicles/ Campers

221— Good Things
to Eat

INI Spartan Travel Trallar. 30 Ft
21 Ft. Awning. Ex. Cond. Leke
Monroe Park. Debary. No Phono
^ d ls P lo # s ^ _ ^

HONEY
CRYSTAL LAKE APIARIES
Orange Blossom Honey
J LOCATIONS:
DUGGARS G EN ERAL STORE
SEMINOLE TV
OLD LAKE M ARY RD.

242—Junk Cars
BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From 510 to 550 or more.
Call 122 1*24 323 4311
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A Used
cart, truck* A heavy equipment.
__________ 322 5N0.__________
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JU N K CARS AND TRUCKS.
CBS AUTO PARTS 213 4505

223— Miscal lanaous

NEED to sail your house quickly!
Wo can otter guaranteed .sole
within 30days. Call 331-1*11.

I ll— Appliances
/ Furniture
Bunk bads lor Solo.
Good condition. 5150
__________ 171 5355__________
Cash lor good used lurnlturo.
Lorry's New A Used Furniture
Mart 215 Santord Are, 332 4132
COLOR TELEVISION
Ztnlth 35” color TV In walnut
console. Original price over S7S0.
Bolonco due SIN cosh or pay
monts 51* month. NO MONEY
DOWN Still In wacranty. Call
M l 5314 day or nlte. Free homo
troll, noohugahow.
Kanmore pari*, service,
used washers. 123 04*7
MOONEY APPLIANCES
WILSONMAIER FURNITURE
3H-31SE. FIRST ST.
372 5432

117—Sporting Goods
Indoor Gun Range Tuos Sal. 101.
Sunday I * Shootstralght. Apopka
Plata 15*10542

Castro Convertible Sole Bed .
Queen site Brand New. 5100. or
best otter. Call attar * PM.
123 4413.____________________
Foot Lockors. Duffle Bogs Trunks
ARM Y NAVY SURPLUS
HOSonlord Ave
322 5711
OAZEBOS
10 Fool new 4 tided Redwood
Gaitbos lor salt Osteen Golt
Club 733 13*1________________
New assorted Kitchen Cabinets,
counter lops, sinks, and other
Hams. 333 5113.______________
Plano. Exctlltnt condition. 5550.
Black and Decker electric edger
and trimmer SM. Boys 3 speed
bike. *10.323 3535.
PLACE YOUR WARES
WHtne T H Cr-R KSU R C
ro a e s ru o fc o
INTWE WANTAOSII
The Favorite Brand Name for
Shoppers Looking tor the Best
Buy Is ” HERALD'*CI**sllied. We buy furniture, antiques or
except consignments lor auction
Flo Trader Auction 321IIII.
23.1 Cu. Ft. Chest Ireeier. Sears
best w/llash defrost. Like now.
New Retail MIS.00 asking *150 00
or Best ollar. I l l 5200.

I t s Hwy. 17*82 • l o f *&gt;6

M 494II
M r U* Fir "Tb

Vtctbm

QTS0K........*40t
IU50K........’ I f f
SR2S0TN ... ,98 f f
.M M I
Beta 1e I

ABSOLUTE
AUCTION

193— Lawn A Garden
FILL DIRT A TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clark A Hlrt 373 75*0.323 2523

199-Pets A Supplies

Tv

m

. A

r m

7 th lls O O

Cabia Boat Caaaaav lad takala last

Registered. AKC Doberman pups
Black and Tan Tails docksd.
Dew claws removed Puppla
shots and wormed Born April
4th. 5150 323 S4*S.

■ s h a ll
I M S B M li A v
C«Ma Beat C*. I*pread to i
MAX* A mBBC AACtJAA VM M H i M }

tary aMba tai iliatlwi if f t I 88J 88 * » ft I

215— Boats/Accessories

i f f i ■UreT N t l n H l N i m M b u P I I

JACK'S BOAT REPAIRS.
For all your Boating needs
504 E Lemon St. Santord
(JOS331 537* Days327 S415 Night.

N B 4 IM IN

SPLASH INTO SUMMER 4 Bdrm.
7 bath horn* In Lake Mary with
year own pool and patle. earth
tana decor, dream kitchen, fami­
ly ream, and Lakefront I Only

v im .
JUST FOR YOU 2 Bdrm. It* both
homo. In Senera South an a oka
tall Cant. HA, w all ta wall
carpal, pattern eat in kitchen,
decor touches, and morel IU.555
REDUCED J Bdrm. IV* hath t
story home with caiy Iire piece
formal dining room, Screened
parches, plea Hears, an a land­
scaped corner M l 542455.
LOTS OF CHARM eMer 5 Bdrm. 2
Bath 1 story homo, with a brick
fireplace, dining roam, le n ity
room, sitting room. 11 caraga
a p a rtm e n t, new re a l, and
II Just I

C A L L A N Y T IM E

O f t o z t • B N fR T f O t O f A

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PDMPSAUSASIIV.

SANFORO Irrigation * Sprinkler
Systems Inc. Free est. 323*7*7
35yr* exp*
^

322-2420

UNDER 52455
I bdrm dodhousa with affordable
m o n th ly p a y m a n ta . C a ll
Owner Brokor211 t i l l .
a. IV* I
roam. Impressive slote
llreplace. Cathedral c e ille f,
located e« tree shaded tat.
StV.ISI.

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Q U A L IT Y UIM G C A M

25*15. Park

ChaN^tanaJjreoEstOlMlOJ.

s g n n n ig iLJwER

Hwy. 17-12

Sanford's Sales Ludtr

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9*793

A l I K ^ I s CARPENTRY

P U B LIC AUCTION

^--* i . , 4 , -- -A Ma^Laaa -A.BAH i • lb Ml B p W V 9| 1st*

To List Your Business...

FFtSIFTnriaHatlo^ChairTInk!

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
Na Credit Check- Easy Terms
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
3214075
1120 S. Sanford Ave.
2235311
IM IS. Orlando Or.

FOR ESTATE. Commercial or
Residential Auctions A Apprai*
als. Call Pali's Auction 3235430

S A N FO R D AUCTION
215 S. F R E N C H A V E .

NEWLYWEDS WILL ARRIVE IN
J U N E - RENT THEM A PLACE
NOW. ITS NOT TOO SOON.

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

Additions*
Rsmodsllng

p V
157— Mobile
Homes / Sale

Sprinklered. heavy Industrial.

For Rent. 3 Brdm tty both. S3U
Par month For more Inform*
lion Coll 323 0400 Alter 4 PM
Lako Mary 3 bdrm 3 bath
garage 5315 discount
331 3734.

231-Cart

213— Auctions

Auctioneer Blen Gibson

117— Commercial
Rentals

Monday, Jewe 6,190-11

Evtflln* Htr*W, Sanford, FI.

M ON. J U N E 6 7PM

155-Condominiums
Co-Op/Solo

t townhouse 2 BR H i bath.

Low rates. 7.000 lo 00.000 Sq Ft.

BAMBOOCOVE APTS
200 E. Airport Blvd. Ph.333 0430
IS? Bdrm*., from 5340 Mo 5 %
discount tor Senior CUliens.
O ENEVAOARD ENSAPTS.
1.2 S ) Bdrm. Apts. From 5205.
Famines welcome.
Mon. thru Sot.* AM to5PM.
1505 W. 25th SI.__________ 327 2070
LU XU R YAPARTM EN TS
Family A Adults section Poolside.
2 Bdrms. Master Cove Apts.
223 7100
______ Open on weekends.______
Mariner's Village on Like Ada. I
bdrm from S205. 2 bdrm trom
5310 Located 1712 just south of
Airport Blvd In Sanford All
Adults. 2231070______________
M e llo n v llle Tree* Apts 440
Melkwvllle Ave. Spacious mod
em 2 bdrm I bath apartments
Carpeted, kitchen equipped.
CHAA.adulls.no pets 5335
__________ 221 3105.__________
NEW I A I Bedrooms Adjacent to
Lake Monroe. Health Club.
Rocquetball and Moral
Santord Lending S R 44321 4220
NEWLYWEDS WILL ARRIVE IN
J U N E - RENT THEM A PLACE
NOW ITSNOT TOO SOON
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
2J00 Ridgewood Ave Ph 323 0420
1.2 A 3 Bdrms trom *210
Sendlewood
3 Bdrm. 2 Both AC , Pool. 5215
__________ 1215 7740.__________
Santord Speclout. I Bdrm. plus den
or 2nd Bdrm. Furniture. 5200
Adults I *41 7002____________
Sanford Lake Mary area Conve
nlenity located New 2 Bdrm. I
bath many oxfra*. Call alter 0
PM 331 40*4, 323 8477. 323 4775.
Unfurnished 2 Bdrm. I bath up
stairs. Magnolia Apartments
5210 MO 5150 Security deposit.
Realtor 473 M74 Orlando

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

AD?

WAREHOUSE

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

152— Lots-Acreage/Sale
ST. JOHNS River frontage. 2W
acre parcel*, also Interior
parrels with river accost 511,100
Public wattr. 20 min. to Alta­
monte M all 12% 20 yrs financing,
no qualifying. Broker
*20 4022

0FTH15

2 Smaller home*. 3 BR 3 bath,
LR/OR/KIt.

C o m fe rta b le sle e pin g room.
Privet* entrance. 050. Includes
maid itrvlca and utlltlas. Call
12U147._________ __________
SANFORD. Rtat. weakly a Mon
Wily ratao. Util. Inc. tff. 500 Oak
Aduito lo s ir a t i_____________
SANFORD Furnished rooms by The
waek. Reasonable rates. Maid
tervlca catering to working peo­
ple. Unfurnished apartments. I
•nd 2 bedrooms. 322 4507. 500
Palmetto Ave.
_______

9 7 -Apartments
Furnished / Rent

WU 9016 m tY 7 tttT /6 M S MATiWAL OMAN‘" ’BR, AH-w
IZATlffl HANS TO OPEN HEALTH
PHYSICAL
y CLUB! PRICES ARE $200 FOR S S
INTEllE6'&amp;-*J&gt;7Wa*£ JOMNd WW**$SOO j f 9

IN DELTONA

93— Rooms for Rent

with Major Hoopla

f I

Mhon*

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�i
4B—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B LO N D IE

Monday, June 4, 1»M

ACROSS

by Chic Young

44 Baiebeller
Gehrig
47 Article
49 Stege

IT

Antwtr to Previoui Punle

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86 Fed
n □ 7] n n
14 Homeric oplc 87 Hamlet's
n □ □
16 Reduce to
swuethesrt
M Ul
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ashes
66 Male garment
71 n □a n
16 Garmsnt piece 69 Auto part
□n n
15 Scouting
60 Visual
nn i n n u u u
tin i n i l ■ n n n
DOWN
n n uW
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20 Genus of
□ n TJA □ ■ □ n n
...........
i Criminal
46 Perfume
23 Infirmities
22 Count calories 2 Useful
quantity
24 Lohengrin's
26 Caussmey
3 Closed up
bride
46 Alliance
28 Word of
4 Energy
grafting
agency (sbbr.) 26 Carry on the 48 Handle of i
29 Face pert
6 300, Roman
bach
6 ------ the
by Mort Walkar 32 Author of
27 Heathen deity 60 Christ's
“Robinson
Greek
birthday
28 Ntxi Rudolf
Crusoe"
7 City in Iowa
(tbbrj
34 Landing boat 8 Redid
29 Faiisbohind 61 Make an
38 Yosr (Sp.)
9 Trojan
30 Crete
36 Smalls
mountain
inscription
62 Kind of
37 Oil-grading
10 Intact ogg
lettuce
31 Needy
number
11 Flyor
33
Expound
63
Make choice
36 Canine cry
12 This (Lai)
39 Moittor
64 Villain’s
40 Carpentry tool 17
exclamation
41 Oblige
42 Dad
leave*
65 Long-noted
43 Universal time 21 Drastic social 43 Demon of
fish
Arabian loro
(sbbr.)
change

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B E E T L E B A IL E Y

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T H E BORN LO SER

by A rt Sansom

WHAtXWA AAEAHiMD0 DON'T KNW WHERE
Atf BALL WEMT?j
THAT^TUE
THIRD OWE
VOU'VE
LOST '

2

3

4

12

13

14

16

16

30

36

S2

AKHf. COUNCILMAN UPPRAFT
SAYS THE TOWN IS N

by Bob Montana
I THINK OUR REAPERS WOULD
BE WTERESTEP IN AN I
DEPTH LOOK A T T H IS '

53

23

24

25

141

40

JH 4 4

43
47

11

37

39

42

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32

31

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22

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26

29

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to-VE 60TTABE THE WORST
0*PF/)d, I'VE EVERHAD!

ARCHIE

6

6

46

45

51

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48

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66

56

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59

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— i

FINANCIAL TROUBLE A N P
THE TAXPAYERS WIU HAVE
TO

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

What The Day Will Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNE 7,1983

EEK A M EEK

by Howia Schneider

I'M k X T G a / O G T D n m

v

I'M G ^ iM G lD RELAY

ffiX X m F V J U &amp; H J r V m

A M D E W J O V LIFE

W

JUST T A K IN G EACH

m

MINUTE A5 IT COMES

PR ISCILLA'S POP

A NOTE FROM MS’ "
TEACHER, POP/ I
GOT IT O N THE LAST

RNt* c f sc h o o l f

by Ed Sullivan

SHE WAS SO00ING
WHEN THE MEN IN
WHITE COATS GAME
FOR HER.

\NHAT ARE
ALL THESE
WATER
M ARKS

BUGS B U N N Y

by Stoffal A Haimdahl

m W ^TONS.VDU

1B4. M£m

M EM BER
OP ZEfBENCH FDQEI6N

W W YDip
YOu_ 1

LESION^—

__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
RpBSET.

JOIN 7J

W U A T T WABB75
1
J
1

MXI HAVE \HUPOKB,DOC.
W T O MEET |HUP1WO,0X
"

SASP'

SCORPIO |Oct. 24-Nov.

Unproductive associa­
tions will dissolve of their
own volition this coming
year. New relationships
will take their place and
ofTcr the substance which
the others lack.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) You could he asking
for problems today If you
permit your emotions to
take precedence over your
common se n se . Strive to
keep you r fee lin g s In
check. Gemini predictions
for the year ahead arc now
ready. Romance, career,
luck, earnings, (ravel and
much more arc discussed.
Send 81 (o Astro-Graph.
Box 489. Radio City Sta­
tion. N.Y. 10019. Be sure
lo state your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 2 1-July
22| Have fun and enjoy
yourself today, but de­
termine In advance Just
how much money you cun
afford lo spend lo have a
good time. Stay within
your limits.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
U n b ec o m in g b e h a v io r
today could shatter (he
respect friends have for
you. Be very careful how
you conduct yourself In
their presence.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) Don't rationalize situa­
tions today which are in
need of attention. If you
stick your head In the
sand, you could be asking
for trouble.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
2 3 ) M a te r ia l c o n s id ­
erations should not be
permitted to conic be­
tween you and a close
friend today. Be constantly
on guard to sec that It
doesn't happen.

2 2 | T r y

G A R FIELD
FRAN K AND ER N EST

TbO’O FE t T S F CUBAN
U P 1t&gt;Uf? A C T -

Oust

p

P o m Ej t ic T R ^ N O o itirr. 5

i n

,t w

c o u s v t u t io n

. « h « ik o s v i x i n a

TUMBLEWEEDS
A u m iH w rs A f f w r e j w t w m .

.

THA^VJ fc-fc

JTM RAVff,

by T. K. Ryan
PONT SEE M NP/ NhICfl

could

a v o i d

DEAR DR. LAM B W h y can 't doctors do
s o m e th in g ab ou t bad
breath? You arc told that
mouthwash won't solve
the problem and only
masks the odor temporari­
ly. but even that Is more
than I have been able to
get from seeing countless
doctors.
First I went to my den­
tist. which you often re­
commend doing. He Is a
great dentist but he had
nothing to offer for my foul
mouth. He said my iccth
were perfect, so were my
gums and I was very
fortunate.
Next I went to the car.
nose and throat specialist
and he said my sinuses
w ere clear, there Was
nothing In my throat and
he had no suggestions.
So I went to my regular
doctor u’ho Is a specialist
In Internal medicine and
told him my problem — as
If he couldn't smell it. Who
couldn’t? He look some
blood tests and X-rays and
said he could find nothing
wrong and It must be from
something I eat. But what?
In this day when they
can transplant hearts, put
In artificial henrts. treat
cancer with myoclonnl
antibodies, why can't they
cure bad breath? I'd be
Interested In you r re­
sponse and so would a lot
of others with the same
problem.
DEAR READER Doctors can treat bad
breath — when they know
what causes it. And many
cases arc caused by dental
problems or sinus disease
and still others from In­
ternal diseases. You did
the right thing but some­
times the real cause Is
obscure. O f course, n
person can h ave bad
breath because he sleeps
with his mouth open.
Others don't know they
should brush their tongue
and some people think
they have had breath
when they don't. That Is a
psychological problem.
But you liuvc a point. I
think many o f the un-

solved cases arc caused by
a change In body chemis­
try. The odor comes from
Internal chemical reac­
tions. Just as a patlcnl
with liver disease may
have a "fruity odor." or a
d ia b e tic an odor lik e
alcohol, which can also
occur with fasting and
very low carbohydrate
diets. A better method of
breath analysis to detect
s m a l l a m o u n t s of
odoriferous gases is In
order and should be used.
There Is much lo be done
to Improve the situation. •
Meanwhile I am sending
you The Health Letter 9-4,
Halitosis: The Breath Pro­
blem and What to Do
About It. lo tell you what
is currently known.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
sure I read In your column
that If a man past 35
wants children he should
take some vitam ins to'
keep his sperm count up.1
Will you please tell me
what they should take and
for how long?
;
DEAR READER - You
have confused something.:
If a man at any age Is on a
balanced diet that pro­
vides the RDA (recom­
mended dally dlclary al­
lowance) of vitamins and
minerals he cannot In­
crease his sperm count by
taking additional
vitamins.
Vitamin A is Important
to sperm cell development,
but that should come from
the diet In the recom­
mended amounts. Large
doses won’t Improve mat­
ters and can cause other
problems.
Vitamin E Is useful in
animals because they have
a d iffe r e n t m e ta b o lic
system than wc do. There
is no evidence It helps men
with their sperm count or
sexual performance.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
9J10675

♦—

+AIQM4I!
WEST

EAST
4A10653
9K»

♦ KJ6I

94
♦ qjiitii

♦7

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♦ AK10JI
♦

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SOUTH

♦ Q74I
9AQIII
♦ «

♦ 1015
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer South
Nurtt

Eaxt

P an

14

19
*
so

If
if

14
4 NT
Pm
DM.
DM.

40

19
79
Pm

South
Pm
29
DM.
Pm
Pm
Pm

Opening lead: *9

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Oswald: "Here Is a freak
hand to end all freak
hands as reported by
Jared Johnson In Popular
Bridge."
Jim: "It occurred In the
1982 Summer Nationals in
A lb u q u erq u e and was
played many limes. So
many. In fart, that there
were 14 different scores

ranging from plus 2470 to
minus 1310 North-South."
Oswald: "The bidding In
the box shows how a
couple of Souths scored
that plus 2470. Declarer
ruffed the spade lead, led
the Jack of hearts and
finessed after East played
low. Then he picked up
the king of trumps und
claimed."
Jim: "Note North's bid­
ding. He wanted lo play
som ew h ere In hearts',
preferably below seven,
which he w asn't sure
would come In. In any
event he didn't want his
non vulnerable opponents
saving In spades."
Oswald: "Some of the
North-South minuses arr
hard to explain . That
minus 1000 was for 10
down undoubted In six
n o-tru m p. T h e m inus
1310 was for six spades by
East doubled and making
seven. Wc assume that.
South doubled and elected
to o p e n a s p a d e ,
whereupon East picked up
the trumps to collect five
spades, seven diamonds
and his slant."
J im : " J a r e d 's fin a l
com m ent Is worth re ­
peating. He said that at no
table was the hand passed
out."

by Jim D s v ii

by Bob Thavoi

wR

to

push-and-shovc situations
today where your work or
career Is concerned. If you
awukcn o p p o sitio n . It
might be more than you
bargulned for.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21| When dealing
with subordinates today,
try* not to assign them
duties which are beyond
tbetr capabilities. It will
frustrate them and dis­
appoint you.
C A P R I C O R N (D e c .
22-Jan. 19) Be careful to­
day that you arc not overly
possessive of those you
love. The tighter you try to
draw them to you. the
more they're apt to pull
away.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) Think twice be­
fore Jumping Into situa­
tions today where you
might have to side with
one friend against another.
You could alienate both In
the process.
PISCE8 (Feb. 20-March
20) Flattering others will
work against you today
ra th e r than fo r y o u .
Persons with whom you
deal w ill be qu ick to
evaluate the sincerity of
your remarks.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) Associates who usually
comply with your wishes
arc likely to oppose you
today If they think your
motives are too selfish. Be
sharing.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) There Is a posslbilltly
tod ay that you could
com pound a situ ation
which Is already rather
complicated. Don't take
this unenviable tack.

Wanted: A Cure
For Bad Breath

stems

ABLE TO M N M N f -

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7S»h Year, No. 239-Thursday, May 26, 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald-(USPS 481-280)-Prlce 20 Cents

City, State At Stand-Off

Where Will Sanford Dump Sewaqe

If Sanford can’t
can l dump effluent
from Its Poplar Avenue sewer plant
Into Lake Monroe, where’s It Colne
to go?
8 8
This Is only one of the questions
which the Sanford City Commission
will look at during a luncheon
meeting Friday at city hall. 300 N.
Park Avc.
City Manager W. E. ’’Pete”
Knowles called the meeting so
commissioners could decide on a
direction logo.
Currently the city and the state
Department of Environmental Regulatlon appear to be at a stand-ofT.
DER has told the city Its sewer
plant operating permit will expire in
1984 unless planning Is under way

dlsD09c of sewer effluent in
to dispose
In some
way other than dumping It Into the
lake.
If the city Is In the process of
planning another way. such as
spray Irrigation over land. It will get
four more years until 1988 from the
DER to Implement their plan.

A major problem with Implemen­
ting such a plan Is the cost which
Knowles estimates at about $7
million. And It appears at this point
that the city will have to bear those
costs totally. There are no longer
federal funds available for sewer
plant expansion.
The additional costs, whatever
they may be. will be borne by the

rim'c
_______ _In the &lt;
•__
city's _____
sewer customers
form
of rate Increases. Since cost
estimates arc not firm at this point
and since the City Commission lias
not decided which direction It will
lake, there is no way of knowing
how much that rate Increase will be.
The commissioners will be asked
to look at the alternatives Friday.
Knowles Is convinced the city can
spend $15,000 to $25,000 to dem­
onstrate to the DER that the city’s
effluent Is not polluting Lake
Monroe.
’’They have let us know that
regardless of the fact that Sanford’s
diluent Is having no Impact on the
lake. Sanford’s still not going to be
allowed to use the lake.’’ said

« __ .
.
.
.
Knowles, who only recently re­
turned from Tallahassee where he
conferred with DER officials.
The city manager said DER of­
ficers noted that the state's Game
and Fresh Water Fish Commission
opposes the dumping of effluent
Into the lake and that DER doesn’t
wish to oppose that agency.
’’We aren’t going to get It (the
permit) with the politics (between
DER a n d t h e G F W F C ) In
Tallahassee.” Knowles said. He
added that even an attempt to
appeal the decision there would
"roust the environmentalists out for
100 miles."
"We could win and still not get a
permit." Knowles said.

Another alternative Sanford has.
Knowles continued. Is to challenge
the state ruling In the courts. "But
court action could go on for ump­
teen years." he said.
And to buy the property neces­
sary to dispose of Sanford's sewer
plant cflluent ofT site, in addition to
the cost of installing pipe and
pumping the diluent to another
location could cost $6 million to $7
million, the city manager said.
For some eight years, the city of
Sanford, the city of Lake Mary and
Seminole County looked Into the
possibilities of expanding the San­
ford sewer plant to a regional facility
serving the entire north end of

Seminole County.
At that time federal funds were
available for most of the cost of the
sewer plant expansion plus the
costs of providing an interceptor
line to bring the effluent to the
Sanford plant. Representatives from
all three local governments met for
eight years talking about the Idea
and no a g re em e n t was ever
reached.
In the meantime, federal money
for such projects was stopped. And
Sanford decided to go It alone and to
continue providing service only for
the citizens of Sanford.
The commission Friday
cldewhat Isinext
Donna Eats

Race Bias
Victim Gets
School Job
Promotion
By Micheal Beha
Herald Staff W riter
The Seminole County School Board will comply with a
federal court order to promote a black employee with
bark pay for discrimination by the district's transporta*
t Ion supervisor against the black employee In 1979.
School board members voted unanimously Wednes­
day night to appoint George Duncan as the district’s
assistant supervisor of transportation for maintenance,
effective July 1. and award him $432 In bark pay.

With A Lot O f PRIDE

School Superintendent Robert Hughes said the small
amount of back pay Is because Duncan would have gone
from the top pay scale for hourly employees to the
bottom of the administrative pay scale.
Bumsed. the
guilty or dlsIng a g a in s t
Duncan, has received an
administrative reprimand
In his personnel flic, ac­
cording to Hughes.
Hughes said "the proper
adm inistrative action"
w as ta k e n a g a in s t
Burnscd. The school su­
p e rin te n d e n t said he
c a n n o t m ake fu rth e r
comment about Burnsed’s
reprem and because of
confidentiality of employee
Gtorgt Duncan

U.S. District Court Judge Elizabeth Kovachevlch ruled
In April that Burnscd discriminated against Duncan In
September 1979 by not giving Duncan, who was a chief
mechanic, the opportunity to apply for the position and
by naming a subordinate to the post.
Bee DISCRIMINATION Page 2A

W o m en In M o jo rify

Williams Joins
Housing Board

H*r•M n m w fcy Twnmy VH*ctM

Seminole County school officials are proud of their P R ID E winners. At
eft, Superintendent Robert Hughes congratulates Joseph DIFonzo of
Lake Howell High School, the state winner in the social studies
competition. Abovet, Hughes congratulates Charles Jones of Lyman
High School, a regional P R ID E winner who came In second In the state
competition. DIFonzo will receive a $1,000 cash award and Jones will
re? ^ * i f 40! , a8 ,a r*°ional w,nner In the Program to Reward Initiative
and Distinction in Education.
','

'*

• • .

.

&lt;- ■. » Ir- *

"

‘

*

▲ .

Sanford Water Usage Up 50%
By Donna Bates
Herald Staff W riter
Sanford's water system pumps arc
working overtime this month to give Its
8.300 Sanford water customers and
those In the city or Lake Mar)1, the
Mldway-Canaan water district and Indi­
an Mound Village all the water they
want.
Walcr usage this month has been up
by 50 percent over the same period only
one month ago. On May 20. some 7.38
million gallons per day was pumped, on
May 21 some 7.95 million gallons were
pumped and on May 22 some 7.4 million

T0DAY "
Action Reports......
Around The Clock..
Bridge...............
Calendar................
Classified Ads
Comics....................
Crossword..............
Dear Abby..............
Deaths....................
Dr. Lamb...............
Editorial..............
Florida...................
Horoscope...............
Hospital...................
Nation......................
People......................
Sports.......................
Television................
Weather..................
World.......................

gallons were pumped, compared with an paying for It." he said, "and I probably
average dally usage In April of 4.84* shouldn't complain."
million gallons.
The city over many years has prided
Itself
on the fact that there has not been
There Is no danger that Sanford Is a restriction
placed In the city on persons
going to run out of water, however.
using water, while other communities
City Manager W. E. "Pete" Knowles have
had to curtail water use during
said the city can pump more than 9 peak periods.
million gallons per day without trouble.
The city has two water plants and two
"It’s the warm weather with no rain." well fields and can rotate use of the
Knowles said In discussing the Increased plants or operate them together.
usage. "People are turning on their
Knowles noted the city has received a
sprinklers and going out to eat and response from Indian Mound Village, to
letting the sprinklers run all night.
which It supplies water, urging that the
"It's a waste of water, but they arc group find Its own water supply. Similar

letters were sent to Lake Mary and to the
Mldway-Canaan water district.
Knowles said the letter Informed that
Ihc Indian Mound group Is holding
meetings to try to find an answer to Its
problem.
Lake Mary has also been actively
looking at alternative methods of
supplying its own water production.
County Commissioner Bob Sturm has
asked for a meeting with Lake Mary city
officials to discuss ways the county may
help the city with that problem. A
meeting time has not been set.

Lym an G ym To BoRopalrod

Lawton School
2,3B

Preliminary plans have been approved for
construction plans at T. W. Lawton Elemen­
tary School in Oviedo and Lyman High
School In Longwood.
The Seminole County School Board voted
Wednesday night to replace a two-story
classroom building at Lawton Elementary
with two new buildings and to use a steel
beam to support the Lyman High gymnasi­
um roof.

foot. Arnold said. That would put costs for the
total project at about $1.45 million.

structlon should begin In January. Construc­
tion should be completed by July 30.1984.

"That leaves us with the option of delaying
construction of the art and music centers
until funds become available, or If we can find
the funds somewhere else In Ihc budget.
going ahead and building them." Arnold said.

Board members also approved a tentative
plan to use a steel beam as the main support
for Lymah High School’s gymnasium.

The board voted to raze an old two-story
building at the school to make room for the
new construction.
Frizzell told the board there Is no viable
alternative to removing the building.
Superintendent Robert Hughes said the
eight-acre school campus has very little extra
space. Razing the building Is the only way to
maintain sufficient playground and drainage
space, he said.
"The only alternative the board has Is to
remove that building." he said. "It’s a
business decision we have to make. It would
be educationally sound to remove that old
building out there."
Arnold also said the removal of the building
was specified In a state survey of the county's
school faculties In 1979. If the district did not
remove the building, state funding for
construction projects could be blocked, he
said.
Arnold aaid the building will be demolished
this summer.
A tentative timetable for construction was
also presented by Frizzell. He said bids
should be awarded by December and con-

The roof was found to be defective following
a Feb. 13 rain storm which left several Inches
of water on the gym floor. An Investigation
revealed that the pre-cast concrete, steel
reinforced beams used In the construction of
the gym roof had developed a sag.
After lengthy debate, the board voted last
month to hire Watson &amp; Associates, the
Orlando architectural firm which designed
the school, to design a new roof for the gym.
Board members Wednesday night vetoed
plans submitted by Watson officials to correct
the sag in the existing beams and to replace
the beams with other pre-cast concrete
beams.
They tentatively accepted Watson's plan to
use a solid steel beam In the roof but told
company officials to bring them proof that the
steel beam plan will work.
Watson's engineer. Bruce Townsend, told
board members they anticipate construction
at the gym beginning in July and being
finished bv November.
School officials have estimated the cost to
repair the gym roof and floor wU! exceed
$500,000. which will be financed by Insur­
ance settlement. —Michael Beha.

f

�iA -E vnlnt HoraM, Sanford, FI.

Ttoirsdsy, May a&gt;, HU

NATION
IN BRIEF
Civil Rights Appointees
Stirring Up Controversy
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The three men
President Reagan chose to complete his
overhaul of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
made a defensive debut that could point to a
controversial confirmation process In the
Senate.
Reagan announced Wednesday that he will
nominate lawyers Morris Abram and Robert
Dcstro and political scientist John Dunzcl to
replace three holdovers from the Carter ad­
ministration who have been critical of his
policies.
However, he did little to discourage sugges­
tions that the goal was to quiet criticism of the
administration by naming members more
favorably disposed to Reagan’s positions on
such issues as affirmative action and school
busing.
Reagan Is the first president in the history of
the commission to try to replace Its six members
with his own nominees.

M X Opponents Vow Fight
WASHINGTON fUPIl - Opponents or the MX
missile, slung with defeats in both houses of
Congress, say they will use the Memorial Day
recess to mobilize opposition for the next round
of voting on the controversial nuclear weapon.
The Senate Wednesday Joined the House in
approving $625 million for further development
and flight testing of the missile, handing
President Reagan, who lobbied hard for the MX.
a dramatic victory.
It was only five months ago that Congress had
withheld the funding when it rejected Reagan's
now-abandoned "dense pack" plan to bunch the
missiles closely together, and asked him to
develop another one.
The resolution was sent back to the House for
final approval, a technical matter the House was
expected to act on today. It does not need the
signature of the president.

Withholding Repealed
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Bowing to the will of
Congress and pressure from the banking
lobbying, the Senate Finance Committee agreed
to repeal the controversial law requiring taxes
be withheld on Interest and dividends.
but repeal supporters charged .«at the
unrelated amendments the committee altached
to the bill Wednesday would Jeopardize its
chances for final congressional approval.
The Republican-dominated committee. In a
party-line 11-8 vote, moved to scrap the
requirement that 10 percent of such Income be
withheld beginning July 1.
The committee attached several administra­
tion-backed proposals to the measure to give
President Reagan a face-saving excuse for
accepting repeal, which he has vowed to veto.
No time has been set for consideration of the
measure by the full Senate.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Winter weather leftovers
dosed California campsites and shut down a Colorado
Uiterstate highway today. Flood damage in Mississippi
reached the $22.9 million mark as the Pearl River held
steady at 11.5 feet above flood stage. Thunderstorms
rhked the Southern Plains Wednesday, scattering hail
from the Texas Panhandle to the Missouri boothill.
Tornadoes were sighted near Midland and Rankin.
Texas. Showers dumped an inch of rain on Beaufort.
$.C. Wednesday night, and hall the size of golf balls hit
Statesboro. Ga. inland from Savannah. The Colorado
Highway Department labored through the night to clear
a giant mudslide that clogged Interstate 70 with 30.000
yards of mud and rock west of Vail. Traffic had to be
rerouted for 10 miles over U.S. 6. A large chunk of
mountain bluff weakened by recent moisture gave way
about 5 a.m. MDT Wednesday. Sierra snowmelt speeded
up by temperatures in the 80s forced Yosemlte National
Park In California to close 275 campsites.
i?AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 76:
overnight low: 66; Wednesday high: 92: barometric
pressure: 29.92: relative humidity: 71 percent; winds
West at 9 mph; rain: none; sunrise 6:30 a.m., sunset
8! 15 p.m.
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs, 9:23 a.m..
$ 4 4 p.m.; lows, 3:12 a.m., 3:04 p.m.: P ert Canaveral:
Highs. 9:15 a.m.. 9:36 p.m.; lows. 3:03 a.m.. 2:55 p.m.;
Rapport; highs. 3:10 a.m.. 1:58 p.m.; lows. 8:26 a.m.,
$16p.m .
- AREA FORECAST: Partly sunny today with highs
l i a r 90. Wind light and variable. Tonight and Friday
Mostly fair. Lows in the mid 60s and and highs In the
id to upper 80s. Wind tonight light and variable.
•recast for Memorial Day holiday weekend: continued
partly cloudy. Little temperature change,
s BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
qltt 50 miles — Variable wind mostly northwest 10
Ifhots or less through tonight. Friday northerly wind 10
Ifhots or less. Seas 3 feet or less. Partly cloudy.

S

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By Michesl Behs
Herald Staff W riter
The executive director of the Seminole
County Port Authority will represent the
port and its tenants In water and sewer
rate proceedings before the state's Public
Serv Ice Com m isston.
The port authority's board of directors
voted Wednesday to authorize Dennis
Dolgncr to provide comment to the PSC
on the rate hike proposed for Lake
Monroe Utilities, the firm which serves
the port.
Dolgncr told board members he

expects the rate hike proposal to be
presented to the PSC on Tuesday. If the
commission accepts the proposal, it will
be sent to the utility’s customers who
will be allowed to comment on the
proposal before a final decision Is
reached.
Dolgner said he Is opposed to a PSC
staff plan for a base rate charge
established by the size of a customer's
water meter. He said a customer with a
three-inch water meter wuuia pay a
higher base rate than a customer with a
two-inch meter even though the custom­

er with the smaller meter may use more
water.
He said he also opposes a proposal to
charge every user of the system who has
a sprinkler system a monthly fee for
service. Dolgner said the port authority’s
office would have to pay $80 per month
nder the proposal. The charge would
penalize consum ers who want to
fireproof their businesses. Dolgner said.
He suggested a one-time connection
charge would be fairer for consumers.
Construction oi the port's newest
building has been delayed because the

county's engineering stalT still is re­
viewing the plans. Dolgncr said. The
building, to be constructed and financed
by Clifton Construction of Cocoa Beach,,
was scheduled to be completed this
summer. The building Is expected to
take 90 days to complete.
Also Wednesday, the board also
approved two leases for renewal.
Approved were leases with Benchmark
Contractors for $428 per month and St.
Johns Petroleum for $562 per month.
Both leases Include a seven-percent
increase In monthly rent over the
previous lease.

. . .Discrimination Victim Gets School Job
Continued from Page 1A
In her ruling. Mrs. Kovachevlch said Bumsed's action
was "a case of blatant racial discrimination to the
conscience of this court.’’
The assistant transportation supervisor's post was
created in 1979 by the school board and Included many
of the duties Duncan was then performing as chief
mechanic. But Bumsed never notified Duncan.
When the Job was established, Bumsed told Russ
Williamson, a white mechanic who was Duncan's
assistant, he would get the Job.
The Job was posted on Sept. 13. 1979, by Bumsed and
Duncan tried to Jalk to him about it but Bumsed made
himself unavailable to Duncan. Four days later Bumsed
announced that Williamson had been selected for the
post.
"This was one of the first or second Jobs advertised In
transportation," Hughes said. "The managers out there
weren't trained or educated in the policies used by our
personnel department.

"That sheds a little light on how this could have
happened," Hughes said.
School officials had considered filing an appeal of the
court order but Hughes said the district will implement
the order in the Interest of maintaining employee and
management morale.
Duncan will replace Williamson, whose contract
expires June 30. Hughes said no decision has been
reached on what job will be offered to Williamson.
Duncan said today he is happy the case has been
resolved. But he said he was "at a loss for words" to
comment further.
The assistant transportation supervisor for mainte­
nance post is salaried at from $19,092 to $23,483.
Ron Boeth, director of the Seminole Education
Association, said his group Is delighted at the board's
decision not to contest the order.
"Any decision by the school board to appeal It would
have been viewed by the public as support for
discrimination," Boeth said.

M a rk e d $2 Bill Leads To A rrest
Convenience store clerk Stephen McPherson, 26,
found himself staring down the long barrel of a handgun
early today, but he kept cool enough to remember to
plant marked money on the robber.
And when Seminole County sheriff's deputies nabbed
the suspected gunman and his accomplice about an
hour later, they found the identifiable $2 bill In their
possession.
Arrested were Robert Lee Ross. 18. of 229 Lorraine
Drive, A ltam onte Springs, and William Jacob
Beckelhiemcr, 18. who refused to give his address. They
were charged with the armed robbery of the 7-11 store
at Wcklva Springs Road and State Road 434 In
Longwood. Beckelhiemcr faces the additional charge of
possession of a concealed firearm.
Both men are being held today in the Seminole
County jail without bond.
The pair was arrested at 4:15 a.m. on Stale Road 434
about 100 yards west of Kensington Park after deputies
stopped their vehicle which matched the description of
one believed to have been used’in the robbery about an
hour earlier.
Recovered from the floorboard at Beckelhiemcr's feet
was a loaded .22-caliber revolver matching the descrip­
tion of the one used In the robbery.
The $2 bill was also taken from Ross and Identified by
serial number by the 7-11 store manager as the one kept
'in the cash drawer for security purposes.
McPherson told investigators he was cleaning the
store at approximately 3:20 a.m. when a male entered
and picked out a sandwich, a bottle of Juice and package
of doughnuts.
McPherson said when he rang up the items and the
cash register drawer opened the man said: "Give me all
your money."
At that point McPherson looked up to find a gun
pointed at him. As the man held the long-barreled
revolver in his hand he Bald. "No change and what is
under the drawer."
McPherson gave him all the money including the
marked $2 bill. The gunman fled and McPherson called
the sheriffs department.
Meanwhile, deputies report, a newspaper deliver)’ man
saw the men leave and noticed the driver of the car duck
down when he saw he was being observed.
He notified police who issued a bulletin with the
description of the car and the men were arrested.

STOCKS
T h nt quotollont provldtd by
mombort ol tho Nstlonol Attoclollon
of Soairltlot D n lt r t o n rtpro
ttnlollvo Intor-doolor prlctt * f of
opproolmofoty noon todoy. Intordot lor morktft chongo throughout
tho doy. P r in t do not Includo lotoll
msrk vp/morkdown.
Bid Atfc
At Ian lie Bank...................... *1 411*
B*m *tl B*nk...................U to

Flag ih lp B «nki................. M U »*•
Florid* Pow*r
A Light............................M U M H
FI*. P r o g r m .................... N H M H
Hugh** Supply................. 3SU Mto
Morrl*on’»....................... M U M M
NCR Corp............................114 1MU
P l* u * y .... ..................M7U igs
Scotty’*...... - ...................... II 1IU
South***! Bank................. W * 1SH

Action Reports
★ First
it Courts
it Polleo
BURGLARIES PROBED
Someone entered a garage at 2044 Hibiscus Drive,
Sanford, sometime between May 15 and 8 p.m. Tuesday
and took $498 worth of tools.
Discovered missing were a Wards edger valued at
$159 and a Craftsman toolbox valued at $339. The
items are the property of Bill Klrchhoff, 20.
Tools were also taken In a burglary of a utility shed at
1900 Locust Avenue, Sanford, police said. Two drills
and a router valued at’ $88 were among power tools
taken. They were the property of Art Middleton.
Tools were again the object of thieves when someone
entered the American Railway Services office at 600
Persimmon In Sanford by crawling through a missing
window.
The thieves took a number of. items Including several
tool boxes. They gained access to a second floor office by
removing the plastic covering from a missing door
window.
The items, as yet unlventoried, were taken some time
between 4:30 p.m. Monday and 8 a.m. Tuesday.
An attempted vending machine heist netted burglars
at Sanford Middle School only a.few cold drinks. Police
said the bandits were able lo remove the chain and lock
securing an enclosure for sesveral vending machines at
the school sometime between 10:30 p.m. Monday and 7
a.m. Tuesday.

City halls in all seven Seminole County cities, the
Seminole County courthouse and annexes, as well as
state and federal offices will be closed Monday In
observance of Memorial Day.
Seminole County schools and school board offices will
be be closed.
Banking institutions and post ofTices will be closed for
the holiday.
Due to the Memorial Day holiday, the regularly
scheduled Monday trash pick-up In Sanford and for the
westside of Altamonte Springs has been cancelled.
Pick-up for those who usually have Monday trash
collection will resume on the following Thursday, June

SAN FO RD
presents:
ISO A IR PO R T B lV D .

50

But Boeth is displeased with the reprimand received
by Burnscd. He said a more severe punishment should
have been given.
"I’m not advocating that anyone be fired," he said.
"But a teacher (Seminole High School dean of students
Jacqullnc Pearson) who was accused of stealing $10
from a grocery store was suspended for six months
while a man who was found guilty or discrimination gets
only a reprimand In his personnel flic."
Several people testified In the trial about racial
remarks made by Bumsed about Duncan. One applicant
for a Job was asked whether he would mind "working for
a nigger."
A former employee at the department said she heard
Bumsed tell Williamson that he could nol wall to "gel
rid of the nigger."
.
Several months after Williamson's appointment.
Duncan stepped down as chief mechanic. He cited
health reasons but the Judge said he was forced to
resign.

Oil Companies Bid
$3.5 Billion For
Offshore Oil Rights
NEW ORLEANS (UPI] - The largest lease offering
of oil and gas tracts In the Gulf of Mexico will reap
nearly $3.5 billion for the government, add needed
Jobs and stimulate the economy. Interior Secretary
James Watt says.
The lease offering Wednesday kicked off a massive
program In which all federal waters ofT (he Gulf of
Mexico will be offered during the next five years for
oil and gas leases.
"Today was a phenomenal success story." Watt
sa|d.
"What we have purchased here today is the right
to spend money and get Jobs." the secretary said.
"The effects of this offering today will be fell down
the line for 15 years."
Mobile Oil. Sohlo and Kcrr-McGee made the
largest single offering on u single tract wltii a
combined high bid ormore than $92 million.
Watt said the 78 companies Involved in the lease
sale participated In the most successful outer
contlnental shelf sale recorded.
‘Two-thirds of ail the oil and gas yet to be found i
the Untied States is on the outer-continental shelf.
Watt said.

M a n y Look Forw ard
To D a y O ff M o n d a y

A GAME BOWLING

MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND
9 AM -6 PM
FRI. MAY 27 THRU MON. MAY 30

A n n itM . B o m s
E4n*M . Evsn*
Albert* J Freeman
D*ll* E. 6*lto»*r
G*r«MR.M *Jtoy
Joann* McCloud

cThundsy, May V&gt;. IBBJ-Voi, 7J, No. m
m bn m m o 0 M t m4 M t r . «tsespi SsSsrOgy By TBs
Nsrstf. 1st, M M . F n w * Aug, Im M M V N .
•SCMO OKI ****** P M It laM srC MsrMs w n

Port Director To Fight Planned Rate Hike

AN EXCELLENT BARGAIN AND A GOOD TIME TO
PRACTICE FOR YOUR SUMMER LEAGUES. COME
IN AND BOWL OVER THE WEEKEND AND SION
UP FOR A SUMMER LEAGUE.

Call 322-7842

SPBING
into

1 0 %

S A V IN G S

A t Florida Public Utilities!
All Hardwick Gas Appliances
O n Sale
Now through May 31st, you can save 10%
on every gas appliance in stock, including
Hardwicks energy efficient gas grills
and ranges. Choose from many models of
gas dryers and water heaters as well...
you’ll save energy all year long!
And, stop by and see Hardwick's new
winning combination: microwave and gas
In one appliance! The versatile "tic"
Microwave gives you a microwave oven with
a long list of accuracy features, plus
an energy saving, continuous cleaning
gas range and oven.
At Florida Public Utilities, you can start
the season right with the best nam es in gas
appliances at m ost attractive prices!

Sale from now through May 31st

_A
H L O R ID A
tH F ------- I T mrnirr
tn u a

your gas co,
SANFORD 8 3 0 W 6th S t/3 2 2 -5 7 3 3
DELAND 206 L N e w ta k Aye /734-1951

i

�FliORCA

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — House Republicans say the
House can fund Its schools improvement program
without a corporate profits tax Increase by speeding up
the collection of state sales taxes.
Republican Leader Ron Richmond of New Port Richey
and Bob Johnson of Sarasota, the GOP whip, outlined a
plan Wednesday to raise 9189 million by reducing the
amount of time businesses have to submit their sales tax
collections to the state.
While the proposal shows that the $175 million
corporate profits tax Increase proposed by Speaker Lee
Moffltl is unnecessary. Republicans won't necessarily
oppose It as a bloc when the House's budget plan hits
the floor today, Richmond said.
However, Richmond said, he doubts that Moffltl will
be able to get the three-fifth's majority vote required for
a change in the corporate profits tax "with or without
the Republicans."
Republicans support the bulk of the educational
improvements included in the budget put together by
the House Appropriations Committee earlier this week,
although they are against the $60 million plan of merit
raises for school teachers. Richmond and Johnson said.
They don't believe tax Increases are necessary
because the state can pick up money through better
management of its current tax revenues. They proposed
requiring big businesses to submit at least half of their

Graham Urges Sanding
Criminals Back To Cuba
TAI.LAHASSEE (UPI) — Gov. Bob Graham
says a new State Department plan for getting
Cuba to take back criminals who came to
Florida during the Martel boatllfl in 1980 is a
step In the right direction, but is still too
passive.
The State Department annpunced Wednesday
that it would begin to restrict the issuance of
visas for U.S. travel to Cuban residents until
Cuba agrees to take back criminal refugees.
Graham has maintained that refugees who
committed crimes should be sent back to Cuba
through the gates at the U.S. Navy base at
Guantanamo.
He said 319 Martel refugees are currently in
state prisons on felony charges and that 1,004
refugees are under state probation or other
supervision in Broward and Dade counties.

7 Told You So...'
ORLANDO (UPI) — The only reason he robbed
six financial firms. Ray Cunningham says, Is
because he wanted to prove to them they should
have bought his robbery prevention equipment.
Cunningham, 30. is in Jail today charged with
the Oct. 22, 1982 robbery of the Bank of Central
Florida at nearby Winter Park. A photo taken
during the robbery was published in the
Orlando Sentinel and a reader recognized him
and telephoned police.
Although the only charge against him at the
moment is the Winter Park bank robbery,
Cunningham has confessed to holding up five
other banks and savings and loan firms in
central Florida. Orlando police say.
Cunningham called the newspaper from Jail
Tuesday, saying that representatives of each of
the six financial houses he had robbed had
refused his offer to build robbery-proof equip­
ment for them. He said he offered to Install
bulletproof glass with wrought Iron for teller
windows.
"They wouldn't listen," Cunningham told the
newspaper. “Robbing the banks was the only
way I cnuld prove my point that it is easy to rob
a bank."

JOHN H. HENDERSON
Mr. John Henry Hen­
derson, 60. of 2026 Alex­
ander Ave., Sanford, died
Saturday at the Veterans
Administration Medical
Center. Gainesville. Bom
May 25. 1922, in St.
Augustine, he had been a
resident of Sanford since
1956. He was a retired
construction worker, a
veteran of the United
States Air Force, and a
member of the AMVETS
Post No. 17. He was a
Catholic.
Survivors include his
wife, Willie Carr; three
sons. Daryl Britton of
Sanford. L.T. Henderson
of Pompano Beach and
William Sylvester Carr Jr.
of Rochester. N.Y.; three
d a u g h te r s . C a rrie
Hartsflcld and Glenda
Cleveland, both of San­
ford. and Louise Cherry of
Detroit; 18 grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.
W ilso n -E ich clb crg cr
Mortuary is in charge of
funeral arrangements.
LETHA T. GOODSON
M rs. L c th a T a tu m
Goodson, 81. of 707 S.
G le n c o e R o a d . New

S m y rn a B each , d ied
Tuesday at the Ocean
View Nursing Home. New
Smyrna. Born Dec. 19.
1901 In Pelham. Ga.. she
lived In New Smyrna for
the past 35 years and was
formerly of Sanford. She
was a member of the
Central Baptist Church of
Sanfdrd.
Survivors include her
husband. Joseph. New
Smyrna; two daughters.
Mrs. Eunice Barlneau of
Tampa. Mrs. Bobby Jo
Braddy of Geneva; a son.
Donald Goodson, of New
S m y rn a; n in e g ra n d ­
c h ild r e n : six g r e a t ­
grandchildren; two sisters,
Mrs. Bernice Beichner and
Mrs. Dorcuts Rathsam.
both of Charleston, S.C.
Brisson Funeral Home Is
In charge of arrangements.
NEWTON &amp; EVANS
Mr. Newton C. Evans.
84. of 268 E. Constance
Road. DeBary, died Sun­
day at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Bom April
25, 1899, in Jackson.
Miss., he moved to DeBary
from Palatka nine years
ago. He was a retired
railroad clerk for the

WHY RENT?
WHEN YOU CAN OWN IN DELTONA FOR ■

293

Nchwartx

Joins C FR H
Thom as H. Schwartz
has replaced the late
R e id B ro d ie J r . as
director of personnel at
C e n tra l F lo rid a R e­
gional H o s p it a l.

A M O N TH

■

INCUMM LOT I

P .I.

3 B edroom , lVa B aths, C entral H eat &amp; Air Con­
ditioning, G.E. Range, Wall-To-Wall C arpeting.
O ne-Car G arage, Many O th er F eatu res.
* * 3 9 ,9 0 0 Including Lot.
M ortgage A m ount * 3 5 ,8 5 0
'293 PnntipN t Ini tin t Pm Month

, FHA 245 Plan III If Qualified
VISIT MODEL HOIK "O f CALL" FOR FULL OCTAILS

CELEBRATION

FLEAM
HWY. 17-92

Seaboard Airline Railroad
and a member of the First
Baptist Church of DeBary.
Survivors include his
wife, Ethel; three daugh­
ters. Mrs. Sadie Struth,
Mrs. Marjorie E. Fisher,
both of Jacksonville, and
Miss Ann L. Evans of
Atlanta: two sons. Joe N.
Evans of New Port Richey
and Grant H. Evans. West
Palm Beach; a stepson.
G ra d y A. B e lg e r of
Tallahassee; a brother,
Robert Evans of Beaufort.
S.C.; a sister. Mrs. Lor­
raine Tamby of Cranbury,
N.J.: 17 grandchildren and
10 great-grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home
Is In charge of arrange­
ments.

Henry Handerton, to. e l 10MAle*andtr Ave.. Son lord, who dtod May
11, w ill b« a l noon Saturday at
Ekhelfaergtr't Chapel. 1110 Pina
Ave.. Sanford, with tho Rev. H.F.
Rlchardton o fficiatin g. C a llin g
hourt w ill be from noon until t p.m.
Friday at the chapel. Buriat lo
follow Saturday In Retltewn Cam ,
f a r y . W llt o n - E lc h a lb e r g e r
Mortuary In charga

c

a t
H O M IS ,
M 305I-574-5S98 H 904I-73M 153

Sunday 8 - 5 PM
33 Big acres of bargains, fresh
produce A free family fun! All
under 1 roof. Clean, cool A
fully paved. Hundreds of
dealers. Rain or shine.
iR p

ran-

SEND FOR FREE BO O KLET PUBLISHED
B Y THE CREMATION ASSOCIATION
OF NORTH AMERICA
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS MOST OFTEN ASKED
Without obEgrton, I would H e to receive the booklet:

'CREMATION EXPLAINED1

Funeral N o tio n
. 0 0 0 DION, MRS. LC T H A T A TU M
— F u n .n l itrv Ic H lor Mr*. L.tfi*
Tatum Coodton, It, o l 707 S.
G la n c o a Rood, Now S m y rn s
Batch, who d(«d Tuatday. w ill bo
•I 1 p.m . F rid a y o l B ritto n
F u n .n l Homo with Dr. Froddlo
S m ith o f f ic ia t in g . B u r ia l In
E va rg ra an C a m a la ry. B ritto n
Funtral Homo In charga el errangamanlt.
H E N D E R S O N , M l. JO H N
HENRY
— Funeral tervlce* tor M r. John

FRIDAY — Saturday It'

★ CREMATION EXPLAINED★

a

Hama

i
i

M a r a t ..

I

City

[h-i /i * E a

.Tip

I

SEND TO i Crem ation Explained
Box 119, c-e Sanford Herald
P.O. Box 14S7, Sanford, Ft. 32771

Memorial
Weekend
Savings!

A Ask

AboutOur r
RED-DOT Qave
SPECIAL
on a group of
chains.

14 karat gold

929 EMBASSY DR.. DELTONA

F o r m e r l y
admlnistrator of the New
Horizon Nursing Center
In O cala, Schwartz's
duties will center
around personnel and
risk management.

In celebration of the Memorial Day
holiday, we’re giving you special
savings and

on a group
of diamond
solitaires.
You’ll find a special group of dia­
mond solitaires at 20% off the
original retail prices. Vbull also save
33% on our group of 14 karat gold
chains. Then, there* our collection
of fine-name watches at 25% to 50%
off the original retail price. You’ll
find Elgin*, Pulsar* and Seiko*,
just to name a few. So, if you're
looking for a great graduation or
Father* Day gift, now* the tim e to
find it at Zaies. And remember, we
stand behind everything w ith our
90-day refund policy.

CFRH currently
employs over 600 people
residing In not only
Seminole but Volusia,
Orange and Lake coun­
ties. Schwartz holds a
BS In biochemistry and
business administration
from Milton College In
Milton, Wisconsin. He
has held positions In
that state in the De­
partment of Health and
Social Services Bureau
of P re v e n ta b le D is ­
eases and the Bureau of
State and Local Rela­
tions.

v_JSave
25% to 50%
on a special group of
fine-name watches.
liT l

Sale ends Monday, May 30!

For most people, saving energy at
home is an important topic. So why
not make it a group topic? Schedule
one of Florida rowerk energy
advisors for your next church,
community, employee or
professional meeting.

f

1t t ANNIVERSARY

Between ORLANDO And SANTORD

JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - Porpoises warded off
sharks and swam alongside a 36-year-old man
who survived 12 hours in the ocean after his
boat was swamped during a nighttime fishing
expedition.
"The sharks — I saw two of them about 30 or
40 yards off — never got close," Jeff Barry, an
air traffic controller said from his room at
Memorial Medical Center, where he was being
treated for exposure.
"The porpoises were all around me. They
were feeding. They stayed right beside me."
Barry said. "I don’t know whether their
presence had anything to do with keeping the
sharks away from me."

u u

J

sales tax collections by the middle of the month. Instead for creation of a commission to make recommendations
i
of being able to keep the collections until the middle of to be considered next year.
Moffltt and Gov. Bob Graham said the Legislature*
the following month.
must raise taxes for additional schools funding now and?
This change would produce an extra $189 million for they derided the call for another schools study.
the 1983-84 budget, money that normally wouldn't
Moffltt says he is moving forward with the tax Increase!
come in until the 1984-85 fiscal year.
plan regardless of what Associated Industries director!
The Legislature could spend the $189 million during Jon Shebel and the other business leaders think. He said *
1983-84 and not miss It the following fiscal year because he Is confident that many business leaders support hlmj
the economy Is expected to have rebounded by then, and that he sees any further study as pointless.
causing state tax revenues to grow significantly.
Richmond and Johnson also proposed the creation of
regional banking stations to receive state tax revenues.
The regional stations would mean that tax money could
be Invested in Interest-earning accounts up to 10 days
sooner than under current procedures, providing
additional revenues of up (o $50 million a year.
NOW THRU JUNE 12th
The regional banking stations wouldn't begin opera­
Every FRIDAY play Spln-To-Wln. Up to $4500.
tions until the 1984-65 fiscal year, although the
U v t B n to r ta ln n w n t F e a tu r in g :
Legislature should establish them now, the two men
• NIGHTWING
• STRINGS A STICKS
said.
• LE’ T H E BAND
Moffltt's corporate profits tax fnorease Is in trouble
Helicopter Rides (WPRthpr permitting)
because of the opposition of three big business groups,
Drawing every 15 minutee for FR EE gifts.Associated Industries of Florida, the Florida Council of
Grand Prize drawing June 12th at 4:00 PM for
100 and the Florida Chamber of Commerce.
Color T V - Microwave Oven and other gifta.
The organizations came out against the tax hike
Tuesday and endorsed Instead the Senate's "RAISE"
plan, which doesn't require new taxes. They also called

AREA DEATHS

Porpoises Save Swim m er

i u o

Thursday, May 34, 1W-IA

Better Collection, Not New Taxes The Key)

IN BRIEF

■

IvwkH MtfsM, lanfwd, FI,

For School Improvomont Plan, Ropubllcant Say

Low-cost ways to wve energy
will be discussed ,along with the
investment benefit* of solar water
heating, heat pumps and heat
recovery units.
For more details,call your
local Florida tower office.

ZALES
The Diamond Store
is all you need to know?

�Evening Herald

Will Downtown Sanford become a "red
light district" as the result of the findings
or Entomologist Arshad All’s 1blind mos­
quito (midge) research? That is the ques­
tion. All In seeking ways to control the
pesky bugs that have plagued downtown
business In recent years has discovered
that lights of different colors have varying
degrees of attraction for the insects. All lias
concluded in his results that “the use of
red color lights along the iakefront will
attract a lesser number of midges to
downtown business and residential areas
of Sanford. Brighter (yellow, white or
fluorescent) lights should be Installed In
relatively unlhabited areas surrounding
the lake. Lights could also be installed on
the channel markers In the lake to keep
the adults on the lake and away from
surrounding homes and businesses."

(UIPS 4I'H0)
900N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, FLA. 3S771
Area Code 90M2M611 or 831-I8W

Thursday, May 2«, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 91.00; Month, M S ; 6 Months, 994.00;
Year, 945.00. By Mail: Week, 91.35; Month, 95.35; 8 Months,
930.00; Year. S7.00.

What We've Got:
Patience, Patience
U.S. arm s negotiator Paul H. Nltze and his
Soviet counterpart. Yuli A. Kvitsinsky, opened a
new round May 17 in their Geneva talks on
reducing theater nuclear weapons in Europe. Mr.
Nitze seemed cautiously optimistic while Mr.
Kvitsinsky sounded decidedly pessimistic, which
says a lot about how these negotiations are going.
The Reagan administration rem ains hopeful that
some acceptable agreement can be reached. But
Mr. Nltze and his superiors back in W ashington
recognize that nothing much will happen until the
Soviets decide to deal. The hope is that the
scheduled deployment later this year of U.S. cruise
and Pershing II missiles In Europe will persude the
Russians that nothing more is to be gained by
stonewalling in Geneva.
To date. Mr. Kviislnsky's Instructions from
Moscow have been to say nyet to m ost If not all
that the Americans have proposed. The Russians
rejected President Reagan's zero-option proposal
almost as soon as it was offered in November
1981.
The zero option would have banned all landbased. intermediate-range nuclear missiles for
both NATO and the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact. The
Kremlin refused, no doubt because its arsenal of
more than 600 SS-20s and 248 older SS-4s and
SS-5s arc unm atchd by anything NATO has.
That Is why there can be no hope for an
agreement limiting these weapons unless NATO
sticks to its plan to proceed with cruise and
Pershing II deployment.
With negotiations stuck on dead center earlier
this year, the Reagan administration responded to
pressure from NATO allies in Europe by offering a
so-called Interim solution. T hat would have
allowed some equal but m odest num ber of
intermediate-range missiles on both sides.
The official Soviet news agency Tass called the
Interim offer, “another farce intended to take in
the naive." That sort of rhetoric applied to a
patently equitable proposal could only mean that
the Russians were not yet ready to bargain
seriously.
The only subsequent glimmer of light from the
East was a suggestion from Soviet leader Yuri
Andropov that Moscow might consider counting
nuclear warheads rather than just missile laun­
chers when the Geneva talks resumed. That was
considered an encouraging sign because the Soviet
lead in missile warheads Is even greater than their
numerical advantage in launchers.
But Andropov's hint of concession has not yet
been followed by anything specific enough to
constitute an actual negotiating offer. Until It is.
there is no reason to regard this tease as anything
other than political posturing.
So, the negotiatons resum e with only the
Russians knowing whether any progress Is likely.
If the Soviets follow their usual pattern in arm s
control negotiations, they will remain obstruc­
tio n ist u n til they are convinced th a t th eir
adv ersaries will m ake no fu rth er unilateral
concessions. Then, and only then, will there be
some chance for an equitable, verifiable agree­
ment.
The Reagan adm inistration has already moved
in Moscow's direction by effectively giving up on
the zero option. The proffered Interim solution
probably encouraged the Soviets to hope that they
could get an even better deal by continuing to
threaten no agreement at all.
Mr. Nitze m ust now be told to stand fast behind
the current American proposal until the Soviets
recognize that the time for real negotiations has
arrived. Unless we miss our guess, that realization
will not dawn on the Kremlin until the first cruise
and Pershing II missiles begin arriving in Europe.

P b m

Writ*

Letters to the editor are welcome fer
publicities. All letters m ost be signed u d
Include • mailing address and. if possible, a
telephone number. The Evening Herald re­
serves the right to edit letters to avoid libel
and to accommodate space.

BERRY'S WORLD

By Jane Casselberry

The Optimist Club of South Seminole
awarded its annual Hall of Fame for Youth
Award to Christine Unsworth, a senior at
Oviedo High School. Miss Unsworth plans
to study International Law at Stetson
University after graduation.
The award, which carries with It a 8100

cash prize, was announced at the May 17
OHS awards program. It was presented by
Owen Bailey of the Optimist Club. The
winner was selected by a panel of
educators and officials of Oviedo High
School. Miss Unsworth will address an
upcoming meeting of the Optimist Club,
which meets at 7:30 a.m. Fridays at the
Holiday Inn on Wymore Road. Altamonte
Springs.
Congratulations to the Seminole County
League of Women Voters, which received
the award at the’State League Convention
for the unit with highest percentage of
membership growth last year and to Helen
C. Smith, who was re-elected president of
the Seminole County League at the recent
annual meeting.
Shirley Bandy, Arlene Tctcnbaum and
Susie Warren represented the local League
at the League of Women Voters of Florida
Legislative Seminar in Tallahassee May
9-11. An address by Gov. Bob Graham and
an opportunity to talk with the Seminole
Legislative delegation were highlights of
their visit to Tallahassee. They heard the
legislators speak on the the State League’s

five priorities: water, day care and migrant
labor sunsetting. alternatives to incarcera­
tion. transportation and education.
The Seminole unit has approved a new
study of the feasibility of a county-wide
911 Emergency System.
The League Is a nonpartisan organiza­
tion open to everyone 18 and older
believing In representative government. Its
purpose is to promote political responsibili­
ty through Informed and active participa­
tion of citizens In government.
Mrs. Merle Coalter. Lyman High School
accounting occupations instructor, has
been chosen the school’s outstanding
business Instructor of the year and was
presented a plaque at this week’s meeting
of the Lyman Business Department.
The Lyman High School BusinessEducation Advisory committee Is pres­
enting a 8100 business student scholar­
ship to the business education student
meeting the committee’s criteria during
the May 31 school award ceremony at 7:30
p.m. In the auditorium. Advisory Com­
mittee member Eddie Rose will present the
award to Lyman Senior Jeneile Norris.

ROBERT W A G M A N

ROBERT WALTERS

Limiting
Television
Exposure

Pension
Reform
Data Hit
WASHINGTON |NEA) - For months
the Reagan administration has been
Jousting with current and former gov­
ern m en t w orkers over proposed
changes in the Civil Service Retirement
System (CSRS) that the administration
says will save billions of dollars.
Fuel has been added to this debate by
the President’s Private Sector Survey of
Cost Control, in which, by presidential
order. 163 high-level businessmen have
probed every facet of government to
locale possible savings. The group —
known as the Grace Commission, after
Its chairman. J. Peter Grace — has Just
com pleted Its survey of federal
personnel functions, and it recommends
changes In the CSRS that go much
further than those suggested by the
administration. The Grarc Commission
says these changes would save taxpay­
ers 816 billion In the first three fiscal
years after adoption, and even more in
the future.
One person who takes a very dim view
of this report is L.J. Andolsck, president
of the 500.000-m em ber National
A sso ciatio n of R etired F ederal
Employees.
"The report Is Inaccurate and mis­
leading." says Andolsck. "It has as Its
basic premise the fact that federal
workers retire much earlier than their
counterparts in the private sector, and
with much higher benefit levels. Neither
fact Is true.
In the past 10 years, he says, “the
average retirement age for federal
workers has been 61.1 years, while the
average In the private sector has been
61.6 years of age.
"As far as benefit levels are con­
cerned. the CSRS provides, for a
65-ycar-old retiree who retired at age 60
with 30 years of service, about 87
percent of his final wages." he says.
"When you factor In Social Security —
which federal retirees don’t get — an
IBM retiree In the same circumstances
gets 85 percent. AT&amp;T 89 percent and a
GM rellree about 102 percent."
Andolsck claims that the Grace
Commission’s report perpetuates an
error that, he says. Is often made in
comparing the CSRS with private-sector
pension plans: "It uses as comparison a
large number of plans, including some
very small businesses. The only valid
comparison Is with very large corpora­
tions whose spectrum of jobs and grades
approaches that of the federal govern­
ment." Using that comparison, he says,
"the benefits going to federal retirees
are right In line.”
"All we are asking In this ongoing
debate over the CSRS." says Andolsck.
"Is that everyone agree on a single set of
numbers as to exactly what are the
assets and liabilities of the system —
then we can sit down and rationally
discuss problems. But every report has
wildly differing numbers."

JEFFREY HART

Reagan's Diplomacy
When President Hosnl Mubarak of
W hat th is m ean s Is th a t the
Egypt endorsed the Lebanon-Israel ac­ diplomacy of the Reagan administration
cords the Reagan administration moved along with the military prowess of the
to the threshold of o major diplomatic Israelis has effectively isolated the
and strategic breakthrough in the
Syrians, who remain the only remaining
Mideast. Even the progress that has tool for Soviet troublemaking In the
been achieved to date represents a solid area.
accomplishment for an administration
if the Syrians can be bought or
alleged to he vulnerable In its handling pressured Into withdrawing their troops
of foreign affairs.
from Lebanon, the Reagan administra­
What has been happening is the tion will be able to claim a major
disintegration of the rcjcctlonist Arab diplomatic achievement. The price iterc
front, in tacit alliance with Moscow and may be high, since the Soviets will be
opposed to any settlement that accepts pressuring Damascus to hold firm
against the agreement, and because
the existence of Israel.
Syria
has always viewed Lebanon as
Sadat of Egypt was the first to break
ranks (Journey to Jerusalem), regain the part of Its regional Bphcre of Influence.
Sinai for Egypt, and agree to the Camp But even if the price is high. It may be
within the capacity of Saudi Arabia and
David settlement. Sadat perceived that
Washington to make Syria an ofTer it
It was In the interest of Egypt to reach cannot
refuse. After all. what is the
an agreement with the Israelis, and alternative?
Isolation in the Arab world
though he was correct It cost him his
Tor
Syria.
Increasing
dependence upon
life. He was gunned down by Moslem
Moscow,
along
with,
at best, alliance
fanatics, but wltfi Egypt out of the with Quaddafl and the Ayatollah.
anti-Israeli equation all hope of a
It would be a large political plus for
military solution evaporated. The
Reagan
if his negotiators can bring off
Israelis could probably defeat any com­
this
Mideast
realignment, but It would
bination of Arab armies, but with Egypt
also
be
an
occasion
for general celebra­
on the sidelines a war against Israel lost
tion. Until the Syrians and the P.L.O.
even superficial plausibility.
invaded Lebanon eight years ago and
With its invasion of Lebanon. Israel
turned It Into a battlefield, it was one of
demonstrated that the Palestine Libera­ the most beautiful and civilized places
tion Organization amounts to very little
in the world. Beirut was known, with
on the battlefield, and demonstrated justice, as the Paris of the Mideast, and
further that Syria is no match for the ‘ its way of life was extraordinarily
Israeli military. The Syrian air force was attractive. Its beaches, hotels, shops,
su b stan tially destroyed, and the
restaurants and clubs were the equal of
Syrians' Soviet missiles availed them
any in the world, and In the nearby
little.
mountains — this is not generally
Now Lebanon has joined Egypt in
known — there was excellent skiing. An
reaching an agreement with Israel,
ancient country. Its culture was notable
further disintegrating the Arab front.
for Its grace, civility and comprehensive
Far from condemning the agreement.
tolerance. The Syrians and the P.L.O.
Saudi Arabia has adopted an attitude of changed ail that, but there seems to be
neutrality toward It. Score a plus here an Increasingly good chance that
for Caspar Weinberger and the sale of Reagan administration diplomacy will
the AWACs electronic spy plane to the
return Lebanon to the Lebanese, and
Saudis.
gel the P.L.O.. the Israelis, the Syrians
King Hussein of Jordan is an agile and the Soviets to go home.
survivor, not at all willing to be the
If Reagan can Indeed bring off such a
point man in an arrangement with the development, he can then turn to
Israelis, but he is basically pro-Western Mondale, Glenn and company and say,
and he Is certain to climb aboard any In the words of Ernest Hemingway,
settlement that appears viable.
"How do you like that, gentlemen?"

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The terrifying
Image of a mushroom-shaped cloud,
universally identifiable as the Im­
mediate aftereffect of a nuclear weapons
detonation, fills the television screen as
the announcer Intones an ominous
warning.
If the voters choose the opposition
candidate on Election Day. proclaims
that off-camera voice, they could be
taking the risk of becoming victims of
nuclear war.
Other television ads have a musical
theme — usually a catchy tune with
vapid lyrics ("I'm feeling good about
America"! more suitable for the market­
ing of soft drinks.
That’s the state of the art In political
television advertising today — often
vicious but seldom enlightening, riddled
with Innuendo but devoid of substance,
long on imagery but short on serious
discussion of the Issues.
In addition to being deceptive, mis­
leading and uninformative, those com­
mercials arc very expensive. If an
election contest requires the use of
television advertising, the cost of pro­
ducing the ads and buying television
time typically consumes at least half of
each candidate’s campaign budget.
During the past two decades — the
period In which television has become
the country’s dominant and most
pervasive medium of advertising and
mass communication — the Average
cost of a congressional race has soared
from 850.000 to 8250.000.
The cost of campaigns for Senate
scats and governorships now ranges
from 8500.000 to 85 million or more per
candidate, depending upon (he popula­
tion of the state.
Although those Increases can be
attributed to the rising prices of all
goods and services used in political
campaigns, the expanded use of Increas­
ingly expensive television advertising Is
by far the single largest factor.
# Now. however, a non-partisan.
Washington-based organization has
advanced a proposal which holds the
promise of not only moderating those
costs but also promoting rational debate
In future political advertising.
The Committee for the Study of the
American Electorate is advocating
passage of a federal law limiting the
expenditure of money for television
production costs exclusively to photo­
graphs of candidates talking directly to
the camera.
Candidates with speech impediments
could designate a single substitute
representative to appear in their televi­
sion ads. Political parties and interest
groups wishing to sponsor commercials
would similarly be restricted to pres­
entations made by their chairman,
president or offical spokesperson.
Adoption of the concept almost cer­
tainly would drastically reduce the
demagoguery and negativism currently
fashionable in political advertising-

JA C K A N D E R SO N

Debate Rages Over Sales To China
WASHINGTON - A secret debate is
raging at the highest levels of the
Reagan administration. It points up the
classic contradictions In recent Re­
publican policies: the desire to promote
American business interests vs. the
demands of a Rock-of-GIbraltar defense
posture.
The debate concerns the sale of
high-technology equipment to mainland
China. Commerce Secretary Malcolm
Baldrige and the president's science
adviser. George Keyworth. favor an
expansion of this trade. Defense Secre­
tary Caspar Weinberger and his Under
Secretary for policy- Dr. Fred lkle. don’t
want to sell the Chinese any technology
of potential military value.
The Chinese, of course, are seeking as
much high-tech stuff 8s they can buy.
and complain that the administration
isn’t cooperating. Sources tell me the
Chinese have already been allowed to
buy scientific technology that has
enhanced their military capability.
Under secret presidential directives,
the Chinese communist/i cannot buy
nuclear weapons and delivery systems.

electronic and anti submarine warfare
technology or goods that will help them
In Intelligence gathering.
Baldrige and Keyworth, both of whom
have just returned from China, seem
determined to let the Peking regime buy
as much as it wants In those vital areas.
ts gov
cm the present China trade policy.
They
AThey
are considered highly sensitive because
of the peculiar nature of U.S.-Chinese
relations, but my associate Dale Van
Atta has obtained the most important
ones.
The "Presidential Directive on Export
Control Policy to China." issued on
June 4. 1981, focused on so-called
dual-use exports — Items that are
o stensibly intended for peaceful
purposes but which can also be used by
the military. The directive was intended
to allow the sale of technology to China
“at significantly higher technical levels
than previously, albeit somewhat below
those approved for other friendly nonallled nations."
The directive laid out the formula to
govern such sales: two times the level uf

exports to the Soviet Union before its
invasion of Afghanistan, when high-tech
exports were banned.
But the "two-times" formula was
regarded by the business community as
not only Inexact but too restrictive for
the kinds of high-tech goods their
Chinese customer Was clamoring for.
They found a sympathetic listener in
Baldrige.
The result was a secret presidential
memorandum of May 6, 1962, signed
for the president by his national security
adviser, William Clark, titled. "Export
Policy for the People's Republic of
China."
"The President expects prompt and
full Implementation of his more liberal
export-control policy, since we do not
want to send mixed signals to the
Chinese regarding our Intent," Clark
wrote. And he conceded that the
two-times rule had been difficult to
ajmly.
So Clark laid down four rules to clarify
the new policy:
— High-tech exports should be "at
technical levels significantly above

those for the Soviet Union and Easten
Europe... (which would) Imply th
presumption of acceptable national sc
curtly risk."
— The two-times formula should b
interpreted to mean approval for an
sale "unless circumstances apply wh|ci
entail major risks to national security
i.e. exports which would make a direr
and demonstrable contribution t
Chihese capabilities” in the forbidde
military areas.
— If the Pentagon or CIA recommen
denial of an export license, "lower ris
substitutes will be suggested, wher
feasible."
— The licensing process must b
speeded up.
Baldrige wasn't satisfied. He wante
to be able to OK sale of some thing
within the forbidden areas — t u * to si
a formula higher than the two-time
rule. He suggested sales of anything I
any amount "except where the expo*
poses a major risk to OS. nation!
security."
The Pentagon is obviously nervou
about the "major risk" yardstick, an
Baldrige hasn't won out —yet.

I

�SPORTS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Different Motives
Stimulate Lyman,
Tribe In Jamboree

Wi\ii........................00

S p rin g Football

rejoicing and the mourning — but the
Semlnoles and the Greyhounds still
don’t have much in common. Both will
approach tonight's Apopka Jamboree
with different motives. The two county
rivals will battle for one half beginning at
7 p.m. The host Blue Darters and
Osceola will play the second half.
Lyman, despite losing 29 of 34 players
from last year, wants to sustain the
winning attitude which bloomed last fall.
An undefeated Junior varsity team will
help, but head coach Bill Scott knows he
needs more than hotshot Juniors moving
up In rank.
"There's a big difference between
varsity and Junior varsity." said Scott
Wednesday. "They're young, but they'll
get after you. Barring Injuries and If we
get some positive experiences (wins) at
the beginning of the season, we could be
pretty tough."
The Greyhounds, who have four
possible starters on the academic caus­
ality list, will use the Jamboree to test
their highly touted juniors. Defensive

linemen Tyrone Simpson and Bill
Nellson. defensive end Kevin Kelkes and
halfback Anthony Merweather all had
trouble with the books, but Scott said all
are passing now and should be ready for
the fall.
Seminole, meanwhile, will take im­
mediate steps to erase last year's dis­
grace. Coach Jerry Posey said his lineup
Is pretty set. "We're going to start with
them and stay with them," he said.
"We’re going to treat It just like a game.
We've got a handful of people we want to
look at, but it probably won't be until
later In the half."
Without sounding like Knute Rockne,
Posey would like to stress this isn't some
ordinary Jamboree. "We don't want to
preach do or die, but It Is Important for
us to make a good impression.
"If we beat Lyman for a half. It's a
positive check. It's a confidence builder.
We stlU have a handful of kids who went
through last season..."
And. they don't want to go through
another one like that one.
Lyman, on the other hand, would like
a duplicate of 1982. But it will be tough
to repeat. The Greyhounds graduated a
multitude of outstanding players. The
star-studded cast of Mike Hill, Jerry

Axley, Willis Perry. Todd Marriott. Vince
Presley, Gene Allen, and on and on and
on Is gone.
Four defensive starters return. Paul
Ellis is a topnotch linebacker. Greg Pilot
is one of the top safeties in the area while
Mike Battle, is a tough defensive back
and Bubba Jones returns at defensive
tackle. Sophomores Pete Crespo (de­
fensive g u ard) and Mike Henley
(linebacker) are both hard hitters who
should help. Crespo got some varsity
work toward the end of last year.
Henley, a 5-11 165-pounder, Is also the
leading candidate at fullback. Avery
Merwealher. Anthony's twin brother,
returnee Phil Germano, Crespo. Battle
and Carl Simmons give the ‘Hounds
depth to run their wishbone attack
which will be under the direction of new
offensive backfleld coach Jim Markham.
He handled the JVs last year. Scott will
take care of the offensive line where
Junior Mark Schofield (6-2. 200) is the
top blocker white Dan Johnson will
coach the defensive with newcomer Jack
Bloomlngdale, head coach at Bishop
Thomann. the
Moore last year. Paul Thomann
defensive mastermind last year, has
been moved to the Junior varsity. Two
others, offensive coordinator Dan
Bridges and defensive coach Doug Dane.

•«•••••*»«.•Avery *crwr*inrr«
Uu........Sieve Abemelhy....

did not return. Larry Baker and Ron
Baker are working with the freshmen.
Like most teams, the bli question
mark Is at quarterback where Tony
Johnson or Greg Pilot will have to
replace Axley. an All-Conference and
All-County player. Johnson ran the
wishbone for the JV and the Job is his if
he can handle It. according to Scott. If he
falters, the versatile Pilot will be called
upon to pick up the slack. "Tony Is
stronger than he was last year and he's
throwing the ball better." said Scott. "I
think he'll handle It and have a good
year."
Tonight's matchup should be a battle
of strong offensive backflelds with de­
fenses trying to find themselves. Clifton
Campbell, who missed most of spring
practice because of track, will make his
first appearance in the Tribe backfleld
because of an injury to Jo Jo McCloud.
McCloud Injured his thigh In practice.

ien...,........... .i

vv .... .-.Lonnie Dowling,
•*•••*••»•••••«••••!•
k . . . .........................
1

The rest of the cast Includes quarterback
Mike Futrell, fullback Tim Lawrence and
running back Dexter Jones.
Defensively, middle linebacker William
Wynn leads the way. He will also play
tight end. Ed Rlnkavage has been
Impressive at defensive end while
Lawrence will see double-duty at safety.

f

a

»•••••••••••

M11
Jtetth Brown... •••&lt;
...William Wynn.,
........Mike Futrell.,
-..Tkn Lawrence...
I..Clifton Campbell.

In The County...N o. 2 A t Lake H ow ell
Lake Howell's Darin Slack It the second-best
quarterback In Seminole County.
Unfortunately for the strong-armed Silver Hawk,
coach Mike Blsceglla lists him In the same category on
the Lake Howell football depth chart. There's nothing
wrong with Slack. It's Just that Incumbent Troy
Sports Editor
Quackenbush better fits the Blsceglla veer offense. And:
high school football teams which throw the ball are
about as rare as state champions in Central Florida (No
offense "Harry the Ram").
otfense so well.
Quackenbush. the second-team, all-conference
Quackenbush Is no. 1. Slack is no. 2. That's the way it
quarterback In the Five Star and for the county last was last fall, is this spring and will probably be next fall.
year. Is the same year (Junior) In school as Slack. But.
Blsceglla. playing the coaching game, won't come out
that is where the simlliarity ends. "Quack" Is a well put and say who's no. 1. “ I still haven't decided who I will
together 5*10 and 185 pounds. He runs Blsceglla's veer start Friday." the third-year Hawk coach said. "I may
offense to perfection and passes well enough to keep not decide until that night. I plan on using them equally
away the gap defenses. A strenous lifting program has this spring."
put more sting behind his throws, too.
Blsceglla did. however, admit that Quackenbush is
Slack la 6-1 Vh and 175 pounds. The classic dropback more geared to the offense. But Slack knows who's no. 1
quarterback. He can throw the ball a mile or he can pick and so does Quackenbush. And being no. 2, makes
you apart with short-range darts. He's unloads In a Darin try harder.
hurry and he knows what the game is all about. But he
Tick off the names of the QBs at the other
doesn't run as well as Quackenbush, and he's not as schools...Seminole's Mike Futrell. Lyman's Tony
good an all-around athlete — so he's the relief man. Yet. Johnson. Lake Mary's Ray Hartsfleld. Oviedo's "Pop"
some coaches said they feel Slack Is probably a better Bowers and Lake Brantley's Dennis Groseclose.
college prospect because of his arm.
Slack is better than all of them. Yet, there he sits —
In the spring Intrasquad game, Slack threw two no. 2 in the county and no. 2 at his school.
touchdown passes to wide receiver Jeff Solomon. The
Ironically, this same dilemma occurred three years
second one. plus a goal-line stand In the last four ago at Lake Howell. Sam Weir was the coach then and
minutes, won the game for Slack's White squad. Despite he had two talented quarterbacks In Bob Capoblanco
the showing, he still sits in the second chair because and Mike Wood. Capoblanco. now challenging for the
Quackenbush orchestrates the Blsceglla ball-controll no. 1 spot at Vanderbilt, was the thrower. He was

ir a s u i

Today's L ittle American games
Seminole Ford vs. Atlantic Bank at Fort
Mellon Park. 5 p.m.
Adcock Roofing vs. Flagship Bank at
Bay Ave. Field, 5 p.m.
Wedeasday's LltUe National scores
Poppa Jay's 12. D.A.V. 3
Rlnkcr 14. Railroaders 13
Wednesday's Junior League scores
Moose 13, KlwaniaS
E l k s 7 . B a l l M o to r L i n e s 6

• ra m Walk Ta Victory Bahind McMurtry
ATLANTA (UPI) - Walk. Walk. Walk. Walk.
Walk. Walk. Walk.
_
Far Pittsburgh manager Chuck Tanner, wat­
ching savon walks In a row by two of his pitchers
was 6 halplass failing Wadnasday night. Pirate
hurters Jim Blbby and Jim Winn tiad a 74-yaar-ald
major taague record - Issuing tha savon sfrateht
walks that gava tha Atlanta Bravas four runs in a
nightmarish third Inning.
.
That was mora thananouoh often* on a night
whan Atlanta rookte Craig McMurtry stilted tha
Pirates on thraa hits for a 4-0 shutout.
___
"Thara Is nothing you can do about It^moanad
Tenner. "They didn't try to walk thorn. Thay wars
thara Is always a first for ayarythlno. Thay triad
and ttjat's all wa can ask of tho^/n^ oojy 900d
thing about It, If thara Is a good thlnols It s only
ona loss. Maybawa got Itout of our system."

Sat Fobs 7A.

w .........Rob Cohen....,
bem diole d e f e n s e

.........Ed Rlnkavage....
•*•»••••

&gt;#•••»•••?••••••••
••••••••«••••••&lt;
&gt;•••*«••••••«••••••••»■&lt;

................Daryl M jw io ii «

.Tony Cox,......
jcOain Malone.
•***•»•••••**••••(•Mike Cushing..,

INJURIES
Lyman: A! Haddad (ankle): no way.
Seminote; Jo Jo McQoud (thigh): doubtful

Still Cookin As Blake 1-Hits D.A.V

STANDINGS
a m ir ic An

instant offense. Wood was the runner who threw well
enough.
They split time as Juniors with Wood getting the early
starting nod, but "Capo" taking over later In the season.
Wood decided Lake Howell wasn't big enough for both of
them, so like a frustrated gunflghter he got out of Dodge.
He went to Tampa to live with his father. He attended
Plant High School and helped It to the no. 1 ranking in
the 4A poll during the course of the year. The move
worked. Later, he received a scholarship to attend UCF.
where even more ironically he returned to play for Weir.
A broken Jaw ended his college career, though.
Capoblanco didn't fare too shabbily either. He was the
best quarterback in the Five Star and he led Lake Howell
to Its first district championship. He teamed with
wldeout Chuck Scott, now a starter, at Vanderbilt, for •
one of the most devastating QB-recelver combinations
this county has seen.
Slack, though, doesn't have a father In Tampa. His
father. Steve, originator of the Tangerine (oppsl) Citrus
Bowl Zonlcs, does live in Winter Park, however. Darin
lives with his mother In Fem Park.
As easy as athletes move from one school to another In
this county, would Slack consider a move to another
county school or even to Winter Park to enhance his
starting chances?
"No way!" was the firm and Immediate reply as the
projected enrollment for Refrigeration &amp; Air Condition­
ing dropped another notch. "I would never go to another
school because of some advantage athletically. I like It at

l * ' t\ ' V »,

Sanford B ase b all

Blake, also considered the top catcher
in the league by most coaches, had a
no-hitter going until the fourth Inning
when D.A.V.'s Cliff Sims slapped a
one-out single. Blake struck out 10 and
walked eight as Poppa Jay’s Improved
to 15-1 for the season.
Offensively, Blake slammed a two-run
Jeff Blake hurled a one-hitter and double in the first inning, singled and
went 4 for 4 at the plate Wednesday as scored In the second, ripped an RBI
Poppa Jay's pulverized Disabled Ameri­ triple in the third and singled in the
can Veterans, 12-3, In Sanford Little fifth. Willie "Sugar Tex" McCloud
National League action at Bay Avenue collected a pair of triples and a two-run
Field. Poppa Jay's has lost Just once homer while Vernon Miller rapped three
(Cardinal Industries) this season.
singles and Mike Gibson and Steve
Johnson added two hits each.
At Fort Mellon Park. Rlnker Materials
scored four runs In the fifth Inning and
held on for a 14-13 win over Railroaders
which has now lost two games In a row
by one-run and stand at 0-16 for the
season. Rlnker stands at 5-9 for the
year*
Key hits In the fifth Inning for Rlnker
Inlcuded a triple by David Wright,
a
inlcuded
Wi
double by Brian Howard and singles by
Tony Curry and William Warren.
Wright picked up the pitching victory
for R ln k er In re lie f of W arren.
Railroaders managed only three hits In
the game but almost pulled out the
victory by taking advantage of 10 walks
and five errors.
Warren led Rlnker with three hits
while Howard and Wright had two hits
each. Edgar Lemon had a double liar
Railroaders.
In Junior League play at Chase Park.
Moose scored 10 runs In the fifth Inning
and Kiwanis didn't have a chance to
come back (literally) as Moose claimed a
12-5 victory. Kiwanis did not get to bat
Cliff Sims' ona-out slngla in tha
In
the bottom of the seventh Inning
fourth inning Was tha only hit off
because third baseman Dwayne Willis
Poppa JayTs righthander Jaff
was ejected and Kiwanis didn't have a
Blaka as Jay's pulvarlzad D.A.V.,
player to put In his place and had to
II ), Wadnasday In Sanford Llttla
forfeit.
National Major Laagua action at
BayAvanua Field.

and picked up seven RBI as Moose
stayed within a game of first place in the
second half with a 3-1 record. Kiwanis
fell to 2-2 In the second half.
Kiwanis took a slim 3-2 lead into the
fifth Inning, but. by the end of the fifth.
Moose had a 12-3 lead. Oscar Merthle
and Gary Derr walked to lead off the
Inning and David Goldstick pounded an
RBI double. Miller then stepped up and
clouted a shot to deep center field that
ticked the center fielder's glove and
went over the fence for a three-run
homer. Two outs later. Calvin Davis and
Tarance Carr looped consecutive singles
and moved up a base on a wild pitch.
Harry Roberts then walked to load the
bases and Merthle. Derr and Goldstick
walked to force in three*runs. With the
bases still loaded. MUler cracked a
three-run triple to complete the 10-run
outburst.
In Wednesday's first game. Elks
edged Ball Motor Line. 7-6. in the battle
to stay out of the cellar. Elks now stands
at 1-2 for the second half while Ball
Motor Line fell to 0-3. Henry Williams
scored the winning run in the bottom of

Popp, Sanders
Trevor Popp and Brian Sanders
rapped out three hits apiece as the
Braves outlsugged the Blue Jays. 15-10.
In Altamonte Rookie League action.
Mark Rohrer. John Young. Allison
Colardo and John Terrel U added two
hits apiece to the 22-hit Braves’ attack.
Sanders and Young also hit homer runs
for the Braves.
The White Sox split a couple of
games, upending the Astros. 17*10. and

the sixth Inning on a Ball Motor Line
error.
Reginald Lawrence and Williams had
two hits apiece fer Elks who had Just
five hits In the game. Ball Motor Line
managed only three hits off a trio1of
Elks' pitchers. Anthony Davis had two
of the hits Including a double.
D.A.V.
010 200— 3
1 6
Poppa Jay 's 641 1 0 x -1 2 16 0
WP - Jeff Blake. LP - Joe Barrett.
R lnker
251 24—14 11 3
Railroaders
035 4 1 - 1 3 3 3
WP - David Wright. LP - Patrick
Mike.
Masse
200 0(10)0 1 - 1 3 11 2
Kiwaaia
002 1
02 x - 5 4 3
WP - Terry Miller. LP - Reginald
Bellamy

OuJays
had a single and two doubles.
In an earlier game for the Orioles,
Scot! hit a two-run homer over the left
field fence as the Blue Jays routed the
Blue Jays, 22-6. Scott also had two
doubles and knocked in five RBI. Fred
Engles added three single* and a
double. Left fielder Allen Satterftekl
made a perfect throw to catcher 8cott
Chance to nail a Blue Jay runner at
home plate.
In Altamonte Major League action.'
Trevor Obon and Spencer Calvin each
dubbed home runs to lead the White
Sox over the Angels, 5-3. Olson also
picked up the pitching victory as he

�Thuradey, May m , m3

Play Bttttr Golf with JACK NICKLAUS

Elkettes Struggle Past Barn
The Bam nearly pulled off (lie
biggest upset of the Sanford
Women's Softball League season,
but Elkettes struggled to a 12*10
victory at the Fort Mellon Park
softball field. Elkettes now stands at
8-4 for the season while The Bam .
fell to M l.
Down. 7-2. The Barn erupted for
eight runs on four hits combined
with four walks In the bottom of the
fourth. Laura Klndal. Cce darkness
and Nancy Boren all walked to load
the bases with no outs. One out
later. Lynne Smith walked to force
In one run and, one out later, Sherry
Koke drilled a single to knock in two
runs. Marlene Burke followed with
an RBI single and Sandy Cooper
singled In two more runs. Dcbc
Campbell followed with a two-run
single and Klndal reached on an
error as two more runs scored and
The Bam took a 10-7 lead.
Elkettes answered with four runs
In the sixth to take a 11-10 lead.
With one out, Tony Hardy reached
on an error and went to second on a
force play, Robin Riggins, who plays
softball for Rollins College and was
named to the Sunshine State AllConference Softball team today,
ihcn reached on a fielder's choice

Sanford Softball
and April Gordon followed with a
single to knock in Hardy. With
runners on first and second. Diane
McKinsey drilled a three-run homer
four what turned out to be the game
winning hit for Elkettes.
Gordon and McKinsey had two
hits each for Elkettes and Sonia
Cherry added a home run. Smith
had a pair of hits for The Bam.
In other Women's League action,
S&amp;H Fabricating kept Its one-game
lead with a 17-1 rout over secondplace Shoemaker Construction.
S&amp;H Fabricating now stands at 9-3
for the season while Shoemaker fell
to 7-5.
Jolc Boyles continues to swing a
hot bat for S&amp;H Fabricating as she
hung out three ropes while Gina
Burker and Cindy Pendarvls also
had three hits. Maxine Campbell
had a pair of hits for Shoemaker
which managed only six hits for the
game off S&amp;H pitcher Dec Hogan.
In Lassie League action. Optimist
played home-run derby Wednesday

as the teum combglned for eight
homers in a 20-3 rout or Pat's
Electric. Tina Roberts slugged a
single and three home runs to lead
Optimist while Patrcll Pinkney and
Katrina Shuler had two round
trippers each and Ann Perry added
another homer. Melinda Jackson
added two doubles. Sorita Rollins
clubbed three singles and Lakosla
Kennon and Abby Whitehead each
added a double.
Singles by Melissa Dawson,
Tracey Mitchell and Stephanie
Smith were the only hits for Pat’s
Electric. Optimist now stands at 7-3
for the season while Pat’s Electric
fell to 2-8.
In the second game Wednesday,
Tcwana Chisholm rapped a pair of
homers as Rotary upended Klwanis.
13-3. Chisholm drilled a three-run
shot In the second inning and added
a two-run homer In the third.
Tcrcsla King added a two-run dou­
ble and Natasha Beasley added an
RBI triple for Rotary which upped
Its record to a league-leading 8-2.
Klwanis now stands at 3-7.
Leticia Strickland had the only
two hits for Klwanis, a single In the
first Inning and a two-run homer in
the third.

Stevens, Salvagio's
Short-Circuit Realty
For Division Crown
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
It shouldn't have come as any surprise to the
Longwood H.D. Realty girls when the power failed twice,
killing the lights during their championship game
Wednesday night against Casselberry's Salvagio's Girls.
The H.D. Realty power hadn't worked all night
anyway.
Salvagio's Denise Stevens gave up two unearned runs
In the first inning of game one then blanked H.D. Realty
five of the next six frames as Casselberry snared a 4-3
decision.
In the second game of the the best two-out-of-three
series. Stevens was even tougher. The Lyman High
freshman shut down H.D. Realty on Just three hits as
Salvagio's Girls claimed a 9-1 victory* and the Eagle
Divslon title of the Seminole Softball Club.
"Whew!" said winning mananger Carlos Martinez
while wiping away the perspiration. "That flret one was
close. But I knew we were due to start hitting In that
second one."
Martinez's squad was due all right, but he probably
didn't expect the big bats to come from the bottom of his
order. After Jennifer Jonas scooted Into second on a
two-base error to open the bottom of the second Inning.
Andrea Martinez reached on a fielder's choice as Jonas
beat the throw to third.
Eighth-place hitter Barbara Malone then dropped a
single into left field to score Jonas for a 1-0 lead.
Christine Pozo followed her with another base hit to left
to chase home Martinez. Diminutive Jennifer Thomas,
batting 10th In the order, then hit a ground ball to short
on which Karen DeShetler stepped on second for the
force and fired to first for what would be an
Inning-ending double play. Thomas, though, beat the
throw by a step and Malone scored for a 3-0 lead.
Stevens, hteanwhlle. worked out of a small Jam In the
first, tffen sailed through the second, third, fourth and
fifth while facing Just one baiter over the minimum.
Malone turned In a nice catch In left In the second on
Loti Helms' liner.
Casselberry upped its lead to 4-0 In the sixth when
Stacy Campbell and Jennifer Jonas each singled and
moved to second and third on a throwing error. Martinez
was walked to load the bases. Malone grounded to third
baseman Helms who tossed home to force Campbell.
The next ball was also hit to Helms, but this time her
throw was low and Jonas scored for a 4-0 lead.
Longwood put Its only run on the board after the
second power failure. With one out. Tracy Kelly hit a
slow down the third-base line which she beat out for a
single and then went to second on Stevens' throwing
error. After waiting through two light failures. DeShetler
ripped a single to center for H.D. Realty's only run. Two
intentional walks to Dalziel and Kaiser helped Stevens
out of her only trouble of the game.
Casselberry put the game on Ice with a five-run
explosion in the seventh. Jennifer Jonas clubbed a
bases-loaded double to score three runs and Martinez's
ground ball chased home another one for the 9*1
advantage.
In the first game. Karen DeShetler opened game with a
base hit to center. Marcia Dalziel then hit a double play
grounder to third, but Campbell gunned the ball Into
right center allowing both runners to come around and
score for a 2-0 lead.

rt

-y lr.

Alecla "D inky" Dinkelacker slaps a base hit
during Salvagio's Girls win over H.D. Realty for
the Eagle Division championship of the Seminole
Softball Club. Dinkelacker had three hits In the
first game which Salvagio's won, 4-3. The
Casselberry crew used a three-hit pitching
performance from Denise Stevens to take the
second game, 9-1.

Casselberry bounced right back In its half. Alicia
"Dinky" Dinkelacker singled and Ava Gardner went to
second on a dropped fly ball. With runners on second
and third. Stevens hit a deep drive to right center drhlch
scored Dinkelacker. Gardner then scored on an error by
DeShetler to tic the score.
Salvagio's went ahead for good In the second. Pozo hit
a one-out single to start the uprising and Jaudon Jonas
singled her to second. Dinkelacker followed with her
second hit to load the bases. Gardner followed with a hit
to left center which chased home two runs for a 4-2
advantage.
H.D. Realty closed within 4-3 In the fifth. After two
were out. Dalziel popped to the shortstop, but catcher's
Interference was detected, giving her first base. Helms
then ripped a single and Kristie Kaiser roped a base hit
to score Dalziel. Rlane Richardson was then Inten­
tionally walked to load the bases and Gardner made a
nice scoop and toss on Amy Adams' ground ball for a
force out at third to end the Inning.
Casselberry had won the first half of the season while
H.D. Realty took the second half to force the
championship playoff.
“All the girls played well," concluded Martinez. “Denise
played real well defensively, too."
(GAMED
H.D.Realty
200 010 0 - 3
8 2
Salvagio's
220 000 X—4 10 2
WP— Stevens. LP— Dalziel. Hitlers— Salvagio's:
Dinkelacker 3*3, Gardner 2-3 2 RBI, Jennifer Jonas 2-3;
H.D. Realty: Richardson 2-2, Kaiser 2-3 RBI.
(GAME 2)
Salvagio's
030 001 5—0 10 3
H.D. Really
000 001 O— 1 3 4
WP— Stevens. LP— Dalziel. Hitters— Salvagio's:
Gardner 2-2, Jennifer Jonas 2-4 3 RBI; H.D. Realty;
DeShetler 2-2 RBI.

T H IN G&gt;9 ftA E

D O N ’T

L-rV\GE
NUMBERS
ON THE
a c o ^ c n P jp .
Sou

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - Moses
Malone has his focus squarely on
"the big marble" and he doesn't
mean Karecm Abdul-Jabbar.
To Malone, "the big marble" Is season. He scored 27 and pulled
the NBA title. And the 6-foot-10 down 18 boards Sunday In the
center will be banging Inside for Sixers' 113-107 victory in the
Philadelphia tonight as the 76ers scries opener.
attempt to take a 2-up lead over
“We Just have to keep working
the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 2 hard." Malone said after practice
of the league championship series.
Wednesday. “After we won 65
Malone has avewtgea more than games. I Just blanked It out of my
26 points and IS rebounds thus far mind. It was time to play for the
during Philadelphia's 9-1 post- big marble. Now we're going for

NBA

...Darin Slack
CoatlosM

tnm BA.

Lake Howell and I've got too much Invested here to go
anywhere else.
"The challenge is here. I'm going to a couple of camps
this summer and I'm going to come back and try to beat
Quackenbuah out. If I don't beat him out. then I want to
play on an even keel with him." added Slack.
As you may have already gleaned. Slack is not of the
“If 1 can't get my way I'U transfer" school. He's an
intelligent chap who knows his worth, yet relishes the
opportunity to overcome his obstacle. The obstacle has
been there a while. Slack played behind Quackenbuah
os a freshman, too. Lake Howell athletic director Harry
Drivas. who coaches the Junior varsity, said be

the main thing — we want to be
world champs."
Doing Just what owner Harold
Katz had in mind when he signed
him to a $13.2 million offer sheet
last September, Malone led the
NBA In rebounding and finished
fifth in scoring while leading the
Sixers to the league's best regular
season record (65-17).
But in the last 10 years, only one
team — the 1981 Boston Celtics —
has captured th e ' league's best
record and the NBA title.

remembers Darin as being ready to hang it up a year
later until Quackenbuah went to the varslly as a
sophomore. Stack took over the controls for the JV and
had a good year. “He had some success and it
encouraged him." said Drivas.
Slack agreed. *'I had a real tough ninth grade year."
he said. “They used me to run the plays of the other
teams. 1 got beat up a lot. 1 was really apprehensive
about going out the next year, but some friends of mine
told me Ouackenbush was going up to the varsity.
“I had a good sophomore year and then played well
last year. That got my confidence back."
Although the battle is an Intense one for the starting
Job. Slack an d O uack en b u sh rem ain friends.
“Everybody seems to think it would be a mean rivalry,
but there's no conflict.'' said Slack. “He's (Quacken­
buah) a nice guy but I feel I have a Job to do. I want to
beat him out."
The feeling, no doubt, is mutual.

YOU

R B t N 'T

B U B C . t &gt;E S A F E

I BTPONGLV
. 8UQOEST%
IF YOU

BU TO Q*T W
i5 a e=K . oHNo ^ B
3 8 » V !8 i

BTM KC,
W H rrrevEH
INVOLVES

s$Sr
.

O IF F C R E N C C
BND PLA Y
B C C O R D IN O L Y .

SCORECARD
Dog Racing
At Super Semlnolt
Wednesday N lfh t Results
First r a c e - 5/11 Di 21.21
1WC
24 60 110 4.10
a JW ’S Blanca Ruth
7.70 4 00
1 M in T iki
. 100
Q (1-41 101.20) T (5-4.2) 7t2.lt
Second r t t t — 1/1D: 40.01
5 Go M itt Robette
4 00 1 00 2.60
4 Mountain Romp
2.40 3 00
ID uboJonet
12.40
Q (4-5) 0:40) T 15-4 2 ) 245.40) 0 0
(1-5)120.10
T M rd ra c t — 5/l4M:11.76
4 M H Cur lout Nick 1100 0 00 4 00
2 Pebeau Star
1.40 2.40
4 Jo Do's Ttgerjo
4.40
Q (2-0) I7.20)T (*-2-4 ) 464.40
Fourth r o c o - 1/16 O ilt.5 4
2 Spud Wrench
7.00 5 20 4 00
• Antonio's Schult
4.40 100
560
7 J a n y Jtn
O (2-0) 10.40) T (2+7) 125.00
F llt h r a c e - l/ lO C : 21.20
7 Kennedy Twist
t l 20 4 00 440
4 Stan Mark*
13 00 410
MO
5M o|o'lD avid
0 (4-7) 01.10) T (7-4-5) 540.40
Slstti race -5 /1 0 A: 11.04
4 Antonlo'l pride
4 20 2 00 240
IM its M o Honey
5 00 240
0 Split Stock
4.10
Q (0 7) 12.20) T 10-7-4) 100.60) SO
(4 7,4-all) 175.00
Seventhraca - 2/0 TA: 10.40
5 Warm Wind
45.00 110 2 00
7 Kathy Be Good
4.40 1.40
0 Long'4 Bet!
4 40
0(1-7)0.00) T (5-7-0) 71JO
Eighth r e c e - 5 / U S : 11.10
5 Highway Robin 11 20 20 00 11.40
1 Lido Court
5 40 000
740
IB o n lta 'iB o y
0(1-5)07.40) T (1-1-2) 1401.20
Ninth r a c e - 1/10 5: K M
OShe-l A Plumber
5 00 5 00 M0
5 Mountain Pilch
2 00 740
140
IB o n lla Vlnnle
a (5-0) 14.00) T (0 5-1) 01.14) 0 0
( M l 01.00
10th race — 5/10 S: 21JJ
5 Bad Newt Bales
4 00 1 40 110
4 Sitter Story
1100 740
740
OMetva Blue
Q (0 5) 44 N) T (5-4 4) 1011.00
llt h r e c e - 5/111 : 10.17
I R D 't Lady Bird
1.20 2 40 1 10
TBIueEyadSue
400 140
5 J D 'tlm a Topper
240
0(1-7)14.20) T (2-7-1) 11.00
12th raca — 1/14 C: 11.11
I Odd Magic
M .40 a* 70 1 10
f Kayat Cyclone
5 40 400
460
4 Annie Pooh
O (1-75 174.44) T (1-7-4) 11.20.00)
luperO: 1-74-1*11-00 no wlnntr
11th r e c e - 1/0 C:2t.5t
t Con Clone
0.40 7.40 300
t Rainbow Love
11.20 400
7Can't Go Far
440
Q (4-1) 20:44) T (4-1-7) 100.40) BO
(1-741) 714.60
A - 1101) Handle 4110471

May 20 — Philadelphia al L a Angelas.
1:10p.m.
May 11 - Philadelphia at L a Angeles,
0p.m.
i Juno 3 - L a Angela at Philadei
phla.tpm .
■ June 5 - Philadelphia al l a
Angeia.4pm.
t
i June I - L a Angela at Philadei
p h la , 0 p .m .

■-If atcoiitry

USFL
UNITED STATES FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Atlantic Civilian
W L T Pci. PF PA
1 0 .017 151 117
Philadelphia
5 0 .101 164 217
Baton
I 0 .iio mi no
No* Jonty
II 0 m in in
Washington

Central Oivtsiwi

Tsmpi Bay
0 10
Chicago
14 0
Mlchlgsn
7 10
Birmingham
7 5 0
Pacific Written
L a Angtla
4 4 0
Oakland
1 7 0
Denver
l I O
Arizona
4 I 0

501 711 144

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pit.
11 17 JS1
Toledo
10 11 141
Columbus
10 17 541
Tidewater
If 17 J00
Charlatan
14 20 444
Richmond
Rochester
14 14 447
Pawtucket
14 14 457
Syracuse
17 11 .447
Wednesday's Results
Columbus t. Charleston I
Tidewater al Toledo, ppd. rain
Richmond al Rochater, ppd. rein
Pewtuckel 7, Syracuse 4
Thunder's Gama
Columbus at Char lei *ou
Richmond at Rochater, 1
Pawtucket at Syracuse
Friday's Gama
Rochaler al Tidewater
Toledo tt Richmond
Syracuse tl Char la ten
Columbus al Pawtucket

117
IM
1)1
114

40
41!
il
41

!U
117
147
70S

(All Tima EOT)
Birmigham al Denver. Opm
Sunday's Oema
New Jersey et Washington. MO p.m.
Philadelphia at Baton. 1 » p m.
l a Angela al Oakland. 4pm

Monday'sCamel

Tampa Bay at Michigan. 7pm
Arltona al Chicago. 4 p m

Saturday. Jene4
New Jersey al Oakland, t p.m
Sunday. JuneI

Birmingham al Tampa Bay, I N p m
Michigan al Philadelphia. I Wp m
Washington al Denver. 1p m
Arltona al L a Angela 4 pm.

Mmdiy. Junes

Chicago *t Boston. 0 p m

Soccer
NORTH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE
E a te n
W L OF OA HP Pts.
4 2 M 11 It 54
New York
5 1 IS I 11 4]
Toronto
1 1 I] 15 10 14
Montreal
10 S 1, l II
Chicago

15 1117 II 11

Tulie
Team America
Tampa Bay
FI Lauderdale

11
IS
14

4 4 1 11
10 If I »
4 II I 14

ARE YOU

hs

Tulsa 1. Montreal I
New York*. Golden Bay 1
Toronto 1, San Diego 0
Thursday's Carnet
(No Gama ScheduledI
Friday's Comet
Golden Bay at Team America
Chicago al Vancouver
San Diego al Sant)*

Baseball

EASTERN LEAGUE
W L Pet.
II 11 400
Buffalo
14 11 544
New Brilain
Reading
15 11 114
If 1) 511
Glens Fails
Lynn
II 14 517
14 17 451
Nashua
Water bury
17 tl Hf
Albany
17 10 175
Wednoday's Result)
Nashua], Buffalo I
Alban, 4. Watertwryl
Lynn f. Slew Britain]
Reading f. Giant Falls 0
Thursday’i Gama
Buttaioal Nashua
Albany at Witerbur*

Lynn it New Britain
Reading at Giant Falls
Friday*! Oama
ButlatoelWetertury
Lynn si Glens Falls
Albany al Nashua
New Britain al Reading

*
!
!

regalehen time er overtime bet enty teur
points ter winning a game decided hy
chattel ASena point It awardedter each
gal tetrad wpIt a matlmwmal thra per
gamedeludingtverhma andshoaiats.)
Wednesday'sRaultt

.750 741 111
447 70S Its

411 111 11)

Friday'sDame

Vancouver
1 I
J »
Seattle
7 1 ' 11 !
Golden Bay
1 1 1 f
?
San Oiago
0 7 I * '
(Tams gel d i P**"4* W "M "4"*

61
—

&gt;i
's
1
1's
1
l'i
4

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Eal
W L Pet. 01
.It 17 SIS
Louisville
14 14 J00 1
Evansville
17 10 .410 US
Indianapolis
14 It .457 7‘&gt;
Wat
Denver
70 14 540
Okie City
70 It .514
Omaha
15 U .404 )&gt;l
WHhlla
15 1» OF 5&gt;s
Wednesday's Roetts
Evansvlfl* 10, Oklahoma City 4
low* 4. Omaha I
Denver t, Louisville I
Indianapolis 7, Wichita 1
Thursday's Gama
Louisville n! Oklahoma City
lowatl Wichita
IndianapoiltatOmaha
Denver al Evansville
Friday's Gama
Denver at Evansville
Iowa al Wichita
Louisville al Oklahoma City
Indianapolis al Omaha
M ld w a tl Leagvs
W
Appleton
Madison
Wausau
Wit Rapids
Waterloo
Cedar Rapids
Beloit
Clinton

Cl
—

I's
1
1's
4'S

4'S
.7

Pel.
0 745
II 4*4
21 M l

N BA P la y a llt
F I p a 11
( I t ilil- ie v ia l
L a Angtla a . Philadelphia
I Philadelphia lead) series. 101
May 77 — Philadelphia 111. L a
Angela 107
May M - L a Angela at Philadelphia.
Ip m

Sprmglield
21 14 540 Burlington
II If 514 1
Peoria
14 II 412 I
Quad Citia .
10 a 411 7
Wednesday) Results
Appleton I. Madison]
Waterloo 5. BeloiU
Clinton 1. Cedar Rapids 0.1st game
Cedi' Rapids 1. Clinton 0. tnd gam*
Burlington ). Springfield 1
Quad C ilia 7, Peoria 4 Wit Rapids I.
Wausau 4. II inn
Thurtday'tOema
Appleton al Madison
Peoria at Quad Cilia
Clinton a) Cedar Rapids
Springfield at Burlington
Baton al Waterloo. 1
Wit Rapids al Wevtau

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• Lowrr tolling /t'Wif.im t

M a lo n e Focus O n 'The B ig M a rb le '

IP

p o s s ib l e

SSCSBE

♦A-Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, Ft.

8-3:00

r

-

t

S A N T O R D

�raves Walk Into Record Book ; Barr Strolls Into The Doghouse
United Preaa Interternatlonal
While Jim Bibby and Jim Winn threw 28
balls and wound up In the record book. Jim
Barr made one wrong toss and landed In the
doghouse.
At Atlanta, Bibby and Winn tied a
74-ycar-old major-league record by walking
seven straight batters, helping the Braves
post a 6-0 victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
In New York, Barr angered manager
Frank Robinson for tossing the ball in the
air as he was removed from the San
Francisco Giants' 7-6 triumph over the New
York Mets.
"He will be fined a substantial amount for
what he said to me afterwards." said
Robinson, who met with Barr and club
general manager Tom Haller for 10 minutes
following he game. "I've asked our pitchers
ho stay on the mound until I ask them for
hhc ball —then they're free to leave."
Barr, the third or five San Francisco
hitchers, was nursing a 7-5 lead and retired
She first two batters before George Foster
finglcd and Dave Kingman, who blasted a
|hrec-run homer In the first Inning, walked
bn four pitches..
I Barr threw a ball to the next batter. Brian
piles, and Robinson strolled out of the
liugout toward the mound. As soon as
Koblnson gestured to the bullpen for Greg
Minton. Barr nipped the ball high In the air

and began walking off the mound. Robinson
grabbed his veteran right-hander's arm and
began to lecture him. punctuating his
remarks with a forefinger to Barr's chest.
The Braves, leading 2-0, broke the game
open In the third Inning when Bibby, 1-5,
and Winn tied the major-league mark set by
Chicago received against Washington Aug.
28, 1909 and broke the former National
League record of six held by many clubs.
"There's nothing you can do about It.”
said Pirates' manager Chuck Tanner. "They
weren’t out there trying to walk them. It just
happens.
"The only good thing about It. If there Is a
good thing, is It's only one loss. Maybe we
got [tout of our system."
Craig McMurtry, 7-1, gave up three singles
In the first three innings and then did not
allow a hit the rest of the way. He walked
three and struck out eight.
Cardinals 7, Rada 2
At Cincinnati, John Stuper, 5-2. pitched a
five-hitter. Darrell Porter slammed a two-run
homer and Ken Oberkfell collected three
hits for the Cardinals. St. Louis knocked out
Reds starter Ted Power. 1-2, In the sixth.
tagging him for seven hits and six runs.
Expos 2, Padres 0
At Montreal, Steve Rogers. 7-1. pitched a
seven-hitter for his third shutout of the
season and sixth straight victory to spark
the Expos to a sweep of their three-game

LcfTcrts for the Cubs. Both Madden. 3-0, and
LclTcrts, 0-2. were making their first ma­
jor-league starts. Bill Oawley finished and
earned his third save.
Angels 7, Yankees 1
While police were busy Investigating yet
another barroom scuflle Involving New York
Yankees* manager Billy Martin, California's
Tommy John was taking all the fight out of
his team.
Martin, no stranger to barroom fights, got
Involved In another barroom Incident
Thursday morning, shortly after the
M
Yankees lost a game In extra Innings to the
I ' Angels. The Incident occurred shortly alter
-j f l H R '
MI
midnight In the Anaheim Hyatt, adjacent to
JIM BIBBY
JIM WINN
Anaheim Stadium.
Anaheim police confirmed the fight was
scries. Andy Hawkins. 3-3. went seven under investigation and detectives spoke to
innings and allowed 10 hits In absorbing the Martin before Wednesday night's game with
loss. Tim Raines went O-for-4 for the Expos.
the Angels, which California won. 7-1.
Dodgers 8, Phillies 1
behind the pitching of ex-Yankee John.
At Philadelphia. Pedro Guerrero drove In
three runs with a single and a homer to Brewers 7, A's6
hand the Phillies their fifth straight loss,
At Oakland, Cecil Cooper homered and
Philadelphia extended Its streak of scoreless drove In three runs and Robin Yount hit a
Innings to a club-record 42 before Gary two-run triple In helping the Brewers to
Matthews homered In the eighth off Dave victory. Charlie Moore also homered for
Stewart.
Milwaukee and Wayne Gross connected for
Astros l.CubsO
Oakland.
At Houston, rookie Mike Madden allowed Mariners 2. Indians 1
only one hit over six innings and combined
At Seattle. Pat Putnam drilled a two-run
with three relievers to outduel rookie Craig homer to back the combined six-hit pitching

A.L./N.L. Baseball

O X SCORES

iooo

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RESISTORS

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Memorial Day Fling

Gimo winning RBI-Hrb*k ID.
E -G itn i OP-Mlwwiotp 1. LOBM totM li 11 Btltimcr* II. IB-GitNn*.
Hftok. Giotll. S ikita SB-Engta (1). SF
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IP N B I B BBSO

Jt o i lS Il

At Baltimore. Kent Hrbek drove In four
runs and rookie Ken Schrom pitched seven
strong Innings to help the Twins complete a
three-game sweep of Baltimore and hand
the Orioles their sixth straight loss.
Rad Box 2, Whits Bos 0
At Chicago. Reid Nichols' third hit of the
game, a two-run single with two out in the
ninth Inning, broke a scoreless tie and gave
the Red Sox their victory behind the
three-hit pitching of Bruce Hurst.
Tigers 6, B iss Jays 2
At Toronto. Kirk Gibson hit a two-run
inslde-the-park homer and Dan Petry scat­
tered nine hits over 6 1-3 Innings to help the
Tigers snap the Blue Jays' five-game
winning streak.

Planning a lot o f driving?
Battar plan to aaa ua flra tl

IILWAUKII
OAKLAND
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E-Monty OP-Oiktand I 1 0 6 iiiwtukM 4. Oik lend II IB -G rw t 18
[Otnlntr, Yount
HR-Coopor 11).

Twtax7,Orteles4

Memorial Day
Ahead!

M w i4 lr ‘t / MftUR lM | M h lK W H
l r Unitad P m i IntafMttowl

Loompn

of pitchers Jim Beattie. Ed VandeBcrg and
Mike Stanton and give the Mariners their
victory. Rick Manning homered for Cleve­
land.
Royals 5, Rangers 2
At Kansas City. Mo.. George Brett belted
his 11th home run of the season and Joe
Simpson knocked In two runs with a triple
to give the Royals their victory. Bud Black,
called up from Kansas City's AAA affiliate at
Omaha Sunday to replace the straggling
Vida Blue In the starting rotation, scattered
six hits and struck out three qyer 7 2-3
Innings to post the victory.

OPEN
7 DAYS

APOPKA
Hat. HH.MI

SANfORD
Ml DORA
PART S C 11 Y u l * .
iA I L L L ltl

61ALM

M l U u 11 I I I
M ltb U U k f',1

�IA— Evening Herald, Sanford,

Rescue Workers Search
For Nile Boat Victims

20 Killed In Japanese Q uake

WORLD

TOKYO (UPI) - An earthquake p.m. EDT Wednesday) and lasted
Jolted northeastern Japan today, several minutes.
killing at least 20 people and leaving
"It’s the first time that I felt such
75 others missing, many of them In a strong quake." Scnlchl Sato, a
a tidal wave that capsized fishing civil servant In the city of Akita told
b o ats and sw am ped a beach reporters. "At first we felt a vertical
crowded with school children.
Jolt and then there was a long period
The earthquake, the strongest to of horizontal swaying."
hit Japan In 44 years, registered 7.8
The quake cracked open a
on the Richter scale, said the U.S. highway across the coastal city of
National Earthquake Information Akita. 200 miles northeast of Tokyo,
Service In Golden, Colo.
and brought a celling down In a
The National Police Agency re­ departm ent store, killing one
ported 20 people dead. 75 missing shopper and Injuring four others.
and 16 Injured on the tip of Japan’s
A tidal wave pounded a beach In
northernmost Island of Honshu. The A k i t a w h e r e a g r o u p of
quake hit at noon local time (11 schoolchildren wns on an excursion.

IN BRIEF
U.S. Military Adviser
Killed In El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador |UPI| - An
unidentified gunman shot and killed the deputy
commander of the U.S. military advisers In El
Salvador In the first slaying of a U.S. officer In
the war-tom nation. The gunman escaped.
The U.S. Embassy said Naval Commander
Albert Schaufclbcrgcr. 32. of San Diego was
shot point-blank four times In the head
Wednesday on the campus of the Jesuit-run
Central American University while waiting In
his bullet-proof embassy car for n friend. The
car’s window was open.
Schaufclbcrgcr was deputy commundcr for
military personnel at the embassy and the 55
naval, air force and army advisers sent to help
train El Salvador's armed forces, embassy
spokesman Donald R. Hamilton said.
No one claimed responsibility for the slaying,
which marked the first death of an American
military officer In El Salvador.

CAIRO. Egypt (UPI) — With 47 bodies recovered,
rescue workers and scuba divers searched today for
270 people missing nud feared dead in a fiery blust
that sank a Nile River steamer In crocodlle-lnfeslcd
waters near the Aswan Dam.
A survivor charged the vessel’s Egyptian crew
were the first to abandon ship.
Officials said 47 bodies - some badly burned were recovered and 325 people were rescued after
bottled gas exploded Wednesday In the engine room
of an Egyptian vessel tugging two barges. Officials
said 642 were aboard.
Sources In Abu Slmbcl said 270 passengers still
were missing and feared dead behind the dam In the
waters of a man-made lake teeming with crocodiles
and wild fish.

Police said one fifth-grade girl was
found dead. 10 were Injured and 13
classmates were missing.
A fire erupted In Akita’s power
station, halting power transmission
to 5,000 homes. Transportation and
communications were disrupted by
downed power lines.
The Maritime Safety Agency dis­
patched 57 patrol boats and 12
planes to search the coastal waters
for survivors tossed from as many
as 50 fishing boats.
The quake wrought havoc on
areas around the districts of Akita.
Aomori. Niigata. Ishlknwa and
Hokkaido.

Police Investigating Rash of Area Burglaries

M issiles M iss Israeli Jets
By United Press International
Israel charged Syria’s missile attack on an
Israeli reconnaissance plane over Lebanon was a
"serious" cease-fire violation and part of an
attempt to sabotage the Isracli-Lebanese troop
withdrawal accord.
Israeli officials said Syrian planes Wednesday
fired two alr-to-alr missiles that missed Israeli
Jets on a routine flight over Lebanon. They
denied a Beirut radio report Syrian ground-to-air
missiles downed a pilotless Israeli recon­
naissance drone In eastern Lebanon.
Israeli pilots. In a departure from their
response to past challenges, held their fire when
Syrian pilots launched the two missiles over
Lebanon’s eastern Bckaa Valley.
The army said Syrian forces tried to shoot
down an Israeli helicopter Monday and also have
fired on Israeli positions In Lebanon. Damascus
had no official comment on the Incident.

Police Summ on Walesa
WARSAW. Poland (UPIJ - Former Solidarity
leader Lech Walesa received a "suspicious"
sum m ons to appear for questioning by
authorities after his appeal for calm during Pope
John Paul ll’s visit to Poland next month.
Walesa said Wednesday the Gdansk pro­
secutor’s office summoned him to appear for
questioning Friday on an unspecified matter. He
said he plans lo comply because "everything Is
legal." but added "It seems to be suspicious."
Walesa said he had sent to the official news
agency PAP the text of an appeal to the nation to
preserve calm during the pontiff's June 16-23
pilgrimage. But a PAP spokesman said he knew
nothing about such an appeal.
Walesa has been questioned several times
recently over suspected discrepancies In the
outlawed Solidarity union’s financial records,
but also for his underground activities.

Two rifles and a television set were taken from the
Police report persons unknown removed $3,500 worth
of tools, tool boxes and cash from the office of American home of Linton Kirk, 350 Prcssvlcw Avc.. Longwood.
Railway Services Corp.. 600 Persimmon Avc. The theft between 12:08 and 1:22 p.m. Saturday. Burglars
entered the residence by a rear kitchen window and
oecured between 4:30 Friday and 8 a.m. Monday.
A steel bar was used to gain entry to the premises and exited through a rear sliding glass door, police said.
the thieves used a can of white spray paint to write "We Other Items may have been taken.
Thomas S. Whlddon. Rt. 2 Box 362. Geneva told
were here" on a rug and "W.R.F." on the outside of the
police his house was broken Into and between 9:30 a m.
building.
The Seminole County School Board lost a weed cater and 12:50 p.m. Saturday and $180 was taken from his
machine valued at $159 after a break-ln at its wallet.
Burglars netted $1,386 In property. Including five
maintenance compound at 1613 Lake Avc. The Incident
guns,
from the home and vehicle of Daniel W. Prattc.
occurred between 4 p.m. May 10 and 6:30 a.m. Monday.
2518 Balsa Drive. Altamonte Springs. Guns tnken in the
A cassette tape player and citizen’s band radio were heist were a Mossbcrg 12 gauge shotgun, valued at $95:
stolen from a 1975 Ford LTD parked at 2544 Park Drive a Glcnfield .22 caliber rifle . $65; a Marlin .22 magnum
on the south side of Molly McGee’s restaurant In Sanford rifle. $100: a Colt 45. $350; and a Charter Anns 38/357.
over the weekend. The vehicle Is owned by John McCoy $150.
of Winter Springs.
The burglary took place between 9 and 11 p.m.
Money bags containing $2,000 were taken from the Thursday.
Police have several fingerprints In their Investigation
Mayfair Country Club clubhouse In a burglary between
of
a burglary at National Auto Sales. 3851 Orlando
8 p.m. Friday and 6:40 a.m. Saturday.
D e m o cra tic G o lf
T ou rn oy D e la y e d
The second annual golf
tournament, sponsored by
th e Sem inole C ounty
D em ocratic Executive
Committee, will be held on
June 25 rather than this
Saturday as originally
planned, according to
Marvin Meltzer. party
chairman.

Drive. Sanlord. After forcing open a rear bathroom
window, thieves removed a Sears craftsman toolbox and
assorted tools valued at $1,250: a Scars red and black
lawn mower valued at $225: a Whirlpool air conditioner
valued at $300: and an AM-FM clock radio valued at
$60. Police said the Incident took place sometime
between 7 p.m. Friday and 9:30 a.m. Saturdayu.
A television valued' at $346 was taken from the living
room of the Grady Stringer residence. 1011 Olive
Avenue. Sanford, between 12:05 and 2:10 a.m. Sunday,
police report.
In a burglary’ to a garage, thieves removed a 4.5
horsepower Mercury boat motor at 303 Hidden Hollow
Court. Sanford. The motor is the property of Edward
Lambeth and Is valued at $825. The Incident occurred
between May 15nnd May 18.
In a theft from a.front yard, between 12:01 a.m. and
7:30 a.m. Saturday an eight-horsepower red and white
Comet Snapper riding mower from In front of (he Glen
Alan Lock residence, Rl. 1. Box 1267. Geneva. The
mower is valued at $800.

TRUTESl

Jg S )
HARDW ARE STORES

The tournament is to be
h e ld a t th e M ay fair
Country Club on Country
C lub R oad. S a n fo rd .
Tournament play will be
"best ball" and will begin
shotgun style at 9 a.m.,
Meltzer said.
T h o se w i s h i n g to
p a r tic ip a te m ay call
629-5588 to make reserva­
tions. Separate buffet tick­
ets are also available for
$7.50 for those who do not
wish to participate In the
tournament. Meltzer said.

12 Days to Save

MMiral TRU-TIST

Spring Paint Week1

★
“A
«o*ut
A

Good Housekeeping •

\

Factory-

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Savings

TRUTESl]

I

'W -ii-lm c
A

Rat Acrylic

Good News!

|GeedHousekeeping;

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and C.O.P. up to 3.35 on the
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Ask what the Rheem imperial
High Efficiency Heat Pump
can do for your home.

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M O N

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S U N

�PEOPLE

Evtnlnf H t r s M ,

Lisa Peppers, James Spray
Married In Centennial Park
Lisa Rac Peppers and James Ran­
dall Spray were married May 6. at
7.30 p.m. In the gazebo at Centennial
Park, Sanford. Notary Public Carroll
Burke performed the ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of Betty
Jean Burke, 2108 Magnollu Avc..
Sanford, and Benny Ray Peppers of
Powder Springs. Ga. The bridegroom
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Spray.
203 Bradshaw. Sanford.
Given In marriage by her stepfather
Carroll Burke, the bride wore a formal
white silk gown enhanced with
brocade lace. The controlled skirl
cascaded Into a graceful chapel train.
Her fingertip veil of Illusion was
attache! to a forward headpiece and
she carried a bouquet of mixed spring

flowers.
Carol Ann Thomas attended the
bride as maid of honor. She wore an
olT-whlte dress and carried a bouquet
of mixed spring flowers.
Cynthia Eden was the bridesmaid.
She wore a pink crepe dress and
carried a bouquet of mixed spring
flowers.
Calvin Williams served the bride­
groom as best man.
A reception In the gazebo followed
the ceremony.
A fter a w ed d in g trip to St.
Augustine, the newlyweds arc making
their home In Sanford.
The bride Is employed as a cashier
and the bridegroom is employed as a
tree surgeon.

G et set for the most carefree vacation]
of your life in great new sum mer looks
from
M a r y / E s th e r's
c ol or f ul
sun d resses— the latest sw im w earskirts and coordinated sportsw ear...in
pack and go fabrics.

7 n a tu f-£ ii/u A i

l i i t f s r i l , P I.

T h u rsd a y , M iy M , I f U - t B

Diploma Is
Credit To
Boy In Jail
DEAR ABBT: A friend
whose family Is divided on
this asked me to write. It
seems that her nephew
was scheduled to graduate
from high school, but he
got Into trouble with the
law (an old habit of his)
and was sentenced to six
months in the county Jail.
However, he is being
a l l o w e d to do hi s
homework In Jail In order
to complete the needed
c r e d i t s a n d g e t h is
diploma.
His mother went ahead
and mailed his graduation
In v ita tio n s and a n ­
nouncements to family
and friends knowing he
wouldn't be able to attend
his own graduation. My
friend thought (his was a
tacky thing for the mother
to do. Of course, those who
received graduation In­
vitations and announce­
ments felt obligated to
send a gift.
What do you think about
this?
NOTOWNOR
NAME. PLEASE
DEAR NO TOWNt I
think it's to the boy's
credit that he chose to
graduate Instead of drop­
ping out. Having that
diploma will make It easier
for him to shape up and
stay out of trouble. Don't
assume that relatives and
friends sent gifts because

T O N IG H T S TV

aXA N O YO U FFTTH

6:30
B0HSCNEW S
( D O C M NEWS
0 O A B C NEW S g
B (10) UNOERSTANUNQI
BEHAVIOR
( B O ) ON E DAY A T A H I M

6:35
© Q O M ERPYLB

they felt obligated. It could
be their way of saying,
" C o n g ra tu la tio n s for
graduating anyway. Now
we expect better things
from you. Don't let us
down.**

© MOW

•:30

S9)MM A R C H 0 P _

DEAR ABBT/ A
mothcr-ln-law was upet
because her daughter-inlaw never made a homecooked meal for her —
instead she always enter­
tained in a restaurant. You
said:
"Some people Just can't
handle entertaining at
home. Th very thought of
It to so upsetting, they
don't even want to make
the effort, so accept the
restaurant dinners with
good grace, and don't let it
botheryou.”
Thanks. Abby. No one
else understood. But you
did. I. too. am petrified at
the thought of entertain­
ing at home. Even when
my married children arc
coming for dinner. I can't
sleep for three days ahead
of time: I wake up at 4
a.m. In a panic, simply
terrified!
Books, courses, friends
or family can't help me. I
can't help being tills way.
I’ve fought It for 40 years,
and I'm only 60.
T h a n k you for u n ­
derstanding.
MR8.B.,
ALABASTER, ALA.
D EA R M R S . B .t IT
misery loves company,
lake comfort In the knowl­
edge that you have a lot of
company.

ID (3t) FAMILY ABEAM

1040

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0 Q M ART TYLER M O O M
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B 0 GIMME A BREAK NaMtahaa
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ThskionUxies fpt Guatlv* PtopU!

FOR THE
GRADUATE

TIE TACK

DEAR ABBT: Is there
a n y th in g " im p ro p e r"
about having the mother
of the bride escort her
daughter down (he aisle?
My father will be a guest
at my wedding, but he and
my m other have been
divorced since I was a
s m a ll c h ild a n d my
mother raised me alone.
SENTIMENTAL
DEAR SENTIMENTAL:
Improper? No way. Dis­
c u s s t hi s wi t h t he
clergypcrson who will
perform the ceremony,
and good luck.

1W 0
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3B — E v tn in g H era ld , San ford, FI.

T h u rid a y , M ay 2d, 1*13

Ugai Notice-

National Debt Limit
Upped; Crisis Averted
WASHINGTON |UPI&gt; - Congress,
moving to avert a national financial
crista, voted to Increase the federal debt
limit by nearly $99 billion, enough
money to keep the government running
through the end of September.
The Senate approved the measure
51-41 Wednesday. Because It Is Identical
to the version the House passed last
week. It goes to President Reagan for his
expected signature.
The bill Increases the national debt
limit from Its current level of St.29
trillion, which Is expected to be breached
next Tuesday, to $1,389 trillion. A
trillion is 1 followed by 12 zeroes, the
equivalent of 1.000 billions.
The action came after Republican
leader Howard Baker, warning the gov­
ernment would come to a halt unless the
limit was Increased, offered the senators
an early, start for the Memorial Day
recess as a reward for quick passage of
the measure.
It appeared for a time the measure
would be threatened by the attachment
of unrelated riders. But Democrats,
assured they would have a chance to
modify the July 1 tax cut at a later date,
decided not to offer amendments.
Baker earlier received a similar pro­
mise from his Republican colleagues —
something he called “a little short of a
religious miracle."
Any amendments would require the
bill to be sent back to the House, where

Sanford Park
To Be N am ed
A fte r Form er
City M anager
The Marshall Avenue
park off W. 25th Street In
Sanford will be named In
honor of the late Clifford
McKibbln, a former San­
ford city manager.
D evelopm ent of the
seven-acre park Is sched­
uled to be completed on
Aug. I.
The Sanford City Com­
mission made Its choice
Monday.
A total of $37,500 was
budgeted for the park dev­
elopment plus labor and
equipment. While the city
spent $25,000 for the dev­
elopment. it also received
a $12,500 state grant for
the park development.
The park will Include
handball courts, a soccer
field, tennis courts, and
open space. In addition,
nature trails have been
m a p p e d o u t an d an
exercise-fitness course for
Joggers has been planned.
Parking is also provided.
McKibbln. a native of
Sprtngervlllc. Ark., served
as city manager from Dec.
29. 1948 to Jan. 1. 1952.
He was on the city’s Board
of Bond Trustees from
1976 until his death on
Feb. 25. 1962.
He was also a member of
th e c i t y 's In s u ra n c e
committee from 1954 to
1970; the Sanford Indus­
trial Commission from
1968 to 1970; the plann­
ing and zoning com ­
mission from 1955 to
1970, and served as its
chairman for 12 years; and
was the first president of
th e S anford-Sem lnole
Development Corp. Inc.
from Its founding in 1962.
Ceremonies on the park
naming will be held when
construction Is completed.

Hyp«rallm*ntation
Court* At Hospital

House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said it
would not pass.
"The government will stop dead In Its
tracks on midnight May 3 1 st... and it's a
powerful short time between now and
May 31st." Baker said. He explained the
government would not be able to pay Its
bills, including Social Security benefits,
or to borrow money by Issuing bonds
unless the debt ceiling is Increased.
The Treasury Department estimates
the $99 billion Increase would be enough
to carry the government through Sept.
30, the end of the fiscal year.
At first. Democratic leader Robert Byrd
of West Virginia said the Democrats
would be willing to refrain from offering
amendments only If the debt celling was
extended until mid-June Instead of the
end of September.
He said that would allow the govern­
ment to gel over Its short-term financial
crisis and still give senators a chance to
offer amendments when they come back
in early June. Byrd wanted a chance to
limit the tax cut, scheduled for July 1. to
poor and middle-income Americans.
But after a telephone conversation
with O’Neill and a brief caucus with his
colleagues. Byrd said the Democrats
would not offer any amendments.
"The Speaker assured me he will send
over a tax cap" bill. Byrd said. "We will
have another chance at the tax cap.
There Is no need to debate this any
longer."

CALENDAR
THURSDAY. MAY 26
Central Florida Quitters Guild, 6:30 p.m., First Baptist
Church. 519 Park Avc., Sanford. Potluck dinner.
Lecture on Mola by Marjorie Payne. Call 321-6821 for
information.
Greater Seminole Toastmlslress Club. 7:30 p.m.,
Greater Seminole Chamber of Commerce, 291 N.
Maitland Avc.. Altamonte Springs.
Semlnola Rcbekah Lodge 43. B p.m.. Odd Fellows
Hall. 107'/i Magnolia Avc.. Sanford.
Overenters Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church, U.S. Highway 17-92.
Casselberry.
Maranatha New Life Center Revival. 7:30 p.m..
Sanford Civic Center.
FRIDAY. MAY 27
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m., Messiah Lutheran Church.
U.S. Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road,
Casselberry.
Wcklva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m., Weklva Presbyterian
Church. State Road 434 at Wckiva Road, closed.
Rolling Hills Moravian Church AA. 8 p.m.. State Road
434. Longwood. Closed.
Maranatha New Life Center Revival. 7:30 p.m.,
Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford AA (Step). 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road.
SATURDAY, MAY SB
Fish Fry sponsored by the Men's Club. 5-7 p.m.,
Congregational Christian Church of Sanford. 2401 S.
Park Avc.. Sanford.
Zellwood Sweet Corn Festival, Ponkan Road Zellwood.
Entertainment, rides, and arts and crafts.

Legal Notice
INVITATION FOR BIDS
THE HOUSING AUTHORITY OF
T H E C IT Y OF S A N F O R D
F L O R I D A M ill receive blcJi tor
S U B T E R R A N E A N T E ° M iT E
T R E A T M E N T at Cattle b ie w e r
Court, W lllltm Clerk Court, Edward
H i g g i n s T e r r a c e and C o w a n
Moughton Terrace until 2 00 P.M., on
Ihe loth day of June. 11*2 et the
A d m in istration B uilding, C e tlle
Brewer Court, Senlord. Florida at
which lime and piece ell bidt w ill be
publicly opened end reed aloud
Proposed lorm t ol contrect docu
m t n t t . I n c lu d in g p le n t end
tpecllicellont. ere on tile et the
oltice of the Housing Authority ol the
C it y o l S e n lo rd .’ F lo r id a . A d
ministration Building. Cattle Brewer
Court. Senlord. Florida
Copiet of the document! (nay be
obtained by depotlllng 42S 00 with the
Housing Au t h or i t y lor each tel ol
documents to obtained Such depot 11
w ill be relunded to each person who
returns the plent. tpecllicellont and
other documents in good condition
within 10 days after bid opening
A certified check or bank draft,
payable lo the Houting Authority ot
the City of Santoro. Florida, U.S.
Government bonds, or a satisfactory
bid bond executed by the bidders and
acceptable sureties in an amount
equal lo 1% of the bid shall be
submitted with each bid.
The s u c c tis lu l bidder w ill be
required lo lurnith and pay lor
satisfactory performance and payrhent bond or bonds
Attention Is called to the provisions
lor equal employ man! opportunity,
and payment ot not less than the
minimum salaries end wages set
forth In the Spec Ilicet Ions must be
paid on this prelect
The Housing Authority ot the City
Of Santoro. Florida reserves the right

A n o th e r m eth o d of
expanding the care of
special patients, both in
the hospital and at home.
Is the focal point of a
seminar. “Hyperalimen­
tation" being offered by
Central Florida Regional
Hospital June 7 at the
hospital.
Scheduled from 6 a.m.
to noon, the course will
a c q u a in t h e a lth p ro ­
fessionals with the concept (0 rti#c,
*. l!( bid, &lt;, t0 «,lvt
of hyperalimentation as a any iniormemiettnih*bidding
beneficial therapy both In period
*** bld
*h*11** *||t|dc*»»' tar •
et thirty (JO) days subseqmnt
the hospital and in the to the opening ol bids without the
home. It Is designed for consent ol the Housing Authority ot
City of Senlord. F lor Ido.
physicians, all nursing theDate:
May 74. l t d
personnel, social workers, THE HOUSING AU TH O RITY
pharsraaclsts. dietitians OF THE CIT Y OF
SANFORD , FLO R ID A 222 2111
and therapists.
By: Elliot L. Smith
Hyperalimentation Is a Executive Director
m e th o d of p ro v id in g Publish M j y M . lt end Juno }. l t d
nutrients through various D EH m ______________________
P U S L IC NOTICE
methods to patients who TIM Seminole
County Lend Mon
cannot eat or dlgeal in the ogomoni Division Is In receipt ot or.
I n o rm a l m a n n e r . The applies! ion to build a boat deck an
described property;
concept ts also helpful to Hielofollowing
t II and tha East IS teat, Stock
the-chronically ill patient C. Seminole Heights, as recorded M
and those requiring addi­ Plat Beak a Page *. Public Records
Seminole County. Ftorloa.
tions) strength before and ol Further
described as on tha south
after surgery.
side at LAKE KATHRYN CIRCLE.
Approved for 4-0 c o n ­ Written comments may be (Usd
the Seminole County Land
tinuing education units, Mwith
anagem ent D ivision. Seminole
the course fee Is $8 fo r th e County Services Building. Senlord.
publics $4 students and $2 Florida. Comments should be re

\

fo r C F R I i e m p lo y e e s.

it

To register, call Nursing
Education. Central Florida
. Regional St 321-4500 or
668-4441. ex tension 607. *

I

ceivod within U deys ot the publico
tion of this notice
Herb Hardin

Seminole County, Florida
Publish M a r M. l t d
DEH lf&gt;

legol Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, E IG H ­
T E E N T H JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT, IN
AN D FOR SEM IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO RID A
C1VILACTION
CASE NO S3 213 CP
IN R E i GU ARD IAN SH IPO F
M IC H A E L D E V O N BU R K E.
Incompetent
NOTICE OF SUIT
NO P R O P E R T Y
TO
M IC H A E L TAYLO R
Whose address Is unknown
YOU A R E H E R E B Y NO TIFIED
T H A T A P E T IT IO N FOR A P ­
PO IN TM EN T OF G U ARD IAN has
been tiled concerning the above
described minor and you aro re­
quired to serve a copy of your
written defenses. II any to II. on tha
Petitioner’s attorney, whose name
and a d d r t ii It
C E N T R A L FLO RID A LE G A L
SERVICES. INC.
104 South Park Avenue
Sanford, Florida 1277I
n o n 121 te d
and Ilia tha original with tha Clark of
the above styled court on or before
June 12, lt d . otherwise a iudgment
may be entered against you tar tha
relief demanded in the petition.
WITNESS my hand and the teal ot
said Court on (hit llt h day o l May,
lt d .
(COURT SEAL)
A R T H U R H. BECKW ITH, JR .
C L E R K CIRCUIT COURT
By B E T T Y M . CA PPS
As Deputy Clark
Publish May I*. M A Juna 2, t, l i d
D EH l i t

IN THE CIBCUIT COURT. IN AND
FO R S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA
CA NO. d-lllt-CA-M -L
IN R Ei T H E M A R R IA C E OF
RO O O LFO R. GONZALEZ.
Husband
and
LO U RD ES S. GO NZALEZ.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
L O U R O C SC -C O N ZA LK E
M2 CaMnrclub Trail
Lengw m L Flat Ma J22»
YOU ARC HSRERV NOTIFIED
that a Petition Mr Ditto!utIon of
Marriage hat been filed against you
and you a rt required to serve a eapy
of your Aftswor or pleading (e *w
P etition er's atlarnay, FR A N K
FER N AN D EZ. ** North ‘
Avenue. Orlande. Florida. I
file tha original Antam
in the Office at the Clark af
Circuit Court on or before Mo t il l
day at Jim . tin . II you toil to tarn ,
a Judgment by default w lir
In the Petition.
OONE 01 Sonlord. Semlnola
Cauity. Florida. Mis I2M dev of
May, IfBL
(SEAL)
£
ARTHUR H.ECCKW ITH. JR.
Clerk ef Me Occult Court
ly : Susan E . Tatar
Deputy Ctork
PubltdiMay H. M B June2. f H d
DEH 111

p a a * r » J S f « * » a d »njartrngw

■t a p p e d / t v * .

NOTICE OF
PU B LIC H EAR IN O
THE SEM IN O LE COUNTY
BOARD O F COM MISSIONERS w ill
hold t public hearing In Room MO ol
tha Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford, Florida on JU N E 21, l i d at
2:00 P.M.. o r a t soon thereafter a t
possible to consider the following:
P U B L IC H E A R IN O FOR
CH ANOE O F ZONINO R E G U L A ­
TIONS
JOHN M. O E R E N A • R EZO NE
F R O M R -IA S I N O L E F A M I L Y
OW ELLINO DISTRICT TO O P O F ­
FIC E OISTRICT • PZ(F-l-d)-M Lot
22, less rlght-of way for SR 43*. Lake
Harriet Estates, Plat Book 12. pages
IS and IF, In Section IS21S21E,
Seminole County. (Further described
a t al tha northaatl corner ol Lake
Herr lei Drive and SP AM.) (DIST.
#3)
Further, a public haarlng w ill ba
held by tha SEM IN O LE COUNTY
PLA N N IN G AND ZONING COM
MISSION ON JU N E I. 1*B A T 2:00
P.M ., or a t toon tharaaftar a t
posslbla, In Room 200 o l tha Samlnolt
County C ourth ouse, San ford.
Florida, In order lo review, hear
comments and make recommends
tions to the Board ol County Com
mltslonert ol Semlnola County on tha
above application It).
Those In attendance w ill ba heard
and written comments may ba Iliad
with tha Land Management Meneg
ar. Hearings may be continued from
time to lime a t found necessary.
Further details available by calling
123 4330, E it . ISO.
Persons are advised that It they
Decide to appeal any decision made
j T these meetings, they w ill need a
record ot the proceedings, and for
such purpose, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim record ot the
proceedings Is made, which record
Includes the testimony and evidence
upon which tha appeal Is to ba made.
Emard ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
BY: Robert Slurm,
Chairman
Attest: ArthurH. Beckwith, Jr.
Publish Mey 2*. 11*2
DEH 72
NOTICE OF A PU BLIC H EAR IN O
TO CONSIOER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORD IN ANCE B Y THE CITY OF
SANFORD, FLO RID A.
Notice is hereby given lhal a
Pub(ic Hearing w ill be held et tha
Commission Room In the City Hall In
the City ol Senlord. Florida, at 2:00
o'clock P.M. on Juna 12. IM). to
consider tha adoption ol an ordi­
nance by tha Cit y o l Senlord,
Florida, as follows:
ORD IN ANCE NO. 1*41
AN ORD IN ANCE OF THE CITY
O F S A N F O R D , F L O R I D A , TO
A N N E X W ITH IN T H E C O R ­
PO R A TE A R E A OF THE CITY OF
SA N FO R D . F L O R ID A . UPON
ADOPTION OF SAID ORD IN ANCE,
A PORTION OF THAT CE RTAIN
P R O P E R T Y L Y I N G WEST OF AND
ABUTTING O RLAND O ORIVE AND
BET W E EN FLO RIDA STREET
A N D T H E C R O S S W A Y , SAID
P R O P E R T Y B EIN G SITU ATED IN
SEM IN O LE COUNTY. FLO RID A.
IN A C C O R D A N C E W IT H T H E
V O LU N TA R Y AN N EXATIO N
PROVISIONS OF SECTION 121 044.
F L O R ID A STATUTES: PROVID
ING FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y . CON
FLICTS, AND E F F E C T IV E DATE
W H ER EAS, lhara nas bean (lied
with the City Clerk ot ttw City ol
Santord, Florida, petitions contain
Ing the names ot the property owners
In the area described hereinafter
requesting annexation to the cor­
porate area Ot tha City of Sanford,
Florida, and requesting to ba In­
cluded therein; and
W H E R E A S , tha P r o p e r t y
A p p ra ise r o l Sem inole County.
Florida, having certified that thare
are two owners in the area lo ba
annexed, and that said property
owners have signed tha Pet! Mon lor
Annexation; and
W H E R E A S , It has been de
Ief mined that the property described
hereinafter Is reasonably compact
and contiguous to tha corporate
areas ol the City ol Santord. Florida,
and It has further been determined
that tha annexation ol said property
w ill not result In the creation of an
enclave; end
W HEREAS, the City ol Santord,
Florida. Is In a position lo provide
municipal services to the property
described herein, and the City
Commission ol tha City ol Santord.
Florida, deems It In the bast Interest
o l the City to accept said pell IIon and
to annax said property.
NO W, T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
E N A C T E D B Y THE P E O P L E OF
THE C IT Y OF S A N FO R D ,
FLORID A;
SECTION 1: That the property
described below situated In Seminole
County, Florida, ba and the same is
hereby annexed lo and made a part
o l tha City of Sanford. Florida,
pursuant to tha voluntary annaiatlon
provisions ol Section 121044, Florida
Statutes:
I IS leet of the E 179 leet o l Lot 4]
and a ll Lot 44, Not Fountain Lodge
Amended P la l D ruid Park, Plat
Book 2, Page S, Public Records ot
Semlnola County, Florida.
SECTION 2: Thai upon this ordt
nance becoming effective ttw pro
perty owners end any resident on the
property described herein shall t a
antlllad to a ll ttw rights aad P riv i­
leges and immunltiaa A are from
time to time wanted to residents and
property owners o l the C ity ol
Santord. Florida, and as are further
provided In Chapter 121, Florida
Statutes, and shall further ba sub|ect
to ItW responsibilities Ot residence or
ownership at m ay from lim a to lim e
t a determined by the governing
authority o l the City o l Santord.
Florida, and the provisions a l said
Chapter 121, Florida Statutes.
SECTION 1: It any section or
portion al a section at this ordinance
proves to ta Invalid, unlawful or
unconstitutional. II shall not ta held
to Invalidate o r Impair ttw validity,
tore* or effect of any section or part
ot this ordinance.
SECTION 4; Thai all ordinances or
p a rts a l o rdinances In c o n flict
herewith. ba and (he sa in t a r t
hereby repealed
SECTION S; Thai this ordinance
shall become effective Immediately
Its peeiape and adaption.
A copy shall t a available a l ttw
Office a l ttw City C lark lo r oil
persons desiring to examine ttw
A ll parties to Interest and t i l l ra n i
shall have an opportunity ta t a heard
tal u ie i h U p iM
■y frder al ttw City Commission at
ttw City al Santord, Ftortde.
M N.Tw nm .Jr.
City dark
PwMMi May l&gt;. It, M S Juna t.

logoi Holies
DIVISION cBIOOINO REQUIREMENTS
ADVERTISEMENT FOR SEALED
BIDS)
P R O JE C T T I T L I ( I ) ANO
LOCATIONISIt
LAKE HOW ELL HIOH SCHOOL
MEDIA CENTER RENOVATION
OWNER) T H E SCHOOL BO ARD O F
SEM IN O LE COUNTY, FLORIDA
AVAILABILITY OF F U N S AND
SPECIFICA TIO N S! D ocum ents
aval table at the tel towing:
DAIMWOOO D E R R Y 6 E R R Y
P A V E L C H A K , ARCHITECTS,
P.A.
210 S .H w y . 17*2, Sulto 200
C A S S E LB E R R Y . F L A . M202
T E L E P H O N E : 201034 2110
THE SCHOOL BOARO
OF SEM INO LE COUNTY
111) M E L L O N V IL L E A V E .
SANFORD, F LA. 33722
T E L E P H O N E : 103 312 1232
D EPO SIT FOR PLAN S ANO
SPECIFICATIONS: A refundable
deposit Is required Irom all Interest
ed parties to Include sub contractors
In the amount ot IX.OO/iel. Terms ol
ttw refund are outlined In the con
t r a c t d o c u m e n t s . L i m i t Is 5
sets/contrector.
S P E C IF IE D BONDS) A ll bidders
w ill be required lo provide o Bid
Bond In ttw amount o l S% ol the total
amount ol the bid by one ol I
following methods: Bid Bond from
Bonding Company, Cashiers Check,
Certified Check. The Bind Bond shall
be drawn In lavor ol ttw Owner, and
such Bid Bond shell guarantee that
the Bidder w ill not withdraw his bid
for e period o l XI calendar days after
the Opening o l the bids. A 100%
Performance end Payment Bond w ill
be required Irom the successful
Bidder.
P L A C E FOR OPENIN O OF BIOS:
S E M I N O L E CO U N TY SCHOOL
B O A R O O F F I C E ; 1211
M E L L O N V IL L E AVE.; SANFORD,
F LA . 32721.
D A T E F O R O P E N I N O BIDS:
June 13, IMJ
T IM E FOR OPENIN O BIDS: 2:00
P.M.
The Owner reserves the right to
waive minor Informalities In the
opening o l bids and re|ect all bids or
award Itw Contract to tha lowest
responsible bidder.
D A T ED THIS DAY: M ey 24. IttJ
OW NER: THE SCHOOL BOARO
OF SEM IN O LE CO U N TY.
FLO RID A
Publish Mey 24. X , 4 June*. IMJ
OEH-tJO
NOTICE OF
PU BLIC HEARIN O
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
M ISSIO N ER S OF SE M IN O LE
COUNTY w ill hold ■ public hearing
In Room 200 ol tha Seminole County
Courthouse, Santord. Florida, on
JU N E 21. 1191 al 7:00 P.M.. or as
soon thereafter as possible, to con­
sid e r e S P E C I F I C L A N D U S E
A M E N D M E N T le the Seminole
County Comprehensive Plan M d
REZONING o l the described pro­
perty.
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D I N A N C E 77-23 W H I C H
A M EN D S THE D E T A IL E D LANO
U SE E L E M E N T OF T H E
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY COM
PR E H E N S IV E PLA N F R O M 'L O T
I N T E N S I T Y C O M M E R C I A L TO
CO M M E RCI AL FO R THE
PU R PO SE OF REZONING FRO M
A I A G R ICU LT U R E TOC-1 R E T A IL
C O M M E R C IA L the following de­
scribed property.
The East is e l the Northeast U of
the Northeast '4 ol the northwest Ve
ol Section M I S TIE, less ttw E JO H.
end 'h e n o rth 23 It. la r road
rlg h l-o f-w e y , Sem inole County,
Florida. Four acres more or less.
(Further described as a l the SW
comer ot SR 434 and Palm Springs
Road) {DISTRICT 13)
A PPLIC A T IO N HAS B E E N
SU BM ITTED B Y FLO R ID A R ESI­
D EN T IA L COM M UNITIES. INC.
Furtlw r, tha PL A N N IN G A N O
ZO N IN G C O M M IS S IO N OP
SEM INO LE COUNTY w ill hold a
public hearing In Room JOB o l Itw
Semlnola County Courthouse. Sonlord, Florida, on JU N E I, IN3 AT
7:00 P.M., or a t scon there#her as
possible, to review, hear comments
end make recommendations to the
Board ol County Commissioners on
the above captioned ordinance end
retonlng.
Additional Information m ay be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 2734110,
Ext, 13C.
Persons unable to attend Itw
Peering who wlen lo comment on ttw
proposed actions mey submit written
statements to the Lend Management
Division prior to the scheduled public
hearing. Persons appearing et the
hearings may submit written state­
ments or be heard orally.
Persons are advised that. It they
decide to appeal any decision made
i t these meetings, they w ill need a
record el ttw proceedings, and. tor
such purpose, they mey need to
ensure that a verbatim record o l the
proceedings Is made, which record
Includes ttw testimony and evidence
upon which ttw appeal Is to be baaed
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By: Robert Sturm,
Chairman
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Publish M ay 39 A Juna JO. IWJ
DEJ-71__________
______
IN TN I CIBCUIT COURT
OP THE IITH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CASE NO. W-3423-CA44-L
IN RC: THE MARRIAGE OF
NANCY S. FOSTER,
Petmanor/Wile,
ELM ER M. FOSTER,
Reapondent/Huebend.
RAOUEL FOSTER,
Respondent.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TOtRAOUELFOSTER
Roxegt
Wlllemsdad. Curecou
Netherlands. Antilles
YOU A RE NOTIFIED thel 4
Petition tor Dissolution ol Marriage
has bean mad against yeu to Itw
above named Court
Interest which yeu may have to ttw
Mtowtogdescribed realgreaerty:
Lota 4 and A FORT MELLON,
Second Addition, according to ttw
piat thereat m recorded to Flat Beak
d. Page is , Public Records i f
Seminole Comity, Ftortde.
end yeu ere required to aorve a copy
to yeur answer or plspdtod to ttw
Petition on too Potlttonor'e attorney,
Wphen M Stone. Eegtorp. 393 Koto
Pine Street, Orlande, Ftortde M l ,
I on too Hnpw taM liiw taaR'a
_ m ay. A ta ri N. PHto, Require,
P.O. Bax tD t, Santord, Florid*
W77I, and Nto Mo original antawr ar
pleading to ttw aNko to too Ctart to
itw Circuit Court In M d tor Samtools
County. Florida, «n ar bototd Juna
slu m .
If you toll to do ea. Iudgment Bp
gglmdf w4U
U m m i Inal m
i lap
W *n OTP I O T O T
fO T O T
toe reilto amended to toePetHton.
WITNESS my hand and to il tote
Id to ta y o fM p p .tm .
(SEAL/
ARTHUR H .iIC K W IT R JB .
Clarfcto too OrcuH Court
Ip: Eva Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
PuMtto May H and June L f , to IK)

logoi Notice

IN R K t Estate to
JO S E PH KR A T ZM A R ,
D u c tm d
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
The administration to ttw tttato ot
JO S E P H K R A T Z M A R , d e n e s
F ile Number 93 242 CP, Is ponding In
the C ir c u it Court tor Somtnolo
County, Florida, Probate Division,
ttw address o l which Is Semin '
County Courthouse, Sanford, F L
12771. The names and addresses ol
ttw personal representative and ttw
personal representative's attorney
ere tot forth taker.
A ll Interested persons aro required
lo file with this court, WITHIN
T H R E E MONTHS OF THE FIRST
PU BLICATIO N OF THIS NOTICE:
(11 a ll claim s against ttw estate and
t i l arty objection by on Interested
person to whom this notice was
mailed that challenges ttw validity ol
ttw w ill, ttw qualifications o l r
personal representative, venue, or
lurlsdlctlon o l the court.
A L L CLA IM S ANO OBJECTIO NS
NOT SO F I L E D W ILL B E F O R EV
ER BARRED.
Publication o l this Notice hae
begun on M ay tt. IWJ.
Personal Ropreeantallva:
P H IL L IP H . LOGAN
POST O F F ICE BOX !IT»
SANFORD , F L 32771
Attorney tor
Personal Representative:
H erryG . Reid, III
SHINHOLSER, LOGAN,
M O N C R IEF ANO B AR K S
Attorneys al Lew
P.O. Boa 2229
Sonlord. Florida 32221
Telephone: (303)223 3440
Publish Mey 1», 24, ISC
DEH-122
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SE M IN O LE COUNTY, FLO RID A.
PR O B A T E DIVISION
File Number U-I22-CP
Dfvtsien Probate
I N R E i ESTA TE OF
V IR G IN IA M . FIS H ER .
Deceased
NOTICE O F ADM INISTRATION
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V I N G
CLAIM S OR D EM A N D S AGAINST
THE ABO VE E STA T E ANO A L L
O T H ER PERSONS IN T E R ES T E D
IN THE ESTATE:
YOU A R E H E R E B Y N O TIFIED
that lha administration o l ttw estoto
o l VIR G IN IA M . FISH ER, docoeied.
File Number 93-222XP, It pending In
the C irc u it Court lo r Semlnola
County, Florida, Probate DIHtion.
ttw address to which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, Santord, F L . Tha
personal representative to ttw estate
Is DOUGLAS STENSTROM. whose
oddrest It P.O. Boa 1339. Santord.
F L 32772-1330. The name and address
to ttw personal representative's at­
torney are set torth below.
A ll parsons having claim s or de­
mands against ttw estate aro re­
quired. WITHIN T H R E E MONTHS
FR O M THE D ATE O F THE FIRST
PU BLICATIO N OF THIS NOTICE,
to file with ttw clerk to Itw above
court a written statement to any
claim or demand they m ay have.
Each claim must ba In writing and
must Indicate ttw basis tor ttw claim.
to the creditor
amount claimed. II ttw claim le nto
yal due, ttw date when it w ill became
due shall ta elated. It ttw claim Is
contingent a r unliquidated, tha
nature to ttw uncertainty shell be
stated. II ttw claim Is secured, ttw
security shell t a described. Ttw
claim ant shall deliver sufficient
copks to ttw claim to ttw clerk to
enable Itw clerk to m all ana copy to
n c f i (M n orii i rtp rittfiiftiiv v .
A ll parsons Interested In ttw estate
le wham a copy to this Notice to
Administration has bean mailed are
re q u ire d . W IT H IN T H R E E
M ONTHS FR O M T H E O ATE O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS NOTICE, to file any obfecilons
they may have that chai tangs ttw
validity to ttw decadent's w ill, ttw
qualifications to ttw personal repre
tentative, or ttw venue or jurisdic­
tion of the court.
A L L CLAIM S, D EM AN D S. A N D
O BJECTIO NS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FO R EV ER BARREO.
D ale to ttw first publication to this
Notice to Administration: M ay 23.
ttn
Douglas Stonitrem
A s Personal Representative
to itw Estate to
V IR G IN IA M . FISH ER
A T T O R N EY FOR PE R SO N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
DOUGLAS STENSTROM , ESQ. to
STENSTROM . MCINTOSH, JU LIA N ,
C O L B E R T A W H IGH AM .P-A.
P.O. Box 13J0
Sanford. F L 32772 1330
Telephone: 303/322-2171
Publish M a y !», 94.1193
OEH-117
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THI1STM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AMO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO.M-SHICA49-F
A M E R IC A N SAVINGS AN O LOAN
ASSOCIATION O F FLO R ID A
a Florida corporation

Plenum.

M IC H A E L 0. ST R ICKLA N D
and OINA STR ICKLAN D ,
husband and telle.
NOTICE OF
, FORECLOSURE SALE
N O TICI IS H E R E S Y GIVEN
pursuant to a final Iudgment to
toretooture dated May SI. 1993 and
entered In Caw Na. B 23JICAW P to
ttw Circuit Court to ttw ISfh Judicial
Circuit In and tar Seminole County,
Flo rid # Wherein A M E R IC A N
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA­
TION OF FLO RIDA, e Florida
corporation, It P la in tiff, end
MICHAEL D. STRICKLAND and
OINA STRICKLAND, are Oaton
dents, l will tell to ttw highest and
bast biddar tor cash at ttw West
to ttw Sembwto County
SW Harth Park Avenue,
Santord. Samtoato County, Ftortde to
11:M o'clock AJkL an ttw iTtti day to
Juna. IBS. ttw fallowing-described
property et set torth to taw final
judgment to torn ttturt . to-wit:
L it IS , V I L L A S OF
CASSELBER RY, PHASE II. gcto the Plat thereto as
to Ptot beta IK Potto to,
B . and II, to Rw Public Records to
Sembwto CeinMy, Ftortde.
DATED this JJrddey to Mey. IMS.
(SEAL!
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.,
As Ctork to Rw Court
•y: Susan E . Tatar
Aa Deputy Ctork
Pstaita May Stand Juna M S B
0EH-M2

i,

P F |' *~i ita|N ttto W s*&gt;NS» * I

Semlnol*

Orlando • Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:30 A.M. - 5:10 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY »• Noon

RATES

Itinw ................... 54c r ling
] consecutive timet . S4c« lint
7consecutive timet 44c a line
10 consecutive times 41c a Him
t lM Minimum
3 Lings Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday -Noon Friday
Monday •5:30 P.M. Friday

21— Personals
L O N E LY ?
34Hr. Recorded Messagen 12212002*

23—Lost A Found
Lost In Country Club area Siamese
Cat mala, long hair, pink cellar.
Children fwarbrofcen 321-0*42.
L O S T M e n ' s Snaka R in g In
Baham a Je t's. Sunday nlghf
3/22. Reward. 401-343-0442.
R e w a r d - L o s t fe m a le E n g lis h
Bulldog- W hile with brindle
spots. Mondey. West of Senlord

25-Spedol Notices
New Office now opening.
V O RW ER K
1120 W. I ll St.

2 7 -Nursery A
Child Cere
Child Cere in my home.
Delly and weekly rates
_________ C ell 321-02tl.
Reasonable R e ie t lll. W ill
your Child In my heme, from
M F. * 00 3PM. 277 1427._______
W ill babysit children In my home
ages infant to 4yrs. Call before
7PM 322-293*.

7l-H$lpWant$d
Body Men minimum 3 years expe­
rie n c e . Im m e dia te openingDeLend Area. Day S04-73S-93t3.
nights 303-374-1777.____________
Book keeper/Secretory. Pert lime.
1 person olflco, oxperlonced,
referent as. Cell 22J-4S2S._______
Boys A G irls A gas 12-11 Earn extra
SttSSS this summer Call 27244H
ask lor Priscilla.______________
CABINETMAKERS. E X P E R
Lemlnelors. Assemblers.
Countertop. Hardware. I l f 3143.
CASH IERS A C L E R K S Full A pert
time openings, good pay scales,
no experience neccessary.
___________ 4204914___________

• CLERICAL*
Any medical experience e plus
Organlra and coordinate. Accu
rate typing wlnal Greet fringes)
AA A E M P LO Y M E N T
1*17 F R E N C H A V E .
323-117*
Companion lo cere for elderly lady.
Live In preferred, room A board,
salary. Ask for Tim *71-1*14
CO VER GIRL M O D EL TYPES
(Over II) No Experience Nates
tary F R E E TR A IN IN G • Cell
Diene Hansen a l 171*) 343 2000 or
Writ*: CO V ER GIRLS. N A K EO
CITY . Box 2000. ROSELAWN.
IN 44272 0301._________________
D A Y C A R E Immediate openings,
full A pert lim e available, good
storting pey.47* 40t4.

31— Private
Instructions

FA CTO R Y W O R K ER S Immediate
openlgi. high wages. Some will
train. Cell *2* 4W4.____________

t e e 0327 33124* • *
For Swimming information.
Je c k k Ceoio

..... FAST F o o d O P E R A T IO N .....
W ill train. Excellent salary end
benefits. For Inlormallion Cell
321 3444. between I I .

33— Real Estate
Courses
KEYES LICENSE EM M SCHOOL
Next l week evening classes tor
Reel Estate License w ill begin
Juna A IttJ. Fo r tuition re im ­
bursem ent ln fo rm e llio n c e ll
M lidredS. Wang 3212200

55— Business
Opportunities
For Sale or Loose. Restaurant fully
equipped. Seats 100. Prim e loca­
tion. In Sanford. 3223434.
^ ^ ^ m m e d to to O cc u je n g j^ ^ ^

57-Opportunities
Wanted
BUSINESS W AN TED B y prlvato
Party. Any sm all business con­
sidered. W ill pay up to 10 K
Down. Good terms, an balance.
Write Past Office Box l i t Sen
ford F la / 32223 -0112. A ll Inquires
w iiii

$3—Mortgages Bought
A Sold
We P A Y T r r t o T m T T d
m o rtgages. R a y Legg, L ie .
^ to rtje g e B 2 k e r2 S S 2 » f^ ^ _

71-Help Wanted
GAS A T TE N D A N T . Good salary,
h o s p lla liia lle n . I week paid
vacation ovary a months. For
information. C ell 133 3*43 be
tween 1 3 PM.________________
A ir. Cond. Installation Ouct and
Servlet technicians Sharp only.
j o u r n a l . S04 27S7JW.

• APPOINTMENT*
•SETTER*
Part or full llmo,
■vonlngs. Guaranteed salary.
W ill train.
AA A EM PLO YM EN T
t o ll F R E N C H A v t,
323-3173
APFT. SETTERS
Aggressive, good town# voice,
bubbly persona lily . Wa w ill train.
Salary plus'com m ission. Need
s e v e r a l I m m e d i a t e l y . C a ll
JoAnn. 322 7771.______________

•AUTO*
General light mechanics. Seme
body work. Drive wrecker. Top
local company.
A A A E M PLO YM EN T
1917 PR E N C M A V I .
323-3174
A U T O M E C H A N IC S F u ll time,
high wages, with o r without tools
O K . 431*14.

U fto Notice
NOTICI UNOIR
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Nto lea Is hereby given that the
u ndersig ned pursuant te Ihs
"Ftotlttous Name Statute". Chapter
B I B , Ftortde Statutes, will ragit tor
wtto toe Clerk to toe Qrcwil Court, In
•to tor Seminole County. Flerlda
OT» receipt to pnto to the publics
Iton to this ntolcn, toe Iktltloue
LA BODEGA
otr a A rBtaodl
*•
p l * fHw
toity Wiopping
Space HK to me City to
Forest CHy, Ftortde.
TOT the parties interested to i
kustotas enterprise ere as tottaut
/s/Hancy L-Can
. /s/RandtolT.Cta
Dgtod to
Cdtotty. F tarids. April I*. IBS.
PubHNi Mey S, I t W. is. ta l.
DIH-je

F i l e M ain tenan ce Ct ork with
pleasenl personality, desired tor
Seles Company. A ccuracy a
must. Typing halplul. Telephone
Linda. 272 2442 F o r appointm ent.
Full lim e Plum ber experienced
only, perferred licensed. Call

a m t ______________

General Office lorFucpItur* Store.
E xper fence prater red.
___________ 223 1322.___________
O IN ERALO FFICE
Bookkeeping, typing. Some cus­
tomer Service.
W O R K FIN D ER S
Indlvlduelited Terms
2433 French Avenue
(In Soblks Building)
___________ 321-3741___________

HELPWANTED
CO R R ESPO N D EN T Itv lag to M s
Winter Springs-Savth Sam Inale
are* to write a weakly ceivmn
tor The Herald tram your hem*
ataut people to yeur cammuaify.
Applicants most hove a typet a a gsed speller, end
eye tor news. Celt Darts Dietrich
ettor 3 PM . dolly. 332-3*11.
H O U S E K E E P E R tor Apartment
complex, must be dependable,
end herd w orking, apply In
persen.llo3P M .M F.
________ UOSW.IItttSI.________
Immediate openings for sewing
m a c h in e o p e r a t o rs ond In­
spectors. 331-2114 or Apply In
porion 230 Powor Court.
Ley Up man tor fiberglass
molds. E xper lenced only
___________ 123 1341.___________
Licensed Cosmetologist needed
Apply In person. IIJW. 27th Sir
___________ 2221*11.___________
M A N IN 00‘s
To holp clean upstairs perch.
___________ 2220414.___________
Management Training Rewarding
entry level position In consumer
(Inane*. W* e ra looking lor
career minded individuals wtto
are ambitious and tn|oy working
with poople. G F C oilers on ttw
|ob training, security, challenge
end good employe* benefits.
General Finance Carport Ion 247*
Orlando Drive Fairw ay Plata
Santord 32771. EO E/A A ._______
Need extra Income. Wo nood you.
Call tor complete detolls.
_________ 277 3143___________
N EED EXTR A INCOME*
WHY NOT SELL AVONI

_____ in-sw ans*._____
NEW HOME SALESMAN
Need Immadstoly In Deltona. Work
front M etal Home, directly tor
builder. Direct knowledge end
experience e l F H A financing
required. Liberal commissions
(draw posslbla). Phone *04 71*
C1M or 393-374MW ask tor M r. C.
O F F IC E H E L P Several positions,
lu ll A port lim a openings avail
able new. W ill M ly train. S3*
.
,__________________
OFFICE H ELP Full lime, many
nponlngs. good storting pay, Call
Immediately 42*40*4__________
Office Help- Immediate openings,
naaxparloncewlll train.
___________ 33* 4404___________
Older women ta live In. Room and
board free to exchange tor leak­
ing after * to S children five deys
• week. Weekend! tree. Lata
Mary area. 32TSS3I__________
Part Time. Woman and Man. Wark
ra m . Earn 123. to SW par
'iraikidmindlng on lima avail
abto.277 33B.
Part Time. Nlghf* and
Attendant. Alert. totolUgani indfvidua I needed te leek ettsr
OTBi
■— M—
P
I I V taosnont
O T 'O T R I W I O -T In111the
ITW* WOTniOT®

Ptau Mu*! ta neat to wgoer
ence, mature, hendebl*. end
ability. Phene
W M ^ B g g W B W lM lIO ta W if'- ■'
PERSONNEL UNLIMITCOTMaT
many |eta available,
tort temporary and full time.
CeJl today 322 3*4*

• RECEPTIONIST •
skills, i

rot

OEM-tao

^ Y R O T U ta P ^ E O T A R W W M llV

CLASSIFIED ADS

IN T H E CIRCU IT COURT FO R
SE M IN O LE COUNTY. FLO R ID A
F R O R A T I DIVISION
File Number (3-M3-CP
(UwlaloW
iN T iw n n n i i t

a.r N t a o

ba plROTd Hi 40

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1*17 FRENCH Avo.
WMITI

�71&gt;Help Wanted
R E T IR E D C A B IN E T M A K E R
To do sm all repairs on Antique

stool. mm«,___________
Roofing SMnglersby the
square. Deltona area
323 75*3.

^TELEPHONE*
★ SOLICITORS ★
Hourly Wage + Bonus
CALL 322-2*11
CIRCULATION DEPT
EVENING HERALD
Tractor Trailer Driver lor local
pick up work. Minimum ol 2 yrt.
experience with good driving
record. Some Dock work re­
quired. Call Sian Shaw 222 0251
lor appointment._____________
T R U C K D R IV ER S Local A long
haul positions. High wages. Call
today 421 sots.
____________
W AREHOUSE W OR K ER S Many
openings, lu ll lim e, good ilertlng
pay. Call Immediately 134 *014

WELOER..................... 1250Wk.
Local need Immediately.
W ORKFIN OERS
Indlvlduellfed Terms
2415 Soblkt Building) 1215741
C O N V E N IE N C E Store Cashiers
Good salary, hospltsllialion, I
week paid vacation every S
months.
For Into cell Manager
at:
Airport Blvd M 373 4251
Casselberrg 44 U t 1725
C tle ry A ve 44 321421)
Lk. M ary 44 )22 4145

73— Employment
Wanted
Camm ed Nurses Aide w ill cere for
loved one In your home I AM
5PM Call 323 044? alter 4PM

91— Apartments/
House to Share
COUNTRY Home to share, non
smokers, references, StSO plv i
Util. X 5 441 4014_______ ______
Wanted Senior lady oi
-.red
couple. To share house work in
exchange lor rent. 444 4413

93— Rooms for Rent
Room lor rent. Gentlemen pre
ferred. S35 week Couple 140
Telphone 332 SOM_____________
SANFORD, Reas weekly 1 Mon
thly rates U lll. Inc ett. 500 Oak
Adults 1141 7145

9 7 -Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Casselberry free utilities, 1 bdrm,
no lease, lake 17SWk. Fee
lev-On-Rentals, Inc, Realter
(E ffic ie n cy Aptse
We have everything. Just bring
llnenaanddlshei.
............... Attic Storage................
....... Single story living............. '
............ Energy Efficient.............
........... Lush landscaping.............
#Sentord Court*
___________ 321 2301.___________
Furnished epertments for Senior
Citizens. 311 Palmetto Ave. J.
Cowan No phone cells._________

Lovely 2 bdrm I bath with screen
porch Newly decorated C all
323 2241 or 321 4147____________
Sand It wood
2 Bdrm. 2 Bath AC , Pool. 1215
1 215 7744.

Large 1 Bdrm. Heat and air, 1400
Mo. References required,
M214W. AfterS. PM,
Winter Springs 4 rooms, lull hitchon, air, patio 1320 Foe 2)47200
lav-On-Rentals. Inc. Re* Iter
2 Bdrm. newly decorated. Range
end refrigerator, fenced yard,
garage, good location. U 1-4271.

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

N0 THANK*,
MAJOR! ONE
FATHER
IN THE PEANUT LEAAUE. YOU THE
ALREADY
BRADLEY/IT MU6T BE
S T E A L
,
QUITE PIFRCULT KN0WIN6 S I A N B Y \ SIGNALS m e
V/HOT 10 00 WITHOUT
T O U C H I N G IBY RUNNING
MY e w HIS PNGERS
-'•CTiAIWWE HIND QF
IG0MMENP

FOR iJP M H A W

VKUINTEER1N4 T D WMtAfiEV dOULPQlVE

EXPERIENCE WE,
$TiAR PLAVER6

A C R O S S H IG
.- T H R O A T ^

HAVE H AD!

PE

1 Bdrm. Specious home. Fenced In
yard. 127). Century 21. June
P o rilg Realty. 121147*.________
3 Bdrm. home, quia I In Country.
1150 Mo. Raterances required.
Cell Kestner. 122 5144,'

Tin Hill SL Company
Rufton

400M. o n . H w y *4. 2 + e e r e i ,
screenad building, septic system
A well. Room lor home on rear ol
p ro p e rty . E x c e lle n t term s
111,100.

OENEVAGARDENSAPTS
1.2 4 1 Bdrm. A plt. From 1245.
Fam ilies welcome.
Mon thru Sat. T A M to 5 P M
1505 W. 25th St.___________322 2QW
LUX U RY APARTMENTS
Fam ily &amp; Adults section. Poolside.
2 Bdrms. Master Cove Apis.
373 7t00
Open on weekends._______
M ariner’s Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm Irom 1345. 2 bdrm Irom
1310 Located 1712 |usl south ol
Airport Blvd. In Senlord. A ll
Adults 323 1470_______________
M e l l o n v l l l e T r a c e A p is . 440
Melionvllle Ave. Specious mod
ern 2 bdrm 1 bath apartments.
Carpeted, kitchen equipped,
C H I A, adults, no pets. 1325
___________ 321 3105___________
NEW I i 2 Bedrooms. Adjacent to
Lake M onroe. Health Club.
Racquetbal I and Mora I
Santord Landing S R. 44 311-4220.
Newly Remodeled, two bedroom,
w/w carpet, complete kitchen
Park Avenue Senlord 123 0)73
RIDGEWOOD ARM S APTS
2510 Ridgewood Ave. Ph.373 4420
1.7 A 3 Bdrms. from 12*0

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Allamonta Splngs 3 bdrm. kids, lull
kitchen, yard 1425 Fee 3317100
lev-On-Rentals. Inc. Realter
IN D ELTONA

2 Smaller homes, 2 BR 2 bath.
LR DR Kit
t lownhovta 2 BR I ' i belli.
1condo. 7 B R , 7 bath. Pool. Tennis.

DAYS5741434
Eves 7H4151

Delightful 1 bdrm 2 bath V illa 2 car
garega, ail appliances 1450 Mo.
322 0141.

BATEM AN R EA LTY
Lie. Raal Estate Broker
2440 Senlord Ave.
COUNTY Older 2 story with 4 lots
Z C 2 Assumable mortgage ask
Ing 171.500
Wes 111.000 Now 554,500 The
Nightmare 4/BR I fireplaces. 17
acres. City water Owner says
make otter.

321 0759 Eve 322-7643
BATEM AN R E AL TY
Lie. Reel Estate Broker
1440 Santord Ave
701 E 25th Z R Com. Let 121x10 27
Garege 24x22. Owner w ill help
finance 1*1.100

321*0759 Eve 322*7643
JUST M A R R I E D ? OR R ETIR
INGT
Bator* you buy to* this sparkling 2
bdrm 1 bath doll house. A ll kinds
ot groat extras. Call lor details
147.500

PRESTIGIOU S M A Y F A I R Below
morhel value this 1 bdrm 3 bath
home on booutltul comer lot hat
loads ol polontlel 144.500.

BY APPOINTMKNT
PH 121*66 t O

Salesman needed

141— Homes For Sale

AU FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORDREALTOR
3 Bdrm. New root newly painted,
screened porch, fenced rear yard
with fruit trees. 147,300
1 Bdrm. II* bath custom fireplace,
gla ss slid in g doors, lead to
p r iv a c y fenced y a rd . Good
assumable mortgage. 141,150.
2544S F R E N C H
122 0231
After Hours 371 1110 322 0771

B E A U T I F U L L Y D EC O R A T E D 1
bdrm I bath home on large
lOO’ x t S O ' o a k s h a d e d lo t
w/tlroplaco, formal dining rm.,
well to well carpel, new root and
a s s u m a b l e no q u a l i f y i n g
mortgage 1Only 1)7.500.
SWIM, P U T TEN N IS AN D R E ­
L A X at Sonora community end
Club house In this fantastic a
bdrm 2 bath split plan home with
commending b rick fireplace,
breeiy screened porch, sprinkler
s y s t e m , c i t r u s tre e s, easy
assumption! Only 175.000
O R E A M COME T RUEI Sunken
living rm "sets the mood" lor
this gorgeous ) bdrm 2 bath spill
plan home w/CHAA, dbl car
garage, custom decor and fenced
c o r n e r lo t In p r e s t i g i o u s
R o m b lo w o o d l F a n ta s tic
assumption! No qualifying and
priced to s t ill Only 151.000
ON E OF A KINDI Gorgeous oxecu
live 2 story 1 bdrm 2.5 bath home
In mint condition. Huge panelled
fam ily rm., beamed callings!
Detached cabann* w/liv. rm ,
bar and bath for antertalnlngt
Over si acre lush A spacious
landscaping I “ N t-q w a lilyln g "
117.500 down t l'7 Mo. Prlndpl* A
Interest t 2 \ A PR Only 1M.000

W E N E E D LISTINGS
C A L L U S NOW! I

323*5774
________ 3*04 HWY 17 47________
Hidden Lake
Hamas trem 147,H*
V illas from 141,14*
F H A /V A Mortgages
Rasidantlal Communities *1
Am erica
___________ 371-1*11___________
Hidden Lake Area. 4/2. pool, lam l
Iy room, lake view, I acre lot Bob
M. Ball Jr. PA. Raaltor. 113-4111.

HALCOLBERT REALTY
REALTOR
323 7137
M 7E.25th St.

Be Wise

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

FOR A L L YOUR
R E A L ESTATE N E E D S

FOR S A L E OR L EA S E
Professional O lllc * near Four
Townes Plata. 1,000 Sq. Ft In
nearly new complex. Priced *1
140.000. N*ncy C lair or Sandi
Sw ill Realtor Assoclat*. 3211144
or 441 1423.

ACREAOE.SANFORD
4 Plus acre parcel with nice trees, 5
minutes lo 1-4. Only 134,000.
5 Plus acre parcels, seme location
only 115 000. Pleas* Cell Joen
Hoenlng Realtor Assoc, at 111
3200orEveningsl71 tan.
541W. Lak* M ary Blvd.
Suit* B
Lak* M ary. Fla. 127*4
DRIFTWOOD V IL L A G E

KISH R E A L E S T A T E
2521 F R E N C H A V E .
R EA L T O R
1110*41
POOL P L A N N E D
1 B r , 2 bath spill plan lam. rm.,
formal LR A DR. screened polio
Large inside utility.1*2.000.
N I C E I N E A T I ALM O STN EW I
1BR. 1 bath, garage, plush carpel,
custom drapes, good closet
space. Low maintenance, aluml
num overhang. 1*1,100.

JUNE P0RZIG REALTY

ROBBIE'S
RIALTY

is . n

Electrical

5u*iu^N*tr!c*n*rvk^^^™
Fans, tlm en. security III**, eddi
lions, new services. Insured.
Master Electrician James Paul.
313 TSS*.
____

We handle The
Whole Ball ol Wax

Fence

I.L IM Const

F E N C E Installation. Chain link,
wood post A rail, A farm lance
License A I n w r e y g ^ t J L

Financing Available

Health A Beauty
Appliance Repair

CLARENCE'S
APPLIANCCSERVICE
t service e ll ma|oc brands. Rees,
atei. is yrt. exp 37)0131

Automotive
CO. Stereo Installation Repair
Auto Sound Center
7t0» French Avo.
322*1))

tkkteping
unting Service T a n 7
ull lim e bookkeeper?
u* Reasonable relet
or hand. P ick up A
It. aPM 31)3441

TOWER’SBEAUTYSALON
F O R M E R L Y H a rrie tt ! Beauty
NeohJHfEJrtltMnTa^^
Heme Improvement
A ^ M to m T T n p r e w n e n tT A u di
l i o n s , c o n v a r i l o n s . and
fireplace*. 33*4114.___________
Carpentry fey " B I L L "
W OOD A rte s ia n G e n e ra l
carpentry, screened room doors
etc B eet Rales 337 2*11
C O L LIE R 'S H O M E R E P A IR S
c a rp ra try . re a l tag. palntlag ,
r. 371-**22________

Lawn Service

FuTSITTMrTenlornMTr
load. Geneva 124 per toad (I yard
loads) cheeper rates tor larger
truck load* 141M N or 34140)1.

Masonry
A l^ r lc h ^ io c f c ^ ^ ™
D riv e w a y s , p a t lo i.

and

B E A L Concrete I man quality
operation. Patios. drlvaw ayt.
Days 131 7333 E v» l. I2 M M I. ■
S W IF T C O N C R E T E . Fooler* ,
driveways. pad*. Iloon. peel*.
Chau. Siena. Fraa Est/ m i l H .

Nursing Cart

21 yrs. experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Free Estimates on Rooting.
Re Roofing and Rapalrs.
Shingles, Built Up end Til*.

24 HOUR JR 322-9283

Interior sr E rla rle r Painllne. Fraa
estlmale*. Reeeeneti* 3*M30a

R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R ______________122 7 m
ST. JOHNS River frontage. i ' j
a c r e p a rc e ls, also in t e rio r
parcels with river access 111,100
Public water, 70 min. lo A ll*
m onti M all U S 20 yrs financing,
no qualifying. Broker
___________ *H 4133___________
Waysidt Drive A Orange Blvd. 1
acres toned A-1. Area ot nice
homes, convenient lo 14 and
M arkam Woods Road. Owner
Iinane ing 153.500. Broker
(41-5415.

On* ol Ihe Slates oldest end
largest dealers. Our own (Inane
Ing. M eny models to choose
Irom, Including 14x70 1 Bdrm. 7
ba lh , d r y w a ll, ga rd en tub.
113.115 Uncle Roy* Mobil* Home
Seles. Hwy 441. Leesburg
_________ 104 7170334__________
G R E G O R Y M O BILE HOMES INC.
A R E A S LA RG ES T E XCLUSIVE
SKY LINE D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
Palm Beech Villa
Greenlee!
Palm Springs
Palm Manor
Siesta Key
V A F HA financing. 305 323 5200.
1500 Down 1150. Mo. buys a new 14
wide Irom Uncle Roys Mobl&gt;*
Home Seles. Leesburg Hwy 441.
104 717 0124. V A . No money
down. Open Sundays.________

159— Real Estate
Wanted
N E E D to sell your house quickly!
We can oiler gueranteed set*
within X days. Cell 331 l i l t .

I l l —Appliances
/ Furniture
Cash for good used furnltura.
L arry's New A Used Furniture
M ari. 215 Senlord Ave. 1214111
COLOR TELEVISION
Zenith 25" color TV In walnut
consol*. Original price over 1750
Balance due SIM cash or pay
menls t i l month. NO M O N EY
DOWN. Still In warranty. Call
M l 5114 day or nil*. Free home
trail, no obligation
Contemporary oak 7 draw dresser
end student desk 1171 lor both
371 4434____________________
Kenmor* parts, service,
used w eshtri. 1210417
M O O NEY APPL IA N CES
W ILSO N M AIER FU R N IT U R E
311-111E. FIRST ST.
3315*73

113—‘Television/
Radio/Stereo
Coed Used TV's IIS A up
M IL L E R S
M llO rlx n d o OPh 322 0151

117— Sporting Goods
Indoor Gun Range Tues Set. 101
Sunday 14 Shoolslreight Apopka

Plata I Ml 0*47

Carpet/Flear Coverings

l7 v T l^3 M !kS airr5dI^
Wo buy d lra c t. F o r personal
tarvlc* H I 1444 IdHr.Vns phone.

Heme Repair*

Auction Every Sal. nlghl Florid/
Trader Auction, Longwood 331
l l 11, See our big *d in Sal, paper
FO R E S TA T E . Com m ercial or
Residential Auctions A Apprais­
als Call Dell'* Auction 3115470

231-Cars

MOVING SALE I Sal 71th 1 5
3300 S Park Ave o il Airport Blvd
Some lurnilure, Mlsc. Cesh only
Moving Soma lurnilure. household
Hems. Sal A Sun. 104 Located
o il *27 *1 the end' ol Garden
Drive. Senlord 373 *0H________
M ov ing Sal* O res tert, chairs,
b a b y / to d d le r d o lh e s /s h o c s .
motorcycle wind screen, books,
dbl bed. loti more. F ri A Sal. 15
1107M«llonvHle Ay*__________
Saturday only 1 5 SectpSertal
desk. 5&gt;4 melgl^SM* cabinets
assorted oitiefequipm ent. bowl
Ing ball, boys bicycle. Atari, end
video games, mlsc
household
Hems. II* E. Jlnklns Circle
Sts. Peter A Paul Orthodox Parish
located at III! Magnolia Ave.
Santord w ill be having a yard
sal* on Salurdey May 71 from
I 00AM until 5 00PM Many
mlsc. and clothing Items will be
available. A ll proceeds wilt to the
parlth building tund__________

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FIN A N CE
No Credit Check Easy Terms
NATIONAL AU TO SALES
11»$ Senlord Ave
271 4075
X 5 IS . Orlando Or.
221(311

DAY TO NA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 12. I mil* west of Speedway,
Daytona Beach w ill hold e public
AUTO AUCTION every Monday
i Wednesday *1 7:Xp m. It s the
only on* in Florida. You sal the
reserved price. C e ll 104 715 1311
lor further details_____________
Debary Auto A M a rin * Sales
across the river lop ol hill 174
hay 17 T2 Debary 441 *541_______
Two Cars. Plymouth Volar* wagon
77, very good shape, no rusl. 27
m iles per gallon , a ir, new
radiels. cassette Ford Thun
derbird. 71. air, laather, new
redials, like new 215131*.
71 Thunderblrd. Loaded, wire
wheels, new tires, clean. 3314100
or 434*405___________________
74 AM C Gremlin. AT. A M / F M
radio, a new tires, new valve job.
runs good. M l 1754____________

Super Garage Sale Anltques. pot
tery, furniture A junque 104 E
2nd Sir. Sat.11114 No early sales
Yard Sale Sunland Estates to*
Lak* Dot Dr., Sanford Saturday.
M ay 21 l : X lo 5:00 old books,
records, household Items, and
mlsc. Something tor ever yon*
Yard Sat* Saturday and Sunday
Miscellaneous Hams 117 Laurti
Drive 1311211.

77 Dodga Custom* M a x i van
loaded, runs perfect M i l l llrm
___________ 371344*
71 Sunblrd Super Coup* . 4 SP„
AC . PS .AM FM . lap*, new ra
dials *7500.172 71/a.
71 Malibu 4 door, air, extra clean,
whit* w all tires, wire wheels,
radio and healer, t i l l down with
credil. 134-1100134 4*05

219—Wanted to Buy
Need f x t r a Cash?
KOKOMO Tool Co . al 111 W F irsl
St., Santord. Is now buying glass,
newspaper, bimetal steel and
aluminum cans along with all'
o th e r k in d s ot nen le rr o u s
metals. Why not turn this idle
clutter into extra dollars? We ell
benefit from recycling.
For details call; 373 1100
Wanted to buy from private party.
14l o l l It. Campar Trailer Phone
3 1 1 1 7 1 * _____________
WE B U Y ANTIQUES
FU R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C E S
171 7340

235— Trucks /
Buses /Vans
1»74 C H E V R O L E T Luv with Cap
11,000
Call 371 711*
1471 Silverado 4x4 new tires, end
mags, new carpet and stats, lull
power. AC and more 15300 or
best oiler, t la i m i

239-Motorcydes/Bikes
Yamaha Ot Seminal*
XI Hwy 17*7
Longwood l l a lao i
Clearance on A L L bikes
"Venture 4 Venture Royal"
Instock
A ll IN7 Models a l dealer Invoice
M J1 0 J1500 Total
QT50K1500 Total
SR250H I t M r Tax
__ Pert* Sevrlc* Accessories

221— Good Things
to Eat
B E T T E R H E A L T H WITH DIS
T IL LE D WATER! Mak* your
own t00 \ pure water with *
home water distiller lor only
pennies per gallon For Inlorma
lio n C a l l or w lrt e C a r l D
minima* 534 Orange Dr Apt 77
Altamonte Spr FI 31701*34 4477
U PICK B L A C K E Y E D PE AS
BRING CONTAINER
HWY 44 I M il* West Senlord

223—Miscellaneous
Brown laalhar couch mad* by
Sears sjo or oiler. 2 twin beds to&gt;
135 Cell 173 J 134
Complete Beeuly Shop Equipment
371 4M1
Call Alter 7 PM
For Set* Reatteuranl Equipment
on* G E electric tryer with stand.
40 Mats plymold booth, steam
tablet, new gas trytr.
Call 331 55101 5________________
GAZEBOS
10 Fool new a sided Redwood
Geltbos for i*l* Osteen Got!
Club 323 1315.________________
Kenmor* heavy duly washar Used
4 month*. 5350 Older Model
Retrlgidair* refrigerator 175.
Call X I 45*5

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
C O LEM A N C A M PIN G T R A IL E R S
R V SA LES Hwy 44
New Smyrna Beach &gt;04 477 1575
E C O N O M Y II ft Shasta M otor
Home Excellent condition. For
details M l 4711.
II Ft Path Finder Sell
contained Can be seen al
504 W IthSIr Senlord

243—Junk Cars
B U Y JU N K C A R S A T R U C K S
From 1)0 to I X or more. •
Cell 172 1*24 123 4117
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A Used
cars, trucks A heavy equipment.
372 5WO
WE P A Y TOP D O LLA R FOR
JU N K C A R S A N D T R U C K S
C B S A U T O P A R T S 213 4505

QUALITY OM B C A M

322-9117

LOOK OVER THIS EXTRA FINE SELECTION.

C A O L E A K R E P A IR . Repairs all
types el root leaks. Replaces all
rotten wood. 20 yrs. experience
AM work guaranteed lor I year,
3311017._____________________
Does Your Old Or New Root Leak?
It II does, call David La*.
___________ 333 *411.___________
Morrison R o ilin g Co.
S p a c la lliln g In sh ln g ta s and
build up. Law, Low Rales. 14 hr.
service. m t V t .______________
Roof Maintenance
Rapalr w r k N a * work
Troy or Georg* for Free Est
R u su a a a o

STENSTR0M
REALTY &amp; REALTORS
SkiM't b in Lufcr
W E LIST A ND S E LL
M O R E HOMES THAN
AN Y O N E IN NORTH
SEM IN O LEC O U N T Y

im m e r iR R J n
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i m T trv u ccuca
-------------Meek * R H 7 .......................................' I V f l
im m e u a n s M

im n m i c la im

I M2 FMB LRRK'T 4*4
Mmk • R I M ...........

im

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SZ-ISS.............. * lt t f
£ 3 3 " ? ............. •»ft»
S S E £ T............ %«t*
IM

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1 H

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......... ................ • • !• »

Mia*W

'M

1 I M

...... ...... * m i
E X P E R T d re ssm a kin g . a lta r'
alien*. Asian Cleaner*. M t f Hwy.
17-f2. Lake M ery Rlvd.

I M

I

I M

I

.............. * 8 4 * 1

•Iff*
H M M U f llS t lV .

I M

I

75yr* *14

• fY fl

?15IinR5*iTT5*ITSnid!nP
ing. patio*. A general carpentry
II Y rs.E ap. Reas 333 *713.

Maintenance af at, typ**
Carpentry, painting, phanMng
___
A electric 373 4031 ______
No lab toe sm all . Hem* repairs and
remodeling. IS &gt;P#f* experi­
ence 33314*1.
PORCHES, badiraam Hear*, ratter
wend replacement, a ll smaR |eb*
welcome 311 M i l

Dog Obedience New classes begin
Saturday M ay 71 Senlord Osteen
area Cell 323 2220 er 323 *3*1.
Free lo good home Sweet, female
dog. Mixed breeed Exc. watch
dog. 131 3143(11. 5:X

M H lk Y f P Y o f A

Carpentry
C A R P E N T E R ro p a ln and
additions. K y a a ra t i p
_________ C a ll W - t l l ) _________
Custom Carved Wood Signs Farm
and Ranch Sign* lid rto a rd t lor
I r t ic k t G e n e r a l C u sto m
Woodwork. 1411021.141 T ill

199—Pots 6 Supplies

JAMESANKRSON
6.F. BOHANNON

3UR R ATES A R E LOW ER
Lakey law Nursing Canter
f i t E. Second SI., Sentord
n tn 7

COMP in t CONSTRUCTION
No |ob to small. M lnar A major
repair*. Llcsnaad A banded.
___________ 3M-412I___________
R O O M a d d itio n * , ra m e d e lin g
drywall hung calling* sprayed,
tireplace*. reeling.

REALTOR, MLS
t i ll S. Preach
Suite 4
Senfgrd. Pla.

Roofing

l&amp;B ROOFING

CALL BART

M LS

322*1671

jerioj»Mouc^72^l|JJ7l^31l^

Louwrey organ with Leslie speaker
MOO. Antique dining room tult
cl re* iM t sideboard, china cabi­
net. table A a chair*-best otter,
typewriter!. 322 4015
M E N S DRESS SHOES 11.11 Pr.
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
110 Sentord Ave.
3771711
M e ta l d e fecto r.G a rre tt &gt; D S 3
VLF/TR
d iscrim in ato r with
ground cancelling. Lists lo r Seal.
I month old. Best offer over 1325.
Call 1231105 alter 4 pm. 3224431
etk ter Bud. M utt tell.
Pinball machine. Excel lent condi­
tion. S12S. Call 323 314]. Attar
5 X P M ___________________
Solid Oak table end 4 ch ain , and e
buffet. Over 35 y n . old. MOO.
3711171_____________________
U t ility Iretlo r, equipped *350.
Craftsm an* edgtr, new SllO.
Zenith Black and while consol*
TV S?5, MS-574 7330.___________
W* buy lurnilure , antiques or
except consignments for auction
Fie Trader Auction. 3311111.
Wheelchair. Like new. Reasonable.
A lto antiques.
_________ Call 3214*40._________
21 FI. Cabin Crultar, Volvo engine.
170 Hp..wlth trailer. Must be teen
to appreciate. M .4X. 372 1It*

217— Garage Sales

DRIVE A LITTLE. SAVE A LOT.

323-3200

REALTOR
W lS French Ave

A J LAND SCAPIN G.
Compitt* Lawn Maintenance
___________ 321-42*1___________
LAND SCAPIN G?
Shrub*, g a n tra l orn am an lals,
shad* trees. Top quality plants
Free del. 4M H71. Eves. Wknd*.

E X C E L L E N T CLOSE IN
LOCATION
70x120 R l In country, trees. Reedy
lo build. 10.700

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

3 Br, I bath. Big eat in kitchen,
sunken LR w/brick fireplace,
double insulated windows 4 ton
heal A air s y s t e m ,
•la c trlc /p lu m b ln g near ntw.
Nice home on large lot 141,100

CONSULT OUR

parmaidservIce^ ™

F I L L O I R T A T O P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAND
Clerk A Hlrt373 ?5*0,373 7*73

J A C K ’S BOAT REPAIRS.
For all your Boating needs
504E. Lemon SI Senlord
1X5 221 5174 Days 122 5415 Nlghl.

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

CeKKqn

COUNTRY

322-4111

Have you had your home cleaned
l a t e l y ? C l e a n i n g w it h the

223-Miscellaneous

215— Boats/Accessories

141— Homes For Sale

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

Cleaning Service

193— Lawn A Gordon

HATS THE RUN S I6 N R JR MANAGERS &amp;

Long wood 2 bdrm lull kltehan, air.
no laata 1710 Fte 111 7200
SevOn-Rentals, Inc. Realtor

121— Condominium
Rentals

Thursday. May » , tftS-SB

213-Auctions

_______ „ m it v iN iiT M o v _________________________ O ’L d

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

TO G E T A W A Y FRO M T H E CITY
this 3 story 4 bdrm I bath home Is
really secluded near Osteen on
oppro xlm ototy I ocro-noods
work. Lot us tell you oboul It.
135.000.

S

3227029

321-5005

Avallabla now elegant A specious
d up lexes w it h la rg e s e re in
p o r c h e s , s t o r a g e ro o m s A
carports. Fully equipped. 1140 to
WW Cell lor details. Century 31
June Porilg Realty 122-1471.
Lake M ery l bdrm, kid*, carpet, no
least 1215. Foe 1)17200
Sav-On-Rantals, Inc. Rooltor
2 Bdrm. t Beth duplex. Cent. HA.
corpotod, carport, ell appliances.
W a sh e r/ d ry e r hook up. 1150
Month. 144 5111.______________
2 Bdrm. Its bath. Sanford. Lake
M ery area. Includes e lr condi­
tion, alt appliances, washer,
dryer hook up. W50. Mo. Cell
430 7411 Alt. 5.PM

By Owner

RgiRM M iflf SpciHist

J bdrm dollhouse with affordable
m o n th ly p e y m e n li. C a ll
Owner-Broker 131-1*11.________
You wen'I believe this, but It* true.
1/2 with screened pad, brick
tireplace, new carpet end appli­
ances, walk te Lak* Menra*.
Reduced M4.IM.

Apartment downstairs I bedroom.
WOO mo. plus sec.dep. No pels.
Cell 322 0*41__________________

S u p w Residenttol A re a N ear
M o y fa k C .C . W alk To M y B w M a
Bem . 414/21. fk e p to c e A ta rn ,
w le t e e n e d F o o l A i p a
to ta l Heating. Fam ily Room,
to n d s c o p e d , tto ra g * A i m •
Poeaibl* Ow ner F in a n cin g .
Oood
Opportunity

ALL TYPE!CARPEN TRY
Custom Built additions. Patios,
serton rooms, carport Door
locks, paneling, shingles, ra
rooting For fast servlet, call
323 4117.3411371.___________
BATHS, kllchons, rooting, block,
concrete, windows, add a room.
Free estimates 333 H43________

UNDERSt,m

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

NEW OFFERING

Additions*
Remodeling

SANFO RD R E A L T Y
REALTOR
32)1314
Art. Hrt. 2224154,221 4315

105— Duplex*
Triplex / Rent

BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E. Airport Blvd. Ph. 333 4410.
IA2 Bdrms , from 1240 Mo. 5 %
discount lor Senior Cllliens.
Cass elberry I bdrm com plete
kitchen, patio 1230 Fee 331 7300.
Sav-OnRowlets. Inc. Realtor

gvtRlne Herald, Sanford, FI.
141-Homee For Sale

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

7 Large Lekelront home 3 BR 7
bath LR/DR/KIt Extras

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

103-Houses
Unfurnished/Rent

• •«••••«*• *_f * g #•
’

N « a .M 7 .m

CALL ANY TIM E
15441. Part

322-2420

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4B-Evtwlt&gt;fl Herald, Sanford, FI.

&gt; A DOOR SHUT... *
THERE'S A SURGLAR
^-1 DOWNSTAIRS

NOTHING'S OON6
A LL OUR STUFF
15 RIOHT
WHERE IT J V M o
WAS h - S

Thursday, May 21, 1WJ

THAT MAKES
ME FURIOUS/

ACROSS

11HE DIDN'T EVEN
THINK OUR STUFF
WAS OOOO ENOUGH

WHATlS t h a t
B EETLE?
I C AN 'T
UNPERSTANlP
s
VOU

IS A IP
I HAVE (
TO H AN G
U P NOW ,
BUNNV

SARG E
WANTS TO
U SETHE

PHONE

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

HOWT0U6HIN01 SOUARE TAKIM6 THOSE
—
r

J

AWMOTHER

1 6ET T

ALL MV 4

LDEPONE? m m

Fibuloui bird
N iw tl
O n t'i M il
Pocketbook
Sign of
disapproval

DEAR DR. LAMB Could you explain a little
b it a b o u t c a lo r ie s ?
Everyone talks about calo­
ries but how does your
body use them? I know
y ou u se c a lo r ie s for
exercise and work but
people who do not do very
34 Deprived of
much still use calories.
be used as heat, for the
36 Former
People use calories when transportation problem or
nuclear
they are sleeping. For to help you Jog, swim or
agency (abbr.)
38 Depression Ini­ what? Why do you equate
c h ase y o u r boyfriend
fat with calories? I see you around the block.
tials
mention body fat as stored
38 Head
To have the proper rest
41 Ocean
calories. I thought calories for living your body must
42 Unsightly
were heat energy.
have energy sources. You
43 Shouted down
DE AR R E A D E R can't race your engine on
genus
45 Long time
Energy Is measured In an empty tank. I am sen­
35 Clip
47 Uncovered
units. The calorie is a unit ding you The Health Let­
36 Spanish fleet
48 Mala singer
37*Yearned (si.)
of energy. The calorie we ter 5-2. Understanding
50 Fodder
40 Fish limb
52 Greek lener
use In a biological sense Is Your Energy System, for
41 Destroyer's
53 Before (poet) a kilocalorie and Is the
more Information. Others
targets
64 Traitor (si.)
amount of heat energy who want this Issue c a n .
required to raise the tem­ send 75 cents with a long,
t 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 B
perature of one liter of stam ped, self-addressed
water one degree centi­ envelope for It to me, In
to
It
12
13
grade.
care of this newspaper,
That unit of energy can P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
14
16
16
17
be changed to chemical Station. New York. NY
e n e r g y , m e c h a n ic a l 10019.
18
20
energy, electric energy or
"
DEAR DR. LAMB - It
22 23
other forms. But It Is not
|25
has been brought to my
created or destroyed.
i
26
Part of the energy In attention by friends that
28
your food Is liberated as the whites of my eyes are
"
2B
30
heat. In fact the chemical often quite yellowish or
32 33 34
31
actions going on In your Jaundiced. I am a male,
35
36
body generate heat, simi­ age 39, apparently In
lar to an engine using excellent health. I’m very
37
36 3B
40
energy (gasoline Instead of active physically and my
food) and In the process diet Is normal and varied.
4t 42 43
44
45
liberating heat. Just as the Can you offer any clue to
J
engine needs to cool, so the cause of this condition
46
and possible treatment?
46
must your body.
DEAR READER - If the
A lot of the energy your
4B
60
51 62
53 54
observation
Is correct. It
body uses comes from the
cost of transportation. must mean that you do
55
56
57
Chemicals don't Just dif­ have mild Jaundice. That
fuse into the cells. Instead, can occur from several
58
SB
60
the various single sugars different conditions that
are hauled through the you might not notice and
Intestinal wall Into the may not be too serious.
Some minor liver dis­
bloodstream. Glucose Is
hauled Into cells. The functions can cause mild
enormous hauling process elevations of the blood
takes energy and as long pigments. The doctor can
as your body Is alive the find this easily by testing a
tra n sp o rta tio n process blood sample for these
pigments.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. continues.
You could have some
When
a
chemical
com­
MAY 2 7 .1 9 8 3
22) Avoid deficit spending
The times ahead look today. Unless you have the pound Is formed, different Increased destruction of
very promising for you. funds In hand It may chemical elem ents are red blood cells, enough to
provided you establish def­ prove unwise to make bonded to g eth er. The cause mild Jaundice but
inite objectives. Going oil large purchases, hoping bonding takes energy. As not enough to alfect your
on tangents could deprive you'll be able to cover hydrogen and carbon are sense of well-being.
See your doctor and let
combined to form fat.
you of a victor)’.
them later.
him confirm the observa­
energy
is
bonded.
Later
as
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
GEMINI (May 21-June
the fatty acids are broken tion and when the condi­
20) There's a possibility 2 3 -D ec. 21) A c lo se down
chem ically, that tion occurs, let him have
today that you might be associate could be difficult energy Is
released and can some blood tests done.
o v erly In flu en c e d by to gel along with today.
someone who does not Excuse yourself from his
have your best Interests at or her presence when you
heart. Think for yourself. see the storm signals.
Gemini predictions for the
CAPRICORN (D ec.
year ahead arc now ready. 22-Jart. 19) Play things
South won the spade
Romance, career, luck, down the middle in career
lead
and promptly led his
earnings, travel and much matters today. Problems
10 of diam onds. West
more are discussed. Send could result from behavior
followed with the deuce,
81 to Astro-Graph, Box that Is either too negative
dummy
with the four and
489. Radio City Station, or u n re a listic a lly o p ­
East
took
his queen.
N'.Y. 10019. Be sure to timistic. .
East
returned
a spade,
state your zodiac sign.
and West let South hold
AQUARIUS
(Jan.
20Send an additional 82 for
the trick. South led his
the NEW A stro-Graph Fcb. 19) Guard against
Jack of diamonds, let It run
ovcrlndulgcncc
loday.
If
Matchmaker wheel and
for a finesse, entered
booklet. Reveals romantic you've been w atching
dummy with the ace of
your
w
aistline,
recall:
combinations and com­
clubs, played the diamond
Obesity
Is
the
fine
we
pay
VAK7J
patibilities for all signs.
ace
and made four-odd
for exceeding the feed
8 J 10
CANCER Keep nothing limit.
when West's king
♦ K7 5 4
under(he rug.
dropped.
Vulnerable: Both
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Inspired defense would
Dealer South
Social contacts who pro 20) Your Image could suf­
have held South to Just
West
North Exit
mlsc to do big things for fer today If you don't
eight tricks. West would
you today could be belter handle yourself well In
have to cover that 10 of
talkers than deliverers. competitive situations. If
diamonds with his king.
Placing your hopes on you win. be humble. If you
South could do no better
them may be disappoint­ lose, do so with grace.
than to play dummy's ace
ing.
and lead a second
ARIES (March 21-April
diamond.
Opening lead: +4
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 19) Unless you have the
Then It would be up to
22) It's Important that you poker face to carry It off.
East to put the last nail In
and your mate atm for the don't try to bluff your way
South's coffin. He would
same objectives today. If through sticky situations
have to play low.
not. you could be In for a loday. Others will be able
South would score his
frustrating tug-and-pull to read you.
10. but there would be no
session.
TAURUS (April 20-May
way to set up any more
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-Oct. 20) Skillful maneuvering
diamond winners. South
23) Ideas and concepts will be required today to
would play along, but the
must be kept In proper come out In the plus
4-1 club break would hold
perspective today, or they column in your business
him to two club tricks, and
could become distorted or dealings. Don't let your
there was no real play for
blown out of proportion guard down for even a
more than two tricks in
second
either major suit.
the Islands
81 Larger
68 Period of time
86 Jesus
monogram
67 Biblical
character
68 Coloring
BB Negatives
13 Piece of
80 Allow
money
18 Insect
17 Powerful
explosive
1 Barrel (abbr.)
(abbr.)
2 Sama(prtfii)
20 Trojan
3 Maintain
mountain
ona'a dignity
22 Meadows
(2 w ds)
23 Hanker
4 Nawbom
24 Pollen bearer
infant
25 Short article
5 Unfortunate
27 Certain
6 Erst
28 Ointment
7 Vassal
8 Belonging to 30 Beams
32 Jonquil
the thing
B Abrasions
33 Redact

L■

■

■

YEAH, I GUESS THAT'S
THE PRICE OF
.
S PROGRESS'
£T_

NOWUAYS, EVERY TIME
YOU TURN AROUNP THERE'S
POLLUTION'

THE WAY THINGS
ARE GOING..

■

■

J ■■
■1

ERE-v

.WE'LL BE GOMG tHStPC
FOR A BREATH OF
FRESH AIR.'
----- ^

Calories: Everything
You Wanted To Know

s

■

FLOWERS

ITS HER
61RTHCAV,

1 Encore
4 Hugo
7 Bo* for c o il
10 Scouting or*
ganltstion
'
(abbr.)
11 Southam
itats (abbr.)
12 Concerning
the aar
14 Amiable
16 Male garment
18 Compass
point
IB Lighted
21 Relative*
22 Holst
24 Invitation
28 Doesn't exist
(corn)
26 Arrival-time
guess (abbr.)
27 Angle ratio
2B Increase
31 Mosquito

44
48
46
47
48

■

J m
■

HOROSCOPE

EEK A M EEK
I COULDN’T HAVE
SAID IT B E T T E R

VUDMBfU!

MV5EU=; MAM-

«rw *

4

» *%» ^ W

ad vice/ MsuVe
dog of tne wor

:he ice witnacute
ittle schnaurer I
met recently? y

, we have l n fl
v common is fleas.

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoff#I A Hfimdahl

BETTER just stick t d

CWSN W/MyvHMUS'N

fty ip A P

In v ite her
o ve r to see
my ite n in tfs?

AFiysyvt*nHR,D0C.

p l a n t will

SOON PUT AN END x&gt; HIM.

THE MOON
REAUNP

IF THIS E X C I S E
XH O W
i f TY P IC A L
T V IS TU PN IN 6 INTO

u la d t i

you of.

Me Or BREAKFAST

4A P /
BR EAKFAST
&gt; / C O M E S W N A fJ.

g a r fie lp ?

A V A S T WAIST L* N P .
CaMuMAM

m tu i

v f n iw n

_______ bv Jim Davit
•NT ) THEN, A F T E R

A.JV : \r. -j
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ib id f ]

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ANNIE
by T. K. Ry#n

r 0U% H A N Sl W U C E 15

VERYUPSETBECAUSE HE
jn e rrE P O N A n m e i ,

CHEER UtJPRUCEYi ITGOOLPA HEN
WORSE:..A FK», A WWY'RfWT,A
*0NPPRIF1HE»*$

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~ M P P V 'w if HE WERE BOM1
T W O L 'A M W O N E P M N E
AM1 ME KNOWS M M T IT t i t

ALL U E m T P O tS &amp; T N O I
THERE. AX KMIT RW HIM/ ■ ■

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SUNDAY EDITION
75th Year. No. 247-Sunday, June 5. 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H erald-(U SPS 4Bl-280)-Prlce 35 Cents

Police Lay Siege To Inn; No Gunman Found

FBI Manhunt Now Nationwide

SWAT members carefully check out each room of
the Deltona Inn looking for the suspects

By Diane Petryk
Herald Staff Writer,1
Scores of FBI ngcnls and other law
enforcement officers surrounded and
sealed-off the Deltona Inn Friday after­
noon after reports that a man there
resembled fugitive Clarence Eugene
Robinson, believed to be the man who
shot and critically wounded, two FBI
agents Friday morning in Orange City. A
four-hour, room-by-room search of the
motel proved fruitless, however.
FBI spokesman Doug Jones said Sat­
urday morning the search Is nationwide
now but could not confirm reports
Robinson has become the FBI's most
wanted criminal.
Robinson is being sought on murder,
armed robbery’, drug and bond Jumping
chargcs.&gt;
The search o f the Deltona Inn, ofT
Interstate 4 at the Enterprise exit four
miles north of Sanford, was sparked
when two motel maids said they saw a
man fitting the description of Robinson.

Ultimately about 75 motel guests were
evacuated from their rooms.
The two wounded agents remained In
serious but stable condition Saturday In
the Intensive care unit of West Volusia
Memorial Hospital In DcLand after un­
dergoing surgery. Jones said.
The agents. Thomas J. Sobolewski of
the Jacksonville FBI ofllce. whose 40th
birthday was Snlurday, and Dennis
Wlcklctn. 42. o f the Ocala office, were
reportedly Investigating an Ocala bank
robbery when, while walking toward
Kitchens' Restaurant at the corner of
U.S. Highway 17-92 and Birch Avenue.
Orange City. Sobolewski spotted a man
he believed to be Robinson.
A Seminole County law enforcement
official said Sobolewski knew Robinson
because he had once testified In court
against him. Jones did not comment on
that, but emphasized the agents were
not In the Orange City area looking for
Robinson.
See MANHUNT Page 2 A

'I Don't W ant O n e
O f Them Shooting M e '
Jayne Hines o f Indianapolis. Ind.. was staying
at the Deltona Inn Friday getting ready to attend
her mother’s wedding Saturday. Although she
wasn't the one getting married, she got the
pre-nuptlaljltters.
It wasn't because she was worried about the
ceremony, however.
While she was In her room the Deltona Inn
had been transformed Into an armed camp.
At about noon she was called by the front desk
and told to stay In the room because police were
surrounding the motel In an attempt to capture
a fugitive who shot two FBI agents that
morning.
She said she had no Intention to do anything
but obey.
Bee INN Page 2A

Jayne Hines

Buckle Up
That Child;
It's Law
By Diane Petryk
Herald Staff W riter
(First o f two parta)
Arc you likely to be ticketed by police If you have
£roung children In your car unrestrained by safety seals
or scat belts after July 1?
You bctcha.
That's when the state's new child restraint law goes
into effect and police In Seminole County have Indicated
’they don't plan to look the other way If they see
violators.
.
■■*■
The law requires that Infnnts and children through
age 3 be restrained In an approved safety seat or carrier
properly fastened down and children 4 through 5 years
be restrained by safety scat or seat belt.
Violation of the law carries a $ 15 fine.
Local Florida Highway Patrol. Sanford, Seminole
County and Lake Mary law enforcement spokesmen said
ofTIccrs will actively enforce the new law.
Will every violator get a ticket?

fir

—

_

A • "rm

Me

Restrain child for his sake
See editorial today Page 4A
Sanford police spokesman Sgt. William Bcrnosky said
the questions can't be answered "any more than you
can answer the question do we write a ticket for
everyone who runs a red light.
"Obviously there's going to be ofTleer discretion
Involved. The law takes effect July 1. We're going to
give people reasonable time to com ply." he said.
But would he look the other way If he saw a child
standing up unrestrained on a car seat? The answer was
an emphatic. "No. sir!”
" I f I'm In my police car and I see a child standing on a
Bee BUCKLE Page 10A

Condominium Planned
A luxury high-rise condominium complex is
being planned for the Sanford lake front
adjacent to Central Florida Regional Hospital.
The condominium is a project of Sanford
surgeon Dr. Kenneth Wing and Seattle develop­
er Gary Warner. Dr. Wing said the 12-story
building w ill contain approximately 80 units
ranging In size from 1.000 to 2,000 square feet.

He estimated individual unit prices will range
from $100,000 to $200,000. In addition to the
condo units, the building will house a conference
room, first floor shops and a 12th floor
restaurant to be called "Top of Sanford."
Residents of the new complex will also have
available a swimming pool, jacuzzl, sauna and

exercise rooms. "It will be luxury all the way,"
Dr. Wing said. Construction Is planned to begin
In 1984 with an expected opening in 1986. The
building will be located on the corner of U.S.
Highway 17*92 and Mangoustlne Avenue, diag­
onally facing Lake Monroe. It w ill be called
Hemisphere N.W.

Fireworks Funds Needed

TODAY

4th Of July Fun Set

SfTewsf Views

Irving Fried, left, present* check from Over 90 Club, the first organization
to contribute to the Sanford Fourth of July Fireworks Fund, to Jack
Horner, president of the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
chairman of the Fourth of July festivities.

By Jane Cassslbcrry
j
Herald S taff W riter
Sanford's Fori Mellon Park will be
(he tile of the annual Fourth o f July
Family Day festivities to begin at 11
a.m. and continue throughout the
dayj climaxing with a spectacular
display o f fireworks on the lakcfront
at dark.
The Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, which together with the
city o f Sanford Is co-sponsoring the
Manning m
&lt;
eve:h^. held the first planning
meet­
ing o f the July 4 committee this
past week and Chamber President
Jack Homer, chairman, said he was
pleased with the response.
"There was a good turnout.” he
said, "and most o f the clubs and
organizations that participated In
the past attended."
Among the groups which cald
they would have booths or con­
cessions this year are the Sanford
Lions Club, the Sanford-Seminole
Jaycees and Jaycec Women, the

» --

• , * «■*

j*» imww+ii+u X "

Seminole County Humane Society,
the Golden Age Games. Seminole
High School Boosters. Seminole
High School Cheerleaders. Sanford
Woman's Club, Good Samaritan
Home. Sanford Landing Apart­
ments. Sanford Pilot Club, Fleet
R eserve A s s o c ia tio n , and the
chamber.
Each group having a fundraising
activity at the festival agrees to
donate a portion o f the profits for
the fireworks fund while retaining
the rest for Its own charitable
projects, Homer said.
"Th is year's fireworks display wffj
cost 83,000 so the chamber Is
actively seeking contributions to the
special account from individuals,
businesses, and organizations," he
said . " W e 'l l n eed h elp from
everybody."
The first organization to contrib­
ute to the fireworks fund was the
Over 50 Club o f Sanford. Anyone

interested In donating to the special
fund may do so by sending a check
designated to the Fourth of July
Fireworks Fund to P.O. Drawer CC.
Sanford. 32771.
Some of the special attractions to
be going on during the day will
Include the Moon Walk, the dunking
machine, a greased pig contest, the
cake walk, live entertainment and
food booths. There will also be an
authentic Confederate encampment
demonstrating Johnny Reb's daily
activities such as cooking.
There will be live coverage o f the
event by Radio Station WWJZ. The
G eneral S anford Muaeum and
Library will be open for free tours
during the day.
A n y organization w ish in g to
participate should call the chamber
office at 322-2212 for further in­
formation and the dale o f the final
planning meeting to be held prior
to the event.

Action Reports.......
Around Tha Clock.... ....4A
Bridge.................. ....6B
Business...............
Classified Ads........
Comics................. ....6B
Crossword.............
Dear Abby............. ....2B
Deaths.................
Editorial...............
Florida................ .....3A
Horoscope............
Hospital'...............
Nation.................
Opinion................
People.................
Religion...............
School Menus........
Sports..................
Television............. ....7B
Weather...............
World...-..............
All want wall Friday
for Sally Rida and tha
othar four aitronauta
who will rlda into spaca
latar this month. Saa
Page 3.

�1

lA-Evsnlwg Htrsld, Sanford, Ft.

Sunday, Juiw S, i m

NATION
INBRIEF
Tax Protester, Sheriff Die
In Arkansas Gun Battle
WIMBODEN. Ark. (UPI) - The FBI expected
positive identification of militant tax protester
Gordon W. Kahl sk the man who holed up In a
concrete “ bunker.'’ killed a sheriff and was
burned to death when officers set the hideout
ablaze to flush him out.
Authorities recovered the charred body about
four hours after Lawrence County Sheriff Gene
Matthews was hit In the chest at 6 p.m. CDT
Friday during the first charge on the house
where Kahl took refuge.
The FBI refused to confirm Kahl's death,
saying only "w e have reason to believe he was
In the house" In northeastern Arkansas owned
by supporters of Kahl. who was wanted in North
Dakota for the slayings of two U.S. marshals.
"W e believed It was Gordon Kahl from the
outset... and we believe it was his body In the
house." said FBI agent Joe Hardage In Little
Rock.
The body was to be taken to the state Medical
Examiner's office in Little Rock today for
positive Identification, he said.

Ban Sex Discrimination
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan,
trying to boost the sagging popularity of his
programs among women. Is calling for women
to enlist In a campaign against sexual discrimi­
nation.
"W e In this administration are committed to
eliminating, once and for all, all traces o f unjust
discrimination against women." the president
pledged In a videotaped address shown Friday
night at an Indianapolis conference o f the
Republican Women's Leadership Forum.
"W e are making progress, but there Is so
much to be done." he said.
"Our struggle Is only beginning, and I need
your continued help If we are to reach our goals.
When you return to your neighborhoods and
communities, help us get our message out. Tell
people of the progress we have made."
The president, with the taped remarks, proved
he could be In two places at one time. As the
speech was screened In Indiana. Reagan was
relaxing at the presidential retreat at Camp
David. Md., following the exhausting economic
summit meeting at Williamsburg, Va.

Car Sales A re Up 7.3%
DETROIT (UPI) — Domestic car Bales rose
nearly 20 percent during the end of May, thanks
to buyer Incentive programs.
Sales were up 7.3 percent for the entire
month, compared to May 1962. according to
Industry figures released Friday.
Industry analysts said a ncar-20 percent boost
over the la s t iO days In MSy came because
buyers wanted to take advantage o f Incentive
programs set to expire May 31. The programs
have since been renewed until the end o f July.
General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co., Ameri­
can Motors Corp. and Volkswagen o f America
sold a total o f 626,756 cars last month, up 7.3
percent from 584,074 in May 1982. They sold
251.748 cars In the May 21-31 period, up 19.4
percent from 210,883 In the comparable period
last year.

WEATHER
By United Press International
NATIONAL REPORT: Sunny skies gave residents .*&gt;f
flood- and mud-covered Utah a chance to check the
wreckage even though hundreds remained homeless
Saturday because the damage was too great. Violent
thunderstorms caused damage and Injuries In eight
slates. A dangerous line of thunderstorms Friday
dropped a tornado Into a Texas trailer park, injuring
four people, and churned through the middle Mississippi
and Ohio valleys. Flash-flood watches were posted In
southern Indiana and western Kentucky. Strong winds
toppled power lines and caused two buildings In west
Tennessee to collapse. Several large rides at a Murray.
Ky.. fair were splintered by high winds, causing minor
Injuries.
A R E A R E A D INQ 8 (9 a.m.): temperature: 75;
overnight low: 70; Friday high: 90; barometric pressure:
30.00; relative humidity: 87 percent: winds westerly at 5
mph: rain: .10; sunrise 6:27 a.m., sunset 8:20 p.m.
•U N D A Y TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 3:44 a.m.,
4:18 p.m.: lows. 9:49 a.m.. 10:21
p.m.; Pert
Canaveral: highs. 3:36 a.m.. 4:10 p.m.; lows, 9:40 a.m..
10:12 p.m.: Bayport: highs, 10:06 a.m.. 10:25 p.m.;
lows. 3:39 a.m.. 4:46 p.m.
A REA FORECAST: — Partly cloudy with a 30
percent chance o f afternoon thunderstorms Saturday.
Highs around 90. Wind southeast to south 10 mph.
Saturday night partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance
o f an evening thunderstorm. Lows In the low 70s. Light
southerly wind. Sunday partly cloudy with a 30 percent
chance o f an afternoon thunderstorm. Highs around 90.
BOATINO FORECAST: — St. Augustine to Jupiter
Inlet out 50 miles — Wind southerly around 10 knots
through Sunday. Seas 3 feet or less. Widely scattered
mainly afternoon and evening thunderstorms.

HOSPITAL NOTES
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IWIPf C H S

Sunday, Jims l NW-VW. 71 No. W

Man Found Dead In Home

A man was found dead of a gunshot wound Saturday
morning in a mobile home In the take Jessup area,
according to Seminole County Sheriffs Dcpnftment
spokesman Capt. Jay Leman.
The victim was not Identified pending notification of
his family.
Leman said sheriffs deputies received a telephone call
at 9:48 a.m. Saturday In reference to a shooting and
upon arrival at the scene they found the mnn, dead o f a
gunshottwound to the head.
Spokesmen would not release the address o f the
mobile home where the shooting occured or any other
Information at press lime.
DOUBLETROUBLE
When a Seminole County deputy was attempting to
arrest Charles Robert McKenzie, 21, for tresspass after a
disturbance at the Fem Park Station nightclub parking
lot a half hour after midnight Thursday. David Paul
tassonde, 20, of Orlando, barged into the fracas and got
arrested too.
According to the deputy's report. McKenzie was
resisting arrest with violence and as he was trying to
handcuff him. tassonde Jumped In between them and
grabbed the handcuffs.

raw. m m (h mat mm t u t ; m m . m j h

★

Fires
it Courts

it Police
"What the hell are you boys doing?” tassonde
reportedly said.
The arrest became a double affair.
tassonde was charged with Interfering with a police
Investigation.
McKenzie, who refused to give hta address, was also
charged with resisting arrest with violence and criminal
mischief after causing approximately $300 damage to
the patrol car door by allegedly kicking it,
The Incident occurred after McKenzie had a fight with
his girlfriend; the report said.
Both McKenzie and tassonde were being held In lieu
o f $500 bond.

.Inn Resident Says She Was Scared
Continued from Page 1A
As she sat Inside Room 141 and
the minutes ticked away, she didn't
peak out often to see the SWAT
teams or the myriad of patrol cars
surrounding the Inn. But she heard
the helicopter hovering above and
she said she began to gel more and
more concerned.
She had been at the pool earlier,
she said, when sheriffs officers were
distributing pictures o f the wanted
man. She didn't think much about
It then.
Her brother. John Porter, howev­
er. who was staying In room 132,
called and told her a maid had told
him she saw the man and he
thought he did. too, while getting
Ice from the Ice machine out back.
Then Jayne said, her mother
called. She was at a nearby hair­
dressers.
"She told me to Just slay In the
room and do what police say." she

said. "W ell, I didn’t have any
intention o f going out."
"But after about two hours I was
getting worried.
"I was so nervous I didn't know
what to do. 1 accidentally put the
heat on In the room. Then I couldn’t
figure out why I was getting so hot."
Meanwhile, SW AT team members
were progressing slowly In their
room-by-room search o f the 130unit motel.
Finally, they got to Jayne's room.
"Th ey called me on the phone
and said 'walk straight out and
don’t move your hands.’" she said.
"W ell, then I really got scared.
“ I thought I was safer in there.
"I said: 'Do I have to?' They said;
'Yes.' I replied. 'Are you sure they
know It's me?
" I didn't want one o f them
shooting m e!" she exclaimed.
"I felt much safer between the
beds."

Reluctant as she was. she obeyed.
Thinking at the time, she said, how
she had been cooped up In the room
for three hours and was getting
hungry.
She left the room, her heart
almost In her throat.
She doesn't remember running,
but she made a fast shuffling walk
toward Deltona Boulevard, not
stopping to go around the bushes at
the edge o f the Inn's parking lot. but
plowing right through them.
"I wasn't going to take time to go
around," she said, out of breath but
somewhat relieved to be across the
road and out o f the motel complex.
Upon reflection, she said It had
been a disturbing welcome to De­
ltona, where she had arrived Just
that morning.
"But it'll be something to talk
about at the wedding." she said. —
Diane Petryk.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Job prospects for youth this
summer look brighter because of an Improved
economy and corporate planning but will not even
put a dent In overall youth unemployment, a study
covering 14 major cities showed.
Of 176 companies polled, more than 70 percent
participated In summer Job programs last year and
most said they would do so again this year, The
Conference Board, a non-profit economic research
firm based In New York. said.
“ It Is possible that more youths will find Jobs
through corporate programs this summer, given
earlier planning by project directors, a continuing
economic upturn, and participation by more
companies," wrote Dr. Leonard Lund and Nathan
Weber, authors of the report.
"B y themselves, however, corporate programs!
cannot solve the problem of youth unemployment,"!
they said.
Despite growing participation, the survey —j
Summer Youth Employment: The Corporate Expe-,
rience — concluded that the programs have made!
little headway In solving the massive youth!
unemployment problems in the nation.
Last summer, almost 31.000 youngsters were*
placed In private-sector Jobs in 14 cities, and]
another 2,250 were placed through local community]
groups and agencies. largely through cash backings]
from companies.
But conservative estimates placed the un-]
employment figure for youths at about 2 million last]
August. Bureau o f Labor statistics do not count;
those who have giverf up looking for a Jobs or those]
over 19 years o f age.
As o f this past April, the youth unemployment]
rate was 23.4 percent, with some 1.89 million1
youngsters out of work, said the report.
The survey said most of the 31,000 jobs provided
last year were low-skilled with minimum wage.
Many programs this summer will try to match Jobs
with education, promising better Jobs to students
who excel in basic skills at school. So far only
Boston has formalized such a program, the study
said.
Prospects appear to be brightest In New York City:
last year such programs put almost 15.800 youths
to work. But that number would have to be tripled to
effectively reduce the unemployment problem In
New York, the study noted.

. . .Manhunt Is Now Nationwide
Continued from Page 1A
"It was a matter totally unrelated to
Robinson." he said.
The man the agent Buspected to be
Robinson had Just finished paying Ills
bill for breakfast and had walked outside
the restaurant.
When one o f the agents reached for his
Identification, the suspect opened fire
with a .45-callbcr pistol he had con­
cealed under a newspaper.
"A s one o f the agents reached for his
I.D., he (Robinson) shot him In the
stomach." said restaurant owner Don
Kitchen*. "Th en the other agent started
to tussling with him and he shot him..."
Sobolewskl fell against newspaper
vending machines at the restaurant
entrance. Wlcklcln stumbled Inside and
fell by the cash register. Neither agent
returned fire. Jones said Wicklein was
shot In the stomach and Sobolewskl was
shot In the back and the leg.
At least seven customers were Inside
the restaurant when shooting started.
Waitress Lots Robinson, no relation to
the subject, said one o f the agents
lurched into the restaurant, crying
"Don't let me die! I know I'm going to
die."
She said she cradled his head in her
lap and told him repeatedly, "You'll be
all right."
The gunman, meanwhile, fled south
on U.S. Highway 17-92 In a 1980 white
Oldsmoblle Omega, apparently escaping
a 300-square-milc police dragnet.
At one point officers changed their
normal radio communications because
they believed Robinson had a police
scanner In his car.
Seminole County Sheriff John Polk
said later he would like to know If the
bullets taken from the wounded agents
match those o f the .45-caliber gun that
killed James Halsell In Brunswick. Ga..
In 1982.
Halsell was a witness against Terry
Melvin Sims, who was convicted of
lulling Seminole County reserve deputy
George Pfell at the Longwood Village
Pharmacy In 1977. Clarene Eugene
Robinson, the fugitive. Is believed to
have been the mastermind o f that
robbery. He has masterminded drug
store and other robberies for the past 20
years, police said.
Polk, on the scene at the Deltona Inn
near the Semlnole-Volusla county line
Friday, watched Intently as Seminole
and Volusia S W A T team members
combed the rooms.
"W hen they killed my deputy, they
went to a motel," Polk said.
A f t e r P fe ll w as gu n n e d d ow n .
Robinson's gang were ensconced In an
executive suite at the Howard Johnsons
motel o ff 1-4 on Lee Road. Polk said. “ He
may not even be here."
Those words proved prophetic when,
after a more than four-hour search which
began shortly after noon, the SW AT
teams packed up and moved on — along
with dozens o f Florida Highway Patrol
troopers. Seminole and Volusia county
sheriff's deputies, at least a dozen police
vehicles, plainclothes FBI agents and at
least three ambulance crews and a police
helicopter that circled overhead periodi­
cally.
PoUt saJd about 25 Seminole County
officers were on the scene. Including 10
8WAT team members. In addition, eight
deputies were Involved In four road­
blocks In Seminole County.
The roadblocks were called off at 3

av n s

HOSM M M y i SNSfc. H S S i OSHMr U M t « MSB

Action Reports

Prospects Good
For Kids In Need
Of Summer Jobs

P Speculating on why the wounded FBI
agents did not drew their weapons before
Identifying themselves to a suspected
dangerous fugitive. Polk said;
" Y o u n e v e r k n o w ‘ til y o u ’ re
there...Maybe he just thought the guy

looked like Robinson."
Outside the Deltona Inn. which is
located olf 1-4 near the Junction of
Enterprise Road and Deltona Boulevard,
police kept reporters, television crews
and other spectators on the far side of
Deltona Boulevard, which runs In front
of the motel. Although law enforcement
officers were not allowing cars access to
Deltona Boulevard in front o f the Inn.-a
number of television vans were in place
in front o f the motel and persons were
allowed to walk Into the area. Reporters
walked freely from one end o f the motel
to the other as long as they stayed oii the
far side o f the road.
Former Deltona Inn desk clerk Susan
Bennington, who was at the m old at
noon using the pool, said once police
decided to search the premises, they
cleared everyone away from the pool and
guests and staff congregated In the
lobby. She said she went behind the
desk and with another clerk began
calling rooms telling guests to stay inside
their rooms until police sent officers to
escort them o u t
She said staff congregated in the motel
lobby.
“ All the maids, everyone," she said,
"were all making sure eveyone was
accounted for. People were hugging each
other when they saw each other, saying
■glad you’re all right.’"
As one motel guest told the story, he
had gone behind the motel to get Ice
from the ice machine when a maid
approached him and said she had Just
seen Robinson climbing stairs to the
second level o f the motel. Law enforce­
ment officials had been passing around a
photo copy o f a picture of the fugitive.
The guest. John Porter o f Indianapolis,
Ind.. said one of the maids showed him a
picture and when lie was getting Ice he
saw a man fitting that description.
"H e looked me straight In the eye."
Porter said. " I Just froze."
At one time about 50 people had fieen
congregated In the motel lobby,, Ms.
Bennington said.
Gloria Alain, one o f the maids who said
she saw a man resembling the fugitive,
said the man acted suspicious and arhen
she looked at him "he made a U-tum
real quick."
A t approximately 1:40 p.m. after
S W A T team members had already
begun evacuating motel rooms, two men
in swim suits came running out o f their
room towards Deltona Boulevard. 1
Between four and. eight SW AT Itcam
members approached each room In the
130-room Inn In turn, with rifles and
other weapons drawn. As reporters
watched from across the street, they
would stand, backs to the wall orj both
sides o f a motel room door, with at least
one other member crouched down.,Upon
swinging the door open suddenly they
would shout: "Sheriff's departmentf"

Good News!
Now, Rheem • proves high
efficiency in a heat pump
Is more than a dream

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Rheem s newest line o f heat pumps,
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Ask what the Rheem imperial
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F

P

L

The procedure was repeated for about
four hours.
Jones denied reports that agents
d iscovered a man who resem bled
Robinson.
t
f
After agents completed a sweep pf the
upper and lower floors of the south wing
o f the motel, barriers to the lobby were
eased and guests, reporters, staff and
police began to mingle.
While the motel bar resumed serving
drinks and popcorn and began predating
hors d'oeuvres at about 4 p.m.. SWAT
team members were still woridiig the
north wing of the complex, throwing
open doors and shouting; "ShcrifTs
departmentf"
Jones said the FBI la following up
numerous leads In their search for
Robinson.

SANFORD
K M IM

4 M R C M M T IO IIIM

PH. 322-6390
M

I L M

h .

�Soviets Complying With Test Ban Treaty
!
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WASHINGTON (UP1) — A classified study conducted
for the Pentagon says there Is no evidence to support
suggestions by President Reagan that the Soviet Union
Is violating a nuclear lest ban treaty signed In 1974.
The Washington Post quoted sources at the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory In California, which
tonductcd the test for the (Defense Department, as
saying there was no evidence the Soviet Union had
conducted tests that resulted In explosions exceeding
150 kllotons, which would violate the treaty.
Reagan said last month there was "reason to belleye

that there have been numerous violations" of the treaty
by the Soviets.
An administration official told the Post that "w e have
never made the allegation" that the Soviets violated the
agreement, but said, "W e do have concerns that there
may have been tests In excess af the limit."
The official said methods o f treaty verification arc not
sufficient to provide absolute proof o f violations. One
scientist told the newspaper the administration's
concerns were based on overestimated seismic data.
The administration, criticizing verification pro­

cedures. decided last year not to resume talks with the
Soviet Union and Great Britain on a another test ban
treaty that was Initiated during the Carter administra­
tion.
“ Whatever It is believed In Washington. It Is now clear
that officials here at Livermore do not believe that the
Soviets have violated the 150-klloton lim it." one
unidentified scientist told the newspaper.
Milo Nordykc, director o f verification programs at
Livermore, told the Post there was no hard evidence of
Soviet violations.

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SH S H o n o rs

Sally , Other 4 Astronauts
Take Make-Believe Ride
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - The crew for the
second flight of the shuttle Challenger, Includ­
ing America's first woman astronaut, made a
successful make-believe launch Friday In pre­
paration for blaslofTlater this month.
The five-member crew climbed Into the
cockpit of the spaccplane about 8:45 a.m. and
the computerized mock launch went o il minutes
later without a hitch.
"E v e r y th in g went g r e a t ." said N A SA
spokesman Jim Ball. "The simulated ignition
occurred on schedule. The crew went through
all of the procedures they normally would do on
launch day und the tests went perfectly.
"W e're looking forward to them being back In
two weeks for the real thing."
Challenger's scrond Journey Into space Is
scheduled to begin with liftoff set for 7:33 a.m.
on June 18. It will Innd six days later on a 3-milc
runway at the Kennedy Space Center, a shuttle
first.
Key objectives of the mission are to launch
two communications satellites — one for Canada
and one for Indonesia. In addition, mission
specialists Stilly Ride and John Fabian, will use
a 50-foot "bonic arm " to launch an experimen­
tal Germnn-bullt satellite nnd then retrieve It
several hours later.

State Jobless Rate Up
T A L L A H A S S E E (U P I) F lo rid a 's un­
employment rate rose to 9.1 percent in May but
state* Department of Labor Secretary Wallace E.
Orr said Friday the Increase was statistically
Insignificant.
The state Jobless rate was 8.G percent In April.
Gov. Bob Graham said he was "concerned"
about the Increase because the Jobless rate had
declined In recent months and because the
tourism Industry had performed well In the
winter and expected to have a good summer.
Orr. said, however that the increase was
"negligible" and "actually Indicated virtually no
change In the labor market."
"Other Indicators show that tourism con­
tinues strong, tax.collectlons are overestimates,
housing starts are up and our survey of
non-agrlcultural business establishments shows
an Increase In Jobs," Orr said.
The state rate remains below the 10.1 percent
national rate.

WORLD
Lebanese Forces Clash;
A t Lease 10 A re Killed
United Preee International
Rival factions o f PLO chairman Yasser
Arafat's Al Fatah guerrilla group battled Satur­
day with machine guns and rocket-propelled
grenades in Lebanon's eastern Bckaa Valley. A
Christian Phalange radio report said 10 Arafat
loyalists were killed.
Lebanese security sources said the clashes
started In the Bekaa Valley village o f Majdatoun
and spread to the nearby town of Baalbeck, an
ancient city 52 miles cast o f Beirut, but gave few
other details.
The main road from Beirut to Baalbeck was
closed off by police 8 miles southwest of the
embattled town to prevent civilians from being
caught In the crossfire, the state-run Beirut
radio said.

RKC ENTERPRISES, INC
7MB. Mtwu BM., Dtltoni, FI.

S 7 4 -1 4 0 6

"Sum m er Extravaganza" was the
theme o f the senior party hclJ May 31
from 7-11 p.m. at the First Presbyterian
Church.
At this fun-filled get-togeiher, Mr.
Wilson. Mr. Cullum and Mrs. Swain, the
sen io r class spon sors, w ire each
awarded with a dinner for t io at the
White Marlin restaurant In Longuood.
The seniors who were present for the
event voted among themselvei to award
their classmates with some jery high
honors.
The Best All-Around Male t as voted
Dean Shoemaker, and the lest AllAround Female was Martha Iclntosh.
Aubrey Kendall and Miriam famllton
were chosen as the Most
Likely to
Succeed.
Other honors and their reelp ;nts arc:
Best Dressed
Dean Sheom ker and
Susie Brtsson: Best Looking — Rick
Nooney and Michele W altoi; Most
Athletic — Harold Gaines anaLaDonu
Merrlfield; Most Talented - Bruce
Nelson and Shelia Brown: Mos Conge-

-Kevin Jackson and Kim Byrd.
Congratulations to all o f thesrand the

Around

SHS

other seniors for their outstanding ac­
complishments.
This week's Tribe members are Robbie
Cohen and Tommy Stllfey, both Juniors.
Robbie Is a Yearbook photographer and
the vice president-elect o f Key Club. He
Is also a member of the football, soccer
and JV baseball teams.
Tommy Is a member o f band, chorus.
Thespians, and the basketball team. He
participated in the talent shows and the
play, "You, the Jury."
Next week, second and fourth period
exams will be Wednesday and third and
fifth will be Thursday. For seniors, sixth
and first period will be Tuesday, and for
Juniors they w ill be Friday, with
everyone getting out at noon on Wed­
nesday. Thursday and Friday.
Don't forget about baccalaurcttc on
Friday at 7 p.m.. and. o f course, the
graduation o f the Class o f '83 Is
Saturday. 8:30a.m.I

VETERANS
OAKLAW N’S VETERANS DIVISION
R outt 4, Box 244
Sanford, Florida 32771

A d d re s s _____________________
C ity __________________ S t a t e ______ Z ip ______

New Study Supports Safety
O f Injectab fe Contraceptive
CHICAGO (UPI) A
new study supports the
safety of a long-acting In­
jectable contraceptive that
has been denied approval
by the Food dm*- Dcug
Administration, Centers
for Disease Control re­
searchers say.
The three-month con­
tra c e p tiv e — m e d ro x ­
yprogesterone acetate — is
known by the trade name
Depo-Provera.
...... jjjjJ
"W e have found ho evi­
dence o f an Increased risk
o f d e v e lo p in g b rea st,
uterine'corpus or ovarian
cancer in those receiving
medroxyprogesterone in­
jections." Dr. Arthur P.
Liang and CDC colleagues
In Atlanta wrote In the
Journal o f the American
Medical Association.
An estimated 1.5 million
wom en w orldw ide cur­
rently use the drug as a
lo n g -a c tin g In je c ta b le
contraceptive, they said.
The FDA granted ap­
proval In 1973 for use In
the United States but re*
versed its d ecision in
1978. noting Increased
incidence o f mammary
cancers In animals and
menstrual Irregularities in
women exposed to the
drug.
"H ow ever, this study
Indicates that there Is not
lik e ly to be a s tro n g
a s s o c ia t io n b e t w e e n
medroxyprogesterone in­
jections and cancer o f the
breast, uterine corpus or
o v a r y , " th e CDC r e ­
searchers said.
The researchers studied
the occurence o f the three
types o f cancer In 5,000
black w om en w ho re ­
ceived Injections o f the
drug at a family planning

For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1 ,1 9 5 5 Q
For Veterans with m ilitary service since Jan. 3 1 ,1 9 5 5 Q
Y e ir of Discharge__________________ A g e ______

cllhc from 1967 through response association be19;6.
t w e e n m e d r o x lthough the numbers yprogesterone Injections
small, there was no and cancer In our study
once o f any dose- population." they said.

Type o f D isch arg e____________________________

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LEG QUARTER

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Breyer
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Cream
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Evening Herald
u

Reporters attend many luncheons,
banquets and other-feeds in the line of
duty. Hut no matter who picks up the tab,
It's all In a day’s work.
Rarely ever do we get to savor a meal set
before us. Ever try tp Juggle a note pad and
a slab o f rare prime rib at the same time?
Taking notes and snapping pictures come
first with many a delicious meal returned
to the kitchen nearly untouched.
Last Saturday afternoon the preacher
called. "Have a nice evening." he said, as
our conversation ended.

IUSPS MI-MI
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305323-2611 or B31-M83

Sundayi June 5, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Horae Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.39; 8 Months, $34.00;
Year, $48.00. By Mall: Week, $1.39; Month, $9.39; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. *7.00.

Restrain Child
For Safety's Sake
I f you Intend to be transporting yo u r children,
your grandchildren o r an ybody else's children
around in a m otor veh icle alter Ju ly 1, and h aven 't
already obtained a crash-tested child safety seat,
do so. T h en m ake sure you use it.
Florida's child restraint law goes into effect Ju ly
1. But that’s not the real reason you need a safety
seat for kids yo u 're drivin g around. T h e real
reason is that conscientious use o f child restraints
give kids the best protection possible against
serious injury, lifetim e disability and death caused
b y autom obile accidents.
A ccord in g to the National S afety Council, 650
children under the age o f four arc killed each year
in traffic accidents in the United States.
T h a t's Just a statistic.
S afety experts say 90 percent o f those deaths —
m ore than 600 — could be prevented by use o f
child safety seats.
T h a t’s Just a statistic, too.
Unless it's you r child w h o's saved.
T h e new Florida law requires separate child
safety carriers be used for infants and children up
to three years o f age. For children four through
; five years o f a age a safety seat or seat belt m ay bo
: used.
;
Failure to use an y o f the recom m ended devices
| an ytim e a child is riding In a car you 're d rivin g
- can result in a traffic citation carrying a fine o f
$15.
T h a t’s not m uch o f a penalty when you consider
; the price the unrestrained child m ay pay in the
: even t o f an accident.
For e v e ry child killed in an auto accident, 10 are
* disabled for life and 1,000 are Injured to som e
1 degree. S om e o f those injuries leave, perm anent
dam age. A b low to the head, for Instance, can
' cause epilepsy.
.
Children are m ost often killed or injured in
j accidents w h en they becom e flyin g m issiles or are
crushed betw een the dash panel and an adult,
i T h a t's w h y children should be restrained and
: should n ever be seated in the lap o f an adult.
T h e S em in ole County S h e riffs D epartm ent is
rem in din g everyo n e this m onth before the new
law takes effect, that child restraint use is the best
survival insurance parents can buy for their
children.
In 1962 Tennessee had six fatalities in the 0-4
, age group: before their m andatory child restraint
law w en t into effect in 1978, fatalities ranged from
25*30 annually.
W ith the cooperation o f parents and others in
the state. Florida can look forward to sim ilar
happy statistics.

A Hero's Death

!

It w as o a ly a coincidence that N a vy Cmdr.
A lb e rt A. Schaufelberger. the first A m erican
m ilita ry a d v ise r to die in El S alvador, w as
m urdered before the M em orial Day weekend. But
his death at the hands o f terrorists in San Salvador
C ity rem inds us all ortce again o f the suprem e
sacrifice so m an y have made in the service o f their
country.
Cm dr. Schaufelberger was a career naval officer;
a professional trained to fight and win.
T h e cause for w hich he ga ve his life In El
Salvador, how ever, had m ore than sim ply a
m ilitary dim ension. Like all U.S. m ilitary advisers
there, C m dr. Schaufelberger w as in El Salvador to
help carry out a policy intended to b rin g peace,
stability, and a m easure o f d em ocracy to that
w ar-tom country.
App ropriately enough, Cm dr. S chaufelberger’ B
Job w as to teach Salvadorans how to defend their
p opu larly elected govern m en t against Marxist
gu errillas Intent on im p osin g a dictatorship.
D efeatin g those guerrillas w ould g o a lon g w ay
tow ard ensuring the stab ility needed for peaceful
chan ge elsew h ere in Central Am erica.
B y all account?. Cm dr. S chaufelberger was
enthusiastic about his w ork in El Salvador and
dedicated to the cause he served. Our guess is that
A1 S ch au felberger w ou ld be the last to w ant his
death to d eter a con tin u in g U.S. com m itm en t in El
Salvador.
A ll A m erican m ilita ry trainers and advisers in El
S alvad or are under orders to avoid com bat.
It is a m easure o f h ow strictly those orders have
been adhered to that the sm all U.S. ad visory grou p
has suffered o n ly o n e battle-related casualty, a
S p ecial Forces sergean t s lig h tly w ou nded by
gu errilla fire w h ile fly in g in a helicopter.

BERRY'S WORLD
1

I

u
ft

$.

"You'r§ right, Sonotor. I uood to bo with tho
bmkon' lobby. Out I woo so ouooootful I m t
rmtUdbytfmCtA."

*&lt; • C . o &lt; *
By Doris Dietrich

1 explained to him that we were looking
forward to going to a banquet. He chuckled
as I told him that Brownie Troop 592 was
having the end-of-the-awards ceremony
and banquet — a spaghetti dinner that the
first and second graders prepared.
Well. yes. wc were Invited guests. But all
guests were asked to donate $2 to attend
the imprcsslvcrilcs. Wc were thrilled and

wouldn't have missed the big event for the
world.
The cute troop o f Brownies started r ff
the year as orphans without a place to
hang their little brown beanies. But
Salvation Army captain Beverly Waters
came to the rescue — with reservations —
and allowed the deserving girls to use the
Sanford facility as home port.
The Brownies had a good year — all 11
o f them. And It was with enthusiasm that
they gathered to cut up Ingredients, cook
and freeze the succulent sauce, made
"from scratch" on Monday before the
banquet and ceremony at the Salvation
Army Saturday. The tables were neatly set
for ail the guests who began arriving before
the appointed hour of 6 p.m.
Before departing we fed the cat the
marvelous leftover shrimp from Friday
nigh|. That was one happy, fat cat.
W « arrived on lime — hungry, naturally,
We kept waiting. Dinner was obviously

late. Then word reached us that the
Brownies had overly-browned the sauce
that they so diligently prepared. In fact. It
was so brown that it was Inedible. Nobody
told the girls that too many cooks bum the
sauce.
SA captain Michael Waters called the
incident a “ hallelujah b rea k d ow n ."
Good-naturedly, he pointed out that
mistakes are learning experiences. And
they happen to everybody.
Within the hour, a fast trip to the nearby
supermarket turned up "store-bought"
sauce which the gracious Brownie host­
esses served, with pride as well as the
dessert. You guessed It — Brownies.
When the Tall season begins. Brownie
Troop 592 will have a happy home. The
Waters are so Impressed with the girls that
the Salvation Army will sponsor the troop,
house them and help with leadership.
Honest Injun.
___________

JULIAN BOND

JEFFREY HART

O n The
M o to w n
Tapes

B rid g e
To P a st,
T h e F u tu re
That there exists an enormous fund of
goodwill and patriotic feelings In this
country was demonstrated once again
on May 24 when millions of New
Yorkers celebrated the 100th birthday
of the Brooklyn Bridge.
Every so often this groundswcll ol
emotion breaks out on a massive scale.
It happened on our bicentennial In
1976. notable for Its high spirits, quiet
pride, and the magnificent parade of the
"tall ships."
It happened when John Glenn re­
turned from orbit to a cascade o f cheers,
tears and ticker tape.
And It happened again last week In
lower Manhattan, as a reported four
million people crowded Into the area In
a display notable for Its orderliness and
almost complete absence of drunk­
enness and rowdyism.
From the start, the Brooklyn Bridge
has been a symbol o f optimism, of
man's creative capacity, and for the Inst
six months at least New Yorkers who
attended to the newspapers and maga­
zines had received some education In
the history o f the bridge. They became
acquainted with the name Washington
Roebling. the designer of the span,
whose own name so appropriately
"bridges" the name o f the first presi­
dent and the ethnic composition of
19th-century America. Readers were
educated in the artistic history o f the
bridge, the subject o f poems and
paintings from Its very beginnings.
On Tuesday, the 24th. the festivities
began at 9:30 •s.m...and continued on
for some people Into the small hours of
the following morning with private
parties and rooftop dancing and cham­
pagne under the stars. A fireworks
display turned the night sky pale.
The opening event, at 9:30, a gigantic
parade t-hat followed the same route as
the parade 100 years ago. when Presi­
dent Chester A. Arthur led the citizenry
across the new and then astonishing
span. Tuesday’s parade was led by
81-year-old Mary Roebling, grand­
daughter o f the famous architect.
The parade Included an elephant,
which was cheered as the crowd moved
down Broadway to Battery Park and to a
clear view o f the Statue o f Liberty. Many
people In the march had acquired
horse-drawn carriages for the trip across
the bridge. People wore 19th-century
costumes. Some spectators recognized
three old Brooklyn Dodger baseball
players in the parade: Ralph Branca.
Clem Lablne and Cal Abrams. One
began to feel the In evitab ility of
Brooklyn once again having Its own ball
club.
Out on the old river, there was a yacht
parade, and there were yacht parties at
the marinas along the Hudson and East
rivers.
Mayor Ed Koch has his faults, but he
Is a vintage New Yorker with his roots In
the streets of lower Manhattan. Not
since Florello LaGuardla has the city
boasted a m ayor who com pletely
expresses Its touch, skeptical, and Joyful
spirit. "T h is Is a once In a lifetime
even t," said Koch as he marched
through Brooklyn Heights wearing an
old Brooklyn Dodger cap.

RUSTY BROWN

S e x is m In A c a d e m e
A certain day I spent in the traditk ml
Ivy-covcrcd campus building Is for: cr
stamped In my memory.
It was a small graduate school c tss
taught by Warren Guthrie, a profciwr
at Cnse Western Reserve University.
I was bothered by the re a d ig
assignment. One author's vlewp nt
was the exact opposite o f anotlu's.
"W ho do you think is right?" I asked.
Dr. Guthrie studied me for a mom it,
then said, "W hat 1 think Is not 1m irtant. It's for you to decide who Is righi '
I was dumbstruck. No professor ad
ever challenged me to come K a
conclusion before. No professor had i cr
expected me to pass Judgment. It as
an exhilarating turning point.
The Incident came vividly to n nd
recently when I read the Assoclallo of
American Colleges study entitled, " he
-Classroom Climate: A Chilly One or
Women?" It Is an extensive re &gt;rt
based on volumes o f research at it ire
than 25 schools.
The question was: Arc women rid
men treated equally In the col ge
setting'/ The answer Is no.
While certainly not a flnger-poin ng
harangue against malc-domina ed
faculties, the study nevertheless ys
bare many conscious and unconsc us
remarks, attitudes and behaviors at
squelch a woman's potential.
Here are some comments of woi en
who were surveyed:
— "I was discussing my work
a
public setting, when a professor cui nc
off and asked me if I had freckle all
a
over my body."
— "I saw a slide show on compt :rs
which had female models in bll ills
standing next to computers and the
narration Included comments sue iOB
Took at those measurements,' etc."
Another Incident reported in. he
study concerned a woman who caned
high grades In a traditionally male
Her professor announced to a m
male class that this represcnlec an
unusual achievement "for a womai ' It
was an Indication, he said, that the
woman student was probably not r illy
feminine, and that the males In the
were not truly masculine since ley

allowed a woman to beat them.
While these arc blatant examples of
sexism, other put-downs arc more
subtle, such as.— Asking women students questions
requiring factual answers while asking
men questions requiring critical think­
ing and Judgment.
— Calling more on male students,
thus giving the Impression that what
. men have to say or contribute Is marc
important.
— Nominating men. but not equally
competent women, for fellowships,
awards and prizes.
— Cutting off or Interrupting women
students when they answer questions
but not doing this to men.
— Calling men by last names but
women by first names.
The study reports that married
women, women In traditionally "male
fields," and women returning at mid-llfc
face even greater challenges from pro­
fessors who are apt to doubt their
commitment and motivation.
Now that the Association of American
Colleges study has been out for a while,
there arc signs o f positive fallout.
At the University of New Mexico, for
example, directors o f the women's
center and women's studies. Kathryn
Brooks and Helen Bannan. pooled a
committee o f 28 faculty members to
evaluate the university's climate.
It was agreed there was discrimina­
tion against women, so a permanent
committee has been proposed to come
up with remedies.
"It won't be a grievance committee."
said Ms. Brooks, "but rather a group to
Bensitlze faculty and students to the
problem and educate them In solu­
tions."
According to the most recent census
figures, enrollment of women In college
is at an all-time high (108 women for
every 100 men). We can't risk having
half the nation's resources thwarted by
negative college experiences.
I wish for every woman a professor
like mine who said, in essence; "Learn
to think for yourself — you have every
reason to."

My friend Robinson approached me
about three weeks ago. He seemed
frightened. "I'v e got them all here,” he
said. "These are the real deal, the right
stuff. No one else has this except you
and me, and if you slip me a few big
bills, it will only be you. These arc the
Motown Tapes!"
The Motown Tapes! 1 was thun­
derstruck. There had been rumors
about their existence since before Cindy
Birdsong joined the Supremcs.
B a c k s ta g e at c o u n tle s s g rim y
municipal auditoriums and In the
dreary dressing rooms o f a hundred
Royal Casinos and Regal Ballrooms. I'd
heard the whispers. There existed
somewhere a half-dozen reels of vintage
Motown material: ooh-oohs and doowops and back-beats and the sweet,
urban, urbane soul that turned Detroit
into Hltsvlllc, U.S.A.
" Where'd you get these?" I snarled at
Robinson, who had last been seen
running a training school for Reagan
negroes. "You seem to move from one
hustle to another."
"You should talk," Robinson said.
"How many grown men do you know
who cam their living writing down stufT
like this? I can't tell you where I got the
Motown tapes. But take it from me;
they're authentic, and they're worth a
pretty penny. 1 came to you first
because I know what a fool — I mean
fan — you are."
"Thanks Robinson," I said. "But
you've got to level with me. Where did
these Incendiary loops come from ? "
"W ell." Robinson said. “ It's like this. 1
got them from a dealer in antiquities 1
know. A man who shall remain name­
less, He got them from a former janitor
at the Motown Studios in Detroit, who
salvaged them from the editing room
floor. He stored them in his Kclvinator
for 20 years, and ts only now offering
them to discerning collectors of AfroAmerican muslcana. That's why we've
come to you."
"W ail a minute," I said. "H ow do I
know these tapes are genuine?”
"T h ey’ve got to be." Robinson said.
"Where else can you get the original
recording of the Supremcs audition?
Where else can you hear unrcleased
ducts between Marvin Gaye and Tamml
Terrell? Where else can you hear the
uncensored version of the Temptations'
'My Girl'? Where else can you hear
Little Stevie Wonder when he was really
little Stevie Wonder?"
"I've got to be careful." I reminded
Robinson. "Remember the phony Hitler
diaries in early May and the phonier
Mussolini diaries a few years ago? The
woods are full o f hustlers eager to foist
fakes on a gullible public."
"I tell you what I'll do." he finally
said. " I ’ ll throw in the prize o f the
Motown vaults. A tape of Adam Ant
singing an early duet with Linda
Ronstadt. How's that?"
"You’re crazy." I said to Robinson
"Neither Ronstadt nor Ant was ever part
o f the Motown stable. Your tapes are as
phony as the Hitler scribbllngs. You've
tried to rip me off]”
"Calm down," Robinson said. "Forget
the tapes. I can ofTer you a chance to
make It back on Ebony's list."

JACK ANDERSON

'Model' Clinic St uggles For Survival
WASHINGTON - Federal Insistence
on collecting money owed by a rural
clinic in northern New Mexico threatens
the existence o f a facility that Is sorely
needed. And the effort could wind up
costing the government far more than
the debt it's going after.
La Cllnica del Pueblo was established
12 years ago in Tierra Amarilla to meet
the health needs o f a predominantly
elderly. Hispanic population In one of
the nation's poorest areas. The nearest
hospital ts 75 miles away and its
services are much more expensive.
For several years the salaries o f La
Clinica's two physicians and two den­
tists were advanced by the National
Health Service Corps. Then the loans
were quietly written o if by the federal
agency. But the Reagan administration
called a halt to the waiver system and
demanded payment o f the debt. The
clin ic soon owed the governm ent
$102,000 and the debt Is still ac­
cumulating. It simply hasn't got the
money.
The irony o f the situation Is that La

Cllnica could easily qualify for $201 )00
a year or more In federal subsldla like
all the other clinics in the area. 1 it It
treasures Its Independence, an Its
directors feel it is on the ver of
becoming completely self-sufficient
Already 70 percent o f its $24
annual budget (exclusive o f the do
salaries) comes from the comm
The rest Is provided by Med
Medicaid and insurance benefits,
the government won't give La C
the modest help it has given in the
the facility may be forced to h
totally dependent on Uncle Sam.

000
or*'
illy.
arc.
it If
ilea
ast.
wne

and testing the quality o f water In the
Washington area.
Suspecting the possibility o f a riverboat shuffle, I sent my associates
Donald Goldberg and John Dillon down
to the Washington waterfront to take a
look at the Engineer Corps' new pride
and Joy. They were given a grand tour o f
the 65-foot craft, named after Thomas
Blanklnshlp. a career civil servant.

"T h is administration Is tryii to
encourage people to be self-sufl lent
with a minimum o f government ter*
ference," Sen. Pete Domcnid. R .M..
told my associate Charles Berfant.
"Th is clinic should be a model."

The good ship Blanklnshlp is no
grubby dredge or tugboat Its basic
sticker price was $393,000. It Is loaded
with many extras, like wall-to-wall
carpeting, a gourmet kitchen equipped
with full-sized refrigerator, range,
microwave oven, dishwasher and trash
compactor, and a stereo system that
pipes soothing music into each o f the
air-conditioned, luxuriously appointed
cAblns.

SURVEYING IN STYLE: The
Engineers are about to dedicate a
new boat for the ostensible
surveying the depth o f ship
the Potomac River and Cf

In fact, with its upper deck and flying
bridge, the Blanklnshlp looks re ­
markably like the kind o f expensive
houseboat millionaires tootle around In
on the Potomac and the Chesapeake.

Corps officials, asked about the fancy
equipment. Insisted that It was needed.
The crew, they explained, will be away
from shore on surveying duty “ from
Monday to Friday."
That, o f course, leaves the weekends.
And sources In the Corps ssy they
su sp ect the real reason fo r the
Blankinshlp's elegant appointments Is
th aA t will double in brass, so to «pw»t«
— serving as a weekend pleasure craft
for Gen. Joseph Bratton, ch ief o f
engineers, and other senior officers with
a taste for the briny. T h e f point out that
the general's living quarters at Fort
McNair are conveniently close to the
Blankinshlp's mooring a few hundred
yards up the Anacostia River.
Corps brass hats would not rule out
the possibility that the boat will be used
for weekend pleasure trips. But one
official insisted that any big shots who
take the boat out partying will be
chargni for the privilege. And presum­
ably the Tooth Fairy wlU be serving as
cabin boy.

�-m
*

OPNON
OUR READERS WRITE
States And Federal Governments Need To Build More Prisons
John Q. Public could be any­
body. On any given day the
morning paper will bring him
word of shootings, savage slayings,
and armed robberies, many not far
from John's front door. The even­
ing television news will feature the
latest video tape from the scene of
that day's most horrible occur­
rence and then follow up with an
update report on the progress of
police Investigations Into the pre­
vious day's crime.
It Is no wonder that each night,
before retiring, John Q. Public
checks and double-checks to make
sure that all doors arc locked and
dead-bolted, the windows arc
securely latched and barred, and
no Intruder could possibly break
through the maze of antl-crlmc
devices Installed to protect his
family and home. The John Q.
Public family Is safe, behind bars,
for the evening.
Ironically, those John and his
neighbors fear arc free to roam the
community and terrorize at will.
John'B friend, a sergeant on the
police force, shrugs his shoulders
saying, "W e do what we can do."
knowipg full well that as soon as
his men apprehend a suspect, the
chances o f that person being
returned to the streets within a
matter of days (If not hours) are
excellent.
No one can argue against the
need to preserve our system of
Justice by which one Is Innocent
until proven guilty and Is guaran­
teed a fair and speedy trial. These
are cornerstones of our society.
But this nation must do some deep
soul-searching to determine If, in
the administration o f crlminnl
Justice, we have neglected to

consider what Is Just for society.
This Is not a new message. It's
been told In countless forums,
in c lu d in g a s erie s o f c rim e
hearings I held Its a member o f the
Senate Small Business Committee.
The victims and cities change, but
the stories arc the same and the
d e e p -r o o te d p ro b le m o f r e ­
volving-door Justice remains.
"Is there no Justice?" John Q.
Public wonders silently. He finds It
difficult to understand why, In an
orderly society governed by Just
laws, people dangerous to the
community arc not locked up. The
radio news says the prisons are
overcrowded. But John knows that
whoever committed the hideous
c rim e s he h eard about fiv e
minutes earlier also belongs In Jail.
He knows lhat as long as that
person Is free, his family has been
sentenced by the criminal Justice
system to live In fear.
In some states hardened crimi­
nals accused of having committed
yet another violent crime are
released pending trial because the
only criteria the Judge had to deny
ball Is the reasonable belief the
accused will not show up for trial.
The Judge Is not allowed to deny
ball because the defendant has a
history of violent crimes and there
Is evidence to Indicate that he may
have. In fact, committed the crime
for which he Is now charged. It
seems to me that we need a form
of preventive detention to ensure
that this Individual Is not returned
to the community and given an
opp ortu n ity to com m it m ore
crimes or to terrorize those who
might testify against him.
It Is understandable why John
Q. Public, having witnessed a

mugging last year, was reluctant
to volunteer any Information about
the crime, opting Instead to tell the
officer, " I didn’t see anything; I
don't want to get Involved." But
such action, or lack o f It, may have
made apprehending and convict­
ing the culprit difficult, if not
totally Impossible.
There Is also the very real
possibility that the "m ugger," if
caught, may be convicted but
never sent to prison, or sent but
released early on parole. Prison
overcrowding Is no secret. But
Justice takes a strange turn when
space considerations enter Into the
Judge's determination o f whether
or not someone should be sent to
Jail for his crime. The same Is true
when a convict Is released early to
make room for a newly convicted
felon.
We clearly need more prisons.
But the states do not have the
necessary funds to build them.
Neither dbes the federal govern­
ment. When you read between the
lines, what is really being said Is
that there's not enough money to
keep criminals olT the streets. It
makes one wonder if anyone Is
really worrying about what will
happen to our neighbors. A con­
sideration o f maximum public
safety seemB to have been lost In
our system of criminal Justice.
What Is needed Is a partnership
between the state and federal
governments to build more pris­
ons, with each sharing in the cost.
I've proposed a bill that does this,
but Congress has yet to act. The
legislative process, a slow one at
best, has bogged down a number
o f good Ideas: preventive deten­
tion; a 13-year, no probation and

no-prole sentence for armed rob­
bery; stlffer penalties for drug
trafficking: bail and sentencing
reform. The list goes on.
But. when Washington does act,
It can only deal with "federal
crimes” and will be unable to
provide all the answers. Penalties
for the more prevalent "state
crimes," like murder, rape, and
burglary, are decided In state
capitals across the nation, where
there are equally long lists of
anti-crime bills awaiting action.
It does nt matter to John Q.
Public whether his community is
being victimized by a "state" or
"federal'' crime. What matters Is
t h a t C o n g r e s s , th e s t a t e
legislatures, and government of­
ficials on all levels overhaul the
criminal justice system In such a
way as to make sure that those
who commit violent crimes arc
removed from society. This can be
done, but not alone and not
without constant prodding from
the John Q. Publics o f the world
who must live, side by side, with
the hard reality of crime.
If we are going to get anything
accomplished, everyone will have
to work together. Our efforts must
be given top priority status, and
there must be a realization that
dollars spent to ensure that our
families can live free from the fear
o f crime are a wise Investment In
the future of our communities.
Our families should not be im­
prisoned within the confines o f our
homes. This Is supposed to be a
"fre e" nation, and government has
a clear responsibility to ensure
domestic tranquility.
U.S. Senator Alfonsc D’Amato
Republican, N.V.

Governor And Representatives Spending Too Much O f People's Money
Many times when we have a
reasonable politician In ofilce. we
don't appreciate what they do for
us until years later.
When Rubin Askew was gover­
nor of Florida, he had more respect
for the taxpayer than most politi­
cians. His first state budget was
$2,829,000,000. after clghl years
in office the state budget was
$6,163,000,000, an increase over
a p e r io d o f e ig h t y e a r s o f
$3,334,000,000.
Now let's talk about a Florida
governor lhat has reverted to the
days o f King Herod who ruled his

people with an Iron hand, and
taxed them out o f all th eir
earnings but Just enough to sur­
vive.
This governor Is none other than
our present governor Bob Graham.
I will show you why I make this
broad statement about our gover­
nor.
The first year Bob Graham was
govern or he raised the state
budget by $1,657,000,000. After
fours In office he has a proposed
budget of $11.300.000.000. If the
governors proposed budget is
passed. It will be an increase In the

state budget o f $5,137,000,000 In
only four years. That is over one
and a quarter billion dollars in­
crease in the state budget each
year the money hungry governor
has been In office.
Our Honorable Governor Bob
Graham didn't rob the taxpayer of
Florida out of all these billions
alone, he had the help of our
hundred dollar an hour lawyers
that we debt to represent us. If you
elect someone to public office that
robs you at home, what can you
expect them to do In Tallahassee.
With all these billions, they had

to rob all the citizens of Florida
with an extra gas tax. that they
claim they will build roads with. If
you think you can do something
about It, JuBt try and see how far
you get.
The cheapest thing our state
representatives have ever done lo
the taxpayer, was to give each
county the power to raise gas tax
by four cents a gallon without a
referendum. Our local con men to
the taxpayer would raise It fifty
cents a gallon. If you give them the
power.
Grover Ashcraft
Pierson

Newspaper Editorial On The NEA Is Appreciated
Thank you for the "'B lockBusting' editorial, NEA: Problem
Or Solution?" It deserves Three
Cheers and a Tiger for the courage
lhat It took to call the people's
attention to the fact that the NEA
could be either of these, a problem
or solution.
It Is a fact that ever since they
came out with their Summary
Report o f the Bicentennial Pro­
gram-Quote: "When we break with
the past or take even a small step
toward a new idea for the future,
we are on totally untried ground.
The risk for ourselves and our
responsibilities to future genera-

Blood Bonk
Appreciates
Newspaper Help
The Board o f Directors of Central
Florida Blood Bank wish to extend
our gratitude to the Evening
Herald for the newspaper coverage
o f Central Florida Blood Bank's
Seminole County Branch and vol­
unteer blood donors.
We appreciate the articles and
photographs depicting the need for
blood and the Importance o f giving
because more than 250 pints are
needed on an average dally basis.
Presently, there is no substitute for
blood. The only source is from
people.
On behalf o f the Central Florida
Blood Bank, the BtafT, and the
patients we serve In 26 health care
facilities located In seven Central
Florida counties, please accept our
sincere thanks for the Evening
Herald's continued interest and
support o f our organlzaton and the
needs o f our community ■
Tcdford Eidaon
Chairman

Paper Thanked
We o f the Lorelei Synchronized
Swuu Team wish to take this time
to thank you for your article in the
Sanford Herald. The barbeque
fundraising dinner held on April 9
at the Longwood Recreational
Center was a huge success due lo
the generosity o f the local media.
Again, we thank you.
Mary Rose, coach
Sanford

tions are awesome. It Is with this
sobering awareness that we set
about to change the course of
American education Tor the 21st
century by embracing the Ideals of
Global Community, the equality
and interdependence o f all peo­
ples and nations, and education as
a too] to bring about world peace.
The establishment of the De­
partment of Education by Presi­
dent Carter as a payoff for the
NEA's support was the camel's
nose into the tent of education and
thus giving the NEA the power to
raid the taxpayer’s pockctbook.
under the guise o f giving the
people a better quality o f educa­
tion. The result has been as has
been called to the people's atten­
tion. ad nauseum.

For money to Improve the pres­
ent 'Edlcatlon Sltchatlon' we could
have returned to local control of
the funds that are now expended
on the Department o f Education.
$10 billion plus. This should never
go to Washington, but remain In
the taxpayer's pocketbook to be
collected and expended, under
local control to improve thr^uaffty
of the Ideology and proficiency of
the teachers In our schools, not
used to promote the idea of One
World Government, by making the
U.S. -US- a nation of mediocrities.
I urge you to go back and rerun
your editorial o f 2/22/79 and urge
President Reagan to remove that
burr under the saddle of educa­
tion, the D.O.E.**D.O.E.- DELENDAEST'.

President Regan should have no
fear o f doing this as the NEA
membership came within 2 per­
cen ta ge poin ts o f votin g for
Reagan over Carter, giving the
former President a paltry 44 per­
cent of the tcacher/mcmbcr vote.
This according to 'Fingerprints' in
Our Age, the official paper of the
National Alliance of Senior Citi­
zens.
"Freedom is not free. Eternal
vigilance is the price."
S.B. "J im " Crowe
Sanford
P.S. Let the NEA beware o f that
most dread disease Asyncsia.

Bans On Pets
Puts Hardship
On The Elderly
Q. An elderly friend of mine
lost her husband last year to
cancer. She can no longer afford
to maintain her house and Is
forced to seek subsidised hous­
ing for herself and her cat of 14
years. It appears that she will
nave to give up her cat, because
she has yet to locate an apart­
ment that will allow pets. I know
that If she has to give up her cat
It will Just kill her — the cat Is
the only link to the family that
she had.
The federal government helps
pay for this housing. Why do
they ban pets? Is there anything
that can be done to allow the
elderly to keep their pets?
A. Your friend's story — like
many others making the rounds in
Congress — probably will not have a
happy ending. Many older Ameri­
cans are having an Increasingly
hard time finding a place to rent if
they own a pet.
"Blanket bans" on pets in rental
housing, however, are coming un­
der attack from some humane
societies and advocates for the
aging. They argue that scientific
evidence shows that pets can signif­
icantly Improve the quality of a
handicapped or elderly person's life.
Doctors, psychologists and social
workers studying the bond between
humans and th eir com panion
animals continue to find that the
presence of pets can: lower blood
pressure; reduce the mortality rate
of heart uttack patients: alleviate
serious depression; and reduce vio­
lent Incidents, suicide attempts and
medication needs in facilities for the
crmlnally Insane. Researchers have
found that animals may help older
people cope with their loss o f
dignity and Belf-cstccm as well as
maintain their sense of humor, all of
which can lengthen a person's
lifespan.
Legislation has been Introduced
lit Congress by Rep. Mario Biaggi of
New York, which would forbid
federal funding for elderly and
handicapped housing units that ban
pets. The bill has received the
support of the Humane Society, the
White House Conference on Aging
and the Delta Society, a non-profit
association o f animal and health
professionals.
Supporters of "blanket bans'* on
pets argue that pets can and do
create management problems, and
that an apartment owner does not
want lo go to court every time a pet
must be evicted. It is easier to ban
nil pels In the first place.
To make the tenancy acceptable
for both the renter and landlord,.
Phyllis Wright, vice president for
companion animals for the Humane

Growing
Older
U.S. Rep.
CUode Pepper

Society o f the United States, sug­
gests neutering all dogs or cats
because neutered animals will not
attract other animals and tend to be
cleaner and better behaved. She
also recommends up-to-date vacci­
nations and current licenses. If
required; extra, refundable deposits
to guard against clawed curtains or
spotted rugs; and references from
previous landlords on the pet's
behavior.
0- A friend of mine, a man 65
year* old, had an accident in
which he broke hla Jaw. Hla
doctor act the Jaw bone, which
healed Jnst fine, and an oral
surgeon repaired hla guma and
the nerves beneath. When my
friend snbmltted his medical
bills to Medicare, they notified
him they would not pay any of
his doctor’s bills. Because an
oral surgeon rather than an M.D.
had worked on the nerves and
gums, Medicare ruled this was
“ dental” work, and Medicare
doesn't pay for dental work. My
friend did have supplemental
private health Insurance, but his
company gave him the same
story as Medicare.
Now my friend has been told
by his doctor that his back
p r o b l e m s a r e d u e to the
misalignment of his teeth and
Jaw and that he must see an oral
surgeon again. Since Medicare
and his private ln s t u n t e prob­
ably wouldn't pay for the same
reasons they refused to pay the
first bill, he is neglecting the
CrflUDft fauDOfflUBildyfta
is if true that Medicare will
not pay for dental services, such
as my friend received?
A. Medicare will not pay for
routine dental examinations for
dentures. However, Medicare will
cover dental work by dentists or
oral surgeons if the same work
would have been covered if a doctor
had done It. I would urge your
friend to have his oral surgeon and
doctor write letters to Medicare
explaining that the work was not
"dental.” but rather medical, hav­
ing to do with the repair of his nerve
and gums. It is possible Medicare
may pay for the bill.

REP. CLAUDE PEPPER is the
ranking member of the House Select
Committee on Aging.

THe oTWeR computers a r Tm SfoRe waiweo Me
To Se T SOMeiWINS WITH MoRe MeMORY,
§OMeTHIH6 COMPaTIBLe WITH oTW«R U N IT SBUT PiD
XLis te n ?

Newspaper Editorial Stands Appreciated
I'm not too big on writing letters
to editors, but I think you are to be
congratulated for editorializing not
only on local affairs, but also on
national and international situa­
tions.
Some time ago you wrote about
the fact that the two staunchest
friends the United States had —
the Shah of Iran, and Gen. Samoza
— has been cast adrift: and we've
now seen the consequences of
these actions.
Your recent editorial on the
Catholic bishops' stand on the
United States use o f nuclear
weapons was also very timely and
thought provoking. SO that there
will be no nilaundccaumdlng, I
should like to reiterate that this
bishops' letter Is not a teaching o f
the Catholic Church. It Is the
staled position of the bishops who,

as men o f God, feel all war is
wrong — but they have gone even
further In stating the U.S. would
be morally wrong In Initiating a
"first strike." Strange, but the
letter did not say nuclear weapons
were wrong for everyone — in­
cluding the U.S.S.R. One o f the
bishops, a former chaplain with
the 62nd Airborne, tried In vain to
halt the publication o f the letter.
He was Ignored by these men who
seem to be getting rather far afield
from their chorea o f ministering to
the spiritual needs of their people.
As another sidelight, I contrib­
uted for a number o f years to an
o r g a n iz a t io n c a lle d " T h e
Christophers.” A Catholic priest
who had done Intensive studies on
com m unism d eterm in ed that
communism Infiltrated countries
through four "spheres o f Influ­
ence" — Communications (All the

s o - c a lle d m e d ia ), L a b o r Management. Government, and
Education. This priest founded the
C h r is t o p h e r s to e n c o u r a g e
Christ-bearers to lake good Into
these four fields to combat the bad
being brought in through the
com m unist In fluence. Father
Keller died a few years ago. The
Christophers are still active, but
their whole thrust now Is toward
“ social consciousness" — the
plight o f developing nations, etc.
Needless to say, I no longer
contribute.
Keep up the good work: our
values and morals are being
eroded so rapidly that many peo­
ple aren't even awre o f what is
happening — It's good that you
continue to remind them.
■Jerry Haley
Osteen

I

Bomber Group Sets Reunion
The 397th Bomb Group with Its
596th, 597th, 598th, 599th Bomb
Squadrons will hold its sixth
reunion Sept. 30 through Oct. 2.
1983, at the Holiday Inn, Tampa
International Airport. Tampa.
Former members o f this W W U
9th Air Force B-26 Marauder group
are asked to contact the 397th
Bomb Group Association, Ncvln F.
Price, secretary; P.O. Box 1786,
Rockville. Maryland 20850. Phone:
301 4G0 4488.
This reunion will commemorate

the 40th anniversary o f the formaBoh o f the 297th Bombardment
Group (Medium) at MacDill Field In
Tampa on April 20, 1943, and a
'homecoming' viait to now MacDUl
Air Force Base Is planned.
T h e last B-26 group to go
overseas during World War II, the
397th soon became known as the
“ B ridge B u sters" for com bat
missions which began on April 20,
1944. At the peak o f Its combat
history the 397th struck the
enemy's communications during

the Battle o f the Bulge (Dec.
1944-Jan. 1943) and received a
Distinguished Unit Citation for a
mission on 23 December 1944
when the group withstood heavy
flak and fighter attack lo sever a
railway bridge at Eller, Germany, a
vital link in the enemy's supply
line across the Moselle River. This
mission cost the group many
planes and men.
Nevin Price
Secretary
397th Bomb Group
Assn.

Battle For State Authority
B y H J id U a v t
B E IR U T . L e b a n o n (UP1) Lebanon's government rules In fits
and starts, what with rival alien
armies and mlllUas vying for similar
authority on chunks o f Its soil. But
you can't say It Isn't trying.
The row with Syria over the troop
withdrawal agreement with Israel
summed up a bit too starkly
President Am in G em ayel's dlf- ficultlcs In trying to do his own
thing.
His other attempts to enforce
Lebanon's will on the runaway
Syrian. Israeli, Christian, Moslem,
Druze. Palestinian “ p rovin ces"
have been subtle and failed. Some
70 percent o f the country Is under
one foreign occupation or another.
So It bolls down to Beirut, where
Lebanese government rules at Its
best.

Israel's Invasion a year ago re­
kindled International sympathy for.
Lebanon's need to manage its own
territory If not the foreign troops —
40.000 Syrians, 30,000 Israelis.
10.000 Palestinians, 400 banians.:
For almost six yean, alien or
rebelliou s m lllU a s had ridden
roughshod oyer state authority right
Into Beirut That stopped when the
Israelis took over.
But the Lebanon-lsracl agree­
ment. controversial from the atari,
once again provoked the sectarian
fights U was designed to curb with
an extension o f Lebanese govern­
ment authority all over Lebanon.
Gemayel appealed to factional
leaders lo hold fire while he con­
centrated on the more essential task
nf ejecting the foreigners — Israelis,
Syrians. Palestinians and Iranians.
It wss the umpteenth appeal.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, June S, IMS

L o w e r M e d ic a l
C o sts O ffe re d
By D o c to rs
;

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Five Sem inars Planned
For Sm all Businessm en
The Small Business Development Center.
University o f Central Florida, is sponsoring five
seminars on the fundamentals of accounting for
small business owners/managers.
Each or the five industry groups, retailing,
restaurant, manufacturing, construction and
profcsslonal/scrvlce, will be represented In
Individual seminars conducted by a certified
public accounting firm with expertise In that
particular area.
These seminars will ,bc conducted starting
June 14 from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. at the John
Young Science Center Auditorium, 810 E.
Rollins St. The course fee is $25.
For further Information persons may call the
UCF Small Business Development Center at
275-2796.

Gregory Attends Market
Renewing the commitment to being the
"Store of First Choice." Eugene Gregory of
Gregory Lumber True Value Hardware of 500
Maple St. In Sanford recently attended the 71st
semi-annual Red Carpet Market and Convention
held In Chicago.
With sights set on the upcoming fall and
holiday seasons. Gregory placed orders with
many of the 1,400 manufacturers whose
displays covered the 175,000 square feet of lloor
space at the general offices of Cotter and
Company, the 100 percent member-owned
wholesaler to True Value Hardware Stores and
Home Centers. Gregory and fellow True Value
members took part In product knowledge
seminars and merchandising demonstrations to
round out their market activities. The most
apparent activity was the Increased buying of
True Value's exclusive lines.

Marvel Represents 1C
IC Industries, a manufacturer of micro-circuit
testing and probing systems, has appointed
Marvel Inc. as their advertising agency of
record.
IC Industries markets equipment nationally
and is considered the technological leader in the
design and production of test probes, fixtures
and systems.
A spokesman for the company said, "Marvel
Inc. brings a buslness-to-business marketing
expertise to our operation that we have not had
In the past." Initial projects include new
collateral materials, direct mall programs and
space advertising In select trade publications.

5-C Promotes Howie
Stromberg-Carlson Corporation of Lake Mary
has named Benton Howie manager o f com­
pensation and Garth Shqcmakcr manager of
Previously a compensation specialist, Howie is
responsible for domestic and International
compensation and classification administration.
He reports to Judlty A. French, director of
compensation benefits and management rela­
tions.
Shoemaker is responsible for all staffing and
affirmative action programs and reports to
Linda M. Metcalf, director of human resources
staffing and development. Previously, he had
been an industrial relations administrator.

By Toni Cardarella
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI) - In an effort to ease
skyrocketing health care costs, almost 100 privatepractice physicians have formed a corporation lo offer
medical services at lower rates to employee organize*
tlons.
The corporation, called Preferred Health Professionals.
Is the first "preferred provider organization" (PPO) In
the Midwest and one o f only a handful o f major
non-profit groups o f Us kind In the country.
A PPO basically Is a voluntary organization of
providers — physicians and one or more hospitals —
who offer prenegotlatcd services to groups o f Individuals
who have a common employer or labor-management,
welfare trust.
;
About 90 doctors at Baptist Medical Center, repre-,
sentlng almost every medical specialty, already have,
agreed to participate In Preferred Health Professionals:^
more than half the doctore on the 230 active-member
medical Staff are expected to Join. The group recently'
began presenting Its Innovative health delivery plan to!
area business. Industry and labor-management repre-]
sen tat Ives.
"W e're In a time where medicine Is In a big area of
change and flux. We know that the federal Involvement]
In medicine has never been smaller, and the costs arc so
great It's Just horrendous," said Dr. Dale Smith,]
Don Vaugh, owner of the new M ister Donut In and David Farr; and chamber welcoming com­ president o f the PHP.
Sanford, shows how to make donuts to a group of mittee members Becky Courson, Joyce Farr and
"Finding some way o f cutting costs without cutting)
well-wishers from the Greater Sanford Chamber Teri Bourque. Vaugh recently opened the new the quality Is really something nil physfenns dre'
of Commerce. En|oying the demonstration, from Mister Donut at 3755 S. Orlando Dr. (U.S. Highway interested In doing."
The PHP offers lo employees In the group thal signs)
left, are Dennis Courson, chairman of the Sanford 17-92).
with the plan prencgotlated and reduced rales fori
chamber boards City Commissioners Ned_Yancey
physician services, discounts on billed churgcs for
hospital care at the medical center, and an effective,
utilization review policy to contain costs.
.
"W e arc concerned as everybody else Is about health
care costs," said Dennis L. McClatchey. vice president of,
the south Kansas City hospital. "W e are Interested In,
Germany
and
similar
ventures
In
By LeRoy Pope
power that is not lost through
electrical resistance as it would be France. Britain. Japan and the coming up with a system to do something about It."
UPI Business W riter
The PHP Is not an Insurance plan but normally Is,
Soviet Union.
in a conventional generator.
NEW YORK (UPI) - After three
offered
alongside an existing business or labor-The
cryogenic
generator
can
be
At these ultra-low temperatures,
decades o f research and develop­
managment health benefit plan. Employees can elect to.
the niobium-titanium alloy used in fitted right Intq, a conventional
ment. General Electric Co. says it
has proved the commercial feasibili­ the fiber windings of the modular power plant alongside ordinary gen­ continue with their existing medical relationships or.
,
field o f the generator become erators. It Is turned by a conven­ choose the PHP plan. ,
ty o f power generators operating at
"It’s a total free-choice system to go to the providers.",
superconductive — they offer virtu­ tional steam or gas turbine. But
cryogenic temperature — around
ally zero resistance to the flow of Rios and Hicks said there Is no said Gary Jenkins o f Martin Segal Co., a Denver,
minus 452 degrees F.
electricity. That makes It possible to reason to believe it will be adopted consulting firm assisting the medical center and*
Dr. P. Augustin Rios and Edwin B.
cut the size o f the dynamo about In rapidly despite Its proven advan­ participating staff In the development of PHP. "It Is not,
Hicks o f GE told United Press
tages. "There simply Isn't sufficient an arbitrary discount offered to employees." he noted.
half.
International the company has Just
Mountain Medical Affiliates in Denver, now In itsAlthough the principles have been present demand for new or re­
completed the first full-load test o f a
fourth year. Is considered one o f the most successful
cryogenic generator capable o f pro­ known for years and achieving the placement generating capacity."
preferred provider organizations in the country and was
viding electricity for a community of cryogenic environment by means of they said.
organized
with the help o f Martin Segal Co.. Jenkins
liquid helium refrigeration Is sim­
20.000 persons. They said the
Il also is possible to improve
said.
ple, designing a practical cryogenic greatly the efficien cy o f large
dynamo produced twice as much
If chosen, the preferred providers offer employees
electricity as a conventional genera­ generator and getting the bugs out electric motors by operating them at
o f It was a huge lob.
tor o f the same size.
cryogen ic tem peratu res, since breaks tn co-payment and deductibles and In turn, the
The saving in fuel was a modest
A number o f other cryogenic
motors and generators are more or company, fund or Insurer promises prompt' payment.
0.45 percent, but in large size generating development projects are less opposite faces of the same coin. and Increased patient volume, said P.J. Whalen, director
generators that's enough to be u n d e r w a y . In c lu d in g one by
Much research and laboratory dev­ ofrommuntcatlon services for the hospital.
"It's a private-sector response lo the cost-containment'
significant, they said. The big sav­ Westlnghousc In the United States, elopment work is going on in this
arena without any legislative support." Whalen said.
ing. though, is In the vast amount of one by the .Siemens group in area.
Supporters o f the PHP are quick to note the difference
between the preferred provider organization models and
the health maintenance organization (HMO) plans, such
as Prime Health and Blue Cross' Total Health.
Under the PHP plan, there Is ho prepayment for future
'Empire o f America FSA has an
applications were received by Big E
services, no monthly premium art'In the HMO system.
nounced that its 9.75 percent Ad­ branches In less than three months about the tremendous boost the
The doctors control the PHP plan, with fees negotiated
justable Rate Mortgage Program will with more than $60 million In the ARM program is providing to the
by them not the hospital, but there are benefits for the
be extended for 30 days — through F lo r id a D iv is io n , s ig n ify in g
real estate and home construction
hospital.
June 30.
tremendous consumer acceptance industries." Wlllax said.
Paul A. Wlllax. president and of the ARM product.
He continued: "Our decision to
chief executive officer o f Empire of
The adjustable rate mortgage plan continue this program for an addi­
America, said the Big E's continued Is offered In communities in New tional 30 days Is based upon our
ofTcrlng o f this unusually low rate is York State. Michigan. Florida and total commitment to further stimu­
based on "overwhelming response" Texas, where the Big E has branch late the econom y o f our IqimH
offices.
from consumers and realtors alike.
communities and to mset-Tffc needs
More than $500 million In ARM
"W e are receiving daily reports o f our customers."

M ister Donut Shows 'Em How

Cryogenic G en erato r A v a ila b le

Empire Extends 9.75% Mortgage Rate

Phones Need Vacations
When leaving Central Florida for the summer,
customers can call Southern Bell to put their telephone
on vacation.
"Special savings from vacation service are available
from Southern Bell for customers who are going away
for more than two but less than nine months." says
Southern Bell Manager Larry Strlcklcr.
"T h e discounted rale is 84.80 per month, a big
savings over the regular monthly rate. Also, the charge
to restore service upon returning Is only $17. consid­
erably less than full connection charges.
In addition to the savings, putting a telephone on
vacation rather than disconnecting it guarantees
retention o f the same phone number and keeping a

listing in the telephone directory.
Seasonal customers who connect and disconnect their
phones have different numbers every year and usually
do not appear In the directory because their numbers
change so frequently. Also, when a phone is on vacation,
a system can refer callers who dial the Central Florida
number to another number where that customer can be
reached.”

MEIC] L IQ U O R 2
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vmmini, m i it au net

-SANFORDHWY. 17-92 South City Limits
Liquor Dept. Store &amp; Lounge
n

m

HAPPY HOUR r s : 50* DUNKS

A call to the business office is all that's necessary to
restore full service when customers return. If that call Is
made ahead o f time, the phone will be ready for use
upon arrival. According to Strlcklcr, the telephone
should be off vacation and ready for use within one
business day after calling the business office In Sanford
at 322-6701.

Q o m b fo u i

iM . F P L

Dennli Courson llk$s to do things In a big way. A
ribbon cutting at a new Sanford business Is no
exception. He recently took scissors In hand to
welcome the new Seminole Sewing and Vaccuum

Mary Boulevard. Helping Courson, from left, are
Terl Bourque of the chamber welcoming committee; City Commissioner Ned Yancey; owners
Keith Oyer and Ron Darbo; and chamber

SAXONY
GIN • VODKA
RUM
M AO

B H L - f i :

MARWOOD
C A N A D IA N S

SANFOKD. INC.
I m UNTOM UU HKI IMt

PHONI 322-S321

�W.L. G racey Rides
To National Fame
Bjr Chris Fitter
Herald Sports W riter
About nine months ago, 10-ycar-old
W.L. Gracey got his first look at B.M.X.
(bicycle moto-cross) racing. He liked
what he saw and thought he might like
to give It a try. It didn't take long Tor the
70 pound fourth grader at Sanford's
Southside Elementary School to get the
hang o f bicycle racing and. after only
eight months o f racing, Gracey has
become one o f the top B.M.X. racers In
the nation In his age bracket.
In fact. In the last eight months.
Gracey has finished In first place In 37
out o f the 41 races he has entered and.
last weekend at the Bayfront Center In
St. Petersburg, he won the State Cham­
pionship and. In the process, beat last
year’s World Champion In his age group.
"H e's continuously practicing." W.L.'s
mother Cindy Gracey said. "Right from
the moment he gets off the school bus."
"H e runs at least a mile a day, and
docs numerous exercises to build up his
leg muscles." W.L.'s father Billy Gracey
said. “ In the nine months W.L. has been
racing, he has won over 50 trophies.
Some o f them are five to six feet tall.”
Every day, when school lets out. W.L.
hops on his bike and practices for the
weekend. He usually participates In
races on both Saturday and Sunday and
the closest track that holds races is at
Gordon Barnett Park In Orlando (Pine
Castle). W.L. Is a member o f the National
Bicycle League and the National Pedal
Sports Association, both groups sponsor
the races the W.L. competes In. When he
Isn't racing or practicing, W.L. plays
baseball for Flagship Bank o f the Sanford
Little American League and docs a lot of
fishing.
Since getting involved In B.M.X. rac­
ing, Gracey has been all over the state
and has won the most prestigious races
In his age bracket. He has won two
Grand National races, finished 2nd In the
Pan Am International race and won the

Sam
Cook
Sparts Editor

number one plate for this year for the
N.P.S.A. state season as a nine-year old.
At the present time, Gracey leads the
United States in points In B.M.X. racing.
The racer with the highest point total at
the end o f the season gets to go to the
World Open In Holland.
To be a successful moto-cross bicycle
racer, It takes a lot o f practice, stamina
— and money. The bicycle W.L. uses to
compete cost over $800. And, the bike
weighs only nine pounds while a stan­
dard bicycle can weigh from 20-35
pounds.
"You need to have the lightest bike
possible." Billy Gracey said. Billy along
with his wife Cindy, Mr. and Mrs. L.H.
Tripp and Mrs. Ann Gracey (W.L.'s
grandparents) are W.L.'s sponsors. They
take care of his traveling expenses,
uniforms and bicycle.
Although you don't hear much about
the sport, moto-cross bicycle racing is
increasing in popularity and tracks are
springing up all over the nation. The
sport can also be very rewarding and pay
off In big dividends If the racer sticks
with It. Professional B.M.X. racers make
as much as $75,000 to $100,000 a year
and you have to be 16 years old to turn
pro.
"T h e y have tracks In Ocoee and
DcLand and a lot of smaller towns than
Sanford." Billy Gracey said. "I'd really
like to sec Sanford get a track. B.M.X.
racing Is starting to become a very
popular sport."
Right now, W.L. hus his eyes set on
being National Champion and advancing
to the World Open In Holland. This
Saturday and Sunday. W.L. will be
racing at Barnett Park where he has
finished In the W column 27 times, and
in the L column zero times.
When asked if he hud to choose
between B.M.X. and baseball, there
wasn't a moment’s hesitation from W.L.
"B.M .X.." he said. And why not? At 10
years old. he already one of the best In
the nation.

W .L. G ra ce ?’* B.M .X. R acing Record
EVENT................................................................................ FINISH
United States National Open, St. Petersburg....................................... First
Florida Championship and Triple Crown, Orlando.............................. First
Triple Crown, Keystone Heights.... .................................................... First
Top Elim inator, Cape Coral................................................................ First
N.P.S.A.* Supercross, St. Petersburg...............
First
N.P.S.A. Supercross, South Dade........................................................ First
War of Stars, M iam i............................................................................First
War of Stars, Pompano Beach........... .............................................. ..First
War of Stars Pan Am International, Clewlston................................. Second
War of Stars, Orlando...................................................................... Fourth
War of Stars, Lake Alfred................................................................... First
Cape Coral..............................................................
First
Cape Coral.........................................................................................First
St. Petersburg.................................................................................. Third
N.P.S.A. of Orlando....... .............................................................. 12 Firsts
N .B .L.e of Orlando..................................................................... 15 Firsts
Totals:................................................................................ 37 first places
....................................................... ................................... 1 second place
.....................................................
............................................................................................ 1 fourth place
• National Pedal Sports Association
+ National Bicycle League

Playing Ball Is Privilege
— Not A Right For Kids
Rotary manager Ed Korgan made one o f hla beat
moves of the year Iasi Wednesday when he benched five
of his stars (?) because they wouldn't run a few laps.
Korgan was contemplating another move Friday — !
giving up the team.
It seems some o f Korgan's players came to a practice
last week, but felt they were too good to practice. Rotary
won the first-half championship In the Junior League.
which assures it o f a spot in the post-season playoffs. In
the second half, the stars have floundered somewhat,
losing three and winning two.

Hprald Photos
By Tom Vlncont

2

third places

In just nine months, Sanford's W.L. Gracey has become one of the top B.M.X.
racers in the nation. The 10-year-old Gracey is a fourth-grade student at
Southside Elementary School.

The guys who didn't need practice were Instructed to
run five laps before Wednesday's game against Knights
o f Columbus, the first-place team. The players, who can
have run any number o f Ihe laps then and finished the ,
rest later, balked at the Idea.
Korgan. with those five on the bench, didn't have
enough reserves to field nine players so he had to forfeit
the game.
This move, understandably, ticked off Moose manager
Bill Dube, whose team Is second In the pennant race,
and needs somebody to knock off KOC so his club has a
chance o f making the playoffs.
Managing a Little League baseball team Is supposed to .
be fun. As you know, it doesn't pay anything but
satisfaction. Korgan wasn't getting much fun or ;
satisfaction during the second half. A manager, even the ;
most kind-hearted, can only put up with so much abuse
before he asks himself. "What am I doing this for?” :
After all, K you're In It for Ihe kids, and the kids don't :
respect you — then there's not much sense being In it.
It seems that these young men are a little misguided. I
know several o f them, and I've always thought o f them j
to be good kids. Of course, 1 knew them a couple years •;
ago as Little Major Leaguers. As we know, a change
comes over kids when they go through the 13-14 age :
They get pimples. They tend to show off a little
They find it hard to listen to authority. They start .
tu mink they know a little more than they do.
Sometimes a lot more. Sometimes they even think they I
know how to manage a baseball team.
What you guys should remember, though, is that
playing baseball Is a privilege — not a right. There Is a
difference which you probably know If you paid attention in Civics class. Nobody owes you the right to
play baseball. And if you continue to act In your
misguided manner, you may no longer have that right.
The baseball program In Sanford In on shakey ground.
Forfeits and player ejections have become normal. The ,
league Is disorganized, tU-aupervlaed and lacking df V
players, according to some league coaches and umpires.
You guys don't help it any when you act In your
Immature manner.
There have been some pretty good ball players that ;
have come through this organization. Names like
Raines. Brown and Wiggins. Several o f them signed
contracts with major-league teams. A lot o f them were a :
lot better players than you guys.
They didn't go through a season shooting ofT their
mouths at umpires. They didn't worry about stuff like
that. They didn't have time for that. They Just loved to
play. Maybe it's time you guys did a little soul-searching
and Bee if you still love to play.
Because If things don't come around, you might not ,
have a place to play. And when you don't have a place to •
play, you try to find other things to do. Some times,
these things are not legal. If you do loo many of these
Illegal things, they give you a number. But this number
is a little longer than that one you got on your back now.
Sometimes It stretches all the way to Ralford.
Think about it.

Ssm inols Track Offlcials-Ath

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Sanford's W.L. Gracey
shows off his trophies
he won while racing
Bicycle Moto-Cross.
The 10-year-old
Southside Elementary
School student has only
been r a c i n g ni ne
months but Is already
considered one of the
top B.M.X. youngsters
in the nation.

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Seminole Rehires Beathard
Roger Beathard. who resigned as Lake
Mary football coach last year, will return
to Seminole this (all as social studies
teacher and football coach.. Principal
Wayne Epps said Friday.
Beathard coached football at Seminole

Pot* Vault..........
Trlpl* Jump..;..;.
Howard Llngard.
Discus,
Pat,
Shot

for eight years before taking the head
coaching Job at Lake Mary when the
school opened two years ago. The Rams
went 1-9 last fall playing their first
varsity schedule. After Beathard s resig­
nation. he was replaced by Harry Nelson.

Carman''opTwiEf'*""*''Tgpn
......

■•

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r

-&amp;IA —Evening HtroM, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, June *, 1W3

Knights Need 8 Innings To Stay Unbeaten
M iller Hits For Cycle As Moose Romps
Friday's Junior League scores
Kntglits of Columbus 12. Klwants 10,8 Innings
Moose 32, Elks 1
Friday’s Pee Wee League scores
Butch’s Chevron 13. McRobcrts Tires 9
Gracey Construction 9, Kokomo Tools 7
Friday's Little American score
v-Flagship Bank 10. Seminole Ford (J**

Sanford Baseball

cut KOC’s lead to 12-10. Willie Grayson then drew a
walk and stole second to put runners on second and
third with Just one out. Brown then stepped up
representing the winning run. However, KOC pitcher
Knights of Columbus erupted for five runs In the Lucas. In relief of Revels, rose to the occasion and struck
eighth Inning Friday night and held off a rally by out Brown and Eddie Evans to preserve the victory for
*'Klwanis cn route to a 12-10 extra-inning victory in, the Knights.
1Sanford Junior League action at Chase Park. KOC now
In Friday night's first game. Moose scored a Junior
' stands at 6-0 In the second half, one game ahead of League season-high o f 32 runs In a 32-1 shellacking of
Moose, while Kiwants fell to 3-3.
Elks. Terry "Th e Cat" Miller hurled a two-hitter and hit
Kiwanls got off to a early 1-0 lead In the first inning, for the cycle (single, double, triple and home run) going
but KOC exploded for six runs in the top of the third to 5 for 5 at the plate, as Moose Improved to 5*1 In the
‘ take a 6-1 lead. Curtis Rudolph led off the inning with a second half and stayed one game bchlng KOC.
* single and Leonard Lucas followed with a walk. Rudolph
Moose opened up its arsenal and exploded for 14 runs
' and Lucas both scored on a double ofT the bat of Stuart in the top of the first Inning. Key hits Included a double
Gordon and Gordon scored on a single by Todd Revels. and a triple by Miller, a pair of singles by David
' Consecutive singles by Shelton Slater and J.D. Paul Goldstlck. a double by John Lewis and a singles by
brought home two more runs and Paul scored the sixth Keith Denton and Oscar Merthie. Moose also took
run on a wild pitch.
advantage o f eight walks in the inning.
Klwanis scored once in the bottom of the third to cut
Moose had 19 hits for the game and capitalized on 11
KOC’s lead to 6-2. With two outs. Arthur Mersey singled,
stole second, advanced to third on a wild pitch and Elks errors. Among his five hits. Miller had one single,
two doubles, a triple and his seventh home run of the
scored on a single by Dwayne Willis.
Knights of Columbus held a 7-2 lead going into the season. On the mound, Miller struck out 10 and walked
. bottom of the seventh inning when Klwanis rallied for Just two. Steven Warren's second-inning single and
five runs to tie the game at 7-7 and send it Into extra fourth-inning triple were the only two hits for Elks who
*' frames. Dexter Debose drew a walk to lead olT the Inning fell to 1-4 for the second half.
for Klwanis and Peter Courlas followed with a single to
' put runners on the corners.,Herscy then drilled a single
' to chase home Debose and Willis roped a single to knock
In Courlas. Both Herscy and Willis scored on KOC
tniscues. Still with nobody out. Reggie Bellamy drew a
walk, stole both second and third, and scored the tying
run on Craig Brown's RBI groundout.
KOC responded with five runs in the top of the eighth
• to take a 12-7 lead. Lucas led off with a single, stole both
: second and third, and scored on an error on a pick off
i; attempt. With one out. Stuart Gordon drew a walk and
stole both second and third and Revels walked to put
runners of first and third. Slater then rapped a single to
knock in Gordon and J.D. Paul followed with a double to
chase home pinch runner Eric Williams and Slater. Paul
-. came around to score on a two-out single by Alonzon
. Gainey.
Klwanis didn't give up though, and rallied for three
runs in the bottom of the eighth. Courlas walked to lead
off. stole both second and third, and scored on a single
by Willis. Willis scored on a double off the bat of
Bellamy, who scored on a single by Walter Hopson to

mM

In Sanford Pec Wee League action at Fort Mellon Park.
Butch's Chevron took advantage of nine walks and nine
wild pitches en route to a 13-9 victory over McRoberts
Tires. Butch's Chevron had five hits for the game
including a pair of singles by Tyrone Williams, a triple
by Jimmy Carraway. a double by Lome Jones and a
single by Billy Farrance. McRoberts Tires got three hits
for the game including a home run off the bat o f Adrian
Cooper, a triple by Demctris Miller and a single by Joe
Webster.
Faulkner's second-inning single was the only hit off Cox
Kokomo Tools helf off a late Gracey Construction rally who struck out 11 hitters, Including the last seven In a
en route to a 11-9 victory Gracey Construction and had row

is r s s a s t s s a

Mitchell's 31
Points Lead
Tribe Into

• s s rsra srs

&gt;&gt;*&lt;**"«

■**.» m &lt;« * * -

Herald PAete Sr Tammy Vincent

balance a d awaiting the outcome. Kokomo scored
10 runs in the last two innings, then held off a
six-run burst by Gracey to win, 11-9.

McRoberts Tire
Botch’s Chevron
WP — Lome Jones. LP — Nell Braddy.
Kokomo Tools
164— 11
Grace? Const.
306— 9
WP — Corey Bennett. LP — Tyrone Chibberton,
Seminole Ford
4
Flag help Bank
WP — Ronald Cox. LP — Doug Spain

Evert Avoids Falling Seeds; Texas Rolls In Series
Sports Roundup

Willie Mitchell tossed In 31 points
y. as Seminole Cook’s Comer blew
away Lake Howell Nautilus. 77-40.
In AAU 17 and Under Sub-district
Basketball Tournament action Fri­
day night at Seminole High School.

hit the home run," Marquess said,
"And that's exactly what happened
tonight."
T on igh t's schedule has fifthranked Michigan against seventhseed Maine In the opener and No. 4
Arizona State facing No. 6 Alabama
in the nightcap.

r

BETHESDA. Md. (UP1) - Scott
Simpson and Tom Kite played
precise golf while George Bums
scattered golf balls around Congres­
sional Country Club. Being precise,
as one might expect, was better.
Simpson bunched four birdies
Into his first six holes and fired his
second-straight 4-undcr par 68 for
136 and a 2-shot led over Kite after
two rounds of the 8400,000 Kemper
Open.
Kite, who played his final nine
holes in an afternoon rain, shot
70-138. Bums, the first-round lead­
er after humbling Congressional
Thursday with a course-record 64.
skied to a 77 Friday but remained
the only golfer within three shots of
Kite.

In the other semifinal game. Lake
Brantley Mickey T-Shirts surprised
Lyman Oshman Sporting Goods.
56-46. as Eric Trombo led the way
with 16 points. James Pilot scored
18 for Lyman.
Saturday night at 6. Seminole and
Lake Brantley will meet for the
- championship with the winner go­
ing to Kissimmee Tuesday for the
AAU 17 and Under Sub-district
Tournament.
Seminole broke to an early lead
behind the hot-shooting of Mitchell,
a 6-3 Junior center. Junior William
Wynn and sophomore Rod Alex­
ander each chipped in with eight
points. Efrem Brooks led Lake
Howell with 12 [Mints and Jerome
&gt;- Evans added 10.

WILLIE kOTCHBLL
No will be no consolation game
Saturday.

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Dealt

"It's a surprise to sec two guys
ahead by such a gap." said Kite.
"But there are a few others at three,
two or one under. Someone could
make up six or eight shots on this
course, so the gap is far from
insurmountable.

10 footer at the 15th.
"A fter that. I Just made a bunch of
pars," said Simpson. "I had some
birdie chances on my second nine,
but I didn't make any putts. Of
coume. at 8-under, I've got plenty of
patience."
Simpson, whose only tour victory
came In the 1980 Western Open. Is
47th on the money list with 862,803
after finishing 24th last year winn­
ing 8146.903.
Two-time defending champion
Craig Stadler. Simpson's roommate
for three years at the University of
Southern California, started the day
even but ran Into problems In the
rain and is at 75-147.
To outside observers, Simpson
and Stadler would have been an
"odd couple" at USC. Simpson is
quiet, almost shy. while Stadler Is
known as out-going, gregarious.
"Actually, we aren't that much
d iffe re n t aw ay from the g o lf
course," said Simpson. "Craig Is
calmer off the course than he
appears and I've had my bad
moments.
"It's Just that people don’t set- all
o f either of us. Craig's reputation
probably is worse than he deserves
and mine Is probably better than 1
deserve."

"This Is so rare because the talent
Is so close on the tour. The norm is
to have a three-man playofT on
Sunday, have the finish run Into the
(NBA) basketball game and have
CBS cut us ofT (of television)."

Kite left himself only 8 feet for
birdie on the fourth hole but found
the sand at the firth for his only
bogey. In the rain, however, he
rolled In a 25-foot birdie putt at No.
11 and a 10 footer at No. 16.

CBS cut to an NBA playoff game
on May 15 missing the finish o f Jim
Colbert's six-hole playofT victory
over Fuzzy Zocller in the Colonial
National Invitation tournament at
Fort Worth, Texas.

"Everything I said about Friday’s
round. Just reverse it for today."
said Kite, who scrambled to a 68
Thursday. "I hit 15 greens and
missed two others by less than three
inches. To think I shot two shots
h ig h e r (th an T h u rs d a y ) is a
mystery.

Fred Couples and Jack Renner
matched 1-under 71s Friday to tie
at 142 with Taiwan's Tze-Chung
Chen, who skidded to a 73. Joe
Inman, who won the 1976 Kemper
Open at Charlotte, N.C.. is at
69-143, tied with Buddy Gardner.

"From tee to green. I played the
best I've played in months," added
Kite. "Th is Is more like ’80, '81 and

�Ivtw lnf H ft M , li ir t o f , FI.

% m m jt h m

%,

H M - fA

Camp, Bedrosian Shackle Cards: Koosman Blanks K.C*

•

1

,
.

ATLANTA (UPI) — Atlanta pitcher Rick Camp says St.
L°uls la going through a slump much like the Braves did
last year before they rallied near the end o f the season,
only to lose to the Cardinals In the playoffs.
Camp, now 5-4, combined with Steve Bedrosian for an
eight-hitter Friday night as the Braves defeated St. Louis
5-3 for their fourth straight victory and a perfect
five-game record against the Cards this season.
‘ T h e y ’ re a great club — they’re Just going through a
slump right now," said Camp, who gave up only four
hits over six Innings before Bedrosian took the mound to
fire a four-hitter over the final three frames for his
seventh save,
"Every good club goes through a slump. We went
through one last year and we tost 19 out of 21." he said.
"Th e Cardinals are going through one right now and are
going to break out or It soon. IPs Just a matter o f time."
Camp himself has been going through a slump of
sorts, especially when he gave up six runs to Pittsburgh
last month. But Camp, who has now won two In a row,
writes It off as Just getting the bad breaks.
"It was Just a period thakl think every pitcher goes
through." he said. "You have bad luck, make a bad
pitch and they hit a home run, whereas sometimes you
make a bad pitch and they hit a foul ball."
With the score tied 1*1, Atlanta moved ahead 5-1 with
four runs In the third Inning ofT starter and loser Dave
LaPoint, who said he was having troubte throwing
anything across the plate.
"It’s nothing to lose sleep over," said LaPoint, now
4-2. "I didn’ t have any control at all. None o f the three
(pilches) were going over the plate. It's one o f those
things that will happen once In a while."
LaPoint walked Claudell Washington and Glenn
Hubbard to start the Inning, followed by Dale Murphy
with an RBI single to center. Bob Homer then shot an
RBI double to left and Terry Harper followed with a
run-scoring ground out. Chris Chambliss topped the
Inning with an RBI single to right that put LaPoint out of
the game.
Chambliss went through a slump earlier in the season,
which has dropped his batting average to .255. But he
has now hit safely In seven of the last nine games and
says It's good to be back on lop o f the ball.
" I feel a lot better and I'm swinging at the right
pitches now. I've been trying to do that all year,” he
said. " I had a real good start, but then I really went
down — as low as I’ve ever been — so I’m Just happy to
get back In and contribute again."
The Braves took a 1-0 lead In the first on a sacrifice fly
by Murphy, but St. Louis tied It up In the second when
Willie McGee led off with a ground-rule double, took
third on a flyout by Keith Hernandez and scored on a
groundout by Darrell Porter.
The Cardinals added two more runs in the eighth off
Bedrosian when Ken Obcrkfell led olT with a single and
went to second on an error bv left fielder Harper. One

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A.L./N.L. Roundup

RICK CAMP

STEVE BEDROSIAN

out later, George Hendrick betted a 1-0 pitch into the left
field seats for his eighth home run.
C u b a 9 , P ir a t e s 9

At Chicago. Larry Bowa had a three-run triple and BUI
Buckner a three-run homer In an eight-run seventh to
lead the Cubs in a game delayed 54 minutes by
darkness and rain. Chicago passed Pittsburgh in the NL
East with its third straight victory while the Pirates
dropped their fourth in a row„
R eds 9, A stro s 1

At Cincinnati, left-hander Joe Price pitched a
four-hitter and Dann Bllardello drove in two runs with a
pair o f doubles to pace the Reds. Price, 4-2, struck out
six and walked two In his third complete game o f the
season. Joe Niekro, 3-5/ took the loss.
P a d re s 8 , P h illie s B

At San Diego, Kurt Bevacqua's bloop single to right
scored Steve Garvey with the tie-breaking run and
triggered a three-run eighth to hand Philadelphia Its fifth
straight loss. Gary Lucas, who entered In the eighth,
took credit for the win to put his record at 2-3. Ed
Farmer, 0-3. was the loser.
E x p o s 9 , O la n t s 2

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Montreal has won three
straight games and Expos catcher Gary Carter hopes
this success will start of a streak that will put his team In
first place In the NL East.
Al Oliver and Warren Cromartle each drove In three
runs Friday night in leading the second-place Expos to a
9-2 win over the San Francisco Giants.
"W e're too good a team not to be a contender." Carter
said. “ We need a winning streak to get back In the race,
and maybe this is it. We won five In a row early in the
season and then lost four. We need to do better than
that.”
Bill Gulllckson scattered eight hits and struck out six
In Improving his record to 5-6. It was his fourth
complete game o f the season.
” 1 was keeping them off balance with my breaking

pitches,” the right-hander said. "1 felt good all the way.”
Gulllckson lost his bid for a shutout in the fourth
Inning when rookie Brad Wellman hit a two-run homer
— his first o f the season.
Andre Dawson homered off loser Mike Krukow. 3-3, In
the third and Cromartle added his second homer of the
year — a two-run shot In the sixth.
" I was trying to go with the pitch and didn't expect to
hit a home run," Cromartle said.
The Expos scored twice in the first when Oliver
doubled in Bryan Little and Dawson.
Montreal added four Insurance runs In the ninth. Tim
Raines doubled. Little was safe on a bunt single and an
error by shortstop Darrell Evans on a ground ball by
Dawson allowed Raines to score. Oliver singled to score
Little, Carter singled In Dawson and Cromartfc’a
sacrifice fly delivered Oliver.
It was only the second time since May 1 that the
Giants lost two straight games. San Francisco manager
Frank Robinson praised the Expos.
"Th ey have one o f the best lineups In baseball,"
Robinson said. "There aren't any easy outs."
Montreal’s Tim Raines returned to the lineup after
missing three games with a double In four at bats.
Raines was sidelined with a pulled hamstring muscle.
W h it e S o x 2 . R o y a ls 0

If only the Chicago White Sox could transplant Jerry
Koosman's brain Into Floyd Bannister’s body,
Then you'd have a pitcher who could strike out the
world.
While Bannister, the White Sox' million dollar
Investment, Is having problems finding his winning
form, the 3S-year-old Koosman continues to outsmart
American League hitters.
Koosman became the first member of the Chicago
White Sox* stafT to pitch a shutout Friday night by
stopping the Kansas City Royals, 2-0. It was his 31st
career shutout.
" I still felt strong at the end." said Koosman, who did
not walk anyone but hit a batter and struck out three. "I
want to keep It going, 1 like the starting rotation much
better than the bullpen."
Koosman, 4-0, had a strong fastball that kept the
Royals ofT stride and discovered his curveball in the late
Innings.
"I found it accidentally warming up In the seventh,"
Koosman said.
Kansas City manager Dick Howscr said Koosman's
performance did not surprise him.
“ He's always pitched well against Kansas City. I don't
know If It's him or if It's us,” Howscr said. “ Give him
credit. We’ re a good fastball hitting team and he was

quick tonight.”
Keith Creel, 0-1, making his first start o f the season
after being recalled from Omaha on Tuesday, wound up
pitching one of Kansas City’s best games o f the season
by limiting Chicago to only four hits.
ftRpever, one o f the hits was Ron Kittle’s 13th home
nin, a sltiMpto the left field stands,
” 1was looking fcr something In,” said Kittle, who tied
California's Doug DeClncc* for the American League
lead In homers. "But I don't think I hit It as hard as a
single I had last night."
Greg Luzlnskl also drove in his 1.000th career RBI
with a single In the first Inning In helping the White Sox
to their seventh victory In their last eight games.
M a r in e r * B , Y a n k e e s 0

At New York, rookie left-hander Matt Young pitched a
two-hltter and Ricky Nelson slammed a three-run homer
In helping the Mariners snap a four-game losing streak.
Young. 7-3. walked two and struck out a career high
eight In tossing his second shutout and second complete
game.
A n g e ls 9 . B r e w e r* 0

At Milwaukee, Fred Lynn homered and Reggie
Jackson had a two-run single to support Ken Forsch’s
six-hit pitching and lead the Angels to victory. Forach.
4-3, walked one and struck out two In posting his third
complete game o f the year. It was the first time
Milwaukee was shut out since July 6.1982.
R e d S o x 6 , T w in s 9

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd dldn t
have his glasses or his good curveball, but he had
enough to pick up his first major league victory.
The 23-year-old right-hander stymied the Minnesota
Twins on seven hits In a slx-Innlng stint Friday night to
lead the Boston Red Sox to a 6-3 victory.
Boyd's only trouble came in the third, when he walked
Bobby Mitchell with two outs and the Twins followed
with three straight singles to score two runs.
Jim Rice belted his 11th homer of the season for the
Sox' final run while Wade Boggs kept Boston ahead,
driving In a pair o f runs with his third single o f the game
in the seventh Inning.
O r io le s 9 , B in e J a y s 2

A l Baltimore, pinch hitter John Shelby drew a bases
loaded walk from reliever Joey McLaughlin in the ninth
Inning to give the Orioles their victory. Rick Dempsey
and Aurelio Rodriguez singled to start the Inning and Al
Bumbry walked to load the bases before Shelby, batting
for Lenn Sakata, coaxed another walk to force In the
winning run. Tfppy Martinez. 3-1. was the winner.
T ig e r s 1 2 , R a n g e r s 1

At Arlington, Texas. Enos Cabell drove In three runs
with three doubles and a single and Alan Trammell hit
his second homer to spark an 18-hlt attack that lifted the
Tigers to victory. The Tigers pounded out eight
extra-base hits. Including seven doubles. In support o f
Jack Morris, 4-5, who worked the first seven Innings.

Bam berger Tires
Of
Decides To G o For N ew Fishing Hole "
U n it e d P r e s s I n t e r n e t lo n e l

Tired of watching the New York
Mets flounder. George Bamberger
has gone fishing.
Bamberger, a nice guy wftq grew
tired o f finishing last, made the
announcement in a hastily called
news conference Friday night before
the Meta beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 4-2 under new manager
Frank Howard.
"It was my own decision," said
B a m b e r g e r . “ Y o u h a v e tw o
alternatives as a manager. One la to
go about the Job the beat you can.
and It eata you up If you don't do
well. The other way Is to go about
the Job and say you don't care what
happens. The first was my way of
looking at the Job."
When "Bam bl" resigned, the Mels
were 16-30, 10 to games out o f first
place In the NL East. Aa teams often
do. they rallied under the new
manager for an initial victory.
The Mets got six-hit pitching from
Ed Lynch over seven innings to

N.L. Baseball

Mets'Flounder,

Bamberger was named manager of
the Mets In 1981 after recovering
from a heart aliment which resulted
in bypass surgery In the spring of

uni in(i. Mu‘ ” *1980.4:
. ... *1 y|Il »■ I MURI I*IiiVrtdiyuVf ^1
snap a four-game losing streak.
Howard, an Imposing 6-foot-8.'
Lynch, 4-2, benefited from a 10-hlt
managed the San Diego Padres in
attack and did not allow a runner as the 1981 strike-plagued season. The
far as second base until the seventh.
Padres were 23-33 in the first half of
Doug Sisk pitched the final two
the year and finished last. They also
Innings to notch his fifth save.
finished last In the second half with
But the franchise has not had a an 18-36 record.
winning record since 1976 and has
"I didn’t want to see George leave
finished In last place in four of the
the Mels,” Howard said. "I knew he
last six seasons.
was thinking o f leaving and I spent
the last 10 days asking him to stay.
"Physically, I feel fine and feel no
If you can’t play for George Bam­
effects from the heart operations
berger. you can’t play for anyone.
I've undergone." said Bamberger.
He's one of the most compassionate
"But I feel that the present situation
and knowledgeable men I've ever
ts too much of a strain. I had the
known."
choice to go home and go fishing,
Howard was a minor league
and that's the one 1took.
instructor for Milwaukee in 1975
"T h e manager has to sufTer when
the team doesn’t do well, and I don’ t and was a Brewer coach from 1976
through 1980. He Joined the Meta as
want to sufTer any more. I feel
a coach last year and spent the last
exhausted.”
A native o f Staten Island, N.Y., several weeks coaching at first base.

JERKY KOOSMAN
FhAar1! American League
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Sunday, Jurw S, lM)

. . . Buckle Up Children; It's The Law
Continned from Page 1A
scat that blue light goes on. that car Is pultcd over and
they (the driver) can be cited for it.
“ If an ofllcer stops a driver and says. ‘Ma'am, where is
your child's safety seat?' and she says 'I don't have one'
and he says ‘Arc you going to get one?’ and she says
‘Hell. no. I don't believe in them and they violate my
constitutional rights,' what do you think that officer is
going to do?”
Bcmosky said he earnestly believes in the importance
o f the child restraint law.
"It's so tragic to walk up to a minor fender bender and
see a mother holding a child with a smashcd-ln face and
know In your heart If the child had been restrained there
would have been no one Injured In the accident.” he
said. "Only the child gets Injured in this type of
accident. They can't protect themselves.
“ In a 30 milc-pcr-hour crash a child Is thrown forward
with a force up to 30 times his weight. That’s equivalent
to throwing the child off a three-story building. Yes, I’m
in favor o f this law.
"Oh. God. how tragic It Is when a police officer has to
drive up to an accident where no one is hurt but a child.

It breaks your heart. They don't know why they've been
hurt," he continued. "W h y their teeth have been driven
up through their bottom lip...
"W h y their tongue is nearly cut In half...
"W h y there's blood dripping down their face...
"It Infuriates m e."
Bcmosky said he was called to the scene of one
accident where a woman who had been In the wreck
kept saying: "W here's my baby, where’s my baby?"
Police thought she might have been hysterical and
there had been no baby in the car. At first.
"You know where I got that baby?" Bemosky asked.
"Rolled up under the dash."
If the baby had been In a proper restraining carrier, he
said, it would have been comfortably sitting on the scat,
probably unaware an accident had even taken place.
" I feel tremendous compassion for the child,"
Bcmosky said. "And absolute anger over the stupidity of
the parents."
And if you think a child being thrown into a
windshield or dash at 30 times his weight isn't bad
enough, consider the child who may be sitting on an
adultjs lap at the time of a crash.

The difficulty with this legislation, he explained, is
The child is thrown forward, Bemosky said, and Is
then crushed by the force o f the adult being thrown that you can't stop a car and look for something. You
forward.
have to observe the violation. Sometime you won't be
"Th at's where you get your cracked skulls and able to see if there's a restraint In use or not, he said.
crushed chests." he said.
"But a child standing on a seat Is definitely a violation
An adult lap. highway safety experts say. can act as a and we can and will stop them (the driver) for It," he
catapult in the event of even a minor crash, and the said. "W e won't have any btg campaign, but our men
child sitting there will most likely be thrown through the will be instructed to take action when they can."
windshield.
While Seminole County deputies have not yet received
Children In the back o f a pick-up truck arc also In an an explicit directive on the restraint 4«rS, Special
extremely perilous situation.
Operations Commander Lt, BsarTfaylor said It will be
"H ow many times have you driven down (U.S. enforced.
"W e're still assessing It." he said. "But as with any
Highway) 17-92 and seen a passel o f kids riding in the
back o f a pick-up?" Bcrnosky asks.
new law. we’re responsible for It. If we see a violation
"W hat happens if that truck swerves or rolls over?
we'll have to enforce it."
"W ho's going to get hurt or killed?"
The Florida Highway Patrol takes a similar attitude,
but as with the other law enforcement agencies, each .
"It's a good law. We will enforce it," Bemosky said.
Individual case will be up to the discretion o f the officer
Lake Mary Police Chief Harry Benson agreed.
"Children can't protect themselves." he said. "T h ey
involved.
don't know better. This (the new law) has been needed
(TOMORROW: HOW TO SELECT AND PURCHASE
fora long time."
Benson said Lake Mary police will enforce the new OR RENT A PROPERLY CONSTRUCTED CHILD
SAFETY SEAT).
sta*« law, as they arc required to do.

Central Florida chapter.
Survivors include his
wi f e . Ma ur e e n : t hr e e
daughters. Cathy, Annemarlc and Danielle, all
o f C a ss elb e rry: two
brothers, Jam es of
Annandalc, Va.. U.S. Rep.
William Carney of Hauppauge, N.Y.: and a sister,
Roscanne Branagan, of
Alexandria. Va.
Baldwin-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs, Is in charge of
arrangements.

Survivors Include her fa­
ther. Doync Irby of Rector.
Ark.: three sons. John L.
Woldrldge and William A.
Redman, both of Winter
Springs, and Charles W.
Redman of Sanford: four
daughters. Ms. Katherine
W. Bell. Ms. Brenda J.

A R E A D EATH S
Rolling Hills Church.
Survivors include his
wife. Helen V.: two-daugh­
ters. Helen Fl aquer.
Longwood, Mrs. Marca S.
Hogan, of Largo. Md: two
brothers. Jackson and
Benjamin, both o f Newark.
Del.; five grandchildren:
an d tw o g r e a t grandchildren.
Baldwin-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

MARGARET H. CARTER
Mrs. Margaret H. Carter.
82. o f 3355 E. Scmoran
Blvd., Forest City, died
Thursday at Florida Hospital-Apopka. Bom June 3.
1900, in Baltimore, she
moved to Forest City from
there In 1969. She was a
retired billing clerk and a
m em b er o f A ll Saints
Episcopal Church. Winter
Park.
S u r v i v o r s i ncl ude a
daughter, Ms. Jacqueline
H. Carter. Brooklyn. N.Y.:
a s i s t e r . Mr s. H a z e l
Rowland. Hancock, Md.;
and five grandchildren.
Bald w l n - F a l r c h l l d
Funeral Home, Apopka, is
In charge o f arrangements.

JOSEPH J. CARNEY
M r. J o s e p h J a m e s
C a r n e y . 41, o f 504
Benedict Court.
Casselberry, died Thurs­
day at nis nome. Bom
J u n e 15. 1 9 4 1 , In
Brooklyn. N.Y , he moved
to Casselberry trom mere
In 1969. He was the presi­
dent o f Advance Com ­
munications Inc. and a
Catholic. He was a charter
m em ber o f the Parish
Council and St. Augustine
Catholic Church, and a
member of the Casselberry’
Charter R evision Com ­
mittee. the National Fire
Protection Association, the
International Municipal
Signal Association Inc.,
and the Associated Build­
e rs and C o n t r a c t o r s .

DENNY W . LAFPERTY
Mr. Denney W. Laffcrty.
81. of 500 N. Grant St.,
Longwood. died Friday at
Life Cpre Center, Alta­
monte Springs. Born Sept.
I. 1901. In Dover. Del., he
moved to Longwood from
Chatham. Pa.. In 1973. He
was a retired farmer and a
member o f Rolling Hills
Moravian Church. He was
a member o f the Tourist
Club. Longwood, Federa­
tion o f Senior Citizens
Clubs.of Seminole County.
Longwood Social Club,
and Modern Maturists.

BEATRICE E. BLISS
Mrs. Beatrice E. Bliss.
59. o f 3059 Anastasia
Cour t. A p o p k a , died
Thursday at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte. Bom Nov.
24, 1923. In Ware, Mass.,
she moved to Apopka from
Keystone Heights In 1978,
She was a homemaker and
a Religious Scientist.
Survivors Include her
husband. William: a son.
R o n a l d W. o f W i n t e r
Springs: a daughter,
Nancy M.. o f Aubumdale;
a sister, Lucille Banford, of
D e n v e r : and one
grandchild.
Baldwin-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte

to

HOWARD J. DENNIS
Mr. Howard J. Dennis.
70. of 371 Second St..
Chuluota. died Thursday
at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Bom June 14,
1912. in Brutus. Mich., he
moved to Chuluota from
Ohio in 1980. He was a
r e t i r e d P o r t e r
Manufacturing salesman
and a Protestant.
Survivors Include his
wife. Frances: two sons.
Lloyd o f Samoa, Calif..
Richard o f Homestead:
t hr e e ste p s o n s . Gal e.
Bruce and Donald, all of
Chuluota: a stepdaughter.
Donna Sum m erville, o f
N ew York: a b roth er.
Thayer of Ohio: a sister.
Erma Dennis o f Cleveland:
and four grandchildren.
Wi nt er Park Funeral
Hom e is in charge o f
arrangements.

Lord. Ms. Annette P. Hall,
all of Orlando, and Mrs.
Lanl Wright o f Hope. Ark.;
a brother. Carol Lindsey of
Los Angeles: 12 grand­
children.
Garden Chapel Home for
Funerals. Orlando, is in
charge o f arrangements.

Funeral N otice

tenoral homo Saturday and Sunday
/•* p.m. Burial In Oak lawn Memo­
rial Park. Gramkow Funeral Home
in charge.

•ARROW, MRI. VONDKLL F.
— Funuril m t v I c m ter M n. Vondoll F. Barrow. M, of Eldar Rood,
Lika Monrot. who diad Friday,
will bt Monday at 10 a m. In
Gromkow Funtrtl Homo Chaptl
with tha Rav. Raymond Crocktr
officiating. Frltndi may call at tha

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME
i

In Observance Of Our 40th Anniversary Year Of Continued Ser­
vice, We Would Like To Express Our Appreciation To The Peo­
ple Of The Sanford-Seminole County Area.
You Can Be Assured That Our Long Standing Experience Will
Be Continued To Serve You And Your Family In Your Time Of
Meed.
Feel Free To Call CJs For Information.

MARGARET A.
REDMAN
Mrs. Mar gar e t Al i ce
Redman. 51. o f 702 This­
tle Place. Winter Springs,
di ed T h u rsd a y at her
home. Bom Aug. 5, 1931,
in Ft. Baird. N.M.. she
moved to Winter Springs
from Norfolk, Va., in 1965.

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME P.A.
905 Laurel Ave., Sanford
322-2131

,

Robert Brisson, Director

*

a Methodist.

arrangements.

BAY AREA HO M E HEALTH SERVICES
BAY AREA HOME HEALTH SERVICES
BAY AREA HOME HEALTH SERVICES
BAY AREA HOME HEALTH SERVICES
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CITRUS HOME HEALTH CARE

CITRUS HO M E HEALTH CARE
1983 will m ark tha eighth year Bay Araa Horn# Health Sarvicaa h a t been
providing the very beet hom e health care to the residents of Central
Florida.
F o r many years it has bean our desire to change the nam e of our co r­
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Therefore, as of Ju n e 5, 1983 Bay A rea Hom e Health will begin doing
b u sin ess a s C ITR U S H O M E H E A LT H C A R E .
T h e Board of D irectors, Advisory Board, m anagement, staff, location
an d phone num bers will rem ain the tam e.
W e have been honored to serve in this com m unity for nearly a d e ca d e
and continue looking-forw ard to offering the very best hom e health care
services to the patients refered to C IT R U S H O M E H E A L T H C A R E .

Ghru» Hom e H ealth C a re
YOUR TOTAL HOME HEALTH AGENCY
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�A Born Con
Teacher Mixes Math

Poetry With Music For Classroom Harmony

By Katherine Burkett
Special To The Herald
Aspiring song writer and elementary school
teacher. Elsa Caskey. Dlls her days to the brim. She
helps with school productions, arranges music Tor
dance groups and theatrical productions and Is a
composer.
This native of DcLand attributes her early Interest
In music to her talented parents.
Her lather played w iltf the London Symphony and
did back-up Tor people like Rosemary Clooney and,
the Ames Brothers. Her mother performed with
Tampa's Opera Company. "There were always
musicians In the house, and I picked up a lot," she
said.

success, his curiouslty will be sparked and prere­
quisites for getting a token can rise.
Elsa has also used her musical talents to motivate
her classes. During her first year teaching, she was
having trouble Interesting her children In such poets
as Stevenson. Her answer • to put the poems to
popular music.

Although attracted to the flute and brass and
string Instruments, Elsa began studying the piano
as her first Instrument at her father's urging. He felt
It was the best instrument on which to learn the
basics o f music.
She concentrated on the piano until she Joined the
DcLand High School marching band. " I was a
member o f the chorus. Then my father took It over
and I had to leave. I was forced to Join the band. I
couldn't exactly push my piano down the street, so I
took up the trumpet." she said.

She recorded her class singing the soul versions of
the poetry and helped them put together a slide
show Illustrating each line from the poems.
"It blossomed Into a real production - the kids
were ready to take It on the road," she said.

Her father's high school choral group. The
Modemalrea. was the first group to perform the

The success o f the project surpassed her expecta­
tions. "T w o years later I had kids who already knew
the poems from their older brothers and sisters,"
she said.

arrangements that Elsa was experimentally arrangIng.
Elsa attended Stetson University's music program
like her father before her. She majored In trumpet,
but also worked toward an elementary teachers'
certificate In order to support herself after gradua­
tion.

Elsa said that she would like for her kids to see
how school subjects are used In the real world - even
In a business as different as music.
"I'd love to take the kids through a recording
studio and show them how math Is used. It's
amazing how much I use numbers. In mixing
music, you have to know the frequencies o f different
instruments so that you can use the machine to
emphasize them or tone them down." she said.

Although teaching has put the bread on her table,
musical activities have filled at least as much o f her
lime.
Soon after college. Elsa teamed up with a young
singer. Both were asked to go to California and work
as back-up for popular easy-listening groups. The
singer signed with John Davidson, but health
problems prevented Elsa from leaving town.

Elsa's goal Is to be able to earn a living composing,
preferably her favorite kind o f music, easy listening.
Her most recent step toward that goal Is the
entrance of two songs in the American Song
Festival, a contest which can boast as past winners
such successful song writers as Barry Mantlow and
Glen Campbell.

Elsa has entertained groups at Lake Buena Vista's
convention center with her singing and playing. She
does a lot of taping for dance studios and would like
to develop a taping service. She said that she can
remix a recording lo make It suit the needs o f the
group more.

Her Two entries are the country and western
"Whispering Lies" and the easy listening "Make
Believe." The tape she Is sending the Judges, called
a "dem o," features Elsa's instrumentals and an
aspiring song writer's vocals.

" A lot o f times, the original recording is not quite
what Is wanted. Pre-recorded music can sound
really dead. 1 can bring out the drum or emphasize
4 fomsilUng else ts give tithe same excitement as live
muste." she said.
■ ........ ............
........... ,
In 1976, Elsa was approached by Ballet Guild o f
Sanford-Scminole to provide the musical score for
an original dance-drama, "R iver G old." depicting
200 years along the St. Johns River. She researched
and arranged the music for this bicentennial
extravaganza featuring a cast o f 78. The award­
winning production was televised several times and
received national acclaim.
Since that time, she has done arrangements and
special compositions for other Ballet Guild shows,
Including Americana, and Gospel Truth.
Most recently, her original composition Elsa's

Elsa Caskey arranges m usical score for produtlons
Theme was preformed by eight o f the Ballet Guild
dancers In Sensational Invitational. This perfor­
mance celebrated the 15th anniversary o f the guild

and was dedicated to Florida's first lady Adele
Graham.
Elsa performed the original piece live at the two

Elsa sees music compostion as a craft. "It's a skill
that you have to work at and work at. And frankly.
I'm getting better at it." she said.

I

Museum Exhibit

The
Timucuan
Trace
By Doris Dietrich
PEOPLE Editor
Who knows where the Timucuan Indiana came from
when they settled in Central Florida some 2,000 yean
ago?
But they were here. In, fact, they were in Sanford.
Mr. and Mn. A.B. (Tommy) Peterson Jr., both
historians, had the proof to surface practically In their
backdoor.
About two yean ago. a 21-foot long and 20-inch wide
canoe was discovered on Ihe Peterson property in the
Loch Lowe Lake area near Sanford. The canoe was sent
to Gainesville and Tallahassee where It was carbondated by state archaeologists and underwent preserva­
tion treatment.
1 Claimed as one of the oldest and rarest canoes in the
area, this 1.500-year-old Timucuan dugout will be one of
the highlights of an exhibit, "T h e Tim ucuan
Trace."scheduled to open at the General Henry Shelton
Sanford Museum-Library on Sunday. June 19.
- Enthusiastic about the "exciting exhibit," museum
curator Mildred M. Caskey talks about transportation
2.000 years ago in comparison to the facility andcomfort of today's travel.
Back then, Mrs. Caskey says that transportation
required considerable ingenuity, to say nothing of time,
patience, creativity and bravery.
In telling some of the background of the dugout. Mrs.
Caskey says the canoe "is a fine example of the
craftsmanship of the Timucuan Indians who were
known to be expert canoe makers who carried on a
thriving trade with Cuba.

[ether with graphic Illustrations, artifacts and In(native literature to make this one of the museum's
•t interesting and educational exhibits to date."

Barnard Kessler, Mai Shotwell, Pat Sevlie, Risdon Barber and Jont Porter paint mural for canoe background.
The museum-library is proud of its participation in the
lnter-actlon of Sanford-Seminole's growing Historical
Preservation Movement Mrs. Caskey says, as writ as the
coopcrt Ion of colleges and area museums in an
exchange of both services and artifacts.
Fine examples are the extended loans of Timucuan
artifacts from the Florida State Museum. Qainesvllie. the
Daytona Museum and the DeLand Museum — all
contributors to The Timucuan Trace.
Of special interest in providing an authentic back­

.,
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ground for the 1,500-year-old dugout will be a large
Dr.Gencvleve
dcstqwid the
mural depicting the wooded shoreline of the St. John's exhibit, and has been assisted In
River.
mounting the work by Mr. and Mrs. A-HFetcraon J r
The colorful work of art was executed under the Miss Patricia Bardin, Mrs. John T, Johnson. M m Donald
direction of Grady Klmsey of the Seminole Community Moore. Mrs. Corinne Campbell. Mrs. Ruth 8winaey. Mrs.
College Art Department and the SCC Art Club and will Joyce Mlkknla, Jim Jcrolgan. Mr. and Mrs. Edward
remain a permanent part of the East Roam exhibit area, Yancey and Mia. Jack Hunter.
Mrs. Caskey says.The museum-library supplied the
canvas and paints for the mural, but the artists auppUed
Others sstsilng with a reception
the talent, gratis. Mrs. Caskey adds.
Walker. Mrs. Grace O'Ekfcn and Mia. Edna Boyette.

�1 ,]

Engagements
■M M

Smith

—

Fow ler

Mr. and Mrs. Janies Russell Smith, 121 Sanora
Blvd., Sanford, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Sheri Rac, to Richard Craft Fowler, son ol
Rear Adm. (USN, ret.) and Mrs. Richard E. Fowler,
3400 Whltncr Way. Sanford.
Bom in Dayton. Ohio, the bride-elect Is the
maternal granddaughter of Mrs. Agnes E. Furay,
New Smyrna Beach, and the late Mr. Norris H.
Furay. She Is the paternal granddaughter o f Mrs.
Darst R. Smith. Radford, Va.
Miss Smith Is a graduate o f Seminole High School
where she was a cheerleader. She attends Seminole
Community College where she Is majoring In
fashion merchandising and Is employed In the
Children's Department o f Robinson's.
Her fiance, bom in San Diego, Calif,, is the
maternal grandson or the Late Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
W. Ray o f Providence. R.I., and the paternal
grandson or Mrs. Garnett Craft Fowler, Burnet,
Texas, and the late Mr. Richard E. Fowler Sr.
Mr.Fowler Is a graduate o f Radford High School.
Honolulu, Hawaii, where he was a member o f the
varsity swim team. He Is a graduate o f Florida
Institute o f Technology, Jensen. Beach, where he
received an AS degree In oceanographic technology
a n d a BS d e g r e e In e n v i r o n m e n t a l
technology/sclencc. He Is employed by the Universi­
ty o f Florida's Institute o f Food and Agriculural
Sciences at the Agricultural Research Education
Center. Sanford.
The wedding Will be an event of July 9, at 7.30
p.m., at the United Presbyterian Church. Lake Mary.

Sheri Rae Smith,
Richard Craft Fowler

Gaines - Henry
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic F. Gaines Jr.. 708 Oak Avc.,
Sanford, announce the engagement o f their daugh­
ter, Elizabeth Carpenter, to James William Henry,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Harrison Henry. 1405
Virginia Avc.. St. Cloud.
Born In Jacksonville, the bride-elect Is the
maternal granddaughter or the late Mr. and Mrs.
Ormond Carpenter o f Fernandlna Beach. She Is the
paternal granddaughter of Mrs. Frederic F. Gaines,
Fernandlna Beach, and the late Mr. Gaines.
Miss Gaines is a 1982 graduate o f Trinity
Pcparatory School. Orlando, where she was business
editor of the yearbook, and was a member o f the
varsity swim team, Women's Service Club. Pep Club
and French Club. She attended Florida State
University and Is employed In the Entertainment
Division at Walt Disney World.
Her fiance, bom in Orlando, is the maternal
grandson of Stewart Lutwlller, St. Cloud, and the
Jpta Mrs. Lutwlller. He Is the paternal grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Harrison Henry o f Scvlcrvllle,
Tenn.
Mr. Henry Is a 1979 graduate o f St. Cloud High
School where he was a member of Interact, the
varsity basketball team and National Honor Society.
He Is listed In "W ho's Who Among American High
School Students." He attended Valencia Communlt
College. Orlando, where he studied electronics and
computers. He.Is, employed in.the. costume division­
al Walt Disney World. ■
The wedding will be an event o f Aug. 12, at 7
p.m.. at the First United Methodist Church. Sanford.

to w n y
A L L V
_________

B. A.G. IN
It&gt;N,N.T.
G.t I'm

H a i r &lt;W” P l a c e
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1983-84 year are, from left, Marian Rethwill, secretary; Yvonne Alday^
corresponding secretary; Paulee Stevens, first vice president; Geneva
Spaulding, president; Batty Sandage, second vice president;
Mar&gt;
Lourdlne, Sunshine chairman; Perk Irvin, director; and Bunnle Morgan,'
treasurer. Other officers are Laura Ozier, director; and M ary Jo Cochran,
outgoing president and director.
_____

Afro-Am erican Society
Presents Youth Forum
The Afro-American So­
ciety o f Seminole Com­
munity College presented
Its third annual Christian
Youth Forum at St. Paul
M issionary Baptist
Church.

Marva
Hawkins
•122-51IS

Theme for the forum
■
was. "T h e Future Is Now; Time for Responsible
Decisions.”
First place winner was Lawand Randall, a junior at
Seminole High School and a member of First Shiloh
Missionary Baptist Church. Lawand Is (he daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Randall Jr.
Other winners were Anglia Delaney. Don Hilton and
James Wright Jr.
Dr. Stephen Wright and Dr. Velma Williams o f SCC
are the coordinators.

rpsntsr

Pair Treasures Friends'
Presence, Not Presents
DEAR ABBY: Last year
you ran an Invitation to an
anniversary party asking
guests to please write a
little piece recalling a fond
memory of the honorees
rather than bring a gift.
We hope to celebrate our
golden wedding anniver­
sary' this summer and we
honestly do not want any
gifts!
Please run It soon before
our children go hog wild!
Thank you. and God bless
you.

P ilo t
O ffic e rs

had to mimeograph It to
meet the demand.
I am not complaining.
The many responses I
have received from grateful readers who have used
this invitation more than
compensate for the work
involved;
"T h e children o f Iver
and Helen Dahl Invite you
to celebrate with them the
50th wedding anniversary
o f their parentsr A recep­
tion will be held May 7. at
2 p.m., at the Elmhurst
Country Club.
"W e request your help
In compiling a book which
recalls memories from our
parents' first 50 years of
marriage. On the enclosed
sheet, we ask that you
write one memory or ex­
perience that you have
shared with them and re­
turn it to us by April 26.
We believe that the loving
mem orie s they have
shared with you, their
friends, would be the most
treasured gift they could
receive; therefore, we re­
quest that no other gift be
sent."

Dr. Mallalah’s Deltona Office Is
Relocating at 910 Deltona Blvd.
Dsltcna Point, Daltons, FI. 6744149

DEAR ABBY: About 10
years ago. when 1 was a
newlywed, after noticing
how much my husband
admired ladles with large
breasts. I went to a plastic
surgeon and had mine
en la rged (s ilic o n e Im ­
plants).
About a year later my
breasts started to harden.
Today they are as hard as
rocks, and 1 am divorced
and lonely. I am so em­
barrassed because o f my
breasts that 1 avoid any
relatlnship that might lead
to Intimacy.
Abby. can this situation
be corrected? If so. please
tell me how.

WANTSTO
LOVE AOAIN
DEAR WANTS! G o
back to the plastic surgeon
who performed the opera­
tion and see what he has
to say. If you cannot re­
turn to the original doctor
(or do not want to), consult
wi t h a b o a rd -ce rtifie d
plastic surgeon and get his
opinion.
Your original Implants
may have to be replaced,
but my experts say your
present situation can be
corrected.
D E A R A R R T t You
naked your readers to tell
you the difference between
a lady and a tramp. I'm
not sure I know what a
lady ts, but I do know that
a tramp la not the same as
a bum. Not In England,
anyway.
In 1032, At Jolson
starred In a film titled,
"Hallelujah. I'm a Bum."
When It was shown In
England, the title was
changed to. "Hallelujah.
I'm a Tramp."
The reason: In England
a " b u m " is slang for
" d e r r l e r c . " whi ch Is
French for " t u c h l s , "
which la Y iddi sh for
"fanny." which is slang

forbadudde.

K

.

rfl

Mrs. Faye K. Williams'and Mrs. Mary Whitehurst have
returned from attending the graduation o f their son and
grandson, Marcus A. Kendrick, from Norfolk State
University where he received Bachelor's degree in Social
Work.
.
Marcus was team captain o f the Norfolk Spartans and
member o f the Fellowship Christian Group. He Is a
graduate of Lyman High.
While In Norfolk. Marcus was district assistant
manager of the circulation department for the Virginia
Ledger. He plans to continue his education at Flonda
State University to receive his master's degree.
Decendants o f the late Albert and Lucy Walden
gathered at the home o f their Uncle James Walden and
the Eddie McGees who were the hosts for the family
reunion that brought together family members and
friends o f the Waldens.
Attending the reunion from the Albert and Lucy
Walden clan were: Ellsc Walden Doscy, Sanford: Erma
Walden Trudo. Landovcr, Md.: Nadine Walden Hayman.
Detroit; Alton Walden. Rochester. N.Y.. and Jessie
Walden, Sanford. Unable to attend were Lucille Walden
Calloway, Rochester, N.Y. and Sgt. Albert Walden Jr.,
Germany.

First Place: Lawand Randall
Over 20 grandchildren and great-grandchildren at'
tended the three duy reunion.

GETTING MARRIED
M ogsgeaeot and wedding form s a n await
able at (ha Herald offices to announce these
sweats. The form s assy he accompanied by
yrafssslom al black and white photographs I f a
p la ta n la desired with the annonneeaeat.
W oddlag farm s and pictures must be subm ltts d w ith in tw o weeks o f tb s woddlag.

Trawling Companions.
For Your Vacation...

Soft, packable, easy-cart
Foar-piicu WMfcind outfit*.
StwN, drift, puts and iacktt In

No matter what condWon your old draperies
are In, we will give you a trade-in of $200 per
pleat toward any window treatment of your
choice. Sheen and valances Included in trade
-In sale. Select from over 2000 fabrics and
ooion.
(Thr taMk-in draprrir*

m m

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If ) mi da Ml
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W l W H l M CK UP VOUt O iD
DBANM S.
NO OHAItC. NOMINATION.

M

p ta M H ty

priedit..

Philips Decorating Dsn

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HtrtM ftato by Tommy Vlocurt

SISTER
Officers

Sanford City Commissioner Dave Farr, from left. Installed the following
officers of SISTER ( Sanford's Interested Sarahs To Encourage Rejuvena­
tion) Inc. to serve during the 1983-84 term: Irene Laney. president; Vivian
Sweeney, vice president; Ruth Swinney. first vice president; Chat Horrell,
second vice president; Vivian Buck, third vice president; and Amy Sokol,
recording secretary. Not pictured is Joann Herrlngshaw, treasurer.

YOUR MANUFACTURER’S C O U PO N S ARE
WORTH TWICE A S M UCH W HEN YOU REDEEM
THEM AT PANTRY PRIDE.
M N Q M A N Y M A N U F A C T U H B W a o o u p o n y o u o#p * o m r w M p t p m , m a q a ^ r w o r
• n y y o u m oetvm In • » ma#, a n d w
d o u b t* th * m a n a y a ovtn g * m a t a d o n th * o o u p o n
(rwtUnd n o t to « o M d *1.00). F o r *K*m pl*, If • m anutaoSufw r* o o u p o n h a i • o ** h
s a v in g * o f 60* P a n try P r t d s w M g lv * y o u S l.O O o a a h s a v in g * o r d o u b t* tft*

In A nd Around Lake M ary

Students Bring Customs
Of Ancient Rome To Life

1W O

PF R RAC.

FRYING ®

Karen
Warner

" Special gucats were s l u d c ^ c m

Lyman and Seminole High *rhoofs
who purchased tickets to the feast,
About 170 students took pan In the
Roman dinner.
I The Lake Mary High students
rfalsed money to purchase the food
By selling candy during the year.
i According to Kathy Stroschcln.

'ponied Trances to Disney World.
but spent most o f their vacation
time resting on Florida beaches.
Raymond is currently a manager
at White’s Department store In
M a r t i n e z , w h i l e L a u r a is a
supervisor at Krogers Department
store. This was Laura’s first visit to
sunny Florida and she loves it, she

Get well wishes are extended to
Gwen Barber o f Van Burcn Street In
Lake Mary. Gwen awoke last Satur­
day morning with chest pains, and
was thought to have had a heart
attack. Fortunately It was not.
Doctors discovered that Gwen had
pneumonia and placed her In CCU
at Florida Regional Hospital In
Sanford. Get well quickly. Gwen.
Late birthday wishes arc sent to
DcLorcs Lash. J.F. McLoughlln,
Patti Lash and Lillian Burke.
On June 6, a special anniversary
will be celebrated by Walter and
Katherine Llpplncott o f Lake Mary.
Family members will gather and
celebrate the couple’s 61st anniver­
sary with cake and refreshments.

* Frances Willis o f Seminole Drive
tad a wonderful surprise recently.

The Lake Mary CIA recently met
and made plans for the July Fourth
celebration.
According to Cindy Brown. CIA
secretary, tickets are now on sale for

leer. The meeting will start at 7:30

ROUND
are:
dogw
holly.
Recently the Lake Mary Extcntion
Homemakers held Its 13th annual
achievement day at the Ag center.
Four Lake Mary members winn­
ing ribbons In the cultural arts and
crafts are: Nancy Fisher, who took
first place In counted cross stitches,
second place In needlepoint and
second place in quilling.
Jackie Lockwood took first place
In crewel, first place In pillow
ma k i n g and secon d pl ace In
counted cross stitch.
Lillian Allison won second place
In artificial centerpieces, while
Dorothea Blbeau took third place In
the clothing categoric.
The homemakers will hold an
awards luncheon on June 16 at the
Holiday Inn at the Sanford Marina
at 11 a.m.

W A T E R O R OIL
t, l , i ) / C A N

TUNA
C H U N K LIG H T

3 / 89*1

------If you have any Information o f
community Interest, or Interesting
news, why not share It with the
community. Call me at 323*9034.

GOLDEN
RIPE
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I$ t B llS

Offictrt of the Sanford Bota Sigma Phi City Council to mtvo during tho
1983-84 year are, from loft* Cathy Taylor, corresponding xocretary; Margin
Bain#, vie# president; Batty Jack, president; Marty Colegrove, traasurar;
and Susan Byrd, advisor to tha board. Mary Johnson Is tha recording
secretary.

r ML S I 1
R L D

R I P E

WATER
MELON

�4B-Evening

Htrald, Sanford, FI

A dventist

11«UL
MB m i .

Assem bly O f God

Congregational

Sunday
John
14:15-31
Monday
John
16:5-15
Tuesday
I Corinthians
2:6-16

Episcopal

Wednesday
I Peter
2:11-17
Thursday
Acts

1: 1-11

NonDenominational

Saturday
Hebrews
10:19-39

Catholic

Naiarene
Christian

Eastern
Orthodox
Lutheran
um uM cw M ao
Fitter

Christian Science

IMt tJt

m ini

Church Of C hrist

Presbyterian

You've met this man before! Remember him? What grand airs he liked to assume!
What vain boasts poured from his lips! He was forever trying to make an Impression, but
most people saw through his false front. They called him a STUFFED SHIRT!
Airs and vanity rarely fool us. We look for the Inner qualities of a man's charocter.
Only when those Inner qualities are just as fine as the external impression he makes—
only then are we sure we have met a man of the highest caliber.

Church O f God

Our sanctuaries build character! Into the life of the individual and of the community
It pours those moral and spiritual influences which develop man’s Innate nobility.
Through religious education and the worship of God, they point young and old to the
high goals and rich resources of Christian living
Copyryht 1 9 0 KtelWr Adv#rt*ng S*noc»
«nd Witewn* tevwip*p« Fi i Kk m Syndcal*. r c
p o e m (024. ChartMWtviM. Vi 22900

Tho Following Sponsors
ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H. Hodges and Stafl

CELERY CITY
PRINTING CO.,INC.

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
Bill A Dot Painter

Moko This

Church Notlco And Directory Pog# Possibloi

FLAGSHIP BANK
OF SEMINOLE and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

KNIGHT'S SHOE STORE
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight A Staff

OSBORN'S BOOK
AND BIBLE STORK
2599 Sanford Ave.

STENSTROM REALTY
Herb 8tenstrom and Staff

GREGORY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

L.D.PLANTE, INC.
Oviedo, Florida

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS
and Employees

WILSON'BICHELBEROER
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff

HARRELL A BEVERLY
TRANSMISSION
David Beverly and Staff

THE MoKIBBIN AGENCY
Insurance

PUBLIX MARKETS
and Employees

JC P enney

MEL'S
aULF SERVICE
Mel Dekle and Employees

SSNKARIK GLASS
A PAINT CO.t INC.
Jerry A Ed Senkarik
and Employees

Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemann and Staff

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE CO.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson

WINN-DIXIE STORES
and Employees

. 4,

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY&lt;
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�Evsnlng Hsrald, Sanford. FI.

Sunday, Juno S,

Barbara Riddle Is
First Woman
Clergy Delegate

Seminole Heights Baptist
Schedules Film On Prison
. “ God's Prison Gang," a film featuring Al Capone's
■ ■getaway driver, the last member of Bonnie and
' • p y dc 8 6an8 and two other notorious criminals who
have become Christians, will be shown al 7 p.m.
• Sunday at Seminole Heights Baptist Church meet­
ing In the Lake Mary High School.
The 44-mlnulc film was shot behind the walls of
New York's Attica prison and Is hosted by Art
LlnkJetter. It tells the story®f the work of "Chaplain
^Ray's" International Prison Ministry. The showing is
. free to the public.

■,Graduates Honored
■:

Seminole Heights Baptist Church will honor 1983
graduates this Sunday during the 11 a.m. worship
service to be held In the Lake Mary High School
auditorium. Dr. J.T. Cosmato, pastor, will give
special recognition.
The graduates, youth advisors, and other young
people in the congregation will be guests of Mr. and
•Mrs. Larry Castle at a fellowship at their home at
200 Sanora Boulevard. Sanford, following the
evening service.

Centennial
Celebration

"Commission", a seven-member group representing
100-year-old Nyack College In Nyack, N.Y.. will present
a centennial celebration in music, testimonials and
audiovisuals at Deltona Alliance Church. 921 Deltona
Blvd., at 7 p.m. June 14. The concert is open free to the
public.

\

Miss Margaret "P eggy" Ann Hegeman. daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Hegeman of Hays Drive.
Sanford, has been appointed by the Morgan County
(Tcnn.) Parish to serve the Wartburg and Lancing
United Presbyterian and Deer Lodge Congregational
Churches as Interim associate to assist In the
‘ general pastoral duties or the three congregations.
Miss Hegeman. a native of New Jersey. Is a 1974
Seminole High School graduate and received a BA
degree in Religion from Florida State University In
1978 and a Master o f Divinity degree from Columbia
Theological Seminary. Decatur. Ga.. In 1982.
While In seminary, she served as summer Intern
pastor at Faith Presbyterian Church In Dunedin and
as a student chaplain at Emory University and
Georgia Baptist Hospitals In Atlanta. She is a
member of Covenant Presbyterian Church, and
Seminole Chapter No. 2, Order of the Eastern Star,
both of Sanford. She Is a Past Worthy Advisor of
Sanford Assembly No. 25. Order of the Rainbow/for
Girts.

)
1
;
z

.
•
-

Youth Director Leaving
There will be a farewlll covered dish dinner for
' ‘Youth Director Joe Irish and his wife. Vickie, this
' ’ Sunday at 6 p.m. in the fellowship hall of
Community United Methodist Church, Casselberry.
Irtsht who*had-been or the church staff since
January, 1981, has accepted a similar position at
First United Methodist Church ofDublin. Ga.

Paper Joins Staff A t First
•*';

First Baptist Church o f Sanford will welcome
David Pepcr as its minister of educatlon/youth this
■ - Sunday. He holds a BS degree from Florida State
University and Is a 1983 graduate of New Orleans
Baptist Theological Seminary with a master's in
Religious Education.
He and his wife. Linda, have two children— Richie
and Mandy. A churchwide reception honoring the
Pepcr family will take place In the church fellowship
; hall following the Sunday evening service.

Children's Day
The Elm Avenue Church of God o f Prophecy will
celebrate Children's Day at the 11 a.m. service this
Sunday. The children of the church will present a
musical. "Down by the Creek Bank," Mrs. Joyce
•Ceresoll. Gleaner director, and Mrs. Yvonne Lewis,
youth director, are In charge. They will be assisted
by the Children's Church directors. Mr. and Mrs.
ttFred Jones. Cradle Roll children present will be
Introduced by Cradle Roll director, Mrs. Lester
Schmclz.

Youth Revival
Darel Talbot, former national secretary o f the
youth o f the Churches of God o f Prophecy, and his
youth group from Daytona Beach will conduct youth
revival at (he Elm Avenue Church of God of
Prophecy at 2509 Elm Ave..‘ Sanford. June 9-11 at
7:30 p.m. Grant Metcalf from Ft. Myers will speak at
,lhe 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. services on June 12. These
‘ meetings are open to the public,

Bible School Set
St. Matthew Missionary Baptist Church will hold Its
Vacation Bible School June 14-25 at the church,
from 5:45 to 8:30 p.m. Theme will be "Thanking
God for the Bible." These sessions are open to the
&gt; public.

Youth Sunday
Holy Cross Episcopal Church. Sanford, will observe
'Youth Sunday this week with a salute to high school
graduates at the 10 a.m. service. There will also be a
commencement service for the church school young
people ane awards will be presented.
Young people will serve as readers and ushers.
Following the service the youth will hold a bake sale
to support "M isty", a Chippewa Indian child the
church school has adopted through the Christian
Children's Fund, during the summer months.

Plnecrest Honors Grads
•Plnccrest Baptist Church will honor high school
graduates. Ken Tlse. Jessica Wilks. Robin Farina
•and Michael Wohlcgemuth; and college graduates:
Pam Tltahaw and Robert Gammon this Sunday.

G irls In Action
Ih e following members o f the First Baptist
Church. Sanford. Girls In Action organization will be
honored In a recognition service at 7 p.m. Sunday
for Mission Adventure work they have completed;
' Kim Revels. Patty Terrell. Shannon Barbour. Tara
.Smith. Casey Butler. Am y Murphy. Sara Wrighl.
■Sherri Smith. Dawn Hartley, and Monlco Corino

Atkinson Joins Staff
At Community Church
The Rev. Lawrence G. church.
He Is originally from
Atkinson has joined the
stafT of Community United New J ersey where he
Me t ho d l Bt Ch u r c h o f served as district superin­
Casselberry as minister of tendent for six years.In the
evangelism, new members Southern New’ Jersey An­
and church growth. He nual Conference. He was
screed in the same capaci­ pastor o f Bclmar United
ty with First United Meth­ Methodist Church for 14
odist Church. Orlando, for years and First United
514 years. During that M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h .
time 900 new members Vi nel and, N.J. for 21
were received into the years.

Sixty laypersons and clergy (plus 18
alternates) were elected to the two
conferences.
"i
The ' Florida Annual Conference ac­
c e p t e d a t o t a l 1984 b u d g e t o f
910,202,981 to be used In the ministry
and outreach of the United Methodist
Church.
Three women and 16 men were
ordained as elders (full connection) In the
United Methodist Church. Twenty-nine
men and women were ordained as
deacons (probationary’ members) and
one man as nn associate member.

T h e K in g Is R e tire d

Retirement is an inevitable event ior
anyone who lives to a good old age and
everyone should prepare for It. The
secret o f a happy retirement is not only
to retire from something, but to retire to
something.
Without preparing for retirement, this
Is what you will most likely face: the
sudden shattering o f long-standing
habits and routines: the sense o f not
being needed and wanted: the terrible
feeling of purposelessness. If you arc not
prepared for retirement, you go to bed
with the thought: "W hat will 1 do
tomorrow?"

ByLEOF.KING,

Pastor.
First United Method
Church of Saafoed

strengthened with might by His Spirit in
the inner man."
Second, something to do and some­
thing to be that will make a person
useful to others and himself. How can
any of us live In one place for a period of
time and not apply ourselves to some
good and useful purpose in the commu­
nity? Besides being endlessly absorbing,
these things give us a rare Joy.

Retirement can begin a new era. a new
life o f productive activity, Joy and
satisfaction — the years o f new adven­
ture. This Is a period o f life to which we
look forward, wondering what we will
do. No one need worry about this, if
mind and heart are centered on trying to
be useful and helpful toothers.

One o f the appalling things about an
unprepared retirement is the way It
suddenly throws away an accumulation
o f wisdom and experience. There are so
many thing that older people can and
should do with their knowledge.

There are certain things that will make
a helpful, happy retirement. First, there
is an underglrdlng faith. When you
approach this time In life, whether you
have a strong faith makes all the
difference In the world. To endure. St.
Paul put It this way: "... that you may be

People with physical limitations may
not be able to do much after retirement;
but it Is so much more Important to be
something than it is to do something. In
old age, we can all be something that
people will remember long alter we arc
gone.

After much soul-searching, a husband and wife o f my
acquaintance have decided to put her mother in a
nursing home.
The elderly woman, at 83, had become too much o f a
burden on the younger couple who are in their late 50s. I
suppose, to be honest, one would have to add that she
was also Interfering with their personal and social life.
They liked to take month-long vacations once or twice a
year. But what to do with Mother?
Did this couple make the right decision? Many would
say they did not.
A denominational magazine which polled its readers
on their attitudes toward nursing homes for the aged
discovered that BO percent feel that "the Christian thing
to do Is to keep the old folks al home;" 76 percent say it
Is better for an old person to "receive less professional
family attention In home than to receive the best of
medical care In a nursing home;" and 56 percent believe
It would be better to "hire a full-time, Mvc-tn nurse than
to take the elderly away from their families."
Have middle-aged children jettisoned their elders for
the sake o f their greater mobility and convenience?
Here are some o f the comments o f the magazine's
readers: .
"F ar too pinny people in their pursuit o f pleasure
simply put the elderly out o f sight."
"T h ey donil produce so we get rid o f them in a very
polite w ay."
"A s a Protestant minister. I visit nursing homes
several times a week. I can only say that being with
one's family even under adverse circumstances would
seem much better than being confined to a nursing
home."
Another reader noted that "uniform programs,
routines and procedures found in nursing homes are
depersonalizing. The elderly should be spared such a
fate."
There were readers who disagreed. They felt that a

The Florida Annual Conference voted
to invite the 1992 General Conference to
meet In Orlando. This resolution will be
to the General Conference for consid­
eration.
A resolution on sexuality In (he
ordained ministry was approved by a
majority and will be sent as a petition to
the 1984 General Conference as a
proposed new section in the Discipline,
and If accepted would become a law of
the church.
The resolution reads: "W hile such
persons set apart by the church for the
ministry of the Word. Sacrament and
Order are subject to all frailltles o f the
humun condition and pressures of soci­
ety. they are required to maintain the
highest standards repreanted by the
practice o f fidelity in marriage and
chastity in singleness. Since the practice
of homosexuality is incompatible with
Christian teaching, professing and/or
practicing homosexuals are not to be
accepted as candidates, ordained as
ministers, or appointed to serve In The
United Methodist Church."
The conference closed with the an­
nouncement o f ministerial appointments
by Bishop Earl G. Hunt Jr. on Friday.

The Rev. and Mrs. J.
Davi d Co c hr a n were
among 81 people named
m i s s i o n a r i e s b y t he
Southern Baptist Foreign
Mission Board May 24 at
F irst Bapt i st Church.
Richmond. Va.

Pastor’s
Corner

Problem Of

The Florida area reported membership
for 1982 of 334,773. an Increase o f 2,568
over the prevllous year. Attendance at
worship and church school also In­
creased and baptism and professions of
faith showed gains o f from six to seven
percent. With the addition o f Ft. Myera
and Leesburg districts Florida Confer­
ence now includes a total o f 14 districts.

Couple Nam ed Baptist M issionaries

Long L iv e T h e K in g
I was a"skedj&gt;y Jane Casselberry, our
Religion editor ic yulle something about
'WttrcmeM.1A fter
the pastoral
ministry. I am now ra r in g from an
appointed church.

Dr. Ethel M. Gray of Hastings, lay
leader o f the Florida Conference, will
lead the delegation.
Also elected at the 141st session of the
Florida Annual Conference held May
23-27 in Lakcland.wcrc delegates to the
Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference
scheduled for July 12-16. 1984 at Lake
Junaluska, N.C. Named from this area
were Marlene J. Anderson, lay delegate,
and Edward L. Dinkins Jr.. Enterprise,
clergy delegate.

\

; M iss Hegeman Appointed

For the first time In Its history, the
Florida United Methodist Annual Confer­
ence has elected a clergy woman as a
member o f the General Conference
delegatfon.
The Rev. Barbara Williams Riddle,
pastor of the TuBkaw.lla United Method­
ist Church, Casselberiy. was elected one
o f the clergy delegates to represent the
Florida Annual Conference at the Gener­
al Conference o f the denomination to be
held May M l . 1984 In Baltimore. Md.
Mrs. Riddle has been a member of the
Florida Conference for nine years.

The Cochrans will work
in Indonesia, where he will
be a general evangelist
and she will be a church
and home worker. Cur­
rently he Is pastor o f
Blackstonc (Va.) Baptist
Church.
Born In Portsmouth.
Va.. Cochran is the son of
Geneva G. Cochran o f
Lake Mar)-, and the late
Glenn R. Cochran. While
growing up he lived in
L a k e Ma r y and in
Hampton, Va. He consid­
ers Lake Mary his
hometown.
He r e c e i v e d the
associate of arts degree
.from Seminole Communi­
ty College, Sanford: the
bachelor o f arts degree
from Florida Technologi­
cal University. Orlando:
and the master of divinity
degree from Southeastern
Baptist Theological Semi­
nary. Wake Forest. N.C.

Parents' C are
Saints
And
Sinners
George Plageas

chronically 111 person causes stress and tension which
could have a harmful effect upon a family. Some said it
Is unfair to expect the middle-aged children to "Jump to
the tune" o f aged parents who often become more
demanding and critical.
My own Interviews with clergymen who visit nursing
homes brought forth these comments:
"There are a lot o f people In nursing homes who
shouldn't be there and a lot who should be there.”
"Not meeting our responsibilities is part-of the spirit of
the times but 'dumping' unwanted old people In nursing
homes Is not as common as some people think. It kills
your pocketbook to put someone in a nursing home
today. Most people can’t afford to do it Just because ft
would be more convenient “
"Rather than bringing nursing home patients back to
their homes. I would like to see more volunteers — from
churches, for example — come to visit them In nursing
homes. Outside the family, people are slow to visit
nursing home patients."
" I hear few complaints from patients in nursing
homes. They seem content and happy. When they first
arrive, there Is a strong desire to go home but that
feeling subsides."
Many o f these clergymen are sympathetic ot families
who find It difficult to keep the old people at home.

He has worked as a teacher in Winter Springs. He
has also served as pastor
o f Moore's Swamp Baptist
Church. Elbcron. Va.
B o r n in H o n o l u l u .
Hawaii. Mrs. Cochran, the
former Anna-May
Thorncll. is the daughter
o f Gertrude A. Johns o f

Sanford and Robert C.
Thomell o f Jacksonville,
She considers Sanford her
hometown.
She attended Southslde
Virginia Community College. Alberta. She has
w o r k e d as a re ce ptlo n ls t-b o o k k e e p e r In
Sanford.

Crazy Laxy Date
C o m m u n i t y United Met hodi st Church.
Casselberry. Is taking registrations June 6-10 for the
"Crazy Lazy Daze” summer program for children
three years to sixth grade. Church Christian
Education Director Daria From will be In charge of
the program to begin Wednesday. June 15 and
continue each following Wednesday 10 a.m. to
noon. It will be a time for crafts, games, and stories.

�i

BLONDIE

44—Evanlnfl Herald, Sinford. FI.

Sunday, June 5, 1963

by Chic Youn g

across
t Printer'i

B EETLE BAILEY

BEETLE, YOUVE BEEN MY
GREATEST PiSAPPOiNTMENT/

by Mort Walksr

WHY CAN'T I MAKE YO il
CHANGE? WHY CAN'T X
MAKE YO J 6 ROW V

meesurt (pi.)
4 Iceberg*
0 And to on
(ibbr.. Let. 2
w dt)
12 Dine
13 Gun
14 Mountain
pm
15 Soap
ingredient
10 Sprite-like
17 Sound of a
dove
IB Lowered in
volume
20 Variety of
wheat
22 Compaia
point
24 Wriggly fifth
26 Total!
28 Greek letter
30 Charitable orginiration
(ebbr.)
34 SF tramit
system
36 Go bad
30 Long time
37 Cassowary
38 Pique
39 Masculine

by Art Santom

OH-OHl 0TH0? W RE PBP OR
jff lH A T C H H K S lP f lR E r t

Skinny fish
Month (Sp)
Printer’s
direction
Propellant gas
Mae West
role
At a distance
Biblical
character
29
Perception
Behold (Lat.) 31
10 Implement
11 Thicken
32
19 Try
33
21 Wield
23 More uncanny
39
24 Oiner
41
25 Fortas and

1

by Ed Sullivan
^ THAT'S JUST A

■’•AMP THAIS THE
BOTTOM LINE, WALPO '
WELL. TLL SEE YA*"

4

2

2

ti

11

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21

g

r
4.
41

M-as

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer North

Past
Pass
Pass
Pass

SeeU
24
JO
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Opening lead: 4K

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoffal A Haimdahl

CM, no ! I LO ST

not feeling

s o w a r? v o u

M/WNCNOWEN PO HAVE A UTTLE aa*T
I WENT"THROUGH OM YOUR-TBttGUETHAT 0342/ GtfTOS
MOUTM.

PRANK AND ERNEST

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jamea Jacoby
Any pair good enough to
reach a world champion­
ship final match Is likely to
have a bidding kit full of
gadgets. Now look at how
this champion pajr bid to
six spades.
South's response of two
spades was a slam Invita­
tional game force and
showed a very strong

Ga r f i e l d

10

II

1

22

22

21

3
10

21

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10

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Pau
Pau
Pau
Pau

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10

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♦ 171
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9 A 965
♦ K5

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59 Author Levin

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West

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67 Insect

•

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21

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48 Pedal
aitramities
49 French
composer
60 Paris airport
52 Light brown
53 Superman'*
girl
54 Selves

14

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22

SOUTH
♦ AQJ1III4
VK4

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NORTH
♦ KS
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♦ J 74 1
♦ A 10 91

PRISCILLA'S POP

Barometric
unit
Display cards
for a score
Kind of fuel
Actress
Bancroft
Am not (si.)
Graduate of
Annapolis
(abbr.)
46 Port of Rom*
47 Compound

Burroughs
26 Lady
27 Band
instrument

40 Sown (Fr.)
42 Go wrong
43 Unused
tl
44 And not
46 Japanese coin
u
46 Embroidery
silk
V
61 Stone
monument
40
55 For hearing
56 Silent
60 Gear tooth
41
61 Building
addition
II
62 Become
accustomed
•1
63 River (Sp.)
64 Baby's
•4
plaything

WEST
*1
Y J 9*5
9KQ10I2
♦ 745

J.'J.llJUULl I a U M IJ IIB

□ n n o n n ia c in n a n
□ □ □ □ □ □ ■ n n n n n n
n n n in in u n n □ □ □

DOWN

11

T HE BORN LOSER________

Answer to Previous Punle

65 Perfume
ingredient
66 Navy ship
prefii (abbr.)

spade holding.
North's two no-trump
rebid said, “ I have a
balanced minimum."
S outh 's bid o f three
diamonds showed a sin­
gleton or void and club
support. South would not
have responded two
spades wi t h a spadediamond two-sulter.
North's call of three spades
said, "I have a high spade
as part o f my balanced
minimum."
South's four diamonds
s a i d , *' l a m v o i d o f
diamonds."
No r t h' s cal l o f four
hearts showed that ace,
and South's jump to six
spades closed the bidding.
It was possible but highly
Im probable that North
held the spade king, heart
ace and club acc-king for
his balanced minimum.
T h e p l a y was easy.
South ruffed the diamond
lead, drew trumps, lost the
club finesse and claimed
the slam.
It turned out to be a 500
point or 11 IMP swing
since at the other table
North passed as'dealer and
So ut h o p e n e d wi t h a
super-strong bid of four
spades to shut out all slam
bidding.

HOROSCOPE
What The Day Will Bring ...
TOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNES, le s s
A lucky break to team
up with another who has a
successful venture going
for him or her may be
offered you this coming
y e a r . It m i g h t c o m e
through a social contact.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20| You could be rather
fortunate today by Joining
f o r c e s w i t h o ne w h o
always seems to enhance
your luck. The horseshoe
Is still working. Order
now: The NEW AstroGraph Matchmnker wheel
and booklet which reveals
romantic combinations,
c o mpa t i bi l i t i e s for all
signs, tells how to get
along with others, finds
risi ng signs, hidden
qualities,'plus more. Mall
$2 to Astro-Graph. Box
489, Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
tional SI for your Gemini
Astro-Graph predictions
for the year ahead, be sure
to give your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) Important matters
could make a complete
reversal today. In areas
where things went wrong
yesterday, the opposite
should be true now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Expansive ideas which
pop Into your head today
m ay not fit Into your
immediate plans. Howev­
er. file them aay for future
use.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) Don't be disturbed If
you have to deal with
some unexpected changes
today. Shifting conditions
will work out well for you
In the long run.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Solutions to problems
YOUR BIRTHDAY
JUNES, 1983
Your circle o f friends
and acquaintances will be
gr e at l y expande d this
coming year. Each new
group with which you
become Involved will in­
troduce you to another.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc
20) You'll be treated with
consideration and respect
today by persons who
have authority and Influ­
ence. whether your paths
cross accidentally or you
seek them out. Order now:
T h e NEW Astro-Graph
Matchmaker wheel and
b ook let whi ch reveal s
romuntlc combinations,
c o mpa t i bi l i t i e s f or all
signs, tells how to get
along with others, finds
risi ng signs, hidden
qualities, plus marc. Mail
82 to Astro-Graph, Box
489. Radio City Station,
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
tional 81 for your Gemini
Astro-Graph predictions
for the year ahead. Be sure
to give your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 2l-July
2 2) Yo ur c ha nc e s for
achieving your objectives
are quite good today, ow­
ing to your own efforts as
well as those of others
working on your behalf.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22}
Your Ideas and comments
could be o f considerable
benefit to friends today. Do
not hesitate to offer sug­
gestions. even If they are
unsolicited.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt.
22| Joint ventures will run
more smoothly today If
you assume the leadership
role. Step in and take
charge If your cohorts arc
bogged down.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Your reasoning
faculties arc exceptionally

will not evade you today iT
you put y o u r head
together with one who is
e q u a l l y as b r i g h t a#
yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Noy,
2 2 ) Y o u c o u l d be
e xt r e mel y l ucky today
where your material li*
tersts are concerned. If an
opportunity arises In this
realm, give it top priority, j
S A G I T T A R I U S (Nov;.
23-Dec. 21) Your greatest
asset for making you a
winner today Is your abllF.
ty to optimistically take in
stride any challenges with
which you may have to
deal.
;
C A P R I C O R N ( Dec}
22-Jun. 19) Being al home
with your family will turd
out to be more fun for yotj
to day than ru bb in g
shoulders with a bustling
crowd.
A Q U AR I U S (Jan. 20Feb. 19) Projects or en­
terprises which smack of
largeness could be quite
lucky for you today. De­
vot e your talents and
energies to doing some?
thing big.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Your opportunities for
gains may not come from
standard sources today. Be
alert for unusuul channels
to offer the largest yields.
ARIES (March 2 1-April
19) You won't be hcstltanl
to use unique methods
today. You are able to
optimistically forecast the
outcome of events. This
makes you a leader.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Ventures today which
are not conducted along
conventional lines could
work out'surprisingly well
for everyone concerned.
Be Imaginative.
keen today and the de-.
clslons you make will be
based upon sound Judg-.
merits. Don't dodge big
issues.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Something which you
have been quietly develop-.
Ing could be brought to a
successful conclusion to­
day. If you feel the timing
is right, push for a cl^sc.
S A G I T T A R I U S (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Enlist the.
support o f friends today If
you get involved In some­
thing which you don't
think you'll be able to
carry off on your own.
C A P R I C O R N (Dec.
22-Jan. 19) Some tasks
you've been putting oIT
because you felt they were
too difficult to tackle will
not be as ominous if you
attempt them today.
A QUAR IUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) Important mat­
ters can be conducted with
greater case than usual
today. Just because you're
able to breeze through
them, don't discount their
value.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) You could be lucky
t o d a y in f i n d i n g the
bargains you've been look*
In g fo r p e r t a i n i n g to
household goods. Check
the advertisements and
personal sources.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) You have the ability
t o d a y to s uc c e s s f ul l y
promote situations which
could advance your selfi nt e r e st s. F ocu s y o u r
brightness on ways to get
ahead.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) You could be rather
fortunate materially today
without actually expend­
ing too much effort. How­
ever. this does NOT mean
you should coast.

by Jim Dsvli

�L a k e H ow ell
H onors Students
Lake Howell High School recently honored
students at an assembly.
Community Awards were presented to:
American Legion Award — Jeanette Pausal and
Michael Tatlcbame.
DAR Citizenship Award — Duncan Steams
Pankhurts Award — Dianne Buckhelster and
Patricia Scllgsohn,
Seminole County PTA Scholarship - Cammle
Hauser.
National Merit Scholarships — Joseph DIFonzo
and Duncan Steams.
Scholastic Awards were presenfft to:
Top ten graduating seniors — John Harvey.
Cummic Hauser. Deborah Lasley, Huong Nguyen,
Lisa Olandcr, Sharon Rogers, Duncan Steams, Lulse
Strange, Robert Tribe and Kathy Yarosh.
Senior Academic Award for Outstanding Perfor­
mance — mathematics, Duncan Steams; science,
Duncan Slcarns: language arts, Lisa Olander: social
studies, Joseph DIFonzo; fine arts, Jeanette Pausal;
Torelgn language, Am y Lastarza; business educa­
tion. Linda Robinson; vocational education, Robert
Hcmmert and physical education. Roxanne Brewer.

CALENDAR
SUNDAY, JUN ES
• Greater Orlando Mothers of Twins Club 10th anniver­
sary picnic. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Wadcvlcw Park, Harding
and Summerlin Streets. Orlando, for mothers of
multiples and families. Bring picnic lunch.
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m., Florida Power and Light
building. Myrtle Avenue. Open discussion.
Seminole Halfway House AA. 5 p.m., off U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford. Open.
MONDAY, JUNE 6
■ Sanford Rotary Club. noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Mature Dating Service, 1 p.m.. Deltona Public Library,
1691 Providence Boulvard, Deltona.
' Free blood pressure clinic. 2-4 p.m., 7th and Elm,
Sanford Seventh-day Adventist Church Community
Service Room.
Rotary Club o f Longwood, 7:30 a.m., Cassidy's
Restaurant. Longwood.
Fellowship Group AA. 8 p.m.. Senior Citizens
Multipurpose Center, North Triplet Drive, Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St. Closed.
TUESDAY, JUNE 7
Hobbycraft Class Introduction, 10-11:30 a.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
Longwood Scrtoma, noon, Quincy's Restaurant.
Longwood.
Rotary Club o f Longwood. 7:30 a.m.. Cassidy’s
Restaurant. Longwood
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on Lake
Monroe.’
Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress.
Sanford Senior Citizens picnic, meet at Sanford Civic
Center at 10:30 to go to picnic site.
South Seminole Masonic Lodge. 7:30 p.m.. Lake
Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Seminole Halfway House AA. 8 p.m.. ofT U.S. Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road. Sanford, closed.
Overcatcrs Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m., Florida
Power A Light. 301 N,.Myrtle Ave.. Sanford.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE S
Casselberry Rotary breakfast. 7:30 a.m.. Casselberry
Senior Center, 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Sanford Rotary Breakfast Club. 7 a.m.. Skyport
Restaurant. Sanford Airport.

IN THE SERVICE
EDWIN P. DOM INY
Marine Stall Sgl. Edwin P.
Oomlny, ion of Jenny Peter* ol
Sanlord, hat been awarded a
Mar ltor Iout Mail while lervlng el
the Marine Corps Recruiting Sub
Station, Cocoa.
A Meritorious Mast Is official
recognition from a Marine's commending officer for superior Individ­
ual performance. It It Issued In the
form of a bulletin published
throughout the command, and a copy
It entered In the Marine’s permanent

“ m T I t LAWRENCE
JONES
Willie Lawrence Janes, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Willie L. Jones of 152
Hidden Lake Drive. Sanford, hat
entitled in the United States Marina
Corps Reserve.
Jones will depart October If for 11
weeks of recruit training t l the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot. Parris
Island. SC Upon completion of
recruit training, Jones will be home
for e seven dey leave before going on
for further technical training In a
formal Marino Corps school.
Jones enlisted for tl&gt; years wllh a
guaranteed assignment in Topo­
graphical Drafter.
Jones It a 1MI graduate el

’’ " " f t W I f t n i u N I O N
Airman Robin R. Run Ion, daughter
of Ernest C. end Melon B. RunIon of
IOS Aialea Lane. Sanford, hat grad­
uated from the U.S. Air Farce
administrative specialist course of
Keasier Air Force Bose, Miss
Graduates of the »Jiwe*fc course
learned haw to proper* Air Force
£erretpondonca and reports, end
earned credits toward on associate
degree In applied science through tho
community College of the Air Force.
Run Ion will now serve with the 47th
Combat Support Group at Bergstrom

^ ffia fft t y T M A R T iN
Staff Sgt. Timothy J. Martin, tan
Roberta J. Glenday of 607 Honeyickle Lone, Casselberry, has boon
heorated with the U.S. Air Force
tmmendatian Model ei Ellsworth
If Torco Beet, SO
Tho Air Fore* Commendation
edit Is awarded to these Inaivldu
s who demonstrate outstanding
hlavement or meritorious service
Ihe performance of their duties an
ballot the Air Force.
Martin is a helicopter technician
fh the oath Strategic Missile Wing.

CHANNEL. BLAIZIS
Army Pfc. Dionne L ilaiils.
ughtor at Vtotol J. Hollenbeck of
IS S. Summer lin Ave, Senlord, hat
enpletod basic framing of Fart

McClellan, Ala.
During the training, sludsnts re­
ceived Instruction In drill and cere­
monies, weapons, map reading,
todies, military courtesy, military
lustlce. first eld. end Army history
and traditions.
She It s If74 graduate of Seminole
High School. Sanford.

logoi Nolle#
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HKARINO
Hearing an Prepsu d Us* of Revenue
Sharing
The County of Seminole Will hold*
Public Hearing at the Semlnele
County Courthouse. North Perk
Avenue, Sanford. Florid* 22771. on
Juno 14. 1K3 at 10:00 s.m., tor the
purpoe* of obtaining written angpsat
comment from the_jwbMe on the
proposed uses el revenue sharing
funds in the upcoming budget tor
Fiscal YaarlftlM f.
All Interested cltliens' groups,
senior cltliens end senior dtlien
organliaiiont a n encouraged to at­
tend the hearing. Persons attending
the hearing shall hove the right to
provide written end oral comments
and suggestions regarding possible
ueetol revenue sharing funds.
Following It Important planning
Information tor tho proposed use
hearing:
Amount of revenue shoring funds
expected to bo avallebto during the
coming fiscal year:
Entitlement 114
t 444.11*
Protected Entitlement III 11.151,742
PERSONS ARC ADVISED THAT.
IF THEY DECIDE TO APPEAL
ANY DECISIONS MADE AT THESE
M EETIN GS/H EAR ING S. T H E Y
WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS AND FOR SUCH
PURPOSE, THEY MAY N EED TO
INSURE THAT A VERBATIM R E ­
CORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS
MADE, WHICH INCLUDES THE
TESTIM O N Y AND E V ID E N C E
UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO
BE EASED. PER SECTION M4.0IU.
FLORIOA STATUTES.
T. Duncan Rote, III
County Administrator
Budget Officer
Board of County
Seminal* County, Florida
ATTEST:
Arthur H. Sechwtlh, Jr.
Clorkto Board of
County Commissioners
Inand tor
Somhoto County, Florid*
Publish June*. H U
OS Id

SCH O O L M EN U
JUNES

THURSDAY
JUNES

Manager’s Choice

Manager's Choice

MONDAY

TUESDAY
JUNE 7
Manager’s Choice

JUNES
Manager's Choice
tl

JUNE 10
Manager's Choice
•Last Day
of School-

Evgnlm Harold, Sanford, FI.

legal Notice
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
NOTICE OF PURLIC
HEARINB
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by
ttw City Commission of tho City of
Lake Mory, Florida, that said
Commission will hold a Public
Hoorlng on June 14, tm , at 1:00
P.M., to consider an Ordinance
entitled as follows:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA. RE.
ZONING CERTAIN LANDS WITHIN
THE CITY OF LAKE MARY, AS
HEREIN DEFINED FROM A-l TO
R-IA AND FROM A-l TO R 2,
PROVIDING A CHANGE TO THE
OFFICIAL ZONING MAP; PRO
V I D I N G C O N F L I C T S .
SEVERABILITY AND EFFECTIVE
DATE.
changing ttw toning on tho following
described property situate In the City
ol Lake Mery. Florida, to R IA
PARCEL t-A
Commence el the Northeast corner
ot Section S, Township 10 South,
Range X East, Seminole Counly,
Florida: thence run South tor a
distance ol 15.00 teat to the South
Right ol Way line ot Peola Road [*
50.00 toot Right-Of-Way); thence run
West along the South Rlght-ol Way
line el Poole Road for ■ distance ol
440.00 feel to the Point ol Beginning:
Thence continue West lor a dis
fence ol 444 00 feet; thence run S 00*
01' 05" W lor a distance ol 1757.00
feet; thence run East for e distance
of 440 00 feet; thence run N 00* 05'
05" E for e distance ot 1757 00 teat to
the Point ot Beginning.
Containing 14.411 acres more or
less end being sub|ect to any
Rigtitsol-Way and easements ol re
cord.
PARCEL 1-6
Commence at the Northeast corner
ol Section 5. Township 10 South,
Range 30 East. Seminole County,
Florida; thence run South lor a
distance ol 15.00 feet to the South
Right ol Way line ol Pool* Rood (a
50 00 loot Right otWayl; thence run
West along ttw South Right of Way
line of Pool* Road lor a distance ol
1310.00 laet to the Point of Beginning:
Thence continue West for a dis
lance ol 4f5 00 leet; thence run S 00*
01' 05" W for a distance ot 1755 00
feet; thence run East lor a distance
ot 4*5.00 teat; thence run N 00* or
05" E for e distance of 11*5.00 feet to
the Point of Beginning.
Containing 14.714 acres more or
less and being sub|ect to any
Rights at Way and easaments ol re­
cord.
PARCEL NO. 1
Commence at ttw Northeast corner
ol Section 5, Township M South.
Range M East. Seminole County,
Florida; thence run South lor a
distance ol 15.00 feet to Ihe South
Rlght ol Way line ol Poole Rood le
50 00 toot Right ot Way); thence run
West along the South Right ol Way
line ol Peola Road lor a distance of
1115 00 feel; Itwnce run S 00* 01' 05"
W for e distance ot 415 00 leet lo Ihe
Point of Beginning:
Thence continue S 00* 01' 05" W (or
e distance ol 440.00 leet; thence run
West 114 24 leet; thence run S It* 51'
13" W tor a distance of 144 IS feet;
thence run N 00* 01' 05" E lor a
distance ol 440 00 feet; thence run S
I T 51' 11" W lor a distance ol 4 00
leet; ttwnce run N 00* 05' 05" E tor e
distance ot 5*7.05 teat to e point ol
curvature ol a curve concave to the
South having a radius ol 114 02 leet.
paid point lying on the South
Right-Of-Way line ol Peola Road;
thence run Easterly along ttw arc ot

Rights*! Way end eesementi ol re­
cord.
more commonly known as; Rentoul
Lent and Paolo Rood
Ttw Public Hearing will ba held In
the City Hell. City ol Lake Mery.
Florida, at 0:00 P.M., on Jurw 14,
1*01, or at soon thereafter a t‘possi­
ble, el which time Interested parties
lor and against ttw request statsd
above will be heard. Said hearing
may ba continued Irom lime to tlmo
until llnel action It loksn by ttw City
Commission.
THIS NOTICE shell be potted In
three (1) public places within Ihe
City at Lake Mary, Florida, at ttw
City Hall, and published In the
Evening Herald, a newspaper ol
gonorol circulation In the City ol
Lake Mary, Florida, prior to the date
ot the Public Hearing, and Ihe
owners ol ttw real property which It
effected hereby shell be mailed by
the City Clerk, a copy ol this notice
as ttwlr address may appear on ttw
latest ed valorem tax records.
A taped record of this meeting It
made by ttw City tor Its convenience.
This record may not commute an
adequate record lor ttw purposes of
appeal from a decision made by the
City Commission with respect to the
loregoing matter. Any person
wishing to ensure that on adequate
record of the proceedings Is main­
tained lor appellate purposes Is
advised to make ttw necessary ar­
rangements at his or her own
expense.
CITY OF LAKE MARY
FLORIDA
t Connie Me|or
City Clerk
DATED: M eyl4,1**1
Publish June 5,11,1*01
DEI*
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In business el 140*
Hiawatha Ave., Sanford, Seminole
County, Florida under the fictitious
name ol LAS AUTO SALES end that
I Intend to register said name with
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florida In ac­
cordance wllh the provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes, to wit:
Section *45 0* Florida Statutes 1*57.
Lawrence J. Samuels
Publish May 1* and June 5. 11, 1*.
HU.
DEH 1*1
Fictitious Name
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 1100 W. Slat*
Road 414 HR*. Longwood, FL 11750.
Seminole Counly, Florida under Ihe
fictitious name ol "GemTec", end
that I intend to register taid name
with Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Florida In accordance with the pro­
visions ol ttw Fictitious Nome Stat­
utes. to Wit: Section *45 0* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
I ll Mar land R. Splclwr
Publish Jun* 5,17.15,24.1M3
DEI to
State el Florida
Department of Stale
I certify that BRANDYWIINE
APARTMEN TS WEST, LTD., a
Limited Partnership formed under
Chapter *10. Florida Statutes, having
Its principal place of business In
Sanford. Florida was cancelled for
(allure to tile Its t*t! Annual Report.
Pursuant to the provisions ol Section
41011. Florida Slatutes, I hereby
give NOTICE In this newspaper,
which Is published In Seminole
County, Florlde. Ihal said limiled
partnership has tiled all reports end

'^ C K r s i M X t H i * .
a central angle ot IT* M' 04" lor a
distance ot 151.35 leet to ttw point ot
tengency; ttwnce run N It* 51' 11" E
lor a distance ol 104.77 leet; thence
run East tor e distance ol 111.17 leet;
thence run S 00* 03* 05" W lor e
distance ol 415.00 leet; thence run
East lor a distance ol 414 00 feel to
the Point of Beginning.
Containing 17041 acres more or
let* end being sub|ecl to any
Rights of Way end easements ol re
cord.
PARCELNO. 1
Begin 15.00 feel South ol ihe
Northwest corner ol Section 4,
Township M South, Range X East,
Seminole Counly, Florid*, lor Point
ol Beginning, said point lying on Ihe
South RlgMofWey line of Peola
Rood (e 50 00 loot RightotWay);
thence run S H* 44' 47" E along the
South Rlght-ot Way line of Peola
Road for e distance of 2X00 leet:
ttwnce run S 00* 01' 05" W lor *
distance ol 7*5414 leet lo the South
line ot the Northwest vs ot Section 4;
thence run N M* 5T 51" W lor e
distance ol 110.05 teal lo Ihe
Southwest comer ol the Northwest ’«
ot said Sort Ion 4; thence run S •*• I f
04” W tor a distance ol 440 05 feet;
ttwnce run N 00* 01' 05" E tor a
distance ol 1*57.45 teal to ttw South
RlgMot-Woy lino ot Paolo Rood,
ttwnce run East tor a dlslanco ol
440DOtool to ttw Point ot Beginning.
Containing 47.111 acres more or
less end being sublcct to any
Rights ot Way end easements ol reend changing Ihe aonlng on the
following described property situate
In the City ol Lake Mary, Florida, to
R-l:
PARCEL NO. I
Commence ol the Northwest corner ol Section 4, Township to South,
Range X East, Seminolo County,
Florida; ttwnce run I I** 44' 47" E
tor a distance ol 1411.14 foot; ttwncr
run S 00* 04' 12” E tor * distance ot
**000 toot to tho Point ot Boginning:
Thence continue S 00* M' to" E tor
O distance ol 1457.10 toot; ttwnce run
N or ST » ' W lor * distance ol
IIV. 14 toot; Itwnce run N 00* 02' 40"
W tor a distance ol *71.1* loot;
Itwnce run N If* to* SI" W for *
distance ol 100.00 leet; ttwnce run N
or « ' 40" W (or o distance ol 1041.4*
toot; itwnce run S to* 04' 47" E tor o
distance ot 1117.11 tool to tho Point ol
Beginning
Contain!
*7.141 acres mora or
loss and being sublect to any
RIghts-ef Way and easaments ot re
PARCEL NO. I
Commence at ttw Southeast corner
ol tho Northwest U of Section t.
Township M South, Rang* X East.
Seminole County, Florid*; thence
run N OT OT 11" W along ttw East
lino of tho said Northwest 1* for a
distance of 14100 tool to ttw Point ot
Ttwnce run N to* to' IT' W tor a
distance of 1*1000 tool; ttwnce run S
OT OT to" E tor ■ distance of 74100
toot; ttwnce run S OT 10' *2" E lor a
distance of 1*1000 feoli ttwnce rur. N
or or to" W tor e distance el 74100
toot to the Polnl of loginning.
Containing 14074 acres more or
lost and being sublect lo any
Rights-ot Wey and aasomants of re
cord.
PARCEL NO. 4
Commence at ttw West le comer ot
Section 4, Township » South. Range
10 Cool, Somlnoto County, Florida,
thence run S OT 10' 0 " E tor a
distance of SlOOf toot to ttw Point ot
Beginning
SOT V X T E I o r
Ttwnce &lt;
of 111-47 toil; ttwnce run
N to* OT r
W tor a distance o&gt;
M l00 toot; ttwnce run N OT W V
W tor a distance of n o .* toot;
ttwnce run S A T M* 05" W h s a
M l.00 toot to the Point of
entaining 1.757 acres more or less
e n d b e i n g t u b i a c l to a a y

Great Seal ol the State ol Florid* at
Tallahassee, the Capitol, this the 10th
dey otMay, 1*01.
(SEAL)
George Firestone
Secretary ol Stale
Publish Jurw 5. INI
DEI-12
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
File Number I7-151CP
Division
IN RE: ESTATE OF
THOMAS WILLIAM JONES,
a/k/a THOMAS W. JONES,
i/k/e WILLIAM JONES,
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO A L L PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST
THE ABOVE ESTATE AND ALL
OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED
IN THE ESTATE:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that the administration of ttw estate
ot THOMAS WILLIAM JONES, de
ceased. File Number U If 1CP. Is
pending In the Circuit Court lor
SEMINOLE Counly, Florida, Pro
beta Division, ttw address ol which Is
Seminole County Courthouse, Son
lord, Florida 11771. Ttw personal
representative ol the estate Is
BARBRA ELAINE HOOKS, whose
address Is 1001 West *th Street.
Sanlord, Florida 22771.
The name and address ol ttw
personal representative's attorney
are set torth below.
All persons having claims or de­
mands against the estate are re
qulred. WITHIN THREE MONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE,
to Ilia with the clerk of tho abovo
court O written statement of any
claim or demand they may have.
Each claim must be In writing end
must Indicate the basis for the claim,
the name end address ol tho creditor
or hi* agent or attorney, and ttw
amount claimed. It tho claim I* not
yet due. the dote when It will became
due shell be stated. It ttw claim Is
contingent or unliquidated, tho
nature ol ttw uncertainty shell be
staled. It ttw claim Is secured, the
security shell be described. The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol tho claim to ttw clerk to
enable the clerk to mall on* copy to
each personal representative.
All persons Interested In the estate
to whom o copy ol this Notice ot
Administration has boon mailed ere
re q u ire d , W ITH IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to tile any abortions
they may have that challenge the
validity of ttw decedent's will, the
qualifications ol ttw personal repre­
sentative. or tho venue or jurisdic­
tion ol ttw court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARBED.
Dale of ttw first publication of this
Notice of Administration: Juno S,

TONIGHT'S TV
mootor to mush loved by Ms t*u-

12:00
aQ D A M C C P W IR
® 0 YOUNG PEOPLE'S SPE­
CIAL "Another Stupid Kid” A
fourth-grader has trouble to school
and to tabooed stupid by Me teach­
ers who are unaware that ha has
dylttxlt,
( D O WEEKEND SPECIALS "Tho
Horse That Ptoyad CantorMd"
Animated. A horse shows ■ losing
mejor league baeobeS teem how
tho gam* should be ptayod. (Pari 2)

0 (10) THE ’SOB: MOMENTS TO
R M M M M R Arthur Godfrey hoodItoas ■ sttr-etudded In* up In a
mjaiefli ifliutt to tho romantic ild i
ot th* postwar ora. Oueots todud*
Rosemary Clooney, Frsnkto Labw,
Guy MttefwjLEddto Hoywoc
Paige end Thoreoa Brosser.
0 (S| B M T OP MRMGHT :
C5AL

8:06

with a World War I pitot, hit parsjbSu ^S—— u j l a
j ||4 SO-—la —
enuring p h a■no
tnpf n—f^ in io
•Oft

12:30

M 0
0
9 ) MAMA'S FAMR.Y Mama
acctdantaSy, ruins the
was pfenning to vtotr lo on
banquet. (R)
CD O LO VE BOAT O r ■
Thanksgtvtog Day erutoe, the cross
members have a MNng out. ■ young
boy to tom botnoan Is m fathers,
and a woman introduce* har handl-

SOLID GOLD
_ THE ROAD TO LOB ANGE­
LES Olympic hopefuls profiled are
Leroy Kamp (wrestling), Jolt Float
(swimming) and Cottoon Sommer
and Jeanette Bolden (track and
(told).

12:36
© MOVIE "TaN In The Saddle"
(1944) John Wayne, Ella Rotoaa. A
cowpoke changes Ms negtltve atti­
tudes about female* when he
accepts a |ob as ranch foramen end
meets hrt two lovely employer*.

1:00
(D WRESTLING
(10) HERTS TO YOUR HEALTH
"Smoking: Kicking The HabtT Or.
Norman Kaplan and Dr. Richard I.
Evans examine some ol the ways
smokers art successfully kicking
the habit. (Port 2)
® (S) MOVIE "Superorgo" (IBM)
Guy Madison. Kon Wood.

S

1:30
CD O MOVIE "Overboard" 11971)
Anglo Dickinson. C*ft Robertson.
An kfytte around-tho-worid cruise to
tragically interrupted for a wealthy
attorney whan Ms wtfe latte off their
racM during ■ storm.
_ (10) LAST CHANCE OARAQI
Brad Soars otter* tips on outfitting
e car (or foul woathor and ehangoa
automatic trarwmlaalon ol. g

8:30
0 9 ) BN.VER BROOM Ricky end
Edward have no idea ot tho ordeal
that awaits thorn when (hoy go
camping tor the su es and. (R)

0:30

2:30
O (*0) WOOOWRtOHTB SHOP
"Lath**" Roy Underhill demonstretei and compares throe fuming
lathes. (R)
©MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED

3.-00
0 ( 1 ) BASEBALL Regional coverago of California Angali at
MHwoukaa Browers; St. Louis CarO SPO RTBSEAT
. (10) LA SEMANA EH LA LEOISUTURA
ON-OECK CIRCLE
(I) WRESTLING

8

3:20

© BASEBALL SI. Louis Cardinal*
at Atlanta Bravo*
3*30
® 0 PGA GOLF "Kemper Open"
Third round (Nv* from Batheeds.
Md).
CD O PBA BOWLING "*100,000
Tucson Open" (live Irom Tucson,
Artz L
0 (10) TONY BROWN* JOURNAL
“to The Atlanta Killer In Jail?"
Tony Brown examinee new charge*
Indicating that the capture and
imprisonment ot Wayne WHHsme
did not etop tho Atlanta child kWtogs.

4:00
INCREDIBLE
HULK
«
MONEYMAKERS
»
F GOES THE COUNTRY
____POPt
CLUB

E

4:30
®
O
SPORT* SATURDAY
Scheduled: Morvto Frazier / Joe
Bugnor (Ground Heavyweight bout
(ttve from Atlantic City. N.J,|c Clift
Otving (from Acapulco, Mexico).
0 (10) MBKM STORY Hoddtog
Carter hoots an examination ol
press performance on national toto(•) AUSTIN CITY

10.-00

(D O MOV* “Fighting Med"
(1976) Paler Fonda, Lyra Lowry. A
tone man b pitted against a corrupt
corporation whan hi* farm Is threatonod by a atrip-mining operation.
® 0 FANTASY ISLAND A pretty
blackjack dealer moots Mark Twain
on a Mississippi rtvorbooL and eoupto on a delayed horwymoon face
on inevitable tragedy (R )n
O (9) TONY BENNETT ^

10:05

©

10:30
© (SS) BMKEL A El
MOVIES

AT THB

11:00

0 99HDI
) (D O

aa_
O
O oI a l f r IDHITCHCOCKPRB_____ALPRB

BENTS

6:30____
0
&lt;W) WALL ITRBET W O K
"Higher And Higher" Quart: WSKvn A. Grant, chairman ot Mackey
Shields Financial Corporation.
0 ( t ) NASHVILLE MUSIC

Hoot: Howard llssssmon. Quarts;
Tam Patty end the Heartbreakert.
IRf

1

------- M O W "Trapeze" (1956)
Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis.
© (SB) M O W "Ttw Magnetic
Monster" (1953) King Donovan,
Richard Cartoon.

12:00
9 ) O MONEY: HOW TO
HOW TOKM PIT

IT.
i

12:05
©MGHT TRACKS
12:30
9 ) 0 M O W “Ttw Great Houdtoto” (1979) Pout Michael Glaser,
Salty Strutters.

1.-00

0 9 ) LAUGHTRAX
© (SB) M O W "Bon Ot Oracula"
(1943) Lon Chanty Jr., Louie*
Albritton.
0 ( 6 ) L A f B « GREAT
1:30
M O W "The Wey Wort"
(1967) Kirk Douglas, Robert
MMctium
O (SI MOVIS "A Night At The
Opera” (193!) Mora Brothers, Alan

(D

O

2:00

9 ) NEWS
) IMGHT TRACKS (CONTO)

8

3:16

0 ( 6 ) M O W "A Day At The Rocaa” (1937) Man Brothart, Maureen
OSuOtven.

3:40
(D O M O W "La* Mtovsbtoe"
(No Data) Gtoo Card. Valentine
Cortaoe.

4.-00
fflMOHT TRACKS(OONTD)

M 0

9 ) C A U YOUR
LAW AMO YOU
ABNCULTUNIU jSJL

,

630

OPPORTUMTYLBJB

m

I S J M

U

.

MO

)vom o p v ic t o r y

PublishJune5. tfd
OEI-IS

W 1 &gt; « 0 0 0 0 NEIGHBORS

130
WALL STREET JOURNAL

0 (50) MAGIC OP DECORATIVE
PAMTVtG

_____

136

© O W B t O n E : THE LAND OP
MYSTERY A documentary reveoitog ttw true nature ol ttw mysteri­
ous Oketenoke* Swamp to presentad.

1:30
O 9 ) MANAQMQ MONEY IN THE

CD O

UBPL FOOTBALL At pma*
Urn*, achadutod gam** wera Mtchior Blrmtogham StsMons at Tampa
BayBondlta.
0 (50) M AGC OF ANIMAL PAJNTB4G

a

236
© BASSBALL St. Louie Cardinal*
at Atlanta Braves

2:30
0 9 ) M O W "A Matter Ol Lite
And Death" (No Dat*|

430
0

9)
8PORTSW ORLD
Scheduled: Avon Woman's
Marathon (Irom Lo* Angatoa. Cast.);
Rtvtorn totamationai Triathlon (from
Ntoo. France); World Finals ol Drag
Ractoqitrom Irvtoa. CoM.L
GD B
NBA B A IK K TB A LL
"ChomptonaNp Oama”
phis 76ors a* Los Angatoa Laksrs (It
HULK
raopwmv w in# noritK)
Alotr
m for •■cii«ne&gt; mI
*« —i
u . r A irlM in B u uulh Alli ——- - * i * ——
"•US,
imSOIH g*10l i w
ry Avon, p#dii&gt;trtf tufgfon Or, JhMk
■to TemborB and Now York Ttowa

■ - - - a - c. —

gfc a

mm im

•W T N I

WORLD OP

Jn OQUBB OOUSTIAU
0 MBNA HAMA

jP CD CALL

VOW

3&amp;ISS

6.-00

.tmnaCararadChrtt1lobs Lea Matos* as n

* •

w W PI " m f m i
Bunwste; • tSSB sarlaon; a SMtNy
Tempi* Mwrt aad CMpMr I P
--------------0 IB W A Y M

GRAPEFRUIT
ft*•**•*■#&lt;*'

Of ■nWTWiiOff

a* aeon'through ttw ayes ot WM5
Dtorwy.
«an#)
(50) MORE OP THAT NASH00 (5
O |S) CHBJMB4 BETWEEN UPfl
AND DEATH Carol Lawranoo and
Art Unktottor hoot this took at ttW
-------- A * E u l
to * -*
k- J
ik
CTMKjrV
r) Of c#SI AITiC
i V
K1 ITtTulm
r

struggle tor turvfvsl. Quart* Dtch
Van Patton, WMUm Shatnar, Daart
Jon**. Efrem ZtmbaHtt Jr.

735
© W REETUNO

7:30
©
(IS) TH E CHARMKINE
Animated. The adventures ot Lady
Slppor and her Monde to Charm
World am told, featuring ttw votes*f
ot Ban Vereen. AHeen Quinn and
SaOy Siruttwn.
O (50) SUNSHMB MUKC HALL
"Claim And High Cotton”
0 9) CHIPS Ponch becomes a
celebrity whan ha taka* a part-time
|od moommq ror s osssgrw jPi#nt
® lot ARCHIE BUNKERE PLACE
BMU# olv## SHohinl# im o n i on
how to charm a man. (R)
*
CD O MATT HOUSTON Matt trio*
lo dear a pro lootboi quarterback
#ccuMd of mnnlflfifi M i t66fn'a
owner with an unueuot axpiootve
d*vtce.(R)
©
(SS) HEALTH M ATTERS
••JU
L VW66
n- W
a iniTIII
0
(50) COSMOS "Journey* to
Space And Time" Or. Cart .8agan
lakes viewer* into ttw poet and ttw
Mure tor a took at tlw origin ol ttw
ptanet* of other item. (fl)n
0 (I) M O W “Tlw FwT' (1991)*
Lauren Bocal. Jama* Gamer. A|
popular Mm star to victimized by ■;
psychotic admirer. ‘R*

835
©
NASHVILLE A U W Ouexti;,
John Andaman. Gory Morris, BByJ
Wafter, Jim Ed Brown.

6:30
® 0 NEWHART Lealto's Olympic!
tkHng chance* ere Jeopardized 1
when Dick INN on Iwr during hto{
flrrt ski outing. (R)
© (36) JERRY FALWILL

630
® O TONY AWARDS Richard'
Burton, Lena Home and Jack Lem­
mon host the 37th annuel ceramo-j
niee. honoring excoOence on the)
Broadway eteg* during ttw pert
year, live from ttw Urt* Theatre to
New York City.
f f l O M O W "Tlw Buddy Ho*y
Story" (1676) Gary Bueay, Don
Stroud. A young man from tho Midwatt become* ■ rock music legend
to ttw late 1950* with hit songs
Including "Peggy Sue” end "IT* So
Eaey.'t Hb a t b b
(
"Son* And Lovers" PaulI and
end MMam drill apart at Paul restttaa
eetttee f i
cannot give Miriam
ieve that she need*. (Pvt 4) g

636
© W EEXM AEW W

630
©(36)JBM6YtWAGGART

1030
(10) THB GOOD NEIGHBORS
(I) MONEY: HOW TO MAKS IT,
HOW TO KEEP IT

8

10:05
© N EW S

10:30
(36) KENNETH COPELANO
(10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS
(9) FINANCIAL INDCPENOENCC
TODAY

10:36
© SPORTS PAQI

1130
® ® 0® 0N S W t
(10) SNEAK PRSW W B Neto
Qabler end Jeffrey Lynne hoe! an
informative look *1 what's new at
ihe movie*.
O (6) BEET OF MKMtOKT SPE­
CIAL

I
_

1138

© JERRY FALW BX

11:30
0
® X T 1R T A B B H N T THUWEEK Featured: Dabney Cotoawn,'
Mickey (Wey; Ltoa Hartman, eke
Brenda Veccero wNh ttwlr pets.
® BBO UO GO LO
® O LARRY KB4G Quests: 90-{
y aro td broedcetttng nwtersn Dor-f
oihy Futdhetoi; "Chodron Ot The]
Famous" Kathy Cronklta. Rock'
Bryraor and Soon Darak.
© (6H W .V. GRANT

_

1230_____

© (66) ITS YOUR BUBMMS
0(6)W REBTUNG

1236
1230

A v 6^m oM

--nw Brm«h

Dec dons" Gueet Sir Harold Wbsow, member ot ttwHouee ot Com-

gw

c#wDf»tK&gt;n Of in# i n

© O P E N UP

O (W

m ocw i

Frady i
ttw country's fomSy-run (arm* and
ttwlr cfwnoM tor survhmL
© (SS) FAR5EET OP THEM ALL A

230
® Q PGA GOLF "Kemper Open"
Final round (ttve Irom Bothaada.
Md).
© (SB) M O W "Made For Each
Other" (1171) Ran** Taylor, Joseph
Bologna. Two mombars ot an
encounter group quarrel Incessantly. but eventually reotti* their deepseated mutual love.
0 (1 0 ) M O W "Thiels The Army"
(1943) Ronald Reagan, Georg*
Murphy. America's lighting men tr*
treated lo a muetoai tribute honortheir spirit end courage.
(I) M O W "The Leal Ot The
Mohican*" (1977) Steve Formal,
Andrew Print. Based on ttw story
by Jem** Fenimor* Cooper. Fort
WWiam Henry I* attacked by Indi­
an* during tlw French and Indian
War.

© M D A N K BTOW

f J"0* A

l i n USA 7 1; &gt;4i 11l a

12:30
0 9 ) BOB GRAHAM ROAST
9 ) 0 M O W "The Virginia HIM
Story" (1674) Oyon Cannon, Harvey
Kmivi. wi ifripovvnSiNMj young gin
•tt^ns afflutnct through htr Frttnd•Wp illh 0logtt6f Bugty Bjggtl.

630

7.-00

B4 M ARCH OP-

7:30

ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
WILLIAM A. OREENBERO, ESQ.
Post Offka D.'Swer K
Fern Park, Florida
127X0154
Telephone: 1X5) 11*4*44

12:00
0 9 ) OUTDOOR UFE
® O EYEWITNEBt AMERICA
© (36) MOVIE "Smoky" (19M)
Fee* Pertor, Diana Hyland. A
domaetlcatad rtaWon turn* on hit
trainer's brother at a maun ot Inhu­
man* tmotmont.
GREAT CHEFS OP NEW
O (K») GJ
ORLEANS
|(S) M O W "Th# Adventure* Ol
Frontier Froomont" (1976) Don
nBggmTjri
i ’y™, * fgunriHw o*
ttw 1630* encounters danger and
ttw throat ol wdd animat* to hi*
search lor s simple ids to ttw moun­
tain*.

O

of ttw Houos Thom#* P. “Rp",
O'NoR end other olWctoto.

630

10) COOWK CAJUN
S i n ANGLERS IN ACTION

--

©I TNWMI I M

6:30

11*30
( S O F A C C THE NATION
( D O TH B WEEK WITH OAVIO

•fMmptt 10 DrMH in# N m un##n#
to St. Louis speed record trevektog
the Mtootoalppl on t powsrtoet;
hong g a n g champion Ed
attempts to land his henge*op Monument Vs*ey. Utah;
■ Heather Ttwnwa journeys
toFmnoe to toem beboontogfrom

730
ohwS hoporu

© W R EETUNO

9 ) O BLACK AWARENEM
(LD (3S) MOV* "Alpine Antics"
(No Date) Stan Laurel. Otver Hardy.
0 (10) LAST CHANCE GARAGE
Brad
8*arfc~
_______
otters tipa on outfitting
a car tor lout woathor and changss
automatic transmtoaton on. q

430
•n o oo o ou pix
4:46
(D 6

6:00

6:20

11.-00

WWPOBfT ON NUTRITION

7.-00
rBOOMPANV
0GDQDL
©IBS) RUNG PU
0 (50) J A M OOOOALL ANOTHB
WORLD OP A M M A l— WWOR
0&lt;«) CLASSIC COUNTRY

10:36
© MOWS "D-Day, Tlw 8txth Of
Jurw" (1S5S) Hobart Taylor, Rich­
ard Todd. As Iholr rotoa In ttw Nor­
mandy Invasion loom ctootr, two
military officers each review ttwlr
separate memories ot tlw girl they
both ton.

(D

B:00

0 ( 6 ) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD

1030
)M O W
ITMRTY M ttR/m
IriRBTBAPTWT CHURCH
) (50) OOMPUTER PROGRAMME
I (S) GET BREVARO WORKMG

11:06
© MISSION: R6PQSSM-E
11:30
0 9) SATURDAY MGHT UVE

toHto (o w is w soaosms ok a u a o A H a

VR

10:06

•

• 9 ) DEAR M R PRM OCN T ThR
quwfRXTi ot v s pvhkr ennorm
cooc#mtng oownniifit v k ) M l In
m Mnmgion, y.v, #»# inw w go uy

ABO NEW* CLOEEUP;
MBraniH

©LIGHTER am

O
(S) M O W "Angry SfwoUrw
Boxart" (No Dotal

UMfTS

W K* WONLD OF STO m S
(DO W
OAMKL BOON!
W M HM GTONW BKM

8V

© (SI) MOVIE "Tito ftd-faahtoned Way” (1M4) W C. Fields,
Judith Alton. A troupe ol actors
become* sawed at eluding th* law
to each (own to which (hay perform.

----------

0 9 ) THERE GOES THE NEIGH­
BORHOOD Throe hobo* (Buddy
Kacfcott, O.W. Bottoy, Patrick ColHns) inherit a rich man's estate and
discover the Ms ol luxury.
0(S)PAULAN KA

2:00
0 ® BIERGENCY
( D O AMATEUR GOLF "Walker
Cup Match" (Irom Royal Liverpool
Golf Club In Hoytako, England).
OX (U) MOVIE "Run For The Sun"
(1956) Richard Widmert. Jana
Groor. A tomato Journalist's search
tor a missing American wrtlor toko*
har to an tooiatod village In Mexico,
where she discovers that Nazis
have taken up queriors.
® (10) COMPUTER PROGRAMME

(W) g

0 ( 0 ) T O M ANNOUNCED

730

1030

HEALTHBIAT
B O N Y / JET CELEBRITY

©
MOVIE
"Tho Tarnished
Angels" (IMF) Rock Hudson, Rob­
ert Black. Booed on th* novel
HOS-g--- «4
iM ■ m
e iJ k M #
A
rp*On a*-.
yy lin
fflW
ni ErlMingfa
A

MOVIE "Gonttomon Jtm”
(1942) Errol Flynn, Alexis Smith.
Boxer James J. Corbett become*
the champion ol tho 1110s.
0 (10) MVBTERYI ‘■Father Brown:
Tho Eye Ot Apodo" Father Brown
bos o strange mystery to sotvo In
this story about tho bonding effect
ot Hght on ■ sun-worshipper. (R) g

1NB.
Barbra Elain* Hooks
As Porsonol Representative
ol ttw tslota ot
THOMAS WILLIAM JONES

Bungay, Juw f, 1W —7^

•
® MOW
"Rto Qranda” &lt;
(1650) John Waynp, Mtureen
O'Hara.
® 0 M O W "Tiw War Between 1
The Tatee" (19771 Richard Cronrw,
Btoabam Aohiey.
© (36) tYIWTTNMB

CD 0

lOO

M O W "Hurting" (1976)
Laa Ramick, Monta Martha*.

�I
tB— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Junt S, Iff]

71-Help Wanted

Legal Notice
FICTITIOM NAME
Notice li hereby given the! I am
engaged In business at 7341 Canal Or
Santord. Fla. 31771, Seminole
County. F lorkla-under. tteJlcllltoys
name of ALLEN FLOO r T W E R
INC. and that I Intend to register
said name*with Clerk ot the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the provisions ot the
Flctlllou* Name Statute*. To WII
Section USOt Florida Statute* 1957.
Detmond A. Allen
Publish May 29! Jure 5,12.19,19*3.
DEH w n
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, EIOH
TEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. IN
ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. u-m-CA-oe-L
DIVISION:
DUVAL FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
L O A N A S S O C IA T I O N O F
JACKSONVILLE, a corporation.
Plaintiff,
v*.
G. RONALD HERNQUIST and
EDITH A. HERNQUIST, hit wife.
Defendant*.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
G. RONALD HERNQUIST and
EDITH A. HERNQUIST. hit wile
Retldence: Unknown
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that an action to foreclose a
mortgage on the following property
In Seminole County, Florida.
West 11 .31 teat ot Lot IS. all Lol is,
BlockM. SANLANDO THE SUBURB
B E A U T I F U L , P ALM SPRINGS
SECTION, at per plat thereof at
recorded In Plat Book 3, page U W,
public record* ot Seminole County,
Florida
hat been tiled against you; and you
are required to serve a copy ot your
written detente*, If any, to It on
Edward S. Jonet. plaintiff'* at
fomey. whota address It IU Duval
Federal Building, Jacksonville,
Florida. 17303, before June I. IMS,
and file the original with the Clerk of
this Court either before service on
plaintiff* attorney or Immediately
thereafter; otherwise a default will
be entered egalntt you tor the relief
demanded In the complaint or pell
tlen.
WITNESS my hand and the teal ot
this Court on this 12th day of May.
A.D. 1m .
ISEALI
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
By; Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish May IS, 21. 29. A June S. INI
P E H N _______________ _
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number U-tolCP
Division
IN RE: ESTATE OF
FRANCIS PHILLIP HERRON.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
The administration ot the estate of
FRANCIS PHILLIP HERRON, do
ceased, File Number MISI-CP, It
pending In the Circuit Court tor
Seminole County, Florida. Probate
Division, the address ot which It
Seminole County Courthouse. San
lord. Florida 11771.
The name* and addresses of the
personal representative and the
personal representative's attorney
are sal forth below.
All Interested persons are required
to (lie with this court, WITHIN
THREE MONTHS OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE:
III all claims against the estate and
(I) any objection by an Interested
person to whom this notice was
monad that chanenges the validity ot
the will, the qualifications of the
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction of the court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJECTIONS
NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREV
ER BARRED.
Publication ot this Notice has
begun on JunaS, l t d
Personal Representative:
Lawrence F. Herron
374 Kentor Blvd.
Casselberry, Fla. 33707
Attorney tor Personal
Rapresantatlve:
MICHAEL E. GRAY.
ESQUIRE-ot
C L E V E L A N D ! BRIDGES
Pott Of flea Drawer Z,
Sanford. Florida
12771-0771
Telephone: (305)111 1114
Publish Junes, 1WJ

S£LM Fictitious&gt;•-».--------

Notice It hereby given thal t am
engaged In business at 201 N. Maple
Ave., Sanford. Fla. 33771. Seminole
County, Florida under the fictitious
n s m s ot J I M ' S C O M P L E T E
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE. INC., and
that I Intend to register said name
with Clark of the Circuit Court,
Florida In accordance with the pro­
visions OMho Fictitious Name Slat
utes. to-Wit: Section MS OS Florida
Statutes ISS7.
/*/ Jamas L. Dunn.
President
Publish Jure L 12.19, M. INI.
DEI-71____________________
INVITATION FOR BIDS
THE HOUSING AUTHORITY OF
TH E CITY OF SAN FO RD .
FLORIDA will rectlve bids for
S U B T ER R A N EA N TER M ITE
T R E A T M EN T ol Castle Brewer
Court, William Clark Court, Edward
H ig g in s Tarrdfce and Cowa*v
Moughton Tsrracs until I:0QP.M., on
the 10th day of Juno, 1943 at the
Administration Building, Casllt
Brower Court, laniard. Florida al
which Hma and place ell bids will be
publicly opened and reed aloud.
Proposed forms of contract docu­
m en ts, I nclu din g p la n s and
specifications, are on file at the
office of the Housing Authority of the
City el Sanford, Florida. A d­
ministration Budding, Castle Brewer
Court, Santord. Florida.
Cdples of the documents may be
obtained by dspesltlng ats.se with the
Housing Authority lor each sat ot
s obtained. Such deposfl
I to oedi person e
------ -------— «. specifications j
other documents In good conddlm
within todays after bid openlng.
A certified chock or tank draft,
portals So the Housing Authority of
the City of Sanford. Florida. U S
to. or a satisfactory
used by the bidders end
iroftea In an amount
M 1% of too tad taoll be

The uKcaoafvl
to '

will be

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

•eeeeeeeeee

O r la n d o - W in te r P ark

322-2611

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRI DAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

R A TES

I t i m t ..................... 54c a lino
1 consocutivs times. 54c • line
1 consecutive tim es. . 44c a line
10 consecutive times 4Jc a line
11.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

55—Business
Opportunities

In memory of our beloved Sitter,
Helen Hsrkey Nelson. She truly
walked with God and served the
sick end aged with great love
We shall miss her.
Her Sisters Elliabeth Harkey
Kircher, Rcse Harkey Payne, a
Brother, Reverend “ Bud"
Harkey, two Daughters, Mary
Jayne Cos and Judllh Niles, a
very special "Marne". Mary
Belle Cola

21—Personals

UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY
Area franchise available lor San
lord provides an excellent bull
ness opportunity. Excellent cash
Mow and Investment return. Suc­
cessful businessperson must
have management background;
sales ability helpful but not
necessary. I1S.500. investment
plus small operating capital.
Contact Paul M. King, (404 54*
*001 C O N S I D E R Y O U R
FUTUREII

63—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

• ABORTIO N*
ltl Trimester abortion 7-12 wks.,
*150 Medicaid *110, 11 M Wks.
I22S. Medicaid S14S; Gyn
Services SIS; Pregnancy last;
Ires counseling. Prolesslonel
care supportive atmosphere,
confidential.
CENTRAL FLORIDA
WOMEN'S HEALTH
ORGANIZATION
NEW LOCATION
1700W. Colonial Dr., Orlando
»J 19* 0921
________ i-eoo-ni issa_______
Ideas. Inventions. New Products
WANTED!
Industry Prtsentallon/Natlonal
Exposition.
Can iioo s?s soso.xeii.
Lonely? Cell or Write Bringing
People together Dating Service.
(Ages 15 III. P. O. Box 1*51
Winter Haven Flordia 33**0.
1 113 793 7377._____________
14 Piece Brilliant Balloon Bov
quite. for Birthday Parties and
Special Occasions. Delivered by
e Clown or our Sexy Stripper.
(Mate or Female) to Santord
Surrounding Areas.
BALLOON WIZARD 904 771 MW.

23—Lost A Found
Lost Silver Chain necklace w/
violet stone. Sanford Shopping
Area Reward, sat e»4.

25—Special Notices
Credit Problems? Receive a
Mastercard or Visa, guranteed.
nobody refused; for tree
brochure send sell eddroted
Stamped envelope to Credit Date,
Box 171004, Dallas. Texas 7S1T7
or call anyllms 214 334 5944.
New OH Ice now opening.
VORWERK
n ” WlttSt

31-Private
Instructions
Hannah Music lessons Plano,
voice, brass, woodwinds, banjo,
drums and guitar (private and
class.) 311 *7*1.
SWIMMING LESSONS. For In
formation. Vicki Gorm ly,
Cert I(led Instructor. (HI 51001.
II Babies Drown Every 14Hours
Intent Swimming Retesrch
Certified and Insured Instructor
Survival Swimming *Mo -5Yr.
Call Rosanna Spain, l i t 4471.
e e • e lH lU ls • • •
For Swimming Information
^ ^ _^ ^ ^ ackle£aol^ ^ ^ ^ ^ _

33—Real Estate
Courses
KEYES LICENSE EXAM SCHOOL
Ntxt * day acctlerated clast starts
June 11. IPS! For lulllon relm
bursement Information call
Mildred S. Wang. 113 HOC.

55—Business
Opportunities
Small retail shop availbale In
Long wood's Historic district
Rent, Including utilities. 1115 per
month. Call 111 4*41
Jabs and Workers Meet In The
Want Ads I Need A Job 77
READONII!

We PAY cash lor 1st A 2nd
mortgages. Ray Legg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker 710 3599.

71-Help Wanted
CLERK TYPIST
Need 4 Immediately. Long term
openings. Typing, filing, and
phone
NEVER 4 FEE

A b le st
__
temporary Services
Mon Thurs. 9-11! 1:30-1:30.
100-200
200Wm*First St (FlagtfvpBank Budding)
Santgrd si-1940
Concession and Office Help (or
weekend work. Apply al Flea
World Thursday and Friday 9-5
PM._____________________
Experienced Only Sewing Machine
operators. Overlock or Sergurt.
for T- Shirt Olvitlon, Sergur
Hammer. Ampro Fashions. 710
Power Cl. Ml 1110.
Experienced phone solictor.
Excellent earnings. Seminole
County. Phone 111 4141. II AM to
1PM. Ask lor Marvin.
Houseparent needed tor Ch ristian

Childrens Home in Geneva. Sala
fy plus room and board. Call
Don US 5099.
Lot and detail man needed for used
car lot. For appointment Call
371 4075.__________________
Mature woman with waitress exp*
rience. Needed. It AM to 1 PM
Tuesday thru Saturday.. TEA
Room In Longwoods historic
district Begin June 14. Cell
111 4*41 lor appointment.
Mature responsible femele wented
lor babysitting I year old girl In
my home. Santord area. 5 days a
week, (or summer vacation Pay
ntgoliable. Musi have own
transportation. Call 111 4054
Alter 4 30 PM _____________
Need extra Income. We need you
Call lor complete details.
_________ 117 1)45_________
NEED EXTRA INCOME?
WHY NOTSELLAVONI
I t H U I lD lN I .

Part Time. Women and Men Work
Irom home on telephone pro
gram Earn S75. lo *100 per
week.depending on time available 177 5301.______________
Part Time Prettman AMI250W
Experience Call Ralph Jenson.
Ill 0074__________________
PERSONNEL UNLIMITED has
immediate lull lime openings (or
(4) Cooks and (51 Cocktail
Waitresses. Also counter Clerks.
and General Laborers. 371 5*49
CITY OF LAKE MARY
CITY MANAGER
Population lOJt. Orlando SMSA.
Salary *11.000 to *11,000 negolia
bl* depending upon qualifica­
tions Appointed by S member
City Commission; *1*0.000
budget; 20 employees. Requires
executive and administrative experiance with background In
public administration, engineer­
ing City planning, construction
or related (leldt. supplemented
by al least 1 years progressively
responsible supervisory expert
ence. degree desirable Submnit
resume* lo City Clerk. City of
Lake Mary, P. O. Box 715, Lake
M*ry. Florid* »74*. Resumes
must be received bv July I, INI.

1435 French Ave.
(In Stalk* Bldg.)
Wo Are An

AM
EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENTAGENCY

CONGRATULATES
THE OTHER AGENCIES

LOCALLY OWNED

FOLLOWING
THE LEADER1
AM
EMPLOYMENT

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
.Monday-5:30P.M. Friday

15—InMemoriam

Wanted 1 Ladles tor selling.
Stanley Home Products.
_________ 44*4413._________

WORKFINDERS, INC.

831-9993

C LA S S IFIE D D EP T .
HOURS

71-Help'Wanted

GAL FRIDAY................. UMWk.
Construction Background helpful.
Work with bids and estimating,
Great tringes.
DRIVER........................ *4.10 Hr.
Drive tractor trailer, some ship­
ping and receiving. In state only.
Lott ol overtime 1
TYPIST....................... to t!7] wk.
Accuracy will land you this great
|ob. Work with Real Estate
Professionals. Btntllltl
MANAGER TRAINEE...11,000 MO.
Any retail tales experience helpful.
Company growing leaps and
bounds. Great benefits I
NURSES AIDE.-..................... ttt
Certified Aide needed nowI Re­
warding carter awaits.
WAREHOUSE..... ........... 1140 Wk.
Trainee, lo drive Van. Some
warehouse. Excellent benefits.
Future secure here I
ACCOUNTING CLERK..... *100 Wk
Work the accounts payable desk
lor Ihit great company. Com
puter a plus I Benellts and
raises!
.DRIVER.........................1750 Mo.
Best employer In Orlando needs
youl Drive small truck. "Go
Places" wllhgrelteaqoany.
P B X ................. ..................... HI
Full pay while training, flexible
hours, local company. Start
Monday)

OVER 100 LISTINGS
DIS0UNT FEE •2 WEEKS
FRANCHISES AVAILABLE
1917 FRENCH AVE
323-5176
• • • • • • • • • • •

u/P ABF

WE ARE THE

MOST REASONABLE
WEOFFER

INDIVIDUALIZED TERMS
To Suit Your Needs
__________371 57*3_________
*750 to *500.00 W E E K L Y
PAYCHECKS (FULLY GUAR­
ANTEED) working pari or full
- .time at home. Weekly paychecks
mailed directly to you from
Homo Of lice every Wednesday./
Start Immediately. No experi­
ence necessary National Com­
pany. Do your work right in the
comfort and sacurty of your own
homo. Details and application
mat ltd. Send your name and
address lo: KEYSTONE IN­
DUSTRIES. HIRING DEPT. 33.
•400 FREDERICKSBURG RD..
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS. 7*319.

73—Employment
Wanted
Apprentice Carpenter just com­
pleted Job Corp training. Good
worker, strong back, has own
Joolt. M l 5390.
Care for the Elderely. Certified
Nurses Assistant. Hgrre of Hos­
pital. References provided. Coll
323 4749.
_____ ■'*-

91—Apartments/
House to Share
COUNTRY Horn* lo share, non
smokers, references. *150 plus ta
Util. 305 4414014
Share rent and utilities. Employed
female 35 or older. 3 Bdrm.
duplex. Call after « PM. 574 4911,

93—Rooms for Rent

OFFICE WORKER - Accurate
typing; handle Phone orders
Complete fringe Benefits. United
Solvents. 121 1400.

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

CABINETMAKERS. EXPER
Lamlnalor*. Assemblers.
Countertop. Hardware. 339 5041,

Collage lovely I bdrm. newly
furnished Complete privacy S70
wk. plus *300 security. Call 373
77*9or 3714747
Furnished apartment* lor Senior
Clllient 111 Palmetto Ave.-J.
Cowan No phone call*.
Nice furnished efficiency garege
apartment. Private. *55 week
plu*depo«ll. 333-H77._________

PRODUCTION
W O RKER
Need 5. Should have tome
carpentry experience. *4.35.
NEVER A FEE

Mon-Thurt 0-11! 1:30-3:30.
100-200
200 MM Fee Si (Flagihp Bank Budding|
Santord321-3*40

S EC R ET A R Y
With shorthand. Immediate long
term opening. Typing 50 WPM.
a c c u r a t e l y .
NEVER A FEE

A b le s t
Mon T h u r t .M l! 1:301:30.
900-200
200 M M Fee St (Flagship Bant Buddmgl
Sanford SI-3940

SECURITY GUARD
HELP WANTED
__________313 9391_________
Sharp Individual. Experience In
Mem Clolhlog Sate preferred.
Apply in person. HIS Santord
Plata.

99-*Apartiffents
Unfurnished/Rent
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E. Airport Blvd. Ph. I l l *470.
I!7 Bdrm*., Irom *340 Mo. 5 %
discount for Senior Clllien*.
GENEVAOARDENSAPTS
f.l ! 1 Bdrm. Apis. From *1*5.
Families welcome.
Mon. thru Sal. 9AM lo 5 PM.
1505W. ?5lh St._________ 337 7090
Lovely 1 bedroom, t bath with
carport and utility room. HO.OOa
week, plus *700 security deposit.
Call 373 17*9or 3711947_______
LUXURYAPARTMENTS
Family ! Adults section. Poolside.
7 Bdrmt. Matter Cove Apts.
131 7900
Open on weekends.

1513 FRENCH AVE.
HERE ITISI
T M "old" Sanford homo you hove
boon looking lor. TM* one ha*
tour hdrms. and an extra room
tor sowing, etc., hardwoods firs.,
oaf In kitchen- **9,199.
QUALITY EXTRAS
This heme exceed* gracious IIh
stylo, wood and beam celling, aid
lashloned fireplace, large eat in
kltchan, decorator wall paper.
Well landscaped grounds.
1914M.

1 Smaller homes. 3 BR 7 bath,
LR/DR/KIt.
I townhouse 7BR H i bath,

DAYS 574 1414
_______.Eves. 7*9 4351_______
Lake Mary 3bdrm 1 bath
garage *195discount
1391714.

POOL
This lovely 3 Bdrm., 1 bath horn* Is
|utl strokes away tram Maylelr
Oall Course. Wood fenced tack
yard otters privacy tor coaling
•ft In the sparkling peal. *95,900.
WOODEDACREI
This lovely Ito acre treed parcel
comet complete with ■ 1 bdrm.
IV* bath homo with llraatetVTn
(am. roam. Mg oeffiriTltchtn and
cool screened petto. All ot the
appro sled value ol tl total.
VERY LIVEABLE
1 Bdrm., 1 hath, largo living area.
Waited pool and patio In bach.
Vacant and ready tor your tamlty to anjoy. *41,900.

R EALTO R

REALTY* INC.
323-5774

realtor

15 YEARS EXPERIENCE

DREAM COME TRUEI Sunken
living rm "sot* the mood" to*
this gorgeous 1 bdrm 1 both split,
plan home w/CHOA.^Jta-tergarage, custom docOFand fenced
corn er lo l In prestigious
R om blew oo dl F a n ta s tic
assumption! No qualifying and
priced to still Only *51.000.
ONE OF A KINDI Gorgeousexecu
live 2 story 1 bdrm 1.5 both homo
In mini condition. Hug* panelled
family rm., beamed colllngtl
Detached cabanna w/llv. rm.,
bar and bath tor entertaining I
Over V* acre tush B spacious
landscaping! "Na-quallfying"
111,500down UI7Mo. Principle !
Interest 11%APR Only WtaO.
HORSE PLAYI Nice 1 Bdrm. homo
on 14 acres, w/lorgo pool sur
rounded by hundreds of oak* and
plenty ol privacy and bring your
horsotl Excollont financing).
Only *79,900.
BOAT, FIIH AND SWIM ON THE
"ST. JOHNS RIVER"I Extra
largo oaks and palm* surround
this 3 bdrmn. 2 bath homo
w/penelled family rm. and slona
I(replace. Boat dock and covered
boat house w/eloc. till. Cement
loawalll 4 paddle (ansi Obi. car'
detached garagel Many extras)
What a view I Only *109.500.

W E N EED LISTIN G S
C A L L USNOW! I

323-5774

321-0041

240* HWY 17-91

H EW O FFE R IN G
105—Duplex*
Triplex / Rent

Ry Ownar

|

fupet Residential Area Neat
Mayfair C.C. Wato To idyttwtidJ
f tom. 4BtfZB•Fhepiace BFans.
New Screened Pool B Spa .
WiSolat Heating, Fomdy Boom,
Ibndscaped, Stotogo Area • i
Possible Owner Financing
Oood

Available now elegant ! spacious
duplexes with large screen
porches, storage rooms !
carports. Fully equlppad. *3*0 to
*300 Call for details. Century II
June Porilg Realty 377 **79.
Large J Bdrm. air. heat, appllances. no pels, 1310 Mo. *150
deposit. Available June 7. 333
113*.

Opportunity

•Y AMOINTMINT
PH 123-6490

I l l —Resort/Vacation
Rentals
New Smyrna Beech Cottage, to
Block Irom Beach. Week or

117—Commercial
Rentals
I, Florida 12771 - ( t o il m a m

IMO Wtst First Street -

SANFORD
MON.-FR1.

9:00-6:00

WAREHOUSE

SUN.
12:00-5:00

SAT,
10:00-5:00

£} SOME PLACES NAVI
ALL TNI PUNI

Low rates. 2.000 to *0,000 Sq. Ft.
Sprlnktered, htsvy Industrial.

IM

OFFICE WAREHOUSE
1500 to 11,000 Sq. Ft. Downtown, air
conditioned LoadsofPerklng.

■tow 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
Available For Immediate O ccapiacy

SHOPPING CEHTER
1500 to 5000 Sq. Ft. Low rates, on
1792. Great visibility. The WT
Parks Co. Broker *7(4179

e/teUto cta.mSaiUte.Ti
TM.

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

VEN D IN G
M ECH AN IC
Excel tent opportunity for advan­
cement. ISO? Chevy pick up for
business end personal use Mutt
bo obit lo do Installation, end
service repair work, start Immodiately. All Into by phona. Mr.
Power*. 311-4080.___________
Waitresses ! hostesses. Some
expert Inc* preferred. Apply In
person Holiday Inn 1-4 ! Sf. Rd
4*.

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Additions A
Romodoling
Custom Built addition*. Polios.
Kroon room*, carport. Door
loch*, paneling, shingles, re
rooting. For Iasi service, call
323 4917,3*11371.___________
BATHS, Utchsns. roofing, block,
concrete, windows, odd a room.
F roe estimates. 333***J

16 5-Acre Tract*
Florida Saturday, Junt 18
d lv iilo a ii lo c a ls „ „ M &lt;od

W* handle The
Whole Ballot Wax
I f

* £

122-7029
Financing Available

Fine*

Landscoping

FENCE Installation, Chain link,
wood pMl B rail, B (arm tone*.
License ! insured. 3734191.

A J LANDSCAPING.
Complete Lawn Maintenance
31143*1

Health A Boauty

LawnSarvica

TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FO R M ER LY Harriett's Beauty
Nook. *19 E .ls l St. 113 5741

Homo Improvomont
C o rp e rtY Y b rm r^ ""
W OOD A r t e s ia n P en ora I
carpentry, screened room-doors
ok. Ro m . Rotes. 317 toie.
COLLIER 'S HOME REPAIRS
carpentry, reallag. polollnj,
wtndowreMlr.il l-dsn_______

a.It that you eon now buy at auction p r i c e i ^ *

Appliance Rtpair

D O N 'T M ISS THIS O P P O R T U N IT Y !

CLARENCE'S
APPLIANCE SERVICE

,T* rm‘ ,0% down d°y of Auction plug 10% at do«mg. Balance amortized over 10 year* at 10%, 5 year
balloon.

We tenrice ell major brands. Ro m .
rate*. II yrs. txp. 384*31.

No |ta to small. Minor B me|or
repair*. Licensed 6 bended.
__________m - n ii__________

laarding A Grooming

ROOM adeltloni. remodeling
drywell hung celling* (preyed.
ftropiocM. roofing.

T S y f^ E to rS n ^ S n S T S T

m m i

Free with ) Me. Contract. Full
jo a r d a v a llta to ^ ta jta e m * ^

Boofckoopfng
BT^Eounth^arvic^taMwr
etao rates. Pick up B delivery.
1313*4* otter 4PM

f * M I ta te T u l* * ” ’

Cloaning Ssrvlcs

tor e

PBR MAID SERVICE!

COMPLETECONSreUCTKM

Homo Rtpair*
Hm^opaSr^SMnmSrpdlSir
tog. potto*. B ganorel carpentry
UVrs.Eae.Moe*. M l 4IW.
Maintenanceofall typM
&lt; njteldbElsue mix m u K U m
a p V II| l!0 N | i P l t a ' t o w y

■Heme repair* and
It yean expert-

'f M j

l

i

*Y.t

H

t

5 ? A ^ C o n c r t!^ ^ !!a !^ u a m y
operation. Patter, driveway*.
0*ys33l 7331 Eves. 327-mi.
SWIFT C O N C R E T E , Footer*,
driveway! pod! floor! pool!
Chaff. Stone. Free E tt/ m n u .

NuningCar*
“

A&amp;B ROOFING
21 yrs. experience. Licensed
Insured.
Free Estimate* on Roofing.
Re-Roofing and Rtpalrt.
Shlngte! Bultl Upend Tile.

•]

c r RftSiAmmnai

S

I

322-9417

Does Your Old Or (tow Roof LoakK
IIII d o t! call Davte Lao.
&lt;
_________ 3314415.
?
Morrison Rooting Co.
Spoclallilng In shlngla*
toil'd up. Law, Lew Rato!
servlet. 7M1171,

4

JUNE CLASSIFIED ADS BRIlj
THAT EXTR A SUMMN
VACATION MONEY TO YOU II

Lakovtew Nursing Cantor
9)9 E. Second St., Santord
M l4797

Painting
IntortS^^utorte^atoS^rFroo
estimate* Reasonable J494M4
or 149-5519.

PUitaring/Dry Wall

C e R n S M I.

YWEOB WILL ARRIVE W
‘ -R E N T THEM A PLACE
rm iO T T00900N

Roofing

t
•.
&gt;
*!

&lt;

JAMESMOCISON

o u ffis T F n iiT B s a r—

PTasto.-tog repair, stucco, hard
cato. simulated brick. M l t m.

too|tatot large ar small
P J f

Masonry

Roofing

PWlflAUSItEn.

SANFORD Irrigation B Sprk
Wttom* Inc. Free act.
75 yrs. exp

T r^ T h e T e rT ^ Ie ile rT n g

I touch. ATOIIS. *71-4111.

THE HOUSING AUTHORITY
OP TH* ClTV OF

TuTTl^Tas^antor^TJ^ef
- toad. Genova *14 per toed II yard
leads) Cheaper rote* tor Isrgor
truck loads. 14910*0or 3*54431.
Mow-Edm
rfwrW
W■RfWWnitoxt
TY^eSMWT
Clean up and lighl hauling
1114150

ocfrk TO-dito
No |ta toe I

le le ly i Cleaning with the

RwCNyeftentordL Florida
Date: May to. tigs

Or Write For

KISH REAL ESTATE

HALL

TIRED
Are you tired ot not making enough
money? Are you tired of net
going anywhere? Are you willing
to go to work? Call 331 3031

auction

9. FLORIDA ID J ill
IL-SmWi

Great Location. Good condition. 2
Bdrm. I bath. Cent. HA. Large
shady tot. excellent financing.
WALLACE CRESS REALTY
REALTOR 3115091.
H A L COLBERT REALTY
REALTOR
ip? E. i5th si.______
JUNE CLASSIFIED AOS BRING
THAT E X T RA SUMMER
VACATION MONEY TO YOUt

Laka Mary 1/1. Adult*. No pal*. 1
months. 1st and last. *150. 323
5091.____________________

For Rent. 3 Brdm. Ita bath. *1*5
Por month. For more Informa­
tion Call 333O40*.AIIer * PM
For Rent.
1 Bdrm. Ibath. No Children.
No pets *375. 377 4179.
IN DELTONA

HAROLD

141-Homes For Sale

CONSULT OUR

ALLTYPESCARPENTRY

forth In the
peUtafW&gt;pr«|ecf.
The HeueJng Auftartty of too City
. Florida reserves the right
m yaraM M taar to waive

H E R A L D C L A S S IF IE D S .

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent

103—Houses
Unfurnished/Rent

EXTRA largo 1 story Colonial on T *
acre ol Oak trot*. All the ameni­
ties plus guest opt. Botf locate.
*100.000. WM. MALICZOWSKI
REALTOR 111 79*3.

Looking for a Home? You'll Find
Your Dream House In the

Sanlord Spacious. 1 Bdrm. plut den
or 2nd. Bdrm. Furniture. *2*0
Adult*. 1 *41 7 M 3 . ______
Santord Lake Mary area. Conv*
nlently located. New 1 Bdrm, I
bath many oitrai. Call alter t
PM. 371 40*4,3731477.3114171.

t condo. 7 BR. 1bath. Pool. Tennis.
Comfortable sleeping room.
Private entrance. *50. Includes
maid service and utllttes. Call
311 4947.
SANFORD, Reas, weekly ! Mon­
thly rales. Ulll. Inc. elf. 500 Oik
Adults I 44171*3
SANFORD Furnished rooms by the
week. Reasonable rates. Mild
service catering lo working peo­
ple. Unfurnished apartments. I
and 1 bedrooms. 311 4507. 500
Palmetto Ave.

LOCAL FAMILY Ntedi * or I
Bdrm*. 1 Bath* and Fam. room.
Roomy and appropriate for
chlldrtn. In Laka Mary or San­
lord Area. Want* to lease for a
least I Year. Reply to P. O. Bo*
111Lake Mary Fla. 37744.^___

Mariner'* Village on Lake Ada, I
bdrm from *745, 1 bdrm from
*110. Located 17-91 lust south of
Airport Blvd. In Sanford. All
Adult*, m M7C.____________
M a llo n v llli T r a c t A pfi. 440
Mtllonvllie Ave. Spaeiou* mod­
ern 1 bdrm t talh apartment*.
Carpeted, kitchen equipped,
CH !A, adult*, no pat*. S135
_________ 371 3905._________
NEW 1 ! 2 Bedroom*. Adjacent to
Lake Monroe. Health Club,
R aequo(ball and Motel
Santord Lending S. R. 4* i l l -4110.
NEWLYWEDS WILL ARRIVE IN
J U N E - RENT THEM A PLACE
NOW. ITS NOT TOO SOON.
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
15*0 Ridgewood Ave. Plv373 *470
1,1! 3 Bdrm*. Irom *790.
Sjeriifil#iwrKKt.
1 Bdrm. 2 Both. AC., Pool. *395.
_________ 1195 77**._________

1 Large Lakelront home 1 BR 7
balhLR/OR/KIt Extras

141—Homes For Sale

123—Wanted to Rent

99-Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

TrooSorvIco
K i l l m a lts
W* 0*41

Trl-Cagnty Tree Service.
Trim, remove, trata hauled
n iesenata*. Free B*t.» 9dto.

�141—Homt* For Salt

OHtTH
ILITARYMSTKLE coum.y
COMM, h e #
*EM
numtemai

1 Bdrm. New roof newly painted,
tcreenad porch, fenced rear yard
with fruit free*. 147,300.

Longwood For Si I* by Owner.
Four btfrm. 1 bth. greet rm.
15xM .crooned porch,fireplace,
celling lent, over 1/3 acre lot.
Beautifully landscapad . wood
privacy fenced • % assumbalba
mortgage. »7*.*S0. M M Sjj.

3 Bdrm. Iw bath cuttom fireplace,
p la n adding doora, lead to
privacy fenced yard. Good
aaavmable mortgage, let,HO.

ffiS EWSTHE
MMOAT^ J W

219-WantaltoBuy

225—Trucks/

M Y HI#
KNUOKLC#

Bv*t*/Van*

nx? WHTTB

HAVE THE JtfTUN* PACKBEAT
5EF0TC THEY EVEN ffaKXlV I

TAF

THE

MV RE^RPMAY^T t i g s
NEVER BE BROKEN! ) £ &amp; ■

1/ A WEEK/

HE# Y

LM T,

im Chevy Van
dcyimder|47S.
Call 3334377.

t

3344 S.F BENCH
3334131
After Houra 33F-3F10 333437*
COLEMAN CAMPINO TRAILERS
R.V. SALES Hwy 44
New Smyrna Beach *04 431W73

# la 3 atory 4 bdrm 1 bath home la
'•ally aecluded near Oateen on
#&gt;pro»lmately 1 acre needa
wort. Let in tell you about It.

PRESTIGIOUS MAYFAIR Below
market value thla 3 bdrm 1 bath
home on beautiful comer lot hoa
load* of potentials**.500.
4
Saleaman needed.

LIVE RENT FREBI Duplex for
aale, 11 with garage, gulet Do
bary, dote to Glenn Abbey Golt
Courae, and ahopplng.
Call
Evelyn, 374-140* R K C En-

■ STEMPER AGENCY INC.

Rimbltwood. 4/31Acre. 11*400
Cardinal Oaka. 3/11134,*00.
Ravena Brook. 4/3 tl*4.*00.
Foreat City. 3/3S4*.»00.
BobM. Ball Jr. PA. Realtor
M l 41IS. ______

{&amp;IV1UAN UFE £0N$UER# ALL HEROES

__________M»-4**1

203—Livesto ck/P o u ltry

B tU /iu
Caft K « p

24 HOUR 03 322*9283

WE HAVE CLIENTS
WAITING FOR
YOUR RENTAL
PROPERTY
PLEASE CALL
323*3200

REALTY &amp; REALTORS
SanfarfsSaltsLsatfet
WE LIST ANOSELL
MORE HOMESTHAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

Alt. Hra.333ae*4.131041
Seller motivated. Assume Mtg. or
finance. 4 Bdrm. 1 bath. Cent
HA. private backyard. S53.000
Owner Associate. MI-0414.

DELUXE I Bedroom IW both
townhouaoa. Private patios.
FHA/VA and Investor financing
available. Located on Ridgewood
o il 3JtH St. 33 Minutes to
downtown Orlando via 1-4, near
17 *3. shopping, churches, and
schools. Models open 1-4 Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, or call
anyllma for appointment.

Antigua Sessions mantle Clock
mint condition 1100. Curio Cobl
not, Inalde light 3330., Norlleke
dinner let service for I p'ui 7
oxtro serving pieces. 3100.
___
333-3300.

Chippendale sofa, mahogany
vanity 4 carved matching chairs,
Duncan Phyla table and a chairs,
oak dressers. cedar cheat, china
cabinet with table and 4 mat­
ching chairs, drop leal table,
tables and chairs, savaral
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC.
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
•
SKYLINE DEALER
FEATURING
Palm Beach Villa
Greenleal
Palm Springs
Palm Manor.
Siesta Kay
V A F H A financing.
"
...............
385-313 SMO.
New Homes starting at SO**5. Easy
credit end low down. Unde Roys,
Leesburg. US. 441 *04 7474034

BATEMAN REALTY
Lk. Reel Estate Broker
1440 Sentord Ave.
OSTEEN S Acres, high end dry.
14*11 and light pole. Owner hold

We s32joo

ALSO 1.7 Acres. Terms. II4J00.
FISHERMANS PARADISE. I ris
QAH 15x 31 screensd pool,
orkshop. 13x14. Booutlful
eluded area. Lot 75x550 on
Lake Monroe. 1164.100.
HAffDYMAN SPBCIALI. County
At. Lot 110x134. SAND.

S

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From 110 to S3*ar more.
Call M l U14 3334111
TOP Dollar Paid for Junk A Uaad
car*, trucka A heavy equipment.
_________ M3SH0._________

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR

PLACE YOUR WARES
WHERE THEY'RE SURE
TO BE STUDIED
INTHE WANTADSII

1*11 Dodge Challenger 4 cyl
loaded, low mileage. P e i
balance of S7JM.14 Cell 1334177.

We buy furniture, antiques or
except consignments tor auction
Fla Trader Auction. M»-lll*.

opened. Call otter a PM. 3331151.
1 Couches end 2 chairs to match,
t i n ea. set. Rocking Chair, S45.
Rattan couch end 2 chairs. 1100. 2
Odd chairs. SIO ea. Old bookcase
with kay. 375. M l 5117.

7* Sonblrd Super Coupe. 4 speed
AC., P.S.. AM
FM lepe. raw
redials. S3J00 373 714*

tl1MSWHIM tfOYofA

nights to I PM.
No money down end 1 days service
en all VA financing. Short on
Credit? Cell and ask lor Tom.
Undo Roys. Leesburg. Open SI
Waekdays. W4-7I7-0M4._______

322-2420

2 4 3-Ju n k C a n

1*71 AMC Concord. D. L. 1 door,
auto, alr.AM. FM.. power. After
«Pm. Weekdays 333 4147.
1*71 Toyota Cellce
G.T. Hat­
chback. AM FM stereo. Auto.
Trans, air, 333 41*7. Weekdays
after* PM._______________
3*73 Bulck Riviera.
All orig. w/attenlton and care to
match Its condition. Priced right
and must sell. Longwood MI-MSS
Eves. Thank You tor Celling
1*7* Lincoln Mark V. Fully

FORALLYOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
EXCELLENT START HOMEI 11
with large lemlly room, lanced
let, centrally located. Owner
wants quick sale I Asking 141.000.
CallS. Swift or N. Clair.

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy *1, t mile weal of Speedway,
Daytona Beach will hold a public
AUTO AUCTION every Monday
A Wodnetday at 7:30 p m. It'a the
only one In Florida. You aet the
reeerved price. Call *04133411)
for further detain.
Dabary Auto A Marina Salaa
acrota the river top of hill 174
hey 17*1 Debery **S*54*
Dodge Dert
74 Excellent running condition.
111001311777.

OPEN HOUSE
INDIAN WOODS
Fleetwood "NEW" Deluxe t A J
Bedroom, 2 Bath. Completely
Set up In a Beautiful Mobile
Home Community . Includes ell
Amenities. Financing Available.
A Must see MFG Home - All tor
Uf.SQO.OO. SR 41* A Tuscewllla
Road. Winter Springs Fie. M7M.
177 3140

■

*1925 HIBISCUS COURT*
SANFORD, FLORIDA

A mojastic, picturesque fast* of yesteryear’s finest
residences! Unbelievable 4 bedroom, 3'/s bath home
with Spanish architecture, featuring quarry tile ft wood
flooring, cathedral ceilings, spacious rooms, formol liv­
ing room ft dining room, parlour, screen/glass enc. sun
pbrch w/fountoln, fireplace, Ig. entry foyer, double
enclosed garage w/mald quarters, beautiful gardens
op three landscaped lots I Restore ft decorate to be a
snowploce of Sanfordl Yours for only $127,500. For
Reviewing call today I

STENSTROM
EALTY — REALTORS

322-2420

1 beauttfutty wooded tots ’ODVf
ously super location Priced to
sell new 574.SOB by FHA/VA.
Drive by (4 blocks.S E of 1-4 A
414) Call for appointment. Belter
hurry.

lamp*, bookcases, paintings, I pc
redwood potle set with largo
rotting cooker, built In wrought
Iren patio sets, wicker pieces,
large assortment el chairs.
NEED to sell your houso Quickly I
We can otter guaranteed sale
within 10days. Cell 311-MU.

Looking for a Home? You'll Find
Your Drtam Houso In Hit
HERALD CLASSIFIEDS.

151—Lots-Acreigt/Sale
Casselberry Mobile home lot set up
with chain link lance. Cash or
farms 4*5 7143_____________
• SANFORD 1-4A 4*0
I ’.s Acre 4- - country homo site.
Oak pine some cleared paved. 10%
down lOYrs.ef 13%.
STENSTROM REALTY
REALTORS
•Call 1331410 Anytime e

I l l — Appliance*
/ Furniture
Bunk beds tor Sale.
Good condition. SIS0.
331 5355.

..................... Ml SC............... ......
HAmmand Organ, Bumber pool
teMo w/cerd table top. Meteg.
110 Volt portable dryer, plus
assorted appliances, under the
counter refrig, fens, 3 pc. chllds
4UI furniture set In wood, new 1
pc. MdMs ka cream parlor set
with mustcaUlMts, brass plated
flatware set, left* Assortment of
hand tools, drills, sente, table
band
saws, plus tM Noest
selection of Bisque, porcelln one

COLOR TELEVISION
Zenith 15" color TV In walnut
console. Original price over IMS.
Balance due Sl*4 cash or pay­
ments sty month. NO MONEY
DOWN. Still In warranty. Call
*43 51*4 day or nil*. Free home
troll, no obiIget lew.

ST. JOHNS River frontage. i \i
ocre parcel*, olio Interior
parcels with river access |l*,*00
Publk water, 30 min. to Alto
monte Mall 13%30 yrs financing,
no qualifying. Broker
4244S21

117—Sporting Good*
GUN AUCTION
SUNDAY JUNE 5 1 PM.
SHOOT STRAIGHT
APOPKA PLAZA
CORNER 441 and 436
MORE INFO 1-M9-0842

llfftlK CtMNfRy f Of Of A
SUN. 3 PM
Fireplace. New lawn chairs, new
elec. lens, heaters, furniture,
stereos, TVs. glassware. Few
antiques, lets of mlsc. box lots.
A l AUCTION SERV.
MSS t. PARK OR.

323-41*1

JACK'S BOAT REPAIRS.
For all yeur Baattns needs
1105MI 5374 Days 333 54*5 Night

CASSELBERRY
START Your garag* kotos now11
M AKE LOTtOFOUICK MONEY
Call THE HERALD M3 341I today.

3 Bedrooms lVa B a th s , C e n tra l H e a t &amp; A ir C o n
d ltlo n ln g , Q .E . R a n g e , W a ll-T o -W a ll C a rp e tin g
O n e -C a r O a ra g e , M a n y O th e r F e a tu re s .
* * 3 9 ,9 0 0 In clu d in g L o t.
M o rtg a g e A m o u n t * 3 5 ,8 5 0

l

FHA 245 Plan 111 If Qualified
n m k "m c m r m fmu. kyajls

ABSOLUTE
AUCTION

WE A R E D E S T I N E D T O BE

THE GREAT SUZUKI
PRICE BLOW-UP!?
GS450LZ
GS450YX
GS550LZ
GS650GZ
RM125Z

E. Z. BANK FINANCING

929 EMBASSY DR.. DELTONA

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�</text>
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Volunteers To Do More; Librarian Reluctantly Agrees To Program
B J Mlcheal Beha
Herald Staff W riter
Seminole County Librarian Jean Rhein will establish a
volunteer program at the county's two libraries even
though she feels the program will reduce their quality of
service.

'It't not what
wo'vo boon
building for.'

Mrs. Rhein expressed her opposition to the decision bv ,
Seminole Cour.ty commissioners at the Monday wfl'rn
session but reluctantly agreed to establish the program.
"Lots o f libraries use volunteers but not very
successfully." she said. "It’s not what we've been
building for."
The libraries recently reduced their hours of service.
Both the Casselberry library and the Sanford branch
library are now closed on weekends and have reduced
hours on Thursday and Friday.
County commissioners have warned that library
services may be seriously reduced In an attempt to meet

— J«an R h d n

an anticipated 18 million budget deficit.
The deficit and even larger deficits anticipated for
coming years could also affect a 87 million bond Issue

approved by county voters for construction of four
additional libraries In the county.
Commissioners have warned that those bonds might
not be sold unless the deficits can be eliminated.
Ms. Rhein said establishing a volunteer program Is not
difficult but Instituting It while the library system
continues to grow Is much more difficult.
"Oiji'•apablllly to grow at the pace we have been will
•• slip y itH ••We’ll have to pull In our
horns. We won't be able to automateas we had planned.
Our emphasis will be on Just keeping the libraries
open."
Ms. Rhein said training volunteers for the Sanford
branch will be much easier than for the Casselberry
branch.
“ In a small operation It can be easily done," she said.
"Altamonte Springs Is a good example. But they have a
circulation o f about 30.000 books a year. Ours
(circulation) Is qbout 700.000."
County Commissioner Sandra Glenn said the volun-

teer tasks should Include checking out and receiving
books, shelving returned books, collecting fines and
other circulation Jobs. By using volunteers for those
Jobs, professional staff could be used for more technical
Jobs,
But Ms. Rhein told commissioners the pace at the
Casselberry library can be hectic. She said 1.700 people
sometimes use the library during a 1W-hour period.
Mrs. Rhein said the county’s library advisory board
"iCCOrmncndcd against using volunteer help.
’ ’They’d rather reduce the hours o f service than the
quality o f service.’’
But Commissioner Robert Sturm said he’s already
received phone calls from people who want the libraries
open longer. And other commissioners agreed.
Commissioner Bill Kirchhoff, who agreed that the
volunteer program should be Instituted, said It probably
won’t save any money.
"Expenses are going to have to be considered, he
said. "It's not going to be an easy fix."

County Told To
Take Better Care
O f The Wetlands
A plan to control development In
Seminole County's wetlands will not
limit growth but will help developers
plan better projects, according to a
University of Florida professor.
Mark Brown, one of two UF professors
who headed a study team of the county's
wetlands, said the study gathered In­
formation which wlllallow developers to
be creative In their construction plans.
"Creativity was used to get around the
law. We want to use that creativity."
The study Is Intended to help Seminole
County get a wetlands management
program In place before development
_
occurs In areas which could be seriously
affected by. development- Wetlands are
ypes of areas
•even types
__
valuable ecological services such as
storm w a ter d ra in a g e and w ater
purification.
A wetlands management code, similar
to land management and building codes
now In effect, has been proposed by
Brown and fellow UF professor Earl
Starnes. The key to the program would
be to Identify where each of the seven
types of wetlands exist In Seminole
County and what development may
occur within them.
But Brown said to properly manage
the wetlands the county should also
manage the adjacent property. "It has
become very obvious that without man­
aging that adjacent property you haven't
managed the wetlands."
He said severe damage can be done to
the wetlands by draining an area that
feeds Into It or by polluting neighboring
property.
Development In the county's wetlands
has not been widespread. Brown said.
And so far there Is no record of any
damage to the wetlands.
"But you get a little development here
and a little development there. It sneaks
up on you.” he said. "On the scale I've
seen, you've done wrong. And the whole

water management district will pay for
It.”
’
Brown was not critical o f the county’s
efforts at controlling development In
wetlands. He said there has not been
major Impact so far.
County Planner Woody Price said the
alternative to developing a wetlands
management code now is to pay higher
costs for manmade water management
facilities In the future. The wetlands
code would basically let water take Its
own course.
That policy is supported by Starnes, a
member of the Suwance River Water
Management District. That group's pollcy has been "God made It. gravity runs
It.^he sald.
—-7 ------Starnes said creating manmade conditches
tainment areas and drainage
_
may look like a good Idea but may have
severe long term Impact on an area. “ We
made some very serious errors In Florida
In the 1880s and 1890s. And we're
paying for them now.”
During that period much of south
Florida was drained to make farmland.
The cost of maintaining that farmland
will run Into the billions over the next 50
years, he said.
But there Is some controversy between
the consultants and a citizen's commit­
tee appointed to review the study. The
c on su lta n ts have proposed strict
guidelines on the wetlands and adjacent
areas. Including a ban on the use of
herbicides.
County commissioners accepted the
report Tuesday and have been asked by
the committee to hire a consultant to
draw a county map Identifying where
each of the seven types of wetlands
exists.
The county has filed a grant applica­
tion with the St. Johns River Water
Management District to fund the map­
drawing.
“ By Mlcheal Baba

TODAY
Action Reports............ 2A Florida...................... 3A Sports................... 9-11A
Classified Ads
l,9B Horoscope.................. «B Television..................7B

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Editorial................... 4A People..................... 1-3B World......................12A

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Cementing

All Plnecrest Elem entary School faculty
and staff members, Including M a rie Lewis,

Friendships

Carem G ager and Ruth Dougherty, secre­
tary, reverted back to their childhood
Tuesday when they placed their handprints

11X11# S V W Ivia i f

F e a t h e r 's

■»

A p a r t m

Familiarity was no ally for Seminole
County Commissioner Robert G. "B u d "
Feather.
' Feather’s plans to develop a 43.8-acre
parcel along the Wekiva River Into 222
apartments were derailed by fellow commis­
sioners Tuesday night on a 3-2 vote.
Commissioner Robert Sturm voted with
Feather but Sandra Glenn. BUI Kirchhoff and
Barbara Christensen vetoed the plan.
About 100 residents of other developments
In the area appeared at the public hearing to
protest the plans of Feather, who Is president

e n t

and nam es In the newly poured concrete,
"M e m o r y W a lk " at the school laid out and
finished by the Seminole County School
Board M aintenance Department. They are
being eyed by envious students, who didn't
get to record their nam es for posterity.

P la n

o f Audobon Habitats Inc., and Robert J. Pugh
o f Epoch Properties.
Those opposing the plan said too many
apartments were planned for the property
beside Wekiva Springs Road. Miami Springs
Road and Weklwa State Park.
The proposal had a gross density of five
units per acre and a net density of 7.9 units
per acre. But adjacent developments have
densities o f between one and three units per
acre.
Neighbors were also skeptical o f the
developers' plans to build a brick wall to

R e je c t e d

obscure the development from the site of
neighbors and o f plans to rent the units for
five years prior to converting them Into
condominiums.
Feather and Pugh asked for a specific
amendment from a low density residential
preservation conservation area to a medium
density residential area and a zoning change
*
.................
* home! ala*
* 1 -to
from agricultural
and mobile
district
amulll-famlly dwelling district.
The county's Planning and Zoning Com­
mission approved the plan on May 4 but
county stafT officials opposed the plan. —

Mlcheal Baba.

'Scared' But G u ts y Girl* 16, Chases Th ie ve s, Recovers Property
By Diane Petryb
Herald Staff W riter

• -r
, .

I (IV)

A 16-year-old Sanford girl who chased two suspected
burglars last night has been credited with saving
•17,600 In property for Robson Marine. 2927 S. Orlando
Drive. Sanford.
"I was pretty scared." she said today.
But Jodi Gctman. a Junior at Seminole High School,
was also determined that two men she saw leaving
Robson Marine at 8:30 last night not get away with a
van full of boat motors It appeared they had Just taken.
Jodi knew the van she saw leaving the marine
compound was suspicious, because she had once
worked for the owners o f the shop. She knew they close
at 5:30 and she knew the boxes In the van were motors.
"I'd unpacked plenty o f them.” she said.
Jodi said she and her mother, Vicki Getman. were
coming out o f McCrary's store in Sanford Plaza Just
before 8:30 when she heard a burglar alarm coming
from Robson's.
As she and her mother got in her Ford Ranchero. she
saw two men In a van approach the compound fence.
The man on the passenger side got out and opened the
fence.
Jodi said she tried to get Its license number, but the
occupants apparently saw what she was doing and
barked up and turned.
At (b e c a m e time Jodi alerted her boyfriend and
another friend, who were in thrlr own car, to follow.
The young men tried to head the van off as It went

around the Flagship Rank auto teller. Jodi was honking
the car horn to get attention.
The van then headed past the Southern Bell phone
center toward Airport Boulevard.
At Airport Boulevard, she said. It appeared the van
hesitated, first seeming to want to turn toward U.S.
Highway 17-92. But then it turned left on Airport.
Jodi said she feels the men In the vehicle were
panicking after seeing her trying to get their license and
being chased by two cars.
By this time Jodi's mother was telling her to "forget
about It” .
But Jodi continued her pursuit.
While tlje van made a turn Into Sandlewood Villas ofT
Airport Boulevard, Jodi's boyfriend alerted a police
officer whose patrol car was parked at the Plnecrest
Baptist Church nearby.
By the time police Joined the chase, Jodi’s car had the
van bcttled-up at Sandlewood.
" I think they thought they were entering a through
street.” said Jodi, who was scared but undaunted..
As the two men leaped from the van. Jodi started to
get out o f her car to continue pursuit but her mother
restrained her.
" I was grabbing her with one arm and trying to start
the car with the other,” Mrs. Getman said.
"Get back in this car.” Jodi remembers her mother
saying.
Upon reflection. Jodi said the thought one o f them
might have had a gun or something should have made

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her more prudent. But it didn't.
She saw the man on the passenger side of the vehicle
Jump out and run (o the right and the driver stop to grab
something off the seat o f the van and run straight Into
the woods.
The police car arrived through another Sandlewood
entrance, but by that time the men had disappeared.
Sanford police detective Karen Reynolds said the van
was Impounded and four outboard motors recovered.
The vehicle's owner had not yet been Identified this
morning, but Ms. Reynolds said the van is from Orlando.
Today. Ruth Jean Robson said Jodi will get a reward
for her efforts, along with her boyfriend Rowdy Hinkle
and his friend Keith Taylor. Hinkle is IB. Taylor. 19.
" I think It's a wonderful thing what these young
people did,” Mrs. Robson said. "It's wonderful.
"W hile everyone's saying young people are no good
and are all on drugs, these young people last night
showed what they can do. What they're capable o f
doing. We are very grateful.”
Mrs. Robson said an inventory o f the Robson Marine
premises, currently selling all Us Inventory, has not
been completed and no damage was noticed in the
confusion last night, except for the two chains securing
the compound fence which were clipped.
For Jodi's part, she hopes the burglars will be caught.
But she didn't do anything for a reward or for the
Robson'a.
•
•
Looking back on It. she said, "It was a terrible place to
work.”

�9

Termites Found
Civic Center

N A TIO N

Donna Eatea
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Drywood termites have been discovered In the interior
wood o f the Sanford Civic center.
Knowles said the termites were found in the civic
center by workmen in recent days.
The employees "found some dustings on the floor at
the back o f the main auditorium o f the civic center In a
big wood overhang." Knowles said.
The city manager said the employees laid some paper
down and the next day found more dustings. After
pressing on the wood, pest control specialists were
called In to Inspect the facility.
Knowles noted there is a great deal o f Interior wood in
the civic center. He said to eradicate drywood termites,
It will be necessary to tent the building.
Cost estimates have not been received as yet, but
Knowles anticipates the cost will be In the thousands of
dollars.
Repairs on the 25-ycar-old center, which faces Sanford
Avenue und Seminole Boulevard, were completed
several months ago. The civic center was -damaged" Ly
the April, 1982. hail stnrpi
_Qiln-r Improve­
ments also have been completed at the center since that
time.

INBREF
Senate Debates M X
Funds After House Okay
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate resumed
debate today on whether to release engineering
and night-testing funds for the MX missile with
the White House expressing cautious optimism
that it will follow the House’s lead.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., urged the
Senate to give Reagan the giant 10-warhead
missile as a tool to move the Soviets to the
bargaining table In Geneva.
"Congress should give him the MX card." she
said. “ If it is used wisely, we could force the
Soviets to put some o f their own cards on the
table this year, instead of In some uncertain
future."
She also announced her support for a "sense
o f the Senate" resolution Sen. Carl Levin.
D-MIch.. Intends to offer later calling for a
mutual suspension o f flight-testing o f all
multiple-warhead missiles such as the MX by
the United States and the Soviet Union. The
resolution has eight co-sponsors on both sides of
the aisle.

ItorsMra#W« w Jm * CMMltorry

Ray Denied N ew Hearing

Helping Hand

NASHVILE. Tenn. (UPI) — A federal Judge has
denied a request by James Earl Ray. convicted
killer of Martin Luther King Jr., for a clemency
hearing before the state Board o f Pardons and
Paroles.
U.S. District Judge John T. Nixon dismissed a
lawsuit Tuesday died by Ray on March 14 that
asked the court to order the board to grant Ray a
pardon hearing.
Ray. serving a 99-year sentence in the state
penitentiary for King's 1968 assassination, said
in the complaint filed In U.S. District Court that
the parole board violated his constitutional
rights to due process by denying him a hearing
on executive clemency.

Cindy Stephens, 14, of O range Boulevard, Paola, a
seventh grad er at Sanford M iddle School, helps
Cali O 'B rie n and Jason K aise r with their reading.
Cindy spends two hours every day after school
w orking with first g ra d e rs a s a
D ividend
volunteer at W ilson Elem entary School. When her
school had a M a y D a y Play Day, she chose to

spend the day helping out In the classroom at
Wilson. She began two years ago helping the
teacher while waiting to w alk a younger child
home and en|oyed It so much she became a
regular. Because of the experience, Cindy wants
to go to college and become a teacher.

Women Victims
Of Phone Scheme
Five women and one teenage girl were victims of
similar attempts at intimidation by phone Friday.
According to Seminole County deputies* reports:
The women, from Sanford, Lake Mary and Longwood,
were called at home by a male who asked for their
husbands by name.
In each Incident the caller staled lie was lapped into
their telephone and they would not be able io call out. In
several cases, the caller said lie had duplicate keys (o the
victims' homes and asked for money and valuables (o be
placed outside "and you won't be harmed."
Descriptions ol the caller's voice varied from "a strong
foreign accent” io "very businesslike."

N A A C F Likes Court Ruling

One victim said It seemed like the caller had the
statements he was making written down or bad said
them so often they were memorized.

GREENVILLE. S.C. (UPI) - The president of
Bob Jones University says he pities the
“ heathens who sit on the Supreme Court”
whose "blighted minds" decided his fun­
damentalist school Is Ineligible for tax breaks
because o f Its racial policies.
But Thomas Atkins, NAACP acting executive
director, said In New York:
“ The Supreme Court decision today puts the
country back on track. The decision says If you
practice discrimination you are not entitled to
public support ”
The court upheld a federal appeals court
ruling, which prohibits private schools that
practice racial discrimination from taking
advantage o f lucrative tax breaks.

The calls took place between 4 and 6:45 p.m. and
were all made to phone numbers listed In the telephone
directory.
Two victims live a block apart on Dublin Drive In 1-ake
Mary. One of them said she hung up on the caller but
when she picked up the phone later he was still on the
line and said: "I told you you can't make any outside
calls."
The other Dublin Drive victim was lold her iclcphonc
line had been cut.
In Sanford, a 14-year-old girl was asked If her parents
were home and how much money was In the house. The
girl told deputies the man spoke with a Spanish accent
and said he was on the telephone pole behind the house.

fWEATHER
i---------------------

&lt; NATIONAL WEATHER: Snakes and sewage today
'became the greatest danger along the stlll-rislng Pearl
j River In Mississippi, Louisiana floods canceled a nuclear
'disaster drill and frost warnings covered the northern W ilson Elem entary School Dividend volunteers
'Plains. A slow-moving storm system spread thun­ Richard Odell and Libby D alby discuss costumes
derstorm s from the Texas Panhandle to Wisconsin late
'Tuesday, spinning off a tornado in Iowa and dumping
$•ankle-deep hall at Vigo Park, Texas. The storm front
•chilled the northern Plains, where frost warnings were
£posted for northern Minnesota and northeastern North
* Dakota early today. Summer weather In the West sent
'th e mercury into the 80s from Washington to Montana,
'and into the 100s from Presidio. Texas, to Blythe, Calif.
A mix-up over the location of a house led to a delay in
[Lake Havasu City, Ariz- sweltered in 112-degree Seminole County firefighters responding to a Are which
[temperatures, the nation's hottest. Floodwaters along did extensive damage to a house at 2200 MacArthur
[the San Jacinto River and Its tributaries In southeastern Ave. near Sanford.
[Texas started to recede but authorities said some o f the
A fire call was placed to (he Sanford Fire Department
[7,000 people who fled the water may have to wait a at about 10 a.m. Monday but because the Tommie Lee
[week to return to their homes. The Pearl River pushed Johnson family's residence is not within the city limits
[toward Its second-worst flood crest in history today of Sanford the call had to be relayed to the county.
[when It was expected to peak at 39.5 feet — 11 feet over
By the time county lire crews made It to the scene the
•flood stage — and remain near that level for several (Ire had done considerable damage to the house, a
[days.
Seminole County firefighter said.
"They're not going to be living there for some time."
* AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 77:
said
Seminole County Fire Division Battalion Chief Bill
'overnight tow: 68: Tuesday high: 93; barometric
^pressure: 29.94: relative humidity: 81 percent: winds Klnley.
Klnley said the fire severely damaged two rooms In (he
' northwest at 6 mph: rain: none: sunrise 6:30 a.m„
house and the entire dwelling was damaged on the
; sunset 8:15 p.m.
* THURSDAY TIDES: Daytoaa Stack: highs, 8:42 Interior by smoke and heat.
The fire was apparently started by a faulty refrigerator
[a.m .. 9:05 p.m.: lows. 2:29 a.m.. 2:24 p.m.-, Port
'Canaveral: highs, 8:34 a.m.. 8:27 p.m.; lows. 2:20a.m.. motor, he said.

for play, while Cindy M u se tries on duckling head.

At'another Sanford residence, a 50-ycar-oId housewife
got the impression she was being watched by the the
caller. She also said she was advised to place her purse
and all the cash in t)ic home in a pillow case and set It
outside. When she told the caller she had no cash, he
became angry and hung up.
_
i
In Longwood. the caller was foiled when the victim
activated the burglar alarm In her house. Hearing the
racket, the telephone bandit hung up.

Delay In Reporting Fuels House Fire

$2:15 p.m.: Rapport: highs. 2:32 a.m „ 1:29 p.m.; lows,
•7:58 a.m., 8:52 p.m.
5 BOATtNO FORECAST: S t. A o g o a tla o to J ap ita r
^In let, o o t BO atUaa: Wind variable less than 10 knots
£through Thursday except easterly near 10 knota during
&lt;the afternoons. Seas 2 feet or less. Widely scattered
gshowers or thunderstorms today.
“
T: Today partly cloudy with a 20
*percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs near
90. Light variable wind. Tonight mostly (air with lows
Light variable
wind. Thursday mostly
(mid to upper 60s
“
-----liable w
in 1
the upper 80s.
(sunny with highs in
S EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudy. A slight
chance o f thunderstorms north late Friday increasing
through Sunday. Highs low 80s north to near 90 Interior
central and south. Rather cool nights north with lows
near 60. Lows upper 80s centra) and mid to upper 70s
smith.

HOSPITAL NOTES

CLOTHING COLLAR
Several hundred sets o f newly manufactured sportswear
were stolen from SAN-DEL Mfg.. 2240 Old Lake Mary
Road, between May 15 and May 20, police report. The
clothing, ready to be shipped to New York, bore "Brooks
Bros.” and "Scoreboard" labels on the Inside collars.
The Items stolen were valued at 82,000. They are not
normally sold In the central Florida area.

Action Reports
*

ftn $

A C o u rts
A Poll co
BRIEFCASE TAKEN
A Fori Lauderdale businessman lost hls briefcase
Wednesday evening at the Amtrak station in Sanford.
Sam Hanson. 63. told police he set the briefcase down
outside a restroom. When he returned the case was
missing. Hanson said the case contained 8700.

CASH STOLEN
A dancer at the Circus Circus go-go nightclub on U.S.
Highway 17-92 In Fern Park lold police her locker at the
club was burglarized while she was performing.
Shirley Amendole, 20. o f Orlando, told police the
locker contained 8710 in cash and traveler's checks.

TRACTOR STOLEN
A 1973 International tractor parked at 1400 Elm
Avenue, Sanford, was stolen between noon Saturday
and 8 a.m. Monday, police reported. The tractor Is the
property o f Sunnlland Corp., 200 Oak Avenue. It was
parked at the Z. Hower Garage.

A gold necklace and gold crucifix were ripped from the
HOMES BURGLARltED
neck o f an Orlando man aa hls car was slopped at an
Numerous Items o f Jewelry were taken from the home
Intersection In Altamonte Springs, police report. While o f Merlon B. Johnson. 620 S. Sanford Avenue. Sanford,
driving hls 1980 Datsun 210 on North Street at Market sometime between 8 a.m. and 3:45 p.m. Monday,
Street, Jeffery Alan Jenkins. 22. said an unknown Sanford police report. The value o f the stolen Items has
person reached In the car and grabbed the Jewelry from not been determined. Police said the the thieves gained
hls neck.The Incident occurred at about 3:40 p.m. entry by breaking out a kitchen window.
Friday. The act was committed while Jenklna waa
Burglars also struck a block away at 700 S. Sanford
stopped by a group o f males who asked him if he wanted Avenue sometime between 1:30 p.m. Sunday and 5 p.m.
to buy some marijuana. The gold chain was valued at Monday. A window waa also broken out.
8200. The cruciflc. 8100.
Police said the bedroom o f the home o f Mrs. A.B.
In another anatch-and-run situation. 83,048 was taken Douglas had been ransacked. The extent o f property
from Ann Tlncher, 22. Sanford, aa she walked behind loss, if any. Is not known.
Flagship Bank. 300 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford, at 3:45
Jewelry valued at 8189 and a stereo with two speakers
p.m. Sunday.
valued at 8300 were taken from the home o f Louie H.
Ttie money waa contained In a Flagship money bag Williams, 458 Ohio Avenue. Sanford, sometime between
and is the property o f the Shop *N Go store at 3631 S. 6:30 a.m. and 4:25 p.m. Friday, police report. The
Sanford Avenue.
Jewelry included gold chains, and a silver necklace with
Witnesses described the robber as six-feet tall, thin,
diamond chip. A total of 84 cash waa also taken.
with blond hair. He was wearing a blue T-shirt and blue
A home under construction at 113 Wayside Drive west
o f Sanford waa visited by thieves sometime between
May 13 and 14. police report. Stolen: two celling fans
valued at 979 each.
A woman's puree waa taken In a burglary at the borne
o f Yvonne Weaver. 917 Brantley Drive, .Longwood.
sometime between 10:40 and 10:50 p.m. Friday, police
report.
At nearby 508 Wood view Drive. Longwood. Lloyd
Walters reported hls home waa broken Into Just oilier
midnight Saturday. Nothing waa taken because the
burglar was surprised by a resident o f the house!*
In both the Weaver and Walters cases, the residents
noticed a strong offensive odor during or after the
Incident

AR R ESTS
Clarence E. Stubblefield, 38. Rt. 1 Warren Street.
Longwood. and Jeffrey Robert Hoch. 22. o f 714 Ramond
Circle. Altamonte Springs, were arrested Thursday for
possession o f marijuana.
The arrests occurred after Seminole County Drug
Task Force agents were working security and sur­
veillance at the Rendezvous Lounge, Slate Road 427.
Altamontge Springs.
Willie Suggs. 33. P.O. Box 390. Jamestown. Florida,
waa being held at the Seminole Colunly Jail In lieu of
85.000 bond alter hls arrest on charges o f assault,
assault on a police officer and threatening a public
servant. He was arrested at 11:20 p.m. Monday at the
Intersection o f Central and Broudway In Oviedo.

OBSTRUCTING JUSTICE ARREST
A 24-year-old Altamonte Springs man was arrested by
Seminole County deputies Iasi week for obstructing
Justice.
Deputies report Robert Lee Richardson. 207 Cadillac
Court, interfered with police when he Identified drug
enforcement agents attempting to purchase marijuana
at the Disco Food Store, 420 Magnolia, Altamonte
Springs, at about 10:15 p.m. Wednesday.

HOSFITAL
Ling M. Williams. 21. was treated In the emergency
room o f Central Florida Regional Hospital Friday for
wounds received In a fight In the parking lot o f Jimmy
Hampton’s Bar. Briaaon Avenue, Sanford. Police said the
incident occurred between 10:30 and 10:50 p.m.

DUI ARRESTS
The following persona were arrested for driving under
the Influence In the early morning hours Monday:
-D en is James Wobig, 43. Ri. 1, Box 176. Slate Road
46. Sanford. He waa arrested at U.S. Highway 17-92 and
Airport Boulevard at 12:30 a.m.
-B u z z y Martin Bennett, 49, o f 606 Park Ave. *1,
Sanford. He waa arrested at 12:59 a.m. on the 2500
block o f Laurel Avenue after being observed behind the
wheel slumped over. Police said he "stumbled out" of
the vehicle.
—Silas Abraham Bo m . 33. of Orlando. He waa arretted
at 12:34 a.m. near Sanford Plaza after the car he waa
driving went o ff the right aide o f the roadyray at U.S.
Highway 17-92 and Foxfire Street.
Edward Joseph Rhymer. 22, o f 273 N.E. Triplett
Drive, Casselberry. He was arrested at 1:49 a.m. and
charged with driving under the Influence, unlawful
blood alcohol level and driving without two headlights.
-L a r r y Ervin Jones. 24, o f 171 N. Edgcmon Drive.
Winter Springs. He waa arrested at 307 a.m. after being
observed openUlng a vehicle with high beam headlights.
Police told blinking lights railed to get him to change to
low beam so he was stopped at U.S. Highway 17-93 and
Division Street as he pulled inlo the Krystal restaurant
there. Police said he exited hls vehicle staggering and
exuding the odor o f alcoholic beverage. He waa charged
with DUI, unlawful blood alcohol level, driving with
license suspended and obstruction by g iv in g . raise
Information.

�1

• • • • r* / /
#^ »

*

♦ w*

ivtwlm Hsrskl, Sanford, FI. Wsdwn4ay, Msy M, 1N 3- 1 A

F L O R ID A

Lake M a ry

INBRIEF

S e c u re

Askew Campaigns For
Unity In N ew Hampshire
CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) — Taking his campaign
lor ihc 1984 Democratic presidential nomlnatlon to the New Hampshire House, former
Florida Gov. Rcubln Askew called for a new
unity to meet the challenges facing the nation.
Reviving themes he has made familiar In
seven previous appearances In the flrst-ln-lhenation primary state. Askew said Tuesday that
America faces Increased economic competition
from Its world neighbors.
"Our standard o f living Is In peril, and Jobs,
profits and futures arc being lost because we
competing as we must with other
nations. ’ the former trade ambassador told the
400-member House, which^traditionally- b ^ . e r .
all maJorpaiTy prcsIdeiiTTal candidates to sneak.
—
at that trend. Askew safdTfuTnttilon
must moderate Its reliance on Individualism and
be "willing to look beyond our narrow Interests
as Individuals and our special Interests as
groups to our common Interest as Americans."
Askew opened his address by pledging his
support to preserve New Hampshire's status as
the Initial state primary.
That status has been threatened by Democrat­
ic rules changes which could permit Vermont to
hold a non-binding primary on March 6. 1984,
the date the party has chosen for New
Hampshire's primary. Presidential candidates
trooping through the Granite State have each
been asked their position on the primary Issue.

B y Donna Estes
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Lake Mary city commissioners are
working Individually on a Job de­
scription and salary range In the
city's search for a new city manag­
er.
A lth ou gh C ity M anager Phil
Kulbcs' written resignation earlier
this month carried an effective date
of June 30. he actually will be on
the job only two more weeks.
He Is scheduled to take his two
weeks vacation and compensator)'
time due him before his resigna­
tion's effective dale, meaning he Is
expected to leave the Job wltiitn the
first week oL-lUDT.
--------------- ' -

parameters on remuneration first,"
Pcrlnchlcf said, adding to advertise
before these decisions arc made
would be doing so "in a vacuum."
Commissioner Russ Mcgoncgal.
noting he has already asked Kulbcs
for n paragraph citing his Job
r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s , s a id w h e n
advertising Is done. It should not
only Include the "Municipal Re­
cord" of the Florida League but also
target nearby colleges and un­
iversities.
Some city officials have already
talked to n graduate student of
government who would like to
are*sw.iidcrhrg- '
•-Wit
cmulovmcnt.

"W e should review the Job de­
s c r ip tio n and e x a m in e som e

The commission may have a
special meeting to adopt a salary

^

To

M anager

Pcrlnchlcf said the advertisement
should Include enough Information
to attract applicants and that Is why
the decisions on salary range and
other considerations should be
made prior to the advertising.

JACKSONVILLE (UPI) — An administrative
hearing examiner refused Tuesday to dismiss
unprofessional conduct proceedings against a
Jacksonville dentist who was acquitted In 1981
o f charges he raped a female patient.
Charles Adams of the Florida Division of
Hearings heard a complaint by the Florida
Department of Professional Regulation against
Dr. William T. Woodward that he sexually
molested a patient and kissed two others after
administering nitrous oxide (laughing gas) to
them.
If found guilty. Woodward. 44. could be fined
or stripped of his license to practice dentistry In
Florida.
In September 1981, a Circuit Court Jury
acquitted Woodward of rape charges stemming
from the same Incident Involving Sherry Martin,
26.
Woodward's lawyer, Edward M. Booth, argued
Tuesday that the state's administrative charges
were vague and put the dentist in double
Jeopardy In that he was being tried for the same
action.

^

ra n g e, q u a lific a tio n s and re ­
sponsibilities of the office prior to Its
regular June 2 meeting.
Kulbcs' resignation was sub­
mitted after a work session of the
City Commission on May 4. It was
contained In two type written lines
In a m em o to M ayor W a lte r
Sorenson
Kulbcs was first hired by the city
as a building odlclal on Aug. 7.
1978, at a salary of $12,000 annu­
ally. On Jan. 18. 1979. he was
appointed city manager at a salary
of S I3.999.96. Ills current salary Is
S21.982.75.
Is the city's first manager. He

will celebrate his 65th birthday on
June 26.
Kulbcs said 'he resigned lor
personal reasons. Among those was
that he and Mrs. Kulbcs were trying
to get custody of their grandson,
who lived In California. They have
since been successful In that effort
and the boy now lives with them.

House OKs Controversial
Insurance Reform Bill
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Some health Insurance
policy holders would be denied a choice o f doctors
and all would have to pay a portion o f medical bills
up to $2,500 under a bill approved by the House
and sent to the Senate.
The measure (HB 1182). approved 87-31 Tues­
day, also would require a second doctor’s opinion
for non-emergency surgery and bar holders of
multiple policies from making a profit on their
reimbursements.
Proponents said the reforms would help put the
brakes on spiraling health costs, which Increased
19 percent In Florida last year compared to 11
percent nationally.
Opponents asserted It would unfairly deprive
thousands of employees of their right to select their
doctors, lead to lower quality medical care and. In
effect, place a tax on all policy holders by
mandating they pay a portion o f medical hills nuw
covered bv Insurance.
■' "TITS
not'the cniTalir s ^ ’ Commerce M
Chairman Sam Bell. D-Daytona Beach, whose
committee drafted most of the measure. "It's Just a
beginning (to crack down on health costs)."
" I f you want to lower the quality of health care In
Florida, vote for this bill." said Rep. Tom Woodruff.
R-St. Petersburg.
In Its most controversial provision, the legisla­
tion would authorize Insurance companies to offer
"preferred provider" coverage.

p e c Ia l h o u d a y

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JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - The U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers dredge McFarland was laid
up in Jacksonville for repairs Tuesday after an
on-board explosion Muy 1 killed one crewman
and Injured live others, authorities said.
A Corps spokesman said repairs to the ship,
formerly assigned to Jacksonville but now part
o f the Philadelphia Corps' district, were
cxpeiied to take three months after the contract
Is awarded.
The vessel was dredging near the channel
entrance to Port Canaveral when a welding
torch apparently sparked the explosion. Corps
public affairs spokesman Juan Colon said.
Crewman James Puffnock. 55, of Virginia
Beach. Va.. was killed.

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Wood Chips To Cut
Prison Fuel Costs

s.

C ity

Although Commissioner IvcnhctH *
K in g w a n te d to Im m e d ia te ly
advertise In the Florida League of
Cities Journal for a replacement, his
colleague, Dr. Burt Pcrlnchlcf. In­
sisted the advertisement would be
premature.

Dentist Still Charged

RAIFORD (UPI) - Union Correctional Institution
hopes to save $500,000 In fuel oil costs next year when
It switches over to an Innovative wood chip boiler
system to heat cells and cook prison chow.
And Inmate labor will be used to chop down trees on
the prison's 9.000 acres of tlmberland and to feed the
logs and wood pieces Into a machine known as a
"chipper" that reduces them to chip-size morsels.
The prison currently Is on the last leg o f completing
the $3.7 million project, which Is set to be inaugurated
this fall.
Wally Mooneyham. UCI Industries supervisor, pre­
dicted that, once it begins operations, this selfperpetuating use of an alternative energy source will
never cost the state a cent.
The wood chip project Is unusual since work on It has
proceeded on schedule and well within the anticipated
$4.2 million cost, according to Rick Schroeder. a wood
energy specialist with the state Division o f Forestry.
"It might set all kinds or records Irrelevant to wood
energy." Schroeder said, who added that It could
become the prototype for similar projects at stale-owned
hospitals and other prisons.
The chips will fuel two 60.000-pound boilers at UCI.
which previously were powered by expensive fossil
fuels. Water is boiled to about 440 degrees (Fahrenheit),
making steam.
The steam then Is forced through underground pipes
to the prison, where It will heat buildings In the winter
and provide steam for cooking all year long. Mooneyham
said.
UCI spends $1 million a year for fuel oils. The wood
chip program will cut that In half. Mooneyham said.
Any kind o f tree or part o f a tree can be used to make
the chips. Project officials hope not only to harvest trees,
but also to "c h ip " the garbage tree parts normally left to
rot or pitched out by area timber companies.
"That's the beauty o f It." Mooneyham said. "W e've
got the existing Umber. Our 9.000 acres, properly
managed. Is a perpetual line o f fuel.”
With an eye on future fuel needs, prisoners this year
planted 40.000 seedlings, which will be ready for
harvesting In eight to 10 years. Harvey Smith, prison
forestry supervisor, said.
As the wood chip system gets underway, about 3.000
acres a year will be chipped and replaced with 14.000
hand-planted, fast-growing seedlings, he said.
A steam pipe to neighboring Florida State Prison could
be added later and the boilers could be modified to
create electricity for lighting the prison as well as steam
for cooking and heat.
Melinda Ponce o f Davis and Associates Engineering of
Gainesville, the project engineer, said even the potashrich ashes left by boiler steam-making will be used to
fertilize the trees that one day will fuel the boilers.
"You have completely used the entire product." Ms.
Ponce said. "There's Just no waste."

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E v e n in g H e n ik l

It's doubtful Pete Rozellc Is looking Into
this one. but a friendly wager had half of
the Lake Brantley Blue football coaches
huffing and puffing after practice Monday
night.
Two laps were bet on the outcome of
Friday’s Blue &amp; White Intrasquad game.
U n fo rtu n a te ly fo r the Blue, A lle n
Armstrong and Greg Shatto rolled up 236
yards on the ground to pave the way for a
12-0 victory. Donnie O'Brian returned a
fumble eight yards for a TD to cement the
victory In the third quarter.

(USPS 41 MO)

300N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, FLA. K 771
At m Code 30M 2M 6U or O l-n n
Wednesday, M ay 25, 1983— 4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 81.00; Month, 14.9; 6 Months, $9.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.9; Month, ISIS; 8 Months,
$9.00; Year. 97.00.

The last great track meet o f the season
will be Friday when the Golden South
So Monday night after practice. Blue
Classic gets underway at Winter Park's
coaches Tony Durham. Kevin Carpengcr.
Showalter Field at 2 p.m.
Marty Williams. Wes Salley and Scott
Seminole County’s three stale champi­
Trimble (on loan from the Florida Gators)
ons — Lori Carroll. Ken Chccscman and
put on their track shoes and paid their
Schowonda Williams — will all be there to
dues.
try and pick up some more hardware. All
Head coach Dave Tullls viewed the
three arc Juniors, so you can expect great
whole situation as pretty hilarious, but he
things, and maybe another state champi­
also knew where to place the blame for the
onship. next year. Lyman's Carroll won
law-scoring contest. "I thought we’d score
the high Jump, the Lady Greyhounds'
more." he said. "But there was a lot riding
Williams took the 330 hurdles and Lake
-a n .
-1-H
i l n
l L
.. _Hmvci i V\ c i u ^ c u ^ ^ - i n a u a l ^ 'i n t c r
.. Sam Momarv.gn^ frflOle conservative when
c . urlan
In the
The
he got that lead.'
Jaegcr-Checscinan duel will be spiced by
Which goes to show you. he who laps
Ransom Everglades' 2A champ Billy
last doesn't always laugh best.
Convey, too.

Reagan Should
Seize The Moment
T h e recent budget fiasco In the Senate Is one
m ore sign that Congress Is not even close to
gettin g federal spending under control. Indeed,_ ib o rc .to r moV (dtoswoawwnt
rrs—e « Capltol Hill that one wonders w hether Congress
can even produce the required budget resolution
before som etim e this summer.
T h e Senate considered tw o separate budget
resolutions and rejected both. Neither reflected a
proper sense o f urgency on the need to cut
excessive spending and the huge deficits now in
prospect.
T h e budget resolution tentatively favored by the
adm inistration would preserve the third year o f
Mr. R eagan 's tax cut. but leave the fiscal 1984
budget with an estim ated deficit o f $192.4 billion.
Senate Dem ocrats and a rump caucus o f liberal
Republicans wanted a resolution callin g for $70
billion In new taxes during the next three years.
T h e ir projected deficit for fiscal 1984: $184.4
billion.
T ip O 'N eill's House o f Representatives stands In
even greater disrepute on spending. T h e House
budget resolution passed March 22 would cancel
both the adm inistration's third-year tax cut and
the scheduled Indexing o f Incom e tax rates
designed to protect us all against inflation-induced
bracket creep. Domestic spending would rise $30
billion o ver what President Reagan proposed for
fiscal year 1984 and the House version o f the
deficit would swell to $198.2 billion.
So much for congressional D em ocrats' pious
expressions o f horror over the deficits, to say
nothing o f their fraudulent claim to be holding the
line on spending. T h e House budget resolution
was drafted by the Dem ocratic leadership and
approved by the Democratic m ajority. T h e resolu­
tion would hike taxes, increase spending, and
fatten the deficit.
T h e budget plan offered by Senate Dem ocrats
and a handful o f liberal Republicans w as only
m arginally less objectionable. No doubt It would
have been worse if Dem ocrats in the Senate had a
m ajority. Even the resolution endorsed by Senate
Republican leaders was such a disappointm ent
that Mr. Reagan hardly lifted a fin ger to help it
pass.
Beyond the dismal-budget num bers in all o f
these resolutions is a larger, m ore om inous reality.
President Reagan took office m ore than tw o years
ago rightly pledged tq reduce the percentage o f the
gross national product siphoned out o f the private
sector by the federal governm ent. In 1980. that
figure stood at 24 percent. Unless som ething is
done, it w ill grow to 25.2 percent next year.
Granted, m uch o f this Increase is due to a
recession that has curtailed econom ic growth
w h ile drivin g up govern m en t spending for such
things as unem ploym ent com pensation. But it Is
Just as true that Congress has steadily resisted
W h ite House efforts to cut deeply into federal
spending. And Mr. Reagan has contributed to his
ow n problem s by allow ing, and som etim es even
helping, his tax cuts to be offset by higher Social
Security levies and various "reven u e enhaheem en ts."
T h e new taxes and higher spending now being
advocated by Democrats, and by som e so-called
"m o d e ra te " Republicans, can on ly soak up an
even greater percentage o f the nation's total
output o f goods and services. A t the very least, this
would m ean slow er econom ic grow th for- most o f
the 1980s. A t worst. It could abort the econom ic
recovery now in progress and risk plunging the
nation into a n ew recession.
It is worth n otin g that during the period from the
K orean W ar to the V ietnam W ar w hen the
econ om y grew steadily without significant infla­
tion or high budget deficits, federal spending took
o n ly about 18 percent o f G NP. R estoring an yth ing
close to the robust grow th rates o f the 1950s and
1960s depends on reducing W ash ington 's current
25 percent take to perhaps 22 percent or. better
yet. less.
C ongress Is g iv in g dally dem onstrations that it is
not up to the task. W ith the congressional budget
process in total disarray, m aybe it is tim e for
P re s id e n t R e a g a n to s e iz e th e m o m e n t b y
retu rning to his earlier call for a freeze on
discretionary dom estic spending.

BERRY'S WORLD

thorn tro horn onothor plonot ond not looking
for DIOXIN!"

Football concludes Its spring season
Thursday and Friday for county teams.
Defending district cham pion Lym an
tackles Seminole for one half In the
Apopka Jamboree Thursday at 7:?0 p.m.
Apopka and Osceola play In the second
half.
On Thursday. Lake Brantley hosts a
Jamboree for the rest o f the county schools
and DcLand. Admission Is $2 and the first
quarter begins at 7:30 p.m. Here are the
matchups:
First quarter: Lake Mary vs. DcLand
Second quarter: DcLanJ vs. Oviedo
Third nunrler: Oviedo vs. Lake Brantley
Frnlrit r ‘*o‘uar?cr: Lake M o ry ~ T ff*'.2 ittr•
Howell
" 1
Fifth quarter: Lake Brantley vs. Lake
Howell

SCIENCE WORLD

VIEW PO IN T

Th e EPA:
To o M uch
Pressure

A D a rk e r
Side To
Jo b Loss

By G regory N. Jonsson

(Editor's Note: Gregory N. Jonsson Is
USIC Washington Representative and a
former law clerk with the Environ­
mental Protection Agency.)
Repeated public opinion polls have
shown that Americans detest hazardous
waste, acid rain, smog and other forms
o f pollution. It is axiomatic to conclude
that most Americans are environmen­
talists.
What should have been the subject of
a thorough benefit-cost analysis at the
level of local communities has become a
strident debate at the national level
between environmentalist extremists
and the Reagan administration, which
Is determined to bring benefit-cost
analysis to agencies o f the federal
government. Caught In the middle are
the career bureaucrats of the Environ­
mental Protection Agency, who seem
Incapable of providing the American
people with the decentralized solutions
to environmental problems.
The truth Is a central bureaucracy far
removed from the parochial Interests of
state and local governments will never
provide the practical solutions to
environmental problems. Moreover.
EPA Is unmanageable because it Is a
coopted agency. In part hostage to the
commercial Interests It Is charged with
policing, and In large measure because
special Interest groups such as the
National Wildlife Federation and the
National Resources Defense Council
pressure the Congress to second-guess
every EPA decision. The environmental
extremists have persuaded millions of
Americans that corporate Interests
control EPA. .
For example, the environmentalist
pressure groups have alleged certain
improprieties In the recent sale of
Powder River Basin coal leases. The
allegations were Inaccurate, but they
made the headlines and helped to
undermine public confidence In the
Department of Interior's coal leasing
program, a well-run program In a
superbly managed department of the
federal government, led by an outstand­
ing stewart of the public trust. Secretary
James G. Watt.
The American people must be told the
truth. The environmental pressure
groups have convinced the public that
Secretary Watt Is busy selling leases to
vast amounts o f coal lands for fire-sale '
prices to greedy commercial developers
while none o f us was looking.
The facts speak for themselves. In the
case of the Powder River Basin Leases,
acreages containing 1.6 billion tons out
of an estimated 146 billion tons of
recoverable coal will be leased at a
record average pile of $7.25 per ton.
$2.80 of which will go fo.* taxes, royalty
and rent. There were no Improprieties In
the sale of leases which would Justify a
freeze on appropriations for Interior's
coal leasing program.

"Well, how are people supposed to read a
little sign like that when they're going 85? //

JEFFREY HART

Tass Loves Th e Bishops
We have now all had time to reflect
upon and assess the final version o f the
American Catholic bishops' pastoral
letter on nuclear warfare.
From the standpoint of the text alone,
taken In Isolation, we can be sure that
different Interpreters will come up with
different emphases. In any document
running to 150 pages various passages
can be picked out and used to support
one or another point of view. Liberal
anti-bomb people will stress the overall
anti-bomb thrust of the letter. Propo­
nents of deterrence can and will point
out that the letter docs admit the
validity of the deterrcncy of nuclear
war. Conservatives. If they wish, can
say that the letter represents a clear
improvement over the two earlier drafts.
There docs remain a serious con­
tradiction at the heart of the document,
however. In calling for a "h alt" to all
nuclear production and deployment, the
bishops In fact undercut the Idea of
nuclear deterrence, as at present In the
European theater where the Soviets
possess a clear advantage In theater
weapons. You cannot deter effectively
from a condition o f perceived Inferiority.
Not at all surprisingly, the bishops'
document received Instant praise from
the Soviet news agency Tass. which
c e le b r a t e d It fo r ‘ "d e n o u n c in g
Washington's preparations for nuclear
war as amoral" and "providing guid­
ance for almost 50 million Catholic
parishioners in the United States." Tass
says nothing of Importance without
official Soviet clearance, and Its com­
ments here provided us with a bridge to

a political perspective on the letter.
For. of course, the letter did not
emerge in a vacuum. It Is pari of a
surrounding context of related events.
Following the deployment of the
Soviet SS-20 missiles in Europe, we
have been subjected to a political
hurricane of nuclear protest directed not
at the Soviets, who have deployed these
weapons, but at the United Stairs,
which has not yet done so.
We had the growing protest move­
ment In West Europe, und the later but
similar mass protests In this country —
In N ew Y o rk . W a s h in g to n , and
elsewhere.
We have seen the House of Repre­
sentatives pass a "freeze" resolution
which, however Innocuous In terms of
Its text, does represent a political and
symbolic victory for the disarmament
movement. Congress voted for a mutual
and verifiable negotiated freeze — lan­
guage that anyone could support,
especially If the negotiations ensured
substantial equality o f forces — but the
whole exercise was empty of mllltury
and diplomatic substanre. Nevertheless,
it docs put political pressure on the
White House.
The colleges and universities, many of
them at least, have been used as centers
for agitating against further deployment
of nuclear weapons, with special em­
phasis on the planned Pershing II In
Europe. The Soviets have cheerfully
supplied speakers for these efforts, and
they have invariably been dominated by
anti-nuclear pressure groups.

By A1 R osalter Jr.
UPI Science Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Researchers
say a darker side to unemployment Is
an Increase In adverse emotional and
physical health effects, and even
suicide.
Dr. Duane Q. Hagan, chairman of
psychiatry at St. John's Mercy Medical
Center In St. Louis, said several studies
have produced evidence that Job loss
contributes to increased III health and Is
related to severe mental disorders.
And he said no longer Is It Just the
unskilled and undereducated who are In
risk of losing their Jobs. He said white
collar workers, professionals and man­
agers also share that risk.
"The Implications for emotional and
physical health are profound." he wrote
In a report In the current issue of
Hospital and Community Psychiatry, a
magazine published by the American
Psychiatric Association.
In a separate commentary In the same
magazine. Dennis A. Ahlburg of the
University of Minnesota and Morton
Owen Schaplro of Williams College said:
"It is critically Important to understand
all the costs of unemployment and to
attempt to minimize them.
"Those who speak of squeezing out
Inflation, staying the course, and living
with the short-run effects should be
aware that the total costs of such a
policy go far beyond the more visible ’
economic consequences of fewer Jobs
and lower production."
Hagen, who reviewed the scientific
literature dealing with the subject, said
the suicide rate was perhaps the first
indicator of health problems linked to
changes In the economy.
He cites the research of sociologist M.
Harvey Brenner at Johns Hopkins
University who found specific correla­
tions between higher Joblessness and
mortality. His findings suggested that a
1.4 percent rise In unemployment In
1970. alTecting 1.5 million people, was
responsible for 51.570 deaths. Including
1.740 additional homicides and 1.540
additional suicides.
Hagen said Brenner's correlations are
controversial, but he said they have
been confirmed by other studies. He
said researchers in England and Russia
also found an association between
suicide rates and chronic unemploy­
ment.
Other researchers, he said, have found
a link between unemployment and
homicide, spouse abuse and child
abuse.
lie said a state hospital In Connecticut
noted an increase In the number of
hospitalizations during the economic
decline of 1974. and a more recent
study In Missouri found a strong
correlation between patient readmissions to mental health facilities and
unemployment rates.

JA C K AN DERSO N

Papandreou No Greek Bearing Gifts
W A S H IN G T O N - G reek P rim e
M inister Andreas Papandreou has
become a baffling source o f discomfiture
and dismay to the Reagan administra­
tion.
He has a perturbing habit o f denounc­
ing the United States in full-blown
rhetorical outrage. Yet he served In the
U.S. Navy during World War U. went on
to teach at Harvard and other U.S.
universities, became an American citi­
zen and married an American. His
children are U.S. citizens.
Administration officials don't know
whether to believe his words or trust*his
b a c k g ro u n d . W h y d o th e y c a re
particularly? Because a new round o f
negotiations got underway this week on
renewal o f the leases for U.S. bases in
Greece.

V hap* thorn pooptt In th t moon « * * out

Lyman High School Is looking for four
assistant football coaches. Offensive
coordinator Dan Bridges has left and
volunteer assistant Danny Allen Is return­
ing to the University of Central Florida to
play nose guard. Allen, one of the Knights
top defensive linemen two years ago. was
Injured last year. Contact athletic director
Ed Buckner (831-5600) If you choose to
apply.

You can throw Sem inole's Chsrlta
Mcdlock Into that elite group, too. after her
performance Saturday In the State Hep­
tathlon. Mcdlock. a sophomore, long
Jumped 19-6 to break the Heptathlon and
Seminole High School mark. Tony Hardy
held the old mark of 19-1. She was a state
champion In 1982. Mcdlock won the
region, but had an offday In the state meet
before putting It all together Saturday.

The bases are vital to NATO’s de­
fenses in the eastern Mediterranean. But
in laat ye a r's election cam paign.
Papandreou's Socialist Parly promised
to get rid o f the "imperialist" U.S.
presence. It was a good, xenophobic
campaign tactic that appealed to leftist
voters, including the Greek Commu­

nists.
Some Intelligence analysts figured
Papandreou's shrill attacks on the
United Slates were simply a political
ploy that would be dropped once he
gained power. Now they're not so sure.
They were startled at his Intemperate
reaction when Assistant Secretary of
State Richard Burt expressed support
for increased military aid to Turkey last
month during an official visit there.
Actually Burt said nothing more than he
had voiced on earlier occasions In
Washington.
But Papandreou responded with a
public show o f indignation. He
sated Burt and wlthdiew Burt's
Invitation to visit Athens.
Among Intelligence analysts, there are
now two diametrically opposed theories
about Papandreou's actions:
O n e is p e s s im is t ic . It v ie w s
Papandreou as a man trapped by his
own anti-American campaign rhetoric
— someone who. as one source put It.
has painted him si If into a corner. He
promised so long and so persuasively to
get rid o f the U.S. bases in Orecce that
he doesn't dare renege. That means the

E

renewal o f the leases Is doomed.
The other view Is optimistic. Those
who favor It cite Papandreou's Ameri­
can background. This, they argue,
suggests that his anti-American bom­
bast is hogwash and that deep down he
realizes that Greece needs U.S. aid more
than we need the bases. In this view.
Papandreou's public flogging o f Burt
was Just part o f a horse trader's
technique for getting a better money
deal on the bases.
The pessimists, o f course, wonder If
Papandreou's American connections —
well known to Greek voters — haven't
forced him to be determinedly anti
American as proof o f his independence
As one source told my associate
Lucette Lagnado: "Papandreou is a
captive o f his own rhetoric. Dema­
goguery has Its price. It catches up with
you sooner or later."
One thing both schools of thought
agree on; Papandreou lias L.S. policy
m akers con fu sed. W ith Casca In
Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar." they
admit it's “ Greek to m e."
COPPING OUT?: The Pentagon, try­

ing to pare a few bucks from its
multl-bllllon-dollar budget, has run
head-on Into critics on Capitol Hill. The
economy In question involves the Pen­
tagon’s hopes of hiring rtnt-a-cops and
private firefighters to handle security
duties at military bases, instead of
civilian employees of the Defense De­
partment.
In re ce n t yea rs. C o n gress has
forbidden the' military to hire outside
police and firefighters, but the legisla­
tion runs out Sept. 30. Rep. Vic Fazio,
D-Callf.. has Introduced legislation to
ensure that these vital services remain
In the hands o f government employees.
Why?
Reason One: Federal employees don't
have the right to strike. Employees o f
private contractors do — and in the past
they have done Just that.
Reason Two: Publicly-paid firefighters
are more likely to assist neighboring
communities In an emergency.
Reason Three: The Pentagon costcutters haven't convinced congressional
critics that the move to private security
contractors would actually save the
taxpayers any money.
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Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, May 25, ttS J-S A

Foreign Legion: Boredom Most Feared Enemy
B y John A .C a llco tt
AUBAGNE. France. (UPI| — At
Foreign Legion headquarters these
days the men arc out tending the
flowers.
As could be expected the flow­
erbeds are perfect. And the grass, as
cropped as a regulation haircut, is
lush and green despite the hot sun
of southern France.
But gardening hardly seems the
right task for the mercenaries of an
army whose real Job is desert and
Jungle warfare.
"T h e toughest, most disciplined
fighting force in the world." Is how
the Foreign Legion Is described by
the official Journal o f the U.S.
Marines — themselves not known
for softness.
,
Lack of action is proving a major
pTOTflcTftrSflfe r f l T c ^ -w lrtr-rtvr
Legion'? la s T ~ m p a ^ «T !m b a l in
Zaire back In 1978.

"S u re we still gel plenty or
recruits," said one veteran sergeant.
"But a lot of them are looking for a
fight and get restless."
One thing the Legion may do Is
cut the current Initial signing-on
"contract" o f five years to three
years.
"That probably would be a lot
better as there doesn’t seem much
chance of real action," the sergeant
said with distaste.
Legion headquarters on the out­
skirts of sleepy Aubagnc was once a
regular French Army caserne. The
Gestapo used it as an interrogation
center In World War II.
The Legion arrived in 1962 when
Algerian Independence forced It to
leave Its trad itio n al hom e at
Sldl-bcl-Abbcs — In typical fashion
,p everyth
to its
dead.

T h e W o o d e n b a r r a c k s at
A u b a g n e . w h ic h Is c lo s e to
Marseille, was tom down and re­
placed by a city-wlthln-a-clty of
gleaming white buildings complete
with hospital, inovle theater and
bordello.
"W e arc the only army in the
world to have our own brothel at all
o f our camps." an NCOsald.
He declined to point out the
headquarters facility but explained
that it runs according to usual iron
Legion discipline.
The girls arrive each day at 5
p.m., leave at 9 a.m. and get the
basic pay of a private plus monthly
commissions. They also get a
monthly commission based on the
counters bought at the door with
the price determined by rank.
Vistors are
1&gt; museum mlifato^Wtpm full. o f past
battle souvenirs and Its hushed

case would mean little because
most of the men changes both name
and nationality on Joining.
"T h e one thing you never do Is
ask a man why he Joined.” the
veteran sergeant said. "He came in
because he wanted to bury his past
and you don't remind him of It." •
Today's Legion Is 8.000 men
strong, compared with the peak
enlistment of 50.000 reached dur­
ing the Indochina conflict In the
1950s. About 50 percent drop out
after the first five-year contract
expires.
"But we get 400 to 450 new
recruits here every month." an
officer said. "Th e minimum Joining
age is 18 but It can happen that
nothing Is said if someone is 17.
although they arc supposed to have
_____ _
“ the 5.000 to 6.000
yearly applicants arc French who

crypt with Illuminated cross set Into
the door.
The crypt Is holy to a legionnaire
with Its regimental standards and
the wooden hand of Capt. Jean
Danjou. who led 62 men In holding
off 2.000 Mexicans for a full day at
Camerounein 1863.
That engagement and the fourmonth defense of Dicn Bicn Phu In
1954 symbolize the glorious past for
the Legion.
In a niche in the crypt is an urn
with the ashes o f William Moll of
Chicago who, before his death at
age 57. asked that he "be burled
with the Legion."
Top officers at Aubagne head­
quarters said the French Army
Ministry In Paris has to authorize
interviews but an unofficial visit
-w a s •s t r i ng s . ' " g i n n 1--------m -

-

Names were withheld and In any

arc given another nationality "and
name If they want" because It Is the
"Foreign" Legion. Some 15 percent
o f the foreigners are West Germans.
About 55 nationalities are repre­
sented In all.
"W e don't get many Americans
because they have a big army o f
their own." the sergeant said.
Applicants go through three
weeks of security screening and
Intelligence tests at Aubagne with
one out of three falling to get sent on
for baste training.
Training Is so rough — Including
a 100-miie march — that half of the
men do not make it.
A total 600.000 men have been
through the Legion — and 35.000
have been killed — since It was
established In 1831 by King Louis
Pbllinne as a mercenary army

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M AHER OF RECORD
DISSOLUTIONS
OF MARRIAGE
JoMph William Akim Jr, i Sandra
Lea Akim.
Patricia Ann Thoma* A Char laj
Eugene Thomai
Bill Edwin Doldar A Onada Marla.
Gary Charlet Law A Jacqueline L.
Donna F. Hargrove A Mark M.
Sutan Loulta Floras A Eusebio
Andres Floras Jr.
Richard William Corwin Jr. A
Carolyn Jordan
Marvin Gena Scott A Louise
Stephen A. Yocjlk A Fay* S
william H, Richardson A Cheryl
Ann.
David Marlin Brown* A Elols*
Mary.
Andrew Francis Patrick A Rosatta
G
James E Spltter A LanettaMari*
Joan Snell Speaks! John Ed*
MARRIAGE
APPLICATIONS
Raymond E Wtirlck. IS. IDS
Avocado St.. Santord. Rebecca E
Shenk.20
Kenneth M Radebaugh. It. SOS D
Georgetown
D r,
Casselberry.
Marlha G Alcorn, 12, *10 Redwood
Ct.. Altamonte Springs.
Lee A Wheeler Jr.. 55. Boi lit].
Santord, Carol H. Williamson, 17, Bi
lU Lake MAry.
Joseph E Cota, it. Bo« is 15
Longwood. Sarah L. Hickson, 17.
Roulal. Boi 1710. Oviado
Allen
L Hahn. 7t.Geneva
Gardens. 105 B. Sanlord. Grace H
Peebles. St. 1405W 15th SI.. Sanlord
William G. Ryan, is, Ms Loch Low
Dr , Sanlord. Susan D. Weydener, 70.
Ils Rosebrlar Dr.. Longwood.
Robert A. Smith, IS.
Boi IS],
DeLand. Irma M. Harker, 11. Boi
It], DeLand
Cllllord Webb. SO. 1000 N
Castlewood SI.. Winter Park. Karon
M. Sprteman, It.
Mark A Jackson. 17. III! Swann
Ave, Orlando. Nora D. Williams. It.
ISIS E. Washington SI , Orlando
Daniel W. Armistead.
» . 1000

Douglas Avenue, lilt , Longwood,
Sheri A. Vernon, 11, 111 Rivtrbend
Ave., Longwood.
Darrell A. Barber. 11. 1004 W. 11th
St., Sanlord. Vtrnoca M Jackson. 19
John G Porter, 17, MO Hidden
Lake D r . Sanlord. Barbara J.
Barbato.il.
Richard C. Halrt. it, SSO Land
Ave , Longwood. Iren* E . Shader. It.
William B. Soyart. Is, 130*
Soulhwind Cl.. Caisalbtrry, Jennifer
L Smallwood, II, 151 Warren Ave.,
Longwood.
Joseph P Desabreis. 71. 1545 Park
D r , LI 54. Sanlord. Erma L. Hunter,
SI
Hsrry P Villanueva. M. 207
Spoonwood Ct . Winter Springs, Olga
LaiuiBaei.il
Gene A Lincoln, 51. toil Bear
Laka Rd., Apopka, Edilh J.Cole, It.
Thomai L. Williams. 11. sis
Palmetto Ave., Sanlord, Judith C. M.
Sweet, II. Boi M. Geneva.
Russell E Mullen, is. 7171 S.
Wymore R d , Altamonte Springs,
Deborah A. Polley, Is
Brendan J. Trant, 17,1510 Sumhlna
Tree Blvd. Longwood, Alice T.
Hughes. 5S
David S Saynt. It. 1M1 S Santord
Ave. SIS. Santord. Margaret A.
Nardtlla.il
Mlchaal A. Shop*, is, 7430 Sanlord
Ave. Sanlord. Karen Y Corbell.lt.
REALTY TRANSFERS
Robert E. McKee to William G.
McClelland A Wf Oorothy J., Lot • A
t. Loch Arbor Crystal Lakes Club
Sec.. 111.000
(OCOI Linda A. Benson Aka Hicks
lo Linda A. Benson A Edward C.
Benson Jr., Lot II, Blk F, Charter
Oaks. Un. 1,5100
National Homas Corp. lo Rustic
Woods Ltd. Ptr. Lots 7*-112. Incl.
Wildwood Pud. 5157.500
(OCDI Emory G. Puiey A Wt
Marsha to Irwin N. Sperling, Lot 21A
E W ol 25. Blk B. West Altemonle
Heights. Sec. Three, 5100

Michael D. Welsh to Stephen C.
Perry, Lol 30, Weklva Club Esti.,
Sec. 7. list,fOO
(OCDI Roger D. Simpson A Wf
Kiltie D. to Roger 0. Simpson, Lol
250 Weklva Hunt Club Foi Hunt, Sc.

John. E. Southerland Jr., Sgl. to
Richard R. Ltytndockar A Wl
Dorothy, Lot 2, Lake Hartley Beach,
125,500
Waller S. Parciak A Wt Anna May
to Donne Story A Michael Nielsen.
2.5100
Lot 2E. Blk C, Amended Plat Lake
Anna S. Hester to Lee A. Salmond. Kathryn Park, Sac. Addn, 524,000
James A. Salmond, Lot IS A W 17.51'
Bruce W. Mylrea to Philip J.
ol Lot IS. blk 54. Sandlando the Massey A Wt 5hlrley G„ Lot 10
Suburb Beautiful, grantor III* e$t„ Harbour Landing, 512.000
5100
Katharlna T. Coggashall, Sgl. to
I0CD) Ralph O. Blanchard A Crank Constr. Co.. Lot 15. Blk A,
Virginia L. Warren lo Rilpt) O. Crystal Bowl Addn CB. 525.000
Blanchard A Virginia L. Warren, Lot
Ludwig Goali. Jr A Wt Sharon to
K5. Lake Harney, 5100
Larry R. Hudson A Wt Mailne. Lot
Robert J. Hickson Sr. A Wt Effle 202. Wrenwood Hts, Un. 2.510.000
M. to Helen H. Jones A C. Robert Jr.,
Blanch# V. Hasterock to Tori
Sgl., Loti 1 I At. blk S. Rosalind Patruskewlc (Marr.l, Lot 25. Laka ot
Heights. 1100
the Woods Townhouse, Sec. One.
Joseph Smith A Wl Gladys to John 551.000
Jones A Wl Judith, Beg. NW cor. ot
Mary L. Ames to Barry B. Bunntll,
Lot H, Martins Plan, 51.000
Sgl. A Denise C. McKinney, Lot 5 A
Shasta Homos. Inc. to Ronald N Wof 4. West Haven, tlsM0
Washington. Sgl. A Cynthia D. Mc­
(OCDI O. Sevola. Sgl.to Carmel#
Queen, Sgl.. Lot 11, Academy Manor, Paone, Sgl., Lot I, Blk A, Oskcrest.
Un.2,147.000
5100
Equity Roalty Inc. to Dawn T.
Sprlngwood VIII. Apt. Corp. to
Frick A Richard W. Stewart, Jt. ten. Fredrlc D. Frank A Wf Judy C. A
Un. 71. Destiny Springs. ISS.fOO
Jacob Frank, Sgl., Un. 114-B Spr­
Jo Anne Harriett. Sgl. A Judith lngwood Vlllaga Cond., 114.000
Harriett, Sgl. to James C. Victoria,
Robert P. Schiller A Wl Cathy to
Sgl.. Lot 2. Blk R, Longwood Park, Amalia O. deVargat (Marr.l, Un. 107
114.000
Bldg. XOAltamonla Village l.tls.000
Goehrlng Dev. Corp. lo Charles R.
Howard W. Kane A Wl Linda 'to
Apger A Wt Arietta E.. Un. IS H John F. Bush A Wl Kay F., Lot 455.
Tuscany Place, Ph. I, iSt.soo
Winter Springs. Un. 4.5112,700
Cllllord J. Hurston, J r A Vivian
Ruth K. Yeager, Wld. to Lynda
Bowden. Heirs to Thomas I. Moore A Cuthbert. Lot 4. Cluster 0. Deer Run.
Wf Unde A.. Lots 2 A S. Blk 10 Tier I, Un. 22,5100
E. R. Traflords Map ol Sanlord.
Donald K. Yost A Wt Janet F. to
541.500
Steven L. Grier A Wf Jara L., E I50‘
Springs Landing Vent, to First of N 125' ol Lot 10, Florida Lapd A
Southern Group Inc.. Lot M. Springs ColonIis IIon Co. Celery Plantation,
Landing. Un. 3, ITS.100
tM.OOO
Coply F. Johnson to Susan A.
Lesley M. Bennett, Jr. A Wt
England. Sgl., Lot II. Blk A. South Sharon to Charles H. Kent A Wl Vkkl
Ktm Park S/D. 570.400
L., S 100' ol N 200’ ol W ISO1ol E MO'
E. Everotte Huskey to Michael W. ot Lot #. Bradley’s Adn. LW. 140.000
Young A Wt Patricia L.. Lot 2. Blk C.
(QCD) George G. Bennett A Wl
Orange Ridge Farms. 22/12 Mtg. Shirley to Claronca T. Brandenburg
Amerlflrst Fed., A74.500., Due 1/12. I Marr.l, W 25' ol E 225' Of Lots # A 7.
Mtg. E. Everette Huskey 55.000., Bradleys Addn, LW.1100
l5W%Due tl/ls.Stt.fOO
Leon Lindsay to Edwin Soto A Wf

RECYCLE YOUR
NEWSPAPER
FOR MONEY!

Esthar. Lot 5. Blk L.
Estatos.S45.tOO
Martha J, Sowers, Sgl., to Linda L.
Haywood, Sgl., A George C. Foster
(Marr.l, Lol 244, Laka ol the Woods
Townhouse Sec. 4,512,100
Ann Merle Cltvella lo
Hansen Sears It Int. A
Hansen It Int.. 14 Ini: S 53
242.11' ol NW(4 ol NWI4 (lest
Ol W 105.24’) Sec 22 20 22
517.000
Louis C. Lovely A Elliabeth G.
Legette, Sgl. to Arnold Meson A Wf
Mirgeret M.. Lot 170 A N 't ot in.
Fronk L. Woodruff's S/D. S75.000
Michael T. James A Wl Dele to
Jeffry Stein, Trustee, Lot 22. Blk
Sterling Park Un. 1.545.000
(QCD) Longwood So. Jt.
to MRC proptrtles. S 17.40'
all ol 5. Trlangladala S/D. 5100
Deslgnad Structures Inc. to Kevin
J. Spoiiki, Sgl. A Stanley H. San
defur (Marr.) Par. I: Tract ol land
being part ol Lots 57 A 5#. M.M.
Smith's Second S/D 510JOT
Same as above. Par. 2:
57
(QCD) James F. Hall to David M.
Hall A Wf Sharon, Lot 1, Woodmere
Park. 515.100
William A. Wllktnson Jr A
Bonnie Sue to Robert L. Dalton A
Ann G., Lot *. Mills Crook Manor,
511.000
Jarand A Wl Jennath W.
Roger L. Jerand
W Ritchey l&gt; Wl Elnora L..
to James W.
jo\ X A all of 11. Blk 11.
E 't ol Lot
aid. 1*1.400
Dreamwold.
Anden Group o( FI. to Francli J.
Mullln A Wf Carolyn. Lol 11. Sunrli#
VIII.. Un. 1.157,WO
Myles Z. Garion A Wl Albina to
Cabot L. Jalfaa * Barbara G., E ISO'
ol Lott 4 A 5. Blk E,
of Lot 1 Al E 150' o
Normandy Addn CB. 5U5.000
The Anden Grp. ol II. lo Sere Jo
Busch, Sgl., Lot 14. Sunrise Village
Un. 1.554,000
The Huskey Co. to Robert Relche
Inc., Lot 7, Blk D, Sweetwater Oaks.
Sac. 11.155,500
D. Joyce Rlebe (Form. Hitt) A Hb.
Bernard to Jano F. Pauluccl, Lot 11
Map ot Pfep' ol H.C. Shepard, aka
Waites S/D. less part a, ate.. 5100,000
Montreal-Springs Inv., Inc. lo Gull
Coast Housing Design Inc. Lot 51.
The Springs, Whispering Pines Sec.
Two, 527.000

VETERANS

ID'M
SbuW
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City_______________ State_____ Z ip _____
For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1 ,1955 Q
For Veterans with military service since Jan. 31,1955 Q ]
Year of Discharge_______________ A g e _____
Type of Discharge________________________

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ORLANDO RECYCLED FIBER
LOCATED AT FAIRWAY PLAZA
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Phone 8 4 3 - 6 3 9 7
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Most Male Infertility
Problems Can Be Solved
PHILADELPHIA (UP1) — Infertility
generally can be treated and solved
more simply In men than in women, a
Medical C ollege o f Pennsylvania
physician says.
"One out or six couples cannot
conceive a child," said Lester Karelin,
head o f urologlc surgery at the
college. "A t least half the time, the
male partner has an Infertility pro­
blem."
H
Karafln said a large percentage of
male Infertility problems can be
Identified and solved.

sperm-carrying lubes are Intact will
often reveal a varicose vein In the
spermatic cord," he said. Such an
Irregularity accounts for more than
one-third o f the cases o f male In­
fertility.
"Fertility can often be restored by
tying o f the spermatic vein," he said.
The procedure requires a hospital stay
of up to two days.
Karafln said a study showed that
following surgery, 70 percent o f men
had Improved semen counts and 50
percent were able to father children.

"Women, because o f their complex
reproductive systems, may need
many time-consuming, delicate and
sometimes uncomfortable tests to
uncover the cause o f Infertility," he
said. "On the other hand, unless a
man is Impotent, discovering the
cause o f Infertility is frequently pretty
straightforward."

"A t the first visit, If there Is an
abnormal sperm count, the urologist
will take blood samples to check
hormone levels." he said.

In most
cipher docs
not manufacture enough sperm or the
sperm does not reach the egg to
fertilize It. he said In a recent
Interview.
"A n examination to tell If the

M|n
where a semem
sample showB no spcim at all, biopsy
o f the testicle and x-ray o f the tube
transport system may reveal a
blockage which an be corrected sur­
gically," he said.

Irregular levels som etim es are
assocated with benign brain tumors
that can be treated, leading to a
restoration o f normal levels and
potency, he said.

Not Everyone Sharing
ORLANDO (UPI) — Time Is the enemy of
that ever-growing group EBD — Everybody
But Disney.
Since Walt Disney World’s Epcol Center
opened last fall, thousands more tourists
have poured Into central Florida to sec the
combination futuristic world and Interna­
tional community.
Highways are Jammed and hotels are
packed.
It seemingly would mean good news for the
rest o f the area's attractions, too. Right?
Wrong.
Most o f those extra visitors, plus the
traditional tourist trade, were spending alt
their time at Epcot and Its sister park, the
Magic Kingdom.
Many o f them hopped the planes and trains
out o f central Florida before casting their
shadows at Sea World or Circus World or
Cypress Gardens or Stars Hall of Fame or any
o f the other attractions in the area.
No one has gone out o f business yet and
nobody Is losing gobs o f money. But the
threat Is there, and park executives have had
to change their marketing attacks In midstream.
Uieproblem.
' *-****.'*
"W e all knew It was going to happen," said
Richard Howard, director o f marketing at Sea
World. "But people don't seem to understand
the time situation.
"Epcot has filled tip the plate. You're going

to be full If you eat everything on the central
Florida plate.”
Howard. along with executives from other
parks and the Disney people, admits It takes
at least three days, maybe more, to see and
enjoy the Magic Kingdom and Epcot.
With vacationers spending only three or
four days In central Florida — called by one
executive as the "family tourism capital of
the world" — the results can be brutal for
EBD.
"Sea World has traditionally been the No. 1
attraction after Disney," Howard said. "For
the majority o f people, we would be the third
day, but Epcot has changed that.”
The result Is a new approach to the tourist
trade by Sea World and the rest o f the
attractions. The enemy is not Epcot. It’s the
clock.
"W e have to convince the tourists to stay a
longer period of time," said Frank Langley, a
spokesman for Circus World. "W e want to
build their three-day vacation to five days or
seven days or 10 days. God knows there’s
enough to do In the area to spend two weeks
here."
While Epcot Is helping Disney World break
attendance in m
i
&lt; J.
officials to realign (heir predictions and
expect 3 or 4 million more visitors this year,
the numbers are down slightly at the other
central Florida parks.
An unusually rainy winter slowed atten­

Prosperity j
dance some, but Epcot played the biggest
role, all admit. A fter y e a n o f annual
Increases, these parka are having to scramble
to recapture a share o f the market.
The nearest victor o f the Epcot explosion la
Busch Oardens In Tampa, where attendance
records were set all spring. But BuscJj
officials consider themselves a West Coast
property and not a member o f the central
Florida club, an advantage when It comes to
Epcot.
"W e feel like people are going to Epcot anfl
Magic Kingdom, getting overdosed on theme
parks and lines and then saying ‘Get me to a
beach,'" said Busch spokeswoman Glenda
Gilmore.
"Then, they’re going to to Daytona Beach
or the West Coast. Those that come over here
are staying at the beach and coming to Busch
Gardens as a day trip. But there's no question
that the Impact o f Epcot Is huge and that
people are choosing a Florida trip because o f
Epcot."
The battle is being waged In the trenches o f
central Florida. No casualties so far. but that
doesn't mean there won't be any, warned
Howard.
—
...............
“ It may take awhile, but somebody may
eventually go out o f business,” Howard said;
"Not the small, family-run operations whir
will always get enough people to keep going;
but the ones In the middle."

Peanuts Detect Colon Cancer
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A peanut
substance used successfully to Identify
pre-tumor changes In mice may offer a
way to detect potential colon cancer In
humans early enough for prevention or
life-saving treatment, a researcher says.
"T h e method has proven successful In
one patient so far, and the evidence Is
en cou ragin g." Dr. Richard Boland,
gastroenterologist at the Veterans Ad­
ministration Medical Center, said Mon­
day.
"W e don’t want to raise false hopes
but we can’t help being excited," said
Boland, who will present his findings
about the substance — peanut lectin —
at the annual meeting of the American
G astroen terologica l A ssociation In
Washington. D.C. this week.
" I think we’re on the path that’s really
hot. but we’ll have time to brag later."
Boland said doctors already know how
to Identify fully established colon cancer,
which strikes about 5 percent o f all
Americans and kills some 40 percent of
Its victims.
What they want to find out now is how
to identify pre-mallgnant lesions.

"W e ’ve used the substance extracted
from peanuts to detect pre-cancerous
changes In the lining of the colon before
tumors develop In m ice," he said.
"Peanut lectin may help us detect the
step-by-step development o f colonic
cancer, allowing early treatment that
could save lives.
" I f we can detect the changes that
Indicate cancer Is coming but that occur,
say. five years before the actual tumor,
we can remove the colon or, even more
exciting, change diet and lifestyle and
prevent the tumor from ever developing.
Boland and his colleagues produced
tumors in mice by exposing the animals
to dlmethylhydrazinc. a chemical known
to cause cancer of the colon. After a few
weeks, they examined the mice for signs
of tumors or other changes.

A n open conversation
between our customers
and our employees.

Boland used peanut lectin, attached to
a fluorescent marker that made It easy to
see. He found the substance binds
chemically to mucous secreted by can­
cerous cells In the colon — but not to
mucous secreted by normal cells.

Don Holler
Owen Grill

Math Contest Winners Listed
1 . J e a n n e
T h e re s u lts o f the
Seminote County Math Goodenough. C rooms
2. Laura Boehnlcln,
Contest held earlier this
month at Seminole Com­ Lake Brantley High
3. K i m b e r l y A n ­
munity College have been
derson. Lake Howell High
released. The winners are:
4. Louis Rosen. Lake
A ll C o a s ty A lgeb ra

Mary High
5. Glnny Sutherland,
Lake Brantley
6. A lvin Jones.
Crooms
7. Katherine McKee,
Lake Mary
8 . Brenda R cdw ay.
Oviedo
9. T im M c M u l l e n .
Crooms
10. T o d d S m i t h ,
Crooms

Business Owner

Q: “I’m conserving on my electric use, but my bill still
seems to keep going up. Why is this?”

A*

A lg eb ra n
Julie Zelenskl, Lyman;
Deborah Stearns. Lake
Howell: Ronald Spinner,
Lake Mary; Ann Hardman.
Lake Mary: Janine Jones.
Oviedo; David Lam pert.
Lyman; Ung Joan Park.
Lake H o w ell: Robert
Greensteln. Lake Mary;
Kelly Topoleskl, Oviedo;
Scott Clay, Lyman,

(3

ot »w‘

G eom etry
K ay Hamada. Lake
Br a n tle y: Suklt
Chayachatl, Lake Howell;
Keith Woolner, Lake Mary:
K en D e M o o r, L a k e
Brantley; Lynda Wasula.
Lake Mary; Am y Plkar,
Lyman; P egg y Kohler,
Lake Brantley; Charlie
Pledger, Lake Brantley;
Joe Pledger, Lake Brantley
Yal Ylen, Oviedo.

•• &lt;

“Because our operating costs, like the costs ofthe other goods and servicesyou buy have gone
up dramatically in recent yean. And will probably continue to go up at about the same rate as the general
inflation level. Ybu may also be noticing the seasonal increase in your bill primarily caused by increased
use of yuur air conditioner.
“However, you can still have some control, through conservation, over the amount of your monthly
electric bill. In fact, the energy usage information in the lower left hand comer of your bill shows you the
kilowatt-hours you've bought both the current month and the same month last year. Use that information
to help guide your conservation efforts."

Joan Monroe
George Silver
Stockbroker

FPL Energy Conservation
Representative

Q: “What is FPL doing to make it worth my while
to conserve?”

A!

Trigonometry;
Analytic Ooomatry
Fr a nk Hsu, L y m a n ;
D ian a L o n g . Lak e
Brantley; Mike Brooks,
S em inole; C h ris Korn,
Lake Mary: Philip Alan
Halle, Lake Mary; J e ff
Chamberlin. Lake Mary;
Kathryn Hayward, Lake
Brantley: James Strawn.
L y m a n ; J e r r y Hauck,
S em in o le ; J a m es Earl
Hoitgrcfe. Lake Mary.

$ 0 ^

FPL Supervisor, Energy
Conservation

“ Maty things. Our cash Incentives help residential customers pay for ceiling insulation, solar film,
or the repiacement of inefficient air conditioning andvvater heating systems with new energy^ffidert ^sterns.
Vtfe offer Energy Audits for homes and businesses Our Ubtt-Wise™ Line gives customers information on
how to conserve electricity We have a comprehensive program encouraging builders to build energy-efficient
Whtt-Wise Homes, We have a program that helps residential pool owners by adjusting their pool pump timers
And we distribute information and brochures telling customers how to conserve electricity
to hold down their energy costs"

Calcnlas

O o m i&amp; U i

uM. F P L

F IN A N C IN G A V A IL A B L E
W ITH A P P N O V IO C U O I T

Charles Jones. Lyman;
T o a i D oan. S em in o le ;
Duncan Stearns, Lake
Howell; Huong Nguyen.
Lake Howell; Paul Plrillo,
Lake Brantley; John Fisher. Lyma n; Mike
Nakagawa. Lake Howell:
Robert Tribe. Lake Howell:
Jennifer Ehrecke, Lyman;
Scott A tch ey, Lake
Brantley.

Ron Brunson

A.G. Merlin

Retired Businessman

FPL Dealer Representative
VVUt-Wbc Products Progn

Q: “Are conservation programs really working?”
A t

towerlhl» simmer thantheyweretwo
yo
n^C o w e iva b m .U ie e ttw ^^ M r w r f
FPU oil-nviiw, program, reducedour total useofoil by27percent lastyear Thatt 12miltamlamb of
oil that noonehad to payfor. Conservation benefitseveryonethrough reducedoil useanddeferredpcwwr
plant construction. However, customerswhoconserveactivelyget the biggest immediatebenefit
ams for customers, write to
V .

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Hefner: Most Beautiful
Women Are Californians

decades now. almost from the beginning
of this century, beautiful young women
and handsome young men have been
flocking to California to become movie
stars and. more recently. TV stars.

W IN !

A

W R IT

M IM H A N T

OLD CROW
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BOURBON

DALLAS (UPI) - Find­
ing a Job is simply selling
yourself. John Truitt says.
He says you can often do It
over the phone.
"Direct dial the best Job
of your life" the dust cover
of his book. Tclesearch.
says.
It Is Truitt’s contention
that Job seekers should
use the telephone to make
the Initial contact directly
with head o f the depart­
ment in which they want
to work.
” By c a llin g the d e ­
partment head directly,
you find out everything.
He's the first one to know
If a vacancy might be
coming up. He's the one
who knows If he's dis­
satisfied and plans to get
rid o f someone." Truitt
said.
"Sometimes there is a
delay o f four to six weeks
from the time the manager
decides h e'll be hiring
someone to the time that
v a c a n c y g e t s to the
personnel department, or
the help wanted ads."
A Job search, like any
sales campaign, must be
well o rg a n is e d . Trui tt
says.
He says you first need a
goal. You need to find the
openings before anyone
else — the competition —
does. You need to be
persuasive on the tele­
phone to set' m ore In­
terviews.

Truitt said. "In sales talk
t/iat's a forced response
question."’
Truitt also discusses Job
discrimination. He calls it
unfortunate, but cautions
Job-seekers. "Neither you
nor your interviewer will
change company policy
d u rin g y o u r firs t In ­
terview1. Moreover. If the
company has any Inkling
that you might be some
kind of activist, you can
forget about working for
the firm. Right or wrong,
that Is the way things
are."
He Is not high on re­
sumes. which he says arc
c r e a t e d to h e lp th e
employer, not the pro­
spective employee. " I f you
can avoid sending a re­
sume. don't." he advises.
He also advises Job­
seekers to dress up for
I n t e r v i e w s . He s a y s
women should not wear
pants suits to the first
I n t e r v i e w and a man
should wear a neatly pre­
ssed dark business suit.
"You may be wise to call
ahead and ask If there Is a
company policy concern­
ing facial hair.” It sug­
gests.
Much o f Truitt's advice

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"1 was darned lucky to
do It then." Truitt said.

CALENDAR

" Y o u ’ v e g o t to s e ll
yourself." he said. " I f you
W U lIB B D A Y t MAT SB
can make that guy want
Jewish Community Center Single Parents speaker
you - in his company or discussion program, “7:30
* * p.m..
' "U., 851 N. Maitland Ave..
in
be
m his
n » department
u v j» u ,.v ... —
m , h u ,m i
Dr. George Llndenfeld.
will
mfeld. psychologist,
pt
will find an opening In W a , pucvMk.)
. Admission
free.
Baby-sitting
available.
Call
David
iim .iw .1.• . . W ■ ' j —11ting ava
place for you. or he II help Seidenberg at 645-5933
645-5033 for
for Information.
Information.
you f i n d an o p e n in g
Sanford Serenaders Senior Citizens Dance. 2:30 p.m..
someplace else."
Sanford Civic Center. Sanford Avenue and Seminole
He tells Job-seekers to
Boulevard.
open their phone contact
Wes* Volusia Stamp Club. 2 p.m.. Jane Murray Hall.
with a -id-second sell that
United
Congregational Church. West University Avenue.
catches the attention o f

c im r e i. * 1 9 A r t
U e lu r e o n IW » b y M *»)arte C o yn e . C o ll 3 3 1 ^ 8 2 1 [o r

statement. " h e says.

information

N|

COS! AMIR

HAPPY HOUR 4°ml 5 0 'DRINKS]

Truitt. 35. who grew up
In Madison. Ga., and now
lives In Houston, dropped
out of college and at 19
was a fulltime sales man­
ag er for C o llie r 's En­
cyclopedias. For six years
he Interviewed prospective
sales people, trained them
In basic sales techniques,
and then designed and
taught an advanced sales
course to more experi­
enced personnel. Later he
owned an executive Job
search firm which he sold
Just before the economy
turned sour.

"Y o u 'v e j c l to | e , tb e ir
• iie n it o n in W e U r o l

J

1 0 2 9

"I know how to sell."
says Truitt. " I ’ve been in
sales since my teens. I sold
encyclopedias while I was
In college at the University
of Georgia."

Orange City.

v •

- H 70 I V i 1.75
7! LTR

" I f you run Into repeated
rudeness or negative re­
sponses. It’s not them —
It’s you." Truitt said. "You
m ay be to o u p tig h t.
Loosen up and smile. You
will be amazed at how
many nice people you can
meet over the phone."

the prospective employer.
The main point, he said,
should be established in
the first five or 10 seconds.

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could be labeled common
sense. He reminds Job­
seekers that when making
phone contact with pro­
spective employers, they
should have a calendar In
front of them. Never get
Into a telephone argument
wi t h a p r o s p e c tiv e
employer, he says.

tlY D S V

TH I

VODKA

““ 10.59

"Th e centerfolds In Playboy arc more
conccrend with beauty than sex." she
said.
Hefner, as one muy guess, nodded Ills
approbation.

The opening statement
should end with a ques­
tion. asking for an In­
terview and suggesting
two times for such a meet­
ing.

• I*

*

DAY SALE TH R U TUESD AY. MAY 31

To Find A Job,
Search By Phone
By Brace B. Bekke
UPI Baelaesi Writer

HAS

w «

AlfBlfC LIQUOR

By Vernon Scott
UPI Hollywood Reporter

"Naturally, only a fraction of them
make It. But even those who don’t enter
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - The most
show bu sin ess g e n e ra lly stay In
beautiful women in the United States
California. And they are attracted to one
come from California.
another because of their physical at­
This flat statement of fact comes from
tributes.
no less an authority on American beauty
"T h ey have children, half o f whom are
than Hugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy
girls. And they keep getting better
magazine and the acknowledged satlooking all the time. I’m not even talking
chcm of sex appeal In this country.
about the current crop o f beauties who
Hefner should know w h ereof he
come to California. We’re doing Just fine
speaks. No single man In America Is as
with the natives."
tKsicgcd by nubile beauties as he. Herds
Hefner did not feel It necessary to ndd
of young women and girls, anxious to
that such former Miss Americas as Mary
fling off their clothes, storm his ofTIccs
Ann Mobley and Lee Merrlwcathcr
dally, seeking fame and fortune as
settled down In California and currently
centerfolds.
arc rearing another generation o f
beautiful daughters.
They arc. o f course, screened by
Playboy employees and an editorial
Marianne. 23. agreed with Hefner. As a
committee, which selects the Playmate
Playboy model she has traveled on the
of the Month. Hefner makes the final
East Coast and In the Midwest.
decision. _
_______ • think California giriM
■TI^SFL'S1uniy the cream of the crop.
too." she said.
After more than a quarter century of
"Mostly 1 think It’s because we’re Into
e y e - b a l l i n g s o m e o f th e m o s t
health food, exercise and sunshine.
California girls spend more time outside
pulchritudinous women In America, he
has concluded the fairest In the land are
and they take more pride In their
Californians.
bodies."
Hefner has a solid theory for the
If her Playboy layouts are any Indica­
pre-em inent position o f California
tion. California girls arc also less selfwomen.
conscious about displaying their bodies.
"This year alone, both Miss America
As Playmate of the Year. Marianne
collected $100,000 In cash and a new
and Miss U.S.A. arc California girls."
sports car worth almost as much. Unless
said Hefner, drawing on his ever-present
pipe. "And this year's Playmate of the
a girl is into education, the Playboy haul
Year Is also a California beauty."
surpasses the prizes for most beauty
Miss America Is Debra'Sue MolTctt of
contests.
Anaheim. The recently elected Miss
Of her dishabille In the pages of the
U.S.A. Is Julie Hayek. 22. of Westwood.
magazine. Marianne says It was the first
And. lo and behold! Sitting across the
time she'd been able to overcome her
shyness.
richly paneled den of his Beverly Hills
mansion was Playmate o f the Year
"I was born In Hollywood." she said,
Marianne Gravatte. literally In the flesh.
"but I was too shy to try out for school
Unlike Misses Moflett and Hayek. the
plays or cheerleading. I wouldn’t even
tall, long-legged, blonde Miss Gravatte Is
enter a beauty contest. I overcame my
not above casting aside her swim suit for
shyness because a Playboy centerfold
her cause.
was that important to me.
She appeared In the altogether In
"I wasn’t shy about taking off my
Playboy's centerfold last October and
clothes. To me being In Playboy is
makes a repeat appearance In the June
historic, something I can be proud of and
Issue as Playmate of the Year, equally au
show
my children and grandchildren."
nature!.
Marianne said she would not have
Hefner Is convinced It Is no coinci­
stripped for any other magazine, making
dence that all three young women are
the point that Playboy Is the only such
natives of the Golden State.
publication "with class."
"Look at It this way." he said. "For

A M IR IC A ’ S U U tO M T

• « V

THURSDAY. MAT 16
Lake Mary Rotary. 8 a m.. Lake Mary High School.
Central Florida Outliers Guild. 6-JO p.m.. First Baptist

M IN I B A G

25

�A
»»-»-• i«r *r v* v ■* -

r /

SPORTS
Famous Recipe Routs
Flagship Bank, 26-12

Idget Nelson (right)
i quite an adventure
th e b a s e p a t h s
esday against M edco
arm acy. At the right
son speeds past first
ke as Sonja Buckner
ches for the w ild
pw. Below, Nelson
es a rest a s M edco
b rtsto p S h a w a n d a
Iker tries to get a
uiSfen.the ball while
ond basem an Louise
ks watches. Nelson
m, K lw a n ls, won,

Today's Little National games
Rlnker vs. Railroaders at Fort Mellon
Park. 5 p.m.
D.A.V. vs. Poppa Jay’s at Bay Ave. Field.
5 p.m.

Tuesday’s Little American scores
Famous Recipe 26. Flagship Bank 12
Butch’s Chevron 18. Atlantic Bank 17
Adcock Roofing 25. Seminole Petroleum

'allace Hurls 1-Hitter As Kiwanis Romps
evonda Wallace had an Impressive day
Tuesday as she slugged three hits and
itched a one-hitter as Kiwanis upended
ledco Pharmacy. 18-3. In Sanford Junior
eague softball action at the Fort Mellon Park
oftball field.
Wallace doubled In a four-run first Inning,
added another double In a six-run second
inning and singled In a nine-run third frame

Sanford Softball
for Klwanls. Melissa Pinder got Klwanls going
as she smacked a two-run homer In the first
Inning to drive In the first two runs. Laura
Scott added a three-run homer In the third
inning as Klwanls Improved to 6-3 for the
season and Medco fell to 3-6. Louise Hicks

homered for Medco Pharmacy.
In other action. Rocky's Texaco upped its
record to 8-1 with a 22-7 rout of Sanford
Housing Authority. Mary Hicks and Coretta
Moore had two hits each and both cracked a
home run for Rocky's Texaco while Feronda
Brown also had two hits and Valerie Gordon
pitched a two-hitter. Tonya Curtis' triple and
a single by Karen Wynn were the only hits for
SHA.

ookie Bears C o m e O u t O f H ibernation
Burleson's Run-Scoring Double Nips SFRH; 23-Hit Attack Destroys Fabricating
The Pookle Bears are coming out of
hibernation.
Plagued by inconsistency during the first
half of the season and bogged down with a
so-so 9-7 record, the Bears have added two
victories this week to pull into fourth place
Just a game behind slumping S &amp; H

Hospital, 8-7. In Sanford Men's Softball
League action at Ptnehurst Field.
The Pookle Bears also received two hits and
one RBI from Teddy Miller and an RBIsacrifice fly by Bobby Kelly In the seventh.
Carl Thompson and Jim Butler had two hits
apiece for CFRH.
On Monday the Bears demolished S A H.
17-2. Burleson and Kelly each slammed
homers and drove In three runs. Mark Smith.
Mark Whitley. Miller and Bill Lee had three
hits each while Lee drove In two runs. Don
Marple and Steve Miller had two hits apiece
and winning pitcher Wayne Crocker drove In
two runs for the 11-7 Bears who ripped 23
hits. S &amp; H fell to 12-6.
In other action Tuesday,' Uncle Nick's

Men’s Softball
added two singles. David Lively added three
hits while Wayne Russell and Marty Ceresoll
had two apiece. Ceresoll drove In two runs.
Frank Tufner's sacrflcc fly pulled the
Express within one run In the bottom of the
seventh, but winning pitcher Tom Szabo
Induced Line Larson to pop out to end the
game. Turner chased home three runs with
two singles for Express. Terry Hart had three
hits while Donny McCoy and Alton Jenkins
each rapped two.
Session Time. 10-8. handed S &amp; H Its first
setback of the week on Monday. 19-16.
Robbie Hanrahan slugged a base-loaded
double for three RBI to cap an 11-run third
Inning and then boomed a three-run homer In
the third Inning. Ricky Bryson ripped four
hits while Dave Kent. Brian Hanrahan.
Russell Holloman and Wayne DeLawder had
two each. B. Hanrahan and Kerry Myers each
drove In two runs. Ron Saler and Dave Perry
had two hits each for S &amp; H. Saler had three
RBI. Steve Scribner, who also roped three
hits, was the winner and Carl Manning Sr.
the loser.
In other games Monday. Central Florida
Regional Hospital dropped Session Time. 9-3.
and Moblllte outlasted Harcar. 30-15. In an

....

eight-inning battle of the cellar dwellers.
Session Jumped on winning pitcher Gary
Snell for three runs in the first inning on
Kent's two-run single and a sacrifice fly by
Robbie Hanrahan. but Snell slammed the
door thereafter, allowing Just three hits.
CFRH. 7-11. pushed across two In the
fourth and added three more in the sixth and
four In the seventh. Jim Butler and Mark
Snell had two hits each for the Hospital which
was helped by three Express errors In the
seventh. Rick Dunn and Frank Contz had
RBI. The loser was John Myers.
Moblllte. 2-16. moved a game ahead of
Harcar. 1-17, by breaking loose for 10 runs In
the sixth and six more In the seventh. Mike
Lawrence rapped two hits and drove in six
runs for Moblllte. His three-run triple was a
key blow In the eighth. Dan Dougherty drove
In five runs with a three-run triple and two
singles. Mike Mavarez had three hits. Manny
Rivera picked up the win.
Joe Flannlngan swung a bit bat for Harcar
with a three-run homer and three singles.
Calvin Smith plated five runs with two triples
and a single while Jim Hawkins had four hits.
Eddie Warren and Rick Buffington each
strokes three hits. Mark Steffers was the
loser.
Tonight. DeLuxe Bar, 16-0. takes on
Moblllte at 6:30. followed by Harcar-Uncle
Nick's Oyster Bar and Pookle Bears-Sesslon
Time.

i

Pole; Holmes Plans Retirement
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - It wasn’t too long
go that Teo Fabl was skimming down the
ki slopes at 100 miles an hour and thinking,
Is this all there Is to speed?” |
Like a child going through the stages o f
talking then running, the Italian-born driver
oon discovered that auto racing was more
melting and the speed extra breath-taking.
Fabl competed for the Brazilian Olympic ski
earn (his mother Is Brazilian) and later was a
nember o f the Italian national " B " ski (cam.
lis brother, Corrado. Joined him In go-karts
s a youngster and now Is a Formula One
river, without much success.
Teo (pronounced uy-o) Fabl sits on the pole
x Sunday's 67th annual Indianapolis 500
Hie race. He has a limited command o f the
nglish language, but In his terse sentences

9 0 0 4 1 9 K O ttu Q t]
manages to moke himself understood
Honored Tuesday as the ‘ 500‘s fastest
rookie o f the year." for his pole-attaining
speed o f 207.395 miles an hour, a new
Indianapolis Motor Speedway qualifying record. Fabl said the most fearsome element In
running at the famed brickyard Is the
concrete wall. Otherwise, he has a complete
lack o f fear concerning speed,
. . .
NEW YORK (UPI) — Larry Holmes Is giving
his wife a Christmas present that will be
enjoyed by all challengers In the heavyweight
dlvlalon.
Hol mes, ( he Wo rl d B o x i n g Council

heavyweight champion who barely defeated
unheralded Tim Witherspoon last Friday
night to retain his title, said Tuesday he will
retire by Christmas.
Holmes Is unbeaten In 43 professional
fights and has held the heavyweight crown
for five years.
A fter survlvlving a strong finish by
Witherspoon to cam a split decision last week
at Las Vegas. Nev.. Holmes said on NBC's
‘ T o d a y " show that his Christmas present to
his wife would be his retirement from the
sport.
"I'v e done everything in boxing — 43
fig h ts . 49 w in s , f i v e y e a rs o f b ein g
heavyweight champion." Holmes said. ‘ T m
part o f history. I want to get out o f boxing
with my faculties and some money

Famous Recipe went on a 13-run
—s w l r g binge- In- the-*'^*** -%•-ta-nkrg-*
Tuesday en route to a 26*12 rout of
Flagship Bank In Sanford Little Ameri­
can League action at Bay Avenue Field.
Flagship Bank's loss combined with
Adcock’s Roofing victory over Seminole
Petroleum, sets up the game o f the
season In the Little American League as
Flaghslp and Adcock Roofing meet
Thursday at 5 p.m. at Bay Field. Both
teams now stand at 12*3 for the season
and Thursday's game will vault one of
the teams Into sole possession of first
place.
For Famous Recipe In the big fourth
Inning. Leonard Richardson walked to
lead ofT and Anton Reid and Troy Rollins
followed with consecutive triples for the
first two runs. Tim Hampton and
Ondreus Redding then singled and Sam
Jones walked to load the bases. George
Fryson then drew a walk to force In one
run and two more scored on a single ofT
the bat o f Mike Taylor.
One out later. Richardson blasted a
triple to knock in two more runs and
Reid singled to drive In Richardson. With
two outs. Hampton and Redding deliver­
ed back-to-back singles as Reid scored
the tenth run of the frame and Jones
walked to load the bases. Fryson then
drilled a three-run triple to complete the
scoring parade. Famous Recipe went
Into the Inning trailing. 11-8. and came
out o f the Inning witha21*l 1 lead.
After being touched for 11 runs over
the first three innings. Reid settled down
and allowed Flagship Bank only one run
In the last two frames as he picked up
the pitching victory. Rubin Blake took
the loss for Flagship Bank. Hampton and
Rollins had four hits each for Famous
Recipe, which had 21 hits for the game.
Reid and Richardson added three hits
each while Taylor and Gerald Morris had
a pair of safeties.
Blake and Ronald Cox had three hits
each for Flagship Bank. Cox and Travis
Pickens also homered for Flagship.
At Westslde Field. JefT Derr had two
singles and a home run while Anthony
Harris. Latrel Williams. Jerry Harkness.
Tyrone Gibson and Tony Hayes had two
hits apiece as Butch's Chevron outslugged Atlantic Bank. 18-17.
Atlantic Bank had 21 hits In the game,
compared to 12 for Butch’s Chevron, but
Atlantic Bank committed six costly
errors. Larry Allen and Paul Rivera each
homered for Atlantic Bank. Andrcaus
Redding added three hits-and Julius
Bennett had two hits.
Derr picked up the pitching victory for

Sanford Baseball
Butch’s Chevron which Improved to 6*9
for the season while Atlantic Bank fell to
5*10.
At Fort Mellon Park. Von Eric Small
and Tony Chavers combined for a
four-hitter and were backed by a 15*hlt
attack as A d cock R oo fin g routed
Sem inole Petroleum . 25*2. A dcock
Roofing put thr game awav early with 16
runs In th ^ T rn Uniin^T*fCacock Routing
now stands at 12*3 for the season while
Seminole Petroleum dropped to 5* 10.
Key hits in the 16*run first Inning
outburst for Adcock Roofing Included
triples by "Steady Eddie" Charles and
David Rusher, doubles by Jay Adcock
and Rusher and singles by Small.
Bernard Mitchell (two In the Inning).
Adcock and Maurice Howard. Adcock
Roofing also took advantage o f six
Seminole Petroleum errors In the Inning.
Leading the way for Adcock Roofing
was Mitchell who slugged three hits
while Chavers. Jay Adcock and Rusher
had two hits each. Scooter Leonard. Carl
E asferday. Tim Davis and Daniel
Skipper each had a single for Seminole
Petroleum's only four hits.
In Pee Wee League action at Chase
Park. Phillip "D u k e " King fired a
one-hlttcr and was backed by a 13-hit
offensive attack as Adcock Roofing
hammered Kokomo Tools. 19-5.
King struck out five and walked seven
and the only hit for Kokomo Tools was
an Insldc-lhe-park home run by Ronnie
McNeil In the first inning. Damien
Tillman slugged two inside-the-park
homers for Adcock Roofing while De­
mentiy Beamon went 3 for 3 and scored
three runs. King and Rechard Ransom
also had two hits for Adcock Roofing
who now stands at 6-1 for the season
while Kokomo Tools fell to 5-2.
In other Pee Wee action. Matt Wllk was
3 for 3 with a double and a home run
and scored three runs to lead Graccy
Construction to a 12-9 victory over
McRobcrts Tires. Graccy Construction
upped Its record to 3-4 while McRobcrts
Tires fell to 1-6.
George Martin added a double for
Graccy Construction which had six hits
for the game. Demetrius Miller had two
hits and scored three runs for McRobcrts
Tires and one o f Miller’s hits was a
two-run homer. Mike Thomas.added a
double for McRobcrts Tire. Graccy Con­
struction's Josh Lclchworth. who Is also
one o f the top players In the Sanford
Soccer Club, made the defensive play of
the game when he snagged a line drive
and turned It Into a double play to save
two runs In the first Inning.

Famous Rec. 360 (1 9 )5 -2 6 *2 1 4
Flagship Bk. 524
01—12 9 4
WP - Anton Reid. LP

Atlantic Bank
Batch's Chev

Rubin Blake.

104 2 6 4 -1 7 21 6
189 4 2 x -1 8 12 9

WP — JefT Derr. LP — Julius Bennett.

�H
r
%

1QA—Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI. Wodntodoy, May II, w &gt;

N o Slips For Freeway O il En Route To 16-0 M
H.D. Realty, Salvagio’s Begin Championship Playoff Toni
Forest City II Freeway Oil com­
pleted a perfect season with a 19-5
v ic t o r y o v e r C a s s e lb e r r y in
Seminole Softball Club action at the
F ive P oin ts softb a ll com p lex.
Freeway Oil finished with a spotless
16-0 record and clinched the league
c h a m p io n s h ip in th e H aw ks
Division. Freeway Oil was the only
softball team to finish unbeaten for
the year.
In the victory over Casselberry.
Aimcc Krlvan and Kristen Bates had
three hits each while Kimberly
Stclnkc, Tam m y Laszalc, Missy
Marcella, Stacy Brandenburg and
Tonya ColviiulSid two hits apiece.
Bales also picked up the pitching
victory as she allowed only five hits,
out one and walked two.
HcfaM

In E a g le s D i v i s i o n p l a y .
Trsvlslon's Chevron split its last two
games of the season, losing, 5-0, to

fry im ufr

Lisa Sllverstein sla m s a base hit for Freew ay O il.

Softball
Rotary Ckib of Casselberry and
winning, 131* , against Altamonte
Billiard.
In the loss lo C a sselb erry.
Trivlslon's managed only two hits, a
single by Trade Monger and a
sin gle by T ra c i G allano. G ill
Knudson had a pair o f hits for
Casselberry while Betty Hill picked
up the pitching win with a shutout
performance.
In the victory over Altamonte
Billiard, Lisa Lathan rapped out
three singles and a double and
knocked in four runs to lead
Trivlslon's Chevron at the plate.
Jennifer Carlisle added three hits
and two RBI for Trivlslon's, Laurie
Bird slugged a single and a triple

and collected three RBI while Beth
McCain slugged a two-run single
and BufTy Osborne came up with an
RBI single. Kim Miner picked up the
pitching victory for Trivlslon's.
While Freeway OII|cllnchcd the
Hawks Division title, double elimi­
nation playoffs for the Eagles and
Starlings Division crowns got under
way this week. In the Eagles
Division, Salvagio’s Girls goes up
against H.D. Realty and in the
S t a r lin g s D iv is io n , N ew h am
P la s te rin g m eets Forest C ity
Goodings.

HAWKS

Freeway Oil •
Rlnkcr Materials
Larry Dale Const.
Salvagio’s Photo
Dulundo Screen
•League Champion
S T A R L IN G S

Sem inole S oftball Club
Second Round Standings
EAGLES
H.D. Realty*
Salvagio’s G irls*
Precision Graphlx
Lake Howell Amoco

'Coach' Fare Costs
Cedeno $13,000 Seat
You can't be a complete hardrock when you're
running a ball club. You can’t be only one way. You
must have Infinite patience, understanding and
forgiveness, and to varying degrees a guy like Dick
Wagner has those capacities, but It doesn't matter.
Cesar Cedeno's three-day suspension still stands.
At his salary level, it'll cost the Reds' sidelined
outfielder somewhere around $13,000. ThaCs B.A.,
meaning Before Appeal. His agent already has said
there probably will be one. Money, however. Is only
a side Issue here.
Cedcno's suspension was the dfrect result o f his
being assigned a coach scat instead of a first class
one on the Reds' flight to Cincinnati from Chicago
last Sunday after their 4-3 win over the Cubs.
Accustomed to (lying first class with the club,
Cedeno ripped up his boarding pass for the coach
section, strode angrily ofT the plane and flew back
home on his own.
His action also could be tied into problems he was
having with Reds' manager Russ Nixon the past
three weeks. Cedeno fell into a slump and was
benched after a fine start. Sore shoulders also
contributed to his problems, which became com­
pounded when he angered Nixon first by not coming
out to Wriglcy Field early enough for treatment
Sunday and then by getting Into an argument with
team trainer Larry Starr.
On M on d ay, C eden o was suspended for
"misconduct." The suspension was announced by
"the club." But as president and chief executive
ofTlccr of the Reds. Wagner was the man who had to
make the decisions. He had to hear all the problems,
solve them and keep the house in order. He met with
Nixon Monday and also spoke with Cedeno.
" I ’ni not angry with Cesar." Wagner revealed
from his Cincinnati office Tuesday. "He's a good
competitor and a good person. He played very well,
for us at the start of the season and he has been
hampered by legitimate Injuries the past few weeks.
He had hustled good for us. 1 think it was Just the
frustration on his part lhat caused him to do what
he did. He's had problems and w e've had
problems."
Wagner didn't excuse what Cedeno did. though.
"1 don't look at it lightly or we wouldn't have
imposed the suspension." said the Reds' boss, who
made the deal to get Cedeno from the Astros for Ray
Knight In December of 1981. "I don't feel he was
correct in the things that happened. But I suppose
down deep you wind up liking all your ballplayers.
I've never had a cross word with Cedeno. He has
alwuys been thoughtful. I read somewhere that we
were sorry we had made the trade for him but that’B
not true at all. I told him last night I had no regretsi
over the trade and that I felt he could help our ball
club. He has helped us and I believe he will again.
Cedeno apparently felt Nixon was the one

Commercial Roofdecks
Casselberry Rotary
Cent. FI. Circuits
Altamonte Billiard
Bushor Plumbing
Trivlslon's Chevron
•Second round winner
+ First round winner

Goodings*
Newham Plastering*
Tropic Bank
Lombardi's
Rax
•Second round winner
♦ First round winner

Spaghetti
Seminoles
T a k e a q u ic k lo o k
because It w on't last
long S e m in o le tra c k
coach H a n k D a v le ro
(rear) tells (from left)
M ik e W o o te n , Jo e
W hack and Dion
Jackson. Davlero
honored his three state
qualifiers with some of
h is w i f e ' s I t a l i a n
s p e c ia lt ie s In c lu d in g
Spaghetti &amp; M eatballs
and Lasagne Tuesday
ight. S e m i n o l e s '
Clifton Campbell, Torln
W illia m s a n d W illie
B a s s a ls o In d u lg e d .
Campbell, a sophomore
440 dash cham p at the
district, will compete In
the prestigious Golden
South C lassic Saturday
t Winter P a rk 's
Showalter Field.

Milton
Rlehman
U P I Sports E d ito r

responsible for his being assigned to the coach
section on Sunday's flight.
"I think he made the statement that Russ did that
personally," Wagner said. "Russ didn't. He wasn't
even aware o f it. Steve Cobb, our traveling
secretary, was In charge of the plane tickets and he
wasn't to blame, cllher. He was simply following our
regular policy o f rotating the fellows In first class
and coach scats. Besides, he's new on the Job.
"Cesar is a very emotional fellow." Wagner went
on. "H e wants to do well. There have been stories
that he has asked to be traded, but those stories
aren't so. He has never asked us that. On Sunday's
flight from Chicago, we had nine first class scats.
The other three first class scats were held by
non-baseball people, so the rest of our players had to
sit in the coach section. We normally move the
fellows around. We usually try to put the next day's
pitcher, the manager and the player rep (Frank
Paslorc) in first class. I guess when Cesar got that
coach ticket, with all his other problems. It hit him
wrong. To him. maybe it was the last straw that
broke the camel's back."
Cedeno, who spent his first 12 seasons with the
Astros, isn't having that bad a year with the Reds.
He has played In 24 of thelt 41 games and his ,272
batting average includes six doubles, two homers
and 13 RBI, two of which have been game-winners.
People always keep expecting more from him,
insisting he never really fulfullcd his potential
although he owns a more than respectable .289
lifetime average, has driven in 848 runs, hit 173
homers and stolen 507 bases.
"Sometimes. I think the fans expect too much."
Wagner said. "It's hard for them to understand what
happens to a player and It's hard for people in the
front office to understand. But players don't stay the
same. And you know how the game is, it's
frustrating. It reminds me of when I was In the
Navy." laughed Wagner, who served two hitches as
a hospital corpsman during World War II and the
Korean War. "Th e old Navy guys would sit around
and you'd hear them say how the last ship they
were on was the worst ever, this one was only a little
better and the next one was going to be the best.
They’d never change their stories, and you hear the
same thing in baseball all the time."

Herald Photo by Tommy Vinront

Johnson Will M iss Rem aining Gam es
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Earl Curcton has been a hard
guy to find for the past three months but the Los
Angeles Lakers will make sure they know where he Is
when the NBA championship scries resumes Thursday
night.
The Philadelphia 76ers will have the 6-foot-9 Curcton
slotted for some playing time in Game 2 In place o f
Clemon Johnson, who remains In Temple University
Hospital with a urinary tract Infection that could keep
him out of the entire series. Johnson played his college
ball at Florida A A M University.
Curcton. a third-year backup center and forward, has
seen his playing time cut since the acquisition of
Johnson from the Indiana Pacers on Feb. 16. But
putting him in the playoff pressure cooker doesn't seem
lo overly concern Sixers coach Billy Cunningham.
"Earl has been through this many times in the past."
Cunningham said Tuesday. "You Just don't know
what's going to happen but one thing I know you will
get Is the effort and intensity, and that's all you can ask
from a player. Earl has great quickness and can get up

NBA
and down the court as well as anybody."
The speed of Curcton, who has played Just six minutes
in three post-season games, is important against the
fast-breaking Lakers. He thinks he'll be able to
contribute despite his limited playing time.
"I know to be ready now because I'll definitely be bn
the court." he said. "I'v e been practicing hard every
day. Our practices are almost like games so I'll be ready
to go out and help."
Curcton will back up Moses Mulonc at center anil also
may sec some time at power forward alongside Malone.
The Sixers have another center in 7-1 rookie Mark
McNamara.
The Lakers arc confident they can bounce back front a
113-107 defeat on Sunday and they can use history as
evidence.

SCORECARD
Dog Racing
At Sup*r femlmto
Tuaiday night mutt*
Fint r a n -5/14. D: 1140
7 ThraaToktnt
11.40 1*0 JOB
1Sport Boot*
100 MO
IJD'tSIrO no
1.10
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Second rat* — »*, O: 40.11
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MO MO 1*0
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1*0 1.40
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4*0
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(7-1) 11.44
Third race — J/H, MJ1.4#
) Art l Ac*
14 70 7.00 f .40
7Sn*v*ly Whlptolh
1)10 0 )0
I Odd Ability
44
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Fawflfcrata — 5/14, M: I J H
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1)110 14-40 11.10
4 Lody Midai
17*0 D IO

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17th r*c* — 1/14. C; 17.44
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500 4.10 Arbsni
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1*0
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lopor 0; 7-1■)****•&gt; m dinner
M iy 'if a iM t
lllh r o c a -7/14.0:44.1*
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4.40 )40 110
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Tempi B*y *t Wdwgan. 7pm.
Arran* *1 Chicago. * pm
IHwdiy.JtMl
Nm Jtnty at Oakland. I pin

NBA

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Birmingham it Tamp* 0*y&lt; l:M*&gt;
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POLYESTER
POWfR STREAK
BLACKWALL BLEM

(AiTtotoilOT)
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Baseball
AMIIICAN ASSOCIATION
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Blue Jay Hitters Take Over,
Rally Erases 5-0 Lead For Win

‘ Sanforfi Tto.

'

Uulted Pruus lutermutlouxl

Plesse don't Itugh, but the Toronto Blue Jays have
the distinct look o f s team that must be taken seriously
In the American League East this season.

A.L. Roundup
worked the last two Innings to register his third save.
“ A lot o f teams would give up when they're down five
runs, but not thts team." said Jackson. "The guys on
this club have a lot of confidence. They really believe In
themselves. Everybody Is capable of doing what they’re
called upon to do."

..................... .Vm

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IVI. mV.

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C aught.............
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.II

Avtrago.

STANDINGS
AMERICAN LCAOUE
loti
W L K I.
Toronto
n ii mo
Botta
n i; ut
Boltimor*
n ii jii
Milwaukee
JO 14 SH
Now York
M M NO
Cltiwtond
l» 11 4JJ

NATIONAL L IA S U I
fait
B I N . St
— SI Lauit
N M JM
1
Montreal
M IT All 4
1
Philadelphia
IB 14 JM 1
14 PlttMurgh
IS M JM 44
14 Chicago
U a JtS 4
44 New York
l» ,n JIS 1
Detroit
ii n at 1
(tot
Won
toe Angeiet
M II JIB
Ceiifornie
a ii mi —
Atlanta
M 14 AM 14
Oakland
a it uj 1 Sen Frandaca
M M MB 14
Tout
it it j n 14 Cincinnati
It B m N4
Kentet City
u ii m 1
Sen Diego
IT a MS 114
Mmnetote
M a m 4 Heutlan
IB a alt 11
Chicago
u a hi 14
TeoeOer'i I.iufh
Seattle
14 M Ml 14
Mentroel l SanDtegaL U Inringi
iM M ir'i Kmih
San FrandicaL New York 1
Toronto t. Detroit 4
lo* Angelo 1 Philadelphia 1
Miwte&lt;91 MUimort 1
SI Louie/.Cincinnati 1
Chicago tLSeeton 4
PittMurghL Atlanta S
Ttu t 2. Kinui City 2.5 innings, rain
Chicago L Houatat 4
CWvotand4.Soiti44
Wedwetday'i Som m
Oeklandl. Milwaukee!
(ARTMm(DT)
Calilornia T. NowYork 1 II Mtingt
SI. Lauit (Martin 1BI at CMclwwtl
Wedeetdey't 04M1
(Ptawrlll.il Mam.
lAXTHtoEOTI
San Frencttca ISroMng 44) at New
Milwaukee (Hoot I II It Oakland Vark (Altai 141. 1 Mpm
Underwood) 11.) IIpm
Piitthurgh (BRSy la) at Atlanta
Cleveland (Ekhefcerger 1 1) at Saattla (McMurtryAI|,l:4Bajn.
(B*ittiol D .) )lpm
Lea Angeiet (HtaMn 1 11 at Philo
Detroit (Potry ell a« Toronto (Colt I deighia (lyttrem Ml, 4 M a m
JI.MOpm
San Dtogo (Hawkme &gt;J) at Mantroal
Mmnttofj (fcfcrom 20 8t BjWmort IRogertH), JtJam
to MeftmeiJJ). T:JJpm.
Chicago (Leftan • 11 at Heueton
toton (Hurt! 11) et Chicago (Burnt 1 (Madden 111. I D pm
It.1 Mpm
Teiat 1Darwin ))) at Kantat City
01

(Black04). 111pm.
New York (Rowley III it Calilemie
(John III. 10IB |l«.

LEADERS

g

AmtrkaaUagM

•

•

starting pitching staff1In the A L East with Dave Stleb.
Jim Clancy. Luis Leal and Jim Gott providing a T w ia s 6 ,O rlo la a I
formidable rotation. The bullpen corps, led by comAt Baltimore. John Castlno and Tom Brunansky hit
ebacklng Randy Mofllt. also Is sound.
solo homers to lead the Twins to victory and hand the
Yet It’s that Intangible quality known as confidence Orioles their fifth loss In a row. Bobby Castillo. 2-3.
that sets this year's Blue Jays' squad apart from Its notched the victory by pitching the Twins’ second
predecessors.
consecutive complete game. He allowed six hits, walked
The Blue Jays believe they can win any game now four and struck out six In besting Scott McGregor. 4-3.
when they take the field whereas before they expected to W h ite Sox 12. Red Sox 4
lose moot o f the time.
At
Ron Kittle
Jerry Hairston each
This was evident Tuesday night when they rebounded slammed a three-run homer during an eight-run first
from a 5-0 deficit to defeat the Detroit Tigers. 7-6. for Inning that carried the White Sox to victory. Greg
their fifth straight victory. After posting three straight Lnritrekr Lnrrruo Gray and Carlioq FUk also homered
shutouts, the Blue Jays switched tactics and let their for the White Sox. who tagged'Doug Bird. 1-2. with the
hitters lead the way to victory this time.
loss. Jerry Koosmah, 2-0. scattered eight hits in six
Buck Martinet drove In four runs. Including three with Innings lo notch the victory with Dick Tldrow finishing
a baaes-loaded double In the fifth Inning, to spark the for his third save. Dwight Evans homered for Boston.
triumph.
Indiana 6, Mariners 4
"W e didn't plan it that way. Another shutout would
At Seattle. Mike Hargrove’s two-run single highlighted
have been nice," said Martinez, who entered the game In a four-run ninth Inning rally that gave the Indians their
the third inning as a pinch hitter for Ernie Whitt. "But victory. The Indians rallied against Bill Caudill. 0-3. and
this Is really great. It shows the club can score runs."
helped Neal Heaton. 2-1, gain the victory. Julio Cruz
Martinez feels the Blue Jay offense Is beginning to stole four bases and scored twice and Pat Putnam
match Its pitching prowess.
homered for the Mariners.
"In order to be a really consistent ballclub. we have to A 's 8, Brewers 7
have all facets going." he said. "T h e pitching has been
At Oakland. Bill Almon stole home with one out In the
really great and I think our offense is starting to catch bottom of the eighth Inning to snap a 7-7 tie and give the
upJo It. We're generating a lot more runs."
A ’s their second straight victory over the Brewers,
Toronto reliever Roy Lee Jackson raised his record to Almon started the winning rally by beating out an
3-1 by allowing only one hit over 3 2-3 innings. He Infield hit and took second on a single to right by Jeff
struck out four and walked one. Joey McLaughlin Burroughs. Dwayne Murphy sacrificed the runners and

,

WM
' i

.~

,

. '

. ..
, .

i

Greg "T h e B u ll" Luzinski clouted till fifth home
run In five gam es to help the Chicago White Sox
r |p Boston, 12-4.
with Mike Davis at bat. Almon broke for home on an
attempted suicide squeeze and made It when the pitch
g0| away from catcher Ned Yost. Dave Lopes homered
for thc A's.
Angels 7, Yankees 6
At Anaheim. Calif.. Bobby Grich blooped a single off
the glove of right fielder Oscar Gamble with two out In
the 10th inning to drive home pinch runner Rick Adams
with the winning run and cap a two-run rally that gave
,he Angc|s thelr victory. A dropped fly ball by right
fielder Oscar Gamble with two out allowed the Angels to
thc tylng mn Roy Smalley. Oscar Gamble and
Qralg Nettles homered for New York and Fred Lynn
connected for California.

LaPoint Snaps Cards' Skid
Uulted Brass International
Dave LaPoint went the distance
Tuesday night but fell short o f his
chance for Immortality.
" I was trying to make the Hall of
P a m e.'* L a P o in t k id d ed after
throwing his first complete game In
35 major league starts, helping the
St. Louis Cardinals snap a fourgame losing streak with a 7-1
victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
" I wasn't sure how many starts
without a completion I'd need to set
the all-time record, but If I'd gone
this year without a complete game. I
w as g o i n g to c h e c k on that
autistic.”
The left-hander dropped to hls
knees after the final putout.
" I fainted." LaPoint laughed. " I
couldn't believe I had a complete
game. It seems like the last com­
plete game I had was In Little
League."
Bruce Berenyi. 3-5. suffered the
loss, giving up six earned runs and
nine nIU over 6 1-3 innings. He
struck out seven but walked six.
Berenyi 'walked LaPoint. Tommy
Herr and Ken Oberkfell to load the
bases at the start o f the third Inning.
Lonnie Smith singled In LaPoint
and George Hendrick singled home
Herr to give St. Louis a 2-0 lead.
The Cardinals added a run In the
fourth when O zrit Smith singled,
moved to second on LaPoint's
sacrifice bunt and scored on Hen's
single down the right field line.
In the Cardinal sixth. Darrell

N.L. Roundup

accounted for both New York runs
with a pair of homers.

Dodgers S, Phillies O
At Philadelphia. Alejandro Pena
scattered four hits for his first major
league shutout' and Dusty Baker
broke out o f a slump with two
doubles, a run scored and an RBI to
lift the Dodgers. The loss was the
fourth straight for the Phillies, who
have been shutout In three consecu­
tive games and have not scored a
run In 35 Innings.

Pirates 6, Braves B
At AtlanU, Lee Mazzllll belted a
two-run homer and the Pirates
withstood a five-run eighth inning
rally by AtlanU to snap thc Braves'
four-game winning streak.

P155/I08xl3

29.95

P185/808xl3

SI.9S

Cuba B, Astors 4

P175/90Rxl3

13.95

At Houston. Ron Cey continued
hls torrid hitting pace with hls fifth
home run o f the year and Dick
Rulhven won hls first game in a
Chicago uniform in helping the
Cubs to a victory over thc Astros.

P185/908xl3

35.95

PI 15/75R&gt;I4
PI85/758x14

37.95
88.99

P205/758x14

48.95

P205/758x15

41.95

P215/758x15

43.95

P22S/758x15

48.95

P235/758x15

49.95

Expos B, Padres 4

double and a home run and scored
twice to back the seven-hit. 10strikeout pitching o f Mike Krukow
and lead the Giants. Dave Kingman

At Montreal. Warren Cromartle
singled home Bryan Little with one
out In the 13th Inning to lift thc
Expos. Little opened the 13th with a
single ofT loser Luis DeLeon. 0-3.
Tim Raines' groundout advanced
Little to second and Cromartle
followed with a single to center.'
Raines, who raised hls average to
.280 with three hits in four at bats,
also stole two bases, hls 11th and
12th of the year.

BOX SCORES
By United Prou Intanotwta
U N 01100
MONTREAL
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Wiggint cl t i l l R « mo It
4 11 1
Bonilla »
1 1 1 1 WcNfertf rt I B M
Rtchow It 4 4 11 CrOMrSt m i l l
Conwy lb B i l l Dowton d 1111
Beeecgua ft 111 B OlltWf 16 I B M
Kennedy c I IBB Conor c
4BBB

Krvkaw (W I
Now Tort
lynch (L III
Slit
Own
HIP-6y I
11,111.
LOB A N S fll

T it *
M « f 4 Tolah M II II II
total
III M N 4 - 4
Chkagt
III 44M II-It
Came winning RBI - Klttlo III.
E-Boggt. Ftek DP-toton 1. Chicago
I. L 0 « - t o t a l 4. Chicago J 18Al Iowan. Stapleta HR-Evont III.
Kitts (I). Motion (I). Lwlrakl ID.
GrayOi.Fieiii).

ISSiU
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4MB
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TUB
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SUB
SUB
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SUB
SUB
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;

�Thatcher Is THE Issue In British Election

WORLD

By Gregory Jensen
UP1 Senior Editor
LONDON (UPI) - "T h is Isn’ t an
election." cried a British politician study­
ing opinion poll results. ” lt's a Thatcher
coronation."
Every poll. It Is true, makes a landslide
winner o f Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher and her Conservative Party In
Britain's June 9 election.
Yet this election poses a rholcc os
sharp-edged and clear as any set before
an electorate In recent times. Its main
contenders are even of opposite sex.
On one hand, a Labor Party under
Michael Foot. 69. pledging a nucleardisarmed Britain with American bases
evicted, a pullout from the European
Common Market, "m assive" economic
reflation , sw eeping nationalization
perhaps even of banks and farm land.
Import and currency controls.
&lt; On the other, a Conservative Party
under Margaret Thatcher, 57. pledging
exactly the opposite In every case
Among the smaller fry. an "Alliance"
o f Liberal and Social Democratic Parties
crying a plague on both other houses
and propounding policies It hopes arc In
the middle ground.

N BRIEF

Steamer In Egypt Sinks;
Afore Than 100 Missing
CAIRO. Egypt (UP1) — A Nile River steamer
carrying 627 passengers and crew caught fire
and sank today In crocodile-infested waters and
more than 100 passengers were missing and
feared dead, police said.
A police spokesman said the vessel, a shuttle
service between Aswan in southern Egypt and
Wadi Haifa In northern Sudan, was carrying 599
passengers, mostly Sudanese, and 28 crewmen
when It caught fire before dawn.
The boat, the 10th o f Ramadan, sank In
southern Egypt a few miles south of Abu Slmbcl
— the she o f two temples built In the face o f a
cl'ffby Ramse? ■!. the spokesman said......—
....
He said 183 people were rescued and seven
bodies recovered. But the Middle East News
Agency quoted Police MaJ. Gen. Farouk Nour
Eddln, (he security chief In Aswan, as saying
500 people had been rescued.
A search was under way for those missing In a
section of the Nile Infested by crocodiles.

"T h e choice facing the nation." says
Mrs. Thatcher without partisan rhetoric.
"Is between two totally different ways of
life."
Yet the real choice Involves only one

Chinese Jetliner Crashes?
PEKING (UPI) — A witness reported a Chinese
jetliner crash-landed In the southeastern coastal
city of Fuzhou In February, but the Chinesestate airline CAAC denied the accident occurred.
China does not confirm air disasters unless
foreigners are Involved. But details were pro­
vided Tuesday by a foreigner who said he
witnessed the Feb. 27 accident.
The witness, who requested anonymity, said
the plane was a British-made Trident Jetliner.
"I saw It come down. Its landing gear snapped
and It damaged Its belly as It skidded along the
runway." he said.

factor.
"Thatcher Is the Issue." said the
Economist magazine.
"T h e issue In this election Is Thatcher
and T h a tc h e ris m ." echoed form er
Parliament member Brian Walden.
"She dominates contemporary poli­
tics." Walden said with what Is almost
British understatement. "Everything Is
seen In terms o f her. This election Is
Thatcher versus the field."
She seems strangely subdued as she
enters her first official campaign news
conference. Eyes down, mouth relaxed
and unsmiling, posture calm under the
neat brown tweed suit and double string
o f pearls.
Then the questions start.
Margaret Thatcher's head whips up.
E yes fla s h . V o ic e firm , p re c is e ,
modulated as If at on elocution class.
Accurate figures and dates tumble from
her. without notes. She talks always to
one person, who Is speared unwaver­
ingly on her sword-blade gaze.
No questioner gels away with any
Innuendo, any slur, anything at all.
“ We are fighting against the most
extreme program ever laid before the
British public." she cries. "It Is state
socialism rampant."
An "Iron Lady." all right, and a very
formidable one.
There Is an ovation as Michael Foot
takes the tectum. There always is.

As always he Is rumpled, even un­
kempt — "H e's resisting sll attempts at
tutoring," says an advertising man.
"People give him hints, but by the look
nf things he's not taking them."
His owl-eyed spectacles sparkle, his
luxuriant white mane bobs to the
chopping, sweeping arm gestures o f a
triumphant soap box orator.
Nothing remains of the accent o f his
native Wales. His voice sinks, swoops,
whispers, shouts. Here Is an evangelist, a
tub-thumper, a man obviously con­
vinced o f the passionate truth of what he
says.
"She offers Qs Just more o f the same,
shameful, disastrous policies we have
had over the last four years." he orates,
the voice rising on "the same." shouting
out "shameful." thunderous on "disas­
trous."
Foot's oratory sometimes carries him
away — "Ignorant barbarians." he has
called his opponents. Some of them call
him "Yesterday’s man."
Some 3,000 candidates are fighting tor
650 Commons seats. Britain's 42.7
million ellglbles vote only for their area's
Commons member, not for the prime
minister or a party slate. It's a gloves-off
but not dirty campaign.
Campaign styles tell much about the
two main parties' status.
Foot's underdog Labor must throw the

Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
rascals out. so Its campaign Is ag­
gressive. emotive and somewhat vitri­
olic. It produced a party platform 15.000
words long, Instantly dubbed "th e
longest suicide note In history.”
Mrs. Thatcher, prime minister for four
years, promises more of the same, so she
works words like "steadfast," "firm "
onH “ r M n liit r " In in «&gt;verv sta te m e n t.

D en ies It

Beirut Claims It
Downed Israeli Jet
U nit** Press International

Paris Torn By Riots
PARIS (UPI) — Some 130 Paris police officers
and dozens of student activists were injured In
rioting over educational reforms that ended
early today, authorities said.
The violent clashes broke out during protest
marches Tuesday and lasted until 3 a.m. as
bands of youths skirmished with police and lit
bonfires at several points around Paris.
One police officer suffered a serious eye Injury,
but none of the other Injuries to police were
serious. Authorities said dozens of students
suffered minor injuries In the clashes with
police, who repeatedly fired tear gas to disrupt
roving bands of protesters.
Police arrested 11 protesters on riot-related
charges and held 67 before releasing them after
questioning.
The late-night confrontations unfolded as the
Socialist majority moved to curtail a parliamen­
tary debate on university reforms. The educa­
tion minister, who Introduced the legislation to
the National Assembly Tuesday. Invoked an
emergency clause of the constitution that will
limit the upper and lower houses of Parliament
to one reading of the bill.

Hospice Help
Ken Sandon. president o f R otary Club o f Sanford, presents $500 check to
Mrs. Shelley R ife for Hospice or Central Florida, at a luncheon m eetin g
M onday at the Sanford C ivic Center. H ospice assists term inally 111
patients and their fam ilies In cop in g with their situation.

Syrian warplanes fired two alr-to-alr
missiles at Israeli reconnaissance Jets
o.'er Lebanon today but missed their
targets In the first aerial encounter since
last summer, the Israeli military com­
mand said.
The military command In Jerusalem
said the Israeli planes did not fire back
and that they had returned safely to
their base.
But In Beirut, state-run Beirut Radio
said Syrian ground-to-air missiles today
shot down a pilotless Israeli recon­
naissance aircraft over the Nlha moun­
tain slopes overlooking the southern
Bekaa Valley.
Quoting "security reports." the radio
said the Israeli drone was one o f several
on a reconnaissance flight over the
region when It was downed. There was
no confirmation from the Israelis or the
Syrians on the report and It was not
known If the two incidents Involving
Israeli aircraft were related.
The Beirut Radio broadcast said a
number o f Israeli reconnaissance planes

were spotted over the Bekaa valley and
other parts of Lebanon. Including areas
south of Beirut.
"Syrian ground-to-air missiles shot
down a pilotless Israeli reconnaissance
plane over Nlha." the Beirut Radio report
said . T h e N lha regio n . 22 m iles
southeast of Beirut. Is under Israeli
occupation.
In the enounter with the Syrian Jets,
an Israeli army spokesman said the
"Syrian planes tried to Intercept Israeli
air force planes that were on a routine
reconnaissance mission over Lebanon."
"There was no dogfight and all our
planes returned safely to base." the brier
announcement said. "T h e air force Is
continuing Its flights as usual."
Armed Forces Radio said the Syrian
Jets fired two missiles at the Israeli
planes.
The confirmation was the most serious
between Israel and 8yrla -since last
summer when Israeli Jets destroyed
Syrian anti-aircraft missile batteries In
the Bekaa Valley.

AREA DEATHS
CLAIR EUGENE CLARK
Mr. Clair Eugene Clark.

85. of 216 H a cien d a
Village. Winter Springs,
died Monday at his home.
Born Nov. 9. 1897, In
Peoria. III., he moved to
Winter Springs from Pon­
tiac. Mich.. In 1976. He
was a retired office worker
and was a Baptist.
Survivors Include his
wife. Vera; a son. the Rev.
Robert E. Clark of Winter
Springs; a daughter. Mrs.
Barbara Trayer of Pontiac;
brother. Brooks E. of Du-

quesne. Pa.: eight grand­
children.
B a ) d w ) n - F a ir r h l l d
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

ROMA JEAN LOCKER
Miss Roma Jean Locker.
23. of 1033 Pebble Beach
Circle. W inter Springs,
died Saturday. Born In
Youngstown. Ohio, she
moved to Winter Springs
from there In 1978. She
was a nun of the Order of
Carmelite Dlscalced.
Survivors Include her

GENERAL

parents. Cline and Frances He was a Mason.
S u rvivors lnludc his
Locker of Winter Springs;
a b r o th e r , R o b e rt o f wife. Eva: two daughters.
B ren d a L e e B ush, o f
Casselberry.
Griffin. Leggett. Healey Austin. Ind.. and Anna
and Roth Funeral Home. Marie Rclff of tltusvllle:
Little Rock. Ark.. Is In tw o s is t e r s , P a u lin e
Whaley of Greenville. Pa..
charge of arrangements.
and C a ro lin e Bean o f
HAROLD V. BYRER
C
le v e la n d ; six g ra n d ­
M r. H a r o ld V e rn o n
children.
Byrer. 78. o f 17 San Juan
W in ter Park Funeral
Bay. Oviedo, died Monday.
Home.
Winter Park. Is In
Bom Sept. 18. 1904. In Oil
City. Pa., he moved to charge o f arrangements.
Oviedo from Goldenrod In
1981. He was a retired
audtor and a Methodist.

ELECTRIC

ADA LARIVIERE

husband. Leo; two sisters.
Mrs. Blanche Gregolre of
Montreal. Canada, and
Mrs. Floretle GoyeLa
Tuque. Canada.
Gramkow Funerai rlome
Sanford is In charge of
arrangements.

DAVID A. RAMSEY
M r. D a v i d A l l y n
R am sey, 50, o f 459
Summerlin Ave., Sanford,
died Monday at Americana
Health Center, Orlando.
Bom March 16. 1933. in
Sanford, he was a com­
mercial fisherman.
He Is survived by a
brother. Kenneth Ramsey,
o f Bellevue. Wash.
Brlsson Funeral
Home-PA. Is In charge of
arrangements.

Mrs. Ada Larivlere. 77.
of 214 Citrus Drive. San­
ford. died T u esd ay at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Born March 21.
1906. In St. Guillaume
D'Upton. Quebec. Canada,
she moved to Sanford a
year ago from Pembroke.
HENRY J.AKKERHUIS
Mass. She was a retired
Henry J. Akkerhuls. 50.
hairdresser and was a of 2514 Myrtle Ave., San­
fo rd . d ie d S u n d ay at
Roman Catholic.
She was survived by her Daytona Beach. Bom July

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27. 1933. in Almelo. The
Netherlands, he moved to
SanfDjd three years ago
from Elkhart. Ind. He
came to the United Stales
In 1956. He was a general
maintenance man.
He is survived by two
sons. Leonard of Sanford
and Gary o f White Cloud.
Mich.: a daughter. Mrs.
Jenny Mlktes of Elkhart;
three sisters, five brothers:
four grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home
Is In charge o f arrangeYnents.

Fun»rol Nolle#
LANIVIIRK.RUU.AOA
- Memorli! M o m Mr Mr* Ada
Lerlvlere. 77. of 114 Cltrvi Drive,
laniard.
died Twetday. will be
celebrated at f a.m. Thurtday at
All Saul* Catholic Church with the
Oav. William Knnl, officiating.
Gram kow Funeral Horn* In
charge.
AKKKRHUIt. M0. H IN N Y 4.
— Funeral lervlcet (or Mr. Henry
J. Akkerhul*. JO. of t i l l Myrtle
Ave.. Sanford. who died Sunday,
will bo Friday at 10 a.m. at
Gramkow Funeral Homo chapel
with the Nov. Steven J. Heckman
Sr. officiating. Frland* may call 14
and 7-f Th u rid a y. Gramkow
Funaral Hama In charge
RAMSIV. MR. OAVIO ALLYN

— Funeral tervlcet for Mr. David
Allyn Ramley. SO. of 4St Sum
marlin Ave.. Sanford, who died
Monday, will ba Friday at 10 X
a.m. at Iritaen Funeral Home with
the Rev. Leo King officiating
Burial at a later date. In lieu of
flower* donation* may bo mad* to
the Amordan Cancer Society
Seminole County Unit. Britton
Funeral Homo in charge ot or-

How would you
like TO PUT
, youRsclf
!“
shoes?

�I
/

Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

W edneiday, M ay

is,

✓

1M3— IB

Cook O f The Week
Coleg rove Graduates From
Cumberland School O f Low
Samfbrd University. Birmingham, Ala., graduated
one o f Its largest classes In history this month,
awarding diplomas to 865 seniors during activities
the weekend o f May 13-15.
Circuit Judge John A. Jamison of Fredericksburg,
Va., a 1941 graduate of Samford's Cumberland
School of Law. received an honorary Doctor o f Laws
degree. Judge Jamison delivered the commence­
ment address during the law school's graduation
May 15.
Richard Arthur CoJcgrovc Jr., son o f Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Colcgrovc o f Sanford, received a Doctor of
Jurisprudence from Cumberland School o f Law.

M uray State Graduate
A total o f 883 students were In the spring class of
the 60th annual spring commencement exercises at
Murray State University. Murray. Ky.. on May 14.
Among the candidates receiving degrees is Evelyn
K. Orman of Oviedo.

M iam i U Graduates
Miami University. Oxford. Ohio, held commence­
ment exercises on May 15. Participating were 2,932
degree candidates. Including 1.897 bachelor's. 189
associate's. 181 master's, 10 doctoral and seven
specialists In education.
Bachelor of science degrees were uwarded to 893
students, while 648 received bachelor of arts
degrees,
Degree recipients arc as follows: Lisa A. Scott and
Ray John Vlntilla. both ofLongwood.

Health Care Program
The Florida Nurses Association. District 8, will
sponsor a program on Dermatology skin care with
Dr. Jerome Afrlck. M.D. as the guest speaker. All
health professionals are Invited. Tuesday May 31,
1983 at 7:15 p.m.. All Saints Episcopal Church
Center (Interlackcn and Fairbanks Avenues). Winter
Park, to hear Dr. Afrlck discuss skin cancers.
Two nursing contact hours will be offered. The
program Is free for FNA members, &gt;5 for nonmem­
bers. For Information, call FNA at896-3261.

RSVP Recruit Coffee
The Advisory Council o f the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program of Seminole County Is sponsor­
ing a recruitment-sponsorship coffee on Wednesday,
June 1. from 10 a.m. to 12 noon, at the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. 1st Street.
Prospective volunteers and those Interested In
learning more about RSVP are cordially invited to
attend. For additional. information. plca*c call
834-6550.
"i-

Dulcim er Class Completed
Mrs. Zoe Stanley o f Twelve Oaks Resort. Sanfoid,
has returned home after receiving Instruction In
dulcimer making at the John C. Campbell Folk
School In Brasstown. N.C. Mrs. Stanley participated
in the class from May 1-13.
The Campbell Folk School, located In the western
North Carolina mountains near Murphy, offers
workshops year-round In traditional and contempo­
rary crafts, as well as In music, dancing and
homesteading skills. Under the instruction of Bill
Smith, students made a mountain dulcimer from
start to finish In the class uttended by Mrs. Stanley.
She said o f her experience at the Folk School: "It's
been a wonderful, worthwhile experience. I learned
a lot, made a dulcimer, and made a lot o f new
friends. I'll go back — probably again this year."

No-Bake Pie Perfect Summer Dessert
By Loo Childers
Herald Correspondent
Wife, mother o f three active boys, church pianist,
em ployed by a local doctor, and an excellent
cook... that’s Rose Ann Dean of Sanford.
Rose Ann considers Sanford "hom e” even though site
was born and grew up In Charleston. W. Va. "M y
husband Gary and I moved to Sanford In 1970," she
says, "and even though his work has taken us back up
North a few times, we always come back to Sanford."
The Dean household has been spending quite a few
hours on the soccer field watching Greg, age 11. "do his
thing." Chris. 13. and Adam. 5, watched their brother
play his last game of the season Saturday with the F.C.
United Tornadoes Soccer Team.
"W e are an active family," says Rose Ann, but she
-alwa-ye manages to havc-tlme-4e-gj***A goodrnutrltlotrr
meal together for lu.r-’ *gang." "One thing 1 learned
when studying for my L.P.N. degree at SCC In 1979, was
the value o f eating a balanced diet by using a variety of
foods. I also serve my family as many fresh vegetables as
possible instead of using canned goods so much."
Rose Ann states that her family Is beginning to "gear
down" a bit right now. adjusting their eating habits due
to the hot. summer weather we've been experiencing.
"W e Just don't cal heavy meals when It's 80 degrees In
the shade,” she says, adding “ we tend to be really big on
salads and the likes."
Rose Ann Is fond of Taco Tossed Salad because It Is
"quick and easy" and seems to fit Info her family's
lifestyle. “ We also love the Zucchini Crescent Pie
because It is as good cold as It Is fresh out of the oven."
Rose Ann lost her mother when she was a young
teen-ager, and credits her grandmother with being the
one who really taught her to cook. *'! still use Granny's
1938 Watkins Cook Book." It Is full of "a pinch of that, a
dab of this" recipes. From this book Rose Ann found a
great "no-bake" peach pic that makes the perfect
summer dessert.
Ever faced with the problem o f what to serve a large
gathering of friends for a summer luau? For liquid
refreshment. Rose Ann likes Tropical Punch. This cooler
Is a lemon-lime concoction that includes bananas, white
grape Juice und floating melon balls. For light snacking
her choice is Cool Canapes. She adds, "For the children
who are Invited, make Banana Pops." Her recipe makes
an even dozen o f the frozen pops that are equally good
for dieters since tliev contain only 50 calorics each.

ITALIAN ZUCCHINI
CRESCENT PIE
Cook and stir 4 cups of thinly sliced zucchini and 1
cup chopped onion In V* to x/i cup margarine for 10
minutes. Stir In W cup chopped parsley (or 2
tablespoons parsley flukes). M» teaspoon basil, and 14
teaspoon oregano leaves. Combine 2 beaten eggs and 8
oz. shredded mozzarella cheese. Stir In zucchini
mixture.
Separate 8-ouncc can refrigerated crescent dinner rolls
Into 8 trlungles. Place In ungreased 10" pie pan: press
over bottom and up sides to form crust. Spread crust
with 2 tcaspopns mustard. Pour vegetable mixture Into
crusL Bake In preheated ’ 375 degree oven for 18-20
minutes or until center Is set. (Cover trust with foil
during last 20 min. o f baking.) Let stand 10 minutes
before serving. Yield: 6 servings.

BROCCOLI AND
MUSHROOM BALAD
1 bunch fresh broccoli
1 pound fresh mushrooms
1 small bottle zesty Italian dressing
Clean and cut broccoli and mushrooms into small
bite-sized pieces. Place In salad bowl and cover with

2 cans (6 ounces each) frozen lemonade concentrate,
thawed
644 cups water
1 can (6 ounces) frozen orange Juice concentrate;
thawed
3 cups white grapcjulcc
x/i cup honey
2 quarts chilled ginger ale
4 cups assorted melon balls
1 lime, cut Into very thin slices
Slice bananas Into blender container; add lemonade
concentrate. Cover and blend on high speed until
smooth, about 15 seconds: pour Into large bowl. Stir In
water, orange Juice concentrate, white grape Juice, and ,
honey: pour into freezer containers or shallow pans.
Freeze unrn.v.g.fd until slushy, about 2 hours.
Pour banana mixture Into chilled punch bowl. Just i
before serving, stir In ginger ale and melon balls..
Garnish with lime slices. Yield: 50 servings X
A cup each.

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad
Sunday, June 19. Is Father's Day.
The Herald is searching for the annual "Outstand­
ing Dad." but wc need the help of readers.
Write a letter and tell us In your own words why
you think a certain father Is outstanding. First, write
your full name, address. Including street, city and
state, and your telephone number ut the top of the
first page. Then, add the name, address and
telephone number of the favorite dad you are
nominating. Please type or clearly print your letter
containing Information about Dad.
Submit lctteis to PEOPLE Editor Doris Dietrich.
300 N. French Avc.. Sanford 32771. no later than
Wednesday. June 8. the deadline forjudging.
HtraM PMetor lee CMMars

Rose A nn Dean still uses her grandm other's 1936
W atkins Cook Book which calls for " a pinch of
that, a dab of this."

ARE BACK IN
BUSINESS

X
A cup firmly packed brown sugar
2 tablespoons finely chopped walnuts
Cream butter und gradually add sugar, beating until
mixture Is light and flurry. Add egg: beat until blended.
Combine flour, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt:
add to creamed mixture alternately with milk, beginn­
ing and ending with flour mixture. Spoon into greased
mufTln pans, filling half full.
Combine brown sugar and walnuts: sprinkle over
batter. Bake at 350 deg. for 20 minutes. Yield: about 2
dozen.

M j T O lL ,! J

ERNIE 1 MVE ME MCI IN B U IIN K S ^ ^ M m E
WISHING HOUSES i TRAILERS
REASONMIE RITES.
ERNIE BAUM EISTER
FORMIM.Y IN S U tlN H I FOR 27 V IA M

114 Pinecreit Drive, Sanford, FL
C A LL 3 2 2 -7 6 8 2

TACO TOSSED SALAD
I pound ground beef
x/i cup luco sauce
1 small head lettuce, tom Into hllc-stzc pieces
1 medium green pepper, cut into strips
1 medium tomato, cut Into 8 wedges
Vi cup pitted ripe olives, drained
2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese (about 8 ounces)
1 package (114 ounces) taco-flavored tortilla chips,
crumbled (about I cup)
x/i cup Thousand Island salad dressing
Cook and stir ground beef over medium heat until
light brown; drain. Stir in tuco sauce and heat. Toss
lettuce, green pepper, tomato wedges, olives, cheese and
chips. Spoon hot beef mixture and salad dressing over
lettuce mixture: toss. Serve Immediately. Yield: 8

IOWA
MEATS
Wf

/ .III

NOW IW ( 1OV! t» 1 V i P i M ONI) A Y

Normal Tender lean

CENTER CUT
PORK CHOPS

* i» »

Hormel Tender Lean

LOIN END
PORK ROAST or chops

* i‘?

HormeT™*

COUNTRY STYLE
SPARE RIBS

Hodgson-Herndon
Vows Exchanged

* r®
$ 4 f t 95 1
u ii
I l f
1

GROUND CHUCK
PATTIES
let Poefc Freih

49cu.
55V

WHOLE FRYERS
CUT-UP

Mr. and Mrs. John Carlin Hodgson. Sliver Spring, Md..
announce the marriage o f their daughter,Terry
Elizabeth, to John Potter Herndon, son o f Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Middleton Herndon. Sanford, on May 18. in
Somerville. N.J.
The bride is a graduate o f Towson State University.
Maryland. The bridegroom is a graduate o f Yale
University and received his M.B.A. from Rutgers
University.
Mr. and Mrs. Herndon arc making their home In
Somerville.

S 10. So* Homemode

SAUSAGE
PATTIES

eM &gt;7«

_ * 6 » !
2108 S* FRENCH A V I. (1742)
N iX T TOMB. C f CHICK IN

PNOM OftDil ANIAD
It's Reedy When Yee'rt Reedy

VACUUMCLEANER
REPAIR CENTER

0 2 3 -4 5 2 0

ONLY ON A THURSDAY SPECIAL V rffc
AT OLD FASHIONED PMCIS!

US
Mild) each of the following
hockey learns with Its city:
(1.) Sabres (I) Islanders (3)
Jets (4) Maple Leafs (S)
Oilers
(a) New York (b) Toronto
Winnipeg (d) Edmonton
Buffalo

• KIRBY
• ELECTROLUX
• HOOVER
• EUREKA
• A ll MIKES

S
H fk il4&gt;

1. Who wrote “The Lower
Depths’*? (a) Maxim Gorky
(b) Upton Sinclair (c)

I l f W. LAKI MARY UVD.
IA K I AAAIV, FL

321-5111 or
339-0111
A Ceaawuil Stall CwtNM BCFMIUll

Trophy for
i? (a) yachtiag
(b) tenia (c) hockey

v J t

V* SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN
h

WITH

A CHOICE OF 2 VEGETABLES,

.

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Pr ize Fern
30 Years Old

Harald Phalt by Ttmmy VIAcant

Garden Club
Officers

The Garden Club of Sanford elected officers at the M a y meeting. The new
officers will serve during the 1983*84 year when the club resum es activities In
September after recessing for the sum m er months. The new officers are,
from left, M a ry Tillis, vice president; M a r y Elm ore, president; Elizabeth
Welebob, outgoing president; Claudette Behrens, treasurer; and Pauline
Spivey, secretary.

Consolation Talk
Sometimes Cruel
DEAR ABBT: 1just read
the letter from "Linda in
Lancaster" telling about
some of the cruel comJ p
DQQF
ments she heard after
^ I f
losing her 14-ycar-old son.
A h h i/
S ix y e a r s a g o my
n u v j
14-ycar-old son was killed
In an accident. I also heard
som e cruel com m ents
.
,
.
from people who thought
easier on others
they were comforting me.
Everyone assumed 1 wa:
,
adjusting nicely.
My son was a slow
Recently my mother ca
learner. Not retarded — suajjy m entioned hov
Just slow. My sistcr-ln-law mucj, my son had re
said,
^ou re better off. scmblcd me. My guan
Now you won t have any wa9 down and I broki
more problems to deal d ow n and crlcd&lt; He
with, so don t feel sorry for c o m m en t : --| though
yourself.
(I will never yoy'^ ke over that b’
forgive hcr.l
now."
At the lime o f my son's
Abby. I'll never be "ove
death, there was no one to It!" I’ll Just keep my guan
talk to about my feelings, up more closely now
It was easier Just to keep especially when peopl

ITALIAN
SIDE OF
BEEF... .1 1 .3 ? SAUSAGE U . S *
cms Hutfca ns n a n
■HAMAS
AMERICAN
HINDQUARTERS A I.4 * CHEESE .1 1 .9 9
mmmwum
am nam w aan

ask. *’How many children
do you have?” Wc origi­
n a lly had tw o. but I
thought that by answering
"O ne." I wouldn't have to
talk about the one wc lost.
But that doesn't work ci­
ther. When I say "One."
I'm asked.. "W h y only
one?" {Can you believe It?)
I feel for Linda. Thanks
for letting me get this oul
of my system. In my heart
I'm still...
THE MOTHER
OF TW O
DEAR MOTHER: Please
accept my condolences.
You most certainly should
talk about the son you
lost. And If you feel like
crying, go ahead and cry
until you’re all cried out.
{Tears are healing.) Don't
keep this raging resent­
ment bottled up inside
you. pretending to be
"adjusting nicely."
You are still hurting
b e c a u s e you h a v e n 't
allowed yourself to express
your normal feelings: the
anger, the pain, the grief of
losing a part of you. You
need to do that.
Please get In touch with
a wonderful support group
c a lle d C o m p a ssio n a te
F rien d s. {C h eck yo u r
phone book.) They can be
enorm ou sly helpful to
people who have lost a
child.
About your sister-in-law:
She probably meant well,
but she showed herself to
be shallow, unfeeling and
thoughtless. Forgive her.
DEAR ABBT: I noticed
that the U.S. post office
has Issued a 17-ccnl post­
age stamp with a picture
of a woman on It. Her
name is Carson. Who Is
she? Someone said she's
Johnny Carson’s mother.
Is that true?
TRUE OP.
FALSE?
D E A R T R U E : Falscl
(Johnny Carson's
mother's name Is Ruth.)
The stamp was issued to
h o n o r R a c h e l L o u is e
C arson , an A m eric a n
b io lo g is t and s cie n ce
writer lauthor of "Silent
S p r in g "). She died in
1964.
DEAR ABBTt I heard
something that upset me
and wonder if it Is true.
Someone said that in
case or female twins, one
twin is likely to be sterile.
Thank you.
A TW IN
D E AR T W IN : Not in
humans. However, in the
case o f cattle, when a
f e m a l e and m a l e are
i wl nb orn . the fem ale,
known as a "freemartin."
is usually sterile.

US SAVING BONDS
•jeaoNO wcm avacrou or iaoa
I as w h o

w iih

auaCNAti or im jf

O tffP fM S JtM C M ttU

G etting married?
W hether you want a
formal church wedding or
a simple, "do-your-ownth in g *' cerem ony, gel
Abby'* booklet. Send $1
plus a long, self-addressed.
stamped (37 cental
envelope to; Abby's Wed­
ding Booklet. P.O. Box
38923. Hollywood. Calif..
90038.

In e z F r e d e r l c h s of
S a n fo r d , a r e t ir e d
school teacher, stands
by a 30-yea*old "M r s .
W itherton" fern given
to her by her mother.
Today, the fine-leafed
fern stands more than 5
feet tall. M r s .
F r e d e r l c h s s a id an
A p o p ka n u rse ry m a n
claim s he "n e ve r saw
anything to equal It."
But the stately fern w as
not alw ays so healthy
and lovely. M rs.
Frederlchs admitted to
neglect after her
mother gave her three
prize plants. " I didn't
have time to care for
them ," she said. "1 set
t h em u n d e r the
M agnolia tree and they
nearly died." After she
r e t i r e d , M r s .
F r e d e r lc h s sa id she
noticed the fern in a
clay pot w as sprouting
new growth. Today, she
waters the plant dally
and feeds it the neces­
sary nutrients.

AMERICAS FAMILY DIJUG STORE

Mkr*k- rra-tkau lu itw iun ran
i n w 111 pNfle M n a tn rl r r j i i w

M M M ...

(iidinrl Mifilighl il Ihcv jn- ukingi*

V

Compare with Barer' Limtl 1

utuif &lt;n- ut Ih,' num (wmotmt
druf. and unnklKi ImLiv

Thi» rr-H'ion ran rrunilol ibrll
in lh&lt;* lurm nl w\rrr Minturm
»kin r.'h ,md ittrllinf and will
i,n Irwn prrum tu prrxm dr
pt-nding on mam lartort (irral
ran- niuil hr lakrn In lh,-»r indi
vidtuU
Suncm-ning jfrnl* ran br hrlp
lul In (irtili.i niurM'II (rum their
frjcliun. Thu ,&lt; imr muff framn
mu -dkKild nut hr.date In atk niur
phv.ii'un ur Kikrrd (diarmaritl
aSiul Ihi' mi.hi atmn mu takr’

4-oi Lotion or
2-oi Creim
Limit 2

While quaniiiiet
•aal Limit 2

4 grid herghta

Saltwater Tattr
or Peppermint Kiteee

I K Trip le -S in or

300 flagutar Sin.
Lrmrt I

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!•
Evening Herald, Sanford, Ft,

Miss Embree
J.L. Acevedo
Repeat Vows

W adrm day, M a y I I , 1 M S -S R

Show To Salute Women
From All Walks Of Life
"Salute to the Women o f the 80s,"
a mall show designed to promote
women's businesses, products and
service groups. Is being coordinated
by the Women's Travel Network on
June 24, 25 and 26 at the Alta­
monte Mall.

Doreenjfathrinc Embrcc and Jorge Luis Acevedo
*--* *
* 7. at- 7 p,
|m a ,
^ joma u n|tcd
were married
May
Methodist Church. Pastors Leon Reich and Jim
Henry performed the double ring ceremony.

Key corporations and Individuals
in the community will gather to
promote their services and further
their associations with women In
the business w orld. Featuring
women's endeavors and career op­

The bride Is the daughter or Mr', and Mrs. Donald
mbree. Winter Park. The bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Acevedo, Orlando.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride chose
for her vows a formal gown fashioned along the
Southern Belle silhouette. A wide-brimmed hat
secured her full-length veil of illusion. She carried a
teardrop cascade of white roses, carnations, baby’s
breath and tvy.

portunities for women, there will be
live television and radio broadcasts
from the event.
Center Stage will spotlight live
music by Rosie O’Grady’s Jazz
Band, fashion seminars, nutrition
presentations, exercise forums and
more.
Door prizes donated by the exhib­
itors Include trtivcl. wardrobe con­
sulting and services o f all types.
This event will salute women of
Central Florida ind their endeavors

In all walks of life from education,
business, technology, law. medicine
to th i arts. The mall show is
non-partisan and invites communi­
ty-wide participation.
. Business which caler to women or
are owned, operated or managed by
women are Invited to purchase
exhibit space for the show. Display
space is limited, but still available.
Anyone wishing to participate may
c o n ta c t the w o m e n ’ s T r a v e l
Network at 422-3938.

SHS 25th Class Reunion Set
The 1958 class of Seminole High School will hold Its
Don Baty. Jeanette Decs Jessup. Bruce Hold. Rhea
25th class reunion on July 2, at the Sanora Club, Johnson. Wayne Johnson, Barbara Nitchell Kaseote.
Sanford.
Jack Statsky. Chuck Wledcrhold. Lola Yates Keeping

Debbie Glasgow attended the bride as matron of
honor. Bridesmaids were Lisa Acevedo, Ellle Baker.
Jennifer Jacobs. Natalie Jacobs, Sonya Green,
Mcllsa Mowdy and Donna Bldmead. They wore
peach-colored tafTeta gowns and carried white fans
arranged with tiger lilies and baby's breath.

Letters have been mailed to all known classmates, and Louise Giles.
Members o f the class who have not received a letter are
Also: Doyle Corley. Barbara Dcklc. Betty Ann Johnson
asked to phone Jean Womack Gonzalez, 321-0825.
Shock, Shirley Johnson Hudson. Fred Knight. John Ott.
Anyone h avin g Inform ation on the follow in g Bobby Wledcrhold. Kathleen Wood Garrett and John
classmates is also asked to call Mrs. Gonzalez:
Dodson.

Hector Acevedo served the bridegroom as best
man. Groomsmen were George Glasgow. John
Keen. Danny deArmos, Billy Carrion, Rex Terrell.
Lyle Schakford and David Embree.
Following a reception in the church fellowship
hall, the newlyweds departed on a weddong trip to
the Poconos Mountains. Pa. They are making their
home in New Orleans.

call toll

ra n

IWW-IHI

Optimist Club Wins
Two 'First' Awards
Foundation and is the leader in both
Youth Program and Achievement Points
and Pride Builders with a net member
increase of 32 for the first six months of
the club year.

D a y S a le !

At the second quarter State of Florida
District Convention held May 13, 14 and
15 In Plant City, the Optimist Club of
South Seminole was awarded two first
places for Its Fire Prevention In the
Home and Aid to the Haitian Mountain
People Projects In competition among
the 153 Florida Optimist Clubs.

savings at all Eckerd stores.

These two projects will now compete
against the winners from the other
Districts that will be held In New Orleans
in June.

In addition the club and Its President
Thomas Sobkowski both achieved Dis­
tinguished status for last year. Florida
District Governor Bob Howe o f Sanford
also awarded his Governor's Cup to
m em ber Oscar Hall o f A ltam on te
Springs.

The Aid to Public Broadcasting and
Saturday Time Off for Parents Projects
garnered second and fourth place respec­
tively. The club was also awarded Patron
status in the Optimist International

The Club meets every Friday at 7:30
a.m. at the Holiday Inn. Highway 436
and Wymore Road In Altamonte Springs.
Those interested in further information
arc invited to visit a meeting.

AMERICAS FAMY D%UG STORE[

Outstanding School
Volunteer Award

s

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Fabric guide tor |utt-rtght hast

OALAIV 1r OOOtt

Miss Susan Luke, a
s tu d e n t at S e m in o le
Community College, was
recently chosen the East
Central Florida Regional
Winner o f the Outstanding
School Volunteer Awards.
Miss Luke began helping
as a school volunteer in
the Dividends School Vol­
unteer Program at Sanford
Middle School while she
was a senior at Seminole
High School.
A fter her graduation
from SHS, she continued
to volunteer while atten­
Y..
ding Seminole Community
9 V ar
"¥.&lt; TCollege.
Her volunteer work in­
•A1
cludes helping with math,
social studies, English,
sffUfc
me d i a c e n t e r and
F ir s t L a d y of F lo rid a A dele Graham # left,
counseling with students.
Both years she has presents plaque to Susan Lake as the East Central
worked with the Dividends Florida Regional W inner of the O utstanding
Program she has received School Volunteer Awards.
special recognition from Central Florida Region in- Volusia. ‘ Brevard. Lake
the County D ividen ds eludes Orange. Seminole, and Osceola counties.
Program for volunteering
over 200 hours.
Miss Luke is the first
R egion al W inner from
Seminole County who has
OLD I ASH ION f D MEAT MAPhi i
been the recipient of the
Outstanding School Vol­
lJU AN ?11Y k t1. M1S U f \f L v I I
unteer Award. The East

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W A D E 'S GROCER,

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NEW
ARRIVALS
Mr. and Mrs. O ctavio
G a lle g o announce the
birth o f their first child, a
son, Octavio III, on May
18. He weighed 81bs.. 9
ozs. •
M rs. G a lle g o is the
former Denise Bagwell of
Sanf or d. Mat ernal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. R.A. Green and H.O.
Bagwell o f Sanford.
Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Octavio
Gallego Sr o f Call, Col­
ombia. South America.

MHOS GOOD THRU TUESDAY, MAY St

Chitterlings 10 t i * 4 "
PORK

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Pork Feet
TURKKY
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Wsdwtsday, May M, m i

ovorite Recipes

Zellwood Com Festival This Weekend
T h e 19B3 Z e llw o o d
Sweet Com Festlvaal Is set
this Saturday and Sunday,
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.. on
Ponkan Road, Zellwood.
The gates will open at 10
a.m.
The menu will Include
ham, slaw, potato salad,
roll, tea, and all the sweet
j^ellwood com you care to
' eat.
This Is the 10th festival
and there will be some­
thing for everyone In­
cluding rides, musical en­
tertainment, and an arts
•and crafts show featuring
ih e works o f over 100
-artists and craftsmen on
'both days.
*i The committee says no
to p e t s , c o o le r s and
frtsbees. For information,
'call 886-0014.
The following recipes
"are from the Seventh An­
nual Zellwood Sweet Com
Festival Cook Book:

Blend eggs and milk.
Add pancake mix and stir
Just until fairly smooth.
Fold In com and pineap­
ple. Drop batter on each
side. Drain on paper towel.
Serve hot with butter and
maple syrup. Senes 12 to
15.

CORN BUBBLE
2 tbsp. butter or marga­
r in e
1 small onion finely
.chopped
2 tbsp. flour
1 tsp. salt
14 tsp. paprika
14 tsp. dry mustard
pepper to taste
W cup milk
1 egg slightly beaten
with milk
1V4 cups fresh grated
com
Place butter and onion
In 1 qu art c a ssero le.
Microwave 1-2 minute on
high or until onion Is
transparent. Add flour,
salt, paprika, mustard and
pepper. Blend well. Add
m ilk and egg m ixture
s lo w ly s tirrin g until
smooth. Stir in com and
cover. Microwave 8 to 10
min. on *6* or until bubbly.
Let stand 3-5 min. cov­
ered. For m ic ro w a ve
without solid state heat
control, microwave 14*16
min. o n ‘5’ . Serves 4.

TAMALECORN
CASSEROLE
3 cups corn

kernels.

P

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J U IC Y F L O R ID A

BATHROOM

YELLOW
CORN

VALENCIA

PICK Y O U R OW NI

4 ROLL P A C K

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8 9 *

2/89*
.-89*
— 99*

M A N

LIBBY’S
VEGETABLES

* .A v 1

1»M I[J|

LIBBY’S
LITE FRUITS

PAPER
TOWELS
A M i'l

? 5 / $2

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CURRIED CORN

Un 3 tbsp/butter
14 tsp. Curry powder
J-' 14 tsp. salt
v* V4 tsp.-pepper
j
Hi 2 c u p s f r e s h c o r n
--.kernels
&gt; ’
1 cu p chopped celery
j
*11 14 c u p d i c e d g r e e n

f t

114 cups milk

v 3cupspancake mix
3 cups cooked com.
JQdrainedtfrcsh)
2 cup* crushed pineap-

Ifr ^ Soklng oil or shortn-

(See CORN. Page SB)

S A V E 30'

PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., MAY
25 THRU TUES., MAY 31, 1083.

SOUTHWESTERN
CORN BAKE

V4 cup sour cream
Melt butter In skillet,
add curry, salt pepper and I
blend. Add com and cel­
ery, green peppers and
onions. Cover, cook over
low heat 8 to 10 min. dr
until Just tender. Stir In
$ L ou r cream. Heat, stirring
^constantly, but do not boll.

large bowl, combine lima
beans, corn and eggs,
c o m b i n e flou r, salt,
p e p p e r, s ug a r and
nutmeg. Stir into com
mixture. In hot butter In
small skillet, over medium
h eal saute onion and
green pepper, stirrin g
about 3 minutes. Remove

FR ESH
BR O CCO LI

cPride

stuffing
C om b in e in gred ien ts
- plus 1 cup stuffing. Pour
Into 1 qt. casserole. Toss
remaining stuffing In but’ ter and place on top.
Decorate with ripe olives
. and mushrooms. Bake at
350° for 30 min. Serves 8.

■■/»!

14 cup flour
cup com meal
1 ( 0 . 5 p z .) e n v e lo p e
cheese sauce mix

sweet pepper
2 cups half and half
1 pkg. ( I Doz.) frozen
Lima beans, thawed
2 pkg. (1 Doz.) each,
frozen whole kernel corn
3 eggs beaten
Va cup flour
1 tsp. salt
Preheat oven to 325° F.
Ligh tly grease a 10*‘ x
6 "x l4 t " baking dish. In a

LA R G E B U N C H

FIESTA CORN BAKE

1 dozen ears com. cut
c rea m s t yl e (cut and
scraped)
v 2 eggs, beaten
* &gt;4 cup yellow com meal
1tsp. garlic salt
6 tbsp. salad oil
■* 1 (4 oz. can) green chill
f . pepper, finely cut
2 cups grated cheddar
cheese
*■'' Mix together all ingre­
dients except chili and
/cheese. Divide mixture In
-half. Place on half in a
• greased 8‘ *x8‘ ‘x 2" baking
'•/dish. Mix together chill
land cheese: lay on top of-/•corn mi xture In dish.
I /Cover with the remaining
• /corn m ixture. Bake In
/•I moderate over (350°) for
fi35 min. Serves 8.

CHEESE OLIVE
TOPPING

dough is formed. Spoon
1&gt;4 tsp. baking powder
over casserole.
1 tsp. salt
SUCCOTASH PUDDINO
1egg. slightly beaten
V» tsp. pepper, fresh
Va cup milk
ground
Va cup vegetable oil
1 tbsp.sugar
2 tbsp. chopped ripe
Vi tsp. nutmeg
olives
2 tbsp. butter or marga­
In a large mixing bowl,
com bin e flour, cheese rine
1 cup finely chopped
sauccmlx. baking powder
onion
and salt. Add remaining
1 cup finely chopped
in gred ien ts. S tir until

YOU CAN’T BOY BETTER!

2 cups cooked cream
com
1 cup cooked diced car­
rots
M cup chopped onions
V4 cup ripe olives
14 c u p c h o p p e d
mushrooms
2 beaten eggs
1 tbsp. melted butter
1 tsp. salt
dash pepper

^

slices and corn. Pour pizza
sauce o ve r all. Spoon
green pepper over. Spoon
cheese olive topping over
casserole. Bake at 400° for
30 min.

fresh or frozen
2 (15 oz.) can tamales
W cup chopped green
peppers
1 (14 oz.) run pizza
sauce
cheese olive lopping
Cut each tamale Into 6
slices and place half on
bottom of a 13"x9" pan.
Spread with 114 cups com.
top with remaining tamale

COOKW

CO M PAR E

SWEET FLOWERS COUPONS
WILL NOT BE ISSUED AFTER JUNE 18th.
(ONLY 25 MORE DAYS)
HOWEVER. YOU CAN CONTINUE TO
REDEEM OR PURCHASE YOUR
COOKWARE THRU JULY 9.1983.
I S A N F O R D -2 9 4 4 O R L A N D O

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Make Dad
Feel Special
On His Day

1

over both sides. Preps air from bag and tie securely.
Place bag containing meat In center o f a double
thick rectangle o f heavy-duty aluminum foil (twice
the circumference and 8 inches longer than brisket.)
Bring 2 opposite sides o f foil together over top of
meat. Fold edges over 3 to 4 times, pressing crease
In tightly each time. Flatten foil at one end, crease to
form triangle and fold edge over several times
toward package, pressing tightly to seal. Repeat
procedure
rocedure on other end. Place on grill and cook at
i g every
e v e . hour
low temperature 4Vi to 5 hours, turning
Carefully open foil packet and cooking M g; pour off
drippings into saucepan. Add reserved sauce to
drippings and cook slowly until thoroughly heated.
Brush brisket with sauce and place on grill. Cook 10
to 15 minutes, turning and brushing with sauce
occasionally. Carve In thin slices diagonally across
the grain. Serve sauce with slices o f brisket. 12 to 15
servings.
*A boneless chuck pot-roast, cut approximately 2
Inches thick, can be substituted for the brisket.

You can bank on this flavorsome beef brisket to
satisfy not only Dad but the whole clan as well. The
brisket is an excellent choice for a crowd as it Is
boneless with little waste. When carved Into thin
diagonal slices, It's feasy to stretch Its outstanding
beef flavor a long way.

Looking for a sure way to make Dad feel extra
special this Father's Day? He'll know Just how great
you think he is when you make him the guest of
honor at a family cookout featuring Texas-styic Beef
Brisket.
Dads from coast to coast will enjoy this manpleasing beef entree served up with Western flair,
while the beef brisket Is naturally less tender, the
National Live Stock and Meat Board has developed a
cooking technique that will enable you to cook this
full-flavored cut on the grill with tender and tasty
results. The brisket is first sealed in a cooking bag,
then wrapped In foil, allowing It to cook leisurely In
moist heat on the grill.

TEXAS—STYLE BEEF BRISKET
4 to 5-pound boneless beef brisket *
1 cup catsup
W cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons prepared mustard
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
V* teaspoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons flour

To accent the beef with robust Western barbecue
flavor, the brisket cooks In the bag with a spicy
tomato coaling. Then as serving time approaches,
more flavor punch is added as the alrcady-tcnder
brisket Is brushed with the easy-to-make barbecue
sauce and briefly broiled over the coals.

Combine catsup, brown sugar, prepared mustard,
Worcestershire sauce, hot pepper sauce and cin­
namon. Combine V4 cup catsup mixture with flour.
Cover and refrigerate remaining sauce. Place brisket
In large cooking bag and brush catsup-flour mixture

...Corn

SO WHY P A Y MORE?

cPride

S H A N K P O R T IO N
S A V E 40° P E R L B

LB

PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., MAY
25 THRU TUE&amp;, MAY 31, 19B3.

B U T T P O R TIO N . *89

BONOS
B O Y

GREAT
GROUND
B E E F P A T T IE

CHUCK
ROAST

SLICED
BACON

M IX

5 LB A V G . PKG.

K N EIPS
OVEN ROAST

BLADE

MARKET STYLE

CORNED BEEF

BRISKET
BAKE OR BOIL

PER P O U N D

3 LB A V G . P K G

$139
LB A

rSm
ji

tSS*

CO M PAR E

CO M PAR E

SAVE

FLASH FROZEN, CELLO

•1“

: U .S.D A CHOICE TYWN PAK

.

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U.8.D-A. CHOICE, BONK M
ila

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W a in w i l i a n O B S l • ui

i U.B.OA. CHOICE. SOME M

I

.

California Steaks is * 1 "

CHECK
THESE

CO M PARE
MR. TURKEY SKMUtSB

Turkey Franks
Turkey Ham

Braadad Shrimp
BEACON UQHT. H EATS SERVE

■ M ia

*1 "

•

-

_____

Fried Fish Cakes as *1**

Lunch Meats

•

*1“

• p*a

69*
PANTRY

Veg. Oil Spread

.

Sliced Bologna

.

.

Floundsr or Craaksra ibI

« . .

*1 "

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MRDORBEEF

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WHOLE ORESSED

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BAM

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B urins.............. ... * 1

SBBF PATTY O R M U T LOAF

a ___

Mraee .m * 1 "

B

V.
T

wr

from heat. Add half and
half and sauteed vegeta­
bles to com mixture, mix
well. Pour Into prepare*)
casserole, set casserole in
pan. pour hot water to It"
depth around casserole.
Bake, uncovered. 1 hour
or hour or until knife
Inserted In center comes
out clea n . S erve hot.
serves 8 to 10.
t

SWBET CORK RELISH
2 V4 quarts, frozen c o m ,
1 cup, chopped gredn
pepper
1 cup chopped sweet red
pepper
1Vi cups onion
1 cup chopped celery
1 small clove garlic
1 cup sugar
1Vi tbsp. mustard seed
1 tbsp. salt
1 tap. celery seed
Vi tsp. tumeric
2% cup cider vinegar
2 cups water
Combine all Ingredients,
simmer for 20 minutes.
Pack into clean pint Jars,
l e av ing 1 " space but
making sure vinegar solu­
tion covers vegetables.
Adjust lids. Process In
boiling water bath (212°)
for 15 min. Remove from
canner and complete seal.
N O T E : If using s e l f ­
sealing. this need ot be
done. Makes 5/6 pts.
P.S. • Can be made from
fresh com. Take about 20
ears o f com, boil for 20
min. Plunge Into cold
w ater and proceed as
above.

Chocolate
Baked
Pudding
A rich chocolate baked
p u d d in g

th e

thing to eet before guests
at a barbecue.
This version Is filled
with alm on ds, sponge
cake and dates or raisins.

CHOCOLATE PUDDING

_______

Kraft ‘S B ? .......... tfs*1**

n.w .u

• M|

79*

Cottage Cheese . ss *1M

Axelrods

Smoked Seueege as 1

PAN TRY P R ID E

t ie

WHOLE MEK

. . . .

ivi

99

COM PARE

89*

• * na

QENERIC SLICED
ASSORTED VANETK8

SEA HARVEST, EAT ALL

Chuck Steaks . . „ * 1 "

■^ . H f n M

$449

Flounder F IIM s

Lamb Chops . .

SAVE 80° PER LB

OWALTNEYB SLICED

r, TRAY PACK
•: NEW ZEALAND SHOULDER

!1 49

SAVE 60
PER LB

S A V E 40° PER LB

SAVE 40° PER LB

■

(Coat'd From Fago 4Bfc

SMOKED
HAMS

S R 0 1 L-BAKED

Chleken Dinner
WITH
A AANOLL
W IT*HVSO.
! VSO.
A NOLL

.-• r saasss

.

i~

t
t

1 can (4 Vi ounces)
whole blanched almonds
2 eggs
Vi cup sugar
1 cup milk
2 cups day-old cake
(sponge or pound), cut in
cubes
2 ounces semi- sweet
chocolate, grated
Vi cup chopped, pitted
dates, or raisins
Vi
teaspoon ground
cinnamon
Place almonds on bak­
ing sheet; bake In 300degree oven 20 minutes or
until golden. Using an
electric blender, or sharp,
heavy knife, chop nuts
very fine. In medium bowl,
beat together eggs and
sugar; beat in milk. Stir In
almonds, cake, chocolate,
dates or raisins and cin­
namon. Turn into lightly
buttered 1-quart baking
dish. Bake in 350-degree
oven 40 to 50 minutes or
until tip o f knife Inserted
in center comes out clean.
Cool to room temperature.
Serve with ice ci earn or
whipped cream. T h is
kitchen-tested recipe
makes 4 servings.

j

�48— Evtn ln g Kara Id, Santord, FI.

47 By mouth
60 Taka a maal
52 Game
I Spharat
5 Sourcaof
55 Arouilng
matala
68 Wing: Ft.
B Ovar (prefix) SB Famala bird
12 Patrolaum
80 Mira
darivativai
61 Praicribad
13 Baleh
amount
14 Thraa (prafix) 62 Troubla
15
_______
63suit
Pratidant
16 living thing
18 And lo on
(ibbr., la t. 2

Wadnaaday, M ay 25, W 3

T W O WAV S O U C A N
D O B O T H h— ^

BUT l WANT T O LIE
f DOWN POP A PEW
E W ^ V M IN U T E S

7
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V'KNoW, WE REALLY
HAVE A hllCE
T lS H T -K N IT s ZZSj
GROUP HERE
CAMP SWAMPY KTdP

HIS WIFE POES
THE KMITTIMG
AND HE POES
TH E TIS H T ,

lTfe“ TIS H T-K N IT
ALL RIGHT

36 Go to court
37 United
38 Ostricita
3B Brought into
lift

40 Wivti
42 Holt
44 Fill I gun
46 Greek letter
1

2

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(pi)
7 Capa
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(abbr.)

13

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37
41

IT SEEMS TO Mt THAT
TOPW'S YOUTH IS
TOTALLY TELEVISION f ABOUT
'IT, MISS
ORIENTED/

ADJUST THE

...60 I ASKED ONE STUDENT
HOW HE WOULD CORRECT
GARBLE0, INDISTINCT SPEECH
AND HE ANSW ERED- ^

IN MY PRAAM CLASS. I WAS
TRYING TO TEACH M V
STUDENTS TO ENUNCIATE
PROPERLY..
________-

antenna

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HOROSCOPE

GRUNDY/

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YOUR BIRTHDAY
MAY 36.1983
m

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EEK A M EEK

&lt;r&lt;X&gt;WUOUfCRYfcARSmS
COMPLETELY^af-SOFROELTr
IDIDIUTDEEDAJJMDkJEEi5E!

I MAD A WOUD6RFUL
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5ELE..6UTTHAT'SALLOJER..

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SEPARATING!

P R I S C I L L A 'S P O P

LATELY, VCU SEEM
TO KNOW EXACTLV
WHAT PEOPLE NEEE
REVERENP WEEMS

6

*i to
i 3 ■

44
47

3 J * K 3 k »«M
(|bbr»
38 Poverty-war
»8«ney (abbr.)
38 Gambia
41 Infirmities

36

40

T l i
n o *

1 Soli mud
22 Donkty
2 Pe*ce
24 Angry
disturbance 25 Math symbol
3 Cut off access 26 Dim-wined
4 Fast aircraft
parson
(abbr.)
27 Novelist
5 Flutalika
Ferber
instrument 28 March King
« f.1*)0? 1
30 Lonalinasa

12

by A rt Sansom

TH E BORN LO SER

A
1
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wdt)

IB Light maal
20 Agai
21 Sunilowar
atata (abbr.)
23 Caps
26 Rapitti
2B Fend off
33 Disparity
34 Semiprecious

Blood Pressure Up
When Visiting Doc

T

T mA T AM7 th e :

IT MUST CONE FROM
SOME KJNP OF PEEP
SPIRITUAL INSIGHT'

f I CON T KNCW HCNV
SOU KEEPTR A£K O F
EVERYONE'S NEEC75
ANP PROBLEMS.

hom e c o m p u te r

r BOUGHT RECENTLY.

by Stoffal

a

Haim dahl

RABBIT SEASON/ IS A BIT
1 SICK 1E B IN A U S T R A L IA ,
M A T£, TH A N IT 15 IN T H E
U .5 . OP
______

•

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PtP '(°U

I

Agoor RALPH?

I

It's to your advantage to
function as Independently
of others as possible this
coming year. If you must
form an alliance, do so
with great care.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) One-to-one r e la ­
tionships could be a criti­
cal area for you today, so
treat with kid gloves those
you encoutncr. It won't
take much to rock the
Ixwl. Order now: The NEW
Astro-Graph Matchmaker
wheel and booklet which
reveals romantic combina­
tions. compatibilities for
all signs, tells how to get
along with others, find
rising signs, hidden
qualities, plus more. Mail
82 to Astro-Graph, Box
AS®. Radio CU\’ SAaMrm.
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
tional 81 for your Gemini
Astro-Graph predictions
for the year ahead. Be sure
to give your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) Make play out of your
work today, but don't play
and avoid your work. The
former will make things
easier. The latter will
cause you problems.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
T r y nol to be o v e rl y
possessive of persons you
love. They’ll resent It to­
day if you make them feel
they must account to you
for all their actions.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) Unfortunately, others
may not readily go along
with what you want today.
This could cause you to
become unduly angered.
Watch your temper.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) It's not like you to
speak nastily o f someone
behind his or her back, so

don't do so today.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Be prudent In manag­
ing your resources today,
even If those you are with
arc not. It won't take
much lo trigger a spend­
ing spree.

SAG ITTAR IU S (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Even a harm­
less rendezvous could be
seriously misjudged today,
so don't step out of line In
the. romance department.
W alk the straight and
narrow.
C A P R I C O R N (Dec.
22-Jan. 19) Don't play
favorites today where you
do s omet hi ng for one
f r i end and I g no r e
another's request. It could
cost you (he goodwill of
both.

DEAR DR L AMB Please tell me what makes
one's blood pressure go up
when visiting the doctor.
This happens to me each
time I go to the doctor. Is
there anything that can be
done about It? I am over
65 but I don't feel age has
anything to do with It.
This has been happen­
ing Tor the last three or
four years. My blood pre­
ssure Is normal when I
leave home but at the
doctor's office It is high.
When I get home It Is
normal again. I am In good
health otherwise. Thank
God.
DEAR READER - First,
take your blood pressure
device with you to the
d o c t o r 's o f f i c e and
measure your pressure
with It when you have
your pressure checked in
his dfTIce. If you get the
same thing on your In­
strument. you can rule out
a problem with your blood
pressure Instrument.
Some of the Instruments
need adjustment and give
false readings. They are
usually checked against a
mercury column blood
pressure Instrument for
accuracy.
Assuming your
measurements are correct,
you are what we often call
a vascular hypcrreactor.
T h i s Is a l s o c a l l e d
borderline hypertension.
Many of these individuals
never develop persistent
high blood pressure or
problems related to the
labile blood pressure.
What should you do
about It? I could say stay
out o f doctors' offices but
you need your evalua­
tions. The Important thing
Is not to let It become a
problem. When you and
your doctor both know It Is
not your usual blood pre­
ssure level, you can both
relax about It.
Blood pressure can rise
or fall In a reflex manner.
And If you get anxious the
pressure may rise. It Is
Important to distinguish
between true hypertension

EAST
•4
YKI1
♦ QJ 9
♦Qiitrn

Feb. 19) Do not assume
t hat you arc the
spokesman for your peer
group today. Unless you
arc elected by the majori­
ty. your reign will be
short-lived.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Be realistic regarding
what you hope to achieve
today, or you might be
tripped up by your own
limitations. Keep your ob­
jectives within your capa­
bilities.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) Much time and motion
will be lost today If your
lo g is tic s are p oo rly
planned. Set up a sensible
Itinerary that you can
comfortably follow.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Be reasonable regard­
ing the terms and condi­
tions you hope to get today
In y o u r c o m m e r c i a l
dealings. If they're too
harsh, they'll be coun­
terattacked.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer South
W nt Nertk East

Opening lead: 4K

Playing It tafa •
By Oswald Jaeaby
and Jaaaaa Jacaby .
"On a good day. I would
have made s ix ,” com ­
plained South. "E v e r y
card Is placed wrong for
m e."
South had rufTed the
club lead and played one
trump to collect the two
out against him. Then he
led his Jack o f hearts and
let it tide. East took his

W HY 00 GIRLS
ALW AYS S M E LL)
GOOD, ARLENE?

J

-.CWOYLL RMWWETC1H.

I GOTTA \
S&amp; AFBU A {

ABOUTSHIPPING
A LQ A P FflO M ,
V M EXICO ! y

§

■

to

•

•

f A GLASS,
A N P A FIFTH
O F TEQUILA/
v FE LLA ! &gt;

Pete's avoidance play
had taken away East's
chance to gain the lead
early and guaranteed his
game. Shift Ihe ace of
diam onds and king o f
hearts, and Pete would
Just make his game while
the play taken by South
would have brought in 12
tricks, but the contract
was for Just 10.

SOUNDS Kl

tu m b le w e e d s

/

king and quicker than you
c oul d say ' ' E l y
Culbertson” had led his
queen o f diamonds to give
the defense four tricks.
' i would have made the
game.” replied Pessimistic
Pete, who had held the
North cards. " I always
play as safe as possible for
my contract, and this time
I had a cinch.”
Pete's sure-lhlng play
was to let West win the
first club trick. Pete would
discard a heart. rufT the
second club, pick up Ihe
trumps, play the ace and
queen o f hearts. WltH the
king of hearts held by
East. Pete would get lo
d i s c a r d t w o o f hi s
diamonds and make an
overtrick. If West held the
king. Pete would lose to It.
but get to chuck all his
diam onds unless W est
took his diamond ace right
away.

0 F 5 * * 5 in i
TO M E

WCn T RANAAfA*.

(ft**

and actual anxiety situa­
tions.
You didn't say what
your readings were. You
will be Interested In read­
ing about blood pressure
control and what the val­
ues should be for good
health In The Health Let­
ter 15-8. Your Vital Blood
Pressure, which I am sen­
din g you. Others who
want this Issue can send
75 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for It to me, In
care o f this newspaper.
P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
Station. New York. NY
10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Do
vitam ins really prevent
cancer? Does vitamin C In
large doses really prevent
the common cold? I'm
going crazy from people
telling me what you get In
food alone Is not enough. I
take no vitamin pills. I eat
a very balanced diet with
loads o f fresh fruits, fresh
vegetables and Juices. I'm 1
very active and have never
smoked.
Until a few weeks ago I
thought I was a very
healthy person but I'm
b e g i n n i n g to w o n d er.
What would be a good
combination o f vitamins,
minerals and whatever
else for a person to be
healthy?
DEAR READER - Your
diet sounds like it Is pretty
good, although there Is not
enough information to v e r - '
Ify that you are truly on a
balanced diet.
Unless you have a medi­
cal problem, and then you
need a doctor, any o f the
regular all-purpose dally
vitamins, such as Onc-A-Day. Is more than
enough. Most healthy peo­
ple on a balanced diet
won't even need that.

TROUBLE WHEN HE CANT
GET R VIP60 PICTURE FROM
FlOO-M COSELOOSSf
n p r t A E t t for ds / I

�I

TONIGHT'S TV
C4M* CM

Cable Ch.

(D O (ABCI Orlando
(£) O (C1*&gt;Orltndo
(T) O iFlBCI Daytona loach
Orlando

(ED(38)
(t) CD

independent
Orlando

(10) S)

Orlande Public
Iraadcatting Syttem

Independent
Melbourne

In addition to tha channtlt listed, cabltyition tubtcnbtrt may tuna in ta indtsandant channel 44,
SI. Pataribsrg, by toning tt channel tuning ta channal l). which carriat tparft and fht Chriitian
•roedcatling Network (CBN).

I;

Jr- -

'&lt;
%

*■
■

0 ( 1 ) HOUSE CALLS

7:30
0 (3) ENTIRTABMENT T0NKIHT
Aloofcatthnauceottotfourovar40 ectreeuM; AX MacOraw. L M a
Orav, Linda Evana and Joan CoMna.
( D O T i C T AC DOUGH
(X) O FAMILY FEUO
(IT! (SS) BARNEY MILL1A
QP( K&gt;) UNTAMED WOULD
8 (O MARY HARTMAN, MARY
HARTMAN

P riscilla Pointer as Rebecca Wentworth, left,
A u d re y L a n d e rs as Afton Cooper and K en

Kercheval as Cliff Barnes are aw are of J.l
conniving in " D a l l a s " -Friday nights at 9 on C B S

TV: If Face Doesn't Fit, Operate On It
By Kenneth R. Clerk
UPI TV Reporter
NEW YORK (UPI) - When Al
Corley got himself fired last year In
a squabble over his role as Blake
Carrington's homosexual olTsprlng
on the CBS prime time soap cham­
pion "Dynasty." Its producers had a
problem.
How were they going to save the
role o f the bluckshccp son the
ruthless Denver oil baron, portrayed
by John Forsythe, so loves to kick
around If Corley, whose looks were
distinctive, was gone? The answer:
an oil rig explosion, plastic surgery
and Jack Coleman.
That the scenario was not exactly
plausible did not bother Coleman. It
meant, for him. the big move from
daytime to prime time and he was
.willing to make the trip on any
llcket the writers were willing to
kcript for him.
I "How valid docs It need to be?"
fcc said of the "Dynasty" debut he
■ a d e last season, appearing to his
B w audience swathed fromlialrllne

to collarbone in plaster and ban­
dages.
"I don't think anyone Is really
looking for realism In terms of real
life problems. It's Just entertain­
ment. Sometimes It's realistic and
sometimes it's not."
Thus did Corley get his fictional
face burned off when his father's oil
well blew Its top. end thus did
Coleman emerge. In his personna.
from repairs when it was time to
peel off the bandages.
Since Coleman looks more like an
athclctc aspiring to Olympic gold
than an actor who might be
hungering for an Emmy, and since
he bears virtually no physical re­
semblance to Corley, the scenario
was anything but realistic, but the
writers o f "D y n a sty" were not
perturbed.
Attention spans arc short in prime
time. They were confident that
memories of Corley's face would
fade as swiftly as a test pattern once
a new one was presented to the
prime time . audience, and they

apparently were right.
If the transformation was noticed,
audiences did not protest — at least
not at the Nielsen level, which, in
the prime time ratings race. Is all
that counts.
"Dynasty." swiftly renewed by
ABC, finished last season with
enough share points in the bank to
keep It going for a long time, and
Coleman, who came to the show
from the NBC daytime soap opera
"Days of Our Lives." has many
episodes In which to resolve the one
thing that has bothered him about
his character.
It was not easy, he said, to step
Into the role of a homosexual.
"It’s there for prop purposes." he
said of his character's sexual orien­
tation. "It's really almost Impossible
to have a gay story line. You can
talk about it and hint about It and
innuendo, but you can'i really do It.
You Just can't put that on prime
time TV. The standards won't allow

0

8:00

( 9 REAL PEOPLE A Mute to
America* valaran* and aarvtcaman
•aaturaa tha 40th anntvaraary Data­
mation ot tha WAC8. a proNa ot
tha Mghaat-ranking tamaia cadat at
Waal Point, and a noatalgic look at
tha daatroyar U 8.8. Laftay. (R)
(X) 0 MOVIE "Caaia X Son”
(1941) Ltndaay Wagnar. Jamaaon
Parkar. A young woman’a rtaa to
Immanaa waalth and powar la ovar*

(Z) 0
MOVIE
"JtcqiMlIn*
Bouvtor Kannady" (1411) Jadyn
SmHf». Jamas Frandaeu*. Tha Ma ol

Waalam taavxrtogy m a country
rutad by conventional laiamlc codas

naadsd provtatona

0

M0

® THE FACTE OF UFS
(35U M O V * "Sima" (1941)Lonl
Andaraon, John Foraytha. A amaktown girl bacomas a aultry
nightclub star m an attampl to
avanga har tianca's murdar. (R)Q
0 (IE) READY WHEN YOU A M .
tha Amartcan dnama, la proMad.

0 (3) TAXI

9:30

JUn chakangaa aach ol
Ma M o w cabWas to gka 11,000
away to a worthy aoui. .

10:00

0 GD OUMCY

Quincy savaa tha
Ma ol a popular antartainsr who
catenas lira whlla Iraabaalng

ItVosfor as
yoi/canqo.

A lw ays 'O n '
Funny m an D an A ykro yd Is up to his old antics as
guest V J on M T V : M u sic Television tonight from
10 to 11. He joins the list of recording articts,

A dam Ant, D uran Duran, the Stray Cats and
Journey, who have also made guest V J appearances on the first 24-hour video m usic channel.

Crime Victims Get More Help I
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - The U.S.
criminal Justice system is beginning to

resulted In a criminal going to Jail or
prison, said the report, prepared by
SEARCH Group Inc. o f Sacramento.
Calif., as part o f a $240,000 grant.

FAM II
C D E

To get cooperation o f victims and
witnesses, criminal Justice agencies in­
creasingly "are sensitive to the need of
victims for information, notification,
compensation, participation, and simple
understanding." Schlcsinger said.
Hundreds o f local victim assistance
programs organised by community,
church, service and national lobbying
groups and bar associations also have
sprung up across the country, the report
said.
It said at least 38 states have enacted
legislation providing for compensation or
victims o f violent crimes under specified
circumstances, with payments made
from state-administered funds.

movement." Schlcsinger said.
Some 12 states have programs that
may require offenders to make restitu­
tion to their victims, and several stales
have passed new laws establishing
victim rights and providing victim and
witness services, the report said. But It
concluded more needs to br done.

Payment does not depend on the arrest
and conviction o f the offender, and
coverage usually extends to both victims
and their dependents.

Although an American is murdered
every 23 minutes, a woman raped every
sift minutes and two people shot,
stabbed or seriously beaten every Ins­
tant. only 9 percent o f th ; crimes
reported to police In four major states

• Most o f the statutes condition eligibili­
ty on the victim’s having reported the
crime to the police, and some also
require that the victim have cooperated
in the investigation and prosecution o f
the case.

3 piece* of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cote slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits

PRODUCE

�U - E v n i i f H w iId , Sanford, FI.

W odfiggday, M a y U , 1913

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando • Winter Pork

322-2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
SA T U R D A Y 9 - Noon

631-9993
RATES
lt im * ....................... Me • lint
3 consecutivetimti. M e t lint
7 com tcvtlvt tlm ts.. 44c t lint
lOconstcutlvttlmM 43c t lint
13.00 Minimum
3 Lints Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
Monday -5:30 P.M. Friday

21— Personals
LONELY?
14Hr. Recorded Menage
I 111 If ] 0011

23— Lost &amp; Found
Loll In Country Club oraa Slam*M
Cat mate, long hair, pink collar.
Children heerferoken 371044?
LOST Men’* Snake Ring In
Bahama Jo*'!. Sunday night
Sm . Reward. 404 343 0441.
Loit imall brown temala dog. 11
w**ki old Pomtranlan. Aniwtri
lo Print*!!. Vln. Cryital Lake
Park, Lake Mary. Large reward.
I ll 3401.______________________
Rtward Lost temala Engllih
Bulldog. White wllh brlndla
tpoti. Monday. Wait ol Santord
near I 4.3120142.

UCF Library Seeks Special
Books, Other Donations
o f books, classical music
tapes and records, art
portfolios, canvas prints
and government docu­
ments.
Dr. Gwathmey was an
oplhamologlsl who died in
1982. His family saw UCK
as a u s e f u l and
appreciative recipient of
his v ar ie d c o l l e c t i o n ,
which Includes a book
autographed by President

Wondering what to do
with those old books and
phonograph records gath­
ering dust In the attic?
There is an alternative to
the Ilea market, or worse.
The UCF Foundation
welcomes gifts on behalf of
the university library. Of
special Interest are’ rare
and out-of-print books.
Phon orgaph records,
music tapes, catalogs and
magazines arc examples of
other Items sought.
Florence Glazier, who’s
been with the gifts and
exchanges department of
the UCF library for five
years, notes the gifts arc a
way for the library to
obtain valuable material
not otherwise available.
When a gift Is received.

Legal Notice

G Y a z ie r say's. " H e scre e n
th e b o o k s to see irb a r we '

WASHINGTON 1UPI) American children know
less about sex than their
p e e r s in t h r e e g t h e r
countries, a study by two
A u s tria n educators say?.
’ ’America has got the
worst statistics of the lot."
said Ronald Goldman, a
psychologist ’ who leaches
at La Trobe University In
Melbourne.

Legal Notice

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
E IG H T E E N T H JU O IC IA L
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
PROBATE DIVISION
CASE NUMBER: U 217-CP
IN RE: THE ESTATE OF
PEARLHOWINGTON.
Dtcraud
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO A LL PERSONS H A V IN G

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIG HTEEN TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO. S31111- CA*f L
F E D E R A L N A T I O N A L
M O R TG A G E A SSO CIA TIO N , a
corporation organised and existing
under lit* law* ol th* United Slates.
Plaintiff,
v*
ROYAL D E L T A PR O P ER TIES.

t h e ABOVE ESTATE a n d a l l
OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED
IN THE ESTATE
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that th* administration of tt*« Estate
o! PEARL HOWiNGTON. Deceased.
Flit Number 11117 CP It pending In
Ihe Circuit Court for Seminole
County, Florida. Probate Dlvltion
the addrett ol which It Probata
Court. Eighteenth Judicial Circuit,
Seminole County Courthoute, San
lord. Florida 11771. The Pertonal
Repretenlatlve ol Ihe Ettate it:
HERBERT R. SWOFFORD. t ill
Eattin Avenue. Orlando. Orange
County. Florida HUM. The name and
addratt ol the Pertonal Repre
tentative and hit Attorney are one

R IC H A R D C JO N E S A N D
PATRICIAJ. JONES, hli wile.
Defendant!.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
RICHAR DO. JONES
PATRICIAJ. JONES
ADDRESS: UNKNOWN
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
ANDRESIDENCE:
I12J Roiboro Road
Longwood. Florid* J17J0
YOU ARE HEREBY nolilled that
* Complaint to Ioreelote a mortgage
encumbering lh* following r*al

can use. After that ue
s e n d s o m e to o t h e r
libraries, and what’s left
over Is sold.*' The proceeds
arc added to the UCF
Foun dation ’ s library
enrichment fund.
A collection recently re­
ceived from the estate of
Dr. G. Taylor Gwathmey.
a long-time resident of
Winter Park, was the “ first
really diverse collection we
had r e c e i v e d . ” s a y s
All persen* having claims or be
Glazier.
mend* against the Estate am re
The Gwathmey collec­ qulred.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS
tion. reflecting a wide FROM THE DATE OF TH E FIRST
range of Interests, consists PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE,

U.S. Kids
Ignorant
About Se x ?

Reagan.
Those who wish to donale similar glfls, which
are tux deductable, arc
encouraged lo bring or
mall them to the UCF
library, where they will be
acknowledged In writing.
For more information.
I&gt;crsons may call the gift
and exchange section of
the UCF library at (305)
275-2521.

to III* with the Cl*rk of th* above
Court • written statement ol any
cloim or dtmand trwy m*y have
Eoch claim mull b* In wrlllng and
inuil Indicate th* b*»li tor th* clolni.
th* n«m* and address ol th* creditor
or hi! *g*nt or At'amey, and th*
•mount cUlm*d. It th* ctelm li not
y*t rtu*. th* itete wh*n It will b*com«
du* than b* stated If th* ctelm li
contingent or unliquidated, th*
nature ol th* unrertalnty shall bt
itated. It fh* ctelm li th* secured,
th* MCurity thill b* d*tcrlb*d Th*
claimant .nail da'ivar tulflctent
coptel of th* ctelm to th* Cterk to
enable iha Cterk to mall on* copy to
» i u i Pertonal Representative
All ptrtont Interfiled in It* Ettate
la whom a copy o» thli Nolle* at
Admlnlitration hat baan malted art
r e q u ir e d . W I T H I N T H R E E
MONTHS FROM TH E DATE OF
TH E FIR ST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to Ilia any objacllont
th*y may hav* that challenge th*
validity Of th* Decadent'! Will, th*
qualification! ut th* P*rtonal Repre
centallv*. or th* v«nu* or lurlsdlc
tfonof th* Court
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILEO WILL
BE FOREVERBARREO
Date ot iha flrtl publication ol thfe
Notke ol Admlnlitration: May IS.
ItC
HERBERT R. SWOFFORD

The Goldmans blamed
inadequate education and
adult Inhibitions.
He and his wife. Juliet, a
sociologist who used Ip
teach grade school, said
A* Personal Representative 3
Tuesday the results were
disturbing because Arnett \ (lira Ettate ot
P fA R L HOWINGTON,
can children are dating
and have sex at earlier
ERT R. SWO* FORD. P A.
andPortonai
ages than ever. Goldman
■aid the average age for
f i r s t I n t e r c o u r s e is
approaching IS.
Tt

The Swedish children Publlto May
were by for the best In­ DCM tar
formed. For more than 20
years, sex education has
been compulsory for all
children aged 8 and older.
The Goldmans said In the
other three countries sex
education comes In high
school o r late in secondary
tehool.

Lot 4. Hidden Lake Phat* 11. Unit
I. According to th* Plat Ihereof at
recorded in Plal Book 14. p*g*t 15-17
Public Rtcordi ol Sominote County,
Florida.
hat been tlted agalmt you and you
or* required to serve o copy ol your
written dotenm. It any, to It on
JOHN M MCCORMICK, Attorney
for Plaintiff, whole addrett li Pott
Otllc* Bo* M13. SOI Eatt Church
Slre*l, Orlando. Florida 33S01, and
III* th* original with th* Clark of th*
abovestyled Court on or bttoro Juno
II. IfU : olherwli* a default may bo
entered agaimt you tor rtllal da
mendad in Iha Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and tool of
told Court on May IS, IN I.
ISEALI
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clark ol th# Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By: EvaCrabtraa
Deputy Cterk
Pwbilth May il. M 4 June r, (, IN )
DEH IIS

N*w Ollica now opening
VORWERK
m o w . lit st.

3 3 -R e a l Estate
Courses

INVITATION TO BID
The Homing Authority of th* City
ol Santord, Florida will receive Bldi
for Eitarlor Painting al William
Clark Court, Santord. Florida. Fla.
14 2, until 1:00 P.M., on tha lit Oey Ol
Juna IH l. al tha Authority'! admlniitrallon office! Caitla Brewer
Court W. 10thSt.. Santord, FI.:
Proposed form! ol Contract Doc
um anti. Including Plans and
Specification!, art on file at Iha
Ofllca of the Homing Authority ol th*
City ol Santord. Florida, Admlnlilration Building, Cailla Brewer
Court, Santord. Florida and Iha
Oflica of tha Architect*'. Gulmann
Aiioclatei Architect! Planner* Inc.,
101 Wymora Road. Suita It. Alla
monte Spring*. Florida.
Copla* of tha Docum ent*.
Drawing* and Specification* may be
obtained by depoiltlng N/A with the
Archllact lor each let ot Document!
to obtained. Such depot It will be
refunded lo each person who ralurnt
the Plant, Specification*, and other
Document* In good condition within
today* alter Bid Opening.
A certified Check or Bank Draft,
payable lo tha Houtlng Authority ol
tha City of Sanford. Florida. U.S.
Government Bends, or a satisfactory
Bid Bond executed by tha Blddart
and acceptable Sureties In an
•mount equal to S\ ol tha Bid shall
be submitted wllh each Bid.
Tha tuccatslul Bidder will ba
required to furnish and pay for
Satisfactory Performance and
Payment Bond or Bond*.
All bidders are hereby notified
that they must alllrmatlvaly ensure
that In any Contract entered Into
Pursuant lo this Advertisement, mi­
nority Business Enterprises will ba
•Horded full opportunity to submit
Bids as Sub Contractors, or at tup
gUere n&lt; msteriMv nr vtrskwv t M
will not be discriminated against on
Iha grounds of raca. color, religion,
tee or national origin In contld
•ration lor award.
In accordance with Executive
Order 11433, Minority Contractor
Goals Program, all Blddart will be
afforded lull opportunity to submit
Bids In response to this Invitation
and will not be discriminated against
on tha grounds of raca. color,
religion, sax or national origin in
consideration for award.
This project Is subject to th*
Requirements ol Section 3. ol th*
Houtlng and Urban Development Act
of IN I. All Bidders will be required
to comply with an Affirmative Action
Plan to provide opportunity to lower
Income residents ol th* project area
tor Training and E mployment.
Th* Houtlng Authority at to* City
of Sanford. Florida reserves to* right
lo reject any or all Bids or to waive
any informal!!tel In th* Bidding.
No Bid shall be withdrawn tor a
period ol X Days subsequent to the
opening ol Bids without too consent
ot the Housing Authority ol Ihe City
ot Sanford, Florid*
THE HOUSING AUTHORITY
OF THE C ITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Elliott Smith
Executive Director
Publish May U . 15. IN3
DEH 131_______________________

agaimt you tor tot r«IM &lt;
in tho Ptflfloi
DONE AND OROEBED tote Wrd
' ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
CM
of tha O r evil Court
By: Currte E. Buattnar
OomlyCarti

satisfy to* terms al sal*
Executten.
John E. Polk.
Sheriff
laminate Ceunty. F terid*
Publish May If. If. A June 1.1. with

Petitioner/Wile,
and
LEEW CUR RY
Raipondant/Huiband
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO.
La# Curry
P O Bo, 444 .
Old Otcacte Road
Geneve. F t
You art hereby notified that a
Petition lor DissoMion ol marriage
hat baan Iliad agaimt you in Iha
Court litJad abava and you art
required to aarva a copy of
miwor or pleading to Hi* Petition an
lh* Ptflllangr'a attorney. THOMAS
C. GREEN E. PO. Baa MS. I l l W. tot
« . II*. 4®. Sanlord. Florida 8771,
and III* the original amwar or
pleading In to* atflca el to* Clark ot
to* above Circuit Court, SamMote
County Caurtoouaa. Senior*. Florida
u n i . an m bator* to* Nto day of
Jum. i n j If you toil to do to.
Judgment by default will be taken

tH Ml

O EM ®

31— Private
Instructions
• * • *311 3131* • • a
For Swimming Information.
Jsckit Caolo

NOTICE
OF SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
by virtu* ol that certain Writ of
Execution Issued out ol and under
the sail ol too Circuit Court ot
Sominote County, Florid*, upon a
linal judgement rendered In th*
aforesaid court on too 2nd day ol
October. A O . If®. in that certain
case entitled. Creditorltl of America.
Inc., Plalnlill. vs- Randolph Max
wall. Jr. and Victoria Maxwell.
Defendant, which aforesaid Writ ot
Execution wot delivered to mo as
Sheriff el Sominote County, Florida,
and I hav* levied upon to* toilowing
desrlbod property owned by Randoiph A. Maxwell, Jr., said property
being located In Sominote County.
Florida, more particularly described
as lot low:
All toe right. Hite and interest In
and to th* following daw
party belonging to to* datondants.
Randolph Maxwell, Jr. and Victoria
Maxwell, to wll Lai it, Teo'n Green
Estates, according to tot plat tharaol
as racardtd In Plal Baak u . Fag* 43.
Public Racards ol Sominote County,
Florida, til Bunfcar Lana, Santord.
Fterlda.m il.
and to* undsrslgnad a* iharltf *1
SamMal* County. Florida, will at
IL ® A M . an toa Mh day al June,
A.D 1N3. oHer tor sate W aall to
toa highest Mddar. N r cash, subject
to any and all existing liana, al tot
Freni IPtest) Dear *1 toa atop* *1 toa
laminate County Courthoute to San­
ford. Florida, tha abava a
REAL Properly

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA
CASE NO. S3-I133CA
IN R E : Tha Marriage ol
ELAYNECURRV.

Child Car* In my home.
Dally and weekly rates
_________ Call 3310331._________
Reasonable Rates!II. Will keep
your Child In my home, Irom
M F.«:0B 1PM. 111 *427._______
.
THE HAPPY ELVES
Quality child car* and pro school.
Individual attention. TLC .
Unique Infant rooms. State
licensed. 110 E. Crystal Lake
Avs. Lake Mary 31111S4._______
Will babysit children In my home
ages inlanl to 4yr*. Call before
7PM1211031
__________

25— Special Notices

Legal Notice
Florence Glazier has the enviable |ob of cataloging contributions to the
U C F library, such as the Gwathmey collection shown here.

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care

~ I ’J B

B

KEYES LICENSE EMM SCHOOL
Neit I week evening classes for
Real Estate License will begin
June 4, IM3. For tuition reim­
bursement Informalllon call
MlldredS. Wanq 313 1200.
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS.
CBS AUTO PARTS. It ] 4303.

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I am
engaged in businets at 401 Hunt Club
Blvd.. Apopka. Fla. 11703, Seminole
County, Florida undtr th* fictitious
name of FAMILY HARDWARE, and
that I Intend to register said name
with Cterk ol lh* Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In ac­
cordance wllh the provisions ot th*
Fictitious Name Statutes. ToWIt:
Section 145 0* Florid* Statute* 1437.
/i/John E. Norfleet
Publish May 4.11. 11,13,1403.
DEH 13
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 1*44 Bonania
CL. Winter Park, FL 11741. Seminote
County, Florida under tha fictitious
name ot SUN ‘N FUN. and that I
Intend torogttto* told M int With toa
Cterk of Ihe Circuit Court, Sominote
County, Florida In accordance with
tho provisions of toa Fictitious Nam*
Statutes, To-Wlls Section 143.04
Florida Statutes 1437.
/t/ChertetJ. Coyno
Publish May II, IS and Juna I, a.
IN I.
DEH-1U

BEER A WINE PUB
Low down payment, pool tables
and garnet plus band itand and
danca floor. Busy shopping
Center. (30.000.
PUB A RESTAURANT
Includes property. Large free
standing building on I A lte
acres. Living quarters A room
tor expansion. Owner financing

1110.000

Gp

71-H#lpW anttd

71-Help Wanted

55— Business
Opportunities

CRUISE SHIP J O » 7
Great Income potential. All oc­
cupations. For Information call:
t ill! 741 4710 Ext. MX._________
DAYCARE Immtdlate openings,
lull A part time available, good
starting pay. 417-4044,__________
FACTORY WORKERS Immediate
oponlgs. high wag*s. Some will
train. Call 41* 4044.____________
..... FAST FOOD OPERATION
Will train. Excellent salary and
benefits. For Intormatllon Call
3131444. between I S.

i'l 1 . I l k

For Sate or Loos*. Restaurant fully
•quipped. Seats 100. Prim* loci
lion. In Santord. 83 5434.
Immediate Occupancy.

57-Opportunlties
Wanted

Full time Plumber experienced
only, porterred licensed. Call
M l 4444
_______________
General Oftlc* tor Furniture Store
Experience preferred.
___________ 3111311.___________
Grounds Keeper needad Immedi­
ately applications at *00 N.
Forest Blvd. Lake Mary. Monday
thru Friday Irom I AM to 1 PM.

53— Mortgages Bought
A Sold
We PAY cash lor lit A 2nd
mortgages. Ray Lagg, Lie.
Mortgage Broker Ttt 1344.

71— Help Wanted

CORRESPONDENT living In tha
Winter Springs-South Seminal*
area to write a weekly column
tor Th* Htrald tram your homo
about peopte in your community.
Applicants must hav* a type­
writer, be a good spelter, and
hava a (lair tor wrlllng and an
aye tor news. Call Doris Dietrich
alter 1 PM. dally. 8 M S II.
HOUSEKEEPER lor Apartment
complex, must be dependable,
and hard working, apply In
person. I to 3 PM. M F.
_________1303 W. 13th St.
Immediate openings tor sewing
machine operators and in­
spectors 12MHO or Apply in
person I X Power Court.

• LA N D S C A P E R *

GAS ATTEN D A N T . Good salary,
hospllalltallon. I week paid
vacation every 4 months. For
information. Call 1211443 be
tween 1 3 PM._________________
APPT.SETTER S
Aggressive, good phone voice,
bubbly personality. We will train
Salary plus commission. Need
several Immadiataly. Call
JoAnn. 321 7774._______________
AUTO MECHANICS Full time,
high wages, with or without tools
O K. 414 4044._________________
Body Man minimum 3 years tip*
rfence, Immediate openingDeLand Area. Day 404 7X 0141.
nlghls303 374 1777.____________
Bookkeeper/Secretary Part lima,
t parson elllca, experienced,
reference*. Call 83 44M._______
Boys A Girls Ages |j l| Earn extra
WWW this summer Call i l l *6M
ask tor Priscilla.______________
CASHIERS A CLERKS Full A part
lima openings, good pay scales,
no experience neccessery
___________ 474 4044.___________

NEW HOME SALESMAN
Need Immedately In Deltona. Work
Irom Modal Homo, directly for
builder. Direct knowledge and
experience ol FHA financing
required. Liberal commissions
(draw possible). Phone 404 7X
0l33orXS374 3***a*h lor Mr. C.OFFICE HELP Several positions,
full A part time openings avail,
able now. Will fully train. 414
4044._________________________
OFFICE HELP Full time, many
openings, good starting pay. Call
Immediately *14-4044,_________ i
Y
Office HtIp Immediate openings,
notxpartenco will train.
___________ 433 304*.___________ _

• O F F IC E *
Train on CRT bright future-light
otflca skill* wins.

H E LP W A N TE D

BUSINESS W ANTED By private
Party. Any small business con
tlderad. Will pay up to X K
Down. Good terms, on balance.
Writ* Pott Office Box 111 Senlord Fla/ 31771 P ill. All Inquires
will bo answered.

NEEDEXTRACASH?
Companies need peopla to star!
Immediately. 1X0 per waek plus
possible. For Into call 311*315137 ext H1144.________________

Will train! Sod. plants, sprinkler
systems. Permanent raises
AAA EMPLOYMENT
1417 FRENCH AVE.
1113174
MAN IN 40 *
To help clean upstair* porch
___________ 311-0414.___________
Management Training Rewarding
entry level position In consumer
finance. We are looking lor
career minded individuals who
are ambitious and en|oy working
with peopte. GFC oilers on the
|0b training, security, challenge
and good employe* benefits.
General Finance Cor portion 1471
Orlando Drive Fairway Plata
Santord 31771. EOE/AA________
Need extra Income. W* need you
Call lor complete details.
___________ 1171143___________
NEEO EXTRA INCOMET
W HYNOTSELLAVONI
133 0434 131 103S

AAA EMPLOYMENT
f
I417FRENCH AVE.
111-1174
Older women lo live in. Room end
board Irte In axchange lor look'
Ing alter 4 to I children live days
a weak Weekend* free. Lake
Mary area 313 0111____________
Part Time. Women and Men. Work
trom horn* on laltphorw pro
gram. Earn 113. to 1100 par
week.depending on lime avail
abla. 177 3304_________________
Pari Time. Night* and weekends'
Attendant. Alert. Intelligent Indi­
vidual needed to look alter
amusement center In lh* Santord
Plata. Must ba neat In appear
anca, mature, bondabla, and
hava mechanical abillly. Phone
tor appointment 311-4403._______
Part Time. Turn your Interest In.
N a e d le c ra ll Into m oney.
Excillenl earnings, set your own
h ou rs M a n a g e m e n t op
portunllla* available Cell
Carolyn 111 0171 alter 1.________ .
PERSONNEL UNLIM ITED has
many |obs available.
Both temporary and lull lime
Call today 311 3444_______
RETIRED CABINET MAKER
To do small repairs on Antique
Stool 122 0414.

* TELEPHONE*
★ SOLICITORS ★
Hourly Wage + Bonus
C A LL 322-2411
C IR C U LA TIO N D E P T
E V E N IN G H E R A LD

• C L E R IC A L *
Will train work with |ob costs. Lika
Irguras? This ones lor you I
AAA EMPLOYMENT
1417 FRENCH AVE.
111-1174
Companion lo car* lor elderly lady.
Live In preferred, room A board.
salary.Ask forTlm47ll43S
COVER GIRL MODEL TYPES
(Over III No Experience Neces
sary. FREE TRAINING - Call
Diana Hansen at (214) 143 2000 or
Write: COVER GIRLS. NAKED
CITY , Box X ® . ROSE LAWN,
IN 441710301,________________

• D E L IV E R Y *
Pari lima days, use company car.
Will train. Pertocl lor ratfrad
person!

AAA EMPLOYMENT
111IF BENCH AVE.
3311174

1*00 West First llrtel - Santord, Flarida 11771 - (X t ) 111*134

NO W L I A I I N f
MON.-FRI.
9:00-4:00

SAT.
10:00-5:00

SUN.
12:00-5:00

£&gt; SOMK PLACKS N A V I
- A H THff PWNt......
N tw 1 and 2 bdrm. apts.
Available Far Immadfata Occupancy
CbMww 0/kM® itt. to IBs U*k Ttoto. BmomM L NAqM,
TreA. lotooliA tdtttotoq Swl kawtow 4 Res

CONSULT OUR

m

im s s sbihceusnin
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
List Your Business...
322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions A
Remodeling
ALLTYPESCARPENTRY
Custom Bulll additions. Polios,
screen rooms, carport. Door
locks, paneling, shingles, re
roofing For test service, call

1214417,1411131._____________
BATHS, kllchans. rooting, block,
concrete, windows, odd a room.
Fret estimates. M l 4443________

I ermMIbi SoedilM
Wa handle Tha
Whole Ballot Wax

LLIM C brsL
522-7125

^n a n cto j^
I Available

Appliance Repair

T u IiS u T

APPLIANCE ISaviCE
Wa tarvka all ma|or brands. Reas.

Cleaning Service

Home Repairs

PAR MAID SERVICES
Haw you had your homo cleaned
la la ly T Cleaning w llh lh*
portenel touch. X7-0I1J 4714111

PORCHES, bathroom floors, rotten
wood replocomonl, oil small jobs
welcoma. n iO U l.

Electrical

Landscaping

Quality I toctrkal lorvlct
Fans, tlmors. security lilts, addl
lions, now tarvlcot. Insured.
Master Electrician Jamas Paul.
H I 7334.

A J LANDSCAPING.
Complete Lawn Maintenance
____________311 4341_________ __
LANDSCAPING!
Shrubs, gsnsral ornamentals,
shad* tree*. Top quality plants.
Free dal. *44 3*75. Ews. Wkndt

Fance
FENcFTnttoiteilor^Chaln
stood post A roll. A farm
License A Insured, room.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JU N K CARS AND TRUCKS.
CBS AUTO PARTS. 1*143®.

Health A Beauty
Automotive
^T&amp;UmoinUoiiSiSniupa!^*
Auto Sound Canter
11® French A w .

TOWER S BEAU TY SALON
FO RM ERLY Harriott's Boouty
Nook. * I»E . lit SI. 1211741

Homo Improvement
Boarding A Grooming
^^^E E w lT E rR im r™ ""

Dog grooming, small Breads ®.
Frea pick up. dot. Longwood
orea.7dor*«3M«3.

nnnE55SB5nBrv5Tr?i
•Herd a full time baton spirt
Than call w .

Computer or fund. Pldt up S
doHwry.Aft.4PM.ailMr____
O.B.F.S. Inc. ;®g French Incur

Carpentry
C A tp iN T IR repairs and"“

addition*. ®ynar»oap.

CnHBTU®

All Homo Improvements. Addi­
t io n s . c o n v e rs io n s , and
fireplaces. MF41S4.____________

Carpentry by "BILL"
W O O D A r t e s i a n Gon o r ol
carpentry, screened room-doors
etc. Rooe. Rates. 327MX.
COLLIER'S NOME a iP A tB S

Lawn Service
HiTDIrt!"Bat^*n!or^2^r
toad. Geneva u s par load (I yard
toads) thsapsr rates for larger
truck loads. 34*50*0 or 3434031.

Masonry
Ai^rick^Sock^n^stonoswrtr
D r i v e w a y s , p a t io s , and
fireplaces 3X 4)*4.
BEAL Concrete 1 man qualify
operation. Polios, driveways.
Days 131-1233 E w s.M M M I.
SW IPT C O N C R E TE . Footers,
driveways, pads, floors, pools.
Chaff. Sion*. Fro* Esf/323 710)

coaliwncownucn
oa
4

____________m a i n

ROOM additions, romodollng
dnrwoll hung coiling* sprayed.
fireplaces, rootingm m t

ASBROOFING

11 yrs. experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Free Estimates on Roofing,
R* Rooting and Repairs.
Shingles. Bull! Up and Til*.
'

JAMESANDCKS0N
CT. BOHANNON
____

322-9417

C A O LEAK REPAIR. Repairs all
type* of roof leaks. Replaces all
rotten wood. N yrs. siportenc*.
All work guaranteed tor I war.
33*40*7.
Does Your Old Or Naw Root Leak f
If If does, call Oavld Lao.
313*433
Morrison Roofing Co.
Spaclallilng In shingles and
build up. Low, Low Rates. 24 hr.
sorvlcs. 7® 1371.__________ .
Roof Maintenance
Repair work New work
Troy or Georg# lor F rw Est.
X3 345 1440

Sewing
Nursing Care
^ T O H R T l s ARE LOWER
Lakevlew Nursing Center

*&gt;* E. Second St., Santord
184707

repair, nt-asa
No I®
small. Minor
major
repairs. Uconsod A bonded.

Roofing

Painting
(nteeB^rTxkwto^Rtoltog^rel
estimate* Reasonable lasfxs
or 14*44M

ORAPESBYOEBBIE

Reasonable rate*
___________ 331 3740
E X P E R T dressmaking, alter•lions Aslan Claanors. JU4 Hwy.
17 *2, Lakt Mary Blvd.
M l.

Sprinklers/Irrigation .

�•f

5Ept2C

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Tractor Trailer Driver for local
. pick up work. Minimum ot I yr*.
taper lance with good driving
record. Some Dock work requlred. Call Sian Shaw B24U1

for appointment,

Wt

I ^ HUNT W WRPSt NJTrtlNd
V Y W HAVE HAfTTLNEP

Defeary Auto A Marine Salts
aertaa the river ftp at Mil ire

» t W J ~ H A K * K A fF '- s . i M/kV

p

m t W W iB N f t m a w r

hoy 1741
71 Thunderblrd.. Leaded, wire

r-^V e*0M N,THAT ALL CATi

Interprieee, Inc.

'/ V

Winter Springe 4 reams, appl., rec.

IM W rCfCH wl

W 0ULP WEAR B ELL*

today «t-40fa.
SR M W M M fTFx

_garege, good locallen. 01071.
J Bdrm. Spaclout home. Fenced In

M d S jw jtM ilg lijti

Mt-ltecrMttwial
AAA IM F L O Y M tN T
t*17FRINCHAVE.
» }I 1 M
W f N I I D ASSOCIATKS. Full or
pert lime. Contact RKC En-

W O R K FIN D ER S INC.
IN O IV ID U A U I ED TERMS

m il....................tests
Just because we haven't advertised
e |ob you’re looking lor, doesn't
moon we don't have It.
COME 1N AND ASK USt 11

3411 French Ave;
(InSoblksBIdg.)
____________M l-IJU ___________
CONVENIENCE Store Ceshlort.
Good celery, hospltellialion, I
week paid vacation ovary s
months. For Into call Manager

J Bdrm. heme, quiet In Country,
«S0 Mo. References required.
Call Kastner, MMiat.

1M— DuplexTriplex / Rtnt
Available now elegant A spacious
duplexes with large screen
porches, storage rooms A
corporis. Fully equipped. SMO to
IMP Call tor details. Century it
June Pen la Realty MASTS.
Lake Mery l bdrm, kids, full kltch
an, carpal tits. Foe MSTwu
Sav-Chi-Rentals, Inc. Reatter
1 Bdrm. 1 Bath duplex. Cent. HA.
carpeted, carport, all appliances.
Washer/dryer hook-up. USO
Month. Ott-HB.___________
1 Bdrm. Its bath. Sanford, Laka
Mary area, Includes air condi­
tion, all appliances, washer,

91— Apartments/
House to Share
COUNTRY Horn# to shore, non
smokers, references, (ISO plus W
Util. 101AM 4014__________

Call: Evelyn 374 4377 or RKC
Enterprises, Inc.l741*0*.
Sandiowood Villas 1 bdrm 2 bath
condo washer/dryer. dishwash
ar, no petsUTOm set) U 1-4047.
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLECOUNTY

Want to Rent. EH., hit., bed. bath.
1 females 44 A 17, t yr. old cal.
m r t v i i-i p m weekdays.

________cell in-ms.

Cash for good usod furniture.
Lorry's New A Used Furniture
Mart. 113 Sanlord Ave. M l 4111
COLOR TELEVISION
Zenith IS" color TV In walnut
console. Original price over 1730.
Balance due tits cash or pay­
ments Stt month. NO MONEY
DOWN. Still in warranty. Call
O tls m day or nlte. Free home
trail, no oblloellon. _________
Contemporary oak 7 draw dresser
end student desk S17S for both
1114414.
Kan more parts, sarv lea,
usad washers. m-OStl
MOONEY APPLIANCES
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
111 U S E. FIRST ST.
m M il

Two Cars. Plymouth Votoro wagon
77, very good shape, no rust, 17
miles per gallon , air, now
redials, cassette Ford Thun

UOW W

■ M R V Loaded * 5 2 9 5
n m t n s n ________

Sreroof A Air

PUBLIC

N O TIC E

lk v iiM r

M. Boll Jr. PA. Realtor. 1114m.
HO M I WITH INCOME
Largo modem 1 Br family homo
with CH1A. eat-in kitchen, fami­
ly room overs!tod garage. Plus 1
fully equipped groenhouses going

BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED 1
bdrm I both homo on largo
lO O'xlSO ’ oak shodod lot
w/flroplaca. formal dining rm„
wall to wall carpet, now root and
a a tu m a b le n o -q u o llly in g
mortgage! Only S17.300.

M vm cKSPr. * 2 3 9 5

117— Sporting Goods

CALL MR. LEE

Indoor Gun Range Tuts Set. to*
Sunday 14 Shoofitroight Apopka
Plata t eat (*4i

BOB DANCE DODGE

FAWBMWnf, 2 Dr.

SWIM PLAY TENNIS AND RE­
LAX ot Sonora community end
Club howto In this fantastic 4
bdrm 1 bath spill plan homo with
commending brick fireplace,
broety scroonod porch, sprinkler
system, citrus trass, easy
assumption! Only 173400.

O N I OF A KINDI Gorgeous a*atu
five 1 story 1 bdrm l.j both homo
in mint condition. Hugo panelled
family rm., beamed ceilings!
Detected csbama whto, m .
bar and bath tor ontorloinlngt
Over W acre lush A spaclout
landscaping I "He-qualifying"
111.100down M U Mo. Principle A
Interest 11% APR Only SM.000.

LOTS OF CHARM older 3 Bdm. 1
bath 2 story home, with a brick
fireplace, dining room, family
room, sitting rucm, 1-t cerege
apartment, new root, end
fenced! Just 144,000.

322*2420
1041OREENWOOD AVE S4t,tot. 1
Bedroom. 2 bath, Florida room,
large landscaped comer lot. All
appliances, drapes, w/w carpet
Ing. Call Tom Gineo. 5741171. Or
RKC Enterprises, Inc. 374-1401.

551—Investment
Property/Salt
GOOD INVESTMENT RENTAL
PROPERTY, 2/3, screen porch,
ranted. Asking SI 1.100, 1440
Toledo Dr.. Owner will help with
flnencing.Cell Evelyn 374-1401 or
RKC Enterprises. Inc._________

153— Lots-Acreage/Sale

/ Famine* welcome.
(ton. thru Set. f AM tel PM.
3103W. 13th St.__________ :

B b UKm

C d tttp
cory hrtpiece ) bdrm 1 huge
both, wooden docks, screen
porch country kitchen, easy
assumption with no qualifying.
Groat location. Price tet.tOO
SHADY OARS Surround this CB 1
bdrm homo on gorgeous tot and
good location. Easy assumption
and no qua IIlying i Why rant
whan you can own 1Only 141,NO.

Racquotboll and Mora I
Sanford Landing S R. 4* MUMP.

KISH R IA L tS T A T C
M B FRENCH AVE.
REALTOR
B14*41
POOL F U N N ED
1 Er* l both split plan Sam. rm.,
format LB A OR. screened patio.
Large intldi utility-OMAN
N ICB IN EA TI ALMOST NEWI
M R . 1 bath, garage, ghah carpet,
custom drapes, good closet
spare, Law metatononce, alumi­
num Marking. 140,NOCOUNTRY
1 Br, 1 bath. Big eat-in kitchen,
sunken LR w/brick flrapiare,
deubto Insulated windows 4 tan
hoal A air system,
etoctrlc/ptumblng near new.
Nkohamtre largo tot &gt;4*.M0.

FANTASY ISLAND 1 bdrm Rustic
tog cabin turreundid by 1 acres
ot sprawling lungte. scenic pend
and walk to Laka Jttsup. A im
dbi wido mobile home currently
ranted. Needs TLC owner anx­
ious. Only *37,300.
AFFORDABLE COUNTRY LIV­
ING ol Its best In this immacu­
late 1 bdrm homo screened
porch, large tot, ctoto to 1-4 and
walka to Sylvan Laka Fork

ST. JOHNS River Ironlag*. i h
acre parcels, also Interior
parcels with river access tt»,*00
Public wetor. 10 min. to Alta
monta Mall 11% 10 yr* financing,
no qualifying- Broker
___________ *1* 4*31___________
Wayside Drive A Orange Blvd. 1
acres toned A-l. Area ot nice
Markam Woods Road. Owner
financing 132.100. Broker
__________0413*13.___________

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/Sait
LAKESIDE CONDO’S FOR SALE
Furnished or unlurnlshod 1/1 with
tennis courts, pool, boot ramp on
Laka Monroe. Prices starting at
*44.300. Call Evelyn 374-4377 or

JKCEntofglrtosJnclteHO^^

199— Pets A Supplies

1

Dog Obedience New daises begin
Saturday May it Sanford Osteen
area. Coll Ml IMP or M l 1141.
Free kittens to good home.
Litter trained Cal I
Ml 0013alter 3PM.
Free to good home. Lovable- S
month old male, mixed breed
hunting dog. Cell 111 3173.'
Free to good home. Sweet, female
dog. Mixed breeed. Exc. watch
dog. 111-1041eft. 5:10.

|

Auction Every Sat. nlghl Florida
Trader Auction. Longwood 11*
1) l», See our big ad In Sat, paper.
FOR ESTA TE. Commercial or
Rasldantlal Auctions A Appraiials. Call Pali's Auction Mi-mo.

215— Boats/Accessorie*
JACK'S BOAT REPAIRS.
For oil your Boating needs
VUE.
tented
IM3M1317S Days M l 34*3 Night
Iftl Galaxy boat motor and trailer
V hrt. SS.SOO. 1*71 Stardust, 14ft.
Housaboat, dishes Included.
311.300M l 7**t

217— Garage Sales
Moving Some furniture, household
Hems. Sat. A Sun. 104 Located
ott 417 at the end ol Garden
Drive. Santord. M140**.________
Yard Sala-Sunland Estetei-104
Laka Dot Dr.. Sanlord Saturday.
May It l : X to 3:00 old books,
records, household Items, and
mitt. Somathlng tor everyone.
Yard Sale Saturday and Sunday
Miscellaneous Items. 117 Laurel
Drive M l OIK _____

f

t

l t

SANFORD
M O T O R CO

DM MNWAY 1742
Conor at Uho Mary BM.

A M C

JEEP

Y

f

3 2 1 -2 3 8 8

f

M
O

L O O K

*3 2 9 5

ERNIE JACKSON
AUTO SALES

BUDGET CMS

l f

1 9 7 1 k i c k R atal

n «M c o N e o »t3 1 9 s

1976 CADILUF997
uso d n : u s weekly

f
REDUCED) 1 bdrm. Its bath 1
story home with cory fireplace,
formal dining room, scroonod
porches, pin* floors, on a land
scaped comer lot I S4I.300.

m jip

*2 7 9 5

77 m »

‘ 10 CARS UNDER 17.000
‘ LOW WEEKLY PAYMENTS
*N0 INTEREST CHARGES
EXAMPLE

WHERE EVERYBODY RIDES!*
HORSE PLAY I Nice 1 bdrm home
on 14 acres w/lorgt pool sur­
round^ by hundreds at oaks end
plenty of privacy and bring your
horsetl Excellent financing!
Only 17V,tOOt

*2 9 9 5

77 BliCK CtHTmVwj a

32*7730

99— Apartment*
Unfurnish«d/ R»nt

O V E R

K
S

A

U

T H IS

f

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T T S

O

E X T R A

l l t l TOYOTA MUIX
__________
Stock* M M U .................................... ’ I V 9 I
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QUALITY
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1974 TOYOTA CflKA
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1981 TBVBTA
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Phone i'l l

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III!

Stood Extra Cosh*
KOKOMO Tool Co . at *11W. First
St., Sanlord, Is now buying glass,
newspaper, bimetal sleel and
aluminum cant along with all
othar kinds ol nonlerrous
mttait, Why not turn this idla
clutter Into extra dollorsT Wo all
btntfll Irom recycling.
For details call; B l-l 100
Old electric A wind up trains.
Lionol. American Flyar, Ives ale.
Writ* Roovo A Howard 103 W.
Indiana Avo. Poland BT10.
Wanted to buy from privet*
14 to N ft, Camper Traitor.
M l 4714.________________

WE A R E D E S T I N E D TO BE

B E TTE R HEALTH WITH DIS
TILLED WATERI Make your
own 100% pure water with a
home wafer dlstlltor for only
pennies per gallon. For Informa­
tion-Call or wlrta Carl D.
minimal SM Orange Dr. Apt. B
AHamonta Spr. FI. B70IP44471,

circa ISM tWoBaard. (M m cabi
not. tobto A 0 chairs bait offer
fypowrltora. Mt-4011,__________
M IN I O B I SS SHO ISM .M Fr.
ARMY NAVY SUE PIUS

M M fq W W f

Ml—Junk Can
4014 CHEVROLET Luv with C4p
SIAM.

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

DREAM COME TE U E I Sunken
living rm "sots the mood" for
this gorgeous 1 bdrm 1 both spilt
plan homo w/CHAA. dbl car
garage, custom decor and fenced
co rner let In prestigious
R a m b lo w o o d l F a n ta s tic
assumption! No qualifying and
priced to tell I Only 130400.

V lov-Oa-Rootal*. tec. RoeIter
*
LUXURYAPARTMENTS
Family A Adults sacIkm. Poolside,
1 Bdrmt. Matter Cove Apts.
M l-7*00
_______Open on weekends
Mariner's Village on Lake Ada, 1
bdrm from IMS, 1 bdrm tram
1)10. Located 17 *1 |ust south of
Airport Blvd. In Santord, All
Adults. M l 0*70_______________
M ollonviilo Trace Apis. 440
Mellonvilla Ave Spaclout mod­
em 1 bdrm I both apartments.
Carpeted, kltchan equipped,
CHAA.adults.no pots. SMS
___________ BI-IMS.___________
NEW I A 1 Bsdraomt. Adjacent to

Bad Credit?
No Credit T
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check-Easy Terms
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1110S. Sanford Are.
M l-4073
3*JI S. Orlando Dr.
_ M)431f

OAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy tl, t mile west of Spoodwoy,
Daytona Beach will held a public
AUTO AUCTION ovary Monday
A Wednesday at 7:10 p.m. It's the
only ono In Florida. You sot tte
reserved price. Coll OMlSSflll
tor further dotalIs.___________

K
bbH
bi__________1
21-5005

Tolphona M l *0*4.

We hive everything. Just bring
linens and dishes.
.Attic Storage
..Single story living.
..Energy Efficient
Lush landscaping
o Sanlord Courts

\£\6M&amp;ORHOOp BALANCE CF TERROR

GREAT BUY A FINANCING!!!
Owner moving North., l i s t
Danlo Dr. 1/2, garage, scroonod
porch, family room, separate
hobby room detached 10(14.
Furnished. Ashing t4f.f00. Call

AAAKI OFF II-O w ner Moving.
1 bedroom. I both SXLSSO. All geos,
stove, rofrlgerator.m drapes,
tool shod. Cell Tom. 3741171. Or
RKC Enterprises, tnc. 374-1484.

•EfficiencyApts*

321*0759 E v e 322*7643

Tb* WaU St Compey

Airport Blvd. M B1421I
Cestolborrg M 11* 1713
Calory Avt 44 m e m

73— Employ merit
Wanted

VbMcIm /Camper*

1!!!

THE GREAT SUZUKI
PRICE BLOW-UP!!

�H B—Evening BtrsM, Sanfecd, FI, W tdwtlday, Msy as, i t t i

Many clever hostesses focus party menus on dishes
that are made from scratch, using the freshest of
Ingredients: dishes that can be made In Jlist minutes
before dinner is served. Another secret good cooks arc
sharing these days Is using a variety o f imported
liqueurs to add distinctive new flavors to favorite old
recipes.
One such dish combines succulent fillets of striped
bass and Jullcnncd red peppers with a creamy tomato
sauce laced with the flavor of anisette liqueur. It's a dish

that can leave guests marveling.

BROILED STRIPED BASS
WITH ANISETTE PEPPER SAUCE
6 fillets ofstilpcd bass, about 8 oz. each
3 medium red peppers, cut Into Julienne strips
2 tablespoons butter
W cup Anisette
1 cup heavy cream
M cup tomato sauce
W cup anisette needles or chopped parsley

Salt and pepper
Preheat broiler. Place fish on broiling pan and sprinkle
llahtly with water to prevent sticking. Droll about six
Inches from heat five to ten minutes or until fish
becomes pearly white and flakes easily when tested wfth
° While fish broils, saute peppers In butter until limp.
Add Anisette, heavy cream and tomato sauce. Coar
until reduced by half. Mix In anisette needles or parslej
Season with salt and pepper to taste. Serves six.

m

• H C I A I i-

CASH

55*£r © j g g S g n

Convenience foods make chicken provencale a
quick dish.

French-Style
Dish Ready
In 1 Hour

U.S.O.A. INSPECTED
TENDER LEAN, WELLFLAVORED
CENTER CUT

SIRLOIN 4
STEAK

12

A French-style chicken dish that lakes about an hour
from start to finish to prepare is welcome in busy
households.
The secret here Is to save time by not peeling, slicing
and chopping several of the Ingredients. Onion and
garlic used is in dehydrated form and the tomatoes arc
canned.
There is an 'authentic flavor o f a peasant French
provincial dish with seasonings, a few anchovy fillets,
black olives and a touch of wine.
Serve with boiled potatoes, a salad and an apple tart.

Burgers With
Mexican Flair
Wilh Mexican cuisine gaining popularity all across I he
country. It’s not surprising that south-of-thc-border
accents are turning up at a lot o f places, including
backyard cookouts.
Surprise Fiesta Burgers arc a delicious example of how
the all-American hamburger can be easily transformed
into a Mexican specialty that will have all the outdoor
diners shouting "O le!" The Oavorful ground beef
burgers conceal a spicy gaucamole and tomato filling. In
keeping with today's emphasis on eating light and light,
the burgers are served on rafts o f lettuce Instead o f buns,
then lopped lightly with shredded cheese, ripe olives
andsaisa. If you like.
While these unique burgers are satisfying appetites,
they will also be satisfying many o f the body's
nutritional requirements, points out the national Live
Stock and Meat Board. Ground beef is an excellent
source o f high-quality protein, the vitamins, thiamin,
niacin, riboflavin. B-6 and B-12 and the minerals iron
and zinc.

„

.

m

SAVE41'UL*
LEAN.TENDER.KUCIOUS
DELMONICO

■ MR STEAKmHU' u . * 3 (9 8 u .

■'■.V v ■'

JJ5
S S
I ' Jr
I•”

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OTIAUCANFAULTPACKSMOKED
PORK CHOPS
M
MWWUL
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OTWLEANASSORTEDranCOT

ms LOM PORK C H O P S A ^ S S *
__

EAST CHICKEN PROVENCALE
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 pounds chicken parts
1 can 116ounces) whole tomatoes, broken up
114 teaspoons basil leaves, crushed
1 V4 teaspoons onion powder
1 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon garlic powder
Dash ground black pepper
4 anchovy fillets, diced (optional)
1 tablespoon white wine or apple Juice
V4 cup sliced black olives
In large skillet, heat oil until hot. Add chicken: brown
well on all sides. Drain ofT drippings. Add tomatoes,
basil, onion powder, salt, garlic powder, black pepper
and anchovies. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer,
covered, until chicken Is tender, about 45 minutes. Add
wine and olives: simmer until hot. about 2 minutes. This
kitchen-tested recipe makes 4 portions.

8 8

uwtria.

SHOP
PARK AVE. A 25TH 3T.
SANFORD
OPEN 7 DAYS
8 A.M.-9 P.M.
SANFORD AVE.
&amp;4THST.
SANFORD
8A.M.-6 P.M., SUN. 8-2

PRICES GOOD THRU
THUDS. MAY 2S-WED. JUNE 1

ROUND
STEAK

ALL MEAT

FR ANKSu*l«S 9

*&gt;- I

SURPRISE FIESTA BURGERS
114 pounds ground beef
2 small tomatoes
I package (6 ounces) frozen avocado dip. defrosted
Salt
1
1 head lettuce
Shredded cqlby cheese
Sliced ripe olives
Salsa, if desired
Cut 3 center slices. IA inch thick, from each tomato
and reserve. Chop remaining tomato and lightly mix
with ground beef: form Into 12 thin patties. 4 to 5 Inches
In diameter. Place 1 tomato slice and an equal portion of
avocado dip on 6 patties. Top with remaining patties:
press edges together to seal. Place paltlea on grill over
ash-covered coals or on rack In broiler pan so surface o f
meat is 4 Inches from heat. Broil 6 minutes, turn, season
browned side with salt and continue broiling 6 to 8
minutes to desired doneness: season second side. Cut
lettuce crosswise Into 6 rafts. 44 to 44 inch thick. Serve
burgers on lettuce rafts, top with cheese, olives and
salsa sauce. If desired. 6 servings,

FwfiST
rnnimSm

» n » i» iij u .

PIZZA M M

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*

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4 NB*1

�,

at Well Be Well'
1th One Dish Meals
A l arg e v a r i e t y of
ethnic foods Is now
plentiful across the
United S ta te s.Th e
low-calorie Ginger Pork
contains snow peas,
ginger root and black
Chinese mushrooms.

1

IDO AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 3234950
‘ en let them soak In a covered bowl for IB minutes or
ore. When the mushrooms turn soft, cut ofT the stems,
ueeze out the water and they are ready to use.
There are two kinds o fresh cabbage. One. called
hlnese celery cabbage, Is white and firm. It la the best
d good for cooking, stewing or serving raw In salad
_ _ _other
_ n . . kind
: : _ _ _ _has
_ _ _ Aw
__ “
i green
*
The
hile
stalklea
with
good for cooking
‘ ‘ _ and* stewing,
_ but can'tIbeeateni
sent here from Ha1 11 and
rFresh
‘ gtngcr'root■ ‘is often
~
______
Never
can be kept In a refrigerator
for a few weel
freeze It. Bean threads “produced In Taiwan, ate better
known as cellophane noodles. The noodles are translu­
cent and should be softened before use by soaking In
!warm water for S to 15 minutes. Heat by dipping In
; boiling soup.

-

PORK
SPARE RIBS

____ ^_Bill

TOP ROUND

LONDON BROIL”
STEAK

GINGER PORK
1 2 tablespoons soy sauce
; Vi cup apple cider
; 2-3 tablespoons ginger root, cut Into paper-thin
julienne strips
2 cloves garlic, minced
1pound lean pork, cut Into M-lnch strips
1tablespoon vegetable oil
1pound fresh or frozen snow peas, trimmed
1cup Chinese or regular sliced mushrooms
3 cups Chinese cabbage
Combine soy sauce, cider, ginger root and garlic In a
medium size bowl. Add pork and toss to coat evenly.
Refrigerate for 2 to 3 hours. Remove pork, reserving the
marinade. In a wok or large skillet over medium nigh
heat. In hot oil. stir-fry the pork for 6 to 8 minutes until
thoroughly cooked. Add vegetables and continue
cooking for 3 to 5 minutes until they are crisp and
tender. Add reserved marinade and heat thoroughly.
Serve over warm bean threads. Makes 4 servings.

W E SELL O N L Y U S D A C H O I C E B E E F . . . W E S E l l O N L Y U S D A C H O I C E BEEF... W E SELL O N L Y U S D A C H O I C E BEEF
M B A fffffffT
B f

R U N . 9 LBS. OR M O R I

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ROUND
CURED
STEAK BEEF
I2 . S 9 LIVER...
n u n

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. 5

9

*

FROZEN FOODS

D ELICA TESSEN

NUTRIENTS PER SERVING (not Including bean
threads) Calories: 275: Protein: 22 gm; Fat: 13 gm;
Carbohydrate: 21 gm; Cholesterol: 55 mg: Sodium: 725
mg.
: Chicken Couscous Is a traditional North African dish
that supplies a good percentage o f the recommended
'dietary allowance (RUA) for certain vitamins and
minerals. These days some supermarkets even stock
quick cooking couscous. Steam It according to package
d irecti ons o mi t t i n g m a rgarin e. I f you have a
couscousler. simply put the couscous directly on top.
Cover with the lid and the steam rises through It. Total
steaming time takes 5 to 10 minutes.

BAKERY-FRESHLY

BAKED

PCPPCRIME FARM FROZEN

CAKES it o z . . . . . . . * 1 . 6 9
itK N a

PAPER
PLATES

£99

PAPER m s ^ W .
TOWELS M
uX r i

CHICKEN COUDCOUt
• 4 cups chicken broth
1(16 oz.) can peeled whole tomatoes
2 teaspoons powdered coriander
1teaspoon cinnamon
1 (2Vi pound) chicken, cut Into 8-10 pieces, skinned
and trimmed o f excess fat
3 medium carrots, peeled and cut Into 1-lnch diagonal
slices
3 stalks celery, cut Into 1-Inch diagonal slices
2 medium turnips, cut Into 1-lnch chunks
1(16 oz.) can chick peas, drained
1(16oz.) package couscous
Grated rind o f 1 medium orange
V4 cup chopped fresh mint, leaves only
Heat broth, tomatoes and spices In a medium size
saucepan over medium heat. Add chicken and reduce
heat to low; simmer 5 minutes. Add carrots and celery
and continue cooking approximately 20 minutes. Add
turnips and chick peas; cook 5-6 minutes longer until all
vegetables are tender. Prepare couscous according to
directions, omitting margarine. Serve chicken-vegetable
mixture over couscous. Sprinkle with grated orange rind
and chopped mint. Makes 6 servings.

CANTALOUPES

FRESH PRODUCE

PAPER

TOWELS
Cs&gt; Ttw (venfa* H*r*W A m n fM |
Department - 911-MI I or S914999
AM A ik hr.lfcs I m Im m Rw iew

W HUM NHU
O M N IA

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»C—Evtwlm H fiM , tonH rl, F&gt;, WMwtXay, May is,

Regional
Speciaitie.
Everyday
Favorites
Three of today's "hottest" food trends which
becoming everyday fare coast to coast are pasta
other Italian specialties. Mexican foods, and Amert
regional cuisine. As creative cooks experiment v
preparing the specialties o f other lands and regions,
original "authentic" recipes frequently undergo su
adaptations to better suit Individual tastes. Ea
available Ingredients are substituted for the hard-to-f
spicing and flavors are modified, and convenfe
products may be used to shortcut time-consuming
preparation. Resulting dishes provide the Intrigue of
International and regional cuisine along with the
satisfaction that comes from adding a bit of personal
style.
One creative touch that's as American as apple pie yet
adds pizzazz to a host of foreign and regional foods Is
Miracle Whip salad dressing. This amazingly versatile
product combines the best features o f mayonnaise and
old fashioned boiled salad dressing with a unique spice
blend that has made It the nation's favorite for 50 years.
Devotees o f this one-of-a-kind salad dressing will find
over 200 recipes for American and Intemaatlonal
specialties, as well as foods ranging from appetizers to
desserts, and breakfast treats to late-night snack
specials in a new cookbook from the Kraft Kltchesn.
"Cooking With Mtarcle Whip Salad Dressing/' a
160-page cookbook with over two dozen color photos,
contains chapters which highlight recipes for two,
qulck-to-flx and make-ahead dishes, recipes which
shortcut preparation time with food processors and
microwave ovens, time-honored "classics" and ideas for
casual entertaining.
Helpful Ups and serving suggesUons are liberally
sprinkled throughout the book, as are recipe variations
which help you custom tailor flavors to fit individual
preferences. Recipes were developed especially for
Miracle Whip salad dressing, which has a lower fat
content than mayonnaise and is made with a unique
blend o f spices. If mayonnaise Is substituted, texture
and appearance may be affected and flavor may not
meet expectations.
Included In the cookbook are foreign favorites such as
Pasta Carbonara. a salad dressing variaUon of the
celebrated Roman dish. This version streamlines
preparation while maintaining the dish's classic flavors.
Prepared with fettuclnl. garlic, bacon, grated parmesan
cheese and parsley, the dish takes on a delicate flavor
from the addlUon o f the salad dressing In the light sauce.
Recipe variaUons suggest substltuUng green fettuclnl or
iingulnl, or equal, parts o f green and regular noodles for
a change o f appearance and taste. Served as a first
course In Italy, the dish also makes a fine accompani­
ment or a light supper main dish.
For entertaining, the chapter Includes such treats as
Sombrero Appetizer, a hearty south-of-the-border treat.
This brelefly baked mixture o f cooked ground beef, salad
dressing, cheese and onion takes Its "h eat" from taco
sauce, so use mild or hot as you prefer. With com chips
or crackers for dipping It makes a great party Ice
breaker.
Regional specialties such as Jambalaya Rice are
classic examples o f the Inventive and adaptive character
o f American cooking. A native dish o f New Orleans,
Jambalaya reflects the culinary heritage o f France and
Spain. Excellent as an accompaniment to meat, poultry
or seafood. It becomes a hearty main dish with the
addlUon o f chopped cooked chicken or ham.
For more international ahd American specialties, and
a wealth o f additional recipes prepared with one-of-akind Miracle Whip salad dressing, send for "Cooking
With Miracle Whip Salad Dressing," while the supply
lasts. To order your copy, simply send a check or money
order for 63.05 to: Miracle Whip 50th Anniversary
Cookbook. P.O. Box 854. Dept. P. South Holland. II
60473. Be sure to enclose your name, address and zip
code, and allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery.

Italian Pasta
Carbanara Is an
accompanlmant
to any dish or
can stand alona

a A NOW OPEN

7 DAYS A WEEK.
M
l
i
x
w ill be open
a ll day

Publlx

Memorial Day.'

[ 3 Fresh Produce
“Publlx" Brand 100% Pure, Fresh
Florida Cldllad

Vfaiume

Orange Juiet..... ft! ’ I*9

8

Partset For Baan Salad,
Florida Tandar

Non Ami table st

Priiix
mms ant
*
*«0 "m
m
m/um
m
&lt;1sd
n ft#atIM
n
riiM
aw
n
fn»W|
nKytvssmsiit JW
m
u*aeef
tuapw
f

Croon Baans...... »! 59*

Oscar Mayer Meat, Baaf or Cheats

Centt

Steam With Onions, Florida Fraah

Yellow Squash.... ?! 39*

tM

AN Purpose Crisp Juicy

only

Ida Rod Apples. 3 &amp; 89*

$3.99

Low In Sodium, Florida Tandar

Zucchini Squash.. % 39*
... S! 39*

Salad Perfect Florida
(Medium Size)

Jun»&lt; '980

THIS AD EFFECTIVE: THURSDAY, MAY 26
THRU WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1 , 1 0 8 3 . . .

Tatty Tomatoes.. »! 49*

Paul Masson
Wine

* 6 83.0-liter
9 bot.

Top Your Steaks With Florida

Fraah
Mushrooms........

Peter Paul Almond Joy or

Enjoy Both, “Minute Maid" Chiliad

Lsmoftads or
Fruit Punch........ ft' 79*
Fraah, Crisp and Tandar

Spinach.............

Swift Premium Beef, Dinner,
Meat or Bun Size

CHABUS, ROSE,
LIGHT CHABLIS OR ROSE

For Your Picnic Hamburgers or
Salad, Large Swaat

VldaHa M o n o

Wlonars............. *t: 91 «

PUBLIX RESERVES THE RIGHT

TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SOLO

Grill Pranks........ft? 91##
Webber Mild, Hot, Taste Treat
or Saga

Whole Hog
Sausage...... ...... ft M 99
Swift Premium Meat, Garlic or
Beef Sliced Bologna or

Cooked Salami.... &amp; 9199
Jonas Minute Smokey Beef,
Regular or Bacon Breakfast

Mounds................£ ; 91«

Sauaaga Links... f t 91 «

Coffioca, Licorice Nip, Coffee Nip,
Chocolate Partait, Caramel Nip or
Mint Parfait

Grouper Filiate ... ft * 2 "

Pearton Candy

69*

Pranks...............
Lykea

. . . ss ^ h o ? 1*

Seafood Treat, Frozen
Seafood Treat, Hickory Smoked

69* Mullet..............

ft *2°*

PASTA CARBONARA
Vi cup milk

Vi cup salad dressing
1 garlic clove, minced
2 eggs, beaten
1 10-oz. pkg. fettuclnl noodles, cooked, drained
8 crisply cooked bacon slices, crumbled
Vi cup (2 ozs.) Kraft grated parmesan cheese
14 cup chopped parsley
Gradually add milk to salad dressing and garlic: cook,
stirring constantly, over low heat until warm. Remove
from heat: blend in eggs. Add fettuclnl: mix lightly until
noodles are coated. Add remaining Ingredients: mix
lightly. Garnish with additional chopped parsley, if
desired.
6 servings.
Variation: Substitute 10-oz. pkg. green fettuclnl or
Iingulnl noodles for fettuclnl noodles.
NOTE: For extra color, use equal parts o f regular and
green fettuclnl noodles.
1 lb. ground beef
14 cup salad dressing
V4cup taco sauce
44 cup (3 ozs.) shredded Casino brand natural
monterey lack cheese with Jalapeno peppers
V4cup chopped onion
1 cup crushed corn chips
Brown meat: drain. Add combined salad dressing and
taco sauce: mix well. Stir In cheese and onion. Pour into
9-lnch pie plate: tog with com chips. Bake at 390". 15
i com chips or crackers. Makes 4V4
minutes. Serve

Short Sleeve Dress or Knit Sport

Shirt*........SS *7 "
Leggs Control Top Reinforced Toe,
Sheer Toe or Queen Size

Pantyhose.......... Z *4”

Breakfast Club Quarters of

U S D . A. Choice Boneless

Corn OH
Margarine.........2 «&amp;. 00*

Top Sirloin Steak.. ft 93°*

Sour Cream...... . 'I?
Seaitest Light 'n Lively
Strawberry/Blueberry (5-oz. cups)

PRICE

arTi

Regular Price
With Purchase
Of Any Msns'
Or Ladies' Sun Glasses

COUfON

Boneless Hams ... ?' Mts

fast Club Grade A Florida

..... Z 75*
Deli [ 3 Deli

Yogurt................£i.
Kraft Sliced Cheese

Beked Freeh Daily in the DeH

Deluxe American... ft? 917#

^ M h^M I

Light 'n Lively individuallyWrapped Cheese

Birds Eye Regular a Extra Creamy

■iSeilitS................. 6

Sliced American.... f t 89*

Cool Whip........... »

Reedy-to-take-out, Southern

0re4da Crinkle Cut Potatoes or

Kraft Casino Brand Cheese .

MozzarsHa...........ft* 924B
Breakstone Lowfat, California Style
or Smooth 4 Creamy

Cottage Cheats.... *t? 91M

cups.

Sunnyland Fully Cooked

Breakstone

w

69*

Golden Fries ........TtS 9119
Birds Eye Chineee, Kalian, Bavarian,
Japaneae, Far Eastern or Mexicana

far

Fried Chicken.... f t *| h
Freeh Beked Dutch Apple or

Apple Pla........... ft* s|ss

International 8tyla ^
VegetaMaa......
1ST 99* Fumparnlekal.... a
Freeh Breed

JAM BALAYA KICK
green pepper
3

14teaspoon ground thyme
1 chicken bouillon cube
1Hi cups boiling water
3 cups cobbed rice
Vi cup salad dressing
U win choooed Dimiento
Ocriaply cooked bacon slices, crumbled
Saute onion and green pepper in margarine. Blend in
flour and th y m e. Gradually add bouillon cube dissolved
In water cask, stirring constantly, until thlchcnrd. Stir
In remaining ingredients: continue cooking, stirring
occasionally. 6 mtnutrs over low beat. Garnish wtth
green |

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�IWRfea HsraH, Safttord, FI. W ik ilfty. May

Microwave Magic

Enhance Flavor A n d Nutrition O f Fresh Corn
T h l. i
n
for thc Zcllwood c °m Festival.
That good Florida sweet com will be plentiful again.
Microwaving enhances thc flavor and nutrition of
com.
It Is best If microwaved as soon after picking as

P
°4, . j ,, can bc microwaved in the husk.
Individually wrapped In plastic or placed In a tightly

covered dish. Do not salt before cooking as this
causes the com to be tough.
Com is best If used immediately after'picking;
however, if you must store It for a later use. wrap
unhusked ears In plastic and refrigerate.
The longer com Is stored, thc more apt It Is to be
tough and starchy. These recipes will make good
use of the cars of com that you have microwaved on
the cob and are not eaten. The com can bc removed
from the ears and used in these dishes.

CORN AND TOM ATO CASSEROLE
4 medium tomatoes
3 tablespoons butter
1onion, chopped
2 stalks celery, chopped

minutes, or until sauce has thickened. Stir in egg
yolks combined with cheese. Arrange the chopped
tomato, sliced egg, and com In a 10-Inch baking
dish. Cover with sauce. Cover with waxed paper and
microwave on 30% power for 8 minutes. Be sure
center o f custard Is completely cooked. Let stand 2
minutes. Top with slices o f tomato.

Mldg*
Mycoff
Home Economist
SeminoleCommunityCollege

CALICO CORN RELISH
1W cups water
2 cups com, cooked
Vi cup chopped celery
\Acup diced green pepper
V* cup finely chopped onion

1green pepper, chopped
3 tablespoons flour
1Vi cups milk
3 egg yolks
Vfacup grated Parmesan cheese
3 hard cooked eggs, sliced
.2 cups com
Salt
Pepper
Chop 3 tomatoes. Slice thc remaining tomatoes.
Microwave 100% power thc butter for 40 seconds,
add onion, celery, green pepper. Cook 2 minutes.
Stir once. Stir In (lour and cook for 30 seconds. Stir
In milk. Season with salt and pepper. Cook 3

2 • 3 tablespoons sugar
1tablespoon cornstarch
A cup cider vinegar
2 tablespoons diced pimento
Set power at High. In a 4-cup glass measure, add
water, celery, green pepper, onion and sugar; heat 3
to 4 minutes. Stir In cornstarch blended with
vinegar and heat 214 to 3 minutes or until mixture is
slightly thickened, stirring occasionally. Add com
and pimento; chill before serving.

7H-0Z. CORN CUPS Oft
7-OZ. PRETZEL TWISTS

P A m E S , STICKS
Oft NUGOETS

OLOC SMTHRELO

8 lc«d
Bacon

Banquet

Detergent

Chickan

•4-ei. pkg.

With On U N Stamp
Prtcs Saver Csrttflcats

Im M

14 b. pkg.

12-0*. pkg.

W WiOMUHSUMf
M e* Ssvsr CsiSflcsls

WHS One SAH Sterne
Prte# Sever CertMcete

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THIS AD

KG VALLEY

Whole
Coffee
10-ox. far

WNti One MH Stamp
Prtea Sever Certificate

f
EFFECTIVE:
THURS.
MAY 26
THRU
WED.
JUNE 1,

BrMkfast Club

Hamburcwror
Hot Dog aunt., 2 ££ 70'
Bar-B-O, Sour CfM m A Onion
or Bacon A Sour CrM m

Prtto Lay Rufflae. S ' l *
T n t Top (From Cancontnlo)

1 0 6 3 ...

Applo Juico........ *iz 00'
Flavor Partact Assorted

Drinks................. ft 00'
Aunt NeHiM SHced or

WholoBoote...... V
F A P Whole Kamal or
Cream Style QoMan

Swoot Corn.........

98'

Vionna Sauaogo 2 £ S M
Swoot Poos.......«3 c
’&amp;
onsr *1 Soft Ply Assorted
F A P Cut or French Style
Nanklna
Croon Boan a..... 3
*1 Assorted or White A Decorated
Showboat
Gala Towola........ *8T 90'
Pork A Boons.....4i ? 70' 12-Inch Aluminum Foil
60*ct. Extra Dry Daytime or
Reynold's Wrap...n7Si"59
48-ct. Toddler

PamporoDiopona.. m • 8 "
Vlsslc Kosher

PEACH CANTALOUPE CONSENTS

2U pounds firm ripe cantaloupe
2 pounds (about) fully ripe peaches
2 tablespoons grated lemon rind
Vt cup lemon Juice

30c Oft Label, Food Wrap

Clad W rap.........*°°a n* r

V4cup golden raisins
1cup light com syrup
3 cups sugar, divided
1cup coarsely chopped wainuts
Peel, seed and cube cantaloupe. Measure 4 cups.
Rinse, peel and pit peaches. Cut into cubes. Measure 4
cups. In 5-quart stainless steel or enamel saucepot stir
together cantaloupe, peaches, lemon rind, juice and
raisins. Stirring occasionally, bring to boll over medium
heat. Gently stir In com syrup until well blended. Gently
stir In 1 cup o f the sugar. Return to boll; boll gently 10
minutes. Remove from heat. Cool to room temperature.

Dixie Garden 7” or 9"

DiNPIektea.........

Gold Plates........% L*1*

Hot Ptecelim or
Green Tomato Piccalilli

Dixie Garden 10V

,

SB* Gold Plates......... ift * 1 «

VlarteReSeh......'i-“

Dixie Garden 100-ct. 7-oz.
or 80-ct. 9-ox.

Prtctou.

A-1 Steak Saueo.

W cup margarine, melted
3 tablespoons sugar
1pt. strawberries, sliced
18-oz. pkg. cream cheese, softened
1tablespoon milk
W teaspoon almond extract
2 cups thawed whipped topping with real cream
Combine crumbs, margarine and sugar; press onto
bottom of 9-Inch square pan. Bake at 350°. 10 minutes.
Cool.
Arrange strawberries over crust. Combine cream
cheese, milk and extract, mixing until well blended.
Fold in whipped topping: spread over strawberries. Chill
several hours. Cut Into squares. Garnish with additional
strawberries or crumbs. 8 servings.
Variation! Omit margarine and sugar. Prepare
whipped topping mixture as directed. Alternate layers of
graham cracker crumbs, strawberry slices and whipped
topping mixture in parfait glasses. Chill. Garnish with
additional whipped topping. 4 servings.

PINA COL ADA DESSERT

FAP

10*1.

White Broad...

Let "no-beke" Irresistible dessert recipes simplify
summer dessert preparation this year. Nothing could be
easier, or more convenient, to prepare than fresh sliced
peaches, nectarines or strawberries folded Into chilled
whipped topping made with real cream.
Or for a special fast and foamy dessert — try
Strawberry Delight — in which smooth and fluffy layers
o f almond flavored cream cheese and whipped topping
with sliced fresh strawberries are on a graham cracker
crust. The same basic recipe — with a different twist —
layers whipped topping mixture, strawberries and
graham cracker crumbs In parfait glasses.
When time is at a premium, spoon fresh blueberries
into cateloupe or honeydew melon halves and top with
whipped topping. Or make Pina Cotada Dessert...a
tropical smooth pineapple, coconut charmer, gently
flavored with a hit of rum. It can be served either as a
chilled refrigerator dessert or as an impressive frozen
pie.

1 9-oz. container whipped topping with real cream,
thawed
18-tt-oz. can crushed pineapple, drained
1cup miniature marshmallows
cup flaked coconut
W cup quartered maraschino cherries
Vt teaspoon rum flavoring
Fold whipped topping Into combined remaining
ingredients. Spoon Into six dessert dishes; chill. Garnish
with additional maraschino cherries. 6 servings.
Variation: Spoon mixture into 9-lnch pie plate; freeze
until firm. Place In refrigerator V4 hour before serving.
Cut Into wedges.

Libby

BrM kfM t Club

No-Bake
Desserts
Beat Heat
Of Summer

STRAW BERRY DELIGHT
1cup graham cracker crumbs

g6ft-0Z. CHEEZ CURLSj
IS-OZ. CHEEZ BALLS, I
A L L T E M K IM TU ie

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Gold Cups.......... *119

Return to boll over medium heat. Stir In one cup o f the
sugar. Stirring frequently, boll gently 20 minutes.
Remove from heat. Cool to room temperature. Return to
boll over medium heal. Gently stir in remaining 1 cup
sugar. Stirring more frequently as mixture thickens, boil
about 25 minutes. Add walnuts: stirring frequently,
cook 5 minutes longer or until mixture Is desired
consistency. Remove from heat; skim, if necessary.
Immediately ladle Into clean hot V4-plnt Jan, leaving
It-Inch headspace. Wipe top edge with damp cloth. Seal
according to Jar manufacturer's directions. Process in
boiling water bath 15 minutes. Cool Jars on wire rack or
folded towel. Makes about 6 (Vh-pint) Jars.

CHERRY JUBILEE BAUCE

2 tablespoons com starch

where shopping iso pleasure
7doys a week

O K KO
Sweetened Grape, Cherry,
Strawberry, Raspberry, Tropical
Punch or Lemonade
S T M *

T M t SO IF F IC T IV f M T M FOUOW OM COUOTmt

caret. Carta.. Mataaada. O R U ill. MBMOara. uoo. Ll
Oacaart. Paaca. Haim . Oort. OartaaU, l aaaaO; isdo

K oolA ld........ ....St 07'
Sugar Free Cherry, Grape,
Lemonade, Tropical Punch or
Sunshine Punch

wakwodMptaytordotoito

P U Z A , SANFORD

K oolA ld............ St T9*

LONGWOOD VILLAGE CTR.,

Hunt1. Met. Tomato
French’s (Carton Pack)

Kotehup............ ..

00*

F A P Flavortul

Aaolo Bauoo........ 2* 90*

Publlx

LONGWOOD
m.-9 p.m.; Sun. 0 A.IR.-7 p.m.

Vt cup light com syrup
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
H pound (about) sweet cherries, pitted (2 cups)
3 tablespoons klrach or brandy
In 2-quart saucepan stir together com starch, com.
syrup and lemon Juice until smooth. Add cherries.
Stirring constantly, bring to boll over medium heat and
boll I minute. Remove from heat. Stir In kitsch. Serve
warm over Ice cream. Makes about 2 cups. 1
Strawberry Jubilee Sauce: Follow recipe for Cherry
Jubilee Sauce. Omit cherries. Use 1 pint (about)
strawberries, cut In half. Makes about 2 cups.
1 pkg. yellow cake mix (Duncan Hines)
Large can crushed pineapple
8 oz. pkg. cream cheese
3 oz. pkg. vanilla Instant pudding
1cup cold milk
Whipping creain (pint)

Bake cake as directed adding drained
nice
from large can of crushed pineapple
in 16 by
10-inch pan. Bake In 350 degree o m i, Cool cabs.
Blend cream cheese, pudding, and milk. Mix together;
stir In drained pineapple. Spread over cooled cake: coyer
with whipped cream. RefHfleratc. Serve.

[3 llra llh &amp; Beaut &gt;
1lb. box small elbow macaroni
1large can mandarin orange*
*2 can crushed pineapple
* cup sugar
1n i l Jar cherries

30c Oft Label, Colgate 6.2-oz. Osi
orOoi.RaQ.

Toothpasto......... &amp; • I4*
RBOUiif atrBooth

T ^ d T a M o t e .... * 2 t i , 2 4#
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Drain and wve Juice of crushed pineapple. Cut
cherries in pieces and save Juice. Cook together until
thick pineapple Jutoe. bealen egg. flour, augv. and wit.
Mix Into thc cooked macaroni Let set in refrigerator
overnight Next day. put to the cut cherry*. pineapple.
' berries, and Cm IW I i^ l

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SUPER BONUS

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Presenting A n Outstanding Otter!

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�</text>
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                    <text>*

FBI A g e n ts S h o t In O r a n g e C ity
By Diene P etryk
And
M icheel Behe
A massive manhunt was underway today In the south
Volusia County area for a man who shot and critically
wounded two FBI agents early this morning.
.The suspect gunned down the agents In Orange City
after one agent apparently recognized him as a suspect
In the 1977 armed robbery o f the Long wood Village
Pharmacy. Seminole County Reserve Deputy George
Pfell was killed In that robbery.
The man who allegedly shot the FBI agents was
Identified as Clarence Eugene Robinson, 39, the only
suspect remaining at large In the pharmacy robbery
case, according lo Seminole County Sheriffs Depart­
ment spokesman Capt. Jay Leman.
Police said the FBI agents were gunned down at 8:24
a.m. at Kitchens' Restaurant. 1501 S. Volusia Ave. {U.S.
Highway 17-921 and were rushed to West Volusia
Memorial Hospital In DcLand with abdominal wounds.
Leman said the Seminole County Sheriffs Department
responded to requests for roadblock aid "with almost
every man available."
The wounded officers were Identified as Thomas J.
Sobolewskl. 40. attached to the FBI’s Jacksonville office
and Dennis Wlcklcln. 42. attached to the Ocala office.
FBI spokesman Doug Jones o f the Jacksonville FBI
office said the wounded agents apparently recognized
Robinson as they were entering the restaurant and
identified themselves, then asked him his name, and
Robinson allegedly pulled out a gun and opened fire.
Robinson has been wanted as the mastermind o f the
four-man Longwood robbery In which the Seminole
County auxiliary deputy was killed Dec. 29, 1977.
Robinson was also sought for bail-jumping, homicide
and armed robbery, according to the FBI.

The Seminole County Sheriff's Department today
released this photo of Clarence Eugene Robinson,
the man suspected of gunningg down two FB I
agents outside an Orange Cityt restaurant early
today.
Department was organizing the manhunt for Robinson
this morning and had set up a command post and
several road blocks throughout the area In un effort to
seal off Volusia County. More than 50 law officers, local
and FBI agents converged on the scene In Join the
manhunt.
Capt. Leman said Robinson Is also a suspect in the
murders o f two o f the Longwood robbery accomplices.
From a base In Jacksonville. Robinson Iras devoted 20
years to robbing drug stores, Leman said.
The Longwood Village Pharmacy, at State Road 434
and lnterstate-4 In the Longwood Village Shopping
Center, was robbed on December 29. 1977.

At the Kitchens' Restaurant In Orange City,
rescue workers rush to the aid of the two wounded
FB I agents. One agent, who fell outside the
re sta u ra n t to p p lin g a ne w sp aper vend ing

machine, hadJ an obvious bullet hole in his side,
Lying by the cash register inside, the other agent
writhed in pain.

Reserve Deputy Pfell walked In while the robbery was
Four or five shots were fired. Jones said. And
"preliminary reports arc that Wlcklcln was shot once in In progress and a gun battle erupted, according to
the stomach and Sobolewskl twice." Jones stressed his Seminole County records. Pfell was shot and killed.
He had stopped In on his way home from work lo fill a
report of the Incident is sketchy and Incomplete, while
law officers at the scene told reporters they heard that prescription for his wife.
the FBI agents knew who Robinson was and that they
Three people were apprehended In the case.
were going Into the restaurant to arrest him. Neither
Terry Sims, who shot Pfell: Curtis Baldrcc who was In
Jones' nor local law officers' accounts could be the back o f the pharmacy ordering the pharmacist to fill
confirmed by press time today.
a pillowcase with drugs: James Halscll who drove the
West Volusia Memorial Hospital reported at noon the get-a way vehicle. Baldrcc and Halscll pleaded guilty
agents were both In critical but stable condition.
and agreed to testify against Sims. Sims was later
The DcLand office o f the Volusia County Sheriffs cott vlcted of first degree murder and sentenced lo death.

On the 15th o f March at 9:05 p.m. Baldrcc. who served
two years In prison, was gunned down while attending a
cookout In Jacksonville. On April 21. 1982 at 9 p.m..
Halscll was killed after stopping on the Lanier Draw
Bridge on US 17 In Brunswick. Ga. Both cases are
unsolved, but Capt. Leman said Robinson allegedly put
out the word that Baldrcc and Halscll's days were
numbered because they had testified in the Longwood
robbery case. Robinson was not seen In the pharmacy at
the time of the robbery, but was believed to be the
mastermind of the rrlmc.

Scene Of
FBI Shooting
Marked By

Law enforcement officers held strategy sosslons outside Kitchens'
Restaurant In Orange City, where two F B I agents were gunned down this
morning. More than 50 officers from Seminole and Volusia counties, along
with FB I agents, were Involved in the manhunt for Clarence Eugene
Robinson, the man who allegedly shot the agents as they entered the

Photo* by Vicki Brown. Court*** th» DoLond Sun Now*.

Pain and pandemonium reigned at the scene of
today’s shooting of two FBI agents In Orange City,
according to DcLand Sun News reporter Vicki Brown
who was among the first people on the scene.
The two wounded agents, Thomas J. Sobolewskl, 40.
and Dennis Wlckleln, 42. were both shot In the stomach
by a man believed to be Clarence Eugene Robinson who
is wanted In connection with the slaying of a Seminole
County reserve deputy In 1977.
Ms. Brown said when she arrived on the scene at
Kitchens’ Restaurant. 1501 S. Volusia Ave. (U.S.
Highway 17-92). one agent was lying outside on his back
next to a toppled over newspaper vending machine. The
other agent was Inside with his head on a waitress' lap.
Both FBI agents appeared lo be In severe pain, she
said.
"A huddle of rescue workers surrounded the officer
outside." Ms. Brown said. "Someone was holding a bag
with Intravenous fluid and there was an bbvlous bullet
hole in his right side."

Roadblocks were set up on ma|or highways In Volusia County today as
police searched for Clarence Eugene Robinson, 39, of Jacksonville, who
allegedly gunned down two FB I agents at an Orange City restaurant
today. Roadblocks like this one on Deltona Boulevard were set up on State
Route 415, U.S. Highway 17-92 and other highways In Volusia County.

Ms. Brown, who was taking pictures at the request of
police, said beads of sweat were appearing on the face of
the agent outside and he appeared to be In shock.
Both officers had been wearing conservative business
suits with dress shirts and ties, she said. But as they lay
Sm SCENE Pags 2 A

Lake M ary Says No To Gas Tax
B y Donna E ttas
Herald S ta ff W rite r
"Speaking from my pockelbook,
no. thank you." said Lake Mary City
C om m ission er Burt P erln ch lef
Thursday night as the Lake Mary
; City Commission unanimously ref­
used to support a proposed 4 cent
per gallon county gas tax.
" I don't doubt there's a need (for
money for road Improvements), but
(hat lack o f doubt is not going to
. motivate me lo support this tax."
Perlnchlef said, adding the county's
. road problem s d idn 't crop up
overnight.
"It's taken years o f political expe­
diency to get th ere," he said.
Pointing to the recent federal and
. state tax increases on gasoline, he
said the county tax la the domino
effect.
" I think it smells bad-atrocious."
be said.
:

City Commissioner Charlie Lytle
He said the major beneficiary of
said at a recent meeting he was told
that particular road would be an
by state transportation authorities
Industry. Fox'said county budgets
that despite the recent state In­ are rising at a faster rate than
crease In the gasoline tax that roads Inflation and growth and "I can't
will be no better In the next five
buy a lot o f It."
years than they are today.
Commissioner Russ Megonegal's
Lytle said a new tax would bring
motion, agreed to by his colleagues,
"tremendous political heat from the
said "w ith the project priorities
people o f Lake Mary” who are not
contained in the Seminole County
fully aware of the proposed 4 cent
report, we disapprove a local gaso­
county gas tax.
line tax."
"There Is no concrete municipal . Mayor Walter Sorenson reiterated
support (countywldc) for the tax."
hts statements made at the meeting
Sorenson agreed.
o f the Council o f Local Governments
Of a county priority 'list o f 14 in Seminole County Wednesday
roads, among which some would be
ntght. At that time he said he could
selected for Improvement. Commis­ support a county gas tax In somesioner Ray Fox said the list at best
form. He noted Thursday night that
"is ridiculous and at worst Is super
he might be able to support the tax
ridiculous." He cited the extension
If part of It were used for Improve­
o f Lake Mary Boulevard from UJ5.
ments o f Lake Mary Boulevard from
Highway 17-92 to Sanford Avenue
Interstate 4 to Rinehart Road, listed
as an example.
fifth on a county priority list.

TO D AY
Action Reports............. .2A Editorial
4A
Around The Clock
Florida........................... 3A
B ridge......................... 1QA Horoscope................... 10A
Calender.......................1A Hospital........................ 2A
Classified Ads
l,9A
2A
Comics..........................10A
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Crossword
I0A Sports....................... S,7A
Dear Abby.....................SA Television............. Leisure
Deaths............................2A Weather........................ 2A
Dr. Lamb
10A World..........7................ 3A

County Administrator T. Duncan
Rose III and County Engineer Bill
Bush said at one of their meetings
with city officials over the past six
weeks that the tax would bring In
about 917 million over a five year
period, with 94.2 million o f that
amount distributed to the seven
county cities.
With the balance o f about 912.5
million, they said probably three or
four o f the projects listed could be
accomplished.
Those roads discussed with the
cities were: widening o f Red Bug
Road from Suite Road 436 to Eagle
Circle; Improving County Road 427
from State Road 434 to Charlotte»
Street; and Airport Boulevard from
U.S. 17-92 to Sanford Avenue.
Lake Mary with its vote Thursday
night became the second city o f the
county's seven to vote against the
tax. Winter Springs was the first.

Sanford City Commission early
supported County Com m ission
Chairman Sandra Glenn's proposal
to levy 3 cents gas tax with one cent
going to each, the cities, the county
and the unincorporated areas.
Mrs. Glenn's colleagues on the
County Commission didn't go along
with that proposal. Instead, two
other commissioners — Barbara
Christensen and Bob Sturm —
Joined with her in talking about a 4
cent tax per gallon with revenues
from 1 cent going to the cities and 3
cents to the county.
The Sanford City Commission has
neither discussed nor taken action
on the 4 cent proposal.
M eanw hile. Longw ood M ayor
June Lormann said an unofficial
poll o f the Longwood City Com­
mission revealed that the majority
oppose the gas tax. In Altamonte
Springs while City Commissioner

S a i f i C a lls C o u r t R u l i n g
Herald Staff Writer
Circuit Judge Dominick Salfl today called a Fifth
District Court o f Appeal decision upholding his order
that law enforcement and school officials be Invited to
attend Juvenile sentencing hearings " a victory".
" I fed that this is a real victory for the people like
tearlters and counselors and to a lesser degree law
enforcement and the victims who are on the front lines."
said the Judge who hulds court in Sanford at the

Seminole County courthouse.
'
"These people have a lot o f information and will now
be able to get that information to the Judge. It Is also a
victory for the common man who is wondering what’s
going on in the system and can I make a difference?
"It's
a victory for all Judges who now can be
innovativee in various ways trying to improve the
system, a victory for the young people who come In front
o f the court and to a larger sense a V lctoiy Tor
defendants." he said.

Lee Constantine said he supports
the tax. he Indicated the majority o f
the City Commission opposes. In
Oviedo. Mayor Robert Whittier said
he opposes the tax and will make
his position known to the Oviedo
City Council when It votes on the
Issue. In Casselberry. Mayor Charles
Glascock said he could support the
tax but the City Council there has
many questions which must be
answered before they could support.
And while state law requires a
four-fifths majority vote to approve
a 3 or 4 cent tax. Mrs. Glenn noted
at the Council o f Local Govern­
ments meeting that Commissioner
Bill Kirchhoff has said he hasn't
seen a proposal for the tax that be
could support and Commissioner
Robert G. "B u d " Feather has said
that he could approve the tax only.lf
Its proceeds were devoted to certain
projects.

F o r P e o p lo

1

" I believe this (District Court o f Appeal decision) will
lead to better sentencing that has impact on the
offender. And in the long run the decision will benefit
the relationship between society and the Judicial
system." Salfl said.
But Salfl's elation may be short lived.
Douff Whitney, legal counsel to the state Department
o f Heailh
Rehabilitative Services, had filed the
PrilUqn with the appellate court in Daytona Beach

• M d U D O R P o io lA

�i
Evanlng Herald, Sanford, FI.______ Friday, Junt I, 1W

U n e m p lo y m e n t |
S till D r o p p in g \

NATION

I

INBREF
Reagan: Medics Aren't
Escalation In El Salvador
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan
denies Ills decision to expand the U.S. military
presence tn El Salvador with medical advisers
escalates Involvement In the' war against leftists
he considers "murderers and terrorists."
Reagan and his aides, sensitive to charges of
further U.S. militarization o f the conflict In El
Salvador, sought Thursday to assuage concerns
raised by Ills decision to send a 20-to 25member military medical team to San Salvador.
Administration officials said the medical team
Is being sent at the request o f the Salvadoran
government. They said the action has been
under consideration for several months, but
made only after a survey team returned from El
Salvador and reported to Reagan on shortages of
facilities and trained personnel.

House Ups EPA Budget
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House, which
voted to Increase the Environmental Protection
Agency budget, also wants to prohibit the
agency from Imposing sanctions agclnst coun­
ties that fall to meet anti-pollution deadlines
under the Clean Air Act.
The Clean A ir Act rider was attached
Thursday to a Housing and Urban Development
appropriation bill for fiscal 1984. which begins
Oct. 1. The 854.4 billion HUD appropriation bill,
providing 8220 million more than even the
Democratlc-led House Appropriations Commit­
tee rrcomincnded for the EPA. was later passed
216-143. The Senate must still act.
,,.,The government set a Dec. 31. 1982, deadline
for all U.S. communities to supply a plan to
combat all air pollutants. The deadline was
extended to 1987 for ozone and carbon
monoxide. Some 213 counties failed to meet the
1982 deadline.

NATIONAL WEATHER: "T h e worst weather ... In 40
years" pounded the West with more rain, but cooler
temperatures today slowed record snowmelt blamed for
Hoods and mudslides that have caused more than 8200
million damage In Utah and Nevada. "A n upper level
storm is more or less stationary' there," said forecaster
Steve Corfldi o f the National Severe Storms Forecast
Center In Kansas City. Mo. But. he said. "It will be a lot
cooler. There won’t be much snow melting." An Inch of
rain fell on northern Utah in half an hour Thursday,
forcing officials to pull heavy equipment back from
rising creeks and urge further evacuations. Rain on the
Wasatch Mountains swelled streams over their sandbag
barriers. Homeowners, volu n teers and' National
Guardsmen teamed up In Utah today to sandbag flooded
streams and remove tons of mud In towns Just north of
Salt Lake City. The National Weather Service said Great
Salt Lake Is at Its highest level since 1929. Mudslides
and floods have done an estimated 8200 million damage
In Utah alone. Officials in Larimer County. Colorado said
there was no way to stop a leak in a levee along the
Pouclrc River west of Fort Collins, and it was only a
matter of time before it would give way. flooding a
business and industrial area. Flooding continued In the
Wlnnemucea area of northern Nevada. Agricultural
lands and rural roads were under water along the
Carson River In west central Nevada. Flash flood
warnings and watches covered northeast Washington,
southwest Wyoming and northwest Colorado. Thun­
derstorms rumbled Thursday night through the central
high Plains and the mid-Mississippi Valley. At least
three tornaddes were reported In northeast Colorado and
southwest Nebraska. An afternoon tornado scattered
farm irrigation equipment onto Colorado 66 about 30
miles north o f Denver and damaged a house. Strong
thunderstorm winds In south-central Missouri toppled
trees In the Ozark National Scenic Waterway. An Inch
and u quarter o f rain fell In 20 minutes at Seibert. Colo.
In Utah, all but 35 families whose homes were ruined or
severely damaged had returned to their flooded
neighborhoods in Bountiful by today.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with a 30
percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs
mostly low 90s. Wind east to southeast around 10 mph.
Tonight partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of an
evening thunderstorm. Lows In the low 70s. Variable
light wind. Saturday partly cloudy with a 30 percent
chance o f afternoon thunderstorms. Highs low 90s.
BOATING FORECAST] St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Wind becoming cast to southeast 10
knots today then southerly tonight and Saturday. Seas 3
feet or less. Widely scattered mainly afternoon and
evening thunders]onns.

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): tem perature: 80:
overnight low: 74; Thursday high: 90: barometric
pressure. 30.02; relative humidity: 84 percent: winds
northeast at 8 mph: rain: none: sunrise 6:28 a.m..
sunset 8:19 p.m.
SATURDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 2:53
a.m.. 3:25 p.m.; lows. 9:02 a.m.. 9:22 p.m.; Port
Canaveral] highs. 2:45 a.m.. 3:17 p.m.: lows. 8:53 a.m.,
9:13 p.m.; Bayporti highs. 9:24 a.m.. 8:59 p.m.: lows.
2:39 a.in.. 3:39 p.m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central F torto* BagtoaaI Mm #N*I
Tkundiy
ADMISSIONS
So t lord:
Etitwr L. Buttons
,
Jama* Harper
Becky E. Wtlrlcfc

:f

I

E m e tt R . Cook*. Dtlton*

P w w U E .irw w i.u k &gt; Story
Laura L. Brown, Late Madras

OtSCNAaeiS
Parnate S. Klkumann. Santord
Albert P. Dorlea. Deltona
Theme* ROrmendy, Orange City

Evening Hrrald

fUSPS tel-MW

F rid a y , June 7, 1H J— V d . IS, No. 344

«

Pubitobed Daily ate luteay. *cap« Saturday t v Tte Hater*
terete, lac., m u . Preacb i n , H tte fd .F la .M M I.
locate C lan Pedapa Pate at Mated, Ptortea U 7 V

\

T«

Thanks
Charles W illiam s, proprietor of the old Rltz
Theatre, which is being converted Into the new
Showtime Cantina, publicly thanks the three
Sanford City Commissioners who voted to permit
operation of a cinema pub at the old movie house.
Williams has said that he will be opening the

teaw Delivery: Waek. IL te j Mateh. M -M j 1 M a te * IM te ;
Tear, H ite . By MaM: Weak
Mated, t u t r 4 M i te n ,
S U M ; Vaar, W M

•US;

theatre with first run movies this month. The
cinema pub will serve beer, wine and Mexican
food, Williams said. The theatre is located on
Magnolia Avenue near Second Street in downtown
Sanford.

Virtually all segment of the Job market Improved
during May. except adult women, where the ratt
Jumped slightly from 8.4 percent to 8.5 percent.
Clvllan employment during May was little chnngcd al
99.6 million.
Labor Stallstlcs Commissioner Janet Norwood. (ji
remurks prepared for a congressional hearing, noted
that payroll Jobs rose sharply for the second monlli In ii
row and hours of work remain high.
;

.Judge Is Happy With Ruling
Continued from Page IA
seeking to overturn a Salfi order. The order. Instead,
upheld It. Whitney said today he Intends to file a motion
for rehearing.
However, he Immediately withdrew that comment,
saying he hasn't seen the appellate court decision, and
filing a motion for rehearing Is one of the options HRS
has.
“ I can't say what I'm going to do until I sec the
opinion and what It says,” Whitnev said.
He added that HRS has been negotiating with Salfi on
a cooperative arrangement where Salfl's court order
requiring notification of victims of juvenile crimes, their
school teachers and law enforcement officers Involved
could be voluntarily complied with.

WEATHER

,w

H*r*ld Photo by Tommy Vlnttfit

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Unemployment declined forp
third straight month In May to 10.1 percent, the Labor
Department reported today, another sign the natlonjj
economic upturn is gradually improving thejob market*
The May data by the Bureau or Labor Statistic^
reflected a decrease of onc-tcnlh o f 1 percent froiji.
April’s 10.2 percent seasonally adjusted rate and wifc
the third straight monthly decline of thnt size.
Despite the drop, there were still 11.2 mlllloh
Americans officially classified as Jobless during Ufc
month, not Including about 1.8 million "dIscouragcU
workers” who have stopped looking for Jobs or mllliorfe
more who arc working only part time.
The 10.1 percent level Is seven-tenths of 1 pcrccrtt
below the 10.8 percent recession high experienced lajt
December.
There was good news locally. The April unemploy­
ment rate In Seminole County was a modest 5.4 percent,
the fifth lowest In the state and down about a full
percentage point from the previous month. Statcwldo,
the Jobless rate in Mny climbed to 9.1 percent from 8.6
percent the month before.
The government’s alternative Jobless rale that Ineludes about 1.7 million members o f the nrmed forces
was 10.0 percent In May. down slightly from 10.1
percent in April.
|

assistant state attorney for Seminole Counly. agreed to
cooperatively fulfill the Intent of the order. In the
meantime, attorneys for Cheshire have filed to have Its
case before the appellate court dismissed.
The HRS case against Salfi has remained under
consideration by the appellate court which ruled In
Salfl's favor Thursday.
Ten days ago. Eriksson In a letter to Salfl's court said
that “ it Is now the policy of this office to notify victims
and police officers of the time and place of sentencing
hearings and to encourage them to participate so that
the sentencing court will have the benefit of their Input.
Presently this policy has only been implemented within
our office at the circuit court level, but In the future we
expect to Implement some form of It in the county
court."
Eriksson said Cheshire feels It can only be healthy for
(he criminal Justice system If victims and police officers
are notified and given the opportunity to participate In
sentencing hearings and "so for all intents and purposes
this office Is going to assume that function" under state
law as It relates lo adults.

Saif) several weeks ago withdrew his court orders
requiring State Attorney Douglas Cheshire's office and
the HRS to Invite victims and other Interested parlies to
sentcncings o f Juveniles and adults convicted of various
crimes. The purpose of the orders. Salfi said, was lo give
those parties an oppoilunlty to Inform him o f any
The chief assistant slate attorney said (hat state law Is
Information they might feel pertinent about the "quite clear" In Juvenile delinquency matters as to who
defendants. The Information could be helpful In the
(HRS) shall provide notification.
judge reaching decisions on sentencing, he said.
The appeals court apparently ngreed with Eriksson's
Sail! withdrew the orders after Ralph Eriksson, chief opinion.

Growth Means N ew Zip Code
For Some Sanford Residents
Some Sanford customers will have u new zip code
effective July I because of changes announced by
the Postal Service.
Because of the rapid growth o f the Central Florida
area In (he past few years and untlclpltated future
growth, new zip code boundaries are being assigned
by llic U.S. Postal Service for the Ursl lime in 20
years. There will be a total o f 100.000 changes in
Central Florida.
Sanford Postmaster James Covington said today
that probably no more than 100 fumtlles In the
western and southern sections o f the city will be
affected. They will be changed to the Lake Mary
delivery area and their new zip code number will hi*
32746, be said. The old number was 32771.
"Th e changes arc long overdue." said Covington.
"There lias been a 64 pcrccnl growth In the greater
Orlando area in the last 10 years and a 57 pcrccnl
Increase In the number of deliveries. Another
Increase o f 32 percent Is expected In the next five
years.”
Those who will be Involved In the change will be
notified In the next two weeks. Covington said, and
will be given a zip code map and change of address
cards.
There will be even more changes In post ofllccs In
j* m it b S c m ln o le ^ o u n t £ jie jid d c d ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

Two Seminole Teenagers Arrested On Drug Charges
Two Seminole County teenagers have been arrested
and released from Jail on 88.000 bond on separate drug
charges.
After a month-long investigation. Seminole County
Drug Task Force undercover agents Thursday arrested
Christopher John Sposato. 18. of 2549 Marshall Ave.,
Sanford, and charged him with two counts of posesslon
of marijuana and a charge o f selling the drug.
Deputies report that agents made contact with
Sposato In April 26 at his residence where they arranged
to purchase one bag o f marijuana.
After making three such drug purchases, agents
obtained a search warrant for the Sposato home.
During the search, agents discovered 10 bags of
marijuana, a set of scales and a marijuana smoking
device with residue In Sposato's bedroom. Agents report
they also discovered two marijuana plants being
cultivated outside Sposato's bedroom window.
In a similar arrest Tuesday, drug task force agents

Action Reports
* Fire s
★

»

and cocaine paraphernalia and suspected stolen pro*
perty.
According to a Seminole County Sheriff's reportj
further charges are expected tn the case.
Thomas was released from Jail on 88.000 bond.

Courts

CORRECTION

it Police
nabbed Steven Robert Thomas. 19. o f 104 Knollcrcst
Drive. Longwood. and charged him with three counts of
selling a controlled substance.
The agents reported they met Thomas at the Shop 'N
Go store on Weklva Springs Road at Fox Valley Drive In
Longwood where Thomas sold them marijuana for 810.
He was then escorted to his residence where, under a
search warrant, the agents discovered suspected cocaine

In Wednesday's Herald it was reported that a
70-ycar-old Sanford man was robbed of 83.600 wher
thugs reached Into his home. Roy Barrow. Beardal
Road, said the men did not reach Into his home but Ink
his Jeep truck parked at Brlsson and Byrd uvenues.

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department answered the follnwlnj
fire calls:

Saturday
— 11-.33 a.m.. Lake Monroe Terrace, rescue.
— 12:33 p.m.. 1st Street and Palmetto Avenue, rescue.

Sunday

AREA DEATHS
J u n e 9. 1 9 0 3 in
Samuel George Hays Jr.. G re e n s b o ro . N .C ., he
43. of U.S. Highway 17-92. moved to Fem Park from
DcBary. died Thursday Richmond. Va. in 1978.
afternoon at hla home. He was a retired shop
Bom In Rochester, Pa., he su p ervisor and was a
had lived in DeBary for m em b er o f First P re ­
four years, moving from s b y t e r i a n C h u r c h .
P en n sylva n ia . He was Maitland. He was a Mason.
formerly a woodworker for Lion, and member of the
S ea w o rth y W ood P ro ­ Order of the Eastern Star.
Survivors Include his
ducts. Sanford. He was a
U.S. Marine Corps Veteran. wife. Edith; a son. Troy K.
Survivors Include his J r . , o f W i n t e r P a r k ;
wife. Shirley Wade Hays; mother. Halite Leach of
m other. Francis Hays, Greensboro; sister. Nannie
Rochester: three daugh­ Hapc of Greensboro; three
ters. Tammy and Sherry grandchildren.
Bald w l n - F a l r c h l l d
Hays and Sandy VanMeter. all o f Ohio: two Funeral Home, Altamonte
brothers, Joe Hays o f Springs. Is In charge of
DeBary and BUI Hays of arrangements.
Nebraska; one sister, Mary
VONDELL F. BARROW
Mrs. Vondell F. Barrow.
Kaye o f Pennsylvania;
A l l c n - S u m m c r h i l l 60, o f Elder Road, Lake
Funeral Home, Orange Monroe, died early today
City, is In charge o f ar­ at home. Bom June 27.
1922 In Tattmall County.
rangements.
Ga.. she moved here 35
TROY K. FREDDY ML
Mr. Troy K. Preddy Sr.. years ago frum Glennvllle.
79. o f 500 G o o d rld ge Ga. She was a homemaker
Lane. Fern Park, died and a Baptist.
Wednesday at Winter Park
Survivors Include her
Memorial Hospital.
husband. Jessie Sr.; son.

SAMUEL O. HAYS JR.

Jessie Jr.. Lake Mary; a
daughter. Martha Ann
K ritzberger, Levittow n,
Pa.; four brothers. Ralph.
Fem Park. Edward. Curtis,
and Bobby Flowers, all of
Lake Monroe; five grand­
children.
G ram kow Funeral
H om e, S a n ford , is in
charge o f arrangements.

MRS. NONIEI.
LONDENBERG
Mrs. Nonle I. Londenberg, 79. of 306 Ocean
Ave.. New Smyrna Beach,
d i e d W e d n e s d a y In
Roswell, Ga. Bom August
24. 1903 In Alabama, she
moved to New Smyrna
Beach 14 years ago from
Sanford. She was a
member o f the Ruth Circle

Notice Ii hereby given that I am
mg*g*d In bueinatt at N O B Cltru*
Ave.. Otlando JII07, Samlnala
County. Florida under the flctltlou*
name at GOLOENBOD REAL
ESTATE, and that I Intend la
nglttor Mid name with Clerk at the
Circuit Court, Florida In accordance
with BN prwMMra ot the Flctltlou*
Natna Statute*, la Wit: Section MM*
Honda Statute* IH7.
/*/ Jan* Adriatic*

Tteaa olofaftort* pmrtete by Florida Fewer
member* at fteNeftoneMuactofton
A LifM.........
ot Security DMNr* art n*x~» Fla. Prograu
•aatat/M Mtorteate p rin t e t e t Frateo-n Saving*............ j m in*
eppreMlmttety
MCA...
abator meriett cteng*
Hugh** Supply... »W w *
Ite
P rin t At not tetter retell Merrtian'i....... . 171* unctengad
moriup/morMoem.
NCR Carp..........
...IIIW It**

BW M

Atlantic

*~
twdviraad Scatty'*
— MW unctengte Sun Bank*
FlagtMp Bank*......... ........ » MW

4

«*'* I0f

. in* in*
...... M MW
.....«*• M

FICTITIOUS NAME
Nottc* It teraby given that I am
annagtd In butbwtt at 111 J atmIn*
i d .. Ca**albarry, Fla. JIIB7,
Samlnala County, Florida utter the
llctltieu* name at HAY WOBLOted
that | Inland ta ragtete Mid name
with Bn Clark at the Circuit Caul.
Samlnala County, Florida In ac­
cordance with tte provltione at Mw
FktttWu* Name Statute*, la wit:
(KtlonUSM Florida Statute* IW
Theme* T. Ferguton
Publidi May V and Jure 1, to. if,
DEHtM

•

Monday
— 1:08 a.m., 422 Palmetto Ave., rescue.
— 12:07 p.m., 1811 Adams Ave., power lines down.
—3:04 p.m., 2617 Orlando Drive, traffic accident.

.

.

.S c e n e

Is

D e s c rib e d
•*

Continued from Page 1A

Funsrol Notlco
LONDENBfRO, MBS. NONIKI.
- Funeral tervlcet lor M r*. N*nl*
I. Londanberg, 71; ol X U Ocean
New Smyrna Beach, who
dlod Wodnotday, win bo conducted
S a t u rd a y a l 10 a .m . a t the
Baldwin Hughey Funeral Home,
Naw Smyrna Beach, with tte Rev.
Robert Brown, pettor ol Coronado
Unltod Method Itt C hurch. Naw
Smyrna Beach, ol tic lating. Fam ily
will receive friend* at BaldwinHughey Funeral Home Frid ay 7 *
p m . Burial In Evergreen Came
ta ry, San lord. B a ld w ln -H u g te y
Funeral Home In charge.

U g a l N o tic e
ritlHNui H in

PuMIth Ju n * l. 10.17,14. H O . D E M I

STOCKS

and active o fficer and
church worker In Sanford.
She Is survived by a
daughter. Linda Blackmon
of Atlanta; one sister.
B aldw ln-H u ghcy
Funeral Home. New
S m y r n a Be ac h, is In
charge of arrangments.

—3:51 a.m., 1401 W. 7th Street, rescue.
— 10:42 a.m., 3512 Orlando Drive, rescue.
—3:29 p.m., 1210 Lincoln Court, rescue.
—4:10 p.m., 1206 Lincoln Court, rescue,
—5:58 p.m., 27 Lake Monroe Terrace, dumpster fire.
—9:14 p.m.. 115 South French Avenue, rescue.

legal Notice
NOTICE UNDIB
FICTITIOUS NAME
STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAV CONC E RN:
NOTICE I* hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant la the
"Flctltlou* Nam* Statute" Chapter
m m , Florida Statute*, will ragtater
with tte Cavafy ComptrotStr in an-l
ter SamNote County, Florid*, upon
receipt el proof ot the publication el
Mil* notlea. tte flctltlou* nam* **wtt:
COPT PLUS
utter adikh wo enact to engage In
bu*ln*«* at tel bougie* Avenue,
Suite 6. Altamonte Spring*. Florida,
M7N.
The pirty intertttod in »aid but!
neuenterprlMlieateltowt:
LONGWOOD
DUPLICATING, INC.
By: Michael F. Howard.

wounded, their ties iiad been loosened and their jacket:
removed.
Inside the restaurant, police had cordoned ofT an arei
and Isolated the 8 to 10 diners for questioning.
•'
The agent inside, meanwhile, writhing in pain, win
lying by the cash register. Ms. Brown said. His head wai
In the lap of a waitress who was trying to comfori him. •
There wasn't much visible blood, she said.
Outside, a Volusia County shcrilTs lieutenant spread'i
large map o f the area on the top of an unmarked polici
car and began lo dispatch cars In various directions am
the manhunt for the gunman began.
n
The Injured agents were transported to West Volusli
Memorial Hospital where they were listed In critical bu
stable condition this morning.
_ By Diane Fatryl

A B SO LU TE
A

T im s . A

U

m

C

T I O

N

7th lliO O __

tath *Mt Ctapaqi (•* Mab I ni Caaywif

PfRildbril

Publlte May X . 17 and June I. I*.

mi

*

0EH-1M

4

�Evening HsraM, laniard, FI.

To Fund

FLORDA

A ir Pollution Control Programs

A u to

IN BRIEF
Intensive Search On
For The Dreaded Medfly
MIAMI (UPI) — Because of one dead bug,
nearly three dozen agricultural experts arc
fanning out through south Florida at the
expense of $150,000 to make sure there aren't
any more o f the dreaded Mediterranean fruit
flics around.
Local agriculture agents and reinforcements
from throughout the South will canvass Miami,
distributing sticky cardboard fly traps on 200
different varieties o f edible plants that attract
the insects. Their purpose is to make sure a
Medfly found at Miami Springs Tuesday was
traveling alone.
The team of 35 agents will scatter 1,700 traps
across an 81 square mile area encircling the
place where the fly was discovered, and plant
several thousand more In perimeter areas.
The Infertile fly that turned up Tuesday in a
back yard near Miami International Airport
could have been carried into the United States
from any of several countries Infested with the
crop-destroying Insects, agriculture officials
said. They were quick to point out that lone
Meddles have been discovered previously
without resulting In an infestation.

House: 'Buy American'
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Some House mem­
bers waved flags and called it patriotic while
other lawmakers saw it as meaningless and
"dum b."
In the end. a bill aimed at giving preference to
U.S.-made products in supplies bought by state
ugencies was approved 81-10 Thursday and
sent to the Senate, where an identical proposal
died Iasi year.
Ironically, minutes after the House passed the
"Buy American" bill. It unanimously approved
a bill (CS-HB 758) appropriating (70,000 for a
study on how to Improve Florida’s International
trade.
The measure would require state agencies to
select a U.S.-made product whenever it ties with
a foreign product on a bidding list.

L ic e n s e

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Motor vehicle
tag fees would cost 50 cents more next
year under a bill sent by the Legislature
to Gov. Bob Graham.
The (5 .3 million to be raised annually
from the surcharge would go to fund air
pollution control programs.
The measure (SB 242) by Sen. Jack
Gordon, D-Miaml Beach, was approved
63-50 by the House after leaders suc­
ceeded in removing a hostile amend­
ment.
The House sponsor. Rep. Sam Bell,
D-Daytona Beach, said about half the
funds will go to the Department of
Environmental Regulation with the re­
mainder going to counties that have
local air pollution control programs.
As o f now, only six counties have such
programs — Hillsborough. Palm Beach.
Pinellas. Dade. Broward and Brevard —
and rural lawmakers objected that their
areas would have to pay for the urban
counties' problems.
The amendment, which the House
dropped on reconsideration, would have

IN BRIEF

imposed the surcharge only In the six
urban counties.
Also sent to Graham was a bill making
public complaints made by citizens
against police.
The House approved the measure (HB
1260) 105-5.
Under existing law, complaints against

NEW YORK (UPI) - Consumers dcmonstrating Increasing confidence in the
economy opened their pockclbooks in
May and gave major retailers strong
sales gains for the month, reports
showed.
Despite unseasonably cool and wet
weather In many parts o f the country
and continued weakness in some seg­
ments o f the economy, many o f the
largest retail chains Thursday reported
double-digit Increases at the cash regis­
ter.
“ The sales gains in May continue to

Feather To Proceed
On Wekiva Project

io n m i at st
TV SERVICE

•1 0 0
CASH REFUND
ON QUALIFYING
GENERAL ELECTRIC
CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING

Commissioners rejected by a 3-2 vote last week a plan
by Feather and Robert Pugh to construct 222
apartments on the property on Miami Springs Road near
Sweetwater Oaks.

nuauK i

TEL AVIV. Israel (UPI) — Prime Minister
Mcnachem Begin today flatly rejected the
opposition Labor party’s call for a unilateral
Israeli troop withdrawal from Lebanon, saying
such a move would harm Israel’s security.
Begin was quoted by the Ma’arlv newspaper
as telling his aides “ every effort should be made
to bring the boys back home, but only when it
can be guaranteed that they will not have to
soon go to war again.' 1
In a unanimous resolution Thursday, the
Labor Party said Israel's 30.000 troops should
pull out of Lebanon completely within two to
three months, regardless of Syrian refusal to
remove Us 40,000 troops.
In the meantime, the party said. Israel's
soldiers should immediately pull back from the
confrontation line with Syrian troops In eastern
Lebanon to establish a 27-milc buffer zone in
southern Lebanon.

PUBLIC
BANKRUPTCY
AUCTION
DMVKIN31 ASSOCIATES IRC.
cm &gt; nituawcr
TtnuipjkWH u n tru e
SUVICE, INC

cut« u w w av

Youth Car Wash and Bake Sale. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m..
Community United Methodist Church, Highway 17-92.
Casselberry.
First Presbyterian Church Youth Club yard sale.
Gregory Mobile Homes Sales, Highway 17-92 at Lake
Mary Boulevard.
White Elephant Sale. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.. First Baptist
Church o f Longwood property, Stale Road 434. two
blocks west o f Highway 17-92. Proceeds for summer
youth trip.
PJC School o f Baton, 7:30 p.m., Sanford Civic Center.

•UNDAY, JUNE B
Greater Orlando Mothers of Twins Club 10th anniver­
sary picnic. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.. Wadevlew Park. Harding
and Summerlin Streets. Orlando, for mothers of
multiples and families. Bring picnic lunch.
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. Florida Power and Light
building. Myrtle Avenue. Open discussion.
Seminole Halfway House AA. 5 p.m.. off U.S, Highway
17-92 on Lake Minnie Road, Sanford. Open.

[ Providence Hornvara, union*.
ce blood pressure clinic, 2-4 p.m., 7th and Elm.
brd Seventh-day Adventist Church Community
Ice Room.
itary Club o f Longwood, 7:30 a.m., Cassidy s
aurant. Longwood.
llowship Group A A , 8 p.m., Senior CUizcns
(purpose Center, North Triplet Drive, Casselberry.
nford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201W. First St. Closed.

UTUIMT, JURE 41k. II Ml
WOII Smwh IM.
II
§1 Otto oi United Stitn
Bankiwptcy Court TruttM
fiuN«n«p4|BytottortidWtor-t «&gt;|*M
to|ft •*

la

toil EtonNfrt tan*'*•»■■*Corn
Ito SAq (tot l#sm(MM FitfjM(sea*

¥ l-tofa* W*r"| tom to to to *to I| pa*

THIS IS 4 VUT LAKE I4U
Mcwcnsa, i

Moonlight Sale
Tonight
Friday, June 3rd
Open 6 To 10 PM
Look For Ads In Thursday June 2nd
Evening Herald For Great Savings

Bowling Balls

19 "

Sale

Orlg. 32"

Frisbee’s
Orlg. To 3 "

Sale 9 9 *

Slider Darts
Outdoor Game

A

Orlg.5**

m

U

08IG

099

20” Boy’s Dirt Bike
10n,y 0rig*..
Sale 4 9 "

Camping Equipment
Nike8 Back Pack
Tear Drop Bag
5x7 Pup Tent

oh,, tv

salt 9 "

oh8.iv

Sait 9 "

Orig.29M

Sale 1 9 M

TUESDAY. JUNE 7
ngwood Sertoma. noon. Quincy's Restaurant.
iu y ^ b h ib o f Longwood, 7:30 a.m., Cassidy's
aurant. Longwood
nford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on Lake
roe.
nlcr Springs Sertoma. 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress,
nford Senior Cltlxens picnic, meet at Sanford Civic
erat 10JO to go to picnic site.

Limited
OuantltfM

reflect the Improving trend In evidence
the last four or five months,” Jeffrey
Fcincr. retail Industry analyst at Merrill,
Lynch. Pierce, Fenner &amp; Smith Inc. said.
“ Despite adverse weather conditions and
continued sluggish economic activity,
the reports were quite favorable and
encouraging."
Felncr said lower Inflation and lower
interest rates should help bolster con­
sumer confidence and spending to pro­
duce "a gradual Improvement In retail
sales through the year and culminate In
a strong Christmas selling season."

The encouraging May sales reports
sent prices o f retail stocks climbing on
Wall Street.
Chicago-based Scars Roebuck &amp; Co.,
the nation's largest retailer, said sales for
the four weeks ending May 28 climbed
6.3 percent from a year-ago to a record
(1.64 billion.
Scars Chairman Edward R. Telling
said record sales were achieved despite
cooler weather across the nation. A yeat
ago. he said, warmer weather contrib­
uted to the strongest percentage sales
gain o f 1982.

1100 FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD, FL

3 2 2 -7 9 S 3

10°HOUR
91
SATURDAY

SUPER
SALE!

lot ivino Mmaumo*ncrvui
won* mown rtuif cm

Trt the plan proposed by Feather and Pugh, the
apartments would have been converted into &lt;
condomlnums at the end o f five years.

Red Pearl Only

On Wednesday, the Senate approved
and sent to Graham a parallel measure
(HB 1260) opening up complaint files
against public school teachers.
Another bill sent to Graham Thursday
would make the manufacture, sale or
possession of Teflon-tipped bullets a
third-degree felony.

JUN£ 1th

Commissioner Robert Sturm voted with Feather
supporting the project. Commissioners Sandra Glenn.
Bill KirchhofT and Barbara Christensen voted against the
project.

The project had a gross density ol about live units per
acre with a net density of 7.9 units per acre. The
adjacent developments have net densities o f between
two and three units per acre.

SATURDAY, JUNE 4

'84

STERCHI'S

Seminole County Commissioner Robert G. "Bud"
Feather says he will close a deal on 43.8 acres adjacent
to the Wekiva River despite a vote by his fellow
commissioners to approve a zoning change for the
property.
Feather said he has not yet determined what type of
development he will try to place on the property.
The land currently is zoned for slngle-tamlly resi­
dences.

But Feather said the project "w as in keeping with the
neighboring planned unit developments but had more
units than the people wanted to see."

FRIDAY. JUNE 3

ln

PH l?J (Hi?

Opposition also came from people who felt the project
did not fit In with the adjacent developments.

17-B2 Group AA, 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
U.S. Highway 17-92, south o f Dog Track Road.
CA5sclbcrry&gt;
Weklva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m., Wcklva Presbyterian
Church, State Road 434 at Wekiva Road, closed.
Rolling Hills Moravian Church AA, 8 p.m.. State Road
434. Longwood. Closed.
,
Sanford AA (Step). 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Tangle wood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church, Lake Howell Road.

police do not become public If internal
investigation determine them to be
unfounded.
Under the bill, complaint flies would
be confidential until investigations are
com pleted. At that point, whether
founded or unfounded, they would
become public.

U p

( A l l M 11 l f » V

ByMlcheal Beha
Herald Staff Writer

~~

G o

Retailers Report Strong Sales In May

Begin Rejects Unilateral
Withdrawal From Lebanon

CALENDAR

T ag Fees M a y

About 100 people opposed the plan at the public
hearing. Feather said some o f the opposition to his
project was from people who thought it was to be built
right on the banks o f the Wekiva River. But Feather said
the complex was to be 800 feet from the river.

W ORLD

Friday, June &gt;, 1W -IA

Sanford Plaza Only

Limited

SPECIAL HOURS

SATURDAY ONLY:
8a.m. 'til 6p.m.
COME PREPARED TO SAVE
ON SOFAS, CHAIRS, TV s
STEREOS, BEDROOMS,
DINING ROOMS, RECLINERS,
BEDDING, &amp; APPLIANCES.
EVERYTHING IN THE STORE
HAS BEEN DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. YOU'LL SEE
TWICE THE AMOUNT OF
FURNITURE WE NORMALLY
HAVE ON DISPLAY AND
IT'S ALL ON SALE AT
PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!

�E v e n i n g H e r a ld
(USPS « 1 WO)

308 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30W»-J811 or 831-W83
Friday, June 3, 1913-Vol. 73, No. 240
Wayne D. Doyle, Publliher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising ana Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 91.00; Month, |4.S; 6 Months, $34.00;
Year, 943.00. By Mail: Week, fl.3S; Month, $3.23; 0 Months,
Bto.00; Year. H7.00.

Time Runs Out
For Navy ‘Tin Cans'
T h e N avy Is about to put the last tw o o f Its
traditional destroyers on the deactivated list. T h ey
are the San Diego-based Hull and the Atlantic
Fleet's Mullinnix.
■'The Hull w ill be decom m issioned in San Diego
Ju ly 11. T h e M ullinnix is to be deactivated in
August in Charleston. S.C.
Both launched in 1957. th ey are the last o f the
greyhounds o f the fleet that still carry a com plete
arm am ent o f guns Instead o f missiles. T h e y are
typical — and the m ost m o d em — o f the lon g line
o f sleek vessels assigned to defend larger warships
with their guns, torpedoes and depth charges and
to h a n d le s h o re b o m b a rd m e n t an d re sc u e
assignments.
T h ey w ere called "t in c a n s" by their crews,
because their light steel hulls w ith no arm or
plating seem ed to resem ble the containers tuna
cam e in.
These old-line tin cans have given w ay to m ore
m odern, larger and m uch m ore com fortab le
destroyers equipped w ith electronics, guided and
cruise m issiles for use against en em y ships,
missiles, planes and subm arines.
Som e o f the N a vy's n ew vessels even carry
helicopters and can m aintain speeds o f 33 knots
and cover 6,000 m iles w ithout refueling.
T h e m odern S pruance-class d estroyers are
about twice the size o f the Hull and M ullinnix and
cost 9310 million, com pared to 926 m illion for the
older vessels built 25 years ago. T h e N avy m ay be
gettin g sm aller in num bers o f vessels but it is
gettin g much bigger in size and tonnage — and
expense.
T h e N avy also has a m odem fleet o f guidedm issile frigates, which are about the sam e size as
the old postw ar destroyers.
-B u t few other sm aller warships rem ain in the
N avy. D estroyer escorts, corvettes and P T boats
are ghosts o f the past — and soon to Join them will
be the traditional destroyers.
♦

Plush Senate Jobs
A lth ou gh It d oesn ’ t ad vertise Job open in gs.
C apitol H ill w ou ld seem lik e a good place to w ork,
especially in the Senate.
About 165 Senate em ployees receive annual
fclTkries above 950.000 and that doesn't Include
the 100 senators w h o are paid 960,662 a year.
£ T h ere's m ore than lust good salaries.

•

—

&gt; Fancy titles are a frin ge benefit that com e with
the fine w age scales. For exam ple, seven staffers
called "rep orters o f d eb a te" record , e very word
t)iat Is uttered on the floor during proceedings,
debates and speeches. T h e ir annual salary is
957,000 each — a m ere 93,662 less than the
salaries senators receive.
£ For som e reason or other, the Senate has a total
o f 6.700 em ployees. T h e so-called keeper o f
S tation ery g e ts 9 50,304 a n n u a lly and m ost
ien ators have at least one aide w h o earns m ore
jhan 950.000. T h e b igger spenders can have tw o
pr three aides in the above-50-grand bracket.
Nothing in the Senate ever seem s to be on a
Ip odest level. T w o o f the 39 Senate em ployees
gsslgncd to V ice President G eorge Bush earn m ore
than 955.000 each. T h e ch ief Senate barber earns
oly 929.993 — o f course, that doesn't include tips.
Even the "S en a te uph olsterer" gets 927.030 to
m ake certain senators enjoy the bes* o f com fort
when th ey’re o ff their feet.
•

$

By Donna Estes

It's rather plain now that County
Commissioner Robert G. "1301^ Feather is
not the most popular county official ever.
But seldom, if ever, have three members
of the board come out so publicly in their
support o f an opponent of a colleague In
recent years.
Even though the election for three seats
on the county board is not slated until
1984, C o m m i s s i o n e r s B a rbara
Christensen. Bob Sturm and Sandra Glenn
arc making it public that their favorite for
Feather's District 3 scat Is his GOP
opponent, Fred Strcctmnn.
The trio ts among the "great celebrities"
scheduled to perform at Strcctman's first
fund-raiser next Friday at Lord Chumlcy's
Pub. Also slated to perform are Sen. Toni
Jennings. Ingrid McCollum, wife of the
congressm an, and the congressm an
himself.
Another high- powered Republican on
the program ts Jim Stclllng. Stclllng. who
headed the local Young Republicans last
year, ts president this year of the Greater
Seminole County Chamber o f Commerce
at Altamonte Springs.
Again, It should be noted that Fcnthcr
was not the choice of local Republicans

when he ran for the county commission In
1980. but he won anyway.
A n d I t ' s I n t e r e s t i n g t h a t Mr s.
Christensen, who Is also up for election
next year Is lending her support to
Streetman. For a long time, she and
Feather voted together on many issues.
T h e S em in o le C ou n ty Y o u n g R e ­
publicans recently elected a new slate of
officers.
They Include: James "J im " Lavlgne —
erstwhile Casselberry councilman and
unsuccessful candidate for a legislative
scat a year ago — president: James
Weinberg, owner o f the Wall Street Co.,
first vice president; Patti jBrantley. an
associate realtor and wife of state Rep.
Bobby Brantley, second vice president;
Ron Salford, teacher at Lake Mary High
School, third vice president; P.J. Denney,
medical equipment sales, recording secre­
tary: Ricarda Wakefield. Interior designer,
corresponding secretary; Marti Anderson
of Altamonte Travel, treasurer: and Dick
Fcss. vice president. Freedom Savings,
sergeant at arms.
Fess is a former Lake Mary city commis­
sioner and
unsuccessful candidate for

mayor o f Lake Mary last year.
Incidentally. SafTord was also elected
Region 3 co- chairman at the recent
Florida Federation of Young Republicans
State Convention recently.
While some Sanford homeowners In the
area north o f 13th Street, who have bought
and restored old homes, arc pushing for a
change in zoning from multiple dwelling to
single family resdlcnttal, at least one city
official is not entirely sympathetic to the
cause.
Mayor Lee P. Moore mentioned the other
day that he could understand their feelings
after they had Invested a "bunch of
money."
But. he udded. that the city is Just as
much responsible to those who can’t afford
high rentals In apartment complexes und
that particular area has been multi-family
residential for at least 35 years.
Under the homeowners plan, the area
would be rc-zoncd for single family homes
and those old homes which have been
serving as apartment houses for many
years would be "grandfathered In." appar­
ently allowed to remain, but not allowed to
be continued as apartments if sold.

SCIENCE WORLD

DICK WEST

Better
To Die
At Home

Tender,
Loving,
Thinking
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Doctors, it
says here tn this article 1 have been
reading, are becoming ever more con­
vin c e d that m ost Illn esses have
psychosomatic origin.
Many parts o f medical science now
believe there are hardly any parts of the
human body that don't respond to what
Is going on In your head, it says here.
These findings on the mind-body link
appear to fit In with certain other
medical experiments o f the past couplr
o f years or so.
One study Indicated that cholesterol
and fat in food were not as harmful as
other studies had indieated. Still other
researchers discovered that laboratory
rabbits being fed high-cholesterol diets
got along better if they were
mollycoddled.
Rabbits that were individually fed.
cud(t!ed.and otherwise treated real nice
showed fewer signs o f artery damage
than bunnies receiving routine han­
dling.
The upshot here is obvious. Whenever
I have a high cholesterol meal in a
restaurant. I ask the waitress to caress
my brow, nuzzle my neck, blow In my
ear and run her fingers through my hair
as she Is taking my order.
(If 1 happen to draw a waiter, I. of
course, stick to diet dishes.)
Nevertheless. I am wondering where
the new findings leave all those sweaty
millions who have taken up Jogging in
hopes of improving themselves physi­
cally.
If I am Interpreting the results of the
research correctly, what Joggers think
about as they lurch along has as much
to do with their well-being as the
exertion.
Assuming that such ts the case,
wouldn't it be possible to prevent or
treat organic diseases while lying down?
Provided you can get yourself tn the
proper frame of mind?
Stress Is the emotion that apparently
causes the most physical distress. So it
follows that we should try to create for
ourselves a regimen that is relatively
free of pressure.
The basic objective of a sedentary
workout is to loll about In your easy
chair and let your mind do all the work
in the pursuit o f health. Here arc a few
pointers:
Warm-up — Never embark on any
fitness program with a cold body. Before
sitting down, drape a shawl over your
shoulders and turn up the thermostat If
need be.
Easy part — Start out by thinking
about something simple, like your
sacroiliac. There Is always something
wrong with the lower back that an
upbeat mental attitude might remedy.
Sixty percent to 80 percent of the
population suffers from back pain,
mainly because they are fatheads

"First we obliterate Israel In a single stroke, then we
crush the U.S. with a massive assault..."

WILLIAM RUSHER

How Bad Is Russia?
NEW Y OR K I NEA) - Unless I
seriously misinterpret the signals, we
ure In for a long season of liberal
brainwashing on n relatively new
theme. It Isn't really new; In one form or
another the general idea has been
around ever since the Soviet Union was
founded 65 years ago. serving as a
standard Ingredient In liberalism's suc­
cessive disastrous recipes for coping
with that dangerous state. Its latest
formulation, however, represents one of
the most forthright liberal attempts In
decades to peddle the proposition that
the Soviet Union Is "not all bad" — and.
Implicitly, that on a balanced view the
West, and In particular the United
Slates, is Just about as bad as the Soviet
Union.
When the apologists for German
aggression tried roughly the same
argument on behalf of their favorite. It
was promptly parodied by critics as
"Let's not be beastly to the Hun." There
was. In fact, good reason tn la- beastly to
the Hun. and we arc indebted to that
realization for the fact that the West and
Its allies today are still rightly called
"the free world."
A whiff of that same tukc a Russian to
lunch attitude appeared, in theological
guise. In the very first drafts of the
Catholic bishops' statement on nuclear
war. There we were warned in Just
about so many words that communist
leaders arc human beings, too,' and that
we must avoid regarding them as some
sort of monsters. If that strikes you as
too mild and -unobjectionable a state­
ment to be gainsaid, try transposing it
Into the Nazi key and sec If you still like
the tune: How far do you suppose the
bishops would have gotten If they had

tried to tell their countiymen that
Adolph Hitler and his colleagues were
human beings, too. and not to be
regarded as monsters? Yet the Soviet
hierarchy since 1917 has committed far
more wanton murders than even the
Nazis.
The latest variation on the new theme
wus elaborated In a recent public
address by George Kcnnan. a longretired Foreign Service officer who has
parlayed a knack for riding his sur­
fboard along the crests o f fashionable
opinion Into an entire new career as a
sort o f all-purpose eminence grise.
Stephen Roscnfcld reported the speech
in a column tn the Washington Post
recently, presenting the old coot as a
rare and precious piece of porcelain, "a
driven, concentrated man of an Increas­
ingly spectral appearance whose con­
tributions ... entitle him to be heard out
on the subject of relations with Russia."
Even Roscnfeld acknowledges the
"emotion and Imbalance" of much that
Kennan said, but he apparently agrees
with Kcnnan’s contention that the belief
o f many analysts or Soviet behavior,
that there Is "n o language they could be
expected to understand, other than that
of intimidation by superior military
force." Is "grotesquely overdrawn."
Kennan's alternative view o f the
Soviet Union, however, borders on
musical comedy. He sees it as bedeviled
by "a high general sense of Insecurity"
(the bane o f all Illegitimate regimes,
professor), " a p os itiv e ly neurotic
passion for secrecy" (nothing neurotic
about It — they have a lot to be secretive
about), "a marked sensitivity to condi­
tions In border regions" (border regions
like Cuba and Nicaragua?).

By Sharon R n ten b erg
EVANSTON. III. (UPI) - Allowing a
terminally ill child to die at home —.
rather than a hospital — Is better for the;
family emotionally and psychologically.:
researchers say.
Ray Mulhcm. Mary Laucr and Ray
HolTmann o f Milwaukee's Medical Col­
lege of Wisconsin reported their findings
In the American Academy o f Pediatrics
Journal.
They studied 24 families of terminally
ill children who participated In a Home
Care Program and 13 families whose
children died at a hospital.
"Parents of patients who received
terminal care In the hospital were more
anxious, depressed and defensive and
had greater tendencies toward (bodily)
and In terp erson al p roblem s than
parents of patients In the Home Care
Program." the researchers said.
"Siblings of patients who received
terminal care In the hospital were more
emotionally Inhibited, withdrawn and
fearful than their counterparts in the
Home Care Program."
When the child dies, "pre-existing
family problems arc often Intensified
and may persist long after the loss."
they said.
The researchers said that In ubout 50
percent o f bereaved families, at least onem em ber requ ires psychlntrlc care
caused by the child's death: 70 percent
report serious marital discord, nnd 25 tn
50 percent o f surviving siblings experi­
ence mnjor emotional, behavioral or
academic adjustment difficulties.
"Hom e care has obvious practical and
financial advantages." they said.
"In addition, parents In the Home
Care Program reported a more rapid
rcattalnmcnt o f previous social func­
tioning. fewer marital and personal
problems and less Intense guilt thnn
their counterparts who did not provide
home care."
The researchers said 80 percent of
families of patients at the Midwest
Children's Cancer Center ut the Medical
College and Milwaukee Children's Hos­
pital choose the Home Care Program
option.
The program is coordinated by a
clinical oncology nurse specialist who
teaches, provides technical and sup­
portive assistance during regular visita­
ti ons to the hom e and p ro vid es
bereavement follow-up.
" S o m e phy si c i ans , nurses and
extended family members view home
care as a potentially unsafe, complex
burden for parents which may result In
more pathologic bereavement." the re­
searchers said
"There appears to be little support for
the contention thut participation in a
Home Care Program Is cmotlonaly
overwhelming to families and leads to u
more pathologic bereavement."

JA C K ANDERSON

When Nixon M ad e W ar On M edia
BERRY'S WORLD

WASHINGTON -n Perhaps the most
bizarre episode o f the Nixon era was a
campaign to discredit and. if possible,
destroy an investigative reporter. I had
the honor o f being the ylctim.
The story has been pieced togelher by
S e y m o u r H e rs h . h im s e lf an In ­
vestigative reporter who has raised his
share o f hackles on the backs o f official
necks. The discomforting details can be
found In his new book. "T h e Price o f
Power." which uncovers the sweepings
under Henry Kissinger's rug.

"HEYl KNOCK IT
mjL£8r

Hersh portrays Richard Nixon as a
man haunted by dark secrets which he
feared might leak out and drive him
from public office. Kissinger tended, in
the ways o f an ambjtious subordinate.
toout-NlxorvNixon.
They used the classification system
not so much to protect the nation's
security as to censor the news. As an
example o f their carelessness with
legitimate secrets. Nixon once boasted
to reporters that the United States was
able to re-create Soviet radar signals
and see “ what th e ' Russian radar
showed....*'
“ The Nixon statement created nearpandemonium'* at the National Security
Agency. Hersh reports, fie quotes one
official as exclaiming. " I died when I

heard it.... I Just fell out o f my chair. I
literally did."
’
Nixon's statement caused the Soviets
"to change every frequency, every crypt
system, every net structure." and the
United States lost "the Incalculable
advantage of knowing what the other
side was seeing." Hersh states.
But when I exposed the secret manip­
ulations o f Nixon and Kissinger in
Vietnam, it "threw the White House...
Into a panic," and then-Altomey Gener­
al John Mitchell "ordered an extensive
Investigation."
Recounts Hersh: "In all. Anderson
wrote 13 columns between March 18
and May 6. 1971... und all were Ignored
by the rest o f the press. In some cases.
Anderson's information was recycled by
other reporters In stories years later,
and Invariably each was treated as
major news."
Later In the year. I published secret
documents proving that Richard Nixon
and Henry Kissinger had lied about the
U.S. p o lic y tow ard Pak istan . In ­
vestigators zeroed in on Navy Yeoman
Charles Radford, whom they suspected
o f slipping me the documents.
Tltey bullied and browbeat him for
three weeks. They put him through four
lie d etector tests. T h ey scream ed
obscenities at him. They lapped his

telephone. They finally got their con­
fession — not that he had passed on
Kissinger's secrets to me but that he
had spied on Kissinger for the Joint
Chiefs o f SUIT.
Hersh reports that Donald Stewart,
the chief Pentagon Investigator, was
urgently summoned to David Young's
White House office on Dec. 23. 1971.
"Young shocked Stewart by ordering
him to 'establish' a homosexual rela­
tio n s h ip b e tw e e n A n d e rs o n and
Yeoman Radford: it was clear from
Young's tone that Stewart was not
m erely to investigate such a rela­
tionship but And one.
"Stewart, a former FBI agent who was
nearly 15 years older than Young,
objected emphatically. As Stewart pro­
t e s t e d , Y o u n g ju m p e d up an d
shouted.... ‘Goddam, the President
wants this, and every time we tell him
we can't do somethlngl'"
Here is the rest o f Hersh's account:
"N ixon's fear o f Anderson, o f what he
knew or could leant, about the workings
oi the White House, was acute by the
end o f 1971, and yet (John) Ehrllchman
recalls, the President refused to grant
John Mitchell permission to wiretap
Anderson's telephone at the time the
taps were placed on Radford's. Nixon

apparently feared that Anderson's con­
tacts Inside the FBI were so extensive
that he would be tipped olf about a
legally authorized wiretap. Perhaps
Anderson would also be told o f other
wiretaps that had not been legally
authorized.
•*
"Given the fear and anger In the Ova)
Office, if Richard Nixon could not move
legally to stop Anderson, he would
certainly seek to damage his antagonist
In other ways. (G. Gordon) Llddy wrote
that he and (Howard) Hunt had lunch
with an active-duty CIA physlrlan and
discussed various techniques for drug­
ging Anderson. The three men reached
apparent agreement, so Llddy wrote,
that Anderson should ‘become a fatal
victim o f the notorious Washington
street-crime rate.* He learned later.
Llddy added, that assassination had
been ruled out by Hunt's 'principal.' an
obvious reference to Charles Colson.
Colson, in testimony before the Senate
Intelligence Committee, denied any
knowledge c f assassination plans but
said that Nixon had asked him many
limes' to take action to discredit An­
derson. He also said that he could not
•discount the possibility o f having said
something In Jest’ to suggest that
Anderson should be eliminated."

�H o w

To

Is Ihc time of the year when
people start thinking about
lawn maintenance service
r t han d o i n g t he l a w n
themselves. Selecting such a service
is not an easy task, but here are
some suggestions to help In making
a decision.
Basically, three types of services
are available, (1) partial lawn care,
(2) complete lawn care or (3) total
landscape maintenance. Partial
lawn care may mean only fertilizing
and spraying for pest control or
providing only mowing services.
Complete lawn maintenance would
provide mowing, fcrtlllzaton and

S e le c t A
Frank
J. Jasa
County Extension
Director
323-2500
E x t 102

pest control. The partial care opera­
tors versus complete care firms vary
In charges largely due to the
number of visitations required for
respective maintenance services.

Some Mom s
Not Queens
For A
DEAR ABBY: Guess
what my husband brought
me for Mother’s Day? Ills
mother's dirty laundry for
me to do!
He certainly lacks Imag­
ination. because that's
what 1 get for Christmas.
Easter and every Sunday.
LESS THAN
THRILLED IN
TUCSON
DEAR ABBY; The Sat­
urday before Mother’s Day
my husband handed me a
920 bill and said. "Honey,
please buy yourself some­
thing for Mother's Day. I
never know what to get
you."
He never knows what to
gel his own mother for
Mother's Day. either, but a
week ago, he handed me a
950 bill and asked me to
buy his mother a Mother's
Day gift.
So, what’B the difference
between a w ife and a
mother?

Dear
Abby
bittersweet.

HALF—HAPPY IN
IN CHERRY HILL, N.Y.
DEAR HALF: How do
you think the mother of
your son-in-law feels?

D E A R A B B Y : Af t e r
every Mother's Day. some­
one writes to Dear Abby to
say that his wife com­
plained because he didn't
give her something for
Mother’s Day. He Insists
thal she Isn't hts mother,
so he should have have to
give her anything. I say he
didn’t give birth to her
cither, but he probably
gives her a birthday pres­
ent ! A n d wh a t about
Christmas? Shouldn't all
USED TO IT gifts be given to the Lord?
IN JERSEY It's his birthday we honor.
DEAR USED TO IT: I'd
As for Mother's Day. the
say the difference was h u s b u n d Is m o r e r e ­
S30.
sponsible for his wife be­
ing a mother than her
D E A R A B B Y : I t ' s children are! Besides, we
nothing new when daugh­ should wish all mothers a
t er s d i s a p p o i n t t h e i r h a p p y M o t h e r ' s Day .
mothers, but how's this for whether It’s our mother or
a switch? 1 Invited my not. for It is their day to be
mother to have dinner honored.
J.C.OF
with me on Mother's Day
ALBUQUERQUE
and she accepted. (Mom's
divorced.)
The Friday before
Mother’ s Day she called
me and said, "I hope you
won't be angry, but my
'boyfriend' Invited me to
fly to Las Vegas with him
for the weekend, so I won't
be able to keep our dinner
dale on Sunday."
Care to comment?

L a w n

W h en s e le c tin g a com pan y,
expect the following; a consultation
which will Include a survey o f the
landscape, description o f services
and treatments Included, and the
pricing structure. A program which
will meet local needs for fertility,
mowing. Insect and weed control,
and d isease c o n tro l. Capabl e
personnel that can promptly and
courteously answer your questions.
Ask the contact person how much
training and experience he or she
has. Ask if the personnel are
lic ensed for ap p lic at io n of
pesticides. This Is a critical point
since many effective materials arc

M a in t e n a n c e S e r v ic e
toxic and "Just a n y " pesticide
application will not suffice.
Contracts may be written or
verbal, on a yearly or monthly
basis, very detailed or very sketchy.
Try to be aware o f the pricing
system.and Included services. Look
at the cost of the total program and
compare pricing for fertilization,
pest control and cultural practices
like mowing or cultivation (aerifying
or dethatching).
Keep In mind that cheapest Is not
always best, compare costs only
among comparable services, not
Just the bottom line.

Anchor
Club
Installs

In And Around Geneva

The Anchor Club of
Seminole High School
held Its installation
banquet at the Holiday
House on May 26.
Twelve Anchor Club
m em bers and nine
Pilot Club members
were in attendance.
Installation officer
was Mrs. Mary Stokes.
Anchor Club faculty
sponsor. Officers In­
stalled for 1983/1984
w c r e ; D e e
Goebclbcckcr, presi­
dent; Jill Janak. vice
president; Bonnie
Clark, secretary:
Cheryl Wright, treas u r c r ;
K r i s
Goebclbcckcr,
s e r g e a n t - a t arms/soclal director;
Leonara Folsom, chapl al n/hl s t o r l an and
R eb ecca Haug and
Lisa Grant, directors.
A two-year academic
s c h o la r s h ip was
aw ar d c dl o Bonita
Blue, presented b yi
Mrs. Betty Sandage,
Pilot Club sponsor.

This Is the time o f year when celebrations
are the order o f the day. Seniors In high
school are getting ready to graduate and
students at all grade levels are looking
forward with glee to the last day o f the '82-‘83
school year. For Seminole County students,
that last day will come Friday, June 10.
June 10 is also the date chosen for the
Oviedo High School baccalaureate service
which will begin at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. Daniel
Estok from St. Luke's Lutheran Church In
Slavla will be the speaker.
The senior class o f Oviedo High will also
hold commencement exercises Saturday
morning, June 11. at 9 a.m. at the John
Courier Reid. The class will be addressed by
Its own orator. Ed Dullmeyer.

There's

Lastly, be careful of oversale.
Weed free, trouble free lawns can be
maintained but not as easily as
som etim es portrayed. Florida's
climate and soil conditions require
more attention to cultural details.
Plants can be under water stress
and more prone to pest problems In
a matter of days. Find out If you can
expect service If problems arise
within a reasonable time • If re­
quested once the contract begins.

have better maintenance program^
than others. It la. however, very
Important to realize that a lawn
maintenance program la NO BET­
TER than the care given OUTSIDE
the maintenance contract. If not
mowed and Irrgated correctly pro­
per fertilization and pest control will
not keep the turf quality at an
optimum. If you do not take care o f
your part, you would be better off
without a lawn service company.

As with all commercial busi­
nesses, some lawn services compa­
nies are better than others, frnd out
the company's reputation. Some

All Seminole County Agricultural
extension services programs are
open to all regardless o f race, color,
sex or national origin.
.
n

Graduations,C elebration
Interesting contest. You will have to keep
your eyes open at the grocery store for the]
proper form and Instructions. The company
sponsoring the contest has printed a folder o f '
Interesting recipes that they ask you to read
and try. Then you com plete a slogan
explaining why one particular recipe is your,
favorite. Prizes Include a refrigerator,*,
microwave ovens and sets o f dishes plus
1,000 cookbooks.

Lou
Childers

Chuluota First Assembly o f God Church were
rewarded for all of the hard work they put
Into preparations for the spaghetti supper
held last Friday. The girls reached half of
their goal for earning their way to a retreat
that will be held at Camp Alafla near
Lakeland the third week o f June.

Over 112 relatives and friends attended
with the crowd honoring Charles on his
birthday.

Shelia Starkey, sponsor, assisted by Mrs.
Sue DeWitt, supervised as the following girls
cooked spaghetti sauce, made tossed salad,
and finally served those that attended the
spaghetti feast; Susl Childers. Glcma Monroe.
Louanne Simpkins. Chrissy Starkey. Brenday
Teaster, Janet Tcaster, Jamie Vcnson. and
Tammy Williams.

Following the Baker family festivities.
Charles and Liza motored to Canton where
they visited Liza's sister and her husband,
Mary Ellen and Paul Rcnny, for another
family gcttogclhcr.

The group plans a car wash to cam the
extra money needed to pay for their registra­
tion at camp. June 11 you will sec the girls at
the savings and loan In Oviedo, ready to wash
your car or truck.

The Mlssloncttcs Club members o f the

Received information this week about an

C h arles (S h orty) and Li za Baker o f
Chuluota. attended a Baker family reunion at
the home o f his sister and brother-in-law,
Pauline and Ed Powers In Frazaysburg. Ohio.

BECOM E AN IN S TA N T
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30 Million Won Monthly
And Paid Out In Full,
Tax Free By Canadian Government
Send For FREE Brochure
Sarvlca i Handling Dapt.
365*810 W. Broadway
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H E A T P U M P BONUS

S P E C IA L

yL

Search Is On For
Outstanding Dad \
Sunday. June 19. Is Father's Day.
The Herald is searching for the annual.
"Outstanding Dad," but we need the help of.
readers.
Write a letter and tell us in your o.vn words
why you think a certain father is outstanding.'1
'
First, write your full name, address. Including
street, city and state, and your telephone,
number at the top o f the first page. Then, add
the name, address and telephone number of
the favorite dad you are nominating. Pleasf
type or clearly prtnj- your letter containing
Information about Dad.
“
Submit letters to PEOPLE Editor Doris
Dietrich, 300 N. French Ave.. Sanford 32771,
no later than Wednesday,’ June ft, the’
deadline for Judging.
1 *

Y O U ARE INVITED T O O U R

OPEN
Come O n
In And
Jo in
The Fun!

+C

H O U SE

JUNE 4
AM Til 5

DENVER DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUOHTER:
What's to say? I hope your
mother hit a Jackpot.

DEAR ABBY: I had the
most wonderful Mother's
Day I've ever had. Instead
o f having all my children
and grandchildren to my
house for the usual Sun*
(lay dinner, they bought
pie a corsage and took me
to a fancy restaurant. I
didn't have to cook or
clean up and 1 felt like
queen for a day.
MARYLAND MAMMA

4.
DEAR ABBY: I took a
page out o f your book.
W h e n e v e r so m e n o sy
person asks me what my
h usban d g a v e me fo r
Mother's Day. I say. "H e
gave me the kldt. And on
Father's Day. I give 'em
back."
b u r l in q a m e

GAME PLAYER
DEAR ABBY: Whoever
said, " A son Is a aon 'til he
takes a wife, but a daugh­
ter Is a daughter all o f her
life." hit the nail on the
head.
Ever since my son mar­
ried. he has gone to his
wife's mother's to spend
Mother's Day with his Inlaws.
My d au gh ter Is also
married, but she saves
every Mother’s Day for me.
M others Day to me Is

US SAVING BONDS
I M BOND WITH PURCHASE OF SM B
tWO BOND WITH PURCHASE OF 30Of
OFFER ENDS JUNE 30, t t t l

Sanford
(M i) MS-MIV
Your Neighborhood Carrier Dealer

ELECTRONIC
RENTALS A SALES C O

♦

�SPORTS
*A— Evening Htrald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Juno 3 , 1H J

UCF Applies Muscle, Seeks l-AA Football Status
After four years of trying to run a football
program with Its head In the sand, the
University of Central Florida Is ready to
stand up and fly right.
"T h is is a new era at UCF." athletic
director Bill “ Pete" Peterson told a gather­
in g o f medi a Thur sday at B arn ey's
Steakhouse In Orlando. "W e're going to put
some muscle Into the program."
The muscles have been flexed. Money1has
been raised and the recruiting has been
intensified. The state's fourth-blggest uni­
versity has applied for Division I-AA status,
and hopes within five years to move Into
Division I-A with the big boys. The Knights
are currently Division II. although four I-AA
schools are scheduled for 1983's fall slate.
Although Peterson has applied for the I-AA

already, the Fighting Knights will probably
not receive that status until 1984. The
Knights had planned on staying at the
Division II level another two years before
applying, £mt Peterson felt the time to move
was now. Another major impediment facing
the Knights Is that the basketball team
would have to play 26 of Its 28 games
against I-AA compeltion, and a third of
those games at home. The UCF facility sets
only around 3.000 fans, less than adequate
to bring In the big schools.
"W e don't care who we play," declared
Peterson. "W e'll take on LSU, Louisville or
even Alabama. Orlando Is ripe for big time
football and we're going to give It to them.
"But these people need lo be educated.
Some of them don't know we exist. Orlando

was the biggest step In extracting the UCF
head from its sandy enclosure.

Sam
Cook
Sporti Editor

deserves a great team. We're going to put on
the damndest promotion you've ever seen.
We're going to shock some people," he
added.
The biggest shock generated so far was
the hiring o f coach Lou Saban. The
knowledgeable veteran has seen It all on the
college and pro level, and his procurement

"W e're doing our best to get the best
possible athletes at UCF." said Saban. who
Is also concerned with exposure. "W e've
been talking to Junior high schools, Rotary
groups, air conditioning groups and any­
body else who will listen. We are serious
about this program, but we need the
exposure."
Saban then told the group his biggest
problem — Identity. " I was talking to this
one group and 1 told them we wanted to gel
35.000 fans to our first game," he said.
One gentleman Interrupted and asked,
"How are you going park 35,000 cars at
UCF?"

"Thai's the problem." continued Saban.
"T h e guy didn't even know we played our
games at the Tangerine, cr. Citrus Bowl
(downtown OrlandoJ. That's one of the
reasons we're going to Division I. We have
• the facility. One reason a lot of schools are
dropping class Is because they don't have a
place to play. We have that advantage and
we want to make It go.
"Bill (Pctcrsonl and I can not afford to fall.
We arc definitely enjoying what we're doing,
but when we walk away from this 15 or 20
years from now’, we want to be able to say
w
e d
l
d 1
t
"But I hope it doesn't take that long — we
might not be around that long." Saban
laughed.

Rocky's Texaco
Rips SHA, 16-2

H en d erson 's Hit
Clinches Crow n
For Clem Leonard

Rocky's Texaco finished the 1983 Sanford Junior
League softball season with a 16-2 trouncing of Sanford
Housing Authority Thursday at the Fort Mellon Park
sofiball firlg. Rocky's Texaco clinched Hie league
championship with a victory over Kiwunls on Tuesday
and ended up with a 10-2 record for the season.
A nine-run firs) Inning explosion propelled Rocky’s
over SHA Thursday. Mary Cross. Gina Cross and
Fcronda Brown all walked to load the bases with no
outs. Latlsa Beasley then reached on an error as two
runs scored and. one out later, four consecutive SHA
errors led to five more runs. Corelta Moore lhen ripped a
single to drive home two more runs as Rocky’s Texaco
took a 9-0 lead.
Rocky's Texaco put the game further out or reach with
five runs in the second Inning. Beasley reached on an
•error to lead off and Liz Chesser drew a walk. Mary
Hicks then stepped up and drilled a three-run homer.
With one out In the Inning, Vlmcsc Chapman singled
and scored when Regina McKinney's fly hall was
mishandled in the outfield. McKinney came around lo
score on Moore's RBI ground out as Rocky's Texaco look
a 14-0 lead.
Rocky's made it 16-0 with a pair o f runs In the lop of
the third. Gina Cross and Brown both walked and. with
two outs. Hicks chased home both runs will) a double,
giving her five RBI for the game.
Sanford Housing Authority went scoreless on three
hits in the first three innings off winning pitcher Brawn.
SHA finally got on the board In the bottom of the fourth
as Laura Burke rapped a one-out triple and scored on a
single by Jackie Hamilton.
SHA added a run in the fifth Inning as Tonya Curtis
reached on an error and scored when Belinda Anderson
reached on an error.
Hicks' two hits led Rocky's Tcxuco while Burke
rapped out a pair o f hits for SHA.
In Thursday's second game, Klwanis won by forfeit
over Medco Pharmacy. Look for final standings and
individual leaders In Sunday's Herald.

Thursday's Pee W ee League scores
Clem Leonard Shell 11. Adcock Roofing 10.6 inn.
Graccy Construction 12. Butch's Chevron 8
Thursday's L ittle Am erican scores
Adcock Roofing 14. Atlantic Bank 10
Butch's Chevron 15. Seminole Petroleum 14

Britt Henderson drilled a two-run double In the top of
the sixth inning Thursday to lead Clem Leonard Shell to
a 11-10. extra-inning victory over Adcock Roofing In
Sanford Pee Wee League action at Chase Park. The
victory clinches '.he league title for Clem Leonard Shell,
which finished with a 9-1 record compared to 8-2 for
Adcock Roofing.
After a scoreless first Inning, Clem Leonard Shell
erupted for five runs In the top of the second to take a
5-0 lead. Henderson and Rick Perez both drew walks
and Herman Eason was hit by a pitch to load the bases
with no outs. Adcock Roofing's pitcher, Phillip "Duke"
King, then struck out the next two batters and was one
out away from getting out of the Inning without giving
up a run. Adaryl Jones broke the scoreless tie. however,
as he drilled a two-run double and Tony Lattlmore
cleared the bases as he followed Jones with a three-run
triple.
Adcock Roofing responded with four runs In the
bottom o f the second to cut Clem Leonard Shell's lead to
5-4. Ryan "D oc" Edwards and Kris Barnes were Issued
free passes to lead ofT the frame and Jamie "Scoop"
King followed with a single to drive home one run. Two
outs later. "Duke" King and Demetry Beamon both
walked to chase home two more runs and "Duke"
scored the fourth run on a passed ball.
Clem Leonard Shell took a 6-4 lead with one run In the
third. Diablo Washington led off with a single and scored
when Eric Lambert walked with the bases loaded.
Clem Leonard Shell increased Us lead to 8-4 as it
tallied twice In the top of the fourth. Jones led off with a
double and scored on Lattlmore's RBI groundout.
Anthony Roberts was then hit by a pitch and he scored
Fin al Junior League S oftb a ll Standings
on a two-out single by Henderson.
T
E
A
M
....................................................................W
L
Meanwhile. Clem Leonard Shell pitcher. Roberts,
•Rocky's
Texaco...................................................
10
2
shutout Adcock Roofing in both the bottom of the third
itrAsarWsM Klwanis................................................................. «
4
and fourth Innings. Going Into the bottom o f the fifth
Rocky's Texaco coach Joe Riggins shows Latra Rocky's, which clinched the championship with a Medco Pharmacy.................................
and final Inning. Clem Leonard still had a 8-4 lead.
Sanford Housing.................................................... 2 10
Roberts struck out the first Adcock hitter In the fifth Hampton the way to go home during a 16-2 victory win Tuesday, finished with a 10-2 record.
•Indicates League Champion
and was two outs away from clinching the league title. over Sanford Housing A utho rity Th u rs d a y .
Damien "Muscle" Tillman then came up with a single
and both Edwards and Barnes walked lo load the bases
with one out. "Scoop” King followed with a two-run
single ahd both Barnes and "Scoop" came around to
score on passed balls as Adcock Roofing tied the game at
TAMPA (UP1I - The Tampa Bay
would have killed this whole season for
8-8 and sent It Into extra frames.
PARIS (UPI) — The prospccl of playing
the USFL and It would have been too
Clem Leonard Shell responded Immediately with three Buccaneers have traded their first pick
defending French Open champion Mats
much time." he said. "1 wasn't In the
runs in the top of the sixth. With one out. Lattlmore in the 1984 draft to the Cincinnati
Wllandcr o f Sweden is enough to give
mood to devote that much time to this
singled and came around to score on a double by B en g a l s f o r q u a r t e r b a c k J a c k
most players nightmares.
quarterback who also has been talking
type o f thing."
Roberts. Washington then drew a walk and Henderson Thompson, a first round pick In 1979.
But Jose Hlgucras of Spain went to bed
with the USFL and who had a contract
The Wade came as a surprise to
rapped out his game-winning double for a 11-8 Clem
wondering
whether he will even be able
JACKSONVILLE
(UPI)
The
city
of
Thompson,
who
only
three
weeks
ago
with
the
Michigan
Panthers
before
de­
Leonard Shell lead.
to show up for today's semifinal match
Jacksonville moved a step closer lo
ciding to stay with the Bengals.
Adcock Roofing didn't give In though, and came up settled a protracted contract suit with
against Wllandcr, a clash scheduled for
Thom pson refused to rejoin the claiming a USFL franchise with the
with a two-out rally in the bottom of the sixth. "Duke" the Bengals that began when he failed to
decision
by
the
owner
o
f
the
cross-state
center court In Roland Garros stadium.
rejoin
the
club
last
year
at
the
conclusion
Bengals
after
the
strike,
charging
the
King led off the frame with a single and moved up to
Hlgucras. who is married to an Ameri­
club breached his contract by not paying Tampa Bay Bandits to surrender his
second on Beamon's groundout. With two outs. Tillman o f the NFL Players' Association strike.
can
and lives In Palm Springs, Calif., has
expansion
rights
for
Florida.
"T
h
is
came
as
a
total
surprise."
him
during
the
57-day
strike.
roped a single to drive in King and Tillman scored on a
been
plagued by a chronic tennis elbow
John
Bassett,
majority
owner
of
the
Thompson
said
In
a
telephone
news
"Basically.
1
never
belonged
to
the
passed ball to pull Adcock Roofing within a run, 11-10.
this year and says every match is
union and when the union took the Bandits, said Thursday he to "95 percent
Edwards, who had walked, was then picked off trying to conference hookup from his home In
torture.
sure" Jacksonville will have a team In
stand it did, I chose not to strike,"
advance to third as Clem Leonard claimed the Pec Wee Seattle, Wash.
The 30-ycar-old bearded Spaniard said
the league by the 1984 season.
"I had no clue," he said. "I went back
Thompson said Thursday.
League championship.
he was "scared" Thursday when he had
Bassett and general partner Stephen
He said he offered to play and when
In Monday's first game. Tyrone Chlbbcrton ripped two to Cincinnati to the mini-camp a couple
to complete his quartcrflnul match
the Bengals refused to pay him he felt he Arky agreed to several "concessions" in
.hits and Matt Wllk clubbed a two-run triple as Graccy o f weeks ago and there was no mention
clearing the way for Clearwater busi­ against 1977 champion Guillermo Vilas
o f It. I hud resolved myself lo the fact
had the right to look for work elsewhere.
'Construction upended Butch's Chevron. 12-8.
o f Argentina. Their confrontation was
\ George Martin picked up the pitching victory as he that I wus going to lie in Cincinnati.”
He said his lawsuit was over the nessman Fred Bullard to place a team In
halted by rain In the fifth set Wednesday
The
move
by
the
Bucs
strengthened
Jacksonville.
.allowed only four hits and Btruck out eight. Tyrone
question o f whether the Bengals could at
night after the duo had been playing for
Bullard,
who
must
pay
a
36
million
;Williams had a single and a triple for Butch's Chevron rumors that five-year quarterback Doug
the same time refuse to pay him and
four hours and 13 minutes.
while Lome Jones and Jimmy Caraway each had a Williams will not be back next season.
keep him from working elsewhere. The expansion fee. also reportedly must pay
Williams has played out his option and
" I was really scared when I practiced
double.
court decreed the case to an arbitrator, an undisclosed sum to Bassett for the
expansion
rights.
Basaett
declined
to
before
the mlch. I could not even serve,"
; In Sanford Little American League action at Bay is a free agent.
who ruled the Bengals were within their
discuss the specifics o f the deal, and
Hlgucras admitted after he had taken the
A venu e Field, Adcock Roofing scored eight runs In the
rights
not
to
pay
him.
He Is coming off knee surgery and the
last four games in 17 minutes to oust the
Bullard was not available for comment.
second Inning and held off a late Atlantic Bank rally en trauma o f the unexpected death of his
"But he didn't answer the other
fourth-seeded Vilas. 6-2.6-7.6-1 4-6.6-1.
Bullard's next step Is to gain approval
route to a 14*10 victory.
wife and has said he and the Bucs arc far
question." Thompson said.
" I think one day I will wake up and not
o f the league owners.
; Patrick Daughtery went 3 for 4 with a home run and a apart financially In contract talks.
"1 guess we could have taken It to
be able to play tennis any more."
A USFL spokesman In New York said
triple for Adcock Roofing while Tony Chavers went 3 for
appeal but that would have taken a lot o f he could not comment on the agreement,
He said this week he has talked to
Hlgueras added. "It gets worse and
!4 with a homer. Bernard Mitchell was 3 for 4 with a
lim e." he said. "I'm In no mood to be a
several
United
States
Football
League
but said owners are expected to vote on
worse, slowly but surely."
[triple and "Steady Eddie" Charles was 2 for 4. Mitchell
martyr."
clubs
and
will
sign
with
one
if
Its
offer
league
expansion
at
a
meeting
next
week
Hlgueras knows he should rest, but is
also picked up the pitching victory for Adcock Roofing.
Thompson said he already had a in Denver.
determined lo seize his chance at Roland
; Larry Allen and Julius Bennett each had three hits for tops that o f the Bucs. The Tampa
Tribune quoted sources as saying flatly
contract with the Panthers at that time
Garros this year after losing to Vilas In
The USFL. in Its first year o f operation,
'Atlantic Bank.
that
-Williams
will
not
be
with
the
Bucs
but
didn't
want
to
put
another
season
In
the 1982 semifinals.
has
12
teams
and
plans
to
add
from
four
A t Fort Mellon Park. Butch's Chevron survived an
Jeopardy.
" I will have five weeks rest after this
to eight expansion trams by next season,
11-run first Inning by Seminole Petroleum and came In 1983.
In T h o m p s o n , the Bucs get a
"F or us to take it to court any further
tournament," he said.
the spokesman said.
back fora 15-14 victory.
Jeff Derr, Anthony Harris, Latreil Williams and Robert
Whittaker each had a double for Butch's Chevron which
managed only five hits off a trio o f Seminole Petroleum
Butch's Chevron, however, took advantage o f
j i g walks In the game.
Ah, there's nothing like a little Harcar to cure a
rapped two doubles and a single to pace the
Skipper rapped out a pair o f hits to lead a seven-hit
losing streak.
Express. Sonny Eubanks. Leonard Anderson. Jay
~ nlnole F troleum attack while Tyrone Green belted a
S &amp; H Fabricating, a serious challenger to the
McClure and Frank Turner, who had three hits
»-run homer and Tim Davis added a RBI triple.
DeLuxe Bar during the first half o f the Sanford
Wednesday, stroked two hits each. Wayne Gager
— ChriaFlster
Men's Softball League, had fallen upon hard tiroes of
Winning pitcher Carl Manning Jr., Mark Manning,
picked up the win while Manny Rivera took the
late.
Missing a couple key players and a dormant
Don Waterman and Chuck McNabb each had three
setback. Frank James and Willy Reynolds had two
il«. Shell
OBI BOB—’l l B 0
offense had extended the Fabricating losing skein to
hits to pace 134) 8 A H. McNabb had a two-run
hits apiece for Moblllte.
040 042— 10 B 0
four games. It hadn't won since May 16 against
double In the sixth as dla M. Manning and
W P - Anthony Roberta. LP - Phillip "D uke" King.
Moblllte.
Waterman as Fabricating sent 19 batters to the
For the DeLuxe, "Steady Eddie" Jackson rinneH
B 42-12 3 0
Then
came
Harcar,
a
1-18
ball
club.
S
A
H
built
a
plate.
his league-leading 15th homer o f the year and added
t's Chat ran
821- B 4 0
modest 4-0 lead after five Innings, then exploded for
Dave Ferry, Jim Mullens and Wes Hatchings had
two singles. Levi Raines and Ned Raines each ro J d
• WP — George Martin. LP — L. Jones.
16 runs In the the sixth en route to a 204)
two hits aplsce while Barry Graham scored four
three hits while Danny PaLrick homered and slapSd
IBtiarh Saaflag
1B1 113-14 IB 2
demolition o f Ijarcar Thursday night at Plnehurst
runs. Collin Smith was 3-for-3 for Harcar which only
three singles for a perfect 4-for-4 night. Fred
|40 0 1 4 -1 0 B 2
Field.
advanced n runner as Car as third base in the first
Washington and winning hurler Bill Studomlre had
j W P -B e rn a rd Mitchell. L P - J u liu s Bennett.
In other games, thei DeLuxe Bar won its 19th
inning.
two hits each. Mark Snell had two hits lor ii &gt;straight game, 16-2 over Central Florida Regional
Express, 8*12, scored in every inning but one
(11)02 1 0 -1 4 7 2
while taking apart Mobillte. 2-18. Scott Williams
Hospital and the Express dumped MobUltc, 14-5.
504 33— 11 B S

Bucs Acquire Thompson; Jax Closer To USFL
Roundup

Fabricating Finds Cure For Losing Streak, Hammers Harcar
Men’s Softball

i

1
1
11
1i

jjgw *'12' “d

•Jeny Hurkneas. LP - Ken Crotty.

Sn"'

39

�Evtnlm Hrald, ttnfonf, FI.

Falcone, Forster
Handcuff Cards;
Angels Curtail
Yankees' Streak

BOX SCORES

When the Atlanta Braves signed free agents Pete
Fulconc and Terry Forster last winter, many baseball
observers raised their eyebrows In astonishment and
wondered If manager .Joe Torre hadn’t been hit In the
head with a foul ball and lost all sense of reason.
To spend money on Falcone and Forster was thought
by several scouts to be foolhardy. Forster had had a
series o f arm problems In recent years while Falcone,
although blessed with a strong arm. was lacking In
Inlcnslty and concentration.
Torre, however, was convinced they could both help
his staff and he’s looking more like King Midas every
day. Falcone and Forster have turned Into solid gold
Investments.
! The two pitchers combined Thursday night to lead the
Atlanta Braves to an 8-1 triumph over the St. Louis
Cardinals. Falcone did not allow a run and gave up only
four hits over 7 1-3 Innings to notch his third victory In
four decisions and Forster hurled the last 1 2-3 Innings
to post his seventh save.
"Fin Just happy we won. 1 feel I did my Job and
pitched the best 1 could possibly pitch." said Falcone.
"Terry went out there and did a good Job too. It’s a
confidence builder to me to win and to beat a first place
learn like the Cardinals — world champions."
Chris Chambliss supported Falcone by driving In five
runs with a single and n grand slam. Chambliss, mired
|n a slump during which his batting average has dipped
into the .230s. singled home a run off loser [fob Forsch,
3-4. in the sixth Inning then connected for his fifth
career grand slam olf reliever Jim Kaat In the eighth.
Boh 1lorr.cr also homered for Atlanta.
"I don't feel I was In a slump,” said Chambliss. "W e're
swinging every day ami we get more than 500 or 600 at
pats a year, and to say that from this day to that day lie
had a slump really doesn't apply to me. I haven’t been
hitting well — I've been making a lot of mistakes at the
plate and I've been swinging at bad pitches. When I do
jilt It hard, they were catching It. so what I‘vc got to do Is
stay consistent"

Cubs 3. Pirates 2
At Chicago. Rync Sandberg's two-run homer with two
out In the eighth Inning rallied the Cubs to victory. The
Cubs completed their first triple play in more than a
decade when they converted one In the second Inning.
Steve Trout. 4-6. gained the victory and Lee Smith
earned Ills seventh save.

Padres 4, Phillies I
.At San Diego. Gene Richards singled off reliever Ron
Reed with the bases loaded and two out In the sixth
Inning to drive In two runs and lead the Padres to
victory. Dave Dravccky picked up hls league-leading
eighth triumph as the Padres handed the Phillies their
fourth straight loss and 12th In their last 16 games.
Gary Matthews homered for the Phillies.

Expos 11, Giants 4
At San Francisco, Andre Dawson drove In three runs
with a homer and a single and relief pitcher Ray Burris
burned in 4 1-3 scoreless Innings to help the Expos snap
the Giants' four-game winning streak. Tom O'Malley
homered for the Giants.
Tim Raines, Montreal outfielder, missed hls third

STANDINGS

ThartdaytaAre
Gy tMM

P E T S FA LCO N E

A.L./N.L. Baseball
straight game, but said he should be In the lineup
tonight against the Giants. Raines pulled a hamstring
while trying to avoid a tag Monday. He was held out last
night because o f the cold conditions at Candlestick Park.
He has five hits In hls last six at bats which has raised
hls average to .286.

Dodgers 5, Meta 4
At Los Angeles, ptneh-hitter Candy Maldonado belted
a two-out single to score Steve Yeager from second base
in the 14th Inning and lift the Dodgers. Maldonado pinch
hit for winner Pat Zachry. 2-0. and laced an 0-2 pitch
from Mcts reliever Jesse Orosco down the third-base
line. Orosco, 3-1. worked the final 3 2-3 Innings. George
Foster had a three-run homer for New York,

Brewers 6, A’s 1
Mike Caldwell knew he had a tradition to keep alive —
hls own.
It had been exactly one year since Harvey Kucnn
replaced Buck Rodgers as manager of the Milwaukee
Brewers, and on Kucnn's first day Caldwell had pitched
a complete game In a 5-2 win over Seattle. Caldwell
celebrated the occasion Thursday with another com­
plete game, this time a 6-1 victory over the Oakland A's
at Milwaukee.

Angels 9, Ysnkees 8
At New York. Doug DcCInccs ripped hls second home
run o f the game, a two-run. tlc-breaklng shot In the
seventh inning, to help California snap the Yankees'
six-game winning streak. DcCtnces leads the AL with 13
homers. New York had used n two-run homer from Don
Baylor In the first Inning and a three-run shot from Dave
Winfield In the third to take a 5-0 lead. Ellis Valentine's
grand slam tied the score 7-7.

Bine Jeys 6, Tigers 1
At Detroit. CHIT Johnson doubled in the tlc-breaklng
run in the fourth inning and scaled the verdict with a
two-run homer In the eighth to help Toronto stay on top
In the Eastern Division. Luis Leal gave up seven hits
over the first seven Innings. Detroit starter Milt Wilcox
was ejected from the game by plate umpire Sieve
Palermo after arguing a balk call.

White Box 6, Royals 3
At Chicago, rookie Chris Nyman hit a two-run homer,
hls first In the majors, and Jerry Dybzinskl added an
RBI single In a three-run seventh inning to rally the
White Sox. Harold Baines hit a two-run homer off Mike
Armstrong In the eighth inning for the White Sox’ final
runs. Juan Agosto, l-O. who relieved Rich Dotson In the
sixth, earned hls first major-league victory.

Indians 3, Mariners 1
At Cleveland, Rick SutcllfTc scattered six hits and Rick
Manning boosted hls hitting streak to 14 games as the
Indians extend their winning streak to fou^ games.
Sutcliffe, 6-2, struck out seven and walked two in going
the distance for the third time this season. Steve
Henderson homered for Seattle In the third, hls second
o f the season.

national league

AMERICAN LEAGUE

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Cleveland]. SaatttaI
California*, NewYork!
Atlantal. St. LeUt I
Lot Angela*J.MawYork4.14liming*
Chicago 4. Kantat City 1
Montreal II. SanFrancitco 4
Friday’ * Oamet
(All Tima* COT)
Oakland (Krueger til at Cleveland
Friday'*04mat
ISutclitt*SD,7:»pm.
Piltiburgh IMeWilliam* 43) at Chicago
Toronto iGott 141 at Baltimore 10
IRuthvtn141,7:30pm.
Martinet 101.7 Up m
Houtton (Nifkro 14) at Cincinnati
Kama* City (Creal 00) at Chicago
iPrlcel 1), 7:13pm
IKoo*m*n10) 1:10pm
St Loud ILaPoint at) at Atlanta
Detroit (Morrlt 1J) at Tan* ISmithton
ICamp41). 7:49p.m.
JD.IUpm
Philadelphia (Chrittanton 341 at San
Bolton (Boyd 00) at Mmnetot*
Diego(Lollar 1-4),»:« pm.
(William*741.1:13pm
New York (Lynch 17) at Lot Angel**
Seattle (Young 41) *1 New York
(Beckwith00). 10:11pm
(Howell3111pm
Montreal IGullictun 44) at SAn
California (Fortch ID *1 Milwaukee
Francitco (KrwkowIII, 10:15p.m.
&lt;

E-Hernandai. L. Smith. Ob
erktell. Santana DP-SI. Leutt 1. Atlanta3
LOB -SI. Louit I. Atlanta 0. IB—
Wathlngtan. Murphy. HR-Horner (7)j
ChambWt* 171 SB—Ramiay 13).
FH1LADELFHIA

JAN DIEM

abrkM

ahrhM

Dernier rl 7000 Wlggin* rl 4110
Rot* lb 4000 Bonilla R&gt; 4000
Matthew* II 4 13 1 Richard* II 40 11
Schmidt x&gt; 1000 Jon** cl
0000
Dial c
40 10 Garvty lb 40 11
M*ddo« cl 4000 Kennedy c 4030
Garcia 3b 3000 McRynldt cl 411I
Reed P
0000 Salatar Jb 40 10
Virgil pH 1000 Templetn tt 3110
Deleter* tt 3030 Ramlrei tt 0000
Denny p 10 10 Oravecky p I 000
Former p 10 00
Mlltoume 3bI 000
Total*
t i l l ! Total*
U 4 II 4
Philadelphia
0MMl MO—I
Jan 0»tf*
0M117H i-4
Gam*winningRBI - Richard*ID.
E-Garcia. DP-Jan Diego 3 LOBPhliadeiphia 4. San Diego 10 36-Dial.
Matthew*. DeJetut. Wiggin* HRMatthcw* (SI. MeReynold* U). $8McReynold* (II, Templeton (1). SDravocky
IP H RERBBSO
Philadelphia
Danny
3 3 0 01 1
Farmer (L 071 73) S 3 1 7 I
Reed
71) 7 I I 1 1
SanDtage
Oravecky (Will
0 7 1111
T-M4. A—14,474.
ST. LOUIS

ob r h M

ATLAHTA

ol r b M

Romiey 3b 10 10 Butler II
5000
Oberktell * 1000 Hubbard 3b 1 I 30
Green ph 1000 Wathlngtn rl 4 170
Kaat p
0000 Murphy cl 37 10
Hernandl lb 4000 Horner 3b 1)11
Hendrick rl 4000 Chambltt 1b4 135
LSmith ll 4070 Benedict c 40 It
McGee cl 4 t 30 Ramirtt it 40 10
Porter c 30 10 Falcone p 3000
OSmtta u 40 11 Fortier p 111 I
Forach p 10 00
Santana )b l 000
ER IB SO Tatait
a 171 Total! MI u 7
SI. Low*
MOMMI-1
Atlanta
IHNlMi-0
GameWinningRBI-Homer (II

iP H RERBBSO
St. Leah
Fortch |L 141
7 74 1 11
Kaat
I S 4 4 10
Atlanta
Falcone (Will 7 13 4 0 0 4 1
Fortier (S II
171 1 I I 0 |
WP-Fortch T—3:14. A-I0.7X.
MONTREAL
SAN FRANCISCO •
abrkM
abrbM
Little u
4111 LoMatttr it 1001
Francon* ll J i l l Bergman lb 10 0 1
Dawton ct 4111 Evan* tb J i l l
Oh.er 1b 4 110 Dari* ct 10 01
Wohltord II 10 I 3 Clark rl 10 11
Carter c Ji l l Venabl* II 4000
Cromarii* rt J
I 11O'Malley 3b
waitach 3b 4
13 1Wellman 3b
Flynn 3b 4
11 I May c4
Lea p
1000 McGotttgn p I 000
Larch p
0
000 Minion p
Burn* p 700 0 Summen phi I IA
Martinj - l l Df
Johnton ph 1010
Kingman p 000i
YoungbU ph I 000
Total* w ii u n Tatata
Mill
Mantraal
III Ml 303-11
Ja* Friachce
0M0NMO-4
Gam*WinningRBI-Cromartia (41 »
E-Davit DP-Msntr**l I. San Frart
citco I LOB-Montreal a. SanFrancitco7.
3B-C*rl*r, Wallach. May. HRT
O'Malley (I). Dawton 17). SB-Dawion
(4) S-Le*
IP H RERBBSO
Mantraal
Lea
4 4 4 4 1 4
Larch
33 0 0 0 1 0
Burri* (Will
* 11 4 0 0 0 3
IanFrMdUB
McGattig*. (L 1*1 4 1 1 4 « ‘ H
Minton
1 1 1 10 «
Martin
3) 1111
Kingman
1 4 1 1 ,IK,I
McGaHiganpitchedla1batter* InJtti.
laapitchedtoSbattenintlh.
T-7;JI. A—0.474.

SCORECARD

IN BRIEF
A stros 15-Run Explosion
Secures Top-Team Berth
The Altamonte AttitM broke loose for IB run*
In the third Inning Thursday night to demolish
the Cardinals. 24-14, and win the Altamonte'
Little National Major League playpff epoUn the
Top Team Tournament which begins June 16.
The Astros, managed by Wayne Weger and
coached by Doug Heiser, trailed 6-2 before
Jumping on losing pitcher Robbie Varltek for IB
big ones to turn the game Into « rout.
Wes Weger and winning hurler Jeff Conklin
led the 19-hlt attack with four hits each. Weger.
the winning pitcher In Tuesday's flist-round’
win, ripped two doubles and a pair of singles.
-V
Burton had two hits iece. Andy Spoiski added
a double while Kevin
and Jerry Thurston
had singles.
The Astros will play Oyletfo at 7 p.m. on
Monday, Junei 10 at Altamonte's Eaatmonte
Field.

M ocny Leeds

F,C. //Wins

Jamie Mocny drilled two singles and a double
and Robbie Koehn picked up the '* *- '
victory at Forest City II upended Forest City
9-5. at the Seminole Pony Baseball complex
near Winter Springs. Bryce Fetter had four hit*
for Forest City II Including a double while Mike
Trotta added a single and tarodoublet,
'•&gt;*.;
*
In action last week. Forest CUy {1 cruised to a
9-2 victory over Lake Mary. Mocny stroked thiw
hits and John Feola added a pair. Koehn got the
Longwood I DSI Unproved to
far the
season with a B-4 victory am
....
Salvage's Boys. A flve-run fourth tafttog
propelled DSI to toe victory.;
Jeff Llvemois had a tf
picked up three RBI for
added e single, triple at— .-.
Lamb drove in a pair of runa

m

-a

i

m
i .
m tonight's
. 17*ye
Lyman
. Brenile

The

44II) 14 41 .IX Staub ph 1000 Valaruuela p 11 10
47171 14 3) JIB Oroico p 1000 Stewart p 0000
41141 47 17 J11
Monday ph 0000
Niedentuer p0000
40131 M 41 .11)
A l Sugar Sam Inal*
Landeitoy rt 10 10
44143 M Jl JD
Thurtday night ratull*
H « I) 4 TataI*
47) II I
4417* 74 13 JD TataIt
Flr*t ra ce -3 / 1 4 ,0 :3 1 .7 1
Tataeat*whenwinningrunIcared
4 Sole Boy
* 70 1 40 4 70
M3IMMt IMM—4
• “ r b pd. New Turk
IB Iu * Chip Merit
140 140
43174 34 74 4)7 LatAagata*
IN 111 I I I M011-1
Carew, Cal
1 Carolina Waco
4 10
Game winning RBI —Maldonado 111.
44in » 44 m
Bogg*. Bo*
O (1-4)1 M 0 t T I 4 - I - U M 1 . i l
J* 143 34 33 )44
Brett. KC
Sacand race — *», D : n .7 l
44111 33 41 .141
E-Ballor. DP-Lo* Angela* 3. New
Yount, Mil
i Odd Hop*
14 40 1 40 110
4)117 X 33 .344 York 1. LOB-New York 13, Lot Angel**
McRae. KC
7 D J Packrat
2 f0 1.40
43171 17 17 111 lOlB-KIngman, Oquendo, Baker. HRGrlttey, NY
I J u it Add Water
4 00
4*147 34 35 111 Fenter (10). Landrtaui (I), Bradley (I).
Thornton. Clev
Q (4 7) 1 7 .» ( T (4 7 11 m .4 * f OD
441*3 IS S
3 .131 SB- i. Sa« 1 (111, Kingman (3). SOglivit, Mil
(4-4) 04,40
Simmon*. Mil
43173 It 33 JX Terrti, Andtrton1, Brook*, S.Sai.
TIUrGrae* — S / U .M ill.0 *
44170 17 34 J1I
IP H RERBBSO
SHenderton. Sea
I Llttta Cat
7.40 1.40 310
NewYork
4Ja ck ’iM Jglity
3*0 1.10
National League - Evan*, SF and Torrw
1 Y ourM yCh olc*
1 10
Murphy, All tl; Guerrero. LA It; Brock.
0(4-1711^01 T (M -D B 4 .M
ULFoetarandKingman. NY W
Oroico (LID
FaurINraca — I/14.M : 33*3
American League - DeCInct*. Cal Di
1 M L lo th
3 *0 1.40 1.40
0 10 4 4 I 1
Kittle. CM11: Bratt. KCili Rica, Bo* and Vataruual*
4 Mountain M utlln
4 40 1.40
Stewart
7 00 0 01
Wlnflaid. NY 10.
I R K 'i Union Jack
1.40
Niadentuar
1 I 0 0 I 1
RamBatMla
0(1-4)11.411 T (3 4 -1 144.40
National league - Murphy. All 40; Zi.hry IW301
3 10 0 0 1
Fifth raca - *a. D : l t . f l
Valantuatapitchedla3batter*infih.
Garnar. Hou, Hendrick, StL and
lM O 'iG a a G a *
io*o *40 J.IO
Balk-Tarr*!. T-4 N A-4S.41S
Kennedy. SO13: Dawtan. Mtt34
IW yldaD a bbyC ak *
* 40 5 40
American League - Kittle. CM a;
4 Goitkfi B D
400
Ward. Minn17; Rica. Bo* andWlntwld. NY
O (1-1) M M i T ( M -4 ) 1)4.14
13. Brett. KC and Hrbak. Minn 34
S ixthract — S/14. D: 31.30
Stolmlit«t
7 Caroutar
3 40 1.00 170
Ndttossl lM0u» — SSdia LA 19;
ITSDSTATES FOOTBALL LEAGUE
3 Jrttlc a Joy
4.40 3.00
AttawbcOhrliiaw
4If Wilton, NY 17; Lacy, Pitt. Moreno. Houand
1 RatlacUng
W I T M. PF PA
Rtdut,On14.
O (1 7 ) IS.40J T (7 4 3) 343.40: B IO
American League - J.Crvt, Saa O;
adeiphia
II 1 I 444 370 IX
o iM j-in n j*
Wilton. KC a. Handarton. Oak and
Ian
1 1 1 41S 11) 144
Savantti raca — *t. Ci I t . n
RLaw, CM11; Divl*. OakandSampla. Tax
&gt;Jartay
4 » 0 JM HI lit
1 H R Rock N Rad
11.40 4.40 1A0
I
3
ihingtsn
I 11 0 on tn 343
7 Sneaky Duka
5 40 310
Pitching
Cawtral Dtvktia*
I M ama Jam a
140
cage
* 4 0 4*1 111 117
0 (1 -7 } I4 .U i T (1-7-17117X0
National League - Oravecky, SD11;
ip4 Bay
* 4 0 Jt7 3» 734
Eighth rata — 1/14. C i 11J 4
McMuriry, All and Roger*. Mtl 73; Soto.
hlgan
I S * 41) M 740
4 Bonita Quant
0 *0 4.40 1.40
ClnM; Latkey. SF74.
7 4 I JX 343 113
S LIlB rula ar
U.OO 1X0
American League - Itieb. Ter 11,
PacttkDtvtataa
7 Heat
4 .N
Righatti, NY 7-1; Guidry. NY and
4 7 I .441 IM 337
0(4-1)47.1*1 T (4-S-77417.il
Honeycutt, Tti 71; Meanpitcher* tiedwith
I I I 441 107 IS
N M k r m — 1/14. i t 11X1
1 I I JU 111 733
ID a o h A P o c o
SO M 11X0 7.10
on*
4 * 0 JM IW SI
7 Yank** P rlncatt
7.00 7.10
Friday'*Oima
4 Charro Goat Ip
4 30
(ANTImm EOT)
O C l? ) IIIX B t T Ba O X -7 ) H I .M i
WHhingtanat Denver, I X p.m
D D 7 4 -l)m .a *
Sotardey’iOtMt
iMSraca — 4a.BiM.71
NewJartay at Oakland. I p.m.
1Golly Hally
11.00 a 40 1.40

Dog Racing

Dawtan. Ml)
Kennedy, SD
Murphy. Atl
Durham CM
Oberkfall. SIL
LSmith. SIL
American

USFL

■ Slttar Story
1X0 1.40
4Con‘ttSoFor
1.00
Q(1B)1SXI&lt;T &lt;14-47*1X0
I INi roca-SJ14.Aill.il
1Mart Tox Graham 1040 10.40 1000
1Antonlo'i Milady
110 140
ABonllatSoy
4.40
O (M l 444*1 T (M 4 )U IIX *
t m r a c a -1/1*. Ci 11X1
4 Lucky Sal
«X0 *40 1.40
1Mountain Kahlua
*40 4X0
lOKToAGoso
1-40
8 ( H I 47X11 T (4-MI MB.Hi
Grew It (4-1417-H-4) Ha WNnor
IMirscs—H.C1M.M
1 Rich Ball*
11X1 4X0 1X1
•CryHal Mountain
1X0 l . «

0 (Ml UMi T tM-ll IMXtj BIO
004, Ml 1171.41
A—IXSOi HaaStoltTMU

Leaders
a«MisG
3.1 gSoSs oggogrMMM X
aacktaaa bo* ptayad)

When you climb aboard our
rider, you're riding on years of
S N A P P E R quality, engineer­
ing and innovations.
In fact. S N A P P E R riders
have earned their well-de­
served reputation in the tall,
tough grasses of the Sunbelt
where grass grows most of
theyear. Time-tested performance
features make the S N A P P E R
easy to operate but tough.
These features include on-theg o shifting, easy height adjust­
m ent a rear-mounted engine
to cut down on noise
__

Michiganal Philadelphia. I.Xpm.
Arliana at LaaAngato*. 4pm.
MaadaytaGaaa
Chkaga al Batten, f pm
Saturday.*■* ll
Waahingtanal Arliank.»:» pm.
Sawday.JawaU
BaatanatBirmingham, lIXpm.
MichiganatU» Angolan4p.m.
Phllbdriphl**) NearJanay. 1J|pm

Soccer

SANFORD
AIC

1 *k r b pd

HIM W 44 .30
41141 U M W

4iin u.n JO
47141 a M JD

and improve visibility and the
acclaimed S N A P P E R friction
disc drive. Available attach­
ments includes six-bushel rear
grass catcher, the Thatcherizer,
a front dozer blade, a front
load carrier and the two-stage
snow thrower.
S e e our riding mower at your
S N A P P E R dealer today.You'll
see w hy it's a reputation worth
riding on.

Birminghamat TampaBay. 1:11p.m.

RORTNAMERICANSOCCERHAGUE

2917 Ceaaby CM R i

14 14 .7*1
U 17 40 IV*
17 n jsi 7'*
73 34431 11
II
» 30
11 1* 411 111*

4
4
110
10 00

I) I
11 0

�I

Friday, Jiint 3 ,1M3

•A— Evtfiing HtrdM, Sontord. FI.

le g a l N o tic e

[

F I C T it lO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 1401 Highway
434. Long wood. F L 31730. Seminole
County, Florida under the fictitious
name of L O N G W O O D IN S U R A N C E
A G E N C Y , and that I Intend to
register said name with the Clerk of
the Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the pro­
visions ol tho Fictitious Nemo Stat­
ute*, To-W it: Section 1*3.0* Florida
Statutes t*S7.
/ l/ L a rry fl.M c R e e
Publish M ey t l, M , 17 and Juna 3.
1M3.
D EH If

IN T H K C IR C U IT C O U R T O F T H E
E I G H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV I L A C T IO N N O . U -1 H 3 CA44 E
IN R E t T H E M A R R IA G E O F
K E R Y A N A G R IT T A N I,
Petitioner
And!
G IO V A N N I O R IT T A N I.
Respondent
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N
TO :
G IO V A N N I G R IT T A N I
V IA R O M A B IT R I T T 0 7
B A R I, IT A L Y
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
thet e Petition lor Dluolutlon ol
Marriage hei been tiled against you
end thet you ere required to serve e
copy ol your written defenses. It eny,
to It on F R A N K L . S C H IA V O ,
Attorney for Petitioner, 0 E . Pine
Street. Orlendo. Florlde 37101, on or
before June 13th. 1*03. end tile the
original with the Clerk ol this Court
either before service on Petitioner or
Immediately thereelter; othermite e
default will be entered egelnst you
for the re lit! demanded In the
Petition.
W ITN E S S m y hand end the teal ol
thl* Court on ttilo the 11th day ol
M ay. 1*13
(S E A L )
A R TH U R H. B E C K W ITH , JR ,
A t Clerk of the Court
B V : Cynthle Proctor
A t Deputy Clerk
Publlth Mey 13.70.27 A June 1 .1*«3
OEH-fO

N O T IC E O F A
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
A D O P TIO N O F A N O R D IN A N C E
I Y T H E C IT Y O F
S A N FO R O . F L O R ID A
Notlca Is hareby given that
Public Hearing will be held el the
Commission Room In the C ity H ell In
the City ol Senlord. Florida, at 7:00
o'clock P .M . an June 13. IM3, lo
consider the adoption ol an ordl
nance by the C ity ol S en lord,
Florlde, title ol which Is as follows:
O R D IN A N C E NO . 1*44
AN O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C I T Y
O F S A N FO R D . F L O R ID A . A M E N
D IN G C H A P T E R I*. S E C T IO N If 3.
S TA N O A R O P L U M B IN G C O D E ,
T H E CO D E O F T H E C IT Y O F
S A N F O R O . F L O R ID A ; S A ID
A M E N D M E N T C H A N G IN G T H E
S E C T IO N N U M B E R A N D P R O
V IO IN G F O R P O L Y B U T Y L E N E
IP B ) P L A S T IC P IP E O R T U B IN G
W IT H O U T J O IN T S ; P R O V ID IN G
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . C O N F L IC T S A N D
E F F E C T IV E D A TE .
A copy shell be available el the
Olllce ol the City Clerk for all
persons desiring lo examine the
same.
All partlas In Interest end cltlrens
shell have en opportunity lo be heard
el M id hearing.
By order ol the City Commission ol
the City of Sanford. Florlde.
H .N .T a m m .J r .
City Clerk
Publish June 3, M U .
D E I-7

In t h e c i r c u i t c o u r t , in a n d
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FL O R ID A
CA SE NO. ll-* 2 t-C A 4 S K
JO H N K. D A N IE L S end A L IC E V.
D A N IE LS , hit wife.
Plaintiff i,
v*.
V IO E O TR O N IC S .
Corporation.

INC., a Florlde

Defendants
N O TIC E O F SA LE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N thet
the undersigned. Arthur H. Beckwith
Jr.. Clerk of the Court. Seminole
County. Florida will on the 24th dey
ol June. IftJ. at 11:00 a m., ef the
west front door ol the Seminole
C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e . S a n fo rd .
Florlde. offer for sale end sell at
public outcry to the highest end best
bidder lor cash, the following d »
s c rib e d p e rs o n a l p r o p e rty In
Seminole County, F lor Ida to w it:
3 — Partially Assembled Pinball
Machines
I — Vending Egg Machine
S — Video Consoles — No Mecha
nisms
27 — 3" x 4" x I'Studs
4 — Gallons Paint
I — Bag ol Nalls
1— Drafting Easel
t — Lot ol Wire A Miscellaneous
Tools
(Hacksaw, Hammer A Ruler)
pursuant to Final Judgment entered
In the above styled pending cause.
W ITN E S S my hand and the seal ol
said Court this 1st day ol June, lf(3.
(S E A L )
A R TH U R H. B E C K W ITH . JR .
Clerk of the Court
B Y : Patricia Robinson
Publish June 1. ID. l t U
D E I It___________________________
N O TIC E O F A
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
T O C O N SID ER T H E
A D O P TIO N O F A N O R D IN A N C E
B Y T H E C IT Y O F
SA N FO R D . FLO R ID A
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at the
Qommleston Ream In the City Halt in
the City of Santord. Florida, at 7:00
o'clock P.M. on June 13. IM3, to
consider the adoption ol an ordi­
nance by the C ity ol Sanford,
Florida, title of which Is as follows:
O R D IN A N CE NO. 1441
AN O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
O F S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A . TO
C O R R E C T T H A T C E R T A IN L E G A L
D E S C R IP T IO N C O N T A IN E D IN
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1*23. A D O P T E D
• Y TH E C tT Y OF SAN FO R O,
F L O R ID A . O N F E B R U A R Y 71,
1 (1 3 . P R O V I D I N G F O R
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , C O N F L IC TS A N D
E F F E C T IV E D A TE .
A copy shall be available at the
Office ol the City Clerk lor ell
persons desiring to eeamlne the

le g a l N o tira

IN T H 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
File Number U -O ft
Division Probate
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
C A R R IE M A E O L IV E R ,
Deceased
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The administration ol the estate of
C A R R IE M A E O L IV E R , deceased.
File Number *3 0**, Is pending In the
Circuit Court lor Seminole County.
F lo rid a , P rob ate D iv is io n , the
address el which is Seminole County,
Florlde. Sanlord, Florida 32771.The
nemos end addresses ol the personal
representative's attorney ere sal
forth below.
All Interested persons are required
to file with this court, W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N TH S O F T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A TIO N O F T H IS N O T IC E :
( I ) all claims against the estate and
(21 any objection by an interested
person to whom this notice was
mailed that challenges the validity ol
the will, the qualifications ol the
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction ol the court.
A L L CLAIM S. D E M A N D S . A N D
O B JE C TIO N S N O T SO F I L E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D .
Publication of this Notice has
begun on Mey 27, t**3.
Personal Representative:
O W E N P IT T M A N , JR .
*03 Aulln Avenue,
Oviedo. Florida
Attorney tor
Personal Representative:
H AR VEY M. A L P E R
333 East Semoran B lvd..
Altamonte Springs, F L 32701
Telephone: &lt;303)134 111 I
Publish Mey 27 and June 3. 10, 17,
1*03
OEH-1SS

All parties in Interest and cltlrens
(hall have an opportunity to be heard
at said hearing.
By order ol the City Commission ol
the City ol Sanford, Florida.
H .N .T a m m .J r .
City Clerk
Pibllsh June 3 ,1M3.
DEM
P U B L IC N O T IC E
The Seminole County Land Man
agement Division is In receipt ol an
application to build a B O A T H OU SE/
D O C K on the following described
Lot 13. Block A . Lake Brenlley
Isles. 2nd Addition. P B It. Pg-S.
Seminole County, Florida.
Fu n h e r described as...
3440 O A K D R IV E
Written comments may be tiled
with the Seminole County Land
M anagem ent D ivisio n , Seminole
C o u n t y C o r u lh e u s e , S a n lo r d ,
Florida. Comments should be re
calved within 14 days of the publics
lion of this notice.
Herb Hardin
Land Management
Division
Seminole County. Florida
Publish June 3. IM3
D E I II

I N T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
CASE NO . U -IS O -C A -ft-P
S O U T H E A S T B A N K . N .A .efc.
Plaintiff,
vs.
L E O N A R D R. F R A Z IE R , a/k/a L.
R U S S E LL F R A Z IE R ; S Y L V IA C.
F R A Z I E R , a/k/a S Y L V A N IA C.
F R A Z IE R , his wile, at al.
Defendants
AM ENOED
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : Leonard R . F ra ile r a/k/a L.
Russell F r a z ie r ; and S y lvie C .
F ra ile r, a/k/a Sylvania C. F ra ile r,
his wlfa, 2404 Narcissus Avenue,
Senlord. Florida
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D the! en
a c tio n to fo re c lo s e m o rtg a g e
pursuant to promissory note end
mortgage has been tiled against you.
end you are required to servo a copy
of your written detenses. It any, to It
on Plaintiffs Attorney, Raymond J.
Retell*, whose address Is Post Office
Box 113. Orlando. Florida 32102, on or
before June X . 1MJ, and to Hie the
original with the Clerk ol this Court
either before service on Plaintiff's
Attorney or Immediately thereelter;
otherwise e default will be entered
against you for the relief demanded
In the Complaint
W ITN E S S M Y H A N D A N D S E A L
O F T H IS C O U R T , on the 23th dey ol
M a y, I M3.
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H . JR
Clerk ol the Court
B Y : E ve Crabtree
as Deputy Clerk
Publish M ay 12 and Juna 1. 10. 17,
1M3
D E H 137

N O T IC E
N O T IC E Is hereby given that the
Board ol County Commissioners ol
Seminole County, Florlde, Intends to
hold e public hearing to consider the
enactment of an ordinance entitled:
A N O R D IN A N C E E S T A B L IS H IN G
O N E C O N S O L ID A T E D S T R E E T
L I G H T I N G D IS T R IC T W IT H T E N
L E V E L S O F S E R V IC E F O R T H E
U N IN C O R P O R A T E D A R E A S O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ; S E T T I N G
S TA N D A R D S FOR TH O S E T E N
L E V E L S : C O N S O L ID A T IN G
E X IS T IN G S T R E E T L IG H T IN G
D IS T R IC T S IN T O T H O S E T E N
L E V E L S ; C O N S O L ID A T IN G N E W
S T R E E T L I G H T I N G D IS T R IC T S
W H IC H A R E C U R R E N T L Y B E IN G
C R E A T E D IN T O TH O S E T E N
L E V E L S : P R O V ID IN G D E F I N I
T IO N S ; P R O V ID IN G F O R G O V
E N H A N C E O F T H E D IS T R IC T B Y
T H E BOARD O F C O U N TY COM
M IS S IO N E R S ; P R O V ID IN G FO R
M A IN T E N A N C E A N D O P E R A T IO N
O F S T R E E T L IG H T S W IT H IN T H E
D IS T R IC T ; C R E A T I N G A N A D V I­
SORY BOAR D ; S E T T IN G F O R TH
F IS C A L A N D T A X A T IO N P R O
C E O U R E S ; S E T T IN G F O R TH
A M E N D M EN T PRO CEDUR ES TO
A L L O W FO R T H E A D D IT IO N O F
N E W A R E A S T O T H E D IS T R IC T
A N D FO R C H A N G E S IN L E V E L S
O F S E R V IC E ; E M P O W E R IN G T H E
L E V Y O F S P E C IA L A S S E S S M E N TS
O R T A X E S W I T H I N T H E D IS
T R I C T ; R E P E A L O F O R D IN A N C E
NOS. 12 *. 12 21 A N D (2-24 A N O
P R O V ID IN G F O R S E V E R A B IL I T Y ,
IN C L U S IO N IN T H E S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY CODE, AN D AN E F
F E C T IV E D A T E .
el 10:00 a.m ., or as soon theraaltar
as possible, al Its regular meeting on
the 14th day ol Juna, IM3. at tha
Seminole County Courthouse, Room
200. North Perk Avenue. Senlord.
Florida. Persons are advised that, II
they decide to appeal any decision
made el this hearing, they w ill need
a record ol the proceedings, end, tor
such purpose, they m ey need to
Insure the! e verbatim record of the
proceedings Is made, which record
Includes the testimony end evidence
upon which the appeal Is lo bo based.
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , J R ..
Clerk to the Board ol
County Commissioners ol
Seminole County, Florlde
B y: Joann K .M cN e b b
Deputy Clerk
Publish June 3, IM3
DEI 4
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
Civil Action He.: U -IO T -C A -a f -L
F IR S T F I D E L I T Y S A V IN G S A N D
LO A N A S S O C IA TIO N , etc..
Plaint III,
vs.
R O B E R T P .S C H IF F E R .e t el..
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : R O B E R T P. S C H IF F E R and
B A R B A R A A N N S C H IF F E R a/k/a
B A R B A R A A . S C H IF F E R
R E S ID E N C E : U N K N O W N
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E O that an
action to foreclose a mortgage on tha
fo llo w in g p ro p a rty In S a m ln o li
County. F lo rld i.
Lot 11. Block A . S P R E A D IN G O A K
V I L L A G E . T H E S P R IN G S , accord­
ing to the plot thereof as recorded In
P ie t Book I I , Page 43. P ublic
R a c o r d s of S e m in o le C o u n t y ,
Florida.
has been Hied egelnst you end you
are required lo serve a copy ol your
written defenses. If any, to It on
P A U L H. B O W E N , Swann A H ad­
dock, P .A ., P la in tiffs attorney,
whose mailing address Is P .O . Box
T IM . Orlando, Florida 32034. on or
before the 22nd day of Juna. IMS, and
tile the original with the Clark of this
Court either before service on Plain­
tiff's attorney or Immediately there­
after; otherwise e do leu It will be
entered against you tor tha reliel
demanded In the complaint or peti­
tion.
W IT N E S S m y hand and tha seal ol
this Court on M ay 23th, IM3.
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H , J R .
CLER K OF TH E COURT
B y : Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
Publish M ay 27 and June 3. 10. 17.
1M3
DEH-134
N O T IC E O F IN T E N T I O N T O R E G ­
IS T E R F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
T O W HOM IT M A Y CONCE R N :
Notice Is hereby given that the
u n d e r s ig n e d , p u r s u a n t lo the
"Fictitious Name Statute," Chapter
1*3 0*. Florlde Statutes, will register
with the County Comptroller, In end
lor Seminole County, Florida, upon
receipt ol proof of tha publication ol
this nollce, the fictitious name,
to wit:
1-GiA. H O L D IN G C O M P A N Y , e
New Jersey general partnership
under which It Intends to engage In
business at Lake E m m a Rood. Lake
M a ry. Seminole County. Florlde.
Thet the parties Interested in sold
business enterprise are es follows:
G A B R IE L W A R S H A W S K Y
I L A N K R E IT N E R
Doted i t Fort Lee. Bergen County,
New Jersey this 10th dey ot M ay,
t fU .
I G A . H O L D IN G C O M P A N Y
a Now Jersey general
partnership
B y : / s / G A B R I E L
W ARSHAW SKY,
General Partner
B y :/ s / IL A N K R E IT N E R ,
General Partner
Publish M ay tl. X . 27 A Juna 1. IM3
DEH M

1ESS THAN $1800 DOWN!
FHA/VA FIMNCING«.MICE INCLUDES LOT A CLOSING COSTS.
NKW
CONSTRUCTION

RKC ENTERPRISES, INC.
7G6B. Dtttona Blvd., Dvttoni, FL
• 7 4 -1 4 0 6

itie u x

m o** m a r

f* I
I * 5 0 U s e * Am *

N O T I C E O F A P P L IC A T O N
F O R E X E M P T IO N
Take nollce that Florida Power A
Light Company (F P A L ), on April 4,
1MJ, tiled an application for exemp­
tion from certain requirements of
P art 1*0 of the Commlsston’a Ragula
lions concerning collection and re­
porting ol cost ot service Information
under Section 133 of tha Public
U tility Regulatory Policies Act, O r
der No. al (44 F R SAMI. October I I,
1*7*1. Exemption I* (ought from the
requirements to tile on or before
June X , 1M4, information on the
casts ot providing electric service as
(pacified In Section 2*0.404 [d l End
Use Classes 0 ) "Residential cus­
tomers net using electricity tor
e ith e r w a te r heating or wholeresidence space heating," and (1)
"Residential customers using elec­
tricity tor water heating but not for
whole residence space heating.’1
In Its application tor exemption,
F P A L states that It should not bo
required to (lie the specified dale tor
the following reasons:
Th a and use d o s t specified under
Section lf0.404|d)(1l "Residential
customers not using electricity for
e ith e r w a te r h eelin g o r w holeresidence space heating Is currently
substantially less then the minimum
reporting level of 3% ot the total
kilowatt hour sales. In the post
several years tha trend lor this group
has boon down and tha Company
estimates that It w ill conllnue to
decline during the reporting year.
Rather than comm it tha funds and
manpower to meet the reporting
requirement, the company Is re­
questing this exemption.
Th e end ute class specified under
Section l*0.4(M (d)(2) "Residential
customers using electricity tor water
heating but not tor whole-residence
spec, heating" was Intended to ba
used In determining patterns lor
electric healing. Th a energy use ot
this and use dess was to be com­
pared with that s p td fle d under
Slf0.404(dH3&gt; "Residential custom­
ers using e le c tric ity for wholeresidence space heeling and other
uses" with the assumption that tha
difference would be electric heating
in comparing appliance saturation
studies conducted by F P A L In INC.
and other Items which effect energy
consumption, II is d e a r that the
difference between these customer
classifications cannot bo reliably
attributed to whotorasltanc* spec,
healing. Hence, reporting the In­
formation required tar the Section
l*0.404(d)(2) end use de ss tor the
I N I reporting period would not
promote the purposes of Section 133
of P U R P A and would unnecessarily
divert equipment and manpower
from projects which would yield
greeter benefits to F P A L 's custom­
er*.
Copies of the a p p lica tio n ter
exem ption are on f lit w ith tha
Commission and ore available for
subtle Inspection. A n y person deslrng to present written views, argu­
ments, or other comments on the
application tor exemption should file
such Information with the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 123
N o rth C a p ito l S tre e t, N .W .,
Washington, D .C . 10424. on or before
43 days following the date this notice
Is published in the Federal Register.
W ith in that 43-day pe rio d such
person must also sorve a copy ol
such comments on: Florida Power A
Light Company, Airontlon: M r . J.C .
Collier, J r .. Vice President, Energy
M a n a g e m e n t. P .O . Box 01*100,
M iam i, Florlde 33182.,
Publish Juna 3,1*03
DEH-142
I N V I T A T IO N T O B ID
Th a Housing Authority ol tha City
Ot Sanlord. Florida w ill receive Bids
Exterior Painting at Edw ard
Higgins Terrace. Santord. Florida.
Fla. 14 3. until 1:00 P .M . on tha l*th
day ol Juna, 1M3 al the Authority's
administration offices Castle Brewer
C o u rt. W . 10th Street, Sanlord,
Florida.
Proposed forms of C en tre d Doc­
u m e n ts , I n c lu d in g P la n s a n d
Specifications, are on tile al tha
Office of the Housing Authority ol the
,Clty o l S e n lo rd . F lo r id a , A d ­
ministration Building, Cosllo Brewer
Court. Santord. Flo rid a and tha
Office of tha Architects', Gutmonn
Associates Architects Planners Inc.,
101 Wymora Road, Suite I I , A lta ­
monte Springs, Florida.
C o p ie s o l th e D o c u m e n t s ,
Drawings and Specifications m ay be
obtained by depositing: N/A with the
Architect for each set ol Documents
so obtained. Such deposit will ba
refunded to each person who returns
the Plans. Specifications, end other
Documents In good condition within
lOdeysetter Bid Opening.
A Certified Check or Bank Draft,
payable to the Housing Authority ol
tha City ol Sanford. Florida. U.S.
Government Bands, or a satisfactory
Bid Bond executed by the Bidders
and acce p ta b le S ureties In an
amount aqual to 3% ot tha Bid shall
ba submitted with each Bid.
Th e successful Bidder w ill be
required to furnish and pay tor
S a tis fa c to ry P e rfo rm a n c e end
Payment Bond or Bonds.
All B idden are hereby notified
that they must affirmatively ensure
that in eny Contract entered into
Pursuant to this Advertisement, M l
nority Business Enterprises w ill be
afforded lull opportunity to submit
Bids es Subcontractors, or es sup­
pliers ol materials, or services, and
will not be discriminated against on
the grounds of race, color, religion,
sox or notional origin In consid­
eration foreword.
In occordonco w ith Executive
O rd er 11*33, M ino rity Contractor
Goofs Program , oil Bidders w ill be
x(forded full opportunity to submit
Bids In response to this Invitation
end will not be discriminated against
on tho grounds o l roco, color,
religion, sox or netlonel origin In
consideration tor ewerd.
Th is prelect Is subjact to the
Requirements o l Section 1. ot tha
Housing end Urban Development A d
ol I N I . A ll B ld d m w ill bo required
to comply with on A ffirm ative Action
Plan to provide oppertunity to tower
Income residents e l the prelect area
tar Training end Employment.
The Housing Authority of the City
ot Santord, Florid* reserves the right
to re|ect eny or elt Bide or to waive
eny Informalities In tho Bidding. No
Bids shell bo withdrawn tor o ported
ol X Days subsequent to the opening
of Bids wlfhout the censont ot the
Housing Authority of the C ity et
Santord, F tor Me
T H E H O U S IN G A U T H O R IT Y
O F T H E C IT Y O F
S A N F O R O , F L O R ID A
Elliott Smith
Executive Director
Publish June 1. A, IM3
OEM S
F I C T IT I O U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In busineso pi I P S S.R.
»4 * 2 , W inte r F o r k , F la . W t t
Sem inole County, Florida i
fictitious nom a ef A Q U A P R E ­
S S U R E C L E A N IN G and N u l l I
to re»l*tor seW name wNh Rw Ctark
a t the C ir c u it C o u rt, Sem inole
County, Florida in i
the provisions ol tbe Flcttttous Name
Statutes, to w it : Section
Ftarlde Statutes H P .

*-1 WNfc Deufcld

‘4

5

, 9

0

Snail*

0

MU.

OEM-Ill

yttak. ___

■ ; -____ —
____ ^

'

dhpu* ■-i. Oi PW
tagl

tgRfduipSI AN

1 27 and
am Juna 1 M, IT,

73- Employment

71-H elp WentEd

le g a l N o tic e

L e g a l N o tic e

Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando • Winter Park

322*2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
•:M A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

831-9993
RATES

Need extra Income. We need you.
Coll tor complete details.
_____________ S IM M S ._____________
N E I D B X T R A IN C O M E ?
W H Y N O T S IL L A V O N !

I t in w ......................Me a
) consacutiva times. 54ca
7 comacvtiva timoa.. 44c a
10 consecutive times 41c a
19.00 Minimum
3 Unas Minimum

Ideas, Inventions, Now Products
W A N TED I
Industry Presontatlon/Noflonil
Exposition.
Coll 1 X 8 3 X 4 0 X .X I 2 I .
LONELY?
24Hr. Recorded Message.
1-1131*3-082*
14 Piece Brilliant Balloon Bou­
quets, lor Birthday Parties end
Special Occasions. Delivered by
a Clown or our Sexy Stripper.
(M ole or Fem ale) to Santord
Surrounding Areas.
B A L L O O N W IZ A R D M4-77S «S X .

2 3 - Lost A Found
Lost Silver Chain necklace w/
violet stone. Senlord Shopping
Area. Reword. M l 40*4.__________

25— Special Notices
Now Office now opening.
VORW ERK
1I20W. 1st SI.

27—Nursery A

Child Cere
Child Cere in m y home. Age 3 A up
Mon F r i. Days only. Fenced yard
MI-0377.

31—Private
Instructions

• ***322 3322**#*
For Swimming Information.

33-Real Estate
Courses
KEYESLICENSE EMU SCHOOL
Next 4 day accelerated class starts
Juna 13, IM3. For tuition relmb u rs a m e n t in fo rm a tio n c a ll
M I)d m d S i W a n 2 J M i» 0 O ^ _ _

55— Business
Opportunities
S m all ratall shop avalibal* in
Longwood's H isto ric district.
Rant, Including utllltlas. S323 par
month. Call 0314M1.

43— Mortgages Bought
A S o M
W # P A Y cash lo r 1st A 2nd
m o rtg a g e s . R a y L t g g , L ie .
Mortgage Broker 7*4 23t*

(fttp \
©

United Wtou

House to Share

O F F I C E H E L P Several positions,
full A port time openings avail­
able now. W ill fully train. 41f48*4.__________________ __________

C O U N T R Y Home to (here, non
smokers, references, S I X plus to
Util. X S 4 M X 1 4 ________________

O F F I C E H E L P Fu ll time, m any
openings, good storting pay. Coll
Immediately 41*-4074.____________

Share rent and utilities. Employed
female 33 or older. 2 Bdrm .
duplex. Call alter* P M . 574 4*11.

O F F I C E W O R K E R • Accurate
typing; handle Phone orders.
Complete fringe Benefits. United
Solvents, 321-1408._______________
Port Tim e . Women and Mon. Work
tram home on telephone pro­
gram . E a rn I l f . to HOC per
week,depending on time available. 772-510*.____________________

71-H elp Wanted
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
D IS C O U N T F E E
TER M S
1*17 F R E N C H A V E .
3331174
A U T O M E C H A N IC S Full time,
high iwages, with or without tools
O K . 41*40*4.
C A B IN E T M A K E R S . E X P E T
La mine tors, Assemblers.
Countertop. Hardware. 33* 3*43.

93— Rooms for Rent
S A N F O R D . Rees, weekly A M on­
thly rotes. Util. Inc. alt. 300 Oek
Adults 1-041 7083.________________

P a r t -T im e P r* * sm an-A M !2 30W
Experience. Cell Ralph Jenson.
121-0074_________________________

S A N F O R D Furnished room* b ^ lh e
weak. Reasonable rates. Mold
sorvlca catering to working peo­
ple. Unfurnished apartments. I
and 3 bedrooms. 133-4307. 300
Palm *ttoAv#;i^ _ ^ _ ^ ^ ^ _ ^

Port Tim e . PM . Paper Rout*. 3
day* par week. 3 hours por day.
Long wood area. Economy cor
necessary. 140.321-1073.__________

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
many |obs available.
Both temporary end lull time.
Coll today 111 3*4*.

C A S H IE R S A C L E R K S Full A pert
time openings, good pay scales,
no experience neccesswy.
_____________ 41*- 40*4._____________

has
Furnished apartment* tor Senior
Cltltens. 311 Palmetto Av*. J .
C o * 4 n N o £ h o jw e * l[t ^ ^ ^ ^ _

PRODUCTION
W ORKER

C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y
C IT Y M A N A G E R
Papulation 303*. Orlando SMSA.
Salary ltl.000 to (72.000 negotia­
ble depending upon qualifica­
tions. Appointed by 5 member
C it y C o m m is s io n ; SI40.000
budget; X employees. Requires
executive end administrative ex­
perience w ith background In
public administration, engineer­
ing. City planning, construction
or related fields, supplemented
by ot least 3 years progressively
responsible supervisory experi­
ence, degree desirable. Submnlt
resumes to C ity Clerk. City ol
Lake M a ry , P . O . Box 723, Lake
M a ry , Florida 32744. Resumes
must be received by J u ly I. IH3.

99-Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

N e e d S. S h o u ld h o v e s o m e
carpentry experience. 14.15.

NEVERAFEE

Ablest

o

M o n.-Thurt. * I I A I X J X

100-200
MO W W F x u a i j n i ^ h p Bent BuSdcngi

S E C U R IT Y G U A R D
H ELP W A N TED
321(3*2

MED

CLERKTYPIST
Need 4 Immediately. Long term
openings. Ty p in g , tiling, end

A re you tired ot net making onough
money?
Are you tired ol not
going anywhere? A re you willing
toflOtoworfcTCell 121 3022

NEVERAFEE
S W IM M IN G LES S O N S . F o r In­
f o r m a t io n . V i c k i G o r m l y ,
Certified Instructor. 1221 3300).

91— Apartments/

322-0*1*321-ttx.

D EAD LINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday
Monday - 5:30 P .M Friday

i t — Porsonals

Apprentice Carpenter just com ­
pleted Job Corp training. Good
worker, strong back, has own
tools. 322 33*0.
Core tor tho Elder* ly. C t r l Ifled
Nurses Assistant. Home or Hos­
pital. References provided. Call
30474*.

Mature responsible feme to wanted
tor babysitting I year old g irl In
m y homo. Santord area. S days o
week, tor summer vacation. Pay
n e g o tia b le . M u s t h a ve own
tra n s p o rta tio n . C a li 311-40S4
After l : X P M .___________________

T R U C K D R IV E R S Local A long
haul positions. H igh wage*. Coll
today 43*40*4___________________

A b le s t

V E N D IN G
M E C H A N IC

M on-Thurs* 1 1 A I : X 3 : X .
• 00-200
200 W M Fra Si (Flegdip Bank Bu4*ng)
SmbrdSt-3040

Excellent opportunity lor advan­
cement. l**3 Chevy pick up lor
business and personal use. Must
bo obi* to do Installation, and
service repair w ork, start im m e­
diately. A ll Into by phone. M r.
Powers. 3214000________________

N E W L Y W E D S W IL L A R R IV E IN
J U N E - R E N T T H E M A PLACE
NOW . IT S N O T T O O SOON.
Concession and Office Help for
weekend work. Apply at Flee
W orld. Thursday and Frid ay *-S
PM ._____________________________

W aitresses A hostesses. Some
•xperalnc* preferred Apply In
person Holiday Inn 1-4 A St. Rd
44._______________________________

Experienced Only Sewing Machine
operators. Overlock or Sergurs.
tor T - Shirt Division, Sergur
H am m er. Am pro Fashions. 2X
Power 0 .2 2 1 2 1 )0 _______________

Wanted 3 Ladles tor selling.
Stanley Home Products.
_____________ 44*4*13_____________

BAM BOO CO VE APTS
100 E . Airport Blvd. Ph. 323*470
IA2 Bdrm *,, from S I X Mo. 3 %
discount tor Senior Cltliens.
F o r Rent In Sanford. Apartment
downstairs, large bedroom, liv ­
ing room, dining room, and large
kitchen with retrlg. stove dish­
washer, IV* baths. 7 enclosed
porches, and garage fX O per
month. Plus utilities, security
deposit. 322 00*1__________________
O EN EV A O A R O EN S A P TS
1,7 A 3 Bdrm . Apts. From (2*3.
Famine* welcome.
Mon. thru Sot. t A M to 5 P M .
1303 W. 23th St._____________ 322 20*0
LU X U R Y A P A R TM EN TS
Fa m ily A Adults section Poolside.
7 Bdrm*. Master Cove Apts.
1717100
________ Open on weekends.________
M ariner's Village on Lake Ada, I
bdrm from 13*3, 3 bdrm Irom
1110. Located 12 *2 |ust south ot
A irpo rt Blvd. In Santord. A ll
Adults 323 0*70._________________
M e llo n v lll* T r a c e A p ts . 440
Mollonvlll* Av*. Specious mod
ern 2 bdrm I bath apartments.
C a rp e te d , k itche n eq uipped,
C H A A . adult*, no pets. S123
_____________ 221 1*03_____________
N E W 1 A 2 Bedrooms. Ad|oc*nt to
L o k o M o n ro * . H e a lth C lu b .
Rocquetbell end More I
Senlord Landing S .R . 4*3211220.
N E W L Y W E D S W IL L A R R IV E IN
J U N E - R E N T T H E M A PLACE
NO W . ITS N O T TO O S O O N
R ID G E W O O D A R M S A P T S .
2300 Ridgewood A v*. Ph.373 *420
1,3 A 1 Bdrm*. Irom S IX

W A R E H O U S E W O R K E R S M any
openings, lull tlm t. good starting
pay. Call immediately *2* 40*4

F A C T O R Y W O R K E R S Immediate
openigs. high wages Some will
train. Coll42* 48*4.______________

W O R K F IN D E R S INC

Housoporent needed lor Christian
Childrens Homo in Geneva. Sala_ l y p tu l room and board. Call
O o n .ia M O tt.__________
______

.sits

» » ? ? ? t* (((ii(* i* iit* * * * 1

Just bocousa we haven't advertised
o |ob you’re looking tor. doesn't
moon wo don't hove It. C O M E IN
ANDASK USDI

end Workers Meet In The
Want Adst Need A Job??
___________ R E A D O K I I!___________
J U N E C L A S S IF IE D A D S B R IN G
TH A T E X TR A SUM M ER
V A C A T IO N M O N E Y T O Y O U I

3433 F R E N C H A V I .
(InS ob lk sB ld g.
______________331 3741______________

Management Training Rewarding
■I position In consumer
11nance. W * a r t looking for
career minded Individuals who
ore ambitious and enjoy working
with people. C F C otters on the
|ob training, security, challenge
end good employe# benefits.
General Finance Corportlon 3471
Orlando D rive Fairw ay Plata
Santord 0 7 7 1 .E O E / A A ._________

1130

to 1 3 0 0 .0 0 W E E K L Y
P AV CH ECK S (F U L L Y G U A R ­
A N T E E D ) working part or full
time at homo. Weekly paychecks
m oiled directly to you from
Homo Office every Wednesday./
Start Immediately. No oxptrlanca necessary National C om ­
pany. Do your work right In tho
comtort end te cvrly ol fftur own
homo. Details and application
moiled. Send your nemo end
address to: K E Y S T O N E IN
D U S T R IE S , H IR IN G D E P T . X .
*4*0 F R E D E R IC K S B U R G R D.,
SAN A N T O N IO , T E X A S . 7122*.

Mature woman with w all rets expe­
rience. N ssdad. It A M to 3 PM .
Tuesday thru Saturday. T E A
Room In Long woods historic
district. Bogin Jun o 14. Call
131-4*41 for aooolntment.

1 Bdrm . 7 Bath. A C ., Pool. 12*3
_____________1 2*3 774*._____________
Santord Spec lout I Bdrm . plus dan
or 2nd Bdrm . Furniture. IM 0
Adults, l &gt;41 7102.

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
Lake M a ry 1/1. Adults. No pets. •
months. 1st and last. 1230 373
30*2_____________________________
1 B d r m . p a r t ia lly lu r n lth e d ,
fenced, carport. 1330 Me. plus
utilities. 2724471.

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
For R»n1 3 B rdm II* bath 1313
Por month. F o r more Inform*
tlon Call 321-040* A lte r* PM.
For Rant.
1 Bdrm . (bath. No Children.
Nopatl.S325.321 417*.

CONSULT OUR

BUSINESSSERVICELISTING
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To

L is t Y o u r B u s in e s s ...

D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 o r 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

Additions A
Remodeling
Custom l u l l ! additions. Patios,
screen room s, ca rp o rt. Door
locks, paneling, shingles, rereefing. For tost service, coll
3334*17,3*3-071.________________
B A T H S , kitchens, rooting. Mock,
concrete, windows, odd # room.
Free estimates. 3314*43
We handle The
Whole Boll i f W o«

IX IM C smL
322-7121
Financing Available

Appliance Repair
C L A M N C H 't
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
W * service aH m eter Brands. Ri
rates. IS yrs. exp. 304331.

B A J Accounting Service. R O M PV
abt* rotes. P ick -up A delivery.
8 1 -SM I after 4PM.
ru a n lM

(o n tk i

Tm m n m r
l a t e ly ?

C le a n in g w it h th a
w e n s -iie a ii.

Fence

Landscaping

F E N C E Installation. Chain link,
wood poet A roll, A farm tone*.
License A Insured. 31341*1.

Roofing

A J LA N D S C A P IN G .
Comp lets Loom Maintenance
___________ 32143*1

Health 6 Beauty

Lawn Service

T O W E R 'S B E A U T V IA L O N
F O R M E R L Y H a rrio tt'* Beauty

F ill D ir.. E a N Santord o s par
load. Genova 0 4 por load ( I yard
Nods) cheaper rotas tar larger
truck toads. 344M M or 3*34831

n o r i i f i iivppe v v v t n v n i

Cleanup and light hauling

Ne&gt;k.ine.itisi.ia 170

"iiraw
■ n CAin
n ^ r i Wtulssl
n e p ii

C O L L I E R 'S H O M E R E P A I R S
c a rp e n try , rooting* Minting,

wt*M« ronnlr.331440_______

CONFUTE CMSTNCnON
No job to sm all, NUr a r 4 m ajor
n p n irs . Ucanood A M n M .

ROOM additions, romodeling
drywell bung calling* sprayed,
ftrepiacoe. rooting.

Hame Repairs
tamo Repairs. Shoot rock, i
M g- pMtos, A general carp

tlYrs. Era Roes. a&gt;4m.

MekrwiancaetotltypM
entry, pointing, piumbir
4 etoctrk 33J-4QX

322-9417

S E A n o n c Io ta ^ ^ S lII^ S Im ^

operation. Potto*, driveways.
Days 331 2333Evas. 317)01.
SW IFT CON CR ETE. Footers,
driveways, pods, floors, pools,
ChoH.Stano.FrooEit/Q3-7iai

C A O L E A K R E P A IR . Rapair* oil
typos ol root took*. Replaces oil
rotten wood. M yrs. arjorfenco.
A ll work guaranteed tor I year..
33**007.
Does Your O ld O r New Root Look? •
li lt does, cell Devtd Le t.
______________ 223*433

■ocnxm sm ssR r

Morrison Reefing Co.
S p e c ia lis in g |n s h in g le s e n d
build up- Low, Low Rotas. 14 h r.
service. 7*42173.

Lehovtow Nursing Cantor
t t t I . Second I t ., Santord
3324X7

sawing

Nursing Cara

" R Z R U v k U ik

Fainting
is a rrr a rrs s r n :
aatlmotas. Reasonable
m u fu n .

uitm

SUM S

Sprinhlere/lrrfgatien;

Ptastaring/DryWall

fw fs a u s a sc iv .

x rrTO rrTrra TTrc ;

S A N F O R D Irrigation A Sprinkle?
J f W n s Inc. Free esl 33347*7
J S
j r r ^
j j ^
^

rtoetarlng repair, stucco, hard
rata, simutotad brick. 0 IIM 3 .

No job too small.

y rs . experience. Licensed A
Insured.
Fro# Estimates on Rooting,
Ro Rooting and R (pairs
Shingles. Built U p and Tito.

f ii. K M U H M M

______________3214130
i o f p a M r y b y 'B I L L " ™ ”
W O O D A r t e s ia n G e n e ra l
carpentry, screened roar
etc Root. Rafee. 327 34X.

A&amp;BROOFING
II

Tree Service

M etrical

Roofing

Fans, liman, aacurlty
new services, insured.
No job too targe or small.
Coll S O 32*3.

w

-

Tro y or Georgs tor F r w I N .

!

S TU M P S ground gut.
b o s (ottmatos
M l 4*41

swSsrw,sr
:
Roosmsbl* FrwEst.lBMM.

�103-Houses
Unfurnished/Rent

141— Home* For Sale

141— Homes For Safe

IN D E L T O N A

KISH REAL ESTATE

2 Large Lakelronl home 1 BR 2
bath LR /DR /KIt Extras.

7313 F R E N C H A V E .
H E R E IT III
T h t "o ld " Sanlord homo you havo
boon looking lor. This ono has
four bdrm*. and an aatra room
for towing, otc., hardwoods firs.,
aaf In kltchon. 447,144.

2 Smaller hornet. 1 BR 2 bath
LR /DR /KIt.
11ownhout*7BR I ' , bath
1 conds. 2 BR. 2batti, Pool. Tennis.

Lake M ary J bdrm 2bath
garage *143 discount
._____________337 3734
d— — ^

Available now elegant 1 spacious
duplexes w ith la rg e tcre e n
, p o r c h e i . s to ra g e room * A
carport* Fully equipped 1340 to
*340 Call (or detain. Century 21
June P orilg Realty 322 4474
Large 3 Bdrm . air, heat, appli
ancei, no pet*. *330 Mo * t »
deposit Available June 7 333
7334

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
Casselberry private lot. 2 bdrm,
.kids. appl. *745 F e e 334 7700
Sav-On-Wonlol*. Inc. Realtor

111— Resort/Vacation
Rentals
New Smyrna Beach Cottage. v»
Block trom Beach. Week or
Month 377 *737 Evenings

117— Commercial
Rentals

SANFORD
WAREHOUSE
Low rates. 7.000 to 40.000 Sq Ft
Sprinklered. heavy industrial

OFFICE WAREHOUSE
7300 to 17.000 Sq Ft Downtown, air
conditioned Loadsol Parking

SHOPPING CENTER
1300 to 3000 Sq FI. Low rales, on
17 77 Great visibility. The W T
..P a rk s C o B roker474 4377

• 121— Condominium
Rentals

D R E A M C O M E T R U E I Sunken
living rm "sat* the mood" for
this gorgeous 3 bdrm 2 bath split
plan home w /CH&amp;A, dbl car
garage, custom decor and fenced
c o r n e r lo t In p r e s t i g i o u s
R a m b le w o o d l F a n t a s t ic
assumption! No qualifying and
priced to selll Only *34,000.
O N E O F A K IN D I Gorgeous e.ecu
live 7 story 3 bdrm 7 3 bath home
In mint condition. Huge panelled
family rm ., beamed ceilings!
Detached cabanna w/llv. rm .,
bar and bath for entertaining I
Over ty acre lush A spacious
landscaping! " N o q u a lifyin g"
*12.300 down *417 Mo Principle t
interest 12% A P R O nly *44.000
M A Y F L O W E R S P E C I A L Col
u m b u s h im s e ll w o u ld have
chosen this 7 story beauty with
coty fireplace 3 bdrm I huge
bath, wooden decks, screen
porch country kitchen, easy
assumption with no qualifying.
Great location Price *47,700
SW IM P L A Y T E N N IS A N D R E
L A X at Sanora Community and
Club house In this fantastic 4
Bdrm 2 bath split plan home
w lf h c o m m a n d in g b r ic k
fireplace, breety screened porch,
sprinkler system, citrus trees,
easy assumption! Only *73.000.
F A N T A S Y IS L A N D 3 Bdrm Rustic
log cabin surrounded by 7 acres
ol sprawling lungle. scenic pond
and walk to Lake Jessup. Also
Dbl wide mobile home currently
rented Need* T L C owner a n .
lous Only *37.300

LO C A L F A M IL Y Needs 4 or }
Bdrm* 2 Baths and Fam room.
'R o o m y and app ro p rla ta lor
children. In Lake M ary or San
. ford Area Wants to lease lor a
‘ least I Year Reply to P 0 Bo.
1124 Lake M ary Fla 37744

141— Homes For Sale

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
J Bdrm New r o d newly painted,
screened porch, fenced rear yard
with fruit trees. 447JOO.
3 Bdrm . tty bath custom fireplace,
glass sliding door*, lead to
p r iv a c y fenced y a rd . Good
• assumable mortgage *47.730
*544 S F R E N C H
327 073)
Alter Hours 337 3710 372 0777

323-5774

J U S T M A R R IE D ? OR R E T IR
ING?
Before you buy see this sparkling 2
bdrm I bath doll house. All kinds
of great extra*. Call for detail*
*47.300.
T O G E T A W A Y F R O M T H E C IT Y
Ihl* 2 story 4 bdrm I bath home I*
really secluded near Osteen on
a p p ro x im a te ly I a c re needs
work. Let us tell you about it.
*33.000
P R B S T IO IO U S M A Y F A IR Below
market value this 3 bdrm 7 bath
home on beautiful corner lot has
loads of potential *44.300
Salesman needed.

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

L IV E R E N T F R E E I D u p lt. tor
solo. 7 2 with garage, quiet Do­
bary, close lo Gionn Abbey Golf
Course, and shopping.
Call
E v a ly n . 374-1404 R K C E n _ Ir r prltat. Inc.
Long wood For Sale by Owner.
Four bdrm. 3 bfh. groat rm .
13.32 screened porch,fireplace,
celling fans, over 1/3 acre lot.
Beautifully landscaped , wood
privacy fenced 4 % assumbalbe
mortgage. *77,700. 337 7000.

B

CAN BE VERY'HEAVY?
f t —

153— Lots-Acreage/Sale
Casselberry Mobile homo lot sot up
with chain link fence. Cosh or
terms. *43 2443.

Auction E ve ry Sot. night. Florida
Trader Auction, Longwood 374
3114. See our big od In Sot, paper.

155— Condominiums
Co-Op /Sale

Auction Sale
Friday N ite 7 P M

D E L U X E 2 Bedroom 3W both
lownhousa*. P riv a te p o tlo t.
F H A /V A and Investor financing
available. Located on Ridgewood
o il 2Sth S I. 23 M in u te s to
downtown Orlando vlo 14. near
17-42, shopping, churches, end
school* Models open 1-4 Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, or call
a n y tim e for a p p o in tm e n t.
*37,100.

Ramblewood 4/21 Acre *47.000
CardinalOak*. 3/2(124.700.
Ravens Brook. 4/7*144.400.
Forest City. 2/7 *47.700
Bob M . Ball J r . PA. Realtor
373 4114

ROBBII’S

(B 322-9283
SANFO R D R E A L T Y
R EA LTO R
723 3324
A ll. Hrs. 372 4734.323 4343
Seller motlvoted. Assume M lg. or
finance. 4 Bdrm . 2 bath. Cent
H A . private backyard. S37.000.
Owner Associate. 321 0434.

STENSTROM

G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S INC.
A R E A S L A R G E S T E X C L U S IV E
S K Y L IN E D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
Palm Beech Villa
Groonlaat
Palm Spring*
Palm Manor.
Siatta Key
V A F H A financing, 30*373 3200.

F IS H E R M A N S P A R A D IS E . 3 My
C A H 13.34 s c re e n e d p o o l,
w o rk s h o p , 13.34. B e a u tifu l
secluded area. Lot 73.*30 on
^ Lake Monroe *104.700

322-7643

/Great Location Good condition 2
1 Bdrm I bath Cent H A . Large
;* shady lot.e.celtent financing.
£ W A lL A C E C R E S S R E A L T Y
R E A L T O R 373 3072

B E A U T IF U L 1 Bdrm . 7 Bath home
In nice neighborhood, near now
Hospital. 1-4 and Lake Monroe I
Cant, hoot and air, wall to woll
carpet, oot In kltchon, patio and
more. *44,344.

347 W. Lake M a ry Blvd.
Suite B
Lake M a ry, Fla . 14744
D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E

NEW OFFERING

/

D O L L H O U S E ) Bdrm . 3 Bath
homo, In Dreemwold with now
carpeting, paddle tom , breakfast
bar, (rashly paintod, and fenced
yord. 347,044.
S O U T H E R N C H A R M 2 story 4
Bdrm . 2 bath ham* an spacious
tread grounds. Every feature
Imaginable! Pool and patio Tool
(74444.
L O V E L Y 1 Bdr, I both homo. In
Dreemwold |ust pointed, new
root, large tcroessed porch. Cent
Heat and air, woll to woll carpet,
oot In kltchon and excellent
location. (41,404.

By Ownar

So par RaikJanttaJ A i m N ea t
M&lt;o yfa k C .C . W alk To tdykwfldd
M
Horn. 4 lr/2B •F k o p io c o A Fan*.
i w S c re e n e d Fo o l A Spa
tSofot H oofing, Fam ity lo o m ,
U3,tn d te a p o d . Sto rage A i m •
Po
ossfblo O w n e r F in a n c in g •

S

C A L L A N Y T IM E
1*431. Park

322-2420

215— Boats/Accessories
JA C K 'S B O A T R EP A IR S .
Fo ro ll your Booling needs
304 E . Lemon SI. Sanlord.
(303 371 3374 Days 777 3443 Night.

Now Homos starting at *4745. Easy
credit and low down. U n d o Roys.
Leesburg. U S .441 404 7170324.

217— Garage Sales

No deposit required. Woll toko
application by phono. Everyone
buys. Call lor Doug. Wo finance
e ll. 404-747-0324. Open weak
nights to I PM.__________________

Books toys, baby items, furniture,
kltchon, household, and more.
Friday and Saturday 4-4. 1311
Mollonvlllo Avo.
Carport Sale Friday and Saturday
4 4.702 Citrus Drive
Ravenna Pork.

No money down end 3 days service
on all V A financing. Short on
Credit? Call and ask lor Tom .
U n do Roys. Leesburg. Open 1 1
Weekdays. 704 717 0324,__________

Carport Sol*. Loch Arbor
It* W. Crystal Drive.
4 A M T O 4 PM Saturday.___________

OPEN HOUSE
INDIAN M O O S

G A R A G E S A L E : 147 Mayfair Ct.
M aylalr Villas. 2 Fam ily Sale
Sat. only. Juno 4. Furniture,

Fleetwood " N E W " Deluxe 2 1 3
Bedroom. 3 Bath. Completely
Set up in o Beautiful Mobile
Home Community . Includes all
Amenities. Financing Avallablt.
A Must m o M F G Horn* - A ll lor
SI4.700.0I. SR 414 A Tuscuwttle
Road. Winter Springs FI* 32704
3 2 7 - 3 1 4 0 . ________________
1x34 M O B IL E T R A IL E R . G O O O
C O N D IT IO N . Now Dinette oot
f. Call 344-41 tl.

159-Raal Estate
Wanted
N E E D to l o T ^ o w T o u t ^ u i c k i y T
Wo can otter guaranteed sale

^jjdthlnXdajrtXalUlMatl^^^

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

Cod Keyed
W E H A V E C L IE N T S
W A IT IN G FO R
YOUR R EN TA L
P R O P ER TY
PLEASE CALL
323-3200

CASH DOOR P R IZES
Dalls's Auction

M LS

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M OR E H OM ES TH A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y

tW i*

Couches A choirs, dinette sots,
T V 's , storoos. record cabinet,
mirrors, antique picture*, temps,
folding choirs. A card lablas.
nice lamp tabl* "antique," n ft.
e x t e n s i o n l o d d o r ,
crystal,Bavarian dlnntrwore sot.
All kind* of bric-a-brac trom lost
7 estates.

F O R E S T A T E . Com m ercial or
Residential Auctions A Apprais­
als. Coll Doll's Auction 373 4470

JUNE P0RZIG REALTY
R EA LTO R
402 S French Ave.

Y O U R ID E A L C O M B IN A T IO N
Large J BR horn* with extra rontal
In c o m e , g a r a g e w o r k ih o p ,
garden (p o t. booring citrus,
largo corner lot. no city taxes.
Drive by 7401 S. Park Avo., then
coll for appt. Priced *34.700
O w n «r will hold mortgage. You'll
love III

SANFORD, FLORIDA

CALL BART

A majestic, picturesque taste ol yesteryear's finest
residences! Unbellevoble 4 bedroom, 3% bath home
with Spanish architecture, featuring quarry tile i wood
flooring, cathedral ceilings, spacious rooms, formol liv­
ing room 1 dining room, parlour, screen/gloss enc. sun
porch w/fountoin. flreploce, lg. entry foyer, double
.enclosed garage w/moid quarters, beoutiful gardens
on three landscaped lots I Restore A decorate to be a
lhow place of Sanford I Yours for only $127,500. For
previewing call today I

R IA L ES TA TE
R E A L T O R ________________ 772-7444

STENSTROM
REALTY — REALTORS
214$ PARK DR.
SANFOtO, PL 12771

4

^ 9

9 A O ft

1 B D R M . I Bath con vonlent to
schools, shopping. *42.000 Bill
Mallciowskl 177 7713___________
Looking tor a Homo? T i g 'l l Find
Y o u r D re a m Nous* In lha
H E R A L D C L A S S IF IE D S .

ISS-Lots-AcrMfft/Sato
‘
• S AN FjO R D l 4 i 4 » B
H i Acre + •country name sit*
O ak p in t soma doored paved. 10%
down M Y r t . at 17%.
S TEN S TR O M R E A L T Y
R EA LTO R S
a Call 377 2470 Anyt la w b
S T. JO H N S R iver frontage, !W
a c re p a r c t la , a l» a In lo r lb r
parcels with river accost 114.400
Public water. X mla. to Alta
manta M all 12% M y r o financing,
no qualifying Broker
*704177

U K F T . Utility Tra ile r for sal*..
Ideal tor lawn sarvlc*. *430 323-1742.

D o b a ry Auto A M orin* Solos
across tho river top of hill 174
hay 17 47 Dobary 44043*1________

Cash lor good used lurnlturo.
Larry's Now A Used Furniture
M art, 213 Sanlord Avo. 322 4132
C O LO R T E L E V IS IO N
Zenith 23" color T V In walnut
console. Original price over 4730.
Balance due 1144 cash or pay­
ments *14 month. N O M O N E Y
DO W N. Still In warranty. Call
4*2-3344 day or nlte. Free homo
troll, no obligation.______________
Konmore port*, service,
used washers. 3730447
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
3 II-3 I3 E . F IR S T S T .
377 3*77

117— Sporting Goods

GUN AUCTION
SUNDAY JUNE 5 1 PM.
SHOOT STRAIGHT
APOPKA PLAZA
CORNER 441 and 436
MORE INFO 1-889-0842

241— R e c r a a t io n a l
V e h i c l e * / C a m p * r*

Champion 73. 24 Ft. fully salt
contained. Sloop* 4 to I. S3.0X
Milo*. *7X0.4713370.____________
C O L E M A N C A M P IN G T R A IL E R S
R .V . S A LE S H w y 44
Now Smyrna Beach *04 423 4373,
1X1 Spartan Travel Trailer. X F I.
21 F t. Awning. E &gt; . Cond. L X *
Monro* Park. Oobary. No Phono
Colls PI***#

• For Sol*.
1443 M ercury. Runs Good. S IX .
__________ 714 W. 13th St.__________
1474Chevy V o g e l Dr.
S IX .
Coll 322 4143 Alter 4 PM.

Castro Convertible Sola Bod .
Queen sit*. Brand Now. S4X. or
bost otter. Call
otter * PM .
373 4437.________________________

147* AM C Concord. D . L. 7 door,
auto. a lr.A M . F M ., power After
4 Pm. Weekdays 32441*7,

O A ZE B O S
10 Foot now * sided Redwood
Gattbos lor sol* Osteon Golt
Club 773 4343.____________________
M O V IN G Realistic. 4 speakers
Tope Deck. Record Ployor. 21
Piece PVC pip*. Furniture •«dds
and and*. 321 413*._______________

147* Toyota Colic*
G .T . H at­
chback. A M F M storto. Auto.
Tran*, air, 123 4147. Weekdays
otter* PM._____________________
1471 Butch Rhrtera.
AM orlg. w/attontion and car* to
match Its condition. Prlcod right
and must toll. Longwood 147 3433
Eves. Thank You for Calling.

Now assorted Kltchon Cabinet*,
counter tops, sinks, and othor
Horns. 777 3447.__________________
Plano Excellent condition. 1550
Black and Docktr tltc lrlc td g tr
and trimmer *10. Boy* 3 speed
biko *10.373 7*3*_______________

14*1 Dodge C hallenger 4 cyl.
lo a d e d , lo w m ile a g e . P a y
balance ol 47,333.3*. Coll 323 *377.

P LA C E Y O U R W A R ES
W H E R E T H E Y 'R E SUR E
TO B E S T U D IE D
IN T H E W A N T A P S It
The Favorite Brand Nam* to*
Shoppers Looking tor the Best
Buy IS " H E R A L D " Classified..
Wo buy furnltur*. antiques or
except consignments for auction
Flo Trader Auction 314 3)14.

B U Y J U N K CAR S A TR U C K S
From 110 to *30 or more
►
Call 322 1*24 123 4317
.
TO P Dollar Paid tor Junk A Used ‘
cars, truck* A heavy equipment.
_____________ 377 3440_____________
W E P A Y T O P D O L L A R FO R
JU N K CARS A N O TR U C K S.
CBS A U T O P A R TS . 747 4303.

245— Miscellaneous
| Consol* Grand Piano, with paddod
bench. W alnut color. D a m p!
chaser with warranty. J yrs. old.
1300 1710430

73 Th u n d o rb lrd . Loaded, wire
wheels, new tiros, clean. 334 4 IX
Of 134 4403.
70 Sunblrd Super Coup*. 4 speed.
AC ., P.S., A M • F M top*, now
radial*. 47.3X 372 7344.
74 Malibu 4 door, air, oxtra clean,
whit* wall tiros, wlr* whools.
radio and hooter. 4143 down with
credit. 334 41X134 4X3.

I X Lbs. ol Argentine Gross seed
Valued at wholesale S IX . Will
take best o lla r. Never boon
oponod C o ll* H «r* PM . 333 4343.

W E P A Y T O P D O LLA R FOR
JU N K CARS A N D TR U C K S.
CBS A U T O P A R TS . 243 4301.

7 Couch** and 7 choirs to match.
4130 «* set. Rocking Choir, (44.
R atlin couch and 2 choir*. ( t K . 2
Odd choirs. 130 *a. Old bookcase
with k «y. *74.323 4337.___________

235— 'T rucks/
Buses / Vans

73.1 Cu. Ft. Chast Irooror. Sears
bost w/llash defrost. Llk* new.
New Refill (415 X asking 4150 X
or Bast Otter. 321 37X____________
23 Inch Color TV .
Console
321 1*24

1477 Chevy Von
4 cylinder 4473.
Call 111 1377.

( iT A M ftV N T R y T O Y O T A
QUALITY

LOOK OVER THIS EXTRA

sporli equipment otc._________
Garag* Sal*. Friday and Saturday
4 4. 3103 Country Club Rd Beds,
gun rock, weights. Franciscan
oarthwar* Desert Rosa, many
Homs.
M O V IN G S A L E . 14M Palmetto
Avo. Saturday I A M . Rad Gen*
with the Wind Lamp, I antique
ltd* choirs, furniture, exercise
bike end mlsc.___________________
Moving to Taxes Sol*. Furniture,
cloth**, odds A end* cheap. 317
E . Georgia Avo., Longwood. Sot.
A Sun.___________________________
S T A R T Your gorago Solo* now 11
M A K E L Q T S O F Q U IC K M O N E Y
Coll T H E H E R A L D 377 7*11 today.
Yard Sol*. Saturday only Juno 4th.
1:30 A M to 4 PM . 10* Lok* Dot
D r. Sunland Estates. Lot* of
Horns, at bargain prices. Includ
Ing books and dishes____________
Yord Sol* 2204 Polmotto Avo. I X
AM . Clothing tor everyone, and
household Items. Saturday.
YARD SALE
712 B R A D S H A W OR.
S A N FO R D Sat. 4-7

4 to* Modi"
1474 V.W MtetT

, 1 A . a

Stock * 1 7 1 1 ................................................' I f

f

!

QUALITY

1171 TOYOTA CCIICA
_
Stock *54074 ............................................. ’ * I V 8
1401 TOYOTA COtORA
. . . . .
Stack *407444............................................. ’ i f f #

1101 TOYOTA

••its

Loag 0*d . . . .

219— Wanted to Buy

COUNTRY f QYofA

Need E it ra Cask 7
K O K O M O Tool Co., i t 414 W. First
St., Sanlord. Is now buying glass,
newspaper, bimetal stool and
aluminum cans along with *11
o th o r k in d s of n o n -fe rro u s
metals Why not turn ttili Idle
clutter Into extra dollars? W* all
banollt from recycling.
For details call; 373 1I X

Hwy.

17- V2. L o n g w o o d Fl

P h o n e 8 3 1 - 8 78 7

of*IN SVI *40 A &gt;

S u nt or d Phone 3 3 7 8 6 0 1

I • litl ’ " ! 00

Wanted to Buy 3 Whoel Adult Bika
In good condition.
377 4*47

PUOLIC
BANKRUPTCY
AUCTION

193— Lawn A Gordon

CASSELBERRY

201— H o r s t s
SALE

W E

A R E

D E S T I N E D

T O

B E

1! ! !

S A LE
H O R SE
C A L L 103 327 *300

•_JftwnnJ##v#mot*a|*^^

283— Livestock/Poultry
For Solo Ptg* *30 up. Young ducks
and ch lck oni. *1.00 a*. Call
3770300 or 574 3414 A H . 4 PM .
A ikfe rG siiB .

A B SO LU TE
A U C T IO N

THE G R EA T S U Z U K I
P R IC E

B L O W -U P !!
A4

HIM

Nl1A
&gt;1499

GS450LZ

1
‘
-

242-Junk C a n

4* Chevrolet Coupe. Instdo com
plotoly restored Run* good.
Noeds paint. *7.000 Firm . 322
3447 AM. 4 PM.

S U N L A N D E S T A T E S . 3 Bdrm . 7
B a th , fa m ily ro o m , lanced,
nearly 1300 sq It. Assume groat
loan Priced to soli at (44.300.
Te rry Putty Realtor 134 4700.
U N D E R 11.444
3 bdrm dollhousa with affordable
m o n th ly p a y m o n to . C a ll
Owner Broker 331 1411.

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Choc A E a s y Te rm *
N A T IO N A L A U T O SALES
1 IX S . Sanford Avo.
311 4075
X S IS . Orlando Dr.
327«3I4

-

Antique Sessions
mantle Clock
mint condition S IX . Curio Cabi­
net. Insld* light S IX .. Norltak*
dinner sot sarvlc* for I plus 7
extra serving pieces. (3 X .
_____________ 373 53X._____________

7774W. Hwy.44
_____________ 773 4410_____________

Sanford’sSaltsUadtr

A L S O 7.7 Acres Term s. *14.700

f

321-0041

227-Tracton/Trallen

D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hwy 42, I mil* west ol Speedway,
Daytona Beach will hold a public
A U T O A U C T IO N (v e ry Monday
A Wednesday at 7 :X p m. It'a the
only on* In Florida. You tot the
reserved prlca. Call 404 71401!
tor further details.

223— Miscellaneous

REALTY &amp; REALTORS

_____________ 377-4771______________

O S T E E N 5 Acres, high and dry.
Well and light pole Owner hold
Ing *77.300

Eve

R EA LTO R

R E A L T O R . M LS
7341 S. Fre n ch
Suite 4
Sanlord. F la .

Lie. Real Estate Broker
7440 Sanlord Ave

j*321-0759

V E R Y L IV E A B L E
3 Bdrm ., 3 both, largo living oree.
Walled pool and patio In bock.
Vacant and ready tor your fam i­
ly to en|oy. 142,744.

231-Cars

HONEY
C R Y S T A L L A K E A P IA R IE S
Orange Blossom Honey
I L O C A T IO N S :
D U G G A R S G E N E R A L S TO R E
S E M IN O L E T V
O LD L A K E M A R Y RO.

W O O DED ACRES
This lovely 2V* aero I rood parcel
comot complete with a 1 bdrm .
My both homo with firoplaco In
lorn, room, big oof In kltchon and
cool screened polio. AM of tho
oppratled value of 1124.444.

BIALTY

Hidden Lake
Heme* from *47,740
Villas from *41,744
FH A /V A Mortgages
Residential Communities ol
America
_____________ 7717471_____________

.B A T E M A N R E A L T Y
*.

STEER W rTHDUT

POOL
This lovaly 3 B drm ., 2 bath ham* ft
|utf tfrok tt away from M ayfair
Coll Court*. Wood foncod hock
yard offors privacy lor cooling
elf In tho sparkling pool. 443,144.

322-8478

W E N E E D L IS TIN G S
C A L L US N O W II

__________7404 H W V 17 77__________
Hidden Lake Area 4/7. pool, faml
ly room, lakevlew. I acre lot Bob
M Ball J r . PA Realtor. 373 4114

' 123— Wanted to Rent

___

E N a w ra
THE BU
THE Z ? PlEKUP
CR0WP
&gt; A CHECK.'
DISAPPEARS!

Q U A L IT Y E X TR A S
This horn* t.c o o d t gracious Ilf*
tfy lt, wood and beam colling, old
lothlonod firoplaco, largo oat In
kltchon, decorator wall papor.
W a ll la n d s c a p a d g r o u n d s .
473,34*.

D A Y S 574 141*
_________ E v e r 704 4741__________

105— DuplexTriplex/Rent

pf00 BAP! YbO PI P HI*
ON W (SRNiPFKTrtER*
- k NSW ^ M U &amp; I
EN H
“
‘
FAR^MY*TKEN6TMV*5A \ W HIEN
HEX PPL
HAVE
LZ6LHV! CROWDSdATHEWP THROW'

M fldTANCE!

F rid a y, Jung J , I N J - f A

Evonlnf Hero Id, iairterd, FI.

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

GS450TX

i l in

&gt;1349

GS550LZ

zvjy

&gt;1999

GS650GZ

JKMh

&gt;2299

RM125Z

i /i 1

&gt;1199

E. Z. BANK FINANCING

,

�IQA-Evanlng Herald, Sinford, FI.

B L O N D IE
1 W ORK HARO
7 A L L D A Y '/ '- t

NEVER EV EN

yf

&gt; SAYS
TH A N K
S VOUr

ACROSS

45 Doughnut
ship*
1 Knock about 4( Bacoma
7 Exciting
ovareaat
13 Danounca 49 Lack of
14 Coma
vitality
15 Ohms
8] Split
15 NonH Haiti
profHiional
£1
bm,
17 Viitaxpama M flw lo t
IS Mountain*
20 Noun luffii
21 Glouy paint
□□□
23 ColiKtor
□an
27 Funda­
mentally
31 Intha aim*
placa (abbr.)
32 Ba miatakan
33 Rika
34 Folkalngar
Sugar
book
35 Yock
6 Pinatra*
36 Piaiport
exudation
andoraemant 7 Salient
37 Alfiaad
characteristic
poataga
6 Ruba out
39 Starvaa
9 Waap
voluntarily
10 Pariod
40 Garm
11 Author
42 Sail
Turganav

N O O O O Y CAN W ORK
W IT H O U T O B T T IN O
&gt;
SOM E
•&lt;
ACKNOW LEDGM ENT

B E E T L E B A IL E Y
W H AT P O YOU
G IR LS SEE IN
THAT T EblbllS PRO?
PO ES HE HAVE
&gt;
A b r a in ? y

' P IP
A NlVOh/E

SEE A

P Ublblo

LETiS
LOOK

GO
AGAIN

B R A IN / ?

T H E BORN LOSER

A*jy fikCTOJLAR STYLE
\

S b U 'R E I N T E R E S T E D

'

mcHB.

v*v

( S T B k RTS RNE

A R C H IE

'WOW/ THE FINANCIAL
NEWS IS HOT TODAY
.
VERONICA.'
^

THEY HAD *£C O #t?
PRICES AGAIN ON THE
STOCK MARKET.'

VEAH, GREAT,

EEK &amp; M EEK

SCO AkJ ABUSED

THE PAPER &amp; JUST
FULL OF TERRIFIC
THINGS TO D AY' y
"
~ Z IT tSNT ALL

R E A L L Y ? M X ) MEAJO,SOUR
A\RQUTS BEAT M X ) 1

r n

JUST BAD
-K

HAZEL. YOU'RE A
REAL INSPIRATION
YOU ALWAYS SEE
QOOP IN EVERY­
THING/
y

I HOPE OUR KIDS
WILL GROW UPAS
OPTIMISTIC ANC7
UPBEAT AS YOU
ARE/
&gt;

By Stofftl 4 Htimdahl
X C M i T H O P m F 'T W E V H W r

STEW 15 WgBERy.lHg W *8ftT

W ASW U0BERV ---------- A

Ufe-sae,

c o u rs e

o f

f

w

! « 1a 1

D EA R

DR&gt; L A M B

-

For

the past year I have had a
most unbearable whistling
J
_
and roaring sound in my
0J
O F•
ear- 1 am °n ly 48 and that
S
.
a
is too young to have thosem. h m
L O IW O
i 1 L
kind o f ear problems.
£
Along with the hearing
H,irv
loss a person may have ear
B,rb*
noises. When hearing is — -----------------------------Ragardmg (2 impaired, the things that results In many patients
wda. lit..
cause ear noises seem who have hearing pro*
abbr.)
worse because they have blems that benefit from a
Honk
less — or no — competl- hearing aid. I have dlsRights (al.)
tlon from other noises. By cussed the various causes
Wight
correcting he says I need o f ear noises and what can
Franch
an operation to correct the be done about them In The
woman (abbr.) hearin g. I have n ever Health Letter 12-10, Help
Encountered
heard of operating on the for Tinnitus — Noise or
Har Majesty* car to get rid of car noises. Ringing In the Ear. which I
ship (abbr.)
Is there a way to do this am sending you. Others
_ _ _ _ _
without an operation? He who want this issue can
11
12
7 8 9 10
1 2 3 4 5 6
0 1
1 12
said I could use a hearing send 75 cents with a
------------- aid irI didn’ t want surgery
l o n g . s t a m p e d , self14
13
but I don’ t want to wear addressed envelope for It
------------- one o f those either. Any
to me. In care o f this
16
15
suggestions?
newspaper. P.O. Box 1551,
------------DEAR READER — There Radio City Station. New
203
19
18
17
are many causes for noises York. NY 10019.
■
1 In the car. or that seem to
DEAR DR. LAMB - In
22
21
be from the car. Often. In the past two weeks 1 have
. I- . |3L-1 older people, the source of heard two doctors say that
28 29 30
23 24 25 26
8 **
the apparent sound Is In white bread is no good.
f t ”
the brain, not the ear.
But they don’t say why or
33
[32
31
From your story I would what harm it docs. I would
■
|
think your doctor believes like to know what harm
36
35
34
you have otosclerosis. In white bread does and why
_ I
this disorder the small we should not eat It. If It is
39
38
37
bones In the middle car harmful to me I will quit,
cham ber fuse together
_
DEAR READER - There
41
40
making It Impossible for is nothing harmful about
them to vibrate properly In white bread, except the
46 47 48
42 43
response
to sound, caus- calorics It provides If you
“ 1■
Ing a distinct hearing loss, need to control calories.
52
49
51
so
It con happen in relatively
The problem Is the missy
o
u
n
g
p
e
o
p
l
e
,
e
v
e
n
Ing
Ingredients In white
54
53
younger than you.
bread - what It doesn't
Along with the hearing give you. not what It
56
55
loss a person may have car causes. Today, commernoises. When hearing Is clal white bread gives you
Impaired, the things that everyt hi ng you get In
cause car noises seem whole wheat bread except
worse because they have the bulk from bran,
less — or no - competlWhite dour Is made by
lion from other noises. By removi ng the husk dr
ByBERNICEBEDE08OL
correcting your hearing bran. It is rather complete*,
problem you might not be ly digested leaving no
as Irritated by these other bulk. For people who need
sounds. I hasten to add bulk, and we all do. that
that people with car noises simply decreases the bulk
YOUR BIR TH D AY
thodical and have clearly
from other causes would in your diet. You can
JUNE 4 ,1 9 8 3
defined objectives. If your
not benefit from such a replace that with bran,
There Is a possibility you
blueprint Is fuzzy, the re­
procedure.
whole cereals and other
may form on alliance this sults will reflect It.
Using a hearing aid to foods.
coming year with a very*
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
I mp r o v e heari ng, and
The vitamins that are
unique Individual who
22) Business or financial
thereby diminishing ear lost In removing the bran
may not hit It ofT with the decisions which you make
noises, has produced good are replaced.
rest o f y o u r f r i ends.
today could be overly In­
Ironically, the two of you
fluenced by your negative
will have much In com­ views, and thus cause you
mon.
to limit your possibilities.
OEMINI (May 2 1-June
S A G IT T A R IU S ( Nov.
20) Career matters must
23-Dec. 21) Don't expect
heart and landed at three
be negotiated with skill those you love to set aside
no-tnTmp after a spade
today, or that which you
response and a no-trump
their Interests In order to
hope to achieve Isn’t likely cater to your whims today.
rebld.
to be realized. Gemini Be realistic regarding what
Both Wes t p l ay e rs
predictions for the year you ask of others.
opened the three of hearts
WEST
EAST
♦Al
♦ Q101
ahead are now ready. C A P R I C O R N I D c c . 22Into declarer's bid suit.
♦ QJM 1
*17
Romnncc. career, luck, Jan. 19) Unless you first
Both declarers had to win
♦ 7&gt;
♦ A im
earnings, travel and much lay all o f your curds on the
in dummy. At table one
♦ ••41
+ QI1
more are discussed. Send
the nine o f diamonds was
table today, those with
BOUTS
• 1 to Astro-Graph, Box whom you deal are apt to
led. East ducked and
♦ IS
489. Radio City Station, withhold pertim ent in­
South played his queen to
f
H itt
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to formation.
hold the trick.
♦ KQI04
state your zodiac sign.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20South decided that West'
♦ A K 10
Send ari additional $2 for Feb. 19) Don’t try to buy
would not duck with the
Vulnerable: Both
the NEW Astro-Graph
the good will or others
ace. so East was marked
Dealer South
Matchmaker wheel and
today with material
with that card. It was then
W rit Nartb B u t
Sort!
booklet. Reveals romantic gestures. Compassion and
likely that West would
IP
combinations and com ­ kind words will have more
hold
the spade ace, so a
Pan
1A
Pan
1NT
patibilities for all signs.
Impact than grabbing the
s p a d e wa s l ed. Wes t
Pan
!♦
Pan
S NT
CANCER (June 21-July tab.
ducked and dummy's king
Pan
Pan
Pan
22) Even If you want to be
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
won the trick.
Opening lead: ¥3
helpful, try not to take on 20) Minimal achievements
N ow South had one
tasks for others today today won't be due to a
spade trick In. He aban­
which you may not have lack o f Initiative. You’ll
doned the suit and re-’
the expertise to perform.
have the drive, but you
verted to diamonds to
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) may go after things lllogi_
wind up with one spade,
I t ' s best not to take cally.
As you may have seen
tw o h e a r t s , t h r e e
speculative risks today.
AR IE S (March 21-April f r o m t h e p r e c e d i n g
diamonds and three clubs
However. If you feel In­ 19) Poor Judgment on the a r t i c l e s , mo s t o f the after a lucky finesse for the
clined to do so, be sure the
queen o f that suit.
gamble is worthy of the
At table two the Jack of
returns.
diamonds was led at trick
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept.
two. and East went right
22) An Ineffective counsel­
up with his ace. Then he
or could give you confus­
cleared the hearts for hts
ing advice today, so don't
partner, and South never
go to persons for sugges­
got a spade trick, winding
tions who have steered
up down one.
you wrong In the past.
N ote that wi t hout a
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
heart lead the no-trump
In order to tbe productive
game would wheel in with
today, you must be me­
a very likely overtrick.

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WIN A T BRIDGE

NEWS/

BUGS B U N N Y

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STOCKS

CHILD. FlELD SO Jfc

A Hearing Aid May
Ease Roaring Sound

o

u t W B t y

SHOULDBEAT
THEM E BYtO tf. m BLASTMEFOB
M E B E L W - f H g AHMOTf ASMS
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FEU POM IN*/HOLE

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Evening Herald

LEISURE
Complete Week's TV Listings
tanfwtf, F torIda -

Friday, Juna S, \ W

G e n e a lo g y
C lim b in g Th e F a m ily T re e In S e a rch O f Y o u r R oots
■r i

■ • r a id S ta ff W riter
W as one o f you r ancestors a Revolutionary W ar
hero? O r could great grandm a have been a pioneer
who helped settle the Old W est?
If you really w ant to know about you r forebears,
there's a w ay to find out. In fact several ways, and
(he search can be fascinating.
C a r l P a t ln . a f o r m e r n a v a l o f f i c e r fr o m
Casselberry, got so intrigued with a few gem s o f
inform ation about his fam ily background that he
has becom e nearly an expert on genealogy and is
teaching others about the search for on e's past in a
leisure tim e course at Sem inole Com m unity College.
T h e five -w e ek cou rse. "C lim b Y o u r F a m ily
T re e -G e n e a lo g y R e s e a rc h ," costs t l 5 and is
sponsored Jointly by the leisure tim e program . SCC,
the Sem inole County Historical Com m ission and the
Museum o f Sem inole County.
"R esearch is n ever e n d in g." says Patln. w ho has
been looking Into his heritage from the Cook side o f
his fam ily. One o f the tidbits he has unearthed
that early m em ber o f the fam ily. Thom as Cook. Just
missed the M ayflower, landing In Boston In 1635.
Searching your fam ily tree can be an expensive
hobby, he notes, adding the greatest expense,
h ow ever. Is the t i me Involved in researching
everyw here from the Sem inole County public library
at Casselberry, through the Orlando Public Library,
especially in old census records there, to the Library
o f Congress in W ashington. D.C.
T h e easiest w ay to begin. Patln says. Is
the present and work backward.
"T a lk to fam ily members, especially those u
generation or m ore back. If possible. And don't trust
to you m em ory, lake a tape recorder ufong." lie
says.
"L isten to old-tim ers who enjoy rem iniscing about
stories they have been told and m em orable events In
their lives. Look through their photograph albums
with them. Nall dow n times o f special events, names
and their relationship and p laces." he says.
Patln Is quick to point out that often with a little
inform ation about special events, the tim es they
occurred and other names one can look to public
records, such as marriage, birth, or census records
and find out all sorts o f things.
W hile older relatives m ight think they can't
rem em ber when a picture was taken, photos o f
wom en especially can be pinned dow n on the tim e
aspect because o f the constantly changing styles o f
w om en 's fashions.
Census records are invaluable, he says, noting
that the 1910 census questions Included not only
the names o f heads o f households, but also their
relationship to others livin g in the same house,
m arital status o f those In the house, the num ber o f
children, each person's birthplace as w ell as their
parents' birthplaces, their occupations, whether
th ey could read o r w rite and w h eth er an y m em bers
o f the household w ere veterans o f the Union or
Confederate armies.
In the censuses o f 1800. 1810 and 1820. questions
w ere asked on the num bers o f household m em bers
In each age grouping, w hether the households were
Involved In agricu ltu re,. m anufacturing or com-

Hm-«M Ptote kv Twnmir VtocMt

Searching through the past to find your roots is
no sim ple m atter. It can takes ye ars of
p a in sta k in g re s e a rc h to d e te rm in e one's
heritage. C a rl P atln, who teaches a course on

genealogy at Seminole C o m m u n ity College,
sits w ith only a fraction of the m aterials that
m ust be scoured In tryin g to find fust w here
you fit on the fa m ily tree.

merce, and the num ber o f Tree or enslaved In each
household.
T h e censuses Tor 1850, 1860 and 1870 Includes
inform ation on the value o f real estate and personal
property, whether parents w ere foreign bom . where
and when, and w hether they w ere eligible to vote.

He says It is easier to research the backgrounds o f
fam ily m em bers who have lived In the U.S. for a
while rather than to attem pting to go back to
European origins.
"It 's so Interesting." he says. " I 'v e learned more
about the places where 1 grew up during the
research around Grand Rapids. Mich, than 1 did
when I was actually grow ing up th ere."
A m e m b e r o f th e C e n tra l F lo rid a F lo rid a
Genealogical and Historical Society. Patln says a
rich source o f Information are the quarterly news
letters put out by the local organization and sim ilar
groups all over the country. T h e local society trades
Its'n ew s letters-w ith other groups, and often like
Patln. m em bers run short stories spout where their
particular4 research is stym ied at the moment.
Others across the nation doing research Into their
fam ily trees sometimes- com e up with Just the
Information you are searching for. he says.

T h e Orlando Public Library has m icrofilm s o f
m any census records and m icrofilm s are also
available for view in g and purchase at the Library o f
Congress In Washington.
W ith the Information from the census files, one
can g o further into m ortgage and perhaps pension
records.
Old books are another source o f m aterial. Patln
says he acquired one old book from his hom e state
o f Michigan and w as richly rewarded b y finding a
picture In the book o f bis grandfather w ho died
before he was born.

�a—Ewwlng Harald, Sawtord, F&gt;,

Friday, Ju w I, m 3

Magic Wasn't Blackstone's First Career Choice
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYW OOD (NEA) W e are all suspicious o f
magicians. W e seriously
doubt that there is any­
thing magical about their
acts. W e ore Inclined to
believe they do it all with
sl ei ght o f hand, wi t h
mechanical devices, with
misdirection.
But then there is Harry
Blackstonc Jr., and he Is
not sure him self exactly
what It is he does. A fter
som ething that happened
when he did a recent T V
show, he Is o f the opinion
that perhaps there Is true
m agic involved, after all.
Blackatone has done a
big May special for PBS.
It w i l l a i r a g a i n In
August, and tw ice more,
in 1984 and 1985. He
says they are scheduling
it so fa r In a d v a n c e

because PBS is using it
as the corn ersto n e o f
their fund-raising cam ­
paigns for the next three
years.
"O n the special,” he
says. " I did one o f m y old
favorite tricks. It Is the
disappearing cage. The
cage has a canary Inside,
and 1 hold It In plain vlets
o f the audience — and
the cam era — and then It
s u d d e n ly and I n e x ­
plicably disappears.
"M y producer decided
It would be Interesting to
use a slow-motlon cam ­
era when I did the trick,
and that’s what w e did. It
was Intriguing to m e to
watch the footage o f that.
In one frame, there I am.
holding the cage, and In
the next frame, the cage
Is go n e." He then pauses
before saying, " I t m ay

really be m agic.”
Harry Blackstonc Jr. is
the son o f the original
Blackstone, one of
m agic’s all-time greats.
H a r r y g r e w up wi t h
m a g ic , b u t, fo r som e
years, he didn’ t think he
wanted to make a career
out o f it.
So, presto change-o, he
tried three other careers
first: Journalism, broad­
casting and politics.
"A ll three o f them ,”
B la ck ston e says, " a r c
Ijkc m agic. In that they
fool the eye. I worked for
som e tim e for Lyndon
Johnson, and he was one
o f the great masters o f
misdirection. I mean that
as a com plim ent, not an
insult. He was an artist at
getting people to look one
w a y w h en he w an ted
them to look that way,

and then do som ething
som eplace else."
A fter w orking In those
three professions,
B la c k s to n e tu rn e d to
m agic In 1965 after the
death o f his father. He
was then persuaded to
take o v e r his fa th e r’s
name, act and routine.
He has, o f course, added
m a n y new bits and
pieces to the act since
then.
He believes the grand
o ld a rt ( s c i e n c e ? ) o f
m a g i c is f l o u r i s h i n g
nowadays, because tele­
vision has been excep ­
tionally good for magic.
" A m agician on T V .”
he s ays , ‘ ‘ has to be
careful where the cam era
close-ups arc, but T V la
really a great m e d lu o H W
m agic. T h e view er can
see everythin g, and sec
t hat th e re is n o th in g
phony about It — Just
m agical, that’s all.”
o n ce asked one
fem ale m agician w h y she
had n ever tried larger
Illu sion s. S h e gla n ced
d o w n at th e e v e n in g
gow n she was w earing
and said, ‘ I have no place
to hide anything.’

A Docksick. Rib dncL'Rcctaurdnt

"T h a t Is the answer.
Men, because o f th eir
bulky Jackets and b ig
sleeves, have plenty o f
places to hide things, but
w om en don’t ."

H a r r y Blackstone J r . is c a rry in g on his
father's na m e as one of the w o rld 's most
prestigious prestidigitators. H e 's com e a long
w a y since the days when he g a ve a w a y his
father's rabbits before the senior Blackstone
could pull them out of his hat.
W h e n g r o w i n g up.
Harey used to do one o f
his father’s tricks to the
annoyance o f his father.
T h e sen ior Blackstone
was famous for givin g
rabbits aw ay to kids. He
would call a youngster
up on stage.to assist him
with a trick, then give
him the rabbit used In
th e t r i c k . T h e s o n

estim ates that his father
g a ve a w a y m ore than
5 0 .0 0 0 ra b b its In his
career.
"B u t 1 w ou ldn 't wait
fo r th e kid to be on
sta g e." he says. " I 'd give
the rabbits aw ay at the
stage door. I once gave
aw ay so m any that m y
father didn ’t have any
rabbits left for his act.”

The Twilight Catch
daily from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

$5.95
Cup o f Seafood Chowder
Crock o f Cheese with Crackers
Tossed Salad or Cole Slaw
ttn W

2 9 x J9 M 1 W
W a i t ' 2 9 x 4 a M ’i W

F lo r id a G r o u p e r
fresh when available

29x29 29x24’ 24x49

• H4Mycom«MKl«a
• lu n * w n M H ita i

—

panfried or broiled to perfection
Choice o f Potato or Rice
Hot Bread and Butter
Ice Cream Crepe with Strawberry Sauce

Now Featuring New Dinner Menu

M
■ r- ff_r
Tony Perez at the Keyboards
— Tuesday through Saturday —
Playing Your Favorite Dinner Music

ft* * , of Sanford
Lake M onroe M arina
505/323*1910

MON.-SAT. * * « . * * « .

i B

l

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,NBC' JV/'0” ,eath
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Melbourne

(10) B )

Orlando Public

'

B ro a d c a s tin g S y s te m

" ®

Friday, J a w &gt;, H B - j

in addition te the channels lilted, cable visien subscriber* may tune in to independent channel 44,
St. Petersburg, by tunin« te channel •i tunine te channel IS, which carries sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Netwerb ( CBN) .

Specials
SATURDAY

The Week

SUNDAY

York City.

YOUR EYEGLASSES
SAVINGS CENTER

BUDGET
OPTICAL
SANFORD •323-8080
2544 5. HUNCH A V I. ( 1742)
(NlXnVAOftJKs)

�4—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, June 3, l»8J

Evening Herald, Sanlord^FL___ Friday, June 3, IW I- »

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

Wfx5«t:

0:00
6:00

O S3 (S3 O CDO NEWS
(11) (96) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
8 ) (10) OGEANUS
03(8) GET SMART

6:05
(ID I DREAM OF JEANNIE

6:30
O S ) NBC NEWS
03 Q CSS NEWS
( 1 ) 0 ABC NEWS Q
8 ) (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
SBiAVKM
O (S) ONE DAY AT A TIME

6:35

&lt;11FATHER KNOWS BEST
7.00
O S ) U E DETECTOR
(S3
P.M. MAGAZINE Country
music's 11th Annual Fan Fair In
NaahvMe, T annassee: a woman who
turned her "Ortmbi**." music box-

a

O *
KNIGHT RIDER Michael
pursues a counterfeiter to a small
town where he finds a Bible printing
plant fronting for a cash-printing
operation. (R)
(5) Q DALLAS The Ewings attend
the Oil Baron's Ball. Lucy decides
to get on with her life, and Sue Ellen
runs Into Dusty at the Southern
Cross. (R)
GD O MOVIE "Fighting Beck"
(1980) Robert Uhch, Art Camay.
The story of Rocky Bleier, who
overcame near-crippling war Inju­
ries to star with the Super Bowl
champion Pittsburgh Stealers, Is
dramatised. (R)
0 (10) BERNSTEIN / BEETHOVEN
Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna
Philharmonic perform the "King
Stephen Overture" and Symphony
No. 5 InC Minor, Opus 67. (R)

10:00
0 (9 E JS C H IC D Eischied (Jo*
Don Baker) enlists the aid of a
policewoman to break a gun-smug­
gling ring that I* flooding New York
with cheep weapons. (R)
(S3 O FALCON CREST Richard
Charming use* his paper to exploit
Chase's position, and Lance trie* to
rekindle his romance with Lori. (R)

zQ M p &amp; y*
trim

Dancing Enhances The Flavor Of Aggie's Restaurant

CHUROfS
FRIED
CHICKEN

CORN ft CLUCK

2

PUCES OF FRIED
CHICKEN (MIXED), WITH £
1 EAR OF CORN
V
ROIL

M
1

a

LIM IT ONE COUPON

TO A CUSTOMER

OFFER EXPIRES JU N E 13. 1963

Music to enjoy while dining or dancing enhances
the popularity o f A ggie’s, that popular restaurant at
2520 S. French Avc.. Sanford.
Making their debut this week arc Dill and Ron. a
guitar-vocal duo. who will Ik * playing W ednesday
through Saturday nights. Turk Corey is featured on
Monday nights.
Prime rib Is the specially o f the house where slow
ovens at low temperatures turn out an expertly
prepared dish.
A lth ou gh 3 0 y ears a restaurant site, it h as been

A ggie's for the past three years. Perry Agoranos and
his son, George, who serves as manager, arc
co-owners. They lived In Chicago before m oving to
the Sanford area.
C hef Berthe “ B etty" Cosgrove has lH*cn concoct­
ing dishes since A ggie's Inception. She Is assisted by
Marie Manley and Dave Ornellas. both o f Sanford.
The restaurant is open for lunch from 1:30 until
2:30 Monday through Friday and until 10 at night
through the week. Dinner Is served until 11 on
Friday and Saturday evenings. Doors open at 4:30 in
the afternoon Saturday and Sunday, Early bird
s | K * c ia is are served
from 4:30 until 7. except
Saturday.

NOW PRESENTING
WELLS F*RGO BAND

8'30
0
(10) WALL’ STREET WEEK
"Higher And Higher" Guest: WUHem R. Grant, chairmen of Mackey
Shields Financial Corporation.

11:35
QZ THE CATUN8

12:00
C*30 M O W "Pray For 7h* Wild­
cats" (1974) Andy Griffith. Robert
Reed

SWAMP OPERA

&gt; |

SUNDAY, MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY

to o l S. F in c h Avc. S m ln d

•

Monday Night Jam Satslon

668-8267

Imported Italian Winn

THIS WEEK ONLY*‘ 1
EXP. JUNE 8, 1983

O ff
ONE COUPON
PER CUSTOMER

VISA OR MASTERCARD

12:30

(£1 SCTV NETWORK Quest:
Ben Vereen. (R)
( 7 3 0 ONE ON ONE
OJ) (96) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

F a v o r it e s
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL V

1:00
N O W

O PEN

24

latwrdsy * Sunday Specials
Complete Dinners
d J E A C
)

G Roast Turkey R #

t

&amp; S 0

SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL \ \ t &amp; '
OWNER FROM S-S P.M.
T#
T-DONE STEAK, PRIME RIB, ROAST MICK
■BORED FLOUNDERED, SHRIMP OR SCALLOPS
ENTERTAINMENT S TIL ?
TOM A ERMA

SUNDAY SPECIAL
BAKED NAM DINNER
VEGETABLE, SALAD.
ROLL, TEA OR COFFEE

.

'F 5 0 0

THURSDAY SPECIAL
•ARASRIBS
d
VEGETABLES, SALAD, ROUS
'1 0 0 0
TEA OR COFFEE__________ ~
STUCK ON YOU
WAITRESSES

7:35
d l ROMPER ROOM

8:00
0 S I THE FUNTSTONE FUNNIES
1 } i O POPEYE A OUVE

-

/ f
T t

n

K
Mm

*
"

RESTAURANT

C
{9

v

BILL A RON
Guitsr-Vocsb

Buccaneer

Wed
thru Sol,

m m iis

m m ^ iT O

12:35
(12) MOVIE "Tail In The Saddle"
(1944) John Wayne, EHa Raines A
cowpoke changes his negative atti­
tudes about females whan he
accepts a Job as ranch foreman and
meets his two lovely employers.

1:00

0 ( 1 3 WRESTLING
8 ) (10) HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
"Smoking: Kicking The Habit" Dr.
Norman Kaplan and Dr. Richard 1.
Evans examine some of the ways
smokers ’are successfully kicking
the habit. (Part 2)
CD (6) MOVIE "Superargo" (1988)
Guy Madison. Ken Wood.

S E R V IN G L U N C H
M O N .-F R I
2520 S FRENCH AVE
,HWY 17-92. SANFORD
323-6470
4

( 6 ) 0 MOVIE "Overboard "(1978)
Angle Dickinson. Cliff Robertson
An Idyllic around-lhe-worid cruise Is
CALS / RICHIE RICH
tragically Interrupted for a wealthy
o r (96) QRANO PRIX ALL-STAR attorney when hi* wife falls off their
Rung
yacht during a storm.
8 ) (10) QUILTING
( 7 3 0 WRESTLING
CD (t) REAL ESTATE ACTION LINE 8 ) (10) LAST CHANCE GARAGE
Brad Sears offers tips on outfitting
6:35
01 M O W "Rhubarb " (1961) Ray a car for lout weather and change*
MStand. Jan Starting A baseball automatic transmission oU. n
team win* the pennant under the
2:00
ownership of a cat.
03 O AMATEUR GOLF "Welker
Cup Match" (from Royal Liverpool
Golf Club In Hoytake, England).
013(96) M O W "Run For The Sun"
(1956) Richard Wldmark, Jana
Greer. A female Journalist's search
for a missing American wrttar takas
her to an Isolated vMage In Mexico,
where she discovert that Nazis
hive taksn up quart*r*.
0 ( 1 0 ) COMPUTER PROGRAMME
11) (96) THE HARDY SOYS / NAN­
CY DREW MYSTERIES
0 (10) WOOOWRIQHrS SHOP
( 10) FRENCH CHEF
"Lathes” Roy UnderhW demon­
(6) COMMUNITY CONCERN
strates and compare* three turning
10:00
lathes. (R)
(73 O 8COOBY DOO / PUPPY □
01 MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
0 (10) MAGIC OP ON. PAINTING

S

3:00

0 (1) BASEBALL Regional cover­
age ot California Angels el
Milwaukee Brewers; 81. Louis Car­
dinal* at Atlanta Braves.

J - i R estau rant

*Ngw Owner
*Ngw Monagamant
«N aw Manu

Laurie Robinson, chef at Carol's
Stafood is tha naw owner
and is offering...

Breakfast

( 6 3 0 SOLID GOLD
03 O THE ROAD TO LOS ANGE­
LES Olympic hopefuls profiled are
Leroy Kemp (wrestkng). Jeff Float
(swimming) and CoHssn Sommer
and Jeanette Botden (track and
field).

1*30

The

'rim .rn .s ~ j**

ALL TNI FISH YOU CAN EAT
L
VEGETABLE,
$ * 7 8 €3
SALAD, ROUS
J

H O U R S

• Roast P ork
G R o o d Boot

(3) O THIRTY MINUTES
a&gt; (8) PET ACTION UNS

re.
Lunch served It AM -lf90 PM
A f Browser's Barn
Tues.-Sat.

H

(D O MORK 6 MINOY / LAVERNE
S8HIRLEY
(ID(98) VALD ELAO

7:30

B«er

CHICKEN BREAST PARMIGIAN

( 3 ) 0 BLACK AWARENESS

0 S3 GILUOAN'S ISLAND

Flam ing desserts or A ggie's Surprise with choco­
late and pecans top o il an interesting menu ton
varied to detail.
Frankie and Johnny, a luis»&gt;plnnn duo. are
attractions on W edn esdayan d Thursday nights and
Paul Bcaudette plays the gultur Friday. Saturday.
Sunday and Monday nights.

PIZZA

7:00

Q S3 FLASH GOROON □

(H) BETWEEN THE LINES

For a dram atic appetizer, one might choose
Saganaki. a flam ing cheese dish prepared at table.
Escargots arc stuffed in mushroom caps and broiled.
All dinners include soup du Jour, tossed salad and
potatoes one o f three ways.

*

T h e B est Italian F o o d &amp; O rig in a l

12:05

( 7 3 0 M O W "Heaven Can Welt"
(1943) Don Amech*. Gene Tierney.
0 ( 6 ) LATE IS GREAT

" A corner o f G reece." from the heritage o f the
owners, lists the combination plate o f varied items,
such as mousaka at 66.95 and other Greek dishes.
Lighter appetites might I k * appeased by the
Quiche Lorraine with cheese sauce for 64.50 or an
array or Greek salad for $4.25.

V

322-7658

(S3 O SPECTRUM
(D O BULLWINKLE
1)3(96) FISHING TODAY

CD (6) PICTURE OF HEALTH
7:05

• M EAT
• POTATO**
• WUSM TRAY
• FRESH VEGETABLES
• BISCUITS
• DESSERT I REVERAOE
a as ■
dG M
MCtuowfC

01 NIGHT TRACKS (Premier*) The
new overnight video music show
featuring major recording artists
performing their top hits combined
with state-of-the-art computer
graphic* I* presented.

O

START EVERY MORNING
RIGHT WITH US!

Served 6:30 PM Friday Only

S vM h iy N ight • SO't N ight

(73 O ABO NEWS M G H TU N i
ID (96) T H t ROCKFORD FILES

Tin' witty menu features steaks and seafood
prepared conventionally or with a difference. Prices
range from $6.95 for roast leg o f l amb to $11.95 for
the Diamond Jim Drady hearty-sized prime rib.
There Is also a children’s menu labeled "K id ’s
Kuistnc.**

HAVE A HOME-STYLE SUPPER!!

Wednesday Th ru Saturday

gets fired by Boas Hogg for letting
Luke and Bo aecepe from jel.(R)
(Z 3 0 B R X Y GRAHAM CRUSADB
(LD NS) M O W "Up The River"
(1936) Preston Foster. Phyllis
Brooks. A group of prison Inmates
passes the lime playing footbafl and
romancing lovely ladle*.
0 (10) WASHMGTON WEEK IN
REW W
0 (6) M O W "The Disappear­
ance Of Almee" (1976) Faye Duna­
way. Baft* Davis. A district attorney
tries to prove that the 1926 "kid­
napping" of evangelist Almee Sem­
ple McPherson was realty a ruse to
conceal a romantic tryst.

2016 S. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD
322-0520

CtAL "Another Stupid Kid” A
fourth-grader hat trouble In school
and la labelled atupld by hla teach­
er* who are unaware that he ha*
dyslexia.
(?) O WEEKEND SPECIALS "The
Horse That Played Centerheld"
Animated. A hors* show* a losing
major league baseball team how
the gam* should be played. (Pari 3)
(«)□
OD 75s) MOVIE "Oentleman Jim"
(1942) Errol Flynn, Alexis Smith.
Boxer James J. Corbett becomes
the champion of the 1880s.
8 ) (10) MY8TEHYI "Father Brown:
The Eye Of Apollo" Father Brown
has a strange mystery to solve In
this story about the blinding enact
of light on a sun-worshipper. (R) q)

from 7 am-10 am

0 ( 1 0 ) MAGIC OP ANB4AL PAJNTmg

0 ( 8 ) M O W "Blue Water, Whits
Death" (1S71) Documentary.

�S A TU R D A Y

Story” (ISM ) Cyan Cannon, Harvay
Kattat An Impovartahad young girl
■nuni iimNnev u v w p i n p rnpno*

rfttrS S S a
$ * 2 ! 2 i 2 eWe
LZJ O N SW !
7 :0 0
■ j3&gt; M M A ItO H O P _

® « M O W
"Trapaaa" (IM S )
Burt Lancaatar. TonyCurtla.
© (M) m o v m "Tha Magnate
Monatar” (IM S ) King Donovan,
Richard Cartaon.

® V^JM AW
^ . . g . . * y *0WW **™ ^A**

12.-00
3 ) B MONBY: HOW TO MAKI IT,

ff^ T m P P W R S O N S
( i '^ U W M A W O M D O f
JACOUBSOOUSTtAU
■ W SHANANA
7 :3 0
■ (9 CALL YOUR OONORSBBMAM
(D (SS) BAAMBY M KLDt
I t (f) MUSIC MAOABNB

m o w t o w b p it

8.-00

•
( 9 OtP f BBH T B TR O K IS
Arnold loaia ra)actad whan WMa
baoomaa a “big brothar" to anoth*

af)boj^(« y

o f TM *808

Andy Qlbb, bona Cara and ChrtaMa Brtnkloy Join Laa Maiora aa t l
boautiM modem Bam around tha
world via lor tha tMa - f aoa Ol Tha

_
12.-08
© NW HT TRACKS
12:30
CD O MOWS "Tha Oraat HoudW a" (IM S ) Pam MMhaal Otaaar,
GaayBtruthara.
140
IS ( 9 LA IM H TR M
© O S) M O W -Son or Draoula"
(IM S ) Lon Chanay Jr., Loulau
AJbrttton.
• (S&gt; LAT1 IB ORBAT

-------------- 1:30
(IfS T ) Kirk Oouglao. Robart

M^RCwlUfVvi

• m MOW HA Might At Tha
Oparr* (tfSS) Mara SrMhara, AAan

2.-00

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6:66

32PATHMKM0W6
7.-00
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tha various Mura appkcatkxu of
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f f le « M r m o

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■ (9) HOURS CALLS
7.-06
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7:30
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brothar. (R)
© • M*A*I*H Hawkaya and
BJ. March for a cura to WlnchM
tar's snoring, and Col. Potter looks
' to a Ik" *
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• (10) ONIAT PSRPONMANCSS
"Waonar'a Ring: Ootterdsmmerung. Act 1". Hagan, aon of the
r^Dtmog. ptou otegmeo •oeein m
order to
regain the ring.

9:30
© • O N I DAY AT A T M I

3:36
(THU)

A visit to Sandy Duncan’s Naw
York homo.
© ■ TO TA O D O U O H
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1:10

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7:38

6.-00

on Oary

Buaay-s naw movie.
■ C M NMW NMHTWAT0H

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• M OW “For Haavan’s
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32 M OW "Sitting Pratty" (1*49)
Clifton Wabb. Robari Young.

9 *0

• © NBC M W I OVSRfSOHT

4.-00
■ © M CM W 60V M M Q M T

4:10
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“Tha Beechcombar” (ISM) Chartoa Laughton,

4:16

32 M OW "wad Racara" (II
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6:36

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7.-00

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7 *6

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Cronklta comparaa tha tachnotogL
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Qaorga OrwNI In hto ctasNc work

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(D O KAPTY DAYS Mahon Is
deeo&lt;v mrmrvmi
affected bv
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31 (98) M O W
“It Startad In
Naptoa" (IB M ) Sophia Loran. Clark
Oabto. An Amartcan lawyer gats
romantically Involved with an Italian
woman whan ha trtoa to taka hto
naohsw back to America.
• (HR NOVA 'Th a Road To Hr &gt;“ Tha Ufa and tlmm of Honry
motor oars for tha
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7*6

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tor«y by BuBng a aartM of pranfca
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10:35
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11:00

© © 0 © B N «W S
(96) BCNNY HILL

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■ (10) TODAY IN THC LCOISLATURK

_

11:30
•
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11:35
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12:30
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6 *0

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Friday, June 3 ,1M3

I — Evening H erald, Sanford, F I.

S h o u ld S e x S y m b o ls G e t M a r r ie d ?
By Vernon Scott
U H Hollywood Reporter

H O L L Y W O O D (U P I) D ocs
marriage diminish the sexuality
quotient o f a m ovie glam our girl or
male hunk?
It's a rhetorical question, to be
sure, and probably o f ho great
sociological consequence. But the
answer does illum inate changes in
H ollywood lirstyles o ver the years.
In the very old days or the film
colony, during the teens and *20s
and even into the '30s, m any a
glam ou r girl lost her aura o f
virginal desirability when she took
a husband, losing in the process
her box •office allure as w ell as. one
supposes, her innocence.
Som e actors and actresses were
secretly married, afraid or losing
their follow ing am on g fans if the
news ever cam e out. Francis X.
Bushman was one such.
In m any cases, stars refused to
acknowledge their children, fearful
that parenthood would detract
from their standing as sex sym ­
bols.
T o d a y . In a s o c ie ty w h ic h
Hollywood helped liberate. It ap­
pears the marital status o f sex
symbols, male or female, matters
not a w hit to those given to
m ooning over screen idols.
A v a ila b ility , th en , o f a sex
sym bol is not a serious consld*

eratlon to the smitten fan to begin
with. People probably arc more
com fortab le w ith their dream s
than reality when II com es to sex
symbols.
Perhaps because m ovie gods and
goddesses are so rem ote from the
reality o f most people's lives their
marital status Is immaterial and
inconsequential.
Certainly, m atrim ony has not
cooled m ale ardor for Bo Derek.
Nor has Raquel W elch suffered the
disaffection o f the m ultitudes since
taking a husband.
Men. In would seem, lose none of
their Illusions, nor fantasies, sim ­
ply because a dream girl takes a
mate. It Is natural to assume that
marriage is not what the average
m ale has in m ind when he looks at
a sex sym bol anyhow.

was put squarely to Barbara Car­
rera, the exotic Nicaraguan beauty
who was married a few weeks ago
to Nicholas Navroleon. scion o f a
Greek shipping family.
Barbara, who recently co-starred
In " N e v e r S oy N e ve r A g a in ,"
which restores Scan Connery to
the role o f Jam es Bond, is a
legilm ate sex goddess.
Before turning to acting, the
dark-haired, dark-eyed Miss Car­
rera w as a top m odel w h ose
sen suality brought her to the
attention o f Hollywood producers.
T h ey gilded the Illy by casting her
in sexy, glam orous roles.
Last year Barbara appeared In a
P la y b o y p h o to g ra p h ic la y o u t,
som ething o f a confirm ation rite o f
passage In to the pan th eon o f
authentic sex symbols.

N e ith e r are w o m en all that
discrim inating when it com es to
m ooning o ver m ale dreamboats.

O bserved objectively, Barbara
clearly does not appear to be any
less beautiful, sensuous or desira­
ble since her April marriage. She
does, in fact, look m ore radiant
than ever.

T om Selleck. W arren Beatty.
Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds
are. it's true, single, unattached
and high on the list o f feminine
fantasies.

She is. naturally, le u available
and. at least for the nonce, disin­
Qut also rated as heartthrobs terested in flirtations and other
am ong the fem ale population are ploys m ore com m onplace in single
such battle-scarred married veter­ wom en than In newlyweds.
ans as Paul N ew m a n .' Robert
"W e don't errate our ow n im ­
Rcdford and Sylvester Stallone.
ages anyw ay. T h e public does and
T h e highly subjective question usually It sticks, no matter If you
o f marriage and sex symbolism are married or sin g le."

June 8 am
_

W EDNESDAY

QNMI

10:36

g o g u id e
South Sem inole Optimist Club Open G o lf Classic.
June 4. Casselberry G olf Club. 301 S. Lake Triplet
Drive (o ff 17-92), Casselberry; 8 a.m. shotgun start.
Proceeds for youth projects.
50's Sock Hop Dance. 8:30 p.m.. Saturday. June
4. Jewish Com m unity Center, 851 N. Maitland Ave..
Maltlqnd. Sponsored by Jewish Com m unity Center
o f Central Florida Young Jew ish Singles. Open to
singles 18-30.
Second Annual Cruise for the Critters to benefit
Humane Society o f Sem inole County. Sunday. June
19. Registration for motorcyclists. 9 a.m., W oolco
Shopping Center. Lee Road. Orlando. Destination.
Lake Monroe Inn. Sanford. Sponsored b y OrlandoKissim m ee Retreads.
Concert presented by Upward Bound o f Rollins
C ollege featuring Jacqueline Jones. Carlos Roberts.
T o n y Thom as and Y von n e Harris. 3:30 and 8 p.m.
on Sunday. June 12.
Call 648-2242 for ticket
Information.

Heston Has It Backwards
— The Scotdid a
FUag
.. _______
------- s's kUt Heston, a Beat.
was Honorary High CUsf at a
dinner honoring the Gloeflddich games. He posed for pho­
tos wearing a haadwovon
tartan. The only hug-up was
"Moses" had it on backwards
The spokesman for New
York's fit Andres Society said:
"It's so embarrassing that I
had the picture crapped Just
above his waist."
ti*

TH U R SD AY

&lt;d

8

(D MOW "Hying Tigers" (1049)
John Wayne, Paul Katy. An Ameri­
can Mar with a bad performance
record trice to redeem bimcclf with
one Snal heroic act.

ISIS
6:30

9:00

) ® nbcnew s
lOcasNew s
j Q ABC NEWS □
)&lt;10)OCEANUS^

O

) (t) ONE DAY A T A TIME

7.-00

e ® ue orncTOA
® 0 P.M. MAOAZMS A mother
again*! drunk driving; a small pri­
vate cottage that took soma radical
•lap* to avoid imminent bankrupt-

JQ JOKER'S WILD
) (96) THE JVFERBONI
I (10) MACHCIL / LCHRCA
O H S) HOUSC CALLS

_

a (10) TODAY M the

6&amp;6

6.-00
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aA ®tookEMTXRTAMMCNT
TONIGHT
at what "Dobia amts" star
Dwayne Hickman Is doing now.
(ft) Q TIC TAG OOUQH

® TH* PACTS OP U P f The
girt* encounter problem* when they
try to pet dates lor the Sadie Hawkin* Day dance. (R) q
3’ O
NBA B A S K E TB A LL
"Championship Game'' Lot Ange­
ls* Laker* at Philedeiphia 7Seri (it
n e e e iiir y )

CD O TALES O f T H t GOLD MON­
KEY Jake and Corky aro Incar­
cerated In a French prison whan
they try to help a deeper*!* lather
smuggle his dying son from the
island penal colony. (R)
ffi (10) T H i QfLHJM COMCCRT8
The Loe Angeles Philharmonic and
guest soloist Murray Psrahia. under
the director of Maestro Carlo Marta
Qlullnl, performs Beethoven's
"Plano Concerto No. 3" and Paul
"Concert
Music
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9
MARY HARTMAN. MARY
HARTMAN

a
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6.-00
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(ID (96) SOAP

6:06
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6:30

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12:00
CD O HOGAN'S H C R O a
3 D (96) RHOOA
am HARRYO

12J5
32) M O W
"Against AN Flags"
(1962) Errol Flynn. Maureen
O'Hara.

12:30

q GD LATB NtGHT WITH OAVK)
L I H ERMAN Quests: set therapist
Or. Ruth Westheimer. Rick
(R)
,
(| ) a HART TO HART (R)

0 Q C ------------

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1:00

CD a M O W "Waal Side Story"
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WBO

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1:30

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1:40

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BEHAVIOR
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0:35

32) FATHER KNOWS BCST
7 J0

q 9 ) U E DETECTOR
(4) O F.M. MAGAZINE A visit with
bast seeing detective novel writer
Mickey 8pWanr, a 4-yaar-oid gen-

CD O JOKER'S WILD

If f ig a v
q (t) HOUSE CALLS

CD (9) NEWS

32) NEWS
_

(ID (96) BENNY HIU
a (W) TODAY M THE LEOtSLATURK
SATURDAY NKtHT

a (6)

11:30

6:30

q
®
TONIGHT Host; Johnny
Carson. Quests: Richard Pryor,
actress ANy Sheedy ("WarQames")
® Q HOGANS HEROES
(7) O ABC NEWS MOHTUNC
(U) (96) SOAP

THE NEW OOO OOUFLE
FeSt informs Oscar that his former
wife Is coming to visit. (R)rn

P (10) UNOER SAN. Rob6a Doyle
focuses on tha theory, practice,
care and handHng of spinnakers as
ha taka* two students out In a large

11:36

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CD

MARY HARTMAN, MART

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Steal Crawford, OSvar Read.

10:36

12:30

A visit wUh Kentucky's first lady,
- " i George Brown.
ITtO TACD O UBH
’

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A look si

ID (96) IL O V I LUCY

Jan Barry and Dean Torrance,
become singing sensations during
the 1990s and 1990*.
q (10) SNEAK F R C W W t Noel
Gebtsr and Jeffrey Lyons host an
informative look at what's new at
tha movie*.
O H S ) M O W ' Tha Deadliest Sea­
son" (1077) Michael Moriariy, Kevin
Conway. A professional hockey
player'* aggressive drive for suc­
cess ends In tragedy.

O B f — lACIUM8

i R A y a y

a®BMIBRTi

a m te M

10-JO

BEHAVIOR

Carson. Quests. Joan River*, Joe
Oaragma.

$ s

q (to) W A T MANWAY JOURNeve opt
--------------- 'THE
WORLD

ID (36) M O W
"Oaadman'a
Curve" (1178) Richard Hatch. I

11:30

9:30

to hie

6.-00

a O) SATURDAY MOHT
(2) TOM QHT Host:

S K

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S t o A l a u t a r k A u i *•*------ --- xrm
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ID (SS) BENNY H U

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WITCH The
Tucker* tear that they Haoad the
i man in )aS ae the reeuN of a

June 9

11.-00

■ 9KSOM M I

havescMdi
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