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                    <text>Evenlna Herald—(USPR 4$i-?*0)—Price ?0 Cents

76th Year, No. 53—Thursday, October 20, 1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

Victim's Candid Camera Captures Burglars In Act
By Charles Cobb
Herald 8iaff Writer
If you break Into somebody's
house and steal their video cam­
era, be sure the camera didn't
record the whole show. And If It
did. then It would be wise to
destroy the camera's tape.
That's one moral that could be
drawn from an unusual burglary
that occurred In the Casselberry
area Tuesday night, according to
the Seminole County sheriffs de­
partment. Another might be not to

'follow It up with running a stop
sign.
In any case, two youths were
arrested after they allegedly broke
Into a residence and stole a video
camera that recorded the burglary.
Deputy sheriffs found the video
camera and Its tape, which clearly
shows the youths plundering the
r e s id e n c e , In th e y o u t h 's
a u t o m o b ile , s a id s h e r i f f 's
spokesman John Spolskl.
The Incident occurred after the

residence of Robert Prickett. 31, of
3530 Munsey Place In the Howell
Cove area, had been burglarized
once and a second burglary at­
tempt had been made.
A fte r the second attem p t.
Prickett set up a video camera to
record through his bedroom
window.
Prickett returned home Tuesday
evening and found his home had
been burglarized again and several
lte m ^ v c^ ^ n ls sla j{ln clu d ln g ^ h ^

video camera and tape, valued at
$1,200.
Prickett notified deputies who
had the area under surveillance
due to a recent rash of burglaries
there. Spolskl said.
At about 10 p.m. Tuesday,
sheriffs Investigator Debra Duguld
noticed the car with the two
youths In It driving through the
E a stb ro ok s u b d iv is io n near
Casselberry.
Duguld had noticed the youths
In the area before and was suspl-

clous of their activities. Spolskl
said. She followed the youth's car
In her patrol car and when the
they failed to stop at a stop sign.
Duguld pulled their car over.
Spolskl said.
Duguld found the stolen video
camera and tape In the trunk of
the their car. Spolskl said.
"T h e tape clearly
youths looking the
before they broke In
them going through

shows the
home over
and shows
drawers In-

side the house. Both are clearly
Identifiable on »he tape." he said.
The two youths were arrested
and charged with burglary and
grand theft. John Stephen Davis.
18. of 2060 Dyane Lane. Maitland,
was rcleasd from the Seminole
County JalU after paying $5,000
bond. His partner. 15. of the
H o w e ll C ove area near
Casselberry, was being held at the
county's Juvenile detention facili­

ty-

O rd in a n c e
B efuddies
County Staff
When Seminole County's road
assessment Improvement ordinance
was amended earlier this year the
goal was to make It simpler for
residents living on dirt roads to get
their streets paved.
But the program has been con­
fusing to county stafT and commis­
sioners who arc trying to administer
the program. And a Tuesday work
session, designed to clear up some
of the confusion, may have had the
reverse effect.
The ordinance allows residents of
unpaved streets to petition county
commissioners to establish a special
taxing district for themselves to pay
for paving of their street. The
ordinance specifies that two-thirds
of the property owner* and the
owners o f two-thirds of the property
both must agree to the special
t a x in g d i s t r i c t b e fo r e It Is
established.
The Idea Is to pave dirt roads
which arc expensive for the county
to maintain. The county has 134
miles of dirt roads, according to
county figures.
But with three petitions already
before commissioners and another
15 or so In the works. It has became
apparent that not everyone Is In­
terpreting the ordinance the same
way.
Commissioner Sandra Glenn’s
administrative aide. Rita Curtis,
said In a petition for paving of
Canada Avenue near Altamonte
Springs, she gave Joint owners of
property "o n e vote apiece but
husbands and wives got only one
vote between them."
Commissioner Bill Klrchhoff. who
had two road projects from his

district approved several years ago.
said "each property onwer gets one
vote, regardless o f how many
parcels he owns."
KlrchhofT added that Joint owners
of property should have only one
vote between them. If Joint owners
aren't unanimously for the project,
their vote is no.
Commissioner Robert G. "Bud"
Feather said under his Interpreta­
tion of the ordinance "each bulldable lot should get one vote."
Commissioner Robert Sturm said
each piece of property regaraless of
Its size should have one vote.
And C o m m is s io n e r Barbara
Christensen disagreed with the
two-thirds majority rule. "M y way Is
more feasible. Fifty percent plus one
of the property owners Is a majori­
ty."
Deputy County Attorney Bob
McMillan Is attempting to Iron out
the differences. He said any or all of
the methods could be used.
McMillan said the ordinance calls
for two separate votes. The first vote
requiring approval of 66% percent
of the property owners, makes sure
the residents really want their road
paved. The second vote, requiring
approval from owners of 86% per­
cent o f the property, protects
o w n e rs w ith la r g e h o ld in g s .
McMillan said.
**
He said county staff will have to
spend more time researching the
alternatives and then come up with
a proposed policy for counting the
votes.
In the meantime, commissioners
have suspended action on road
assessment petitions. Petitions al­
ready submitted will be delayed
while county workeis study the
ordinance.

Judge To Address Sanford Group
Federal Judge Alccc Hastings of
the U.S. District Court In South
Florida will be keynote speaker at a
m e e t in g of the S e m in o le
N eigh b orh ood U nited Council
1SNUCJ at 7:20 p.m.. Friday, at St.
Paul Baptist Church. 813 Pine Ave..
Sanford.
The subject of Judge Hastings
speech will be "Politics 1984."

A native of Altamonte Springs.
Hastings was recently cleared of
bribery and conspiracy charges In a
federal couit and Is now the subject
of an Investigation by colleagues on
Use bench.
SNUC’s plans are to foster politi­
cal Involvement In the 1984 elec*»on
year by members of the black target
communities countywldc.

O ff The
B ent T ra c k

A bent track and teetering freight cars shov/ the results of a train derailm ent
on tracks crossing State Route 46 west of Sanford at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Seaboard Systems R ailroad o fficia ls are working to determ ine what caused
these 10 fla tca rs of a Tampa-to-Sanford freight train to run off the track as
they were being pulled at a speed of five m iles per hour. John Spolskl, of the
Seminole County Sh eriff's Departm ent said tra ffic was blocked on the road
until about 2:15 p.m. R ailroad crews are expected to have the 10 cars, which
were ca rry in g b u c k tra ile rs, back on the tra ck by late this afternoon.

Real Estate Commission

Pulls Salesman's License
The Florida Real Estate Commission Tuesday suspened the license of a Casselberry real estatr salesman
who was charged with fraud In a complaint filed by the
Department of Professional Regulation (DPR).
The commission, which met In Orlando, also Imposed
a fine of S I.000 on Vincent Tomaslno. whose addrrss Is
listed as Post Office Box 1307.
The DPR had charged Tomaslno and two Orlando real
estate brokers with fraud, misrepresentation, false
promises, dishonest dealing and breach of trust.
The charges stem from the alleged actions of the three
men when they were selling time shares In con­
dominiums In 1981.
The DPR charges that Tomaslno received a $1,000
deposit from a couple as a down payment on u time
share and that the money was never passed on to the
owner of the condominium or returned to the couple.
The DPR also charged that Tomaslno received
deposits totaling $800 from a second couple and
forwarded $400 of the sum to the owner of the
eondlmlnium but refused to forward the remainder of
the money or to return It to the couple.
According to the DPR. Tomaslno and Krishnalall D.
Pcrsuad were employed as real estate salesmen by Ray
T. Kline In 1981. The uddress of both Kline and Pcrsuad
Is listed as 27 W. Columbia St.. Orlando.
In Mnrrh 1981 Tomaslno and Pcrsuad formed a
corporation known as Intcrcom im -ital Marketing
Services. Inc. (IMS) and KHnc agreed to act as broker for
the company.
IMS agreed to market In the Orlando nrrn time shares
in condominiums near Scbrlng, Fla., that are owned by

Highlands County Title and Guaranty Land Co.
Later a Michigan couple, John D. and Helen G.
Browning, sent Tomaslno a $1,000 down payment on
time shares In two of the condlntlnlums and Tomaslno
deposited the money In an Orlando bank In the account
of IMS. the DPR said.
Later Tomaslno and Pcrsuad refused to deliver the
$1,000 deposit to Highlands County Title and Guaranty
Co. or to return the money to the Brownings, the DPR
said.
Another couple. Richard and Bonita Drapcau. also
sent Tomaslno deposits totaling $800 as a down
payment on a lime share eondlmlnium, The DPR said.
Tomaslno forwarded $400 of the money to Highlands
County Title and Guaranty Land Co., but did not
forward the remaining $400 and refused to return the
moneh to the Drapeaus. the DPR said.
The DPR charges that Kline failed to supervise and
control the acts of his employees. Tomaslno and
Pcrsuad.
In addition to the penalities the Real Estate Com­
mission Imposed on Tomaslno. a hearing officer of the
Florida Division of Administrative Hearings recom­
mended that Kline's broker's license be suspended for
two years and that he be fined 81.000. The officer
recommended that Persuad's broker's license be
suspended for two years and he be fined $500.
However, at Its meeting Tuesday, the commlssloln
said that If Kline and Pcrsuad would reimburse the
Brownings and the Drapcuas the $1,400 owed lo them
and pay for their court costs and attorney’s fees these
penalties would be cut In half.
—Charles Cobb

If you're planning lo remove trees
from property In Seminole County
take note.
Seminole County commissioners
have made arbor ordinance vio­
lations a top priority for their Land
Management Inspectors. Inspectors
will drop everything else when
complaints about arbor ordinance
violations are called In.
In Seminole County trees three or
more Inches In dlumeter cannot be
removed without a permit.
The new complaint procedure
was developed by Seminole County
Public Services and Development
Director John Percy and comes on
the heels of charges last week by a
Winter Springs area woman that
Inspectors took four days to respond
to a complaint. Susan Lawyer, a
resident of Nature’s Way. a dirt road
a block from the; Intersection of
Tuskawllla Road and State Road
419. complained to county commis­
sioners last week that land man­
agement officials failed to respond
to her complaints about a 3.4-acre
lot being cleared of trees until the
work was almost finished.
" I t 's rid ic u lo u s ." said Mrs.
Lawyer.
Land Management Manager Herb
Hardin told commissioners the de­
lay resulted from a misunderstandm g h y In sp ectors. lU r d ln e v e n tu a lly

went to the site himself to post a
slop work order.
"When a complaint comes In
someone should drop what they're
doing and go out there to the site,"
said Commissioner Bill Klrchhoff.
The new procedure calls for In­
spectors to do Just that. Under the
procedure.when a complaint Is
mnde. Land Management officials
will check immediately to see If an
arbor permit has been Issued. If no
record of a permit Is found a site
Inspector will be Immediately dis­
patched to the complaint site. If the
site Inspector can't be reached
within 15 minutes, a zoning vio­
lation Inspector will be sent.
If neither arc available a building
Inspector will be sent to the site.
Inspectors will be on call In the
evenings and on weekends to re­
spond to calls received after hours
and will remain on duty until calls
made laic In the day have been
answered.
Under the new policy. Inspectors
will obtain the name of the con­
tractor Involved and license num­
bers of vehicles Involved, notify the
contractor and property owner that
work must stop Immediately and
post a stop work order on the site. If
no one Is at the scene a stop work
order will be placed and the In­
spector will contact the property
owner as soon as possible.

Golden Age Games
Flame Lighters Chosen; Festivities Planned
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer

H*r«W PMt# Sr

________

Fast Action
Promised To
Save Trees

Road Paving Taxes

By Micheal Beha
Herald Staff Writer

•!

C*mlWrf»

Gene Keltr.er, center, a m em ber of the U.S. O lym p ic Com m ittee, explains
operation of the O lym p ic model stop watch, obtained for tim in g events In
Gulden Age Gam es, to Sanford K lw anians V ic Arnett, left, and J im G rant,
who w ill be o fficiatin g at the track and field com petition. The watch can tim e
four athletes at once.

Tennis player and coach Emma Spencer. 76. of
Sanford, and former baseball player Bernard David
"Buddy" Lake. 70. of Lake Mary, have also been
selected to light the Olymplc-stylc ffaine at the opening
ceremonies of the 9th annual Golden Age Games to be
held Nov. 7-12 In Sanford. They will both be Inducted
Into the Seminole County Sports Hall of Fame on Nov.
11.
The Games ceremonies will begin at 9 a.m. In the
patio of the Sanford City Hall following the parade up
Park Avenue to city hall.
This year's Games will be dedicated lo the memory of
the 'ate Buster Crabbc, Olympic Gold Medalist In
swimming and slur of many film*, who Is a former
honorary chairman of the Golden Age Games.
This year's honorary chairman. John Brcnden Kelly,
Jr., former member of the U.S. Sculling Team, will be
grand marahul of the parade. Kelly. 56. of Philadelphia.
Is vice president of the U.S. Olympic Committee and is
on the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee
executive committee and board of directors. Kelly Is the
brother of the late Princess Grace of Monaco. His father.
John Sr., was an Olympic gold-medallst In rowing.
Jack Horner, president o f the Greater Sanford
Chamber o f Commerce, which co- sponsors the Golden
Age Games, said he hopes to have several well-known
Olympic Gold Medal winners on hand for the opening.

They will be In the area to attend an Olympic Weekend
at Walt Disney World to raise funds for America's
Olympic athletes Nov. 4. 5 and 6 at both the Magic
Kingdom and EPCOT Center.
Entries are needed from organizations and Individuals
for the Informal parade and entry forms for the parade or
other events arc available at the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce office at First Street and Sanford
Avenue.
This years Games arc again sponsored by Post.
McDonald's restaurants will supply helium (filed
balloons emblazoned wtlh the Golden Age Games logo
to be released at the ceremonies. They will also sponsor
the appearance of Miss Florida. The restaurant piaus to
give out buttons to participants good for a complimenta­
ry cup of coffee, and will provide orange bowls with
orange drink and cups for use at the Games.
Debbie Hanna. McDonald's spokesperson and Sanford
McDonald's Restaurant Manager Cheryl Defllllpo. were
at the Golden Age Gumes Excecutive Committee
meeting Wednesday to announce plans, which also
Include printing of tray liners with a map of all locations
for Go'den Age Games events to be used In the
restaurant beginning the week before the Games.
Virginia Longwell. secretary of the Gaines, has already
received 1.007 entries from senior citizens 55 and over
from all over the country and she said more arc coming
In everyday. Golf, bowling, and bridge continue lo lead

See GAMES, page 2A

-M icheal Beha

TO D A Y
And The Bands
Played On...
T h e B th a n n u a l
Seminole County High
School Band Festival,
featuring the music and
precision murchlng of
seven area high school
bands, Is set this year
for Oct. 29 at the Lake
Brantley High School
stad iu m . D e ta ils In
Friday’s Leisure
magatlne.
Action Reports........
Around The Clock... ... 4A
Bridge.................. ... 2B
Calendar................ ...8 A
Classifieds............
Comics.................. ... 2B
Crossword................. 2B
Dear Abby............. ....IB
Deaths.................. ... 3A
Dr. Lamb........... . ....2B
Editorial............... ... 4A
Horoscope.............. ... 2B
People................... ....10
Sports................... ..5-7A
Television..............
Weather................ ....2A

�1A—Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Thursday, Pel 30, m 3

NATION
IN BRIEF
Botulism Cause
Still A Mystery
PEORIA. III. (UPI) - Health officials say they
may never determine which food served at a
local restaurant last weekend caused the
nation's largest outbreak of botulism In recent
yean*.
Robert Spenglcr. a Centers for Disease Control
officer based In Springfield. III., said In*
vestlgators never determine the cause o f the
outbreak In about 10 percent of all botulism
cases. He said that might happen In the Peoria
outbreak.
More than two dozen people were admitted to
area hospitals with cases of suspected or
confirmed botulism.

‘Centerfold1Manager Quits
SPRINGFIELD. Ohio (UPI) - City manager
Tom Bay. who suspended a policewoman for
posing nude for Playboy magazine, says re­
signing was the honorable thing to do after he
was questioned by police for soliciting a
prnatltuie.

Drug Meeting Tonight
At Lyman High School
An organizational meeting for people Interested In
participating In town meetings to be held in conjunction
with the airing of a two-part telcvlson special on drug
abuse will be held at 7:30 tonight at Lyman High
School.
Seminole. Lake Mary. Lake Brantley. Lake Howell and
Lyman high schools, along with Winter Springs
Elementary School, will host town meetings Nov. 2 and
Nov. 9 to view the public television documentary fhc

Chemical People.
Following the showings, panel discussions and
questlon-and-answer sessions will be held with doctors,
legislators, school administrators, teachers, parents and
other Interested citizens, according to Karen Coleman,
public Information officer for the Seminole County
School District.
The first program will deal with the drug problem In
American culture. The second will address ways to deal
with drug abuse.

Reluctant Reagan
To Sign King Bill

Eco n o m y
GNP Up; Recovery Still Strong
WASHINGTON IUPI) - The U.S.
gross national product grew at a
hrallhy 7.9 percent annual rate in
the third quarter after adjustment
for Inflation, the Commerce De­
partment said today.
The strength of the broudest
economic Indicator, measuring the
n ation 's output o f goods and
services, showed the recovery was
d u rable enough to w ithstand
mounting trade deficits and the
problems of a long, hot summer. ■
The latest gains are on top o f the
second quarter's strong 9.7 percent
growth, when final sales were
stronger but Inventory rebuilding
had not yet gotten under way.
I n f l a t i o n t h r o u g h o u t the
economy, as measured in the GNP
report, stayed about the same. The
government’s "implicit price de­
flator" was 3.4 percent In the third
quarter compared to 3.3 percent In
the second.
The third quarter's rate of growth
was even better than the 7 percent
tentatively projected by government
economists in September on the

basis of only one month's data.
Economists generally consider a
sustained 4 percent growth rate the
"break even” point where the un­
employment rate starts getting
better.
In 1983 dollars not adjusted for
Inflation, the department's Bureau
o f Economic Analysis said the
July-September economy generated
goods nnd services at an annual rate
of *3.363 trillion.
When 1982 ended. Its GNP was
worth $3,073 trillion.
In 1972 dollars, the GNP was
worth $1,554 trillion at an annual
rate, the department said.
The main pillar of the recovery,
consumer enthusiasm, drove retail
sales up 5.1 percent, in the third
quarter, compared to 6.8 percent In
the second quarter.
The slightly weaker sales were
helped by a *10.2 billion contribu­
tion from Inventory Investment In
the third quarter, about the same as
In the second quarter.
But the Inventory’ figures showed
a seasonal change of their own.

switching from a a second quarter
in which liquidation of inventory
grew less serious to a third quarter
In which the liquidation came to a
halt and accumulation began.
Businesses that were cutting
stocks severely through the re­
cession and Into the second quarter
finally began to add to their slocks
Instead, a m ajor bench mark
economists look for by which to set
the beginning of long term econom­
ic expansion.
It mnkes no difference for the
GNP s bottom line whether goods
produced were put on the shelf or In
the warehouse or taken home by
consumers.
Among the Important categories
of third quarter final sales only
exports declined, the department
said, but only by about hnlf as much
as occurred In the second quarter.
Another measure of prices In the
report, dubbed the "GNP fixedweighted price Index" Increased 4.1
percent In the third quarter com­
pared with a 4.3 percent rate in the
second quarter.

W ASH ING TO N (U P I) - President Reagnp
expressed doubts about honoring civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr. with a national holiday
overwhelmingly approved by Congress, but said he
will ultra MInto law anyway.
Reagan declined Wednesday lo reject the charges
of conservatives like Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.. who
said secret FBI records prove the slain black leader
was a tool of the communists. Helms contended
during two days of bitter debate that King, winner of
the 1963 Nobel Peace prize, did not deserve to be
commemorated until the details of his past were
divulged publicly.
The Senate rejected that argument and all of
Helms' other attempts to scuttle the bill, voting
78-22 for passage. Eighteen Republicans and four
Democrats voted against the new holiday, which
would come on the third Monday In January
the
month King was bom — beginning In 1986. All nf
Florida's representatives voted for the holiday.
King's wife. Coretta Scott King, watched the vote
with her family from a seat In the Senate gallery
together with black singer Stevie Wonder and
NAACP Executive Director Benjamin Hooks. She
called It, a "great day for America."
A Baptist minister. King came out ol the Deep
South to galvanize the nation with his compelling
voice and non-violent assault on segregation. He
began his public battle against racism In the
mid-1950s, leading boycotts and marches. In the
spring of 1968. nt age 39. he was killed by a sniper.

New Housing Units On Zoning Board's Agenda
Piar.s for construction of 261 new
housing units will be considered by the
Sanford Planning and Zoning Com­
mission at Its 7 p.m. meeting today.
The meeting will be held In the city
commission room at city hall. 300 N.
Park Ave.
The matters concerning the new
housing units IncluJe.• A preliminary and final plat o f the
Arbors and Hidden Lake located at
Hidden Lake Drive and Pine Winds
Drive. A site plan for the condominium
project was approved by the board on

Aug. 4. The development Is to have 61
condominium units.
• A preliminary plat of Hidden Lakes.
Phase ill. Unit IV located at Lake Ada
Circle. Thl3 development ts to have 52
one and two-story units.
• And a preliminary and final plat of
Kaywood Estates at State Road 46A and
Oregon Avenue. Some 128 single family
homes are to be built here.
At the same meeting, the commission
will consider site plans for the con­
version of two homes Into apartments.
Charles Cameron Is asking for approv­

al to convert a single family home Into a
three apartment units at 408 Palmetto
Avenue and to convert a two-family
home Into a four unit apartment building
at 404 Palmetto Ave.
Some weeks ago he received approval
to convert the 408 Palmetto Ave. site
into a two-family dwelling.
The Sanford City Commission Is slated
to adopt an ordinance rezoning the area
from 4th to 13lh streets between Laurel
and Palmetto Into a single family home
district at Its Monday night meeting.
While conversion of single family

homes Into two family units will be
permitted as a special exception after the
rezonlng. conversion Into more than two
units will not be permitted after that
date. Cameron's requested conversions
will apparently be the final ones after the
rezonlng receives final approval.
In a related matter concerning the
same area, a public hearing will be held
to rezone 905 Laurel Avenue from
multi-family district to general commer­
cial. The site has been a funeral home for
many years.

Oviedo Pedestrian Hit By Car; No Charges Filed
told deputies the thefts occurred between Wednesday
A 25-ycar-old Oviedo area man was In stable condition
and 9:30 a.m. Sunday.
today after being struck by a car as he was attempting to
There was no sign of forced entry.
walk across State Road 426 at Chapman Road about
The Smith and Wesson revolver was valued at $250,
three miles south of Oviedo early today.
George Jakubcln. of Rt. 3. Rcdbug Road, suffered head
★ Fires
the gown at $40. the two watches at a total of $210.
Injuries and possible Internal Injuries In the accident,
There was no estimate of the value of the two gold
•k Courts
chains, one of which contained a diamond.
according to a spokesman at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Jakubcln Is listed In stable condition at the
WINDOWS 8MASHED
★ Police
hospital today.
Someone broke out all the windows in a grey
Jakubcln was hit about 1:40 a.m. when he stepped
Chevrolet tmek that was parked at a construction she
Into the path o f a 1980 Mazda driven by Penelope
An attendant ai the Thornton gas station on U.S. on Saba) Palm Drive in Longwood between 5 p.m.
Munsey. 34. of Oviedo, according to the Florida Highway
Highway
17-92 said a red 1975 Ford van and a red 1978 Friday and 6:30 a.m. Saturday.
Patrol.
A brick was hurled through thn,wlnd»hl&lt;ld. both side
Dodge
car
pulled Into the station dt'9:45 p.m. Friday.
No charges have been tiled in the accident.' the F11P
windows and the rear window. Robert Forth. 30, who
The
driver
of
the
van
put
$13.50
worth
of
regular
gas
said. An investigation is eonglnulng.
In the van's lank and the driver of Ihc Dodge put $12 lives at the Cavalier Motel In Sanford, Is the owner of the
MOLESTING SUSPECT RELEASED
worth of unleaded gas In his car. Then both drove off truck.
t A 23-year-old Sanford man. charged wlih 16 counts northbound without paying for the gas.
DISORUNTLED CUSTOMER
'each of sexual battery and committing lewd and
An apparently dissatisfied customer at a Kentucky
lascivious act on a child, has been released on $2,500
GOWN. GUN STOLEN
Fried Chicken restaurant In Altamome Springs poured a
bond.
Someone stole a black lace night gown, a revolver, two cup of soft drink Into the cash register at 4 p.m. Sunday.
Sanford police said Robert Jack Harley. 305 W. First watches and two gold chains from a south Seminole
A clerk at the restaurant on State Road 436 said the
St., ts accused of Incidents involving four Juvenile boys County woman's home.
man appeared to be drunk and Impatient with the
during the last year.
Ida C. Isacco. 44. of 1029 I’rincess Gate near Maitland. service.
He was arrested Monday and placed in the Seminole
County Jail with no bond. The following day, Jrmlnolc
County Judge Harold Johnson set Harley's bond at
$2,500. Harley paid the bond and was released from Jail
at 2:30 p.m.
" I looked at it from the stand point of a bond that
would assure his appearance In court." Johnson said.
"That's what bonds are for."

Action Reports

W EATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Up to 8 Inches of rain created
by Hurricane Tlco swamped the southern Plains,
causing gasoline to spill across an Oklahoma town,
forcing patients from a Texas nursing home, crumbling
bridges and closing roads. At least three people died In
n U n t r i M t n d »ru lU r k r c l d c n U In O k la h o m a - F la s h flo o d

warnings or watches stretched today from southeast
New Mexico across west and cen'ral Texas Into
Oklahoma and southwest Missouri. Line after line of
thunderstorms drawing moisture from Hurricane Tlco
on Mexico's west coast roared across the southern
plains, dumping up to 8 Inches of rain on Texas and at
least 5 on Oklahoma. Oklahoma rains floated two newly
Installed gasoline storage tanks out o f the ground In the
Oklahoma City suburb o f Moore Wednesday night,
spilling gasoline.

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.)r temperature: 74:
overnight low.- 71: Wednesday's high: 86: barometric
pressure: 30.05: relative humidity: 90 percent: winds:
northeast at 7 mph: rain: trace: sunrise: 7:29 a.m.,
sunset 6:51 p.m.
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytons Beach: highs, 8:25 a.m..
8:45 p.m.: lows. 1:52 a.m., 2:17 p.m.; Port Canaveral:
highs: 8:17 a.m., 8:37 p.m.; lows. 1:43 a.m.. 2:08 p.m.;
Bayport: highs. 1:34 a.m.. 2:16 p.m.: lows. 8:09 a.m..
8:17 p.m.

DOUBLETHEFTS
Two motorists drove their vehicles Into a Fern Park
gas station, put gas In their tanks and drove off without
paying.

ock

AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with highs in
the mid to upper 80s. Northeast wind 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight mostly fair with lows In the low 70s. Light
northeast wind. Friday partly cloudy. Highs mid to
upper 80s.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Continued from page 1A
out 50 miles — Small craft should exercise caution north
part. Wind northeast 15 to occasionally 20 knots north In popularity and are filling up fast. There have been
part and 10 to 15 knots south today becoming 10 to 15 250 entries In golf and the first day of the two day
knots over the area tonight but then Increasing to 15 to tournament has already'been filled.
Local participants arc advised to get in their ehtries as
20 knots over northern waters again Friday. Seas 4 to 5
feet but to 6 feet north part today. Seas 3 to 5 feet over soon as possible In order not to be disappointed.
This year’s participants will each receive a plastic
the area tonight. Cloudy with few showers.
name badge to wear with the Golden Age Games logo on
It and a Post Fun ’n Fitness GAG T-shirt. Post will be
serving a free breakfast al the rivie renter again this
year for participants.

. . . G a m

Hi*** quotollon* provided by
membert eI the Netlonel AuocieUon
0i Seturlhet Deeleri ere repre
lerlelive Inter Outer prbet et ot
epproelmetelr noon todoy Inter
Pooler merit It chenge throughout
the dor frlcet do not Include retell
msriupymeridown.
Atlantic Bank...
B*rn*tt Bank---FlagtMp Banka

Jf*»

...JJW » k

Florida Power

A 119*1

§hoppe

e s

Orange-Semlnole Cablevtsion will also donate gifts for
the entrants, possibly sweat bands for head and wrist.
The Central Florida Regional Hospital will sponsor the
........ ........Ml 40 U
trophies for the decathlon winners.
........ JIW 31va
In honor of the Golden Age Games, Sea World will
.............. av* 24
............4)14 4)n observe Sanford Week and provide $2 off admission
________ - » * 14 certificates for participants.

N O W
A groat placo to buy
tandwlchss, grocsrlet

l d»y. a * Mh from
7 0 m- “"ill &gt;p.m. and

t o d a i , le a . p le n lr r u p p ffe :
.
.
j i,

*’ p m " " ***k ,a ^*Vita t Motlortord

, b**V Cnd llq“0r

ll L

L

•L l k

O P E N
,

fhoorfully a«^n,d.

530 N . P o lm o tto A v e , A d ja c e n t To The H o lid a y Inn Sonford

lltUialJilliLt

Fla
Fraadom Savins*
MCA....... ....... .
Hugh** Supply---Marrlton’i ..... ..... ..... ..... 20U 20H
NCR Corp.......... ............1)4 124'*
____ 20 no Iradat
P M tw y ___

The Seminole County Library trill have paperback
books available at the Games to give the participants
Stotti * —....... ........ 11* UH something to read while relaxing between events and
Sun Bank*..... —_ ........... 24* 20k
Southaait Bank . .24U unchanged will distribute a special Golden Age Games bookmark.
Gene Kellner of the Central Florida Chapter of the
American Red Cross, a member o f the U.S. Olympic
Committee, has secured Olympic model electronic stop
watches that will time four athletes at once for use by
sponsors of various events In the Golden Age Games.
The Red Cross sponsors synchronized swimming,
Julio Molnor. Orong* City
swimming, diving, canoeing and sailing events in the
Phillip Cuorro. Sorrento
Golden Age Games.

HOSPITAL NOTES
a nil*I Florid* R*gtenol H*tptf*l
TW wUr
ADMISSIONS
Sonford:
Chor lotto E . Scuddor
JorrlL Tumor
Johnny Vlrovong
Berthe L Spor, OoBory
John E. Momri, Oollono
dornlct Minicti. Oollono
Robert H. y*ck*l. Dtllono
Joton C Foirlnhurg Orong* City

E iF n in f * l lc r n l d

DISCHARGES
Jo mo* A Hickion. Sonlord
Ruth Goldborg. Ckltono
Bornlco Mlnlth, Oollono
Andrew H. Totter, OoDono
Frances9 Cortotl, Conor*
Joton C. Folklnbwrg. Orong* City
Marla L. Wilton and toby girl,
Oollono

i u i m b i -m h

Thursday, October 20, 19M—Vol. 76. No 53
Published Ooily ond Sunday, t ic .p t Saturday by Th* Sonlsrd
Htrold, Inc , JM N Frtnch Ay*., Sonlsrd. FI*. 22271.
Second C lou P itto g t Paid *t Sonlsrd. Flood* 22)71
Mom* Dotlvory: Wttk 11.11, Month, M .iS) 4 Months, 224.64;
Y «* r. 24} 44. By Moll: Wook 21 11/ Month, 22.lt; 4 Monffu.
2)1.64; V**r. 217.44

Golden Age Games Chairman Jim Jemlgan an­
nounced that because the swimming pool at Sanford
Landings Is not deep enough, two of the Golden Age
aquatic events will be held at the Sanford Bath and
Tennis Club Instead. The diving and synchronized
swimming competition, which require greater depth,
moved, but the other swimming events and canoeing
will still be held at Sanford Landings Apartments. 1600
W. First St.
Sailing Is held at the Sanford Marina, next to the
Holiday Inn. but the current dredging project may make
launching difficult on the beach. Jemlgan said, so
adjustments may have to be made.
Tickets are now on salt- at the chamber or at the
Wednesday afternoon dances at the Sanford Civic
Center for the Wednesday night Jubilee Dlnncr-Dance.
This popular event Is always a sellout so early
reservations are advised

-

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• PH. 323-7885

and.

SALES CO.
SANFORD.

�D e L o r e a n F lu n k s FBI
Lie T e s t; A t t o r n e y
C la im s E x a m 'R ig g e d 1

FLORIDA
INBRIEF
Civic Center Beer Ban
May Be Reconsidered

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - John DcLorean flunked nn FBI-administered lie
detector test the automaker’s attorney
now Insists was “ rigged and tlxcd" to
bolster the government's cocaine con­
spiracy case against his client.
The test results, disclosed one year
after De Lorean's arrest, demonstrate the
millionaire automaker was a "knowing
and willing participant” In a plot to
smuggle cocaine Into the United States,
prosecutors said Wednesday.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office conducted
the test to counter an earlier polygraph,
adm inistered a month ago under
auspices of the defense, that reportedly
supported DeLorean's claim he was
entrapped In the $24 million cocaine
deal and not Involved In any wrongdo­
ing.
The battle of the polygraphs now
moves to the courtroom of U.S. District
Court Judge Robert M. Takasugl. The
Judge will decide after a hearing Friday
whether the lie detector results car. be
used In Dc Lorean’s Nov. 1 trial.
"I think Paul Minor (the FBI polygraph
examiner) Is a liar." defense attorney
Howard Wcitzman said after the results
were disclosed. “ The test was rigged and
fixed."
Wcitzman also claimed that -govern­
ment officials had unfairly changed the
wording o f one question concerning an
alleged discussion of heroin.
He suggested before DeLorean took the
test Tuesday that the agency — which
handled the sting operation that led to
his arrest — might fix the results to
bolster the government's case.
De Lorean. 58. flew to Los Angeles
from his home In New Jersey for the
40-mlnute polygraph test. He refused to
talk to reporters before or after the exam.
In Minor’s opinion. DeLorean was
"deceptive" In his responses to four
questions Involving Ills relationship with
James Hoffman, the Informer In the
government's drug "sting" operation
leading to the automaker's arrest.

ORLANDO (UP1) — Fearful that country music
star Hank Williams Jr. would attract "rowdy
people." Orange County ofTlclals decided to ban
the »ale of alcoholic beverages at his concert
next month.
Some of Williams' hits Include "Whiskey Dent
and Hell Bound" and "All My Rowdy Friends
(Have Settled Down)." Several commissioners
said they were concerned about "fighting,
drinking and general rowdiness" at Williams'
Nov. 8 concert at the Orange County Civic
Center.
So. they voted unanimously Tuesday to bon
the sale of alcoholic beverages at the event.
But Commission Chairman Lou Treadway,
who said he had reservations about the original
proposal, said Wednesday the panel "possibly
overreacted" and may withdraw the ban at a
meeting next week.

Pilot Picture Perfect
MIAMI (L'P)
A "perfect" emergency landing
by a Northeastern Airlines 727 with Its nose
gear Jammed won accolades for pilot Robert
Brush from passengers and company officials.
Passengers cheered after the wlde-bodled.
bluc-and-whtte Northeastern Jet made a grind­
ing landing Wednesday at Miami International
A irport. None o f the 71 people aboard
Northeastern Flight 123. Including several
babies, was hurt.
An investigation by the National Transporta­
tion Safety Board and the Federal Aviation
Administration Into why the landing gear froze
in place was pending.

Drug Probe Clears Spaet
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — A House Investigat­
ing committee Wednesday cleared Rep. Hal
Spaet. D-Mlaml Beach, of using illegal drugs.
The three-term Miami Beach representative
said he was "very relieved" by the findings. He
had maintained throughout the Investigation
that he took prescription drugs on doctors'
orders for treatment of epilepsy and Insomnia.

" I t 's

,

\

b a sed

on

h ig h

c o n c e n tr a tio n s

of

red

U dc

Thursday. Pel. » , 1MJ-3A

Friedman’s

S p e c t a c u la r
Diamond

SEVEN DIAMOND
CLUSTER

1/8 Carat'
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE

is $149
DIAM OND
P EN D A N T
AND

EARRINGS

John DeLorean

...last month passed lie detector test
lined up by his defense
Dc Lorean answered "n o ” to each of
four questions which asked:
—Before 1982, did you seek Hoffman's
assistance In arranging a drug transac­
tion for you?
—Before July 12. 1982. did you seek
Hoffman's assistance In arranging a drug
transaction for you?
—When you traveled to California for
the July 11 meeting, did you have plans
to discuss a drug transaction with
Hoffman?
—During the Marriott meeting, did you
discuss with Hoffman a narcotics trans­
action?
Five days after the disputed dis­
cussion. FBI Investigators opened the
probe that led to Dc Lorean's arrest on
Oct. 19. 1982, at a hotel near Interna­
tional Airport.

YOUR CHOICE

*45
NCWTHRU M ONDAY O CT. 31
Ext)

Vour JUNK It worth ttCASHli

Red Tide Sp ark s Sh ellfish in g Ban
NEW SMYRNA BEACH (UPI) — State environmen­
talists have banned shellfish harvesting along central
Florida's Atlantic coast because of a rare red tide that
has killed hundreds of thousands of fish.
The ban took cfTect at sunset Wednesday and will
remain Indefinitely, said Beverly Roberts, biology
supervisor for the Department of Natural Resources.
The area Included In the ban covers most of Volusia
and Brevard counties.

Evening Htrsld. Sanford, FI.

GARAGE
SALE-$3.00

the (red tide) organisms as a food source, can absorb
them and become toxic."

FRIDAYS

Mollusks poisoned by the toxin can cause a numbness
In the extremities of people who eat them. But Ms.
Roberts said there was no evidence any shellfish In the
area had been Infected.

FLEA S

The stench of dead fish hung over the area of the red
Ude, which was 200 yards wide and stretched for 50

W im! vvn
K L»-

m ile * fro m N e w S m y rn a .Bc^ch to P a tric k AH; F o rc e B ose

r»o*» Vji -tun » ) Km - »*) ) rti

organisms." said Ms. Roberts. "Oysters and clams use at Cape Canaveral.

YOURPERSONALCHARGEACCOUNT IS WELCOME!
SANFORD
PLAZA
SANFORD,
FLORIDA

T r ie d m a n ’s
• IN C * 1 B 8 4

Um iX

JEW ELER S

0*1*1S^«»l

iiw

fc B G E [3 3

"M t*

Spy Suspect Cooperating
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Spy suspect
James D. Harper Jr., held by federal
marshals at an undisclosed location to
protect him from assassination attempts.
Is giving government officials Informa­
tion about international espionage In
"Silicon Valley." his lawyer says.
Attorney William Dougherty, speaking
to reporters Wednesday after a magis­

trate refused ball for the electronic
engineering consultant, said he preferred
Harper be kept In custody where he
would be safe from "foreign agents and
others."
"Harper has been In Silicon Valley for
25 years and he's been active (In
espionage) for four to eight years. He has
a lot of information." he said.

A R EA DEATHS
REUEL P. ROBISON

LOLA DEKELE BOBS

Mrs. Lola Dekele Boss.
Rcuel F. Robison. 81. of
1407
Second St.. San­ 78. of 204 Nob Hill Circle.
ford. died Wednesday at Longwood, died Wednes­
Central Florida Regional day at Florida Hospital.
Hospital, Sanford. Born Orlando. Born Sept. 1,
Nov. 26. 1901. In Pelham. 1905, In Cordele, Ga.. she
Ga.. he had lived in San­ moved to Longwood from
ford for 33 years. A retired Miami In 1981. She was a
produce salesman, he was retired shcool teacher and
a member of the First a Methodist. She was a
United Methodist Church chaplain of the DAR, Dade
County and Orlando.
of Sanford.
S ur v i v o r s In clu de a
Survivors Include his
wife. Betty: a son. Ronald. daughter. Patricia Ann
Fairfax. Va.: three grand­ Rowe. Longwood: step­
children; a brother, Odell daughter. A lice Davis,
Robison. Ochlochee. Ga.; a Jacksonville: sister. Mar­
sister, Mrs. Roma Dean, jorie Derrick. Clayton. Ga.;
three grandchildren.
Jacksonville.
B a ldw ln -F airch lld
Brtsson Funeral Home is
Funeral
Home. Altamonte
In charge of arrangements.
Springs, is In charge of
CURTIS RAMBO
arrangements.
Mr. Curtis Rombo, 65, of
LOUIS J. CORINO
2370 G reen w ay A v e ..
Mr. Loouls J. Cortno. 71.
Sanford, died Sunday at o f 1 9 7 A u s t i n S t . ,
Central Florida Regional Longwood. died Tuesday
Ho'spltal. Sanford. Born at his home. Born June
A u g u s t 16, 1918, In 23. 1912. In Brooklyn,
Balnbridge. Ga., he had N . Y . , h e m o v e d t o
been a Sanford resident Longwood from Miami In
since 1945. He was a 1980. He was a pattern
veteran of the U.S. Army, maker and cutter and
a retired constru ction member of the Church of
worker and a Baptist.
the Anunclatlon. He was u
Survivors Include his member of the Elks l.odge
companion. Mrs. Mable in Miami and Orlando.
Dixon. Sanford: five
Survivors Include his
b r o t h e r s . L a w r e n c e wife, Theresa: son. Vin­
R a m b o , A l b a n y . G a.. cent. Longwood; daughter.
Harry Rambo. Monterey. Angela Macrina, Miami;
Calif., Woodruff Rambo, two brothers, Peter and
Hollywood. Fla., W illie Alfred, both of Brooklyn;
Frank RAmbo. Albany and two sisters. Nancy Cortno
U l y s s e e R a m b o , C o l­ and Mrs. Morguret Marumbus. Ga.; three grand­ rano. both of Brooklyn; six
d aug h t er s . Al t a m e a s e grandchildren.
Davis. Eva Lawson and
Baldw ln-Fairchlld
Gloria Robinson, Sanford; Funeral Home. Altamonte
one grandson. Murray Springs. Is In charge of
Robinson. Ft. Lauderdale; arrangements.
seven great-grandchildren
FANNY TULLY
and on e g r e a t - g r e a t ­
Mrs. Fanny Smith Tully,
grandchild.
91, of San Antonio, died
W l l s o n - E l c h e l b e r g e r Sept. 30 and was burled In
Mortuary. Sanford. Is In Ft. Sam Houston National
(Charge of arrangements.
Cemetery. The mother of

*1

the form er wing com ­
mander at the Sanford
Naval Air Station, retired
Navy Capt. Joseph Merit
Tully Jr. of Carmel. Calif,
she had visited here many
tim e s w ith her late
husband. Brigadier Gener­
al Joseph M. Tully Sr. She
Is survived by a daughter.
Frances Clark of San An­
tonio; two other sons. Re­
tired Army Col. Larkin
Smith o f San Antonio:
retired Army Col. Robert
Bu«i| Tully. Fort Worth;
20 grandchildren (includ­
ing five Army and Air
Force officers) and 16
great-grandchildren.

i-

9 S9M

After 16 years,
I forgot what
my sister, Marge
looked like.”

BOBBIE L.MICKEL
Mrs. Bobble L. Mlckel.
50. of 907 E. 8th St..
Sanford, died Sunday at
her home. Born Dec. 23.
1932. In Wrens, Ga.. she
was a member of New
Bethel Missionary Baptist
Church In Sanford and
attended Crooms High
School.
Survivors Include her
daughter, Vcurvon Mit­
chell. Sanford; mother,
N ellie Mason. Sanford;
three sisters. Mildred
Rhodes, Gloria Nathon
and Pearl Mason, all of
S an ford; one b roth er.
Lawrence Mason, Sanford;
two grandchildren.
Sunrise Funeral Home,
Sanford. Is In charge of
arrangements.

Funeral Notice
ROBISON. REUEL F.
-Furwr.t tcrvIcM tor Mr. K iw i
F. Rotolion, II, of t « ; E Sacond
St.. Sdnlord. oho d M Wodnridar.
will b* at 11 s.m. Friday dl tha
?lr»t Unitad Mathodrtt Church of
Sanford »llh tha Rav. Archta Bula
officiating In Ilav of Wooer*. maka
contribution! to tha Florida Math
odut Children’! Homa. inlorpriia.
Burial at 3 pm In E&lt;r»rjr**n
Cemetery In JacUonvIlld. Brtuon
btrharaa

v\

h

THE SILVER f *
METEOR /

Call your Travel A g en t or Am trah at • 0 0 - 3 4 2 - 2 5 2 0

’

WV «TJ-

�E v e n i n g H e r a ld

Fire breaks out in more than seven
million homes each year, resulting in
thousands of deaths and hundreds of
thousands of Injuries.

IUSPS 4*1 110)

300N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 631-WS3

Of course you should take precautions
when using matches and combustible
materials should be stored safely and
heating and air conditioning systems
should be kept tn good repair.

Thursday, October 20, 1983—4A
Wayn* D. Doyla, Publlihtr
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lcvanbury. Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 31,00; Month, $4.53; 8 Months, $34.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

The F u tu re
O f H ong Kong
Hong Kong, that great Aslan entrepot and
outpost of the British Empire, is tottering.
It is inevitable that, sooner or later, the Union
Jack will be hauled down and the five-starred red
flag of m ainland China will be hoisted In its place.
The negotiations between Britain and China are
not going well. The people of Hong Kong are,
understandably, nervous. Pessimistic new s re­
ports send shivers through the Hong Kong stock
market. The value of Hong Kong currency is
plummeting. W ealthy people are m aking standby
plans to emigrate and take their capital with them.
Britain wants to keep some kind of managerial
role, even after the Red flag flies over the so-called
N ew Territories, which make up most of the
present colony and which must be returned to
Chinese sovereignty in 1997, when Britain's lease
expires.
But Peking will have none of British adm inistra­
tion. And. without the N ew Territories, it does not
seem likely that Britain can continue to hold Hong
Kong Island and Kowloon for long, despite the
terms of a treaty negotiated In the last century
which gives Britain the colony In perpetuity.
The British foothold dates back to gunboat days
of the Opium W a r (1839-42). It is anachronistic,
perpetuated only by C hina's weakness. N ow that
communist China is strong enough. Peking is
determined to reclaim Hong Kong. For that, it is
difficult to blame the m ainland Chinese.
The seizure of Hong Kong w as an unhappy
chapter In the history of Britain and China, the
Chinese can continue to tolerate the Portuguese
colony of Macao, which existed for centuries before
H o n g K o n g b e c a m e B r it is h , b e c a u s e th e
Portuguese did not seize it by force and continue
to occupy it only by agreement with the Chinese
government. But Hong Kong rankles.
All the people of the Pacific Basin will be
diminished If Hong Kong's magnificent,,economic
structure is laid low. The colony has been a free
port and a center for trade, transhipment, shipping
and banking, servin g the entire w orld. The
Chinese of Hong Kong have shown w hat the
Confucian work ethic can achieve under condi­
tions of freedom, and the demonstration has been
little short of astounding.
The economic freedom should be continued, if
that is possible, under Pekin g's sovereignty,
together with a large m easure o f political In­
dependence. That w ould not only retain for
communist China the material advantages of
having a prosperous capitalist free port but would
a lso prove to the C h in ese o f T a iw a n that
reunification o f their island with the m ainland is
possible without sacrificing either their freedom or
their prosperity.
The lines are hardening in the Britlsh-Chlnese
negotiations. The danger signals are obvious. W e
have seen in m any former colonics in Asia. Africa
and South America that the end of colonialism can
spell chaos and suffering. Hong Kong has the
potential of becom ing one of the worst of the bad
examples.
If cooler heads prevail on both sides, an
accommodation can be struck between the claims
of Chinese pride and the practical realism of
Chinese com m on sense. It would be a political
miracle equal to the economic miracle of Hong
K ong's present prosperity. The British and the
Chinese, alike in their pride and practicality, are
the two jw opirs most able to pull it off.

Please Write
Letters to the editor arc welcom e f o r
publication. All letters must be signed and
Include a 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.

c lO 6*
By Charles Cobb

the first trace of smoke and heat detectors
which sound an alarm to warn or ab­
normally high temperatures. Smoke de­
tectors should be installed outside the
bedroom and on each additional story of
the house.
• A heat detector — not a smoke
detector — should be installed Inside the
kitchen. Also have a fire extinguisher close
at hand In the kitchen.
• Test your smoke or heat detector every
30 days unless they are battery-powered
and these should be tested every week.

SCIENCE WORLD

DICK WEST

Interferon:
The Jury's
Still Out

Can Clark
Answer
Queries?

By AlRosalter Jr.
UPI Science Editor
WASHINGTON (UP1) - The Jury Is
still out, but there Is increnrtng evidence
that Interferon may yet prove to have a
practical rule in the treatment of cancer.
A variety of small-scale tests of the
natural antiviral protein against tumors
of various kinds has produced mixed
and often disappointing results, consid­
ering the high expectations some re­
searchers had when antlcancer In­
terferon studies began five years ago.
But commercial laboratories are now
using genetic engineering technology to
produce much purer interferon In
greater quantities and at far less cost.
Larger tests are under way or will soon
begin on cancer patients at a number of
medical centers.
There arc three kinds of interferon —
alpha, beta and gamma — produced
from natural body cells. These three
types (.Iso are made by a genetic
engineering technique In which the
genes that regulate the formation of
human Interferon are transplanted Into
bacteria, turning them Into interferonproducing factories.
The National Cancer Institute says
enough is known to say interferon "is
clearly beneficial In some respects."
"It may not be directly toxic to cancer
cells as conventional drugs are, but it
may slow their rate of growth and
division so (hey become sluggish and
die," the institute said In a report
summarizing the results to date.
Researchers know interferon is pro­
duced naturally as part of the body's
defenses against viral Infections. The
protein interferes with the multiplica­
tion of virus cells and apparently can
h a v e th e sa m e effect a gain st rap id ly-

dividing cancer cells.
The cancer Institute said some animal
studies have shown that Interferon
works more effectively against cancer
when it is combined with an anti-cancer
drug. The Institute also said mixtures of
different kinds of interferon may be
more effective against cancer than any
single type.
Laboratory studies. Tor example, have
shown that gamma Interferon boosts
the potency of th^ alpha and beta types
when It is combined with one of them.
"Thus interferon may Indeed prove to
have a place in cancer therapy, but
perhaps as an adjuvant to other modes
of therapy rather than as a single
treatment," the Institute said.
"It may prove most helpful in treating
cancer that remains after surgery,
radiotherapy and-or chemotherapy."
Moat of the early studies of interferon
in cancer patients used the alpha type of
interferon extracted from white blood
cells of blood bank donors. This in­
terferon was scarce and treatment cost
about $30,000 per person.
The cancer iusLllule said it now costs
about $200 per patient to treat them
with larger doses of Interferon produced
by the genetic engineering technique.
The early natural interferon was usually
less than I percent pure. The new
genetic engineered interferon is almost
100 percent pure.

JEFFREY HART

Constitutional Proposal
We now have — Nixon, Ford, Carter —
three living former presidents, and had
John Kennedy not been shot we would
probably have a fourth. Admittedly, this
is an unusual situation, the product of a
series of one-term and Interrupted
presidencies, but the point is that we
could be making much better use than
we are of this reservoir of talent and
experience.
To be sure, these former presidents
write their books, and Nixon has Just
written what may well be a classic on
the conduct of foreign policy, but the
republic could benefit more directly
from their counsel if they had an official
public post and a visible forum for what
remarks they cared to make.
When he took office In January 1977.
for example. Jimmy Carter was a.
provincial with little knowledge of the
outside world and Its leaders. But his
predecessors Ford and Nixon possessed
a fund of experience in that regard, and
could have advised him about dealing
with Brezhnev, the Chinese leadership,
the Mexican government, about the
SALT agreements and their pitfalls, and
about the precise nature of detente.
Instead. Carter started from scratch, to
a great extent, despite (he availability of
career diplomats.
Would It not be wise to arrange —
through a constitutional amendment —
that form er p resid en ts be made
senators-at-large? They would have a
vote, but above all they would have a
forum and they could interact on a
regular basis with the other senators on
matters both foreign and domestic.
I have been re-reading Doris Kearns'
1976 book on Lyn d on Johnson.
"Lyndon Johnson and the American
Dream," a much more balanced ac­
count of Johnson that you get In Robert
Caro's recent hatchet Job. and there is a
powerful sense o f waste and Isolation
about Johnson's life after the pre­
sidency. Johnson was by nature a doer
rather than a reflective person, but
there was very little for him to do. and
he was virtually Isolated.
Invited to the Apollo moon launching
on July 17. 1969. he showed up and sat
In (he bleachers. Other dignitaries
showed up, and a few people shook his
hand. The sweat poured off him In the
broiling Florida sun. Finally, at the last
minute, a helicopter arrived, the band
played, and an unwrinkled Spiro Agnew
stepped out as the crowd stood and
applauded. Johnson wished lie were
back at his Texas ranch.
But. back at the ranch, he preoc­
cupied himself* with trivia. Writes
Kearns:

"Deciding to spend his time on the
ranch rather than on the memoirs or In
public arenas. Johnson set about to
master the ranch's activities with the
same energy he had previously put Into
everything else. All the skills, all the
tools, shaped over decades of public life
were now directed at four or five field
hands. Control that had once spanned
the world was now reduced to a small
rugged domain, as Johnson became the
commander In chief of a much reduced
Western world— For hours every day.
Johnson would drive around the fields
checking up on his men. finding tasks
undone, spotting problems, talking with
them about the cattle or the tractors."
He established a regular 6 a.in.
meeting with the hands. "A t these
morning meetings. Johnson delivered
his Instructions to hta field hands with
the same tone of voice and the same
urgency I had heard at early-morning
staff meetings In the White House.
'Now,' he began, talking with his hands,
*1 want each o f you to make a solemn
pledge that you will not go to bed
tonight until you are sure that every
steer has everything he needs...Now I
want you to write down the following
symbols. 'HP" means "high priority."
" P " means "priority." "S " means "hold
for a slow day."
Here goes. Fix the fence In Pasture
Two — HP. Get Itch medicine in town —
P. Start the sprinklers in Pasture Three
— HP. Fix the right wheel on the green
tractor — P. Check the price of feed at
the county fair — S...Any questions?'
There were none and he strode off."
No doubt Lyndon Johnson did enjoy
his Texas ranch, but his isolation there
surely represented a waste from the
standpoint of public interest.
And no doubt other former presidents
find ways to remain Influential and
politically active. Nixon being a case in
point.
Shortly after his resignation. I visited
Nixon in San Clemente, and the place
was a beehive of activity. Foreign
diplomats and businessmen poured in
and out of the offices, eager for a tew
minutes of Nixon's advice, and there
were long conference calls between
congressmen and the former president.
The fact that Nixon was "an unlndlcted
co-consplrutor" in the Watergate farce
did not matter at ail to those worldly
men. What did matter was his superb
grasp of international relations. And. of
course, there have been the Nixon
books.
But would it not be a good Idea to
formalize the public role of former
presidents?

WASHINGTON (UPI) - William Clark
is bound to face some tough questioning
at Senate confirmation hearings on his
appointment as secretary of Interior.
Opponents of the outgoing national
security adviser surely will remember
when his nomination as deputy secre­
tary of state came up for approval.
At that time. Clark displayed what
some detractors considered a weak
grasp of world affairs, being unable,
among other things, to Identify the
leaders of certain African nations.
During his days at the State Depart­
ment. and since Joining the White
House staff, he presumably became
more Intimately acquainted with In­
ternational Issues.
N o w , e n v i r o n m e n t a l i s t s arc
challenging his qualifications for the
Interior post.
For example, an official of the Na­
tional Audubon Society, referring to
President Reagan's description of Clark
as a "God-fearing W esterner" and
"fourth-generation rancher." pointed
out that owning a ranch and un­
derstanding ecology arc not exactly the
same thing.
Part of the problem. I believe. Is attire.
Clark doesn't always dress In conven­
tional style for the role he plays in
government.
Had he appeared at his previous
confirmation hearings in striped pants,
his appointment to a diplomatic position
would. I am convinced, have sailed
through the Senate with hardly a word
of dissent.
Next time, he Is likely to be more
appropriately clad.
Clark, os la well known, is fond of
wearing cowboy boots. Footwear of that
type Is certain to create confidence In
his ability to run the Interior Depart­
ment.
Nevertheless, confirmation hearings
by the Senate Energy and National
Resources Committee could be rough.
B efore te s tify in g as a C abinet
nominee. Clark might be wise to have
breakfast at one of those restaurants
where the place mats feature maps of
the United States showing the locations
of all the state capitals.
That way, over ham and eggs, or
whatever God-fearing Westerners eat in
(lie morning, he could bone up on
Internal geography.
At the State Department, and as
national security adviser. Clark didn't
necessarily need to know tha*. Pierre is
the capital of South Dakota.
Hts primary concerns In his previous
administration Jobs were overseas or
south of the border.
At interior, however, the outlook Is
more domestic and Clark will have all
sorts o f Intram ural con troversies
dumped In his lap. Here 1s the type of
information committee members will be
testing him on:
—in what state is Jackson Hole. Wyo?
—What Is a snail darter?
—What kind o f fuel was Involved in
Teapot Dome drilling leases?
—What is an antelope?
—What is the difference between
yellow rain and acid rain?
—What does smog come from?
If Clark is going to speak lor the
president on environmental matters, he
will need to know that trees are a prime
cause of air pollution. Probably nothing
in his previous experience has prepared
him for that.

JACK ANDERSON

N A T O H o p e s T o B lu n t F a ll P r o t e s t s

BERRY'S WORLD

_ _

\

But there are other danger areas that
could send your home up in flames. Many
fires start In appliance motors and in
hidden electrical wires. Even your TV set's

29,000 volts of stored energy can cause a
fire hours after the set has been turned off.
Because most fires occur at night while
the occupants are sleeping, the Better
Business Bureau of Central Florida has the
following tipr for Installing smoke or heat
detectors:
• Because smoke rises, the best place to
put a detector is on the ceiling or high
inside the wall Just below the ceiling. In a
mobile home, place the detector on an
Inside wall a few inches below the celling.
• There are two types o f detectors:
smoke detectors, which sound the alarm at

. /O

ow n *****

“ Bonzo. d o you think Mr. S m ith and I could
work to g e th e r? "

W A S H I N G T O N - A nt i -n uc le a r
agitators are trying to blow up a
hurricane of protest powerful enough to
stop the deployment of Perehlng and
cruise missiles in western Europe.
This Is causing considerable con­
s ternati on in the bac kro oms o f
Washington.
In what Is probably a vain hope of
defusing the controversy, NATO officials
meeting In Ottawa on Saturday will
announce a 25 percent cutback of the
short-range nuclear weapons already
deployed in Europe.
The presence of these tactical nuclear
weapons has been an accepted fact of
life for yeant: they have been all but
Ignored In the hullabaloo over the
scheduled December deployment of
m e d i u m - r a n g e P e r s h i n g II and
ground-launched cruise missiles.
Indeed, the only recent controversy
over the tactical nukes Involved their
nomenclature. For years they were
known as "theater nuclear forces,"
which offended some Europeans. So the
Reagan administration obligingly lists
them now as "non-strateglc nuclear
forces."
But a nuclear bomb by any other
name Is still a deadly piece of hardware,

and the tactical nuclear weapons in
Europe are now being upgraded, many
of them to handle neutron bombs.
The number of these weapons is
Impressive, too. The Kremlin Is fully
aware of the grim figures. There Is no
reason not to let the American people In
on the somber secret. My associate Dale
Van Atta has seen top-secret Pentagon
reports which describe the deployment
of U.S. nuclear weapons around the
world.
There are 346 of these doomsday
weapons in Guam and South Korea,
1,426 aboard U.S. warships and 3,193
in arsenals at home. Slightly more than
half our tactical nuclear weapons —
5,840 — are deployed In Europe.
The expected decision In Ottawa will
reduce that number by 1,500. The hope
is that this will blunt the protests over
deployment of 572 Pershing and cruise
missiles.
The tactical weapons, which are ready
for action In Europe. Include airdelivered bombs and Pershing 1A
missiles, short-range 8-Inch and 155mm
howitzers, Lance and Honest John
surface-to-surface missiles. Nike
Hercules aiitl-atrcraff missiles, nuclear
land mines and naval weapons.

West Germany, which has the largest
and most vocal anti-nuclear protest
movement, also has the greatest
number of U.S. tactical nuclear weapons
systems on Its soil: 594 155mm howit­
zers. 84 8-Inch howitzers. 72 Pershing
1A launchers and 24 Lance launchers.
In second place Is the United
Kingdom, with 36 155mm howitzers. 12
8-lnch howitzers and 12 Lance laun­
chers. The breakdown for other NATO
allies Includes:
— Belgium: 36 155mm howitzers,
eight 8-lnch howitzers and four Lance
launchers.
— Turkey: 32 8-lnch howitzers and 16
antique Honest John launchers.
— Greece: 24 8-lnoi howitzers and
eight Honest Johns.
— Italy: 16 8-lnch howitzers and six
Lance launchers.
— Netherlands: eight 8-lnch howitzers
and six Lances.
These are Just the weapons systems,
not the actual bombs or warheads. Each
howitzer and launcher would have
several rounds.
Ail these tactical nuclear systems arc
being modernized — which means the
Pentagon might have been planning to
withdraw the 1,500 obsolete bombs

I

anyway. New artillery shells for both
size howitzers are already In production,
and th ey'll Include some neutron
("enhanced radiation") warheads.
The Pentagon will spend nearly $70
million for about 800 new shells for the
8-lnch howitzers, the weapons system
common to all the allies. Each shell will
have a maximum yield of 1.1 kilotons —
one-sixth the size of the Hiroshima
bomb — plus another ,8 kilotons of
enhanced radiation.
The new nuclear artillery shell will
also travel 29 kilometers (18 miles)
compared to the present round's 14kilometer range (8.7 mlies)
No neutron-bomb warheads will be
deployed in Europe Initially. By De­
cember. at least 340 of them will be
stockpiled in this country. And any
decision to deploy them abroad could
come only after close consultation wilh
the allied "host" and explicit approval
from the president.
Footnote: There will be no d e­
monstrations in East Germany, of
course, against Soviet nuclear weapons.
Yet the Soviets have deployed more of
the horror weapons threatening western
Europe than the other way around.

�SPORTS H
Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Thuridey, Ocl. JO, IMJ-5A

Time Wounds All Heels — Seminoles, Rams, Patriots Will-Win
Arc you ready for George McGovern a#
your next President?
. It must l»r true because, When I told litis
(guy that Illinois would upset Chlo State he
said, "Yeah, you'll probably vote for
McGovern too." Well, you know what they
say — time wounds all heels.
Would you believe, u 10-4 week of picking
(Including cross country predictions)? That
puts me at 37-25-1 for the season after being
only one game over .500 just three weeks
ago.
I think It might lx* safe to go out on a limb
a little this week. Especially at a time when
even Ronald Keagan Isn't as conservative as
usual. U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick
shouldn't worry thut Reagan turned her
down for the national security advisor
position though. I hear she Is one of the
leading candidates to icplace John McKay
as coach of the Tampa Hay Hues. That list
also includes Woody Hayes. Woody Allen
and the Giant Redwood ofT U.S. Highway
17-92.

LYMAN AT SEMINOLE

defense Is better than FSU's though and It
will be able to stop East Carolina often
enough for the Gators to win. Florida by 10

The Lyman Greyhounds have relied on a
tough defense and a blg-play ofTense to
remain unbeaten In the Five Star Confer­
ence You can never tell what Seminole will
do. The Tribe has been a little erratic In B3
but has also looked impressive at times.
After two weeks of playing erratically and
one week off. It's time for the 'Ndlcs to
rebound with another upset. Seminole by 6

Chris
Fister
Herald Sports Writer

MAINLAND AT LAKE MARY
If Lake Mary's offense can eontlnue to
move the ball and pul some points on the
board, the Rams shouldn't have much
trouble with Mainland's Buccaneers. Lake

rampant on the Patriots. If Lake Brantley's
offense can put some points on the board,
the Patriots could pull tills one out. Lake

Mary by 10
LAKE BRANTLEY AT APOPKA

Brantley by 3
EAST CAROLINA AT FLORIDA

If there is a weak point on the Apopka
team. It Is «Wensc. The Blue Darters haven't
had to rely on the defense too much so far
this season because the offense has rolled
up megapoints. Apopka hasn't faced a
defense as good as Lake Brantley's, though,
and the Darters won’t be able to run

East Carolina would like to be the first
team to beat the Gators in ‘83. And they me
capable of doing It too. East Carolina has
one of the most productive offenses In the
nation and they have strung together five
straight vlctoncs since opening with a
one-point loss to Florida State. Florida's

LOUISVILLE AT FLORIDA 8TATE
This is will be the last breeze for the
Seminoles In the '83 season. Louisville and
football Just don't go together. This game,
originally scheduled for Saturday, will be
played tonight and aired on Atlanta's WTBS
at 8:05. If you aren't doing anything else,
turn on this game because Sanford's Issac
Williams will utart for Florida State at
defensive tackle (No. 45) FSU by 24. Sam
Cook, tho Evening Herald Sports Editor,
picks the Seminoles by 21

will be fighting for Its life. Penn State Isn't as
good as last year, but It Is still playing with a
vengence after losing Its first three games.
West Virginia Is a pressure team though,
and the Mountaineers won't fold this week.

West Virginia by 12
8AINT8 AT BUC8
Not yet Tampa Bay. 8alnts by 14

DOLPHINS AT COLTS
After last week's impressive victory over
the New York Jets. It seems the Dolphins
have found themselves a quarterback In
Dan Marino. The Colts have been surprising
to say the least, but Miami will prevail with
Marino leading the way. Dolphins by 10

RAIDERS AT COWBOYS
MIAMI AT CINCINNATI
The Hurricanes will use this game to tunc
up for an Important matchup with West
Virginia next week. Miami by 17

WEST VIRGINIA AT PENN 8TATE
While Miami Is tuning up. West Virginia

While there will still be a winless team In
the NFL after this weekend, there will no
longer be an unbeaten team. The Raiders
could go all the way In '83 but there aren't
enough miracles left to sustain the Cowboys
the rest of the season. Raiders by 21

5 Star Contenders,
Pretenders, Spoilers
Take Shape Friday
By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor
There are contenders, pretenders and
spoilers In the Five Star Conference race
at this Juncture. After Friday, the roles
will be more clearly defined.
• Apopka, boasting a perfect 5-0 mark
(4-0 In conference) and a sixth-place
ranking in the 4A Prep Football Poll. Is
definitely a contender. Coach Chip
Gierke's Blue Darters have a tremendous
offensive squad led by QB Rod Brewer,
tailback Sammle Smith and wldrout
James Jones.
• Lake Brantley, the hottest team In
Seminole County. Is 4-1 overall and 3-1
In the Five Star. The Patriots have
shown their contending status by winn­
ing their last three conference games.
• Lyman, which hasn’t lost any Im­
portant games, has a 3-0 conference
record and a 3-2 overall mark which
stamps the Greyhounds as a legitimate
contender to repeat as Five ,Star and
..■.41»ut&lt;ncht.mptoa.i

H*r«ld Ptwta by Tommy Vincent

O v ie d o ’s S teph anie N e lso n goes h igh in the a ir to sp ik e the b a ll at D ee G o e b e ib e c k e r, left, and G e n e n e Stallw o rth.

Lions Take Advantage Of Lapse
To Subdue Seminoles In 3 Games
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer
The Seminole High volleyball team playrd
a better match Wednesday night In a losing
cause against Oviedo then it did Tuesday
•light in a winning cause against Spruce
Creek. Then again, when you’re going up
, against the powerful Oviedo Lady Lions, you
. have to play near-perfect volleyball.
The Iaidy Tribe played an Inspired opening
game, but a slight lapse in concentration In
the second game opened the door for the
Lady Lions who went on to win the match In
three games. 13-15, 15-7. 15-11 Wednesday
night at Seminole High.
*
was very pleased with the way we played
4 In the first game, we were in control all the
' way through," Seminole coach Belli Corso
said. "But. we lost our concentration a bit In
the second game and we couldn't gel a break
In the third game."
Seminole. 8-5 overall and 5-3 in the Five
[Star Conference, is back In action tonight.
Junior varsity action begin at 4. at Lake
, Howell. Oviedo has rolled up an Impressive
; 16-4 record with Its only losses coming to
Lake Howell. Lake Mao' and 1A powerhouse

Prep Volleyball
Orlando Luther (twice).
Dec Goebeibecker and Katy Barbour Bcrved
three points apiece to open the first game as
Seminole built an early 6 0 lead. Mary Loners
served four straight points for the Lady Lions
to trim Seminole's lead to 6-4.
Oviedo went on to take a 10-6 lead before
Seminole got the serve back and the Lady
Tribe reeled off five straight points behind the
blistering serve of Beth Nelson to take a 11-10
lead.
The Lady Lions came back to take a 13-11
lead on Fayetta Robinson's serve, but
Seminole regained the served and Janet
Hauck served two straight to tic the game at
13-13 Oviedo couldn't score when it got the
serve back und Kerl Lake came on to serve
the final two points, the first coming on a kill
by Genend Stallworth, as Seminole won the
opening game. 15-13.
Stallworth also added four spikes In the
game while Hauck and Barbour had a pair of

spikes apiece and Nelson added one.
"When we got the serve (In the second
game), we couldn't get anytlng going," Corso
said. "W e were hitting the ball as well as in
the first game, but Oviedo kept digging them
up."
The third game was a sec-saw affair most of
the way us neither team had more than a four
point advantage and the lead changed hands
four times. Oviedo, leading 13-11. finally
broke away and won the match on the serve
of Stephanie Nelson.
"W e played belter tonight than we did
against Spruce Creek," Corso said. "Genene
(Stallworth) frustrated Fayetta (Robinson)
several times. Genene is really coming on
strong and 1can't ask any more from her."
In another county malchup, Lake Brantley
subdued Lyman 15-2.6-15, 15-2.
"Our serving was excellent In the second
game," said Lyman coach Annelle Griffin
whose team fell to 4*10. "But we missed
numerous serves In the other two."
Regun Stump had seven service
the second game white Kirn Rets added six.
Lyman hosts Lake Mary tonight with junior
varsity action beginning at 6:15.

Prep Football
respect o f the coaches, especially
Seminole chief Jerry Posey. "I'd say
Apopka was the clear-cut favorite."
Posey mused Thursday morning. "They
have three excellent people at the skill
positions (Brewer. Smith and Jones).
Someone Is going to have to catch thrm
on an off night and be hot to beat them."
Posey, however, didn’t rule out that
happening. "I can't say that you couldn't
catch them on an o ff night," he
continued. "Lake Brantley, Lyman or
Lake Howell could beat them."
Apopka hasn't been a world beater
with Its defense, but Posey said that
could be misleading. "When you score
all those points, the defense sometimes
doesn't look as Impressive." said Posey.
Apopka has scored 161 points In five
games for an average of 32 a game. The

. .i D a rte r* h a v e .g iv e n u p 7 0 p o in ts fo r an

• Lake Howell, the preseason favorite
of the coaches, turned out to be a
pretender. The Sliver Hawks blew an
18-polnt lead and lost to Sanford, then
were embarassed by Lake Brantley,
23-0. Lake Howell Is 4-2 overall, but 3-2
In the conference.
•Seminole, which looked impressive
earlier In the year, has fallen to the role
of spoiler. The Seminoles stunned Lake
Howell, then somehow lost to Mainland.
The fallowing week, they were zapped by
powerful Apopka. They arc 2-3 overall
and 1-3 in the Five Star.
• Lake Mary*, which surprised DeLand.
15-14. in the season opener, has had its
problems with Lake Brantley (32-6).
Lyman (20-0) and Lake Howell (32-6).
The Rams also fall Into the spoiler
category.
Lake Brantley and Apopka battle In
Apopka Friday. Lyman and Seminole
renew their strong rivalry In Sanford.
Lake Mary hosts Mainland. Ail kickoffs
arc H pm
Last year, Lyman and Apopka tied
with 6-1 records, but the Greyhounds
won the title because they whipped the
Blue Darters. With the addition of llic
Rams this fall, eight conference games
are played.
Some coaches feel that two losses will
be one too many. They said they feel It
may take a 7-1 record to win. "W e may
be out of the race, but we're going to
show this conference we can play some
football." said. Lake Howell coach Mike
Btsccglla after the loss to Lake Brantley.
One team — Apopka — has drawn the

average of 14 an outing. Spruce Creek
dented them for 21 and could have had
that many more If not for turnovers.
Edgcwatcr put 20 on the board In the
season opener.
Apopka will face its toughest defensive
tests Friday against Lake Brantley and
two weeks from Friday against Lyman.
Both are at home which will help. To
beat (he Darters, an excellent secondary
or pass rush is necessary. When Brewer
gets the time, he will pick you apart.
Lake Brantley has a solid pass rush
with tackles Dean Shirley and Larry
F r o e m m l n g . L i n eb a ck er s Donnie
O'Brian. Byron Bush. Scott Horwltz. Pat
James and Scan O'Brian comprise the
strongest unit In the conference. The
secondary has a good hitter In Scott
Salmon, but can the others control
Brewer and Jones?
Lyman's defense, meanwhile, has
been superb, yielding Just 43 point* in
five games for un average of Just 8.6 an
outing. Linebackers Mike Henley. Paul
Ellis and Pete Crespo are excellent
hitters. Upfront. Tyrone Simpson, Bubba
Jones and Kevin Keikcs put hrat on the
quarterback. The Greyhounds' second­
ary Is also extremely lough with safely
Greg Pilot along with defensive backs
Mike Battle and Tyler Hughes
Where the Greyhounds may have their
problems Is putting points on the board.
They have scored 83 points for 16.6 per
game.
Whatever, it looks as It the Five Star
should have Its usual down-to-thc wlre
finish In November.

Jones' 95-Yard Kick Return Can’t Save Tribe Against DeLand Blur
They didn't catch his name,
but the Seminole Junior varsity's
defense saw Del, ind's number 33
flash by numerous times Wed­
nesday night. DeLand's blur ran
for three touchduwns. Including
pne of 92 yards, us the JV
(Bulldogs upended the Seminole
iJV. 22-14. at Seminole High,
i. The loss drops the Tribe JV to
3-2 for the season. Seminole goes
up against Lake Brantley, 6-0.
.next Thursday at Lake Brantley
In the game that will decide the
.Seminole County JV champion.
Sem inole built a 0 0 lead
‘without an offensive possession

as Alvin Jones returned the
opening kickoff 95 yards for u
touchdown. It wus the third time
(his season Jones has returned
the opening kickoff for a TO.

extra point wus no good and the
score stood tied at 6-6.
Seminole fumbled on Its first
play from scrimmage of the night
and DeLand recovered on the
Semi dole 30. Two plays later, old
number 33 darted In from 15
yardc out and the two point
conversion wus good as DeLand
built a 14-6 lead.

On the ensuing kickoff, (he
Seminole specialty tram pinned
the Bulldogs back on their own
clght-yurd line. However, on
DeLand's first play from scrim­
mage. number 33 broke loosr for
a 92-yard touchdown romp. The

Seminole then put together un
impressive drive as It went 75
yards for a TD. Quarterback
Daryl Taylor cupped off the drive
with a 10-yard scoring strike to
Robert Hill. Taylor then hooked
up wbrt Melvin Brinson for the

'

J.V. Football

two point conversion to tie the
score at 14-14.
The defense woke up at the
start of the second half, but
DeLand broke the tie late In the
third quarter as number 33
rambled 10 yards for Ills third TD
and the two-point conversion
made It 22-14. DeLand's defense
held Seminole In cheeh the rest
of the game to seal the victory.
"DeLand has a fine team."
Seminole coach Mike Ferrell said.
"T h eir only loss 1s to Lake
Brantley. We played as tough as
we could, but still came up
short." — Chris Fister

Herald H vstit) T#mm, Vincent

Apopka’s Steve Thomason grabs onto Seminole quarterback M ike W helchel’s
legs. Apopka and Lake Brantley ineel in a cru cia l F iv e Star gam e Frid a y.

1

�*A—Evening Herald. San lord. FI.

Thursday, Pel. 30. 1**3

USFL Makes Tampa Super City, 2
HOUSTON (UPI) — The city of Tampa will
host the 1^84 championship game of the
U.S. Football League six months after
hosting the National Football League's
Super Bowl, but a USFL official said the
scheduling was coincidental.
USFL owners. In their second annual
league conference. W ednesday chose
Tampa. Fla., ovcr'thrce other cities to host
the two-year-old league's title game In the
72.000-seat Tampa Stadium next July.
Tampa outbid Jacksonville. Pontiac.
Mich., and New Orleans to host the game six
months after the city hosts the NFL's Super
Bowl.
USFL Commissioner Chet Simmons said
‘ 11 was coincidental that both games will be
in Tampa.
••• .
"Interestingly enough, that didn't even
come up" In questions by the 18 USFL team
owners to representatives of the cities, he
said.
The USFL begins Its second season Feb.
26. The championship game will be played
July 15.
The league voted to hold the 1985
championship game In the Sllvcrdome at
Pontiac. Mich , home of the NFL's Detroit
Lions and site of Super Bowl XVI In
January. 1982.
Despite losing $30 million to $40 million
in its first season and facing the last year of
a network television contract. Simmons said
the cities' aggressiveness In seeking the

championship game Indicates a growing
interest In the league.
"I relate what happened (Wednesday!,
back to last year when 1 was trying to find n
city to host the championship game, and
literally drumming Denver Into saying It
would do It. We had four people who made
presentations that blew me away with their
Intensity and excitement." he said.
"I think that's a tremendous reflection on
the position of the league and how far we've
come In a very, very she’d time." he said.
Meanwhile. Simmons said he has briefed
owners on talks on future coverage with
ABC-TV.
"I am discussing with ABC the possibility
of extending their coverage to give us more
regional coverage, which I think Is absolute­
ly necessary for continued growth of our
league. That Is the one Item I am bearing In
on.” he said.
Asked how ABC was responding. Sim­
mons said, " I think the network un­
derstands what I am saying, but there Is n
tremendous financial Impact with Increas­
ing the number of telecasts."
HATTIESBURO. Miss. (UPI) - Marcus
Dupree, the elusive running (rack who
turned his back on the University of
Oklahoma less than two weeks ago. enrolled
Wednesday at Southern Mississippi but
apparently won't be eligible to resume hts
football career until 1985.

Dupree Selects Southern Miss

—

Football Roundup
"I really Just wanted to be clow to home."
the 19-vear old athlete told an impromptu
news conference, "(and) Just be back among
friends In Mississippi nnd Just play ball In
Mississippi."
A university spokesman confirmed
Dupree registered Wednesday afternoon for
the current semester. Currently at Its
midway point, and was to slart classes
today or Friday.
His enrollment ended the speculation
about the future of the talented sophomore
that had been mounting since he left
Oklahoma 11 days ago. obviously discour­
aged and unhappy.
Over the past several days. Dupree has
Indicated he was considering switching to a
number o f different schools Including
Southern Mississippi. Mississippi State and
Georgia. Alabama coach Ray Perkins said
Wednesday he'd also talked to Dupree, but
he said the onetime Philadelphia. Miss.,
high school star had "probably made up his
mind to go lo Southern Mississippi."
Dupree said Wednesday he'd thought
about other schools but liked the Golden
Eagles.
"I think It Is the upcoming school and I
want to be part of it," he said.

There also had been reports Dupree might
be Interested In skipping his remaining
years tn miUrt. nnd turn pro. But. he said:
"I'm not really that Interested In pro
football tight now. I want to have fun
playing college football."
Under NCAA rules. Dupree apparently
will not be eligible to play for the Eagles
until 1985 but will have two years of
eligibility remaining after sitting out the
1984 season.
USM coach Jim Cartnody told reporters
he would have no comment "at this time"
on Dupree's enrollment.
"W e are In the midst of preparing for
Saturday night's home game against Tulanc
and I will not do anything to chnnge our
dally routine," he said.
Dupree met with Carmody last week and
strongly hinted at the time he might
transfer to the school.
Dupree Indicated a preferen ce for
Southern Mississippi following his high
school career, when he became one of the
stnte's mostly hotly recruited prospects.
But. he wound up choosing Oklahoma
because he felt It would give him a better
shot at the Heisman Trophy.
He said Wednesday he believes he still has
a chance at the Heisman In ydars ahead.
TAMPA (UPI) — The winless Tampa Bay
Buccaneers signed frec-agcnt offensive

guard Glenn Bujnoch Wednesday and
placed defensive bock Sandy LaBcaux on
the Injured reserve list.
Bujnoch. on eight-year veternn from
Texas A&amp;M. was a second-round drufi pick
of the Cincinnati Bengal.*, in 1976. The
G-foot-6. 265-pound Bujr ch was a parttime starter for the Bengals until being
released prior to this season.
LaBcaux was put on the Injured reserve
list with a knee Injur)’.
MIAMI (UPI) — The Miami Dolphins
linebackers problems showed no signs of
Improvement Wednesday.
Coach Don ShuUt reported that defensive
captain Earnle Rhone remained In the
hospital In late afternoon nnd would not be
available for Ihc game against the Colts In
Baltimore Sunday. Rhone has been out or
the lineup for three weeks recovering from
pneumonia.
Shula also listed linebackers A. J. Dube as
doubtful and Mark Brown questionable for
the Baltimore game. Dulic suffered groin
Injury In last Sunday’s 32-14 win over Ihc
New York Jets and Brown has had a badly
bruised toe for two weeks.
The Dolphins were down to three hculthy
linebackers after the Jets game and signed a
free agenl Tuesday.
Defensive end Doug Belters (loe) nnd tight
end Bruce Hardy (bruised ribs) were listed
as probable starters.

Expos, Braves Covet Released Rose;
Governor M akes Pitch To Save Twins
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Pete Rose
says he W asn't even In uniform when he
experienced the best moment of his
five-year career with the Philadelphia
Phillies.
"It was riding In the parade down
Broad Street (after the Phils’ World
Series victory In 1980)." Rose said In
reflecting on a portion of his career that
ended Wednesday when the Phillies
announced they would not renew the
option In his contract.
"Just to see the smiling faces ofT all the
people In the streets, all saying the some
thing." he said. " I ’ll never forget that."
Phillies president BUI Giles said the
team was releasing Rose because the
42-yrar-old first baseman wanted to play
regularly In hts quest to surpass Ty
Cobb's record for most hits In a career.
"Pete wants to play every game and
we could not assure him he would play
every game with the Phillies." said Giles,
who said the decision to release Rose
was a difficult one.
"1 admire him more than anybody
who's worn the uniform." Giles said.
Rose, who signed with the Phils as a
free agent tn 1978. said he did not know
where he would be playing next year.
The Atlanta Braves and the Montreal
Expos are among the teams said to be
In terested In s ig n in g R o se, but he said tie
has not yet heard from anyone.
"There's no question In my mind that
some teams will be Interested." Rose
said at a hastily called Veterans Stadium
news conference.
Bui when asked which teams he would
prefer to play for. Rose responded: "I
don’t know. I'd like to play anywhere. I'd
like to play on a good team, a team that
has a chance to play in the World
Series."
He said he enjoys playing first base,
where he spent most of his time with the
Phillies, but could play the outfield,
where he played some games this season
for the first time In years.
"I really like first base but I think
because I'm going to lose 10 pounds this
winter that I could handle the outfield If I
go to spring training knowing that's
where I'm going to be." he said.
Rose said there were no "hard feel­
ings” about his departure and said he
could even end up returni ng to
Philadelphia as a part-time player If no
other team makes him an a c c e p t a b l e

OCTOBERS
NATIONAL CAR
CARE MONTH

P e te Rose
...w an ts
to p la y
e v e ry d ay

REG U LAR G R O U P
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G R O U P 12 &amp; 15

Baseball
offer. But he said he did not believe that
was likely.
Rose made It clear that last season,
when he was benched for the final three
weeks as the Phillies surged to the
National League eastern division title,
was a difficult one for him. He batted
only .245 and had 121 hits for 3.990 In
hts career. 202 short of breaking Cobb's
record of4.191.
"I've been a regular player for so long
In my career that It's hard for me to play
three d a y s a week." he said, a d d in g he Is
certain he will break Cobb's record.
Rose, who said the tram paid him $2
million this year plus a $300,000 "going
away present." said money would not be
his main objective In seeking a new Job
but Just the opportunity to keep ploying.
"W e'll Just go back lo Cincinnati and
anticipate the phone calls and make sure
the phone's on the hook every 10
minutes." he said.

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ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) - Gov. Rudy
Perplch had never bought a ticket to a
Minnesota Twins game In his whole life
but he says he's chungcd his mind now
that he Is Joining a drive to keep the
Twins In Minnesota.
After meeting with Twins President
Calvin Griffith Wednesday. Perplch an­
nounced he will buy two season tickets
to next year's home games. The tickets
will cost the governor $ 1.296.
Over lunch. Perplch and Griffith dis­
cussed reports the Twins may to another
city If the team falls to draw 2.4 million
fans next year.

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Disney Classic Tees Off
LAKE BUENA VISTA (UPI) - Last
year's Walt Disney World Classic gave
young HaJ Sutton the springboard he
needed to vault among the giants of
professional golf.
Sutton won the 1982 Disney tourna­
ment — his Post professional victory —
on the fourth hole of sudden death. He
opens defense of his title today In the
$400,000 Disney Classic.
The four-day tournament will be
played on three par-72 courses at Disney
World Just west of Orlando.
A field of 132 professionals. Including
seven members of the U.S Ryder Cup
team that narrowly defeated a BritishEuropean contingent last weekend, will
tee up for the tournament.
First prize Is worth $72,000.
For Sutton, the 1982 Disney tourna­
ment boosted his record first-year win­
nings lo $237,434. He's continued the

#2170

trend this year, winning twice and
earning a PGA Tour-leading $425,148.
Sutton. 25. came from behind to tie
Bill Britton In last year's tournament.
Jay Haas, who fired a 65 for a 5-stroke
lead after three rounds. Just missed
making it a three-way tic when a 25-foot
birdie putt attempt wus off the mark.
Sutton and Britton matched pars for
the first three playoff holes. On the
fourth extra hole. Sutton tapped In a
birdie putt to take the title.
"T h e Disney tournament got me
started last year," said Sutton. “ I'm
looking forward to coming back."

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Gymnastics
gymnastics teams Irom throughout
the Central Florida area competed in
the meet.
Others who competed for Sanford
Gymnastics Inlcuded. Jennifer Kopp.
Tracey Kaleel. Camilla Kennedy,
Cherie VanCamp. Nika Lormun,
Shannon Kaynard. Kim Walker. Julie
Delph. Leslie Campbell. Amy Bennett.
Brenda Bessner. Terri Kaleel. Danielle
Moye. Heather Todd. Heather Cooper.
Demetria Petty and Latonla Daniels.

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Kelly Takes All-Around Medal
Kimatha Kelly won the all-around
title medal In an Invltattonar Gym­
nastics Meet which was held this past
Saturday at Brown's Gym in Orlando.
Kelly, representing Sanford Gym­
nastics Club, clinched the all-around
title with a first In the balance beam,
second In the uneven parallel bars,
fourth In the vault and fifth in the
floor exercise.
Shannon Wtlcoxson recorded a
third place finish In the vault in the
8-11 age group while Shari Slrgrist
was third In the vault In the 12-14 age
group. Sheri Jamrs was sixth tn the
vault In the 12-14 age group. Thirteen

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Thundgy, Oct. 20, 1W-7A

Ex-Ballplayer Stone Breaks Into Broadcasting With Ease Of Veteran

I

All during the playoffs and the World elevator back home In Norway. Iown.
Series. Rick Dempsey kept being asked the
But what about Steve Stone? How Is he
same question over and over again.
doing? He won 23 games for Baltimore In
Who did Mike Boddlcker remind him of?
1980 along with the Cy Young Award, but
Dempsey never even had to think.
In June of 1982 while still with the Orioles,
Steve Stone." he'd come right back. he had to retire prematujely because of
' Boddicker throw*, similarly. Also, he’s in chronic tendinitis of the right elbow. He
the ballgame all the lime, even when he tried to keep pitching, but couldn’ t. Too
Isn’t pitching."
much pain.
The reason the Baltimore receiver never
For your Information. Steve Stone Is doing
had to bother thinking before answering Just fine now. I saw him during the
was because he had discussed the same Orioles-White Sox playoffs and can report he
subject with Stone several times before and never haf, looked W ltcr in his lift. Never felt
had told him that In his opinion. Boddlcker better, either. The 36-year-old former Or­
was a clone of his.
ioles’ curveballer worked the playoffs as a
By now. everyone has a pretty good line reporter for WGN-TV in Chicago. During the
on Mike Boddlcker. They cither saw or regular season, he did the Cubs’ games with
heard how the Orioles’ 26-year-old right­ Harry Caray. Stone al5o has worked Monday
hander with the 45-year-old body shut out Night Baseball for ABC.
the White Sox and struck out a recordFor some reason, maybe because of the
equaling 14 batters in the second playoff way he looked so absorbed standing near
contest and then beat the Phillies with n the batting cage, eagerly taking In every­
three-hitter In the Game 2 of the World thing he possibly could during the playoffs,
Scries. Boddlcker Is getting ready to resume he reminded me of some kid with his nose
his annual winter job operating a grain pressed up against the window of a candy

Sports
Parade
ny MILTON RIOIMAN
store.
Fellows like Joe Garaglola. Don Drysdale.
Tony Kubek, Hawk Harrelson and George
Kell, to name only a few. went from the field
to the broadcast booth before Stone. They
no longer show nny withdrawal symptoms.
Stone Isn’t that far removed from actual
competition, however. U Is only 16 months
since he hung up his uniform for good.
Docs he still miss the competition? What
do you think? Does a bear sleep In the
woods?
"When you look out on the field and you
know this Is for the championship, you
forget all the pain, all the frustration and all

the anguish that go Into a 162 game
season." Stone said, watching Eddie Murray
take his cuts during batting practice one
day In the playoffs. "You realize that
regardless of what you’re doing and how
much you like the occupation you’re In.
you’d give it all up for one more World
Series."
A lot of ballplayers run to fat quickly
when they get through playing. Not Stone.
He’s 12 pounds under the 17R he generally
weighed In at when he was pitching During
his 12 seasons In the big leagues, he was
with the Giants; the White Sox twice for a
total of three years; the Cubs, and the
Orioles for four years.
Since he was with both the White Sox and
the Orioles, he was a little tom in his
allegiance during the playoffs.
"I live In Chicago and I like the people
there." he Bald. "Still. It’s only fair to say I’ ll
always remember my four years In
Baltimore as being characterized not only
by spectacular baseball thrills, but by my
meeting some of the nicest people I’ve ever

been associated with In my lifetime."
W hile he was still pitching, Stone
operated a restaurant called Steven In
Scottsdale, Ariz., and he has built another
nnr In l^tke Tahoe. Nev.
This is Slone’s second year in television. If
you listen to him. you’d think he was bom
In the Job, He’s Informative. Incisive and
witty without being smart-alecky. I rate him
right up there/With people like Garaglola.
Kuhek, Palmer. Tim McCarvcr and Reggie
.Jackson among the Jocks I most enjoy
listening to do baseball on TV.
Stone Is working even harder at his
present job than he did on his pitching, nnd
If you don’t know how hard that was. then
go ask Rick Dempsey sometime. Stone told
me he feels this way about It:
"When I left baseball, I decided to become
a nationally known television personality
and have my career transcend the baseball
booth. 1 want to make television my
profession and only hope this new career
can give me as much satisfaction as my old
one."

SCO RECA RD

SPO R TS

IN BRIEF

Whalers Send Capitals
To 7th Straight Loss
United Preau International
Coming off their beat season ever, the
Washington Capitals are closing In on the worst
start In the franchise's nine-year history.
Washington was blanked 3-0 by goaitendcr
Greg Mlllen and the Hartford Whalers Wednes­
day night, giving the Capitals an 0-7-0 record.
The Capitals are one loss away from matching
an 0-8-0 start in their Inaugural 1974 season.
"W c ’vc got a big monkey on our back." said
Capitals defenseman Rod Lanway. whose ac­
quisition from Montreal was a big reason the
Capitals made the playoffs for the first time last
season. ” We have a better team than this, but
Its going to take time because we are so young."
"W e need someone to put the puck In the
net." Capitals Coach Bryan Murray said. "W e
had a good effort In our seven games but we Just
can't score."
Washington has Just 15 goals In Its seven
games.
Miller, registered his sixth career shutout and
second as a Whaler by stopping 22 shots to help
Hartford. 3-2-1. go over the .500 mark for the
first time since November 1980. a span of 233
games.
In other games, the New York Rangers topped
Calgary 3*1. Detroit dumped St. Louis 4-2,
Quebec crushed Toronto 8-1, Chicago blasted
New Jersey 6-3. Montreal thrashed Winnipeg
12-2 and Edmonton rallied to beat Vancouver
10-7.

Auerbach May Appeal
BOSTON (UPI) — Tempers have cooled since
Sunday's fight-ridden game between the Boston
Celtics and the Philadelphia 76ers. and so
apparently has Celtics general manager Red
Auerbach's resolve to appeal his NBA-Imposed
fine.
" I ’m debating It." Auerbach said In today's
editions of the Boston Herald.
The Boston Globe reported that Auerbach had
decided not to appeal.
Auerbach was fined $2,500 for leaving his
scat In the stands, storming onto the court and
challenging 76crs center Moses Malone to a
fight.

Cruz Nips Raines
In A ll-Star Voting
NEW YORK (UPI) - The overall balance or the
National League was reflected Thursday In the an­
nouncement of the UPI 1983 All-Star team which Is
made up 11 players from nine teams Including two each
from the Philadelphia Phillies and Houston Astros.
The league champion Phillies voted onto the team by
the 38 writers who participated were third baseman
Mike Schmidt and pitcher John Denny. The two Astros
were shortstop Dickie Thon and outfielder Jose Cruz.
Joining them on the squad were catcher Terry
Kennedy o f the San Diego Padres, flrat baseman George
Hendrick of the St. Louis Cardinals, second basemun
Johnny Ray of the Pittsburgh Pirates, outfielders Dale
Murphy of the Atlanta Braves and Andre Dawson of the
Montreal Expos, starting pitcher Mario Soto of the
Cincinnati Reds and relief pitcher Jesse Orosco of the
New York Mcts.
Murphy, who batted .302 with 36 homers and 121 for
the Braves, was the only unanimous choice with a
"possible" 38 voles. Dawson was the second most
popular vote-getter with 37.
The closest vote was at first base where Hendrick
received 13 votes to lt^ fo r former teammate Keith
Hernandez, now with the Mets. Hendrick butted .318
with 18 homers and 97 runs batted In while Hernandez
had u .297-12-63 offensive performance. A1 Oliver of the
Expos received eight of the other 15 voles.
Kennedy, who out-polled Tony Pena o f the Pirates. 19
voles (o 12. hit .284. slammed 17 homers and drove In
98 runs for the Padres: Hay had a .283-5-53 offensive
performance for the Pirates: Dawson batted .299 with 32
homers and 113 RBI and Cruz hit .318, had 14 homers
and drove In 92 runs. Montreal outfielder Tim Raines
(.298 average. 133 runs. 90 stolen bases) was a close
fourth wllh 13 voles for the outfield spot, two behind
Cruz.
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tht position by
potman «t,ng tor »* UPI »*tj National
Laaguo All Star loam
C o tta r. Terry Kanootf*. ion Ofego I It):
Tan/ f W Pittsburgh IU1 and Jot7, Dart!
Chicago!!)
First bast Gacrgs Handrick. If Louis
111): Ketfh Hwnanrtol, Nt* Y«rk (fell Al
Otluor, Monfftal lilt Oartttl E.ant San
FranciKO 111 anj Out! Chambliss. Atlanta

Ul.
Stun* bat* Jcfwi/ *4f, Pittsburgh
(111; Glam Hubbard. Atlanta, and .'tor*
So l las Angofei If oath) and Jo* Morgan.
Phllodatohl* and Rjn# landbarg. Chicago
(loach)
Shortstop Dsckrt Than. Houston (M):
Otli* Smith. SI Lout! ill; Ralaal Kamiroj.
Atlanta (I) and Kan D*J*ws. Ptuladslphi*

V

led Sal* Mae Schmidt. PhUedttphia
■(It);
f Sul Podr*
P,
Gtarrara. Let Angafei U l end

Bill Modtock, Pittsburgh (1).
Outlaid Dot* Murphy, Alton!* (Ml.
Andri Danon. Montnal IV); Jo** Crw,
Houston (ti). Tim Ratnav Montrool t ill:
Darryl Strieberry. N*W York til. P*dr»
Gttorroro. Lot A n g ila i 111. Goorgo
HonWfck. SI. Court II) tnd J*tt Leonard.
Son Francisco (I
S ta rlin g g llc h t r i: John D o n er,
Philadelphia 1111; Mario Soto. Oncferofl
(Ml. Sfevt Carlton. Philadelphia, and John
Candtlyi*. PittiSurgh (4 aachl, Larry
McWilliams. Pmwxgh and Paacual P*r*t
Atlanta |] odchl. AM** Hammokar, San
Fro n clico 111 and B ill Oolllckion,
Msntrtal. Nolan Ryan. Houston. Stov*
Rogars Montreal Oftd bob WokX. iM
Angelas (loach)
Ratal pitch* J*u* Orosco, N r. York
Off); A! Holland PNOdflpTua O il and La*
Smith. Outage III

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4 Gablol* Monllll*
1) 40 4 40 1 00
I Pinion Arano
4 M 4 00
• N o g u lE lo rip
4 40
a (7-4) U . U , P (4-1) 74.10, T
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IR ry n
17 M a n 140
5 Bilbao
S.70 140
I Gablol*
IN
Q (111 M.44, P (51) 741.70, T
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a Pit* Elorta
1*00 * 0 0 140
) Bilbao Montlll*
10.40 I M
4 Pinion V ia
100
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1 P lla Agulrra
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1 Maoolo Arana
• 40 *40
1 G a b lo l* V ia
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0(1 1) 41.M, P U S ) 147.41, T
U -5 1 ) n 7 .M
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1 Durango-Zarra
17 M 140 100
4 70 4 tt
• Arra-Barquln
7.40
4 Echava Alano
Q (1-41 11 .M l P (15) I45.M, T
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5 Gorotfoit Forurla * 40 7.M 144
2 R icard o Farah
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tAAIkal Farah
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• Echava Y ia
1140 1170
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4.M
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NATIONAL HOCKEY LEA0UE
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P i trick Dhrhrtn
W L T Pis. OF GA
7 1 1 U
NY Rongtrt
14 20
20 U
Phlladtfphl*
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Nnr Jtrtay
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Pittsburgh
1 4 4
1 17 11
Washington
4 7 « 4
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4 1 1 11 U 14
Ou*b*t
Bmton
4 1 1 • 21 II
1 1 1 I
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Butt* to
Hartford
1 1 1 7 11 m
Montr**)
1 1 4 4
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Campbril CanferMca
Morris Dtrisim
W L T Pti. OF 0A
Chicago
1 1 0 W
St Lout!
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Toronto
1 1 1
7
Minntsot*
1 ] I
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1 1 1
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Edmonton
7 0 *
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Calgary
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Wadntsday's InW ti
HarttordL Washington*
N Y Rangan5 Calgaryl
DvtroflA SI. Louis 7
Monfr*af It. Wlnrdptg I
Ou«b*c I. Toronto I
Chicago 4. Now Jorstyl
Edmonton Id Vanccrwr*' 7

T h a rsda y's O i a i t
(AX Tinas EOT)
Botlon *1 Philadelphia. 7;M p.m.

MantrMl«l MUmoto. • ISpm
Edmonton i&gt; Lot Angtfet, II: U p m.
Friday's Cam*
New Jtrwy *1 Vpncnntf. night

Baseball
NEW YORK (UPI) - Pl*r«rs filing tor
tr*» ogtntf Inc M l . Pltthgn, Rich
Gotugt of Hr* York. Kant Ttkulv*. Jim
Bibby and Djv « Tomlin of Pittsburgh, Lory
Soransm tnd Don Hoed of Cfevtla-ri Jorry
Roust oi I n Angola*. Mill Wlkos of
Otlroil. Don Schatyador oI Montrool. Tom
Underwood el Oakland. Doug Bair of
Dttroil. Dtfwin Lamp of Iho Chicago WMto
Sot, Doug Bird of Boston. «nd Frank
LoCort* ot Houston
Tim tnffeldm. Manny Trlllo r1 Montreal
and Rob Plcctoto of Oakland, ttoeltfed to fell
the frn agon) marktf at d,d oufefefdrrt
Rupport Jonat of San Drtgo: Dam Parkor
of Pittsburgh; Warrtn Cromtrflo of
Montreal 0*4 D erJ:
ul Hanlon
Tad Simmon of MJfwOukn ft Pit Ion*
catihor to dmtart hit frn agmey fe data
Plarort tilg'bfe lor fit* ogorrt Itoful may
(hcLrt Ihtir Infentiono dialog o ISday
ptriod mat bagim on* day offer ft* final
goma of If* World Sarfet. Tho playtrt P in
or* tflgibfe lor If* Nnr. 7 trot agtrtf Waff,
unfeit »h*y roach agrmmanl with tffetr
prttanf clubt on nr* contract!

Philadelphia - Refeawd first bowman
PofeRom
San Otago — Renewed it! working
agroamanf with Miami of Iho Clou A
Florida Sltfe League
Saaflfe - Named Charfe! Armstrong
prtttdant.
Botkatkall
Chicago - Signed guard E m li Whatley of
Alabama fe a 4 ytar cayfract
Cleveland - Refeawd forward Richard
Woihlngfen. guard Bobby Wilkonm and
confer Sfem Haytl
Houttot - Slgrwd forward Rodney Mc­
Cray of louferllfe fe i * yoar contract
Indiana - Cut guard Grog Jcrwi of Wttt
Virginia
Miheoukat - Cut guard Mika Ooeil of
Alabama
Portland - Forward Kortnll Waihlngfen
retired
San Anfenfe - Signed guard John Pa lion
of Noire Dame

HARDWARE STO RES

hardw are
VALUE OF H IE MONTH

Mn. x 60-W.
Cloth Duct Tape

Football

Use to seal leaks around
ducts, windows anddoors. Hi
yousave energy, money. 93

Cleveland - signed quarfeebock Paul
Me Donald tea l yoar conlr art.

Hnem - PtiCw datwfeire tnd Elvrn
Bribe* on ln|ur*d m e rit
NV Jet! - Placed defemlre back Jru*
Jchvnon on Injurkd i M m ; signed frt*
agent linebacker Jim Elfepufet of WyomPltliburgh (USFL) - Named Rich
Erdeiyi militant coach.
Seattle - Signed frn agtnf linebacker
Gary Wlmmtr.

COME IN AMD SIGN
CJP FOR OUR FR EE
DAILY CASH DRAWING -&lt;

Your. JUNK it worth flCASH ll

Deals
Wednesday) Sport! Traaurtfewl
By United Preti laferwahawal
Amafewr
Lot Angtfn Olympic OrgaMtlng Com
mltfe* - Named Robert Ptferwn mooting
ammltsianar.

Quantities Limited

TKZBtfTSJRe

-GARAGE

J fu u l/a &amp; u

lntbiU
Cincinnati - Nomad Bruce Klmmbullpen
coach
Kama! City — Signad catcher John
Wafhan to 4 ytar contract
Milwaukee - Named Tam Trabethom
ttryi b«M coach: retained coactfe! lorry
Haney, D an Garcia and Pot Dobson
NY Mato - Signed catcher John Sturm

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�•A—Evtnlng Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Thurtday, Oct. 10, m i

IN BRIEF
Grenada Prime Minister
Killed Near Army HQ
ST. GEORGES. Grenada (UPI) - Prime
Minister Maurice Bishop and five prominent
supporters marching toward army headquarter
were shot and killed by Grenada's armed forces
and a revolutionary military council seized
control of the government.
Grenada's Army Commander Gen. Hudson
Austin said Bishop was freed from six-days of
house arrest by 3.000 supporters who stormed
his official residence earlier In the day Wed­
nesday. Bishop was shot and killed beenuse he
was trying to pass out weapons to the crowd.
Austin said.
Caribbean leaders today called the death of
Bishop amid a bitter power struggle for control
of the Island "a squalid betrayal” of the region's
aspirations.
In Barbados, the U.S. Embassy said they were
"concerned" about the safety of Americans
trapped on the tiny Marxist-ruled Island. 90
miles north of Venezuela. The Island has close
ties with Moscow and has Cuban-trained armed
lo rc c s.

No-Confidence Vote Fails
TEL AVIV. Israel (UPI) - Prime Minister
Yitzhak Shamir's 10-day government, surviving
an opposition no-confldence motion In Parlia­
ment. moved to head off possible panic trading
In the country's foundering bank shares.
Finance Minister Ylgal Cohcn-Orgad Wed­
nesday formulated a plan with the country's
commercial banks aimed at supporting bank
shares when trading In the stocks Is resumed,
probably Sunday. Israel Television said.
The stock exchange, reopening Thursday
after an 11-day closure, was to resume trading
In bonds only. It was forced to close when
Israelis began dumping their bank shares to use
the cash to buy a total S I20 million in foreign
currencies.
In the Knesset, or Parliament. Shamir's
government survived a motion of no-confldence
called by the Labor Party and two other
opposition groups In a 61-54 vote, clearing the
way for Cohen-Orgad to proceed with austerity
plans.

Reagan: U.S. Will Stay In Lebanon
"The reconciliation conference could
open In Geneva Monday If all parties
agree." the leftist newspaper As Snfir
said. The talks had been scheduled to
begin today.
As behind the scene contacts con­
tinued, skirmishes kept tension high In
Beirut.
State-run Beirut radio said one police­
man was killed by sniper fire and a
Lebanese soldier was seriously wounded
today In fighting between Moslem Shiite
militiamen and government troops In
Beirut's southern suburbs.
A car-bomb exploded Wednesday as a
Marine supply convoy of three Jeeps and
a truck was passing the Palestinian
refugee camp of Chatllla.
Marine spokesman MaJ. Robert Jordan

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - Lebanese
troops and Moslem Shiite militiamen
fought machine gun battles acrosa
Beirut's southern suburbs today as the
government sought an alternate site for
a reconciliation conference among the
nation's warring factions.
T h e g ov ernme nt was forced to
postpone the peace talks between Chris­
tian and Moslem leaders because of
objections to Beirut International Airport
as a venue. The decision came amid the
worst clashes between rival factions In
three weeks.
Beirut newspapers reported today that
the opposition had suggested Geneva as
u possible venue and said the matter was
now under serious consideration In a bid
to end eight years of factional violence

said the blast Injured four Marines, one
with a slight head wound and the other*
with lacerated ear drums from the force
of the explosion.
The car-bomb attack, coming after a
week In which snipers killed two
Marines, marked a new stage In the
harassment of the Americans.
In Washington. President Reagan told
a nationally televised news conference
Wednesday night the United States
would "keep doing what we have been
doing" In Lebanon and will not be worn
down by Syrian resistance to a peace
agreement.
"I know the Syrians have been foot­
dragging." Reagan said. "If they're doing
It with the Idea of wearing me down,
they’re going to be disappointed."

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Orig. *18

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Sport Shirts
Large Selection
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■

a

C alen d ar
THURSDAY. OCT. 30

SATURDAY. OCT. 22
Senior Citizens Foliage Tour to the Ozarks leaves
Seminole Plaza. Casselberry, at 7:30 a m.; pick up at
Sanford Civic Center. 8 a m. Return Nov. 2. 6 p.m. For
reservations cal! 322-9148 or 3237434.
Whale of a Book Sale sponsored by Friends of the
Library of Seminole County. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Sanford AA. open discussion. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.
Sanford Women's AA. 2 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First
St.
Spaghetti Supper. 5-7 p.m.. Congregational Church.
2401 Park Avc.. Sanford.
American Diabetes Association rummage sale. Flea
World.
Halloween Haunted House sponsored by SanfordSeminole Jaycces. opens at 7 p.m., clubhouse. Fifth
Street at French Avenue. Sanford.

,
b a le

Leather Pump
Orig. *30

M en’s Slacks

FRIDAY, OCT. 21

The government's announcement that
the talks would not take place today as
scheduled was followed by a brief respite'
In the fighting In the hills overlooking
Beirut and the city's southern suburbs.

W o m e n ’s S h o e s

rn

Blouses

MOSCOW (UPI) — Reports that two Russian
cosmonauts are stranded In space are not true
and the cosmonauts’ 115-day flight Is continu­
ing normally despite the launch failure of a
Soyuz spaceship to return them to Earth, an
official said.
Evgenll Tabakacv. an Academy of Sciences
space specialist, said Wednesday reports that
cosmonauts Vlndlmlr Lyakhov and Alexander
Alexandrov were stranded aboard the space
station Salyut 7 were ’ •absolutely untrue. Their
transtjort ship Soyuz can bring them back to

Seminole Sunrise Klwanls. 7 a m.. Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport.
Optimist Club of South Seminole. 7:30 a m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte Springs.
Pre-School Center of Sanford benefit. "Christmas In
October." craft show.. Sanford Woman's Club. Oak
Avenue. 9 a.in. to 9 p.m.. gifts, decorations and baked
goods.
Sanford Shuffleboard Club will host Northern District
Tournament. 9 a.m.. Fort Mellon Park next to Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce on East First Street.
Whale of a Book Sale sponsored by Friends of the
Library of Seminole County. 10 a.tn. to 9 p.m..
Interstate Mall. Altamonte Springs.
Altamonte South Seminole Jaycces Igor's Haunted
Mansion, open 7:30 p.m.. State Road 436 at Park Place
(behind Peaches). Altamonte Springs.
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
Wcklva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Wckiva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. at Wcklva Springs Road. Closed.
Long wood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian Church.
SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time and place.
Tanglcwood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same time and
place.
Sanford AA Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Closed.

" T h e mission Is to enable the
Lebanese government and Its military to
take over Its own country with the
withdrawal of all (foreign) forces.” '
Reagan said.

Saving For The Family And The Home
Save Over 60% 11Save Up to 50%| ISave 50%

'Cosmonauts Are Safe1

DcBary Blood Bank Red Cross blood drawing. 4-7
p.m.. DeBary Community Center. Shell Road.
Free oral screening sponsored by American Cancer
Society. 1-5 p.m.. oIRcc of Dr. Mlcheal Zcrlvltz. 916
Deltona Blvd.. Deltona.
Whale of a Book Sale sponsored by Friends of the
Library of Seminole County, 3-9 p.m.. Interstate Mall.
Altamonte Springs.
Ovcreatcrs Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St. Open speaker.
Sanford Alnnon. 8 p.m.. The Crossroads. Lake Minnie
Road ofTHIghwuy 17-92. Sanford.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed. First United Mrlhodist
Church. Oviedo.

Six Marine* have been killed In.
Lebanon since Reagan's last news con­
ference July 26. Members of Congresshave demanded that Reagan define the*
mission of the 1.200 Marines who havcj
been In Lebanon for more than a year a *
part of a multinational peace-keeping
force.

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M en’s Dress Shirts

Bed Pillows

Junior And Misses
Selected Groups.-

Long And Short Sleeve
Solid And
Stripes.
Q o iC i
Orig. To *24 w C l l * ?

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M en’s Sport Coats

Sleepw ear Coordinates

Light Grey Only
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Catalog Q o l a
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Short And Long Gowns And Robes
.

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Sanford Plaza

Open
Sunday
12 To 6
Mon. Thru Sat
9:30 To 9

�PEO PLE
Evening Herald, Santord, FI.

Thursday, Oct. JO, 10M-1B

Robin Bierly Bride
Of Victor Bauder

Transportation Forum
Set By Voters' League
The future of transportation In Seminole County,
will be the topic for discussion at the October "Food
for Thought" luncheon hosted by the League of
Women Voters of Seminole County.
Sallv Dykes, chairman of the Citizens Advisory
Committee of the East Central Florida Regional
Planning Council, will speak about the Orlando/Urban Transportation Study and Its predicted
Impact on transportation for all central Floridians.
The luncheon will be held on Thursday. Oct. 27.
from 12 to 1 p.m. nt Denny’s Restaurant. Oxford
Road and S.R. 436 In Casselberry.
All Interested persons arc Invited to attend. For
Information and reservations call Erika Baldwin at
365-5823.

Given In marriage by
The bride is the daugh­
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Hairy her father, the bride chose
E. Bierly Jr.. 301 Tucker for her vows a formal
Drive. Sanford. The bride­ gown fashioned with a
groom Is the son of Mr. high Illusion neckline,
a n d M r s . L o w e l l K. bi shop sleeves and a
Bauder, 108 Crystal View. scalloped chapel-length
train She carried a bou­
Sanford.
quet of blue and whjjc
daisies.
S u z a n n e Marti n a t ­
tended the bride as maid
of h onor. Frnnces
Bradshaw, sister of the
bride, and Katy Bauder.
sister of the bridegroom,
were bridesmaids Each
wore a steel blue gown and
carried a bouquet of blue
and white daisies.
Larry Plcardat served
the bridegroom as best
man. Ushers were Jeff
Ba uder. J i m Bauder.
Marty Bauder and John
Dauder. all brothers of the
bridegroom. Groomsmen
were S te ve Bauder.
brother of the bridegroom,
and Harry E. Bierly III.
brother of the bride.
Melissa Bradshaw, the
bride's niece, was the
flower girl.
Following a reception at
the Sanora Clubhouse, the
newlyweds departed on a
honeymoon cruise to the
Bahamas.
They arc making their
home In Deltona before
relocating In Gainesville.
The bride Is employed as a
financial consultant with
Em pire of A m erica.
Gainesville, and the bride­
g r o o m Is a c h e m i s t .
USDA—ARS. Gainesville.
M r. and M rs. V icto r Stanley Bauder

Robin Eileen Bierly and
Victor Stanley Bauder
were married Sept. 17. at
7 p .m. . ut A l l Soul s
Catholic Church. Sanford.
Father A u thcnrleth
performed the double ring
ceremony.

Program For Mary DeBose
Mary Llggons DcBosc. directress of the Wilson
Ensemble of Sanford, will be honored nt an
Appreciation Program Saturday, at 7.30 p.m.. at the
New mount Calvary Missionary Church. 1115 W.
12th St.. Sanford.
Mrs. DcBosc has been the directress of the
ensemble, sponsored by Eunice I. Wilson, for four
years and the lead vocalist for six years. She has
served various churches, .choirs and groups in the
Sanford community with her musical talents.
The program Is open to family and friends ns well
as the public.

Boyfriend Leaves When Rules Change
•

.

DEAR ABBY: I am 45
and have three children In
college. My boyfriend Is 50
and all his children are
grown and married. We've
been sleeping together for
over a year, during wl^lch.
time we’ve spent mdfe
time In bed together than
my ex-husband and I did
in the 20 years we were c o m p a n y hi m on ms
vacation.
married.
A mature person takes
The other night. 1 told
m y b o y f r i e n d I w a s responsibility for his/her
beginning to feel "Immor­ actions, so don't ask
al" and 1 refused to go to permission from me or
bed with him. He left In a anyone else to go to bed or
huff and I later learned go to Canada. If you want
t h a t he r e t u r n e d a to go to Canada, but not to
diamond engagement ring tied until you're married to
this wonderful guy. tell
to the Jewelers.
My problem: He has him so.
usked me to go to Cunada
DEAR ABBY: What do
with him on Ills two-week
vacation. Should I go? I you think of a 15-year-old
hate to lose this wonderful boy. bigger than most
grown men. who still
fi«'y
LITTLE RED sleeps with a security
IN MIDDLETOWN. blanket? The boy happens
USA to be my nephew. I've
DEAR LITTLE RED: I threatened to steal the
darn thing and burn ii.
c a n ' t
b l a m e
y o u r
boyfriend for leaving In a Except for this, he Is a
huff: after sleeping with normal, well-adjusted kid.
My sister (the boy's
him for over a year, you
mother)
tells me It Is
suJdcnly change the rules.
Obviously he had mar­ nothing to worry nbout
riage In mind, and still has
If he’s asked you to ac-

AFFORDABIES

The "anything goes
d re ss pump.

. .

i ___

r . i . . ♦•—___ _ •• U .

so c o n g r a t u l a t i o n s ,
member of the "gang." he
Th ere's nothing wrong s h o u l d be I n c l u d e d ,
with being heavy as long Whether he participates or
not is up to him. And to
UNCLEJACK as you're healthy."
That
must
have
been
those of you are "afraid"
DEAR U NCLE: T h e
only problem I see is the sweet music to a lot of fat he might show up with
one you are making by people. Abby. but the fact lingerie In hand: Grow upt
- •
calling attention to It. If he o f the matter Is. the l
Problem s? Everybody
Is a normal, well-adjusted chances for an excessively
overweight person's being has them. IVhat are J’ours ,
15-year old boy. skip It.
healthy are slim.
Write to Abby. P.O. Box
ANM.D. IN 36923. Hollywood. Calif..
DEAR ABBY: Women
NEW MEXICO 90038. For a personal re­
who experience frequent
------p ly . please e n clo s e a
b e d ti me " h e a d a c h e s ”
DEAR ABBY: We work stamped, self-addressed
should know about this
in an office consisting of envelope.
sure cure. My doctorhusband suggested It. and
SEMINOLE TRINITY
It works like a charm.
Relax and enjoy your
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
husband's undivided at­
A Gnat Plata
tention. Lovemaking will
Ta Start
make your headache go
away. Of course, this
J M -IM l
applies only to women
who really want to be
cured.

The Lo o k Of
Su ccess
In “ the Y e a r of the D r e s s ,”
C o u n try M is s resp o n d s to the
c a r e e r - o r ie n t e d
w o m en’s
renewed In terest In d re s s e s
with so ftly tailored one and
two p iece lo o k s that Include
sw eater d re ssin g .

7Ylafa}-£AthsiAA

SMI ITAMS THUMOAV
OflHTlIOOPM

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COUPON

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I
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iff

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HOLIDAY
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years ago.
Does Dear Abby see a
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With C »«pen Only

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DEAR ABBY: In re­
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and .Feeling Fantastic."
you wrote: "One of our
most cherished rights is
the right to be ourselves.

GARAGE
SA LES3.00

Yd.

SUPER SAVINGS

"c u ic " was discovered a
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you* iUNH i* *«orth I k A W t l

■

From

NO MORE
HEADACHES
D E A R NO M O R E
HEADACHES: That

Jacaranda Circle of the
Garden Club of Sanford
Inc. met at the Patchwork
Cottage. Sanford, for the
October meeting. Members
were given a demonstra­
tion on quilting.
F o l l o w i n g the d e ­
monstration. Mrs. George
Rufas was hostess to the
business- meeting and re­
freshments at her home.
Fourteen members at­
tended.

Yd

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A shapely m id heel to p u t
w ith everything fro m pants
to dresses Heaven knows,
it's the p ra c tic a l choice fo r
wom en on the go W ith
the affordable p rice and .
top Quality you've
/
com e to expect
/
fro m Lite S tride
/
/.

&gt;

SH OE 8TO R E
2IO E. First St.
,
Sanford
3 2 2 -0 2 0 4

Under the Public Telecrynmunicatlons Act of 1978, state end local government! are
eligible tor federal grants to plan end construct telecommunications facilities.

�2B-Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. _ Thursday, Oct. 10, IttJ

B L O N D IE

WAITER, I OEMANO
YOU TASTE THIS
BROCCOLI !

by Chic Young

TTTF

across
1 Wild party
5 City in Utah
9 Faihionabla

r«on
12 Phraia of
diimay (2
w da)
13 African land
14 Light breaia
15 People!
17 Total
16 Sailor
19 Stylish
21 Easy

by M ort W alker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

I W H A T A
FAST LEA R N ER /

24 Egyptian tun
dish
25 Spica
27 Oatantion
31 Posa
32 Ranaw
34 Spouts
35 Naadla cats
37 Something re­
markable (al |
39 By w ayol
40 Thickness
42 Hubs
44 Yield
46 Mi'itary
student

47 Old Testament
beck
50 Give name to
51 Secret agent
62 Boundless
57 Plant
exudation
56 Wrongdoing
59 Epochs
60 Measure of
land (metric)
61 Dale
62 Identical
DOWN
1 A lle y ------2 Greek letter
3 Gross
National
Product
(ebbr)
4 Kids
5 Actor Sharif
6 Rodent
7 Put into office
6 Lied
9 Talk back
10 Pope
11 U S service
branch
16 Tier
20 Once more

Answer to Previous Puirle

Here's A Tasty Way
To G e t Enough Bran

M.D. DEAR DR. LAMB For six years I suffered
from a spastic colon. ! am
now regular, I am not
bloated, I feci 100 percent
better and I linve my
weight under control.
&lt;3 Shelves
My probl em started
21 Boxed
proposal
22 Join
when I was running six
45 Propel
23 Exercise
miles a day. My doctor told
It Is also Important to
24 Cite as proof 47 Former
me to use bran daily and develop good bowel habits.
weather
26 Conger
drink plenty of fluids. 1
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
bureau
28 Existed
took a cup of bran, mixed was wondering about my
48 Nautical pole
29 Burning
with cereal and milk. Thnt son. He was premature
4911k
30 Beer
amount of bran clogged and he grew slowly with
SO Seasoning
Ingredient
me up nnd the cereal tender loving care. He's In
53 Thousandth
33 Bullfight
added
too muny calorics to his Intc 40s and the right
54 Period of
Cheer
my diet. My doctor sug­
historical time
36 Annoying
weight for hts size. But he
gested Mclamucll and that feels tired all the time and
feeling
55 Golfer Snead
was not the answer.
36 Unabridged
56 Compass
hts legs ache. He’s a farm­
About six months ago er, who works long hours
41 Tilted
point
my doctor said to use only while using heavy and big
1W cup of unprocessed equipment. A doctor told
bran. It tas&lt;cd terrible so I him the problem was not
found the solution myself. enough oxygen to his legs.
I use 1V5 cup of un­ I've never heard of that
processed bran. 2VS cup
befrre.
of cold waler. a bit of salt
Would you have any
to taste, bring to bolt and solution for his problem?
stir constantly over medi­
DEAR READER - If he
um heat, for about one
works hard, long hours, he
minute. Remove It and let
may have a good reason to
It sit 10 minutes.
be tired.
Yes. these arc the sit me
The comment about not
directions for cooking
enough oxygen to the legs,
oatmeal. It takes longer,
though, makes me wonder
tiiough. for the bran to be If the doctor meant he had
completely absorbed. I poor circulation to his legs.
defy anyone to tell the
That could happen with a
difference from oatmeal. 1
b u i l d up o f f a t l y look forward to having It
cholesterol particles In the
dally for breakfast.
large arteries to the legs.
I'm 44 years old but
He should find out.
through good nutrition
54 55 56
If he has poor circulation
and exercise I am as
to his legs. It Is Important
healthy and energetic as a
58
that he not smoke.
woman ha If my age.
And II he does have a
DEAR READER 62
significant obstruction, he
Thank you for sharing
eventually may need an
your experience. I'm glad
operation. Seven? obstruc­
bran worked for you. It
tion can often be bypassed
doesn't matter how you
to p r o v i d e I m p r o v e d
get your bulk as long as
circulation to the lower
you do get the right
leg. That procedure has
amount for you. 1 think
been done now for years.
your suggestion for one
S tre tc hi ng exercises
way to use unprocessed
well-grounded In facts be­ bran Is a great one. Others help lo eliminate the
fore you espouse opinions like it mixed with apple ' soreness If he Is Just
with friends today. Your
overworking himself.
sauce or fruit juice.
s t a t e m e n t s w i l l be
Others also do well with
Send your questions to
challenged for verification. bulk form ers such as
Dr.
Lamb. P.O. Box 1551,
PISCES (Feb. 20-March Metamucll. Not everyone
Radio
City Station. New
20) Do nothing today thnt responds the same way.
York. N.Y. 10019.
could put your resources
tn Jeopardy. This becomes
especially Important If
you're considering a fi­
nancial Involvement with
another.
At this stage of the
ARIES (March 21-April
proceedings South started
19) Soft pedal your re­
to justify hts overbid by
NORTH
im u
quests If you hope to gain
excellent play. He played
415
th e c o o p e r a t i o n o f
dummy's Jack of clubs and
V J 1072
associates. Aggressive
let It hold by playing hts
♦ K 106
behavior will be Interpetcd
4K J» S
10, The eight of spud is
negatively.
was led and finessed. The
WEST
EAST
TAURUS (April 20-May
44
five came next and West
4K6S2
YAKQO
VIC*
20) Playing the good Sa­
showed out.
♦J9 7 S 2
♦ 12
maritan role could work
Now It looked as If there
4 At 2
471*3
against you today. The
was a sure trump loser
SOUTH
very persons you're trying
pluB the ace of clubs, but
4 A Q J 10*7
to help may add com­
there was a chance for a
V 4I
plications to your life.
trump coup. It wasn’t
♦ AQ4
much of a chance, bul as
4 q io
OEMINI (May 2!Uune
the song go es. " A n y
20) Petty Individuals could
Vulnerable: Neither
chance Is better than no
arouse your Ire today.
D ealer South
chance."
Don't let them reduce you
Wtit
North Bail
Sooth
South led hts queen of
to their level. Instead, ele­
14
clubs. West took hts ace
Dbl
vate them to yours by
I NT
Pan
44
nnd now the patron saint
l’»i«
Pau
Pau
example.
of overbidders came to
CANCER (June 21-July
help South.
22) It Is best to keep your
Opening lead V Q
West tried to cash hts
a c c o m p l i s h m e n t s to
king
of hearts. South
yourself today. Although
ruffed
to get rid of one of
you may have no Intention
his extra trumps and led a
of blagging, it could come
By Oswald Jacoby
diamond.
across as such.
and Jamea Jacoby
West could still break up
South's four-spade call
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
the coup by playing his
Everyone may seem lo was an overbid, bul he had
Jack of diamonds, but that
have a chip on hts or her 100 honors to compensate
is the sort of play that only
shoulder today. Weigh for the probable penalty
the greatest players make
your words Judlclolusly and he felt sure that no
In their dreams.
and you won't get into one was going to double
The 10 of diamonds was
htm.
trouble.
finessed, a high club led
West led the queen of
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
and ruffed, a diamond to
22) A financial situation hearts and continued with
the king and the last high
could be the source of your the ace. East played the
club. When East followed
problem today. If at all five and then the six to
suit. South discarded hts
possible, avoid any en­ show on odd number, so
last diamond and led the
t a n g le m en ts In these West shifted lo the deuce
last heart from dummy for
of clubs.
areas.
hts trump coup.

What The Day Will Bring.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 21,1983

by Howie Schneider

EEK &amp; M EEK

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

M R . M E N A N D L IT T L E MISS

INSULTING A
,
P O U C E O F F IC E R !

by Stoffel &amp; Heim dahl

BUG S B U N N Y
T ELL M E A B O U T T H E ^
F u t u r e .S w a m i b u g s .

In choosing partner or
associations, it's Impor­
tant thi s y e a r to be
extremely selective. Those
who do not share your
philosophy and attitude
toward life could prove lo
be a hindrance.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) It Isn't likely that
anybody will come out the
winner In matters whfch
get down to puBh-andshove today. You'd be wise
to dodge such confronta­
tions. Libra predictions for
the year ahead arc now
ready. Romance, career,
luck, earnings, travel and
much more are discussed.
Send $1 to Astro-Graph.
Box 489, Radio City Sta­
tion, N.Y. 10019. Send an
additional $2 for the NEW
Astro-Graph Matchmaker
wheel and booklet. Re­
veals romantic c o m ­
patibilities for all signs. Be
sure lo slate your zodiac
sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) If you discover today
that someone Is cutting
Into benefits to which you
alone are entitled, keep a
cool head so that you'll be
able to right any wrongs.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Take It tn
stride If you garner a lot of
oohs and aahs today. If
you come on as less than
humble the response could
suddenly turn negative.
C AP R I CO R N (Dec.
22-Jan. 19) You'll fall flat
If you attempt to copy the
mannerisms or methods
used by someone with
whom you're Impressed.
Be your own person and
you'll succeed.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Fcb. 19) Be sure you're

WIN A T BRIDGE

G A R F IE L D

by Jim Davis

F R A N K AND ER N EST

SMITH
LUDLOW
AND PINKNEY
ATTORNEVS

BROWN
GREEN
WHITE &amp; BLACK
COLORS

i
t
ia
i

i
1

*6*

l
m
i

Q

io-io
TuKVei

by T. K. Ryan

TU M BLEW EED S
1

WWTHE F R E E P R O V ER B
o rm p o o s pean u t?
FREE
PRO VERBS

NEE PEP A

p

M Y M I N P 5 o r t H - G O H l&amp; v
!j£«iMLF
&amp;CAJHKE

f
l
1
f
j

Jn S y

C£
&lt;■—

WITH WI5P0M.
pr o v e n

‘

ARE-ARC YOU REALLY AT THIS POINT
I PONT SEE
IjOlN' T' TURN MARIO
over r the m m
THAT I HAVE
A CHOICE,
PATROL WHEN SHE
SETS SACR, ANGELA?
l ANNIE-

HERE WE ARE,
MARiA.-THlS |5
WHERE YOU'LL
BE STAYING.

WHAT ARE YOU
TALKING ABOUT
COYOTE? WHO
LIVES HERE?/

�Evening Herald, Ssnlord^FI^

TONIGHT'S TV
THURSDAY
EVENING

8:00
(?)( H O CEO NEWS
(38JBJ / IOBO

.1
.SwiS™"""1'
LIH"E"
’ 88 (I) ONE DAV AT A TIME

'■
©

LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI.

i W

8

7;9°

r O ® PEOPLES COURT
.UJ O P.M, MAGAZINE A !&gt;«**Back tup Into Wyoming * rugg«d
Wind Rive, mountain rang*, an
. Inlervi** »,ih dancei-slnger• ectreia Cynthia Rhode* (FlashI dance,- "Stayin' Alhre").
i/iOJOKERSW ILO
' l l PS)THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) NATURE "Fungi. The Rotten World About U i" A* an agent ot
decay, fungi perform* a function
•aaenttal to ate on thlt planet, rn
. 0 ) (I) ROWAN 4 MARTTn S
l a u q h -in

7:05
BURNETT

(15) HAWAII FTVE-B
(10) WILD AMER’CA "Animal
Odditlea" Marty tatka about prehiatoric anlmata, men take* a look at
aom* unutual modern-day craaturaa. auch at the manatee and the
diving aptder. q
0
(8) MOVIE "Who?" (1073)
EMiott Oould. Trevor Howard. Work)
power* battle over in* aacrat
behind a man with ■ metal lace

Labia Ch

91

O HOUR MAGAZINE
(35) FAMILY ’
CD 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
CD &lt;8)000 COUPLE

Cable Ch

(7 ) 0

(ABCt Orlando

(D) (35)

Indrprndrnl
Orlando

f5 ) O

(C B il Orlando

(8) CD

Independent
Melbourne

(4 ) 0

INBCI Daytona Beach
Orlando

n o) m

Orlando Public
Broadcasting Sytlem

In addition to the channrli tilted, cablevmon subscribers may tun. in to independent channel 44,
51 P eteribvrg. by tuning to Channel I . tuning to channel I), which carnet sports and fh . Christian
Broadcaiting Network ICBNI.

©
NCAA FOOTBALL Florida
State v*. LooUvUt*

AND

7:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIC:IT
An Intend** with Netl Carter.
® O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
0 FAMILY FEUD
05) BARNEY MILLER
CD (8) TIC TAC DOUGH

8

7:35
© G O O D NEWS

800
O ® OIMME A BREAK Katie
begin* dating a much older college
leculty member (Thome* Calloway)
Cl) O MAONUM. P.l. Magnum
agree* to etcon Rich * tiller (Alice
Cadogen). a itudenl at a convent
aehool, during a nighI on the town
Q i t ) TRAUMA CENTER A akyitrapet climber aullari in)urlea. a
ga* eipionon rock* a tingle* bar.
and Buck (Jack Bennon) undergo**
emergency surgery □

13 ® MAMA S FAMILY Mima
wma over the audience when ah*
Qlvet a humorou* apeech at a coun­
try-club ceremony honoring Ellen
(Betty While)
GD (10) ALL NEW THIS OLO
HOUSE The building all* It
Inapecled end an architect specialKing In tolar home* It contulted

9:00
O ® WE OUT IT MADE Beth
arrange* tor Jay to become ■ finallit In a conl.it tor New York'* mo*t
eligible bachelor
® O SIMON 4 SIMON A.J. and
Rick era hired by a young widow
who It convinced that her hutband a death whH* tkydiving waa
actually a murder.
(D O
S TO S Tommy (Tony
Latorre) atka Dora)** to teach him
how to klaa, then trie* to practice
hit new aklrit on Lind*
(35) QUINCY
(10) DINNER AT JULIA S Julia
prepare^ a main court* ot braiaed
sweetbread*, end guett chat Brad­
ley Ogden aarvet a dessert ot
tugtrbuth maple moutt* g

9:30
Q ® CHEERS Cert* ob)*cta to
what ale perceive* a* Sam’s pref­
erential treatment cl Diane on the
O IT'S NOT EASY Jack feel*
betrayed when he confesses to
Sharon lha' ha'a loti hi* romantic
drive, which the then teds Neel
0 (10)THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

attracted to personable Stain Sen
Gregory Sumner (William Devine)
010/10
(35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
GD (10) ODYSSEY "Some Women
Of Marrakech" Several Moroccan
women share their feeling* about
friendship, family and religion r t
(D(B)KOJAK
^

8

10:30
(ID (35) BOB NEWHART

11:00
O ® ® 0 ( 1 ) 0 NEWS
i l l '(35)BENNY HILL
0 (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE8 ENTS
CE(8)TW!LiaHT ZONE

11:20
© NEWS

11:30
O ®
TONIGHT Hoal: Johnny
Carton Quest) Toot* Thetteman*.
Elam* Struct). Dom Delias*
(3) o WKRP IN CINCINNATI
O ABC NEW8 NIQHTL1NE
(35) THICKE OF THE NIQHT
Scheduled Genie Franci*. Robbie
Benson, Jackie Conms
CD (8) HOUSE CALLS

S

12:00
® O TRAPPER JOHN, M.D. Or.
Riverside ti so moved by the sud­
den appearance of hi* old nanny
and long-lost mothar that he
doesn't reahie he's being conned.

1:00
(? ) a MOVIE "Lady In The Dark"
(1944) Ginger Rogeri. Ray MlBand
CD (35) STREETS OF 8AN FRAN­
CISCO

1:10
&amp; ) O MOVIE "The Quality 01
Mercy" (tfi7S) Scott Hylands, Tony
Mutant*

1:30

7:15

ED(10) AM. WEATHER
7:30

7:35
© I DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00

0 ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Interview with Richard Wld-

mwk.
S i u u k Ntno MiunlwnlCn
(?) O MOVIE "The Glass Key"
(19421Alan Ladd. Vttonlce Lake
© M O VIE "R.P.M," {1970)Antho­
ny Quinn. Ann-Margret

3:00
0 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

4:00
0 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
MOVIE "Men 01 The Dra­
gon" (1974) Jared Martin. Katie
Saylor.

CD O

4:20
© W O R LD AT LAR3C

FRIENDS
0 (B|JIMBARKER
8:05
© BEWITCitEO
8:30
QC (35| POPEYE
0 (tO) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
© I LOVE LUCY

s

12:10

9:00

0 ® OtFFREHT STROKES &lt;fl)
( 1 ) 0 DONAHUE
(/ 10 MOVIE
(1II (35) GREAT SPACE COASTEH
£D 110) SESAME STREET (R) n
CD (8) BOOY BUDDIES
© MOVIE

12:30

MORNING

LATE NJOHT WITH OAV1D
LETT EAMAN Quetta comedian
Ktnny Rogeraon. gultarlit Andy
Summer* ol The Police
( D 0 ALL IN THE FAMIl

5:00

O ® LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY 4
COMPANY
(1)1(35| I LOVE LUCY
CD (8) HEALTH FIELD

O ®

0 ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(1) O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
( 1 ) 0 BENSON (R)
3 »’ (35)GOOD DAY
0 (1 O )M A O C O F O Il pa in tin g
CD (8) HIGH CHAPARRAL

11:05
©THECATUNS

11:30

2:00

0 ( 4 1ANOTHER WORLD
( 7 ) 0 ONE LIFE TO UVE#
it I?(35) QOMER PYLE
© (tO) MAOtC O f DECORATIVE
PAINTING
CUP) BONANZA

2:30

%

O CAPITOL
11(35) I DREAM OF JEANNIE
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mi. SUPERMAN III

® a NEWS
ED(10)AM WEATHER

Johnny McDaniel, State Youth Director of the Churchei of G o d of Prophecy In the State of F lorid a, w ill
b e conducting a s o r lo s of revival services at the locol
church ot 2509 Elm Avenue from Wednesday through
Sunday (October 19*23) at 7:30 p.m. H e w ill be
sp ea kin g ot the 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. w orship services
on Sunday. The Reverend M r. M cD a n ie l w as
groduated from Lee Colleg e, Cleveland, Tennessee,
and Tomlinson College. Cleveland, Tennessee. If you
need d e liv e ra n ce fo r the soul, m ind, or body, com e
and hear this dynam ic young sp ea ke r. You w ill find
the a n sw e r for the needs of your life. W e co rd ia lly
in vite you 1o com e and sh are with us in this tim e of
sp iritu a l re n ew al.

If you have questions, please call the Reverend E.J.
Lewis at 322*4015.

Seminole County Football
Watch for it in the Herald

Staying A liv e
Sylvester Stallone steps out of his 'R o ck y' trunks to portray Rambo, a
form er Green Beret and Vietnam veteran who seeks revenge after being
m istreated In a tiny Northwestern town In F ir s t B lo o d , the action film
m aking Its national cable T V debut Sunday at 8 p.m. on HBO.

Will Reagan Back Networks
In TV Programming Tussle?
greater network control the Interests of Indepen­
V WASHINGTON (UPI) /.The "Rattlp of the Network over syndication threatens dent television stations.
V Reruns" la raging, with
President Reagan aquarely
In ( t i c m i d d l e a n d
&gt;speculation rampant over
•whether he will flex Ills
political muscle to aid Ills
4 y M U ttttf,
'K it c h e n
Hollywood friends.
The television networks
Country Cooking Served Bullet Style
are In a multi-millionPH . 3 2 3 -2 0 6 1
dollar battle for ownership
330 E. COMMERCIAL ton
am m
cnw
DOWNTOWN SANFORD
and control of programs.
OPEN 7 D A Y S
The fight stretches from
LUNCH MON.-FCt. 112, DINNER 4:J09
Capitol Hill to the White
WEEKENDS 119
House.
Reagan arranged to
C H IL D R E N U N D E R 10
W PRICE
meet today with his Cabi­
UNDER 3
net Council on Coincrcc
FREE
and Trade (o discuss a
SALAD BAR
T A K E OUT S E R V IC E
mo t u by the Federal
A V A IL A B L E
Communications C o m ­
mission to case rules that
now bar the networks
Ait rou
^
J
CAN EA T
\
from sharing In lucrative
profits from the produc­
VEGETABLE PLATT
Witt SAUD BAS
tion and syndication of
HOMEMADE PIES
television programming.
BISCUITS CORN BREAD

Follow Your Favorite
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NOW OPEN

*2.60

The FCC wants to roll
bark n 13-year-old rule
; h a l p r o h i b i t s the
’ networks from having fi­
nancial Interests In and
(Control over the syndica­
t i o n of lelevlslon pro­
grams.
Hollywood producers
rguc they would be over*
wered by the networks
cy plso contend that

*3.25

\ m . i t i t i t II Ml t i l Ml-

FOOTBALL SPECIAL
NAM E
ADDRESS
C ITY____

TELE

Please start my subscription

Three blockbuster games highlight the prep football schedule
Frid ay as county riv a ls Lym an and Seminole baffle in Sanford,
Daytona Beach M ainland comes to Lake M a ry and Lake
Brantley (ourneys to Apopka is a key Five Star Conference clash.
Lake Howell and Oviedo are Idle. Seminole, 2-3, and Lym an, 3-2,
each had last week off, so they are dying to get at each other.
The Greyhounds need a w in to stay on Apopka's tall In the
conference race. Lake M ary, meanwhile, is looking for its first
victory at its new sports complex. The Ram s are 2 3 w hile
M ainland is 2-4. The most Important game takes place in Apopka
where the 5 0 D arters try to cool off the 41 Patriots. Read the
detailed accounts of F rid a y 's games from sports w riters Sam
Cook (Seminole Lym an), C h ris F iste r (Lake M ary-M ainland)
and Lee Lerner (Apopka-Lake Brantley) in Sunday’s E v e n in g

H e ra ld .

^ J 5 t l YOU CAN E A r V y

/VEGETABLE PLATE''
And SALAD BAR With
ONE 111 SERVING Of MEAT

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SENIOR CITIZEN
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Football Special 3 Months *10
MAIL COUPON &amp; CHECK TO:
EVENING HERALD
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SANFORD, FLA. 32771

Start Your Subscription Today, Call

Evening Herald
322-2611

831-9993

|

�&lt;B—Evonlng Herald, Sonlord, FI,

Thursday, Oct. 10, IM1

Legal Notice

$10 Billion T a x Bill P a sse d
WASHINGTON (UPll — Democrats and
Republicans Joined forces In Ihe Houre Ways
and Means Committee to approve a $10
billion three-year tax package that generally
will not alTect Individuals.
Chairman Dan Rostenkowskl. D-Ill., Wed­
nesday said the package, which falls far short
of the $73 billion tArget set by a congressional
budget resolution, is "not a blockbuster
revenue bill."
"Its sire Is determined more by political
reality than economic necessity," he said.
Rostenkowskl added that the bill will have
"virtually no effect on Individual taxpayers."
The panel's senior Republican. Rep. Barber
Conable o f New York, appeared with
Rostenkowskl at a news conference to
underscore the message of unity,
"W e arc fortunate to have a package that
will have bipartisan support,” Conable said,
noting that most Republicans did not support

the budget resolution that Congress approved
earlier this year and do not feel obliged to
meet Its savings and tax targets.
"Generally speaking, this Is not a revenue
raiser," Conabie said of the package. "What
we have done Is drawn the lines In such a
way that they will not disrupt existing
practices In any major dimensions."
The committee’s bipartisan spirit may be
tarnished later, however, when the Democrat- •
Ic-controlled panel considers an amendment
to raise additional revenue.
Although President Reagan has con­
sistently opposed any Immediate tax In­
creases. the administration does not object to
the revenue package, which addressess a
hodgepodge of tax rules that were due to
expire this year or blatant tax shelter abuses
that needed to be corrected.
It Includes changes In the tax treatment of
life Insurance companies, rules preserving

EPA Gives Preliminary OK
For At-Sea Waste Burning
dioxin, considered the most toxic chemi­
cal made.
Alan Rubin, chief of the EPA's water
quality criterion section, said public
hearings on the permits are scheduled
for Nov. 21 In Brownsville, Texas, and
Nov. 22 and Nov. 23 In Mobile. Ala.

The action, over protests of environ­
mental groups and many Gulf Coast
residents, means the EPA has decided to
grant long-term permits for Incineration
ships although It has yet to adopt broad
regulations for ocean Incineration of
chemlcal-Iadrn wastes.

The ocean incineration permits have
been at the center of controversy since at
least last February when United Pres3
International reported that Assistant
EPA Administrator Frederick Eldsness
reversed his stafT and ordered speedy
p r o c e s s i n g o f a p e r m i t f or the
VULCANUS while a key aide was
vacationing.
Eldsness acknowledged he had met
days earlier with James Sanderson, an
attorney for Chemical Waste Manage­
ment who previously served as a close
aide to EPA Administrator Anne Burford
Following the disclosure, the EPA de­
layed final action on any permits until
public hearings were held and proposed
monitoring safeguards to ensure against
aouses.

The ships will bum a wide range of
waste mixtures. Including cancercausing polychlorinated biphenyls, or
PCBs. and up to 2 parts per million of

C a r t e r B r ie f in g B o o k C a s e
WASHINGTON IUPI) - The
FBI Is nearing an end to its
Investigation Into how Carter
White House materials reached
Ronald Reagan's 1980 campaign,
but Rep. Donald Albosta says
new leads have delayed his
House panel's hearings into the
controversy.
Federal law e n f o r c e m e n t
sources said Wednesday the FBI
hopes to complete Its Investiga­
tion In the next few weeks and
that Its findings are unlikely to
support criminal prosecutions of
any ranking administration of­
ficials.
The sources also said it appears
doubtful that the bureau will
seek to administer polygraph
tests to top administration of­
ficials. such as CIA Director
William Casey and White House

chief of stafT James Baker, to
resolve discrepancies as to who
first received President Carter’s
debate briefing book.
Baker has said publicly he
recalled Casey gave him the
Carter debate book, but Casey
denied doing so.
Albosta. D-MIch.. had originally
told reporters he hoped his Post
Office and Civil Service sub­
committee's parallel Investiga­
tion vould progress to the point
where he could convene two days
of public hearings by the end of
October.
Since he made that statement a
month ago, It was disclosed that
a Republican congressional of­
ficial alleged that Paul Corbin, a
political consultant with Demo­
cratic ties, told him last spring he
passed Carter's 1980 debate

The House committee also agreed to about
$2 billion worth of Medicare savings, exceed­
ing the target set by Congress. But about half
the savings are contained In a controversial
a m e n d m e n t af f e c t i n g d o c t o r ' s r e i m ­
bursement for their clcdcrly hospital patients'
bills that will be subject to a separate vote on
the House floor.
The entire tax and Medicare package Is
expected to reach the House floor next week.
The Senate Finance Committee has not
begun work on Its tax packngc.

NASA Anniversary Turns
Into A Political Event

WASHINGTON (UFIJ - Setting the
stage for stormy public hearings, the
Environmental Protection Agency has
given preliminary approval of permits for
« toxic waste dlspustt! company to bum
at sea more than 80 million gallons of
wastes.

Rebeccah Hanmer, acting assistant
EPA administrator for water, announced
that the agency Intends to grant three
permits for Incineration of wastes aboard
the ships VULCANUS I and VULCANUS
II. owned by Chemical Waste Manage­
ment Inc. of Oakbrook, 111.

the tax-exempt status of most employee
fringe benefits, and a five-year extension of
mortgage subsidy bonds. It also limits the
ability of tax-exempt entitles like universities
and city governments to pell their bullalngs
to Investors seeking tax shelters and then
leasing the buildings back from the Investors
foi non.ma! fees.

WASHINGTON (UP1) — President Reagan turned
the 25th anniversary of the space agency Into a
policial forum with suggestions Democratic can­
didate Walter Mondale opposed the spare shuttle
more than 10 years ago.
Reagan toid a group ol National Aeronautics and
Space Agency employees Wednesday that the space
agency "has done so much to galvanize our spirit as
a people, to reassure us or our greatness and of our
potential.”
In a bid to capitalize on a recent surge of Interest
In the space program. Reagan look a swipe at Initial
opponents of the shuttle program, one of which wus
Mondale.
"The shortsighted were unable to understand.”
Reagan told the gathering. "In fact, some Individu­
als who would lead America today led the fight
against the space shuttle system a decade ago."
Administration officials said Reagan wus referring
to an unsuccessful move led by Mondaic, then a
Democratic senator from Minnesota, to delete
$227.9 million In funding for the shuttle project.
Mondale's proposal was defeated 61-21 In May 1972.
At the time. Mcndale argued the program would
soar beyond Its projected costs. He advocated a less
ambitious space program relying on unmanned
satellites and some manned flights.

C o m in g T o A C lo s e

briefing papers to the Reagan
campaign. Timothy Wyngaard.
executive director of the House
Republican Policy Committee,
made the allegation &lt;n an FBI
Interview, sources said.
Casey, responding to the
allegation, told The Washington
Post recently that he Is a friend of
Corbi n' s, and that he had
authorized the Reagnn-Bush
Committee to pay Corbin $2,860
for expenses for routine cam­
paign work In the fall of 1980.
But he denied receiving Carter
material from Corbin or anyone
else.
In a three-paragraph statement
Wednesday. Albosta made no
mention of the Corbin matter or
any other specifics of the panel's
Investigation.

Uut he said, "N ew leads have
been discovered In the Iasi few
weeks that require more In­
vestigative work. These lead-*,
which could play a significant
role In resolving some of the
pending Issues, will further re­
quire the stafT to conduct more
Interviews prior to the start of
public hearings.”
Albosta said he still hopes to
begin hearings on the campaign
controversy before Nov. 18. the
target date for Congress to ad­
journ for the year.
The FBI probably will turn
results of Its investigation over to
the Justice Department by late
October or early November for u
decision on whether further ac­
tion is necessary, law enforce­
ment sources said.

Discovery Could Lead To Toxic Shock Vaccine
NEW YORK (UPI) - Sci­
entists using gene-splicing
technology have devel­
oped a blood test to de­
termine susceptibility to
toxic shock syndrome by
Isolating and cloning the
gene believed responsible
for the sometlmes-fatal
condition, a researcher

reported.
the nature of this gene and
Dr. Richard Novlck. may very well lead to a
director o f the Public method of treating and
Health Research Institute, preventing the disease."
said Wednesday the find­ he said.
ing could lead to a vaccine
Last year, health
a g a i n s t t o x i c s h o c k authorities reported 338
syndrome.
cases of toxic shock, eight
"This work gives us a of them fatal. The disease,
handle on understanding which afflicts both men
and w o m e n , c a u s e s
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
and shock.
Novl ck’ s finding was
published In this week’s
edition of Nature, a British
journal.
In their study. Novlck
and his colleagues first
isolated the gene that reg­
ulates the bacterial pro­
duction of the toxin that
causes t oxi c shock,
allowing them to produce
a purified toxin using
genetic engineering
technology.
The purified toxin
makes possible a blood
test for susceptibility.
"One takes a sample of
b l o o d , an d ad ds the
purified toxin," he said. "If
antibodies are present,
there Is a precipitate and it
settles to the bottom. If no
antibodies are present,
there Is no precipitate and
that person is suscepti­
ble.”
Antibodies Indicate a
person is capable of fight­
ing off the disease.
The still-experimental
test has been successfully
tried on 1,000 people in
Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Novlck said.
" I would say In six
months we will have a
sufficient quantity o f toxin
to test about 10,000 peo­
ple In a controlled study."
he said, depending on
requirements by the Food
and Drug Administration.
One in every 1,000 peo­
ple Is susceptible to the
disease and authorities
arid about one In 100,000

3L
Baoerta associated with
t h e d l s e a s e .

staphylococcus aureus,
are commonly found In
men and women.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
FkttttousNem*
Nolle* it hereby given the! I am
engaged in business ol 407 W 33th
SI.. Sonlortl. Fla 32771. Semlnol#
County, Florida uwS«r tiro ftctiltous
name of HAIR HOW. wtd (hit I
Intond to register M id rum* with th#
Clark of ttw Circuit Court. Semlnol*
County, Florid* In accordance with
tha provisions of ttw Fictitious N*m#
S lilu iof, to Wit: Sodlon M i 04
Florid* St*tvt*i 1417.
/!/Merit B.RetM
Publish September 74 A October 4,
13.X. IM3.
0EL-1M
Fictitious N*m«
Notice l&gt; hereby given that I am
enganed In business at 1014 Suite*
R d . Winter Park 37747. Semlnol*
County, Florida under the tlctlllout
nam e of HOME E X CH AN G E
SERVICE, and that I Intend to
reg liter laid name with the Clerk of
the Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the pro
visions of the Flctifloui Nam* Slat
ulei. loWII Section MS Of Florida
Statute* 1437.
!%! Edith Entwtslto
Publish September I t 1 October 4.
13. X , IMS
DEL 147
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that we are
*&lt;ig*g*d in butlneu at 40! N. SR.
Hwy. 17-tI, C a tia lb e rry , FL.
Semlnol* County, Florida unler the
Ficlllloul name of APPLIANCE
PARTS OF SEMINOLE, and that we
Intend to regliter laid name with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court, Semlnol*
County, Florida, In accordance with
the provltlont of the Fktlllout Nam*
Statutes, To Wit: Section MS Ot
Florida Statute* 1437
Robert P. Fulton
S#fn D. Ray
Publish October I3. Id. 37. A Nov
ember 3. (Ml
D E M »I
Flet Ittout Name
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged In butlneu at 1034 Sut*a&gt;
R d . Winter Park 37743, Semlnol*
County. Florida under the fictitious
name of THE PHOTOWORKS, and
that I Inland to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit Court.
Samlnoto County, Florida In ac­
cordance with In* provisions of the
Fictitious Name Statute*. toWit;
Section443 Of Florid* Statute* 1437
/*/ Edith Entwtitl*
Publish September It A October A
11.10, IMS
CEL 141

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN AND
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION NO. U 3344 CA«4 0
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, a corporation
organiitd and existing under the
Law* or Tha United S la ltt at
America,
Plaintiff,

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE » Y THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Notice It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at th*
Commission Room In th* Clly Hall In
th* City ol Santord. Florida, at 7:00
o'clock r'M . on ‘ tovember 14, IWJ,
to consular th* adoption ot an
ordinance by th* City ot Sanford,
Florida, as follows:
ORDINANCE NO. 1443
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. TO
ANNEX
WITHIN
THE
COR
PORATE AREA OF THE CITY OF
SANFORO,
FLORIDA.
UPON
ADOPTION OF SAID ORDINANCE.
A PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN
PROPERTY LYING SOUTH OF
AND ABUTTING COUINS 0RIVE
AND BETWEEN U S. 17 n (SR IS A
4001 AND PARK VIEW DRIVE
EXTENDED SOUTHERLY: SAID
PROPERTY BEING SITUATED IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA,
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
VOLUNTARY
ANNEXATION
PROVISIONS OF SECTION I I I .044,
FLORIDA STATUTES; PROVED
ING FOR SEVERABILITY, CON
FLICTSAND EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS, fliers tuts beer tiled
with th* City Clerk of th* City ot
Senlord, Florida, petition* contain­
ing th* name* ol the property owners
In tha area described hereinafter
requeuing annexation to th* cor­
poral* araa ol th* City ol Sanford.
Florida, and requesting to be in­
cluded therein; and
WHEREAS.
the
Property
Appraiser ot Semlnol* County.
Florida, having certified that than It
on* owner In tha arse to be annexed,
and that said property owner hat
signed th* Petition for Annexation;
end
WHEREAS. It hat bean da
termlned that tha property described
hereinafter Is reasonably compact
and contiguous to th* corporate
areas ol th* City ot Santord, F lor Ida,
and it has further bean determined
that th* annexation ol said property
will not result In th* creation ot an
enclave; and
WHEREAS, th# City ol Sanford.
Florida, ii In a position to provide
municipal services to th* property
described herein, and Its* City
Commission of th* City of Santord.
Florida, deems II In Ihe best Interest
ol Its* City to accept u id petition and
to annas said property.
NOV/. THEREFORE, BE IT
ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF
THE
CITY
OF
SANFORD.
FLORIDA:
SECTION 1; That th* property
described below situated In Semlnol*
County. Florida, be and th* sans* It
hereby annexed to and mad* a part
of Its* City ot Sanford. Florida,
pursuant to th* voluntary annexation
provisions of Section 171.044, Florid*
Statutes:
Begin at th* northwest corisar of
Lot
1.
Block F.
SUNLAND
ESTATES, * t recorded In Piet Book
It. peg* M. Public Records ot
Semlnol* County. Florida; thane*
run South o r 14' 33" West through
the Southwest comer ol Mid Lot 1.
MS S4 tael; thence run West ft 74
feet; thence run North 4T S7' IS"
West 311.4 fact; thane# run North 30*
I r I T ’ East 37) 43 teat to a point on
th* arc of a curve lying concave
Northeasterly having a radius of
i f f -3 feet, also being ttw Southerly
righlofway line ol Collins Drive;
thence run Southeasterly along th*
arc ol M id curve a distant* ol 110 n
feet to tho point ol beginning, being a
part of Block G ol M id SUNLAND
ESTATES.
SECTION 3. That upon this Ordl
nanca becoming tifacllv* th# pro
party owners and any resident on th*
property described herein shall be
entitled to ell the rights and privi­
leges and Immunities a* are from
time to time granted to residents and
property owners of ttw City of
Santord. Florida, and as are further
provldadln Chapter 171, Florida
Statutes, end shell further be sub|*ct
lo the responsibilities ot residence or
ownership as may from time to time
be determined by it* governing
authority ot th* City of Sanford.
Florida, and th* provisions of M td
Chapter 171. F torIda Statutes
SECTION 1- It any taction or
portion ol a section ot this ordinance
proves to be Invalid, unlawful or
unconstitutional, It shall not be held
lo Invalidate or Impair th* validity,
fore* or effect ol any other section or
pert ot this ordinance.
SECTION *: That all ordinances or
parts of ordinances in coniiict
herewith, be and th* M m * are
hereby repealed
SECTION S: Thai this ordinance
shall become effective Immediately
upon Its pastag* and adoption
A copy shall ba available at th*
Office ol th* City Clark tor all
parsons desiring lo examine th*
M m *.

All parties In Interest and cllliant
shall have an opportunity to be heard
at M id hearing.

By order ot ttw Clly Commission of
ttw City ot Santord. Florida
Ro m M Rot undo
Deputy City Clark
Publish October IX N. 37 A Nov
ember 3. ItU
OEM to

vv

RALPH E. JENSEN and JOLLY K.
JENSEN, (formerly husband and
w ife ) and C IT Y CONSUMER
SERVICESOF FLORIDA, INC.,
Defendants.
NOTICEOFSALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
pursuant lo Final Judgment of
Foreclosure rendered on the tlth dey
of October. INS. in that certain causa
pending In th* Circuit Court In and
for Stmlnolo County, Florida,
w h a r a ln F IR S T F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA
TION OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, a
corporation organliad arid aelttlng
under th* Lew* of Th* United Sletes
of America. Is Plelnlllf. and RALPH
E. J E N S E N and J O L L Y X.
JENSEN, (lormarly husband and
w ife ) and C IT Y CONSUMER
SERVICES OF FLORIDA. INC *r*
D efendants, C ivil Acllpn No
1) 7344 CA 04G, I. ARTHUR H.
BECKWITH. JR.. Clark of tha
aforesaid Circuit Courl, will at 11:00
a m , on th* 7th day ol November,
ItU. offer lor tale and sell to th*
htghesl bidder tor cash *1 the West
front door ol th* Courthouse In
Semlnol* County, Florida. In San
lord. Florida, th* following described
property, situated and being In
Semlnol* County, Florida, to-wlt:
Lot It. SHADOW LAKE WOODS,
according to the p'at thereof at
recorded In Plal Book n , Pag* IS. of
th* Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida.
Said sal* will be mad* pursuant to
and In order to satisfy th* terms of
said Final Judgment.
ISEALI
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
CLERK
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
By. Susan E Tefaor
Deputy Clerk
Phillip H. Logan of
S H IN H O L S E R , L O G A N .
MOHCRIEF
AND BARKS
PottOUtc* Boa 7374
Sanford, Florida 11771
A ttarney t lor Plamtltl
&lt;30411311440
Publish October 11, M. 17 A Nov
ember I. IMS
OEM II

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Humber 13-443 C P.
IN RE: ESTATE OF
GERTRUDE Z.HINDSON.
Dicta ltd
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
Th* edmlnlttretlen of the eitat* of
GERTRUDE Z HINDSON. da
ceased. File No U 441C P.. Is pend
Ing In ttw Circuit Court for Semlnol*
County. Florida. Probata Division,
th* address ot which Is Semlnol*
County. Florida 11771. Th* names
and addresses of th* personal repre­
sentative and th* personal rapre
tentative’* attorney are sat forth
below.
All Interastad parsons art required
lo (II# with this court. WITHIN
THREE MONTHS OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE:
(1) all claims against ttw estato and
(1) any objection by an Interested
person lo whom this notice was
mailed that challenges ttw validity ol
ttw wilt, ttw qualifications of ttw
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction of the court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJECTIONS
NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREV­
ER BARRED.
Publication ol this Nolle*,has
begun on October 30th, ttU
Personal Representative:
/*/ Thomas E. Hlndton
411 Monlictllo Drive
Allamonle Springs. FL 33701
Attorney for Personal
Representatives:
/*/ Harvey M Alper
13S East Samovar Bivd
Altamonte Spring*. Florida
Telephone: (105)4440*00
Publish October 30.17, IMS
OEM 131

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1.-00 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY t • Noon

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

RATES

ltime
54c a line
3 consecutive limes 54c a line
7 consecutive times. 44c a line
10 consecutive times 41callne
13.00 Minimum
1 Lines Minimum

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

12—Legal Services
Bankrvpcy 1310. and Chapter II
MtO Free conference. Attorney
M. Price. For Appt, 431 3447.
CURLEY R.DOLTIf
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
101 B W ist Street
Santord Fla, 33771 373 1000

21— Personals
TAXPAYERS RIOHTS
Opposed to "F ox" hunters Pro­
blems? Let me know. P.O. Box
443 Lake Mary, Fla. 31747.

23— Lest * Found
Blk. neutered male cat. with whit*
chest and paws Last seen tntarlng Park Ave. Traitor Park.
RewardI 13331743 or 372 434/
Hearing Aid lost around K Mart.
Panlry Pride, or Taylor's Natu
ral Foods. Reward 1377 3474.
LOST
AMAZON PARROT
_______ 333-4144*r tll-SItS_______
LOST Ocl 1st. Famato Siberian
Husky. Blue ayes. Laurel Ave. A
tSthArea. REWARD3131114

25—Special Notices
FREELANCE WRITER
EARN BIG MONEY FAST AND
EASYWRITING ARTICLES
AND SHORT STORIES FROM
YOUR OWN HOME.
CALL! 314 4434000.
INCLUDING EVENINGS
AND WEEKENDS.
__________ EXT,44711,__________
H4lr RtpUcematrt and Wig*- For
chemotherapy and radiation
patient*. Men Women Children.
Free consultation In your horn*
or our shop. Fully llcansad.
Pitas* call tor an appointment
____________444-4733.____________
New Office now opening.
VORWERK
__________ 1130W. 1st St__________
Spaghetti Supper. Congregational
Church. 3401 Park, Santord.
Complete Meal. Donation U 00
Sat. Oct. I t l to 7 P.M.
that witnessed a
m a t a r c y c l* a c c id e n t an
Ridge weed Ave. (In treat el ttw
High Sdwtll, ttw meriting *f Oct.
Uth, Mease call J33 7T17, Mrs.
Davit.

27— Nursery A
Child Cart
BABYSITTINO to my horn* Ex
per lanced mother, tree meets.
Ref given. 333 4343____________
Inlanti to Preschool
Mon. thru Frl. In my home.
Home Environment, 1314141

33— Real Estate
Courses
BOB BALL JR. SCHOOL OF
REAL ESTATE.
LOCAL REBATES 3314111.
MASTE R CHARGE OR VISA

45— Arts A Crafts
A Ullto 'Him*week 'Witching
th* Went Ads Can Bring
'Tap Ored*’ Basalts.

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CIVIL ACTION NO.
411447CA44-E
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, a corporation
organliad and existing unitor ttw
Laws of Tha United Slates ot
America.
Plaintiff,

vs

ROY A. JEFFRIES, at *1,
Defendants
NOTICE OF 1AL1
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thal
pursuant to Final Judgment &gt;1
Foreclosure rendered on th# 11th day
of October. !4t3, In that certain causa
pending In th* Circuit Court in and
l* r Semlnol* County. Florida,
w h e r e in F IR S T F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA­
TION OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, a
corporation organliad and existing
under ttw Laws of ttw United Stales
of America, It Plaintiff, and ROY A.
JEFFRIES. SOUTHEAST FIRST
NATIONAL BANK OF MAITLAND.
CENTRAL FLORIDA PRODUC­
TION C RED IT ASSOCIATION.
BARNETT BANK OF CENTRAL
F L O R ID A . N .A ., W. A T L E E
BURPEE C O M PAN Y and V-J
GROWERS SUPPLY ar* Dolan
d a n t i. C iv il A c tio n N t.
I1 1 I4 7 C A *4 E , 1, ARTHUR H.
BECKWITH, JR., Clark of th*
aloretald Clrcull Court, wilt at 11:00
a m., on ttw 7th day of November,
14B3, offer for 4*1* and sell to the
highest bidder for cash at In* West
front door of th* Courthouse In
Semlnol* County, Florida, In San
lord, Florida, th* Following da
scribed property, situated and being
In Samlnoto County, F torIda. to wit
Lot J, Block E. HENSON'S
ACRES, according to ttw plat ttwraol
as recorded In Plat Book 4, Pag* tt,
of ttw Public Record of Samlnoto
County. Florid*.
Said Ml* will be mad* pursuant to
and In order to utlsty ttw terms of
Mid Final Judgment.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk of ttw Circuit Court
By: Susan E Tabor
Deputy Cwrk
Phillip H. Logan« f
S H IN H O L S E R , L O G A N .
MONCRIEF AND BARKS
Pott Office Box 7374
Sanlord. Florid* 31771
Attorneys tor Plaintiff
1305) 333 3440

Publish: October 11. » , 17 B Nov
ember 1,1443
DEM *

55—Business
Opportunities
T SHIRT Printing Equipment. Like
naw condition with supplies
Training availab le *1,410.
1 443 7033._____________________
a a * • URC-TILE t # * *
Man needed to toara new trad*I
High pretlt margin, 314-3315.

63—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
# CASH FOR MORTGAGES a
Wa buy llrst and ttcond mortgages
on
homos, from Individuals,
builders, broker*, and real estate
companies. W* alto make home
owner loans tor horn* Improv
men! and Mil consolidation. Call
us and tot us make you an offer I
Barbara Crawiord 333 3410
II you collect payments from e flnt
or second mortgage on property
you told, w* will buy the
mortgage you are now holding.
7M 35*4____________

71—Help Wanted

AAA EMPLOYMENT
SAYS
WHEN DOYOUWANT
TOGOTOWORK?
OENERAL OFFICE........S744 Ato.
Light bookkeeping skillsOrgenlr*.
coordinate tor top employer
Busy company
CUSTOMER SERVICE....1434 Me.
Owarlul person needed tor last
growing company. Management
potential Light skills wtntl
MANAGEMENT---------------- III
Top notch spot tor right coup!*.
Apartment or Mott I experience
needed Maintenance end office,
salary plus house

323-5176
MATERIAL HANDLER....1344 Mo.
Will tr4ln tor supply company.
Raises and berwlltt. Needs now I
R O U T E M A N ............... ..... 14*1 M*.

Wall established company needs
you to train.tor home Service
'‘ i'" * ■ " * '* - • v i

i

W A R E H O U S E ................... 1444 M s .'

Will train lo operate machine
Some shipping and receiving
Busy company 1
DISCOUNT FEE IWkt. Salary
1314 FRENCH AVE.
ASSEMBLY WORKERS
Full tlm*. Will train. Start right
away. 424-*044._______________
Aeto Parts/Cawnter Perse*. Expe­
rience prafered. start im
mediately. Good pay A benitit*
Apply In Person
P arts City, *05 W.TSIh
Babysitting and light nouveUerp
Ing. Part time, references. pay
negotiable. Call alter 4 133 3414
Bi lingual Secretary, Spanish,
English. Interviews 4 to 3. t i l l
Providence Blve. Deltona
____________ 374 1434____________

CARPENTIRS HELPERS '
Immedletty assignments In San
lord araa.

m

N tv fn a rtt

A b le s t

towperery tervxcx*
Tiwtdxy A WKXvMlf
M l A I M3 X

300 P M F v a S u in ^ ih c Bank Buidngi

4f

le g a l Notice____
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 1434 Robert
St.. Longnood, FL 3373C, Samlnoto
County, Florida under ttw llctlttous
name ol THINK CLEANOFFICE
JANITORIAL SERVICE, and thal I
Intond to rtglttor said name with th*
Clark of ttw Circuit Courl, Samlnoto
County, Florida In accordance with
ttw provisions ot th* Fictitious Nam*
Statutes, to Wit: Section u s oi
Florida Statutes 14S7.
/*/K.C Daubresta
Publish October 4.13. X . 77.1443
OEM S3
INVITATION TO BID
Sealed bid* will be recalved In ttw
City Manager's office. City Halt,
Santord, Florida tor:
On* (1) J Wheeled Police Parking
Control Vahkto
C*
Detailed speclllcallons art avail
abto In ttw City Manager'* off lew.
City HalL Sanlord. Florida.
Tha tested bids will be received In
ttw City Manager's office. Room 303.
City Hall, Santord, Florida not later
than 1:30 PM. Wednesday, Nov
ember 4, 14*3 Th* bids will be
publicly opened later that same date
at 3 PM In th* City Commission
Chambers. Room 117, City Hall,
Santord, Florida.
Th* City of Santord reserves ttw
right to accept or reject any and all
bids In th* bast interest of ttw City,
/tJ Steven D Harriott
Acting City Meneger
CITY OF SANFORO
Publish Oclotoer » . tit)
DEM 134
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged in business at P.O, Box 401.
33)7 Semlnol* Ava , Goldanrod.
Samlnoto County, Florida under ttw
ftctlttous nam* of AFTER 3 GUIDE
TO CENTRAL FLORIDA, and that I
Inland to rag liter Mid ham* with ttw
Clark of ttw Clrcull Courl. Samlnoto
County, Florid# In accordance with
ttw provisions of ttw f-k ill tout Nam*
Statutes, to Wit: Section |4t 04
Florid* Statutes 1417
/i/ Robert S Ballet
Publish October IX W, 17 A Nov
amber J. 1413
DEM 74

I

�AVON CHRISTMAS WOWII
START SELLINONOWII
in - a a it e r n iiu i
Avon Ladlat. Full. parl-TIma ovir
II Sanford. Washington Oak*
Midway 1 Geneva, B u m
CONVENIENCE Ster* C**hl#r».
Good Mltry. hotp'talliatlon I
weak paid vacation ovary a
monthi , Application* available
at M3 H. Laura! A w Santoro
COOK/IALAO
Now head cook looking lor
braat-tail cook/»alad parson
F/T. E*p only. FlnS dining.
Apply In parton M F, t to S P M
Dallona Inn._______
Dental Aulitanti Full anp part
lima. Eiparlanca required
Expanded Duty Cartltlcata nac
aaaacy. Sonlord oftka. MMtlS.
DISHWASHER
Matura. Apply In parton M F, ( to 1
P.M. Deltona Inn._____________
Earn Eatra Money. Part/Tlma
Full/TIm e. Prep aid Legal
Service*. Call Dan. 47*24*7
ELECTRICIANS Itnmadlatt help
needed. Good pay. Commercial
and Retldentlal.tW awa._______
Experienced journeyman plumb
log mechanic*, plumbing help
or*, air conditioning mechanic*.
New conduction A tervlce.
2 M - * S * 2 . _________________
Flbtrglati /Aold maker. Exparlenced In ipray and layup Good
opportunity lor right parson.
n m
a i . ____________
Food Concetiloni Manager* and
worker*. Mature, experienced
preferred. Apply Fttfworld.
Hwy. 17-97, Thurt., Frl., Sat., 91
P M m im .
Front Detk Clerk wilting to work 1
to It thlft and tom* weekend*
Apply In perton. Holiday Inn of
Sanlard on the lake Iron!._______
GASATTENDANT
Good (alary, hotplialliatlon. I
week paid vacation every a
month*. For Information Call
U&gt; 7*47 between I j P M
Hair Stytlit wanted In Sanford.
Full or part time Experienced
necattary. Call Linda at
Headliner*.Ml IASI,
Maintenance Worker Immediate
Opening. Full time 131 nio.
_________ Cor-lop* Cove._________
Man capable ol d-lng Auto body
work. Minimum experience re­
quired. Good pay lor right
person 131 4071, /_____________
Model* Wanted. II year* to 10
year* old. tern*l* or male For
haircut* and coloring. Call Linda
at Headliner*. Ml SIS!.

71-H elp Wanted

1, J, J It. Hits. 2 BE. T il
From ‘ * 8 0

ISOS W. 25tb It.

73— Employment
Wanted

NURSES AIDS. Experience pro
lered. Apply Lakevlew Hurting
Center
010 E. hut Street.

Exc. Sec. lor evenlng/weekynd
'work. Cell 372*7*4 after * P.M.
or weekend*

OFFICE HELP

Full time. No experience noco*
lory. Call Alt 4091_____________

93— Rooms for Rent

PACKERS. Immediate (tart lor 1*t
end Jnd ihltt. Heavy tilling
Involved Altamonte area. Able*!
Temporary Settle* a|.)?aa,
PHONE SOLICITERS
Expanding again. Hava opening*
on night thlft. Hourly wege plu*
bonu*. Experience helpful, but
wt do train. Call H i m* ___
Phytclan't ofllee. Medical sacra*»ry, to do tranurlptlon and
Inturence. Send retume to P.O.
Box aoao, Sanford, Fla. S7777
acao__________________________
PROCESS MAIL AT HOME! SIS 00
per hundradl No txperlance.
Part or lull lime. Slert Immedi­
a te ly . D e ta il*, tend t e ll
eddretted damped envelope to
C.R.I.200.PO. Box as.
Stuart. FI. 2)491._________________
R.N Full lime potlllon available
wllh Medicare. Approved home
heeltti agency Day hour* only.
Good fringe benlllt* Seminole
County area. For Interview call
________ 11I W00 E O E.________
RECEPTIONIST POSITION Immedlata opening*. Good darling
pay. Call *79-4094
SUPERVISOR lor tewing dt
partment In new garment lecto
ry. Muil hava axperlanc* In
tailing, con* Irue IIon of garmtnti
and be quality con;lout Salary
commanuirala with • &gt;p » , •
San Del Manulacturlng, tU 0 Old
Lake Mary Rond, HI-HIP.
TRUCK DRIVERS
Local or long haul. Immediate
potlllon* Cal 1*1* 40*4
T rutto Manulacturlng Corp new
hiring production tawyer*. Mud
hava axparlanca with powtr
lumbar cutting oqulpmant.
Excellent benefit* package.
Contact Chuck Let 111 Hkl
Wanted exp. Dental Ault. Tempo
rary lull llm t potlllon Cell
Ml IQIOTu. thru F. ftp 5 P M
Warehouit and Stock Wc.kart
wonted Good urtlng pay. No
E«p. necattary, *11 ao*4________
WELDERS
Full lime work Good wage*. Immedial* opening* 479 4041
WORK ATHOME
Wanted etperlencad teitphon* to
Ikllor*. Top pay. Cell evening*

173 not

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
• Adult A Family
Section*
• W/D Connection*
• Cable TV, Pool
• Short Term L e a ie i
Avolloble

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

71—Help Wanted

' SHENANDOAH 3
VILLAGE ^
I

l i k l i e Ovetai »*« J S

Z
b

*310“

flew

Camlorteb'e tleeplng room with
k!tch*n-«e Prlveie entrenc*.
US a week. Include* utilities eno
meld tervlce. Call Hld(47 or
m n*t.
SANFORD Furnlthed roumt by the
week. Reetoneble rate*. Maid
urvlce catering lo working peo
pie. 321-4107. SOP Pelmetta A ve
SANFORD, Ree*. weekly A Mon
thly rate*. Util Inc. eft. S01 Oak
Adult* 1141 71*1

WS PAPER FINI5HEP
V2URJTCRY. PIKE!
W AN T 70 KNOW

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
Apt. for rant lor elderly couple t
Bdrm., central A/H. Call be
tween IA M. lo * P.M. 2H 1712
BAMBOO COVE APTS
100 E. Airport Blvd Ph 171*410
Efficiency, from 1711 Mo. 1 %
dltcount tor Senior Cltlient
LUXURY APARTMENTS
Family A Adult* tectlon. Poolddt.
1 Bdrm*. Matter Cove Aptt
171 7*00
______ Open on weekends.________
Mariner * Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm Irom 1771. 2 bdrm Irom
1171. Located 17 *7 |ut! touth of
Airport Blvd. In Santord All
Adullt.m M TP_______________
* MeHenvillt Trace Aptt. e
Unfurnished 2 bdrm, Spacious Apt.
Walk To Lake Front No Pet*.
UTS. Ph 1711*01._______________
NEW 1 1 1 Bedroom*. Adjacent to
Ltk* Monro*. Health Club.
Racquetball and Morel
Santord Lending S R . 4*3114110
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
UPO Ridgewood Av*. Ph 111 * 4 »
1.2 A 3 Bdrm*. Irom 1100
1 Bdrm, appliance*, cerporl. *70 a
Wk. Fee P h il* 7700
lev-On-Rontalt Inc. Realtor
I Bdrm. A/C. poof. 17*1 Mo. Fee Ph
11*7700

• FUfttouts
•tuiHOUM

323-2920

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

-A *220 S. M U N b O DRIVE
S
IANFOPO

9 1 M 0 N
In Maylair Area.
1bdrm. H*bath,
clotedpallo

n in e *

'1 0 0 O H Security Deposit
j
with ms coupon
, apartm ents

323-7900
i

o *&gt;

V&lt;

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
Osteen Smell 1 Bdrm. trailer. ISO
a w e e k . L ig h ts A w a te r
lurnlshed CallMl 247*.

117—Commercial
Rentals
Unford Indutlrljl Park
11,000 Sq. Ft. building, I.OOOSq FI.
space , 4 restrooms, 400 AMP
service, toned manufacturing or
warehousing. New Building For
detail*, cell Ml 7110____________
Warehousing tor Lease. 79POO Sq
Ft., dock height, heavy power,
M l toning, (Industrial), Include*
offlcoi. parking, and tancad
railroad site on premltet. Alto.
14,110 Sq, F t. a v a ila b le .
Beautifully lendtcaped. Call
^IM A M latk tor Maxlna.

M l— Homes For Sale
CARDINAL OAKS 1/2 family
room, corner lot, formal dining,
brick. Immaculate *174.*00
OOO*
RAMBLEWOOD ( p family room,
pool, doubt,Vv-rage 11*000
e t e t

RAMBLEWOOD N tw Haling.
1/lt*. Sunken lamtly room, huge
brick llreplac*. dining room, eat
In kitchen, astum* VA loan 1
ttory. U t *00
a a a a

SANFORD 2/lto Family room,
good auumption. excellenl con
dillon. corner let. 110.100 Make
otter.
e aea
SANFORO 2/IV* pool, garaga.
attumptlon, large lot. 14*.*00

BOB M. BALL JR. PA.
REALTOR

304111.

Wo hendlo The
Whoto Ballot Wax

BLUnk Const
322-7029
Financing Avallabl*

A ir Conditioning
&amp; Heating

Health &amp; Beauty
TO W ER'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H arriett'* Beauty

Home Improvement

• OIL HEATER#

CLEANING AND SERVICING
Cell Ralph. 3314713
M X Discount On All Repair*
Far Window Air CPndltioaert

^^^oDayUrvIce^MTMMI^

Automotive
20%On Ml Foreffn Cin
Rtppirv October Only.
Major and Minor Mforl.
277 1131
Bookkeeping
Cemptrtortoed le e kkeoptog
Ne ll do your book* on our com
putor tor a* little a* DO a month.
Receive monthly trail balenc*
end statement* wl*h protlt center
tt desired Other report* avail
•bla
Call Gall 273 07*4

Cteenlng Service
PAR MAID SERVICES
Have you had your horn# cleaned
la t e ly ? C le a n in g w ith tha
paraonal touth. 227-0111 47142H.
H I OH ea Carpet Cleaatog
Living Room A Hall reg 12* *1
lawthren Carpal Car* U * 11*2-

Electrical
K L IC T R IC A L R E PA IR S . Nfl
tervlc e cherg*. reatonable
hourly rate* Free estimate on
new electrical work. Serving
Central Florida tor over 20 year*
VIHLEN ELECTRIC. Ph 21)

COLLIER'S HOME REPAIRS
ca rp a a try, re e lle g , painting.
wtndew repair. 271-4423________

1

COMPLETl CONSTRUCTION

Root Maintenance
Repair work New work
Troy or George lor Free Ett
__________ 201 )*1**40 ________
tlROOFINGU
Hit I'm Art Hubble
I do beautiful work. I do new roolt.
roof leaks. I replace or repair
valley*, root* vent*, tic. I will
save you money I 273 17(2._______

P A R T N E R S . Rooting repair, pamt
ing. remodeling and addition*
Free E tt Call Eve* 7774110a.

Home Repairs

Nursing Care

Austin’* Maintenance Carpentry,
plumbing, painting, masonry,
&gt;prInkier*, remodeling MI17C1

OURRATESARELOWER
Lakevlew Nursing Center
(t t E. Second S t, Sanford
2M-4707

___________ 77m it

_______

Carpentry elterellont. gutter work,
painting, siding, porch**, pellet,
etc. Atk tor Art Hubble
IH * P rlc e * H 2 1 ltH 2 .
Maintenance ol ell type*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
_______ A electric 323 4014_______
No |sb too email Home repair* and
remodeling 25 Year* experience

Cell 771 H4j

Interior Decorating
Custom Draparles/Vartlctl*
A F F O R O A b L E PRICES
S h a ra n 'tC re a lio m ifl 3313

Landclearing
L A N D C L E A R IN G , F IL L DIRT.
C L A Y A SH ALE
__________ 373 1433____________

Landscaping
A A jTa n dtca p In g
Compiato Lawn Maintenance

1310* I

Painting
C E N T R A L FLO R ID A
Home Imprevement

Painting, Carpentry,
Small Repair*
1) Year* Experience. 3131*4*
a . F R E E E S T IM A T E a a

Rhode* Painting All Type*
II Yr* Exp 24 Hr. Phone 313 4*31.
Painting Inter, end Exterior.
Minor home repair* Over 1) yr*
experience Free. Ell. Ph. M2

Plastering/Dry Wall
A L L P h a s e * c l P la s te r in g
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
cote, simulated brkk. 731 !* »]

Rooting
Doe* Your Old Or New Root Leak)
II It doo*. call David Lee

27) 4421

SEMINOLE ROOFINO
RtRoolt.New Roolt.Root Repair*
Fr*e Ettlmalei Ph. Ml u a i

Secretarial Service
Rtsume and Cover Lelter
Preparation General Typing end
Bookkeeping HI 2*17.

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
737 749*
SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
3J31M4
Alt, Hr* 277 4(14. 323 41*1

STEMPER AGENCY IHC.
FIRST TIME OFFER EDI
There't room to spread out In this 4
Br.. 7 B. homo, located on quiet
cut de sac. Majestic oak* give
country lecllng You should sot
this! US.SOO
Pride ol Ownership thowt In thl* 2
Br . 7 8. dollhout*. near high
school and shopping. Raallt
tlcally priced at (11.000
Newly licensed A tiger, lull time
reel estate salesmen needed
REALTOR n ie ts i

321 0759 Eve 322-7643
By Owner Longwood 4 br. 7 bath,
pool with patio, garden area,
fenced yd. tprlnklar system,
storage thed Reduced to 1S2.M0
(30 17*7._________________ ____
BY OWNER Sunlard Etlatet,
newly renovated 1 Bdrm 1 Bath,
house on \ i acre Fenced In lot,
wllh well, In quiet neighborhood
l i f . 500. Negotiable No owner
llnanclng Phone 377 1019._______
Clatilled Ritullt Will Win
Your Vote Every Time I
t t t t m t t u t t t
Geneva. W. on Osceola Rd 1 acre*
hi A dry. Zoned Agr Wallace
Crete Realty Inc. 773 30*7

I

r

a

STENSTROM
REALTY •

REALTORS

Sanford’s Sales Leadet
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINIOLE COUNTY

FAMILY LIVING 4 Bdrm 1 bath
home In Wlnnwood with a ;plit
plan. OR, FR, palio, ntw root
and must peintod. Beat port
tools u i.m .
FIRE SALE IN SANORA. Owner it
detperalal Mutl u ll (Tilt week!
Lovely 3 bdrm, 1 bath, w/lemily
rea m end fe n c e d y a r d l
Tremendous potanliall Submit
all altar* Assumable mertgage!
Asking to(,W0. Make otter.
DREAM HOME IN COUNTRY!
Jut! like new. I ttory. a bdrm, 1
b a th , w / c u t l o m c e d a r
threughoutl Pluth c a rp tll
sparkling pool I 1 peddle lantl
Large shade Iraet and citrus! 7
garaga* and Fla. rm. toot

US.*00

Rtcond Vacuum* 11* *J A Upl
SIRVACASEW

_________

SEWING MACHINE. Zig lag. *11
m etal G uarantied tat. 60.
Seminole Sewing 17 (7 Like
Mary Blvd. Winn Oixla Center

___________ 2M*4I1,_________
VACUUM CLEANER: Electrolux,
n ew , g u a r a n te e d t a t .00
Seminoe Vac! 17(7 and Lake
Mary Blvd. Winn Dial* Center.
377 (411

Swimming Pool Service
SUNSHINE POOL SERVICE
Wilt malnlaln your pool Intop
condition, privet* or commtr
ctal Ph 2M 1242. Sunthln* Pool
Service. I l l Mellonvllt* Ave
Santord FI M77I

Tree Service
JOHN ALLEN LAWN ATREE
Any kind of Tree Service
Wu do moil anything. 2)1 iMO
Save) Credit an Ooor* Weed I
JACKSON TREE SERVICE
__ 10 Yr* Experience771*111___
Trt County Tree Service
Trim, remove, trath hauling ,
firewood, toe* ett i n (4*0

Thurtday&lt; Oct. 30, MM—JD

157-Mobile
Hom es/Sale

217-Garage Sales

G R E G O R Y M O B I L 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
FE A TU R IN G
Palm Beech VIII*
G rtenltaf
Palm Spring*
Palm Manor
Stotta Key

VAFHA Financing

» 5 373 1700

159— Real Estate
Wanted
l o r ) BEDROOM HOUSE
Your PR ICC. MY TERMS
M l 44*1.____________

161—Country
Property / Sale
COUNTRY LIVINO wooded large
lot on private road near St John*
River. M l *4*4014_____________

1B1—Appliances
/ Furniture
APPLIANCES. REPOSSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged
From t ( ( Up Guaranteed
Nearly New. 717 E. 1*1St. M2 7430.
Cash lor good used furniture
Larry'* New A Used Furnlfur#
Mart, 711 Sanford Ave 2M «1M
Kenmore pert*, tervlce.
used wethers. M ) M(7
MOOHFY APPLIANCES
Sleeper sofa with matching love
•eal, neutral color, *• CondiHen (M l Ph Ml 4(7*__________
WILSONMAIER FURNITURE
211-111E. FIRST ST.
____________ 1M1471____________

183—Television/
Radio/Stereo

SUPER 2 Bdrm. 1 bath home In a
nice area I Great starter homtl
CHA, WWC. new root on a treed
shaded lot *44,900

COUNTRY LIVING 1 Bdrm., t&gt;i
bath home In Osteen on a t acre
treed corner lot. CHA, patio.
Horses welcome, many extra*.
*53,(00.
FANTASTIC 3 Bdrm.. 3 bath home
In Immaculate condition. Nawly
palnled and dtcoraltd. CHA,
WWC. OR. paddle tan*, tonetd
yard and more. U M N .
JUST FOR YOU 4 Bdrm. 1 bath
home with large lemlly room.
Brttklatl bar, spill plan, paddle
Ians, tonetd rear yard and Isis
more. tl(,30(.

Good Uted Tttovltlon* (71 And Up.
M ILLER S
K to O rla n d o D r
227 0217

TELEVISION - ZENITH 21" Color
TV tit Walnut Console Original
Price, over (700. Balance due
17(5 Cash or taka up payment*
of (20 00 month No Money down
Still In warranty. Free Horn#
TrUI- no obligation. 1*7 12(4.

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
CYPRESS MULCH FOR SALE
BAD Sawmill
____ Pori ol Santord 727 *791

FILL DI RTATOP SOIL
. YELLOW SAND
Clark A Hlrl M2 lltD, M3 7(33

PRESTIGIOUS MAYFAIR Extcu
lira Section! Walk to Laka
Monro* from this comfortable
home with it's own private In
door |vngl*l 11" x I I " screened
rear palial Custom built Jacutti
olf Matter Bdrml * paddle lantl
Kitchen equipped I Many custom
features throughout! 11*1,(04.

JUST LISTED. 3 Bdrm. 1 bath
home on a lovely Ut. with CHA.
WWC, split plan, equipped with
mlcrowavo, paddle Ians and
tonetd yard. U1.U4.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
3543 S. Park

322-2420
U N D E R Itaoo DOWN

3 Bdrm Doll House Affordable
monthly payments Call owner
broker salesman 231-1*11.

W E N E E D LISTIN G S

323-5774
7*0* HWY 17(7________

keues

-t.no* nr F e * r w

FOR ALL VOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

Long wood Park. Desirable
residential lot lot sale
*4000 l i t 2142
Residential Building Lot 71X177.
Seminole County. (7.100.
____________ M77MI____________
ST JOHNS River Itoacroparctls.
with river access Only a left.
Starting ( l ( , (00 . Public water. »
min. to Altamonte Mall. \1X 30
yr* llnanclng, no qualifying
Broker *7* 4*13

323-3200
149 W Lake Mary Blvd
Suit* B
Laka Mary. Fie M744
DRIFTWOOO VILLAGE

l\KAL KSTATF
I!

REALTOR
2523 S. F R E N C H A V E .
MINT CONDITION: Beauty and
quality abound in this 3 bedroom,
2 both Iwmo. Wood A boom
codings, query tile A hardwood
Hoars, ttropiaco' largo, lovely
tot. IH JN .
GREENBRIAR: Lively well keptl
bedroom. 2 bath home near Coll
Count Poet, screened pall*.
ItS.tW
HIDDEN LAKE: 2 bedroom, I
bath, CB Stucco with wood trim,
Bright, cheery tal in kllcbon.
Covered palio, tonetd back yard,
u t.m .

321-0041
Markham Woods Rd Revonibrgok
4 Bdrm , I B By owner with
OWIwr llnanclng Mi l III_______

i : i M

i

REALTY •

REALTORS

1 ACR E T RA CT S O E N E V A
AREA. East ol Santord. Soma an
hard surface road. 7»\ dawn.
Claslng In )s day*. I I Year
mortgage, at 11% Intorttl. Call
tor detail* and Inspection.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
71*1 S. Park

322-2420
a 1 Acre*

Lake Sylvan A rt*

(43 100 W Mallcrowtk! Realtor
JM 7W1

157—Mobile
Homes / Sale
No* Homo* starling at (t ( * l Easy
credit end tow down unctoRey*.
Leesburg US. 441 04 717 0334
RESALES (Family Park)
•IXaO Nice! (11.(00
24X17 Spactousl 111.100
G R E G O R Y MOBILE HOMES INC
201 M l 1700

Paying CASH tor Aluminum, Cans,
Copper. B ra it. Lead. Hex spa
per. GUIS, Gold Silver

Kokomo Tool. (l* W 1st
* 4 : » t e t (IM 3 H U 0
(u u s m t m m s
Plant# Want Ad
And Harvest OeUers I
WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE A A P P L IA N C E S
223 7340

;

221 Good Tfvngs
to Eat
-

Get the "Cream Of m* Q ? r
The Season* Batl Buy* In
In the Want Adi I

223—Miscellaneous
Desk* conference table*, chair*,
divider*, credent at. bookcases,
coil** &gt;*b&lt;r*. touches, Iloor
mate*, ha! rack*, etc aao W.
Hwy 4)4 behind Kershaw mower.
__________ * 4 1 1911
14
For Sale Box spring* A m*hr*tt
lor lull tit* bed Good condition
Ml HI 7._______________ ___
Hunt Hera I There s ’Ito Limit' on
the Bargin'! You'll 'Bag' It's
Easy to PUc* a WANT AD
PHONE 373 3411.______________ 1
NEW JUNGLE BOOTS(tl.WPr.
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
llOSanlord A w __________ M217(1
Relrlg/Freeior. 37 Cubic Foot.
Whit* (71 Maylln# Drafting
table and Hand MS 373 7*12 _____;
SEWING MACHI NE. SINGER
FUTURA. Ilk* now. on* ol
Singer’s Top Model* All Stitches
built In Sold new over 1700 Must
sacrifice lor 53*4 (0 or Assume
SIS Monthly payment* Will lake
trad* a* pari payment Free
home Trial Call (47 11(4
__________ Payor Nlta.__________
SHOE SALEI Famous brand, lac
lory rtlurn*. Mo»tly Man'*.
Hamrick Shoe Store, beside Fire
Oepl ■17 (7. OeBery___________
Upright piano. (121 Phorwiltter.
telephone answering machine

150H. 459C__________________

231—Cars

Exper Hoot Trimming. Alto, took
Ing for a house with aceraga in
country tor lease. M3 (304
IRIE STABLES 145 5739
fell A Board Horia*
English A Wetltrn Let sent,

BedCredllT
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
Nu Credit Check EatyTermi
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 5 Santord Ave
Ml 4071
Debary Auto A Marine Sale*
aero** the river top ol hill 174

203—Livestock/Poultry
Michigan premium. Altai*.
M.sa/bale or by toad. &gt;7&gt; 3«94

207—Swap Corner
Hat Fall Housacitaning
Turned Up Surplus Things
Want Ad Will Turn To Cash?

209—Wearing Apparel
YOURS II *7*1514
Costum* Rantal. Ladlat Reset*
3397 Atom* Ave Winter Park.

211—Antiques/
Collectables

Auction Sale
Thursday N ile 7 P M
W* have changed our night for one
sale only, due to the Zoo Auction
In Orlando
Desk, beds, TV's, ilereot. lounge A
easy chairs, goll club*, large bird
cage, fancy basket*. A all kind*
ot mlsc. Something lor everyone.
SEE YOU THURSDAY NIGHTI

CASH DOOR FRIZES
Dells's Auction
7120 W. Hwy. *4
____________ M2 3429____________
FOR ESTATE. CommarcUl or
Residantlal Auction* A Apprait
a Is Call Dell'* Auction M ) U K
FOR ESTATE or COMMERCIAL
AUCTIONS Call A t AUCTION
SERVICE M2 4190

215— Boats/Accessories
73 Chrysler Outboard Motor. 120
HP wllh power lilt and control*
U5d 227 *411

STENSTROM

Baby Bedt. Strahir*. Cariaat*.
Pl aypen*, E l*. Paperbacb
Beekt 331 *177 772 (5*4

201—Horses

213—Auctions

321*5005

219—Wanted to Buy

Dtorhound mixed Only 71 Cute,
shot*. A wormed * wk*. old (35
negotiable 377 1014____________

Fumllura and repair, stripping and
rtllnlshlng. staining antique* a
speciality. Ml 0*(7.

■‘ATTENTION BUYERS." Super 4
bdrm with largo family room.
Enclosed patio in great location.
VYta't Ust tcr.g at satUbie price
ot UO.000. Cali today.

aFamtlty yardieto
Very Reasonable Sal.-Sun
H o 4 P A9- tl* Rd**H* Dr
4*7 RoMlfo Dr. Small to large
Ham*, very nice Some tool* A
clothe* Good gilt giving

Used Old* Trombone
Good condition
(100 Cell MlallO Atk tor Cindy
We buy furniture, antique* or
accept comlgnmenlt tpr Auction
Fla Trader Auction 2JMIK

199—Pets &amp; Supplies

HORSE HAY
SOUTHERN CHARM. Largt 1
ttory, a bdrm. I ' i bath home.
W/covnfry kitchen! Family
room) Brick llreplac* In metier
bdrm I Formal dining roam I
Commercial toningl Extemivety
remodeled I *41,000.

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
___________ m -m t

CALL BART

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

ALL YOU 74EED IS US
M2fl7f7
Crockett A Water* Lawn Service
KINO A SONS LAWN SERVICE
Early Fall Clean Up. U* Special
Far Any Average Yard. &gt;417*34.
L A M Lawn Car* Service
Mow. edge. trim, and haul. Contact
Lae or Mark Ml 134for 133 9141
W AD LAWN SERVICE
AAowIng. edging.lerllllilng.
Freee*tlmetea.Ph2MP7a».

BEAL Concrete l man quality
operation Patle*. driveway*
Day*13t-71uEve*.M7-IMI.
SWIFT CONCRETE Footer*,
driveway*, pad*. Iloor*. pooti.
Chatt. Stone Free E»l/ 3M 7103

No |Ob to small. Minor A ma|or
repair* Llcentad A bonded.

S E M IN O L E WOODS t arm*, k u k
and d ry . b eautifully wooded
corner, unbelievable tlt.SOO

FHAVA SPECIAL. Comfortable
and affordable 1 bdrm. It* bath
home, w/lergt lanced yard and
screened porch I Good location!
Call ui quick I *41,100.

Rooting

Masonry

LE ASE O P T IO N , 4/t. nice
neighborhood 144.MO

COUNTRY LIVING, at its bait In
townl 1 larea bdrmtl Sparkling
pool! 17 trull treeil on opprox t*
ocra corner loti Coder and citrus
threughoutl Very privolt and
tonetd I Only 113.100.

Lawn Service

A Little 'Homework 'Watching
tha Want Ad, Can Bring

Lie. Real Eitata Broker
7*40 Santord Av*.

HIDDEN LAKE ESTATES. At
tractive 3 bdrm. I bath home,
d b l/ c a r g a r a g e , k itc h e n
eqpt..C/H/A, fenced yerd
w/prlvacy hedge! Sprinkler
tyiteml Community pool, (tub
house end Itnnltl Low % assume
morlgagol 1*1.100.

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

RimoMlnt Specialist

141—Homes For Sale

THE MERCANTILE BUILOING
BOB M BALL JR PA.
REALTOR 11)1111

To List Your Business...

Quality Electrical Service
Tent, Ilm en , security life*, add I
Hon*, new services, Imured.
Matter Electrician Jam** Paul.
373 711*
’

Altar Hours 114 Mil
M l-4711 or Ml 3*07

10 ~

127—Office Rentals

A N D LET AN EXPERT DO TH E JOB

Electrical

323-3145

BATEM AN R EALTY
1 or 4 Bdrmt. Central haat and air,
sertentd patle. appliance*,
fenced. 1471 Mo 1111071_______
1/2, C/H/A. carpet, Wather dryer
hook up Houu for lease. 1400 a
mo. plu* Sec Dap Wett at
Sanford. Smile* from 14
U i 1*21.

CONSULT OUR

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

INLAND m
REALTY, | i
INC. [B REALTY WORLD.
WE HAVE BUYERSII
WE NEED LUTINGS It

OwBttWt -* wwy l t ev i lu

________

House for Rent, In Deltona. 1
Boren, t Bath, central air with
calling tans, fenced yard, with
ewdoaed porch. U00 173 w t ___
Lax* Mary. Hidden Lake Villa.
New, 7 bdrm, 2 bath, garage, no
pet».1471 Ph 17*741]__________
1 Bdrm, C/H/A. Inilde ulil/rm.
Fenced yard. vet In kitchen, no
pet*. 11*1* mo 17711*1________
1 Bdrm house with wether and
dryer. Nice neighborhood. *410 a
month Cell 177 144*.___________
1 Bdrm, kldt. carport, lerctd yard
1410 Mo Fae Pn 11* 7700
(av-Ow-Rental* Inc. Reeltor

THE SIPEWALK*
O U T K7
N IG H T 7

T h e * e Bochvoc **?
DON'T H A V E 5 IPE-WALKS! PEOPLE ARE *0
„
CHEAP THAT EVEN THE J WONT
SIR P FEE D E R * A R E r ' f
BE
1 o o in 'O p e r a t e p : ) ' b it t e r ,
PRESCO TT=

1 Bdrm., upstair*. AdutHonly. 1171
plu* 1110 damage lee. 111-1141
M r. Barbar or 01-447*._________

•ouKnc root

r NAMIN' N A M E *
OH WHO LEAVER

REDUCED tt,400
Neat 1/1 split plan, carpet plus air.
double gorag* plus shade Ire**
Walk le M aylair C oll and
IdyllwIldeElomnwtary *77 Vxt

Say On R*nt*l Inc. Realtor.

•iiantid wuroet

N E X T B k S 6 IE ?

____

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Fum. Apt*, tor Senior Cltlien*
111 Palmetto Ave.
J, Cowan. No Phene Cell*
Lovely I Bdrm. newly redecorated.
Complete privacy. 171 Wk. plu*
1100 aecurlty depotll Cell 171
7141or 111*147
t Bdrm, tlliciency, patio. A C.
11*9 Ft* Ph l i t 7100
lav-On-Renlil* Inc. Rtailor
2 Bedroom t Bath Furnlthed
13*0 Month No pelt
171144*.

C f LES&amp;

THAN A
WHY THE CAR6
WEREN'T TlCKETEP C A N P Y
F0R CVERTlWE
WRAPPER
P A R K IN '? THE
M E T E R M A IP
W AO 0N
V A C A T IO N !

WHATiS YOUR ^

MAKE
MORE O i 7

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

141— Homes F o r Sale

217—Garage Sales
GARAGE SALE U.
Friday* A I PM.
FLEAWORLO Hwy 17 (1
Bergini A Fun Buying A Sailing
*41 17(7
Garage Sale Frl and Sat
■00E 11th SI.
Comer ol S Princeton and 7Hh SI
LOOKING FOR A TREAT IN
STEADOF A TAICKT USE OUR
________ CLASSIFIEDS.________
Lott ol nice furniture, household
Item*. Frl and Sat. ( A M to
Til. I l l BrUrctlff St . behind
Bahama Joe'*_________________
'RAINED OUT LAST WEEK
* Family Yard Sato Frl Sal ( to
1. All kinds ol miK. Horn*, wind
Chimas, ceramic*, macram*.
Clothing, booka, p lclu ra *.
gtaiswart and old tarn- Item* £.
a* to Bee-da 11 A w turn right
Follow sign*__________________
Sunland Etlatet OH 17(2 10*
Laka Dot Dr Set (4 J Family
Sale. Dol'i (Sasha*. Madam
A ltian d ttt. Etc ) Toy*, and
household Ham*______________

Yard Sato Mull! Family.
2U1 Citrus Or. Rewnna Park
( 1 Saturday. Oct 72

Hwy 17 (3 Debary M* 1544 ____

Extra Nictl Hew pain! jab end
motor. 71 Line ton Continental
Blue with, matching Interior.
171*7*
'
’ Tt Ford LTD Landau. r r r
Loaded (3500
Call M l 3479

KIOOY'SKAH SALES
Ouality Used Cart A Truck*
HI7S. Santord Ave. Ml 1559
1(70 V.W Van. tome ruit, run*
great, 30,000 ml on engine
overhaul, tl.000 Ph Jr* 5009
Geneva.______________________
197* FORD. White. 9 passenger
ttallonwagon. Drive* good. (tM
____________239 (4(4____________
’71 AUDI A '71 LTD
Owner hat too meny card
MUST SELL Ml 0729
'71 fo-d SUtton Wagon P/S, P/B.
air. auto Iran*, radio and heater
(ISO Good, clean running car
_______ (34 4*05 or 339 ( I X _______
*0 Old* M Royal* Luxury, plus
up lo M MPG. a Dr , alt power.
Itoreo Sacrifice 377 U49

237—Tractors/Trailers
8uy Factory Direct Lightweight.
Hberglatt Scamp 12* and 1*'
travel trailer* A new i r 5th
wheal Call now l oll I raa
I 4CO244 49*2 lor tree brochure
and save!_____________________

239—Motorcycle'-/Bikes
IfqO Honda XR 200 Slreat or dirt
accet included *400 Ph la* 1009
Geneva._____________________

19*0 Yamaha XSA50CC Shall drive
Very clean 11MOor bet I otter
M l 10*4___________
'T tG L lOOOGClUWING
H ON DA DRESSER.7000ml
(3 SOP C A U 277 *9*7

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
Country Aire travel traitor.
3*', tall contoinad, Con A/H,
**( *42* alter 1P M

243—Junk Cars
BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From 110to UP or nsoro.
Call Ml 1114 22) 4)12
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A Used
car*, truck* A heavy equipment
____________132 59(0
WC PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 79)4509

YAMAHA
OF SEMINOLE
"DAYTONA'S BEST"

SECA 550 J

*1 8 9 5 °°
SECA 750 H

*2 5 9 5 "
MAXIM 650 J

*2 3 9 9 °°
Order Yaor YAMAHA
FairiagS and Windshield*
Haw Far Suing* Gator*.
N W V . IT -9 2 LO M O W O O D

•3 4 *9 4 0 3

�SB Evening Herald, Sanford, 11

Ihurtday, Oct. 20, ItSJ

Personal Incom e, Spending Up

Hitler's Spymasfer Supplied Secrets
To British Intelligence, Book Says
LONDON (UPI) - Adolf Hiller’s chief
spymaatcr supplied British Intelligence with
top-secret Information during World Wnr It
Including Gcrninpy's plan to Invade Russia,
says a new book by Intelligence socialist
Nigel West.
In excerpts. West said Information passed
on by German Adm. Wilhelm Canarts helped
British Intelligence In the planning of such
World War II battles as the landings In Sicily,
the Anzlo beachhead In Italy and the decisive
D-Day Invasion of Normandy.
In his book. MIG. British Secret Intelligence
Operations 1909-45, West said Canarts, head
of Nazi Germany's military Intelligence,
supplied top-secret Information through a
Polish woman. Hallna Szymanska. In hopes
of bringing about the full of Hitler.
Canarts’ contacts with Britain have been
hinted at since 1944 when he was disgraced
and strangled with a piano wire for his part In
the bomb plot against Hitler, but MI6 —
Britain’s counter-intelligence sendee — and
Mrs. Szymanska kept their silence for the
past 40 years.

West said senior Intelligence men had
privately confirmed the Canarts connection
and M rs S y rm n n s k a . r.c*.v 78 and liv in g In a

small North Carolina town, concurred with
West's story In nn Interview recently with the
London Mall.
"I did not want to be a Polish Mata Hart. I
did what I did because It seemed right." said
Mrs. Syzmanska. who risked death by
traveling In and out of occupied Europe
during World Wnr II to meet Canarts. The
cover for her travels was to visit the then
little-known designer. Pierre Balmnln. .
Most of Canarts’ Information was political,
but West said In the autumn of 1940 he told
her of Hitler’s plans to Invade Russia the
following year, the famed Bnrbarossa plan.
Unfortunately. MI6 did not believe the
information.
West’s book, to be published Oct. 27. Is his
fifth on the Intelligence services since 1980.
Ills Information Is often so precise many
people believe he Is simply the unofficial
historian of the secret services.
One revelation In West’s new book Is that

partment said was 4.7 percent.
Savings averaged 5.8 percent of
spendable Income last year, according
to the Commerce Department figures.
Some analysts have said savings are
actually much higher, as reflected In
Federal Reserve Board measure­
ments.
Personal spending is a somewhnl
broader measure than retail sales that
the government snld earlier this
month climbed 1.6 percent In Sep­
tember.
The number suggested spending on
sendees was nearly as strong ns the
spending on goods during the month,
particularly Important since con­
sumer enthusiasm is the main Ingre­
dient powering the recovery.
The difference between August and
September's Income nnd spending
figures would have been less dramatic
were It not fpr special circumstances,
the department said.
Without three factors, the telephone
Industry strike tn August nnd Its
settlement, speclnl payments to postal
workers and August's hurricane dam­
age cutting rental Income, personal
Income would have been up 0.8
percent In September.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The na­
tion's personal Income rose a healthy
0.9 percent while spending shot up
1.5 percent In September, the most
growth for both categories In five
months.
Wednesday's Commerce Depart­
ment report confirmed that Sep-,
tember experienced a strong rebound
from the late summer economic
doldrums many analysts feared was
the beginning of a slowdown In the
economic recovery.
Personal Income climbed, at an
annual rate, by $25.2 billion In
September to what would be a
seasonally adjusted $2,781 trillion If
repeated for 12 months.
In August personal Income was up
only 0.3 percent and spending, the
main pillar of the recovery, dropped
by 0.2 percent, according to revised
figures In the latest report.
The nation's disposable Income,
after Income tax withholding, was up
a full 1 percent In September after a
0.2 percent increase In August.
The savings rate slipped to 4.5
percent of disposable income In Sep­
tember. under the average for July.
August and September that the de­

Sir Alexander Korda, the legendnry fatherfigure of the British film Industry, worked
closely throughout his career for MI6. allow­
ing his film company to be used as a cover for
British spies traveling abroad.
The Hungartan-bom Korda, who made the
classic spy film The Third Man, received his
knighthood partly In recognition ol his
discreet commitment to MIC. West said.
Korda, who died In 1956. never spoke of his
links.
The Korda revelation comes at an awkward
moment for MI6 because It highlights the way
British Intelligence uses companies as cover.
Last week, reports emerged that MI6 had
bungled an attempt to recruit a couple to spy
for the British In Northern Ireland. The
couple hnd won a week's holiday to Spain,
where they were propositioned by M16
officers with large sums of money to spy.
The London-based company from which
they won the trip. Casuro. turned out to be
bogus, but was traced back to an MIG
address.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Maronda Hornet Inc *o Robtrl J
P a U U S wt Barbara. Lol J Harbour
Rldgt.U4.J00
Victor L Zuchowlkl l *1 T ra il* to
John T. Almon II A wt ledonn* H .
Lot 17 Blk B. d t n Ardtn H it .

■ MW.
Royal A rm t Cond L ld lo R t lp h W
F td tr. tgl A Robert C F td tr 1 wt
Shirley, Un
MO II Royel Arm t
Cond 147.500
Jim m ie R. Brown, tgl A Penny
M . tgl lo Tyrut E Hickt A wl
C u re Lot 53* Town ot Longwood.
147 000
Murphy Prop Inc. to Hereth C
Jotwanl A wl Linde L . Beg MW cor
Tr. A. Longwood Square. ITT 000
Murphy Prop Inc. lo David B
De.eney Sr.. From MW cor Tr A.
Longwood Squara. H i t . 000
(QCDI Carolyn S Jordan, tgl to
Jack W Hoyl. t g l . W 1 II ol Lol 7 A
all ol I. Blk A North Orlando
Towntlle 4th Adn. U 000
rC A lo Joteph C Brown A wt
Dawn M . Lot U Hidden Ik Ph III.
Un Ill.t47.400
RCA to Greld K McAuley A wt
Rebecca. 10} Wild E lm C l . Lol f l
Hidden Lake Ph III. Un III.S44*00
William Miller A wl Carolyn to
Loult Retce. ODS A Frank W
Woodrow. Trutteet etc . From ME
cor Lol II. H D Durant t Addn Lk
Mary, etc d e l . IH J 000
Thomet Summrtlll A Low A S
Taylor to C h erle tO Taylor A wl Lou
Arm. Beg PI 170' S ol NW cor. ol Set
n » U . etc .1100
Lou A S
Taylor to Cherlet O
Taylor A Lou Ann laylor. beg pi
J7f.lt' S ol NW cor. ot Sec 73 JO 1J
etc .1100
F lor ten J Rlcherdt A wt E l‘l to
Richard E Waller A wl Linda M .
Lol J t l Winter Sorlngt Un
4.
1170.000
M R Lend A wl Charlotte to
Kenneth W Pittman A Delorete. Lei
II. Repl Wyndhtm Woodt. Ph One
UJ.500
Bel Aire Hornet Inr to Robert F
Gray. J ill L . w t . Lol It* Oak Foret!
Un TwoB.t77.000
BM A Prop Inc. to Judy L Judy,
tgl . Lot 534 Lake ol the Woodt
Townhoute. Sec IJ.t74.J00
Tompklnt Land A Houtlng Inc to
John O Chapman A wt Felicia D .
Lol 34. Blk C. Amended P lal ol
Butlont S/D. U 0.700
Tompklnt Land A Homing Inc. lo
Janw t P Smith A wt Patricia. Lol
JJ. Blk C. Amended PUI ot Buttont
S O . MO. 700
Horace Hoethlln A wt Oorit to
Letlle G. Stein A wt Charlotte. Lot
471 Wekiva Hunt Club, lo t Hunt Sec
j. teo ooo
Tutka Bay C . V . Ltd to FI Hornet
Conttr Co Inc . Lol 33. Tutka Bay.
Ph l.tJf.aOO
IQCD) Margaret O
Snow to
Me Letter J Snow II. Lol II. Blk A.
The Sprlngt Spreading Oak VIII.
SIOO
Jam et R Futlon A wt Carol to
Edward F Regan A Florence L . Lol
4 A W M ' ol J. Blk 0 . Rev Map
Chuluota. e t c . tlOO
speingwood VIII A p lt Corp fO
Oren B Weinman Imarr I Un 114A
Spr ingwood Vill Land. U t . 400
R ott 0
Brltcoe A Lucille to
M a ilm Bldg Corp.. Lot II. Blk O.
Cattelberry H eight! I».&lt;M&gt;
Seaborn Goebel A Fannie to Earl
D W(llton A wl Harrlelte H . Lol 4.
B lk ' B Sweetwater Club Un II
S4M.OOO
Shadowbay Lid to Pulle home
Corp . Lott 117 117 A IM 15*. Shad
owbay, Un T wo. I J70.400 ^

Ruth P E Jensen, tgl. to Poul J.
Jenten 7 wt Sharon L., Lol 47 lletdle
Manor. 111.500
Wittier Spgt Dev to Trendmaker
Hornet. Inc., Lol *♦ Tutcewllla. Un
1IA.U5.500
Stanley Sandefur 7 wl Deborah to
Joy Beauctiene Imarr.) Lol 7 Weklv
Golf V illat. Sac One. lett part.
tllO J00
(QCDI Avid L
Qulckel A wl
Brenda to Plche Hornet Inc . Lot 44.
Wekiva Club E ttt .te c I.US.000
Ch.trl«t M Maupln tgl A Cathy
O Dell Gibbon* tgd to Gerald Lee A
wl Donna M . Lol I*. Blk R. Bear
Lake Manor. M5.000
B M A Prop Inc to Kevin E De
Marco A wt Regina. Lot 455. Lake ot
the Woodt Townhoutet tec
II.
174.700
Robert R Clolteller Jr. A wl
Shirley to Mark D Berggren A wt
Andrea. L o ti 7 A I. Blk 0. Sanlando
Springs Tr 71. Jndrapi .14* 000
IQCOI Annie C. Rouse to Jim m ie
L Rouse. N 1M' ol W 'l 01 Lot M l.
O P. Swope Lane Co Plat ol Black
Hammock. U00.
The Babcock Co to Helen M
Avery 15% Robert J Frit, J5% A
Stephen Stone M% lots 1 J 4 71 73 75
77 II 14 15 A N Montgomery Sq .
1544.000
Sabol Point Prop Inc to John A
Nardy Jr A wl Phylllt. Let Jt Sabal
Green at Sabal Point U7M 00
BM A Prop to Martha C Webb,
t g l . Lol SJI Lake ol ihe Woodt
Townhoute. sec IJ. 174.300
(QCDI Lk of the Woodt Inc . to
Martha C Webb, tgl . Lot 531" MOO
Bel Aire Hornet Inc. to Michael J
Flink A wl Inge. Lol IU Oak Foretl.
Un JB. M3.500
Suda Inc . to Jam et E Ford A wt
Joan A.. Lot IM. Wynrtham Woodt
Ph Two. M3 000
(Q CO l Joan M Kramer, tgl to
John F Krull A wt Marlon. Lot 10 A
E 35'ol II.Fa rm ertA d d n LW
IQCOI Phylllt Kram arciyk. tgl to
John F Krull A wt Marlon. Lot IS A
E J5 ol II. Farm ert Addn.MOO
John Krull A Marlon to J R .
Hattaway A J M (both marr ) Lol 10
A E « ' ot II Farm ert Addn. SS5.000
Wayne Lukent A wt Sarah to
raymond F Anderson A wt Patricia.
Lol 177 O P Swope Land Co P U I ot
Block Hammock. U4 000
55 John F Prtco Inc. A Tr. to Live
Oaks Realty Assoc . Lid . S *1' ol E
U l ‘ Ot Lot I. etc . blk A. Casselberry.
M.ooi.aoo
Donaid R Evans oral to Beverly J
Srcck. &gt;4 Ini Lol 4. Oak Mill. SIJ.M0
Beverly Jane Srock to Bruce
Caldwell A wt Cherryl, Lot 4. Oak
Hill. 117.000
(Q CDl Louree Ware. sg&gt; to Oort*
Ware, t g l . Beg 41I I' N of SE cor of
M E ', of SW'e of Sac II Jl Jt etc
M00
Calvin Beck to Joseph E. Gleason
A wl Vickie V . Lol 10. Tuscawlllo
Un 1.117.500
Leonard E Smith A wl H June to
Hector Torres A wl 7Aary. Un 503
Bldg 500. Altamonte VIII II. 141.000
F R C Landings Atsoc
Lid
lo
Ronald J Wrobel A wl Marilyn. Lol
44. The La n d in g ! 1103.500

Your JUNK It worth UCASMtt

GARAGE.
SALES3.00

Green SYNTHETIC
I TURF CARPET

Scotty's

6' and 12’ widths

DON'T s en s

Sq Yd

Reg. 3.49
s a v

M ite r-M a ste r
MITER BOX

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3 3 g a l l o n J;
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C h o ic e .

B a g » o r e '1
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SHEET FLOORING

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piaahc asb**'°*
cartridge^

99

CONCRETE MIX
4 0 b beg

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Sq Yd.
^/Teg. 3 .95

SAW BLADES
Choose from 7V4" Plywood
(No F647141. 7V4" Chisel
Tooth C o m b in a tio n (No
F55714f or 7’4" CombmationRip(No F40714)

Interior
LATEX PAINT

Y o u r C h o ic e

S U fttt G LU t

White and colors

Reg. 10.79

After 25 Years In The Same Location .

KARNS INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
I U S M O T H ) T O A N E 1 LOCATION
T O S E R V E YOU B E T T E R

Sheathing
PLYWOOD

Kraft-Backed
FIBERGLASS
INSULATION
’ The higher the R value, the
greeter the insulating power Ask
your Scotty's salesman for the
fact sheet on R values
R I I ’ SqFt
R-19* Sq Ft
3 '/ r " n l 5 . 6 " *15"
.
3 '/i"*2 3 ~ 1 5 1/ t * 6 " x ? 3 " 2 6 *
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ON YOUR AUTO AND HOME
OWNERS INSURANCE?
...COME IN AND
V
WE’LL SHOW
/
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YOU HOW
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2B u n3d leaiu«.
......................... 7 . 9 #
2 41^Square

1 /2" x 4 ’ x 8 ’ (3 ply) 7 . 9 5
1 /2" x 4 ’ x 8 ’ (4 ply) 8 . 7 5

B u n d le ................... “

1 1 . 9 7

Limit 8. please

■

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Ph 322*3702

Limit 2. please
9 o i aerosol can

■ 3 / 1 6 " x 3 / 8 " X 17’. No 2 0 2 . 1

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Reg 18C

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PRICES G O O D THRU O CTO BER 27

Scotty's

K A R N S
INSURANCE AGENCY

J ..8 .2 B

J A d h e siv e -B a c k e d
■FOAM
Limit 4, pleat
S W EATHERSTRIPPING

Each Battery
With Coupon

NOW
OPEN
AT NEW
ADDRESS

2 x 4 x 92 H " Precut

1M 1”

S C O T T Y ’S C O U P O N

" C ” and "D” sues

1 GETTING A DISC O U NT^

2x4x96”

Three teb in White end colors 20
year limited warranty.

3 / 0 " x 4' x 8 ’ ........... 7 . 7 5

6 / 8 " . 4 '« S ’

SPRUCE STUDS

FIBERGLASS
SHINGLES

CDX sheets Agoncy approved

■G en e ral P u rp o se
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( - W Mr.I

5

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4 1 3 f t . H r » l .HI.

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ARE YOU

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FRIDAY?

~Joseph E . Hart A wl Janel T.
Conceptual Vltlont Inc.. Lott I t J l.
lett W 10* A S MO 14* ot Lott II A 1)
Eureka Hammock. 1400.000
Orlando P Acotla to Thereto C
A cctla (m arr.l any Ini: Lot *47
Winter Spgt Un. 4.1100
IOCDI Joanne Hyett to Horace R
Hyatt A wt Joanne. Lott I A J. Blk )A.
Cryitel LakewInter Hornet S/O. I '00

7

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G R E A T B A R G A IN S G A LO R E
IN FR O N T O F OUR S T O R E !

Exterior W hite and C lear or
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2323 South Votuate Ave
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 776-7268
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
1029 East Ahamonte Drive
(Highway 436)
Phone 339 6311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

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Phone 323-4700
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                    <text>Even in g H erald

76th Year, No. 52-Wcdnesday, October 19, 19$3-Sonfcrd, Florida 32771 ^
Vf

'

Evening Herald-(USPS 4B1-30O)-Prlce 70 Cents

^

____________________

.

_- ___

__

________________

5a n fo rd
By Donna Eatea
Herald Staff W riter
A class action lawsuit asking for
$60 million In damages has beeh
filed against two Miami Honda
dealers, one of which has a
subsidiary In Sanford, charging
that factory warranties on the
Imports arc not being honored
because the vehicles were brought
Improperly Into the country from
Guam.
Nnmed as defendants In the suit
are Braman Honda and South
Motor Co. of Miami and American
Honda Co. of Los Angeles, a

wholly-owned subsidiary of Honda
Motor Co. of Tokyo. The Los
Angeles firm Is an authorized
Honda distributor.
Braman owner Norman Braman
also owns Prestige Honda on U.S.
Highway 17-92 In Sanford.
The suit was brought by a group
of Miami Honda owners. Their
attorney. JcfTrcy Tew. Interviewed
at his Miami office by telephone,
said the number of Hondns Im­
ported Into the United States Is
limited by an agreement between
the U.S. and Japan. They arc
supposed to be Imported only

through the official Japanese dis­
tributor In Los Angeles, Tew said.
He said when Braman could not
get enough Hondas through the
official distributor to meet the
demand of his customers, he
arranged to import additional ones
through Guam. Other Honda
dealers. Tew said, arc not honor­
ing factory warranties on the
Guam-lmports. In this fashion, his
clients have been damaged, he
said.
Oramnn said today that he and
the other two Honda dealerships
arc "very confident" of winning

the legal action.
He said thot every customer to
whom a Guam Import was sold
was notified and that warranties
arr being honored.
"We feel there is no violation of
law In Importing the Hondas from
Guam." Braman said, pointing out
th a t Guam Is an A m erican
l&gt;osscsslon.
"Hondas arc a very desirable
automobile and there Is a great
deal of consumer Interest. This Is a
classic example of supply (not
keeping up) with demand and that
Is why we began Importing cars

Polk Promises
Area Clean-Up

w ere being carried-on b n u en ty on

street corners In the area and
promised that deputies would crack
down on the Illegal activities.
"We don't Intend to come In here
like the Gestapo, but we arc going to
clean up your problem." Polk said.
Polk said more deputies would
patrol the area In marked and
unmarked patrol cars, police dogs
would be used to sniff out drugs.

The vehicles from Guam meet
American pollution control re­
quirements, Tew said, but they
may not meet other requirements.

'No'Again
To Sanford
Effluent
Dumping

i'A-.-.-

Crime Crackdown

By Charles Cobb
Herald Staff W riter
"I'm really scared. Someone's
going to get hurt or killed If this
keeps up." a woman told Seminole
County ShetifT John Polk at a
m e e t i n g In a h ig h c r i m e
neighborhood near Altamonte
Springs Tuesday night.
"I'm fed up. I live right In the
middle of this mess." said another
woman In the audience of about 125
persons who gathered at the New
Bethel A.M.E. Church on Marker
Street’ In the black Granada South
area Just north of Altamonte
Springs.
The meeting was called In re­
sponse to a petition signed by more
than 100 persons who live In the
area.
Polk told the gathering he was
aware that drug sales and gambling

Tew said the $10 million sum
being requested In actual damages
was arrived at by asking for
damages of $5,000 for each of the
estimated 2.000 Hondas which
have been brought Into the
country from Guam. In addition,
he said his clients ore asking for
$50 million in punitive (punish­
ment) damages.

from Guam."
Tew said the pu pose of Includ­
ing American Honda Co. of Los
Angeles as a defendant In the suit
Is to force It to direct dealers
throughout the country to honor
the warranties. He said that the
company sent out a letter on June
1 notifying dealers that warranties
on cars Imported from Guam
w o u ld n o t be h o n o re d ut
dealerships.
Tew said by Importing the cars
through Guam, the U.S.-Japan
Im p o rt lim ita tio n Is b rin g
circumvented.

___

'We don't Intend
to come In here
like the Gestapo,
but we are going
to clean up
your problem.'
• Sheriff John Polk

Herald PSeta Sr Tammy Vincent

Black residents m eet w ith Sheriff John Polk to
discuss high crim e rate In their neighborhood
near Altam onte Springs (from left: Jam es

video equipment would be used to
record drug transactions and the
unlawful assembly law would be
Polk said many motorists had
utllltzed to fight crime.
complained
that drug sellers, pro­
This means that groups of three
stitutes
and
gamblers block the
or more persons who gather for
streets.
He
said
the drug sellers post
unlawful purposes will be dispersed.
lookouts who warn them when a
Polk said.
car 1s approaching and they
"It's not a racial thing." he said. police
throw the drugs Into the b u sh es
"If you look out there, you see both until
the police are gone.
blacks and whites buying and
The pastor of the church, the Rev.
selling drugs. Many people Involved
In this don't even live In this area. James E. Stephens, said "We want
They come in here with flashy to stress that In no way Is this
clothes and cant and your young (meeting) any criticism of the efforts
of the sheriff's department. They
people look up to them."
"It's encouraging to see the com­ have been doing a good Job of trying
munity wanting something done to police trhe area. We simply feel
because we can't succeed Without that with the Introduction of
weapono and d ru g s Into our
your cooperation." Polk said.

• 4-.*j' .,* ’D .n ' •«**)
Gadsen, Jam es M cM Illo n, Lena Lanier, Polk,
R ev. C h a rlie Banks and R ev. Jam es E .
Stephens.

neighborhood. It's unsafe for the
residents and we want It stopped."
Some members of the audience
complained that part of the problem
stems from the lack of recreational
facilities for young people who live
in the area.
Stcphcrts said more recreational
facilities were needed, but he said
that Is not a law enforcement
problem. "We should take that
matter up with the county com­
mission and other government
agencies." he said.

Marker and Jackson streets. For the
first nine months of this year,
deputies have responded to 321
cans from that area' *
The calls have come as a result of
drug sales, disturbances, speeding
autos, gam bling, su sp iciou s person*

and autos and shootings. Polk said.
He said there have been reports of
cars stopping at Intersections and
the occupants would be accosted
and Intimidated Into buying drugs
or subjected to strong arm rob­
beries. Polk said.
"The perpetrators would then flee
Polk said the criminal activities Into wooded areas and groves." he
were centered In the area of North. said.

Seminole Stands Firm Opposing OSOTA Change
By Mlcheal Beha
Herald Staff W riter
Seminole County commissioners
remain opposed to a plan to add
members to a regional transporta­
tion board despite Tuesday's threats
from an Orange County commis­
sioner to disband the group If they
don't go along.
The Seminole commissioners said
they can’t support a plan by Orange
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e r Lou
Treadway to Increase membership
on the Orange-Scmlnole-Osccola
Transportation Authority board of
directors to 15. OSOTA operates bus
sendee In Seminole. Orange and
Osceola counties.
Treadway has suggested the cur­
rent 10-member board be expanded
to reflect Orlando's Interest fn re­

gional transportation and to ad-*4
minister a proposed 32-mlle light
rail system between downtown Or­
lando. Industries In southwest Or­
ange County and Dlsneyworld and
Epcot Center in Osceola County.
Treadway hopes the system can be
In use by 1990 and a 10-mlle spur
to Longwood can be butlt by the
year 2000.
Com m lsloner Sandra Glenn
chided Treadway for spending too
much time arguing about mem­
bership and not enough time plan­
ning for the light rail system.
"You need to start addressing
moving people from one spot to
another and stop Mickey Mousing
around with membership." she
said.
The OSOTA board Is scheduled to

All ten members of the board of
vole on the membership proposal
d ire c to rs m u st a p p ro v e th e
on Nov. 2.
Treadway's proposal calls for rcoganlzatlon before It can go Into
Orange County to receive six efTcct.
Seminole commissioners met
members. Orlando four members.
Seminole and Osceola counties two with representatives from Orange
members each and the state De­ and Osceola counties, Orlando.
partment of Transportation, one DOT. the planning council and the
member. In the board s present OSOTA staff In a work session
make up Orange County has live Tuesday to discuss Treadway's
members, one of whom Is from proposal.
Treadway said the proposed light
Orlando. Seminole has two mem­
bers and Osceola. DOT and the East rail system will cost between 9500
Central Florida Regional Planning million and $800 million and Is the
Council have one member each. "largest project this community has
Treadway's plan calls for Osceola ever seen."
He said the challenges facing
County to receive an additional seat,
which would come from the Last OSOTA are bigger and the risks are
Central Florida Regional Planning greater than ever before. Those
Council being dropped from the challenges call for creative thinking
from elected officials, he said.
board.

"The time has come to change the
structure of this board.” he said.
Treadway said his plan gives
more power to Orange County and
Orlando which give OSOTA the bulk
of Its funding. Orange gave $1.3
million to OSOTA last year and
Orlando gave about $370,000.
Seminole gave $72,000 while Os­
ceola contributed nothing.
Osceola Commissioner Mike Bass
said "It's wrong to re-organize this
way. Osceola County hasn't con­
tributed yet. But we will. This
leaves us a little bit out In the cold.
When we get to a point where we
can contribute we're not going to
have much say. much clout."
Seminole Com m issioner Bill
See BU3. page 2 A

Lt. Gov. Keeps Job Despite Irritating The Boss

L t . G o t . W ayne M ixon

Lt. Gov. Wayne Mlxson will continue as
head of Florida's Department of Com­
merce. despite his call for repeal of the
unitary tax lor education, which had been
pushed through the legislature by Gov.
Bob Graham.
Graham had expressed displeasure at
Mixon's remarks, but said he would nakc a
decision on hii future with the commerce
department after they met today.
In an official statement at a meeting In

Tallahassee today, Graham said:
"The lieutenant governor and I have had
u frank and cooperative discussion re­
garding the future of the Department of
Commerce under his leadership. The
lieutenant governor continues to have my
confidence us secretary of the department."
Mlxson responded. "I regret uny em­
barrassment which may have resulted
from the timing and matter of my
statement of Oct. 6 regarding Florida's

TO D A Y

new unitary tax for education. It was
unfortunate that the statement was made Action Report*................2A
without the opportunity for prior con­ Around The Clock..........4A
sultation with Gov. Graham. The governor Bridge.............................. $B
and I have discussed this episode and Calendar......................... 3A
agree that In the future we are a team and Classifieds................ 10,11b
Comics.............................8B
will play as a team."
Under the unitary tax concept, a com­ Crossword.......................SB
pany's worldwide Income Is Included In Dear Abby.......................2B
the formula for calculating Its state Deaths............................. 7A
Dr. Lamb........................SB
corporate Income taxes.

Editorial............. ...........4A
Florida............... ............3A
Harojcooe.........
Hospital.............
Nation
........ ............ 2A
People................ ......... L2B
Sports................ ......10-12A
Television......... ............9B
Weather............. ............ 2A
WnrM ................ .............3A

OSHA Cites Firm In Death

Fanfare To Color
Band Festival
Lake Howell High School's Silver
Regiment will be adding fanfare and
flourish to the 9th annual Seminole
County High School Band Festival
to be held at 8 p.m. on Oct. 29 at the
Lake Branlley High School stadium.
The Lake Howell band will be the
host band and their bandmaster,
Greg Martin will be host director for
the event, sponsored by the Sanford
Optimist Club and the Evening
Herald. The festival will feature
firew o rk s, m u sic, and
showmanship. Tickets are available
from band m em bers and the
Evening Herald. Proceeds will go to
buy band uniforms, instruments,
and music.

The ball Is back in Sanford's court
In Its battle with the state Depart­
ment of Environmental Regulation
over that agency's refusal to issue a
permit to allow the cltv to continue
dumping effluent from Its Poplar
Avenue sewer treatment plant Into
Lake Monroe.
Lee Miller, assistant director of
DER's regional office In Orlando,
said an official denial from DER's
Tallahassee ofllce was sent to the
city of Sanford on Oct. 11.
Miller said the city now has the
right to appeal the ruling by Oct. 25
or to go to court on the Issue. "Court
action I* expensive and time con
sumlng and It's an ordeal we try to
avoid," he said.
Sanford City Manager W.E.
"Pete" Knowles has been trying for
months to get a definite answer
from DER on whether the permit
would be extended beyond Its 1984
expiration date. While It waa un­
derstood by tiie city that the permit
would not be renewed. Knowles said
the state agency had not come out
with a firm and precise denial that
would allow the city to appeal the
ruling.
Early In June, the city com­
missioned a nationally recognized
environmental engineer. Dr. Donald
O'Connor, to study the city pro­
blem. O'Connor's study showed
that the eflluent from the city’s
sewer plant is purer than the
water's of Lake Monroe.
ir the DER ruling Is upheld, the
city must complete planning In
1984 to halt the dumping. Once
planning Is completed the DER has
said that Sanford can continue the
effluent disposal Into the lake until
1988.
A DER order Issued early this year
declared the sewer plant Is polluting
the lake. DER tests of the lake's
water were done during the summer
of 1982 when the lake was at Its
lowest *fett)rded level, one of San­
ford’s major complaints In Its ob­
jection to the state agency's finding.
Sanford lias balked at using the
DER preferred method of effluent
disposal —a land spreading tech­
nique through spray Irrigation over
a large area— because of the
expense InvoHed.
Knowles has estimated these
costs could reach as much as $20
million.

Lake Howell High School's Sliver Regim ent Flags and Rifles team.*

An Altamonte Springs electrical con­
tracting firm has been died for an
alleged "serious violation" of federal
safety regulations In connection with the
electrocution death of a Sanford man
Sept. 20.
The federal Occupational. Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA) cited
Trt-Clty Electric Co. last week In the
death of Mark Douglas Thcller. 28. of
2580 Ridgewood Ave.
Thetlcr. who was employed by Trl-Clty
as an e le c tr ic ia n 's h e lp e r, wan
electrocuted on his first day on the Job
when he apparently got too close to a
panel box which contained live exposed
wires at the Grand Cypress Resort, a
Hyatt Hotel under construction at Lake
Buena Vista south of Orlando.
Dave Norris. OSHA safety supervisor
In Tampa, said today Trl-Clty was cited

for not having a cover on the panel box
"thus exposing employees to the hazard
of electrical shock."
Norris said the panel box. which was
located in the hotel's water plant, was
not supposed to have current flowing
through It until It had been covered.
Norris said Trl-Clty was notified on
Oct. 13 of the citation and the firm has
15 working days from that date to file a
notice of contest with the OSHA review
commission In Washington. D.C. If no
notice is filed, the firm could be fined up
to $ 1.000. Norris said.
Mrs. Paula Eidell. secretary of Trl-Clty
and wife of owner Buddy Eidell. said
today the firm does not plan to contest
the citation. She said the firm would puy
the fine which she said Is "Iras than
$500. We felt It was Justified," she said.
—Charles Cobb

�1A— Evcr.infl H erald, Sanford, Ft.

W *&lt;bw tday, Oct.

m j

NATION
IN BRIEF
Am ericans Win Physics,
Chemistry Nobel Prizes
United Press international
Two American astrophysicists. Subrahma­
nyan Chandrasekhar and William A. Fowler,
shared the 1983 Nobel Prize for Physics today
while Henry Taube of Stanford University won
the Nobel for Chemistry.
Chandrasekhar, of the University of Chicago,
and Fowler, of the California Institute of
Technology, won for their discoveries about the
birth, evolution and death of stars. Taube. 67, a
Canadian, was cited for discovering how
electrons transfer between molecules in chemi­
cal reactions.
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said
Chandrasekhar and Fowler were awarded the
$200,000 prize for their research into how stars
were bom and what they are mode of. They
were the 47th and 48th Americans to win the
prize.
Five of the six Nobel prizes — physics,
chemistry, medicine, literature and peace —
were endowed by Alfred Nobel, the Swedish
millionaire Industrialist who invented dynamite.
The economics award was endowed in Nobel's
memory by the Bank of Sweden in 1969. The
awards will be presented this year as usual on
Dec. 10. the anniversary of his death.

McDonald's Wife In Runoff
ATLANTA (UPI) — Kathryn McDonald, wife of
the congressman killed in the Soviet attack on
Korean Air Lines flight 007, has been forced Into
a runofT for her husband's seat.
The favorite in a field of 19 candidates, most
of them political unknowns, Mn». McDonald. 34,
finished first in Tuesday's non-partisan election
to fill the 7th congressional district seat left
vacant hy the rfoaih of Rep. Larry McDonald.
iHHb
But state Rep. George "Buddy" Darden beat
her badly in the northwest Atlanta suburbs of
Cobb County, which comprises 60 percent of
the registered voters In the seven-county
district, to win a spot In the Nov. 8 runoff for the
year remaining in McDonald's fifth term.
Mrs. McDonald polled 30 4 percent of the vote
to Darden's 27.5 percent.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Autumn rain and fog covered
much ol the nation today and moisture from a Paciflc
hurricane triggered storms that caused flooding in the
Southwest and Plains. Rain extended from the Dakotas
across Minnesota and Iowa early today. Thundershow­
ers and showers stretched across Texas. Kansas and
Oklahoma, while rain showers along the edge of a
stationary front dampened an area from West Virginia to
southern New England. There were showers over the
northern Paciflc Coast. Dense fog developed In southeast
Louisiana. Kansas and Oklahoma as cool air ran Into
moisture from the Gulf of Mexico. Thunderstorms
pulling moisture from Hurricane Tlco In the Paciflc
Ocean flooded roads, menaced bridges and damaged
buildings In the Southwest Tuesday. An Inch and a half
of rain fell In half an hour at Plcacho tn southeast New
Mexico, sending the Rio Hondo out of Its banks, flooding
roads northwest of Roswell, and threatening to wash
away bridges across normally dry riverbeds. Thun­
derstorm winds damaged roofs on the north side of
Clovis. N.M. In Texas, marble size hail and an inch of
rain in an hour drenched Amarillo, and heavy showers
In El Paso produced some flooding of Intersections. More
than 3 Inches of rain hit Oktaha, Okla. and nearly 2
Inches fell at Dewar and Wewoka. Okla. Thunderstorms
spread through the Ohio and Tennessee valleys and
across Florida. Nearly 3 Inches of rain fell at Vcro Beach.
Snow fell at Cody. Wyo. as a thunderstorm moved
through Rawlins. Wyo.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m.J: temperature: 75;
overnight low: 70; Tuesday's high: 87; barometric
pressure: 30.05; relative humidity: 81 percent; winds:
north at 10 mph; rain: trace; sunrise: 7:18 a.m., sunset
6:52 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 7:47
a.in., 8:09 p.m.; lows. 1:18 a.m.. 1:40 p.m.; Port
Canaveral: highs, 7:39 a.m.. 8:01 p.m.; lows. 1-09 a.m.,
1:31 p.m.: Bayport: highs. 1:14 a.m., 1.40 p.m.; lows.
7:40 a.m.. 7:52 p.m.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly sunny and mild today
with highs tn the upper 80s. Wind northeast 10 to 15
mph. Tonight mostly fair with lows In the low 70s. Light
northeast wind. Thursday sunny and mild with highs In
(he mid 80s.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles —Small craft should exercise caution north
part. North part wind northeast to east 15 (o 20 knots
today decreasing to around 15 knots tonight then 10
knots Thursday. Seas 4 to 6 feet today and 4 to 5 feel
tonight. South part wind easterly 10 to 15 knots through
Thursday with seas 3 to 5 feet. Widely scattered showers
and a few thunderstorms decreasing today, then partly
cloudy Thursday.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Florid* Rtfienol Hoipdol
T tw td ir
ADMISSIONS
Sonlord
Money M Bold
Elio K. Bronl
Dolor ov R. Cotfmor
EliutothA DtofcJ
Deborah 0. Howl
MttllrA Kolly
Mory £. Rtdrwr
F ro n d * it. Swonton
M o rrln Long, Deltona

E v e n in g Ifc tn J d

DISCHARGES
Sonlord;
Rotwrl F. Conklin
Viola M Holloy
RoteWarton
FoyoM. Akori. DtLond
Somuol R. Hit A*. O ong* City
l**y I. strkklond. Or ong* City
M*lorfy W. PtMrl I ond baby toy,

Espionage
Source O f Suspected Spy's Secrets W as T ru e -B lu e A m erican '
PALO ALTO. Calif. (UPI) — The deceased wife oi a
mail accused of spying was a "Ime-blue American,"
co-workers claim, but authorities say she supplied her
husband with the military secrets he sold to the Soviet
Union.
An FBI allldavlt Hied in federal court In San Francisco
said Ruby Louise Schuler Harper, who worked for
Systems Control Inc. for 10 years until shortly before
her death from alcoholism Ju n e 22. funneled
"extremely sensitive research and development" na­
tional defense documents from the company to her
husband, James Harper.
Harper was charged Monday with delivering national
defense information to a spy network that was so
successful It won the praise of Soviet leader Yuri
Andropov. The FBI said (he alleged espionage,
punishable by life in prison, took place over a period of
eight years and that Harper had been paid at least
$250,000 for giving Ihc secrets to a Polish contact.
He was being held without ball In an undisclosed
location in the San Francisco area and scheduled lo
appear at a ball hearing today.
His a tto rn ey . William D ougherty, told The

United Press International
U.S. pump prices Have fallen steadily
despite Iran's threat to blockade the
Persian Gulf oil route, Indicating the
United States is not "nervous over a new
Middle East oil crisis" and Is not
stockpiling supplies, analysts say.
Specialists said the United States,
which has reduced Its dependence on
Middle East oil. Is less vulnerable to a
foreign oil interruption than Japan and
several Western European allies.
"If the U.S. oil Industry were nervous
over a new MlJdle East oil crisis, it would
be stockpiling and gasoline prices would
be rising rather than falling." said Dan
L undberg. p u b lish e r of th e Los
Angeles-based Lundberg Survey.
Since early September. Iran has
warned it would close the narrow Strait
of Hormuz at the entrance to the Gulf If
Iraq used French-supplied Jet fighters to
attack Iranian oil facilities.
If Iran shut down the Gulf to retaliate
against Irqq in the three-year-old war
between the two OPEC nations, about 8
million barrels of oil a day — or 20
percent of the West’s supplies — would
be removed from the world market.
Nevertheless, the average U.S. pump
price dropped to $1,238 a gallon In

mid-October from $1,246 in September
and $1,252 in August, according to the
Lundberg Survey that tracks the gaso­
line market.
Last week alone — as fighting in­
tensified between Iraq and Iran —
wholesale gasoline prices plummeted 3
cents a gallon on the West Coast and
three-quarters of a cent In the rest of the
nation, the survey found.
Lundberg said the erosion in prices
appeared to reflect the conviction that
the United States Is In a better position
today to weather a foreign oil cutoff than
it was during the two oil shocks of the
1970s.
The United States hss curbed Its
Persian Gulf crude Imports by 20
percent since the 1973 Arab oil embargo
to about 658,500 barrels a day and
substituted non-OPEC oil for Gulf
supplies.
Persian Gulf oil now accounts for
about 19.4 percent of total U.S. crude
Imports and 4.6 percent of U.S. oil use.
In Washington, a White House official
said the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
contains enough oil to meet U.S. demand
for three months.

Continued from page 1A
Klrchhoff told Treadway he secs no
reason to change the board’s,
make up. "I agree with the Osceola
stand. With the growth they're
going to have they nerd to have
InpuL We need to have input to plan
for growth."
Treadway said the size of the
board Isn’t Important. He called the
15-member proposal "unwieldy"
and suggested a smaller board.

County seaL".

Second C lo u P o tlo to F o ld Ol S a n la rd , F io rid o i n

I

Horn* DoUvory; Week, tt.N; Moots, M Uj &lt; Moots*. SS4.M;
Voor. (Oise. Sy Moil: Wo«S II 111 MoatS. IS IS; » Moots*,
IM.M| Voor, UtM

75

Treadway said the board must
develop some plan to take control of
the proposed light rail system.
Without the authority the state and
federal funds needed to build the
system could be Jeopardized, he
said.

Under the authority’s charter, all
reorganization Items must have
unanimous consent to become ef­
fective. The agreem ent which
established OSOTA runs through
1992 but the authority could be
"Whether we (Orange County) have
dissolved
with a two-thirds vote of
six, five or four members doesn't
the
directors.
bother me. As long as I’m sitting on
the board cf county commissioners I
Klrchhoff reminded Treadway of
have veto power. I’d be perfectly that provision. "If this fails OSOTA
happy to give up one Orange won't fold. It will go on nine more

76 77

78

7 9 ’80 *82

A fte r peakrng In the late 70s, U.S. oil Im ports from all sources are now
less than at the tim e of the 1973 oil em bargo and are still going down.
Im ports from O P E C sources are still higher — an average 3.3 m illion
barrels dally last year com pared w ith 2.9 m illion In 1973 — but show t ^
steepest decline from 1977, the peak Im port year — 8.7 m illion barrels a
day from all sources, $.1 m illion from O P E C .

years unless two-thirds vote to fold
It.”

Treadway said his plan should be
"put before the authority for ap­
proval or disapproval. If dis­
approved we'll probably have to
reconstitute the board."

A federal grant for $2.8 million to
design the system has already been
promised from the Urban Mass
Transit Administration along with
another $600,000 from the state if
$660,000 can be raised locally for
the project, said Treadway. "Most of
that will fall on Orange County."

Long Distance Phone
Access Charge Delayed
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Federal Communica­
tions Commission, buried in paperwork, is delaying
long-distance telephone "access charges" that
would have hiked residential phone bills by $2 a
month on Jan. 1.
FCC official Warren Lavey said Tuesday the new
tariffs, including a $6 monthly charge for busi­
nesses. will Instead take effect April 3. adding that it
is possible the charges will be changed or
abandoned altogether.
The FCC also put off until April action on AT&amp;T's
proposal to reduce long distance rates by more than
10 percent, about $1.75 billion.
Lavey said an avalanche of tariff filings prompted
the FCC's 90-day suspension.
Congress Is also considering bills to suspend or
postpone the access charges, which were originally
to go into effect Jan. 1, the same date of the planned
breakup of AT&amp;T.

Gunman Sought In Sanford Convenience Store Holdup
Police me searching lor a gunman who robbed a
Sanford convenience store early today.
The man. partially concealing a rawed-off shotgun or
rifle in a paper bag. entered the Lll Champ store at
French Avenue and 20th Street at 2:45 a.m.. according
to a Sanford police report.
The man ordered the clerk to hand over an
undetermined amount of cash from the deposit box and
ran out of the store, the report said.
Police found a spent 12-gauge shotgun shell in an
alley behind a nearby Pizza Hut. They speculate the
gunman may have entered a getaway car parked there.
The 55-year-old store clerk was not harmed.
THEFTS REPORTED
Lumber was reported stolen from a construction site
near Casselberry this weekend.
Officials with Complete Interiors Inc. said 65 8-foot
two-by-fours, and six rolls of roofing felt were taken from
a building site at lot 92 in the Woodland Cove section of
the Ambcrwood subdivision.
A boat motor was reported stolen by the owner of AJG
Locksmith. 2013 French Ave., Sanford.
Lowell Bauder, 54. of 108 Krystal View Drive, reported
to police at 8 a.m. Monday that a boat, trailer and motor
were taken from a parking lot at the shop.
His son. Jim Bauder. 22. of 12096 Marquette Ave.,
found the boat and trailer parked on French Avenue a
short time later but the motor had been removed.
Linda C. Robbins, 26. of 1405 W. 1st St., Sanford, said
her wallet and $100 worth of food stamps were taken
from her apartment Monday.
Ms. Robbins said someone climbed through a window
of the house between 6:45 and 9:30 a.m. and removed
the articles.
A tackle box and fishing rod. valued at $680, were
reported stolen by Carol Ann Blair. 38. of 2547 Palmetto
Ave.. Sanford.
Mrs. Blair told police the Hems, stored In a lxv*t parked

STOCKS

&lt;w * «n»&gt;

P u b lis h e d D o lly o n d S e n d e r, * i t * p t S otw rdoy b y T b o la n ia r d
H o r o M , lo t . , M K . F ru n c b A r o „ S an ford, F lo . a m .

1973 74

...Bus Board Expansion Opposed

•IRTHS

W ednesday, O ctober tt , 1WJ— Vol. H , No. J2

Mrs. Harper died last June at the age ol 39 oi cirrhosis
of the liver due lo alcoholism, according to Santa Clara
County records.
The FBI said up in 200 pounds of secret documents
allegedly obtained by the Harpers were still missing.
Some of Ihc documents were believed to contain Secrets
about lasers, satellites and other advanced weaponry.
Harper’s attorney. William Dougherty - rh o repre
sented convicted spy Christopher Boyce In 1977, said
Tuesday Harper contacted him In September 1981 and
asked him to approach the government and work out
protection from prosecution for espionage activities.
Dougherty said that at the time. Harper would only
Identify himself as "Jay." He said he did not know until
Monday that "Jay" was Harper.
A Justice Department official said Tuesday the
government turned down the offer,
"In a nutshell, we wouldn't buy It," said John Martin,
Hie departm ent’s chief of Internal security In
Washington, D.C.
The FBI said Harper's alleged spying was slopped
when he was exposed by a double-agent planted by the
United Stales Inside Polish intelligence.

Pump Prices Fall Despite O il Cutoff Threat

Otloai

Roper and S to lly Kolloy, 0 to b y
g irt. A ltam onte Spring*

Wsshlnglon Post he would try to arrange a plea bargain
today.
Dougherty said Harper's spying was motivated by the
"money and the adventure." The Los Angeles Times
reported, and that he spent the money on "high living."
Dougherty told the Times Harper now wants to get
revenge on the man who allegedly started him In the
espionage effort.
"He’s terribly naive.” Dougherty said. "He thinks that
because he’s cooperating, he's out of danger, and he's
not. It’s dangerous stufT he's playing with."
The FBI said Harper allegedly obtained the secrets
from his wife, who had clearance to highly classified
data at System Controls. Including "extremely
sensitive" information about the U.S. Mlnutcman
missile system.
Fellow workers at Systems Controls said Mrs. Harper
was an accomplished secretary who was loyal to her
boss, company and country.
"I don't believe the story Is true," said Jay Politzer. a
former assistant to the chairman of SCI. "If there is
anybody guilty, in this, it Isn’t Louise. The lady was
true-blue, a U.S. Amcrtcan-type of lady all the way."

D m * quotstknl provided try
member* ol tho National Attodsiicn
o/ tamrltla* Deaton t o ropro
tentative Inter dealer price* &lt;1 of
eppreiltntUI, noon lodev, Inter
do*hr market* change throughout
tho day. Pricet do not Include retail
m tk up-'mttdovtn.
Atlantic tank ...

B*m*f1B*nk....

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Action Reports
★

Fires

★

C o u rts

* P o lice
on her carport, were taken between 4 p.m. Saturday and
12:30 a.m. Sunday.
COW SHOT
Cattle rustlers shot and killed a 700-pound cow in a
pasture near the Iron Bridge sewage treatment plant In
south Seminole County.
The rustlers cut the top off a barbed wire fence and
broke a lock on a gate to gain entry to the posture on
McCullough Road shortly after midnight Sunday, said
Seminole County deputy sheriff Leonard Conley.
The rustlers chased down a cow and shot It in the
right rib cage, apparently with a shotgun. Conley said.
They tied a rope to the carcass and dragged It about a
quarter of a mile toward a four-wheel drive vehicle they
had parked nearby.
Conley speculates that the rustlers were then either
scared off by someone else passing by or they got tired of
dragging the carcass and abandoned it.
"I think they were beginners and didn't really know
what they were doing," said Conley. The carcass was
left unbutchered In the pasture.
The owner of the cow was Identified as David W.
Rrthcrford. 36. of 5030 Tangerine Way. Winter Park.
Conley estimated the value of the cow at $300.
MURDER TRIAL
Prosecutors are trying to prove that Donald Glenn
McDougall abused another little girl the same way he
allegedly mistreated Ursula Sunshine Assald before she
died.
McDougall's ex-wife testified Tuesday that he
punished her 4-year-old daughter in a similar fashion.
Lyn McDougall said McDougall hit and kicked
Kimberly Reese, her daughter from a previous marriage,
would not give her water and made her stand still for
long periods of time.
Mrs. McDougall *«tid she met McDougall In July 1979
and she and her daughter moved in with him three
months later. They then married, but later divorced.
The state charges that McDougall beat and tortured
5-year-old Ursula Assald until the died on Sept. 25.
1982. Ursula's mother, Susan Barrett Assald. lias
testified that she and McDougall threw the girl's body

into a pond in Altamonte Springs.
McDougall is charged with first-degree murdqr and
agrravated child abuse. His trial was moved from
Sanford to St. Petersburg after pretrial publicity
hampered the selection of an Impartial Jury in Seminole
County.
DELAND PAIR CITED
Cynthia Evans. 32, and Richard Clarke. 33, both of
DeLand. were cited for reckless driving by Seminole
County sheriff's deputies Monday.
A police report said both drivers failed to stop at a stop
sign on Oregon Avenue and State Road 46 near Sanford
at about 7:12 p.m. The cars rapidly Increased their
speed to GO miles per hour and headed east on SR 46
toward Sanford, the report said.
Ms. Evans was stopped at Airport Boulevard and
Clarke was stopped by a Florida Highway Partol officer
on Persimmon Avenue. Each told police they h t i had an
argument and Ms. Evana was trying to get away from
Clarke.
CAR LOT HIT TWICE
Seminole Ford. U.S. Highway 17-92 In Sanford, was
the victim of two thefts over the weekend.
The first theft reportedly took place Saturday and
Involved two telephones which were Installed Friday.
Manager Robin BuUcr said the phones, valued at $157,
were discovered missing Saturday at B a.m.
A service truck was also reported missing from the lot.
Ms. butler said the truck, valued at $1,500, was taken
between 2:30 p.m. Saturday and 10:30 a.m. Monday.
SANFORD MAN ARRESTED
James Gunn. 29. of 409 Palmetto Ave., Sanford, was
arrested at 2:10 p.m. Monday on 5th Street In Sanford.
Police said Gunn was charged with carrying a
concealed firearm, possession of a short-barrelled rifle
and possession of a stolen gun after he waa observed
putting them in a car in front of his house.
He was beind held In the Seminole County Jail today
under $5,000 bond.
RETAIL THEFT CHARGED
A Casselberry man was arrested at 2.24 p.m. Monday
on a retail theft charge.
Police said Herman Andujar. 23, of 681 Lilac Road,
Casselberry, waa arrested for allegedly trying to take a
car tune-up kit, pellet gun and gear puller from the
Kmart store In Fern Park.
He was released on $100 bond from the Seminole
County Jail.

�Cve.dng H»r»ld, Sanford, F I.

Orlando Mall
Open After Fire
All but four stores In the 100-storc Colonial Plaza
Mall were open for business today despite a fire that
swept through the center of the mall Tuesday night,
sending clouds of smoke through the north portion
of the shopping center and causing possibly more
thun $1 million In damages.
' The fire wrvs reported lo the Orlando fire
department at aboui 7:15 p.m. and more than 125
firemen fought the bla/.c for about 2W hours after
evacuating most of the mail's Bhoppcrs. Five
flrcfighlers were Injured. Blit only one was hurt
seriously enough to be hospitalized.
At least three store manangers reported their
hrlstmas merchandise was destroyed In the blaze.
The fire started tn an attic above the Jarman shoe
■tore in the mail's midsection and spread north
through the attic to storage areas above Rutland's,
lame Bryant's and Pants USA, the Art department

f

A spokesman for the mall said the shopping center
opened at 10 a.in. today. Its usual time.
The spokesman said all stores opened except
Jarman's, Rutland's. Pants USA and Lane Bryant's.
‘‘Hopefully. lame Bryant's will be open later today,"
she said.
"Cleaning crews arc cleaning up the water and arc
deodorizing the area." she said. "There arc a lot of
shoppers out there right now."
The manager of ihc Jarman shoe store said he
called the fire department after he saw sparks and
smoke coming from the celling of his store. He said
the fire spread rapidly.
Firemen broke out Bky lights and sawed several
holes in the roof to let smoke escape and to allow
them to direct water onto the flames.
An initial estimate from the fire department
placed structural damage at 8100,000. Merchants at
the mall said damage to their inventories could
exceed SI million.

Fighting Scuttles Lebanese Peace Talks

«

I
.
I
I
j
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!

Save

G roup Seeks To Prevent
W ork-Related D iseases
CARPI. Italy (UPI) — Members of a new
international organization to fight work-related
diseases met to seek ways of putting scientific
rcscarrh to practical use in the workplace where
It could save thousands of lives.
The group. Collegium Ramazzlnl. Is an
International academy of doctors, scientists,
business leaders, union officials and govern­
ment workers thut hopes to stem the rising
number of deaths from occupationally caused
diseases.
The academy held Its first symposium
Tuesday In Carpi, birthplace of the founder of
Industrial medicine Bcmbardlno Ramazzlnl.
Samuels, one of the 100 members of the
Academy’s executive body, said the group
hoped lo he an "International conscience" of
Industry.
"Wc’rc a self-appointed group of people that
has the will und ability to speak out." said
Sheldon Samuels, director of Occupational
Health and Safely for the Industrial Union
Department of the AFL—CIO. "If we don't, the
poor devils In developed and underdeveloped
countries will continue lo die unnecessarily."

Calendar
WEDNESDAY. OCT. 19
League of Women Voters Scmlnolc-Orangc Legislative
^ceplion. 5:30 p.m.. John Young Museum. Loch Haven
irk. Orlando.
«ebos and Live Oak Rclws Club, noon and 8 p.m..
used, 130 Normandy Rd.. Casselberry.
Altamonte Springs AA . 8 p.m.. closed. Altamonte
prlngs Community Church. State Road 436 and
crmlt’BTratl. Alanon meets same time and place.
Casselberry AA. 8 p.m.. closed. Ascension Lutheran,
senseton Drive. Casselberry.
’Born to Win AA. 8 p.m.. open discussion. 1201 W.
ret St.. Sanford.
.
THURSDAY. OCT. 20
4.akc Mary Rotary Club. 8 a m.. Lake Mary High
bioo!.
Sanford S h u r c b o a r d Club will host a Northern
(strict Tournament. 9 a.m,. next lo Greater Sanford
humber of Commerce In Fort Mellon Park on East First
reel.
United Way of Seminole County report meeting. 8
m„ Senior Citizen Multipurpose Center. 200 N. Lake
rtplcl Drive. Casselberry. Complimentary breakfast.
Fall Festival Bazaar sponsored by Episcopal Church
omen. 11 a m. to 4 p.m.. Holy Cross Episcopal Church
Irish Hall. 400 S. Magnolia Avc.. Sanford. Luncheon
fved 11-2.
DrBary Blood Bank Red Cross blood drawing. 4-7
pi., DcBary Community Cenlcr. Shell Road.

PARK

COUNTRY STYLE

ASSO R TED

PORK
BUTTS

PORK
RIBS

PORK
CHOPS

C

LB .

EXTRA LEAN
FAM ILY PAK

LB.

A V G E .

EXTRA LEAN

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S L IC E D $
FREE

1

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FA R M ER BOY

9 8

Franks

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Pork Steak

88*

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GRADE A TCIRKEY C0RN K1MCi 10/12
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O N E LE S S
FAM ILY PACK
BAG
H/G 5 LB. PAK

c HAMS FtJLLYCOOKED

29

^

LB.

$ 3 9 8

W hiting Fish

COOKIN’ GOOD
F A M IL Y P A K B AG

_

L e g Q t r s .........................l b . 5 9 c
C U T UP CO M BO PAK

p-

W h o le F r y e r s

. . lb.

Pork Sausage

_

8 A .M . 8 P .M . S U N . 1-7

2 8

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU OCT. 2 6 , 1 9 83

BOHUS

LB . B O X

$098

i -l b

. roll

.

O L D E S M IT H F IE L D

m

8J98
$ 1

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1 9

Spiced Luncheon . . e or. 1
Pressed or Smoked Harrr'i-

dW A LTN EY H O NEY LO AF OR

Picnic Hams

a oz. p k g .

. . .

GW ALTNEY A LL M E A T

Bologna

. . .

a oz. pkg.

. . .

GW ALTNEY A LL BEEF

Bologna

. . .

12 o z .

pkg

.

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8J69

5 9 *

Large Eggs

8 | 29

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$ 0 9 8

EVERCANE

. . 3 La box

S u g a r ........... j5

P H IL A D E L P H IA F A M IL Y PAK

98?
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF!!!
LB- S m o k ed S a u sag e

HOT 0 *
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BEEF

D elm onlco SteakSLB. a 3 9 8

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U S D A C H O IC E

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w ith

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I

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Apple Juice

SUN NY FLA . H O M O

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8

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$1 68

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G OOD THRU 10 -36 I T

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Sliced
Bacon p k g . 3
W ITH OTIE FILLE D BOHUS CARO

98
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8

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GW ALTNEY

COLGATE 11 OZ.

Pie Filling ZL

9

Mix 5 l«or° r 6 9 fa Franks . * 12 oz. . . 2 8 °
WITH one FILLtD Bonus CAU)

Ground Chuck

4 Q Q

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wtth

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SUPER VALUES A T PARK &amp; SHOP-EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
m o tts

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COOP THRU 10 7*-«»

,F I A GRADE A

E x tr a L e a n G r o u n d B e e f 5*1i!bSRp2J!SE9 8 lb

*

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Pith lip Ire* Soper Boom Canificatrc at
Uwckaut Counter.
You {*t 1 Super Bonos Coupon lor »&gt;nj
SI you ipsnd. Past* 36 Super Banos
Coupons on tacb certificate.
When )tu check out prtvtnl one tilled
Super Sonus Certificate for each Super
Bonus Special jou select.

P.fTE, IR .P ID O

O L D e B M tT H F IE L D 6 0 C 1 " 3 , 9 3 S

Club S te a k .............. lb. * 2 6 8

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E X TR A LEAN

O L D E S M IT H F IE L D A L L M E A T

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f a m il y p a k

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IN B R IE F

QUANTITY R IGHTS RESERVED. 1

EXTR A LEAN

4 -6

S w e d e n 's S a a b a n d G e rm a n y ’s
Porschc-Audl.
Llncoln-Mercury moved up to th from
!4th place. Indicating Ford's push for
quality may be paying off.
Ford division products ranked 11th tn
the consumer survey* Dodge was 16th,
Qldsmobllc 17th. Chrysler-Plymouth
18th. Chevrolet 19th. Cadillac 21st.
Bulck 22nd and Pontiac. 23rd.
American Motors Corp. held the 24th
spot whl!" Its French partner Renault
ranked 25th. The survey did not include
owners of the new Renault Alliance. In
the bottom spot was a group of assorted
European automakers.

20 % To 40% On Your Meat

Pork Stew MeatA‘J&amp;.,*lS?

WORLD

Toyota owners reported the lowest
Incidence of mechanical problems and
recurring repair problems for the second
year.
Close behind was Subaru, jumping
from fifth place last year to third place
this year. Subaru's service departments
were ralcd the best among Japanese
automakers and Subaru owners arc far
more likely than buyers of any othrr
Japanese car to service their autos at the
dealership.
Rounding out the top 10 were the
Japanese automakers Honda and Mazda,
followed by the Swedish firm Volvo.
Llncoln-Mercury. the German firm BMW.

cluding the Individual divisions of the
top American companies.
Consumers who had purchased cars
within the past 12 to 14 months ranked
automakers on a 160-polnt scale. Factors
Included dealer service, defects at de­
livery. mechanical problems and parts
availability.
The industry average was 100 points.
Mcrccdcs-Bcnz led the pack for a
second successive year with a score of
159 points. Mercedes owners said the
company had climlnalcd Its only weak­
nesses last year in parts availability and
mechanical problems.
Toyota followed with 137 points.

DETROIT (UPI) - Nine or the top 10
car companies favored by Americans for
pcrlormancc are foreign but U.S.-born
Llncoln-Mercury beat out BMW and
Porsche to take seventh place In a survey
of consumers' satisfaction with their
cars.
The Power Newsletter survey found
foreign automakers holding all hut one of
the first 10 slots while American name­
plates dominated the bottom section of
the 26 places In the poll. Mcrccdcs-Bcnz
was No. 1.
The survey by the Westlake Village.
Calif, marketing research firm covered
foreign and domestic automakers. In­

BONELESS A LL M EAT

I

i

_

Custom ers Happiest W ith M ercedes, Japanese Cars

Com m issioner Suspended
For O dom eter Tampering
CHIPLEY |UPI| — Gov. Bob Graham has
suspended Washington County commissioner
Carlton "Lcnzy" Corbin from his post, citing
odometer tampering charges against the used
car dealer.
In an executive order Issued Tuesday.
Graham said State Attorney Jim Applcman filed
n complaint against Corbin. 51, earlier this
month, charging him with three counts of
odometer tampering. The suspended commis­
sioner has pleaded Innocent to the charges.
The suspension enme as Washington County
sheriff's Investigators continued an Inqulrv Into
the sTfoblfffe (truth of Keith till' 'TJuddy* Cilfnmmgfvte-whrt*re. body-was (BOtid outalde-hl#
house near Chlplcy Inst week. Corbin and
Cummings, a usfd car dealer, were codefendants In an Investigation of odometer
tampering.

an army stronghold.
"As It stands, the fighting around the airport, and the
bickering over the site of the conference will make It
difficult to open the talks on schedule." a Lebanese
government official said. The airport remained open
today.
Mortar and artillery duels erupted only hours after the
government said the talks would begin Thursday in the
worst oubreak since Lebanon's Sept. 23 cease fire.
Government sources said elTorts were under way to
check the violence.

A Lebanese army spokesman said there were no
mllltnry casualties, but six civilians were wounded and
one person was killed by snlpci and shellfire In
suburban Szzfcrfn and the Christian cant Beirut
neighborhood of Ain Rummanch.
Ain Rummanch residents Identified the dead man as
23-year-old Ellas Naslf Herbal — n one-time rightist
militiaman who was wounded In factional fighting six
years ago.
Multinational peacekeeping sources said an estimated
75 shells were fired at dawn on the Lebanese army
post Hons In Souk cl Gharb and nearby Qmatlych —also

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) — Lebanon's worst fighting In
three weeks and factional feuding all but torpedoed
plans today to convene peace talks among the warring
factions. One person was killed and six others •.vcv.r.dcd
by sniper Rnd shellfire. officials said.
A Lebanese army spokesman said government troops
came under an Intense nrilllery barrage at daybreak on
the outskirts of the shutcgic mountain town of Souk el
Gharb, 8 mllrs southeast of Beirut.
The shelling, by pro-Syrian Druzc militiamen, sub­
sided by midmomlng but an army spokesman said
sniper fire kept the region tense.

FLORIDA
iN B R IE F

W td r.tid a y , Oct. 1&gt;&gt; I t l l —)A

8 8

one f il l e d Bonus ca r d
GOOO THRU 10-264)

1Q
S h o rte n in g .

Shave Cream * 1

. . S

f f f i 9 8 *

wnh one filled boau* card

________2&lt;?opTWRU IHf-M__________

STO KELY
MIX O R MATCH
17 oz. W /K or C/S Corn
16 oz. Sweet Peas
16 oz. Stewed Tomatoes
Georgia Red
15 oz. Tom ato Sauce

Triam inlc E x p ecto ran t &lt;02 * 2 98

H e in z G r a v y S S T i f f i "

M y la n ta L iq u id . . . laoz. 6 2 49

O o d l e s o f N o o d le s 4 o V s l ° °

F ireside Vanilla W afers ' 1 ^ 8 9 *

M artha W hite iSS Rice . .&lt;£ 9 9 *

Sunshine Krispy S a ltin e ss

9 8 c

T u ffy S c o u r i n g P a d s . . 3 9 c

A r m o u r B e e f S t e w 2*01. ^ 1 ^

Clorox Pre-W ash A e rso U $ 1 79

H e r s h e y H ot C ocoa

G eneric Dog Food

I-LB.

E q u a l S w e e t n e r . .io c a $ l M
8 1 09
C r e m o r a . . . 16 OZ.
46 8 1 7 9
B etty C rocker Bisquik 02. A

DAIRY
V2 gal. 8 1 1

PARKAY Q TR S .

~

M a rg a rin e

. . . 2

T.V.

Sliced Cheese

a
lbs

.

R E D D E L IC IO U S

F R E S H J U IC Y

APPLES

LEM O NS

2

1 °

12 oz.

. . . •/» g a l .

8 |

CANS

LB.

*

3

&amp;

8

8

*

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GREEN

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19

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^

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3&lt;*1 0

™

8

8

CHEFSALUTO

1

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*

5

2

F OR 9

8

U .S . N O . 1 S W E E T

POTATOES
$ 1
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* . jl

J

LBS.

1

YELLOW

GREEN

C R .S R

O N IO N S

CARROTS

LBS.

Jl

Sausage Pizza
*

SQ U A SH
T
$ 1 00

J

g *

2

BUNCHES 6

9

*

1-LB . B AG 2

0

^

Apple Pie

p q

15 oz

M R S . S M IT H 'S

5 9
6

8 1

5

$388

FROZEN FOODS

G OLDEN

4 n n

oz.

. *4&lt;£ $ 1 ° °

BANANAS

120 Z . 6 9 c

PET

B utterm ilk

1 2 .1 2

PRODUCE

O ra n g e J u ic e

E n g lis h M u ffin s

BEER

IN T R O D U C T O R Y O F F E R
G e n e ric C h a rc o a l L ig h te r 5 1 0 9 S A V E 5 1 * P e r H a lf G a llo n
IS
EXTRA RICH
B-B-Q Sauce °St" OZ.
7 9 *
• J 4 9 K in n ett Ice C ream
Vlasic Kosher Dills
PARLOR T A S T E R
Q O
ALL
FLAVORS
^
I
LaRosa Lasagna i - l b . p k g . 6 9 *
'/ j GAL.
J .

Kraft Mini Marshmallows &amp;* 5 9 c

CANS $ 1 0 0
FOR

OLD
M IL W A U K E E

6 9 c

* -

. . 2 6 oz. . .

I

79

ASSORTED

Banquet Dinners2
B IR D S E Y E

Cool W

La.

'SSL
h ip ________ . 202 .

8 1 79
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* 1

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Eggo Waffles . . n o z . 7 9 *
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Orange Juice . . i 2 o z . 7 9

�E v e n in g H e r a ld

An underwater checkers tournament
between Jhe Rollins Dive Club and the
Disney Dive Club, underwater cinemato­
grapher Stan Waterman and “The Great
Pumpkin Hot Air Balloon Chase" are all a
part of thc",Undcrwatcr Expo ‘S3" which
will bcnefH-the Central Florida Zoo. The
underwater film festival will be held Oct.
28. 29 and 30 at the Ramada Court of
Flags In Orlando and w&lt;U also feature an
ourtdoor arts and crofts show, slides, films,
seminars and door prizes. The grand prize
will be a 7-dav diving nnd sailing trip to the
Bahamas.
For more Information or tickets call
644-2994.

(usps 4tnto&gt;
300N. TRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F U . 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-0993
Wednesday, October 19, 1983—4A
Wayne D, Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Levcnsury * Advertising and C lrculaiion D irector

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months. $24.00;
Year, $43.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57 00.'

Ceremonial
Campaigning
By the time the campaign season Is In full swing,
wc no doubt will have heard the Democratic
candidates swearing not only their willingness to
run with a female vice president, but with a black,
an Hispanic and an Asian as well. No doubt the
actual vice presidential nominee will be a white
male, but the point will have been made — just as
the Republicans arc attem pting to score their own
points by Installing, with great fanfare, a Hispanic
woman as the signer of U.S. dollar bills and by
worrying aloud a lot about the "gender gafi."
Such gestures are not entirely without value. On
the road to actual equality, Up service is a
significant way station.
Eut there is good reason to worry about what
kind of political accommodation today's pieties arc
pointing toward. The numbers game that both
parties play — "Wc appointed more women to
high offices;" "Well, wc appointed a woman to the
Supreme Court" — threatens to become an end in
Itself. As politicians scramble to Include so many
of these and so many of those on each of their
teams. It Is all too likely that the exercise will
degenerate into an Insult to the Integrity of the
Individual players. And the goal of achieving
better statistics could well end up not just
displacing but undermining the real point, which
is to assure that women or blacks or Hlspanics are
fully accepted as political actors.
Nor does It help undo sexism or racism when the
parties decide to court voters by addressing "the
women's interest" in welfare programs or "the
Hispanic interest In blocking immigration re­
forms. Such stereotyped assignm ents of an
"appropriate" set of political concerns to cadi
group is as offensive as the notion — which follows
inevitably — that these concerns arc special
interests of little relevance to anyone else.
Far from bringing about the promised political
attention, this kind of courting of women's votes
or any ethnic group's votes will predictably lead to
further segregation of these groups and of their
concerns from the main business of politics. Thus,
packaged, "their" Interests become talismans that
the politicians m ust touch, not public policy
problems the nation m ust resolve.

The Noose Closes
The Reagan administration now requires that all
its top officials with access to high-level informa­
tion sign contracts. These contracts require them
to submit for governmental review anything they
write and release to the public — for the rest of
their lives.
Signatures of these contracts are required from
thousands of persons on the White House staff and
in the State and Defense departm ents, from
military leaders. National Security Council officials
and high-ranking foreign service officers.
The requirement Is dangerous In the extreme. It
gives those In power control over criticism from
the very persons who are most aware of the facts
and who are most qualified to comment.
The American Society of Newspaper Editors
warns this is "peaoetims censorship of a scope
unparalleled in this country since the adoption ol
the Bill of Rights in 1791."
The stated purpose of tire contract, of course. Is
to prevent the unauthorized disclosure of classified
material. T hat's commendable. The effect In the
end, however, will be government control of the
distribution of information. The government will
release only what it wants released.
The contract requirement is the latest of several
moves by the Reagan administration which tend
to whittle at the freedom-of-specch tenet of the
First Amendment;
— It has sought to place limits on the Freedom of
Information Act, which, since 1961, has opened
federal files and has resulted in many revelations
of government wrongdoing.
— It has threatened the right of universities to
publish and discuss unclassified Information.
It's high time the media and public show
concern. It Is not the role of government to decide
what information about Its conduct should be
released to the public.
If government somehow obtains that power of
censorship, It will mark the end of freedom.

BERRY'S WORLD

"First, he started wearing the fake mustache.
Then, he asked me to call him te c h .' Now. he
wants a work slowdown."

0 . 0 °
By Jane Casselberry

The Rosie O'Grndy's Good Time Band
will wake up the United Way of Seminole
County campaign workers with their
unrestrained Dixieland Jazz when they
turn out for the 8 a.in. report brcukfnst
Thursday. The complimentary continental
breakfast will be hosted by the Casselberry
Senior Citizens Multipurpose Center In
Secret Lake Park. It will be the last report
meeting before the final "Victory' Dinner"
to be held at 7 p.m. on Oct. 27 at the
Eastmonte Civic Center, Altamonte
Springs. There will be a hospitality hour
and cash bar beginning at 6 p.m. Providing

the entertainment will be the Lake
Brantley High School musical group,
"Spectrum" under the direction of Ted
Douce.

the continued support of his club to this
project and to the Special Olympics
program next month. The club meets at
7:30 a.m. each Friday at the Holiday Inn
on Wymore Road and State Road 436,
Altamonte Springs.

The Optimist Club of South Seminole l#»
forming a new Optimist club In South
Orange County, tentatively called the
The Humane Society of Seminole
Optimist Club of Lake Buena Vista. It will
County in Sanford Is calling on doit nwrero
draw its membership horn south Orlando.
to participate In a special fund raising
Williamsburg. Lake Buena Vista, Windrive that will enable the shelter raise the
demcrc. Bay Hill and the Klsalmmee-St.
additional funds lo furthrr its programs of
Cloud area. Herb Wclssman Is chairman of
caring for and housing abused and injured
the project and can be reached at 788animals.
2524 or 239-3000 (office) for further
The campaign, which is pari of a
Information. The Optimists arc civicnational
campaign conducted by the
minded men who gather together for youth
American
Humane
Association and Gaines
and community service, fellowship and
Dog Foods Involve* the collection of
sclf-dcvclopment.
starred price areas from Gaines dog food
The South Seminole Optimists and their
products. The shelter will receive up to 30
wives have resumed last year's highly
centers for each starred (asterisk! price
successful STOP program. On Oct. 8 they
marker collected. They arc found on the
played host to 30 handicapped children
following products: Gravy Train. Cycle.
from Roscnwald Exceptional Children's
Top Choice. Prime Variety. Puppy Choice
School.
and Gaines Burgers. They can be brought
to the shelter at 2800 County Home Road.
The ch ild ren and the O ptim ists
Monday through Saturday. 10 a.m. to 4
participated In softball, baskctbal and
p.m. or mailed to P.O. Box 784. Sanford.
swimming at the Wcsttnonte Recreation
They must be submitted by Oct. 31 to
Facility of the city of Altamonte Springs.
qualify fora double value bonus.
Optimist President Bill Petit has pledged

ROBERT WALTERS

WASHINGTON WORLD

How O u r
Cities
Evolve

Who Is
That
Senator?
By Steve Gerstcl
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Within the
confines of the Senate. Alan Cranston.
Ernest Holllngs and Gary Hart are
well-known figures.
But what these three U.S. senators
have found, despite hustling around the
country for almost a year. Is that
nobody really knows them.
Which brings Into question, once
again, whether the Senate can serve as
a springboard for those ambitious
enough to seek the presidency.
John Glenn, the fourth senator seek­
ing the D em ocratic p resid en tial
nomination. Is. nf cour*e well knmvn
around the land.
But his name recognition docs not
stem from nearly 10 years In the Senate
where he has achieved no more, proba­
bly less, than Cranston, Holllngs and
Hart.
Glenn is known, rather, as the first
astronaut to orbit Earth and it is more
accurate to say his political launching
pad Is the one at Cape Canaveral, not
the Senate.
Name recognition — as all four have
found out —Is Invaluable at this stage of
the campaign.
To a great extent, it dictntes the
standings In the polls and the polls, in
turn, determine to a great extent such
campaign foundations as endorsements,
the ability to get the best state orga­
nizers and. most important of all. the
infusion of money.
That’s why. for Instance, former Vice
President Walter Mondale and Glenn,
who run one-two in all the polls, have
the biggest war chests and. In the case
of Mondaie. the major euduiscmcuts
and the organization.
t
And the reason Cranston. Holllngs
and Hart show so poorly In the polls is
their lack of name recognition.
Nothing prows the point more than
the lale entry of George McGovern Into
the race. He may be remembered most
for his disastrous loss In 1972 but
remembered he is. and now runs third
in the polls.
So Is the Senate a good springboard
for the nomination? No.
The last senator to win a nomination
was McGovern, the one before him was
Barry Goldwatcr and before him .John
Kennedy. Others, with congressional
service In their pedigrees, have reached
the White House, but not directly from
the Senate or the House.
Even this early In the campaign.
Cranston and Glenn have had to explain
over and over their votes for President
Reagan's three-year tax cut. even
though it was part of a package thaPhad
many parts Democrats would support.
Similarly. Glenn and Holllngs have to
explain why they voted against the Salt
II treaty. Glenn has to Justify his vote for
production of nerve gas. Cranston has lo
suffer Jabs for wanting "peace and the
HI bomber."

JULIAN BOND

Symbol V s. Substance
When House Speaker Thomas P.
"Tip" O'Neill announced recently that'
action on a controversial Immigration*
reform bill would be Indefinitely
postponed. Hispanic leaders were quick
to claim credit.
"This was a major victory for the
Hispanic caucus." said Rep. Robert
Garcia, D-N.Y.. caucus chairman.
But when right-wing Sen. Jesse
Helms. R-N.C.. agreed that same day lo
halt his filibuster aguinst legislation
making Martin Luther King J r.'s
birthday a national holiday, no similar
claim came from the Congressional
Black Caucus — despite heavy support
given the measure by black lawmakers.
Fear of the nation's four million
Hispanic voters Is given as the major
reason for temporary defeat of the tough
Immigration measure, which would
crack down on Illegal alien workers.
But no one credits the 14 millionstrong black electorate for passing the
King bill through the House and assur­
ing Its eventual passage in the Senate
and endorsement by President Reagan.
Rather, the King bill’s success is seen
as a way for white legislators to "give a
vote" to their black constituents — u
vote to balance past and future votes
that will affect blacks more than the
holiday the King bill establishes.
"It's symbolism vs. substance" said a
civil rights lobbyist who requested
unnonymity as he compared the King
and immigration bills.
"The King bill Is an easy vole for a
member of Congress who wants to
please his minority voters after he has
gutted social programs for three years."
he said. "He can tell his Men's Day
audiences in black churches that he
voted to make Dr. King's birthday a
national holiday, while Ignoring the
votes he cast that made It difficult for
many blacks to have a Job to take a
holiday from."
The immigration reform bill, called
"Sltnpson-Mazzoli" after Sen. Alan ,K.
Simpson. R-Wyo.. and Rep. Romuno L.
Mazzoll. D-Ky,. hud passed the Senate.
It was supported by the Reagan
administration.

Democrats' feared passage by the
House would permit a Reagan veto —
despite the administration's previous
endorsement. The Republican presi­
dent's probable turnaround would allow
him to curry favor with Hispanic voters,
whose support the Republican Party
badly needs if it Is to carry California
and Texas in next year's presidential
election.
Hlspanics objected especially to sanc­
tions aimed at preventing employment
of illegal Immigrants. The sanctions.
Hispanic leaders said, would* lead
employers to refuse to hire any Hispanic
— citizen or Illegal entrant alike. They
promised that Democrats would profit
from election-season reminders of the
role the Democratic House speaker
played In killing the bill.
Support for the King bill, meanwhile,
would allow the administration to shed
— at least partially — the anti-black
reputation It has earned. But the King
birthday bill would have little effect
except as symbolic recognition of the
martyred leader's contributions to the
nation.
Although the King measure tins been
pushed most strongly by Rep. John
Conyers. D-Mlch., Its success to date Is
the result of bipartisan support. Only
fringe polillcans in either House — the
late Rep. Larry McDonald. D-Ga., and
Sen. Helms — strenuously objeetd to It,
saying that King's politics were Marxist
and his personal life suspect.
Mo»i members nf Onngrer* embraced
the legislation after rejecting It for
several years running. And several said
they did it to appeal to black votes.
Hispanic leaden; have won a victory
by defeating a measure they were
convinced would hurt their community.
Black leaders have won a victory as
well. But the King bill will offer only a
symbolic victory for black Americans,
ravaged by three years of hostility from
congressional Republicans and Demo­
crats alike.
That's the difference —symbolism vs.
substance — between the congratula­
tions being passed around the Black and
Hispanic caucuses.

BOSTON (NEA) — Because Boston has
experienced more than Its share of
racial turmoil In recent decades, most
political observers assumed that a black
candidate had virtually no chance of
success In a mayoral race.
But as in Philadelphia and Chicago,
two cities also wracked by ethnic strife
during the 1960s and 1970s. Boston's
voters this year could elect their first
black mayor.
He is Melvin H. King, a sott-spoken.
yet charismatic 54-ycar-oia tormer state
legislator, whose Nd for Ihc mayor's
seat was written off as hopeless by most
political observers when the campaign
began earlier this year.
When Boston voters went to the polls
earlier this month to participate in an
election designed to winnow the
eight-candidate field to two finalists.
King finished a strong second, only a
single vote behind City Councilor
Raymond L. Flynn, a 44-year-old blue
collar populist.
A second election, scheduled for Nov,
15. will decide which of those two men
Is to be the city's next mayor.
Regardless of the outcome of the
election here, ore important Indicator
provides a fasclnuUng sign of the times: •
Only one of the nation's six largest '
cities Is likely to enter 1984 with a white
male as Its mayor.
The exception to that rule will be New
York Mayor Edward I. Koch.
In Chicago, Los Angeles. Philadelphia
and Detroit, the highest elected officials
arc black men — and the mayor of
Houston is a white woman.
T he e v e n ts to d a te s u g g e s t,
meanwhile, that Boston also has un­
dergone a remarkable transformation.
In no city anywhere In the country
does there exist a stronger sense of
neighborhood Identification. There are
lifelong residents of this city who almost
never go downtown and Identify
themselves not as natives of Boston, but
of Roxbury. Dorchester. Jamaica Plain
or South Boston.
Each of those neighborhoods in-*
variably Is dominated by a single,
insular ethnic group. Thus, when the*
city began busing school children to
achieve court-ordered racial Integration.'
Boston's social iabrtc was torn apart.
As a result, racism —covert and overt
— has been a hallmark of almost every
major election held here during the past
two decades."
This year, however, both blacks and
whites appear to have made Important
accommodations. Four years ago, for
example. King campaigned (unsuc­
cessfully) for mayor clad In dashlkls and
terrorized many white* with his fiery,
rhetoric. He now tours the city in
three-piece business suits and speaks
with pride about his efforts to organize a
"rainbow coalition" that cuts across
racial, ethnic and class lines.

JA C K ANDERSON

Sudanese Train To Protect Chevron

WASHINGTON — In the subterranean
world cf spies and terrorists, the Reagan
administration has embarked on yet
another secret mission. This one Is
centered In the Sudan, geographically
the largest nation in Africa.
Not only is the Sudan considered
strategically Important by administra­
tion geopollllcians. It Is the site of a
major pipeline project and heavy In­
vestment by Chevron Oil.
This giant country has few population
centers, isolated from one another by
vast stretches of desert and primitive
transportation facilities. So vast a space
with so few people Is difficult enough to
maintain centralized rule over: but the
tribal rulers of the south have grown
disenchanted with their Moslem leaders
In northern Sudan.
Adding to the aggravations, the
Sudan has two unruly neighbors —
Marxist Ethiopia on the cast and radical
Libya on ihc west — which are stirring
up rebellion. According to a highly
sensitive State Department cable seen
by my associate Lucetle Lagnado, there
Is "evidence of a growing externally
sponsored insurgent threat to bouthem

and western Sudan."
To President Reagan’s global plan­
ners. this translated into the "need for
a n e f f e c t iv e S u d a n e s e c o u n lerinsurgency capability." So the Pen­
tagon has sent a Security Evaluation
and Assistance team lo the Sudan.
The project has “high political sensi­
tivity," according to the cable, so the
American counterinsurgency experts
have been traveling Incognito, their
presence known only to the Pentagon,
the U.S. Embassy and top officials of the
Sudanese government. "Civilian attire
is directed for travel In and to Sudan."
the cable cautions.
The American public was not trusted
to know about the Sudanese Involve­
ment. Nor, for that mutter, was Con­
gress. Sources at the House subcom­
mittee on Africa, for example, said they
had heard nothing about It from the
Pentagon,
The team Is no more than the camel's
nose under the tent — three Individuals
with "specific skills and expertise in
counterinsurgency problems" and one
who Is knowledgeable In "Sudanese

politico-military sensitivities."
The classified cable makes clear that
Chevron's oil Investment is the chief
concern, The oil fields have been
threatened by rebels who oppose the
Khartoum government of President
Goafar Mohammed Nlmelrl. and the
American team Is supposed lo develop
specific plans for protecting "proposed
oil 'acllitles In southern Sudan against
an Insurgent threat."
The team will also evuluate the
Sudanese ability to deal with the
Insurgents, "through observation of
It dining tn progress, employment of
tartlca, equipment organization and
leadership, and operational planning
skills."
While Congress and the public are
being kept In the dark. Chevron Isn't.
The cable notes that "an appropriate
Chevron representative'' will brief the
Pentagon team and accompany It on Its
Sudanese rounds whenever possible.
A possible operational option would
be the dispatch of U.S. Special Forces to
t r a i n th e S u d a n e s e In c o u n ­
terinsurgency.

BOONDOGGLE OF THE WEEK: An
antique bridge and an even more
antique law arc costing Am Irak more
than $5,000 a weekend and causing
countless behtnd-schcdule trains on the
heavily traveled rail corridor between
Washington and Boston.
The bridge over the Bush River Just
north of Baltimore was built In 1913. It
clears the water by only 12 feet. The
law, which Is even older, says tliat
navigable rivers must be kept open fa­
nny boat that shows up.
This means that 15 train crew
members must spend 40 minutes un­
bolting the little bridge, raising li.
lowering It and bolting It back Into place
before the train can proceed. Each ritual
costs the government-owned railroad
$1,300.
Fortunately for Amlrak. the bridge is
near the Army's Aberdeen Proving
Grounds, so the river Is closed to
boaters during the week, to keep them
from getting caught In the cross fire of
some new weapons. But on weekends,
when Aberdeen is quiet, the raising and
lowering of the bridge occurs about
twice a day.

�Evtnlrm H tr ild , Sanford, F I.

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a distinctive European design and an
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And it's built in America.

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• • U s e fig u r e s fo r c o m p a r is o n . Y o u r m ile a g e m a y v a r y
w ith s p e e d , w e a th e r, trip le n g th . A c tu a l H ig h w a y
f ig u r e s w ill p r o b a b ly b e lo w e r.
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W td n *« d iy , P el. I f , l f M —3A

�* tA—Ev*nln$ Htnld, Santoi-d, FI.

-

Wadrmday, Oct. \1, 1MJ
--------------

For Both

Good Bad

Oil Money Urbanizes Eskimos

H « » U P hoto b y T o m O lo n la iM

Snoop U p To
The B a r, B oys

Dogs a re n 't likely to find anything but w a ter in
this dog bar on Fifth Avenue In New Y o rk City.
But they w ill be able to quench th eir thirst with
the w ater such bars hold. Businessmen installed
the tiny bars In front of their establishments for
patrons who shop the area accom panied by
their canines.

By Andrew MacLeod
BARROW. Alaska (UPI) Eugene Brower presides over a
difficult bllllon-dollar m od­
ernization of an Eskimo-run town
In America's arctic reaches. Out­
side his office, «r*l-skin boats and
bleached whale bones dot the
shoreline,
Brower, 35. is mayor of a vast
municipality called the North
Slope Borough, which Is the size
of Idaho and Includes Barrow and
a few other small communities.
"You compromise and try to
make the best of the two worlds."
Brower said In an Interview.
"You gel the good and the bad of
Western society.’*
Far above the Arctic Circle, at
the northernmost edge of the the
United States, life Is changing.
Flush tollctc, cable television,
running water and processed
foods are arriving. Subdivision
homes arc replacing shneks.
Fueled by North Slope oil
revenues, the borough, which
would be called a county In the
Lower 48. Is moving from the
19th century Into the 20th. The
change has been swift, costly and
not without controversy.
About $1 billion in general
obligation bonds have been
floated by the 11-year-old
borough to finance the mod­
ernization, a figure that breaks

know how to manage their own
down to $126,000 per capltn for
affairs,
which is a crock."
...m
o
re
like
a
the borough’s 7.552 residents,
A
rctic
n a tiv e s have had
slightly less than half of whom developing Third World
extensive
co n tact with the
are Eskimos.
nation
than
an
Western
world
since whaling
Many of the other residents artships began roving the north in
temporary workers assigned to American municipality.
the 19th century. Eskimos were
the urea, which Includes seven
introduced
to repeating rifles,
smaller villages.
"In Anchorage you have flush whiskey, measles, Influenza and
The borough tins almost as
much outstanding general ob­ toilets and running water. Up n cash economy instead of barter.
ligation bonding as the State of here people use 55-gallon drums
Fenced most of the year by a
to melt water In. and we have a
Alaska. Its per capita debt also Is honey
sea
of snow-capped ice on the
bucket sewage disposal
high In comparison with that of
north and a wind-swept expanse
system."
other communities. Anchorage,
Most of the money Is being of flat tundra to the south,
for example, has $1,900 per spent
to provide services like Barrow is as Isolated as any place
person debt.
roads,
sewers,
and schools in the United States. Anchorage
Eskimo leaders say comparing that the rest orwater
takes Is 722 air miles south.
t h e i r b o r o u g h to o t h e r fo r g r a n t e d , thes anation
id
L
lo
It Is a community where walrus
municipalities Is misleading. A hvakana. d ire c to r of aydd­
Their Jurisdiction stretches ministration and finance for the meat is hung outdoors to re­
frigerate: T-bone steak Is sold In a
across the barren arctic from the
Chuckchl Sea on the west to tho borough. The costs are high modern community store for
because of tin; expense de­ $5.69 a pound.
Canadian border on the cast.
Polar bears arc shot ar they
They say the North Slope manded by Arctic construction
walk through the town; Children
Borough, with Its oil-supported technology.
"Materials here arc about three study at computer terminals In
tax base of $10 billion. Is more
times
the cost In Seattle, and the school.
like a developing Third World construction
is the same,
N ation th a n an A m erican which hringscost
a three-bedroom
Wages are high. Workers at the
municipality.
Paying ofT the huge debts is house with about 1.500 square gravel quany earn $27 an hour
timed to match the (low of oil feet to around $225,000.*’ plus overtime. Gasoline sella for
Ahvakana said.
$2.65 a gallon.
from Prudlioc Bay.
In addition, the borough has
Yesterday Is shown in (he
•’We’re ch artin g our own
couise of history. We've ac­ faced cost overruns on some rusting and discarded snow
machines. Tomorrow Is repre­
complished In a very short time projects.
"I think there Is racism and sented by the corporation's
what it's taken America 100 to
200 years to accomplish." said Jealously," said Brower. "They carpeted and glassed head­
think the natives up here don't quarters.
Brower.

AMERICAS FAMIIY DRUG STORE

Eckerd
Generics
Hard to s a y Easy to save on. ,,

There's G old A t West Point
- About $25 Billion Worth
B y S te v e G eim an n
U P I B n e ln e te W r it e r

WEST POINT. N.Y. (UPI) - Residents
near the U.S. Military Academy have
good reason to say;. "There's gold In
them there Mils."
f About 60 million ounces of pure gold
owned by the U.S. government, worth
' about $25 billion. Is stored in the U.S.
Bullion Depository at West Point, a
weii-guanied building surrounded by the
military academy.
The depository also Is used as a mint.
Every day. a tractor-trailer loaded with
8.5 million freshly minted pennies leaves
the depository, headed for New York
City. Boston. BufTalo and other northeast
Federal Reserve banks.
The larger Philadelphia and Denver
mints produce 45 million additional
pennies each day. But unless you work
for the U.S. Bureau of the Mint, you
won't know whether the pennies In your
pocket came from West Point.
•'We've kept it a good secret." Joked
Donna Pope, director oflhe U.S. Mint,
during a recent visit to the depository.
"We don't want the publicity," said
Cliff Barber, depository superintendent.
The gold in the depository used to be
stored at the U.S. Assay Office In New
York City, but last year It was trans­
ferred to the more tranquil West Point
location.
The stash Is second only to the main
gold depository at Fori Knox. Ky., where
nearly 150 million ounces, worth about
$61 billion. Is stored.
The West Point depository was a
well-kept secret until Sept. 13. when top
government officials, coin collectors ant*
the press descended on the small
depository for the ceremonial striking of
(he first U.S. gold coin In nearly 50
years.

Before then, the depository had
operated In virtual anonymity since It
was built In 1936 at a cost of $500,000 to
store the nation's silver bullion.
It was used only for storage until 1973,
when Increased need for coins and an
anticipated Increase In collector demand
for Bicentennial coins prompted the
government to designate the West Point
as an auxll'vy to mint rains.
The wli 'owlcss building was re­
modeled to accommodate 20 coin pre­
sses and to make space for preparing
coin blanks, striking the coins and
storing dally production until shipment.
West Point stamps one-cenl Images of
Abraham Lincoln and the Lincoln Me­
morial on copper blanks which are
produced elsewhere and are shipped In.
officials said.
Coins produced at West Point lack any
special mark showing where the rain
was made. For example, rains stamped
at the large mint In Denver carry a "D”
and rains minted at the former San
Franciscio mint carried an "S."
If the West Point coins carried a "W"
mark, its limited production compared
with the 53.5 million produced every’ day
would make the rains Immediate col­
lectors Items The U.S. produces about
15 billion pennies a year, with about 3.1
billion minted at West Point.
Nearly 165 people work at the deposi­
tory, Including 90 full-time workers,
keeping watch over the gold and work­
ing to strike pennies In round-the-clock
shifts, five days a week.
Government officials appear pleased
with the operation. Pope said the West
Po'nt mint's record of performance made
It the only logical site-to strike the nearly
2 million gold coins authorized by the
Congress.

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Sanford, Florida 32771

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For Veterans w ith m ilitary service before Feb. 1 ,1 9 5 5 [
For Veterans wKft m ilita ry service since Jan. 3 1 ,1 9 5 5 [
Year o f Discharge___________________ A g e _______
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�Evtnlnfl H«r«td, Sanford, FI.

Next Century's [Forecast: Warmer, Wet
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The Environmental Protection
Agency’s weather forecW^for the next 120 years: A
"greenhouse efTect" producing hotter summers, m'lder
winters, polar Ice caps melting and some flooded coastal
cities.
Those are the findings of a major report released
Tuesday by the EPA, predicting the greenhouse efTect
now warming the Earth's atmosphere will cause
enormous climate changes that could Mart In the next
decade.
But the global temperature rise, caused by Increased
levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide from fossil fuel
burning, also may help plants grow better and thereby
Improve world agriculture. EPA scientists nnuThe study, Can We Delay a Greenhouse Warming? la
the government’s first warning of dire consequences
from the greenhouse efTect — Increasing concentrations
of carbon dioxide In the atmosphere from fossil fuel
emissions.
The carbon dioxide lets sunlight that heats Earth
enter the atmosphere but Inhibits escape of heat
radiation Into space.

"By the year 2000, the frequency of hotter days will be
greater. It will be greater In Maine: It will be greater In
Florida," John Hoffman, director of strategic studies for
the EPA, said at a briefing.
The study predicts changes in world weather patterns
eventually could cause enormous disruption, Including
a rise In ocean levels ana flood Ing of coastal cities.
Bui HofTinan noted lhat with more carbon dioxide In
the atmosphere, "The agricultural community will
Increase productivity significantly.”
The additional carbon dioxide, he explained, enhances
photosynthesis In green plants and decreases moisture
requirements for plant growth.
The report cautioned, however, that u its models of
climate activity prove accurate, "Changes in world
climate are likely to occur at an unprecedented rate. All
human activities are likely to be In some way affected.
"Farming, transportation, coastal habitation, and the
provision of water supplies are the most obvious. Some
nations are likely to benefit from changes In climate;
others will sufTer," said the study by EPA employee
Stephen Seidel and consultant Dale Keyes.

EPA Assistant Administrator Joseph Cannon said the
agency docs not view the study as a "doomsday
document, but as a document that will allow us to
plan."
The report said current estimates suggest a 3.6 degree
Fahrenheit rise could occur by 2040 and a 9 degree rise
by 2100.
Previous global icmpcrature changes "have occurred
over tens of thousands of years," the report noted. But
warming Induced by Increases in carbon dioxide "could
equal historical changes In climate In a matter of only
120 years.”
The report strongly recommends that planning begin
now to deal with the changes global warming will
produce. It said policy changes such as massive taxes on
fossil fuels would only slightly delay temperature rises.
The report said sea levels could rise as much as 12 feet
because of melting polar Ice caps. Even a small rise In
oceans “could flood or cause storm damage to many of
the major ports of the world, disrupt transportation
networks, alter aquatic ecosystems and cause major
shifts In land development patterns.”

Fiercely Proud Family Battles Watts' Street Gangs
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Jam e s
Hawkins' store Is the center of an urban
war — a bloody 10-month battle pitting
the 72-year-old grocer and his family
against hundreds of Watts gang mem­
bers enraged by resistance to, their
neighborhood rule of terror.
At issue is who runs the streets of
Watts, the police or gangs. At stake are
the lives of Hawkins and his family.
"My father has said the only way he'll
leave here ts In a box. and If we have to.
we'U go with him,” said James Hawkins
Jr.
The Hawkins — James Sr., his wife.
Elsie, their 13 children and 72 grand­
children — arc reinforced by the
6,500-member city Police Department
and 5,700 member county Sheriff's De­
partment.
Arrayed against them are about 200
16-lo-22-year-old gang members, who
live itrnsH «he mrr»4 *njsn Hav/kins’ tiny
grocery In a pastel-colored enclave
known as the Nickerson Gardens Hous­
ing Project.
The Hawkins family has been under
siege since January, when James shot
and wounded a robber at hta store.
The battle Intensified in September,
when James Jr., 38. grappled with and
then shot and killed a reputed member
of the Bounty Hunters, who allegedly
waa stealing a bicycle from girls outside
the store.
The Bounty Hunters, supported by the
Bloods and Crips gangs, declared war
and began a month-long series of attacks
on two of the family's homes and store

with guns, shotguns and Molotov
cocktails.
• Four of Hawkins' six sons are mili­
tary-trained — and they put their
experience to work.
"In one of the Incidents, we must have
exchanged 30 to 40 rounds." said Elton
Hawkins. 32. "Another time, they tried
to ram a stolen car Into the store, ho]
loping
to get us out in the open so they could
take clean shots at us.
"Fortunately, I shot out the car's tires
and It swerved Into the middle of the
street."
Earlier this month, a police gang unit
officer told a reporter It was not practical
for Hawkins and his family to remain In
their home, which adjoins die store,
because officers could only "police the
results of the violence, not the violence
Itself."
The next day. Police Chief Darvl Gales
zzii the •UUuiuil utu i&gt;ui icficci uie
position of the department.
"When the liberties of the Hawkinses
are attacked.” Gates said. "6.500 Los
Angeles police officers will counterattack
on behalf of that fine family."
Two weeks ago, police officers and
sheriff's deputies posted a 24-hour watch
on the store and home where Hawkins
lives with six members of his family.
Police have also stepped up patrols In
the area, which has taken on the look of
a war zone with flood lights Slid police
helicopters hovering overhead.
Hawkins, a self-made man who earned
a fortune In the funeral business, "could

live among the wealthiest of the wealthy
if he wanted to," his son. James, said.

always fight for what you know Is right."
The district attorney's office an­
nounced recently that 14 gang members
had been charged with terrorizing the
Hawkinses and more arrests were
expected.
Bui James Jr. concedes the wellpublicized stakeout has become a "polit­
ical Issue."
"They can't protect the president, so
what makes them think they can protect
us." he said. "In the end. we’ll have to
defend ourselves. Just as we did before
the police showed up.”

Indeed, the patriarch's brown-and-tan
Rolls Royce sits In his carport, along
with assorted Mercedes and sports cars
belonging to other family members.
"At first, we kept trying to get him to
move out. but he's been here 42 years."
James Jr. said.
"Now. It’s a matter of pride and
self-dignity. Our father is a religious
man, but he taught us that you must
stand your ground, that you must

W pdntsdar, Oct. I t , I t t l —7k

'Next Ring Will
Blow Your Mind'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Those Increasingly popu­
lar cordless telephones are being examined by the
Consumer Product Safety Commission as a potential
hazard to hearing.
The commission said It has received more than 20
complaints about the ring of the portable phones.
Including a few alleging permanent hearing loss.
Stan Morrow, a commission project manager said
the agency is discussing Ihc situation with the
Industry and Is preparing to Issue a "public alert."
Morrow said the problem occurs when a ringing
phone Is placed to the car without first turning a
switch from the "ring" to the "talk" position. The
ring Is In the receiver.
"If. by habit (In using a conventional phone), you
reach for a cordless phone and place It to your ear
without turning the switch, the next ring will blow
your mind." Morrow said.
Morrow said the commission received Its first
complaint about the ring In December 1932. with
most of them surfacing In recent months. He said a
few came from doctors who alleged patients suffered
permanent hearing loss.
The portable phone has been on the market for
more than a decade. In the past few years. It has
become an Increasingly popular home Item. There
arc now about 3 million In use.
Mark Rosenker of the Electronic Industry
Association said his trade group Is Is working with
the Consumer Product Safety Commission on
Issuing a Joint public alert, but said he knows of no
plans to redesign the phone.
The American Academy of Otolaryngology, an
associiion of eye, ear and throat doctors. I* also
concerr-d about the ring. It says It has received
reports of about a dozen cases of permanent hearing
damage.

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AREA DEATHS

s; 58.r ofa1022
a sWoodall
s x Drive,
s,
•.
,
;
,
;
;

Altamonte Springs, died
Monday at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte. Bom Sept.
27. 1925, In Brooklyn.
N.Y., he moved to Altamonte Springs from Rego
Park. N.Y. In 1974. He was
;• a clerk.
He Is survived by his
k. s i s t e r , M rs. L u c ille
£ A ru m d e l. A lta m o n te
j Springs.
• B s l d w ln - F a lr c h lld
Funeral Home, Altamonte
Springs, la in charge of
. arrangements.
BOBBIE L.M1CKEL
Mrs. Bobble L. Mickcl,
50. of 907 E. 8th St..
Sanford, died Sunday at
her home. Bom Dec. 23,
1932, In Wrens, Ga.. she
was a member of New
Bethel Missionary Baptist
Church tn Sanford and

aitendcd Crooms High
School. - * *-***•*She is survived by her
daughter, Veurvon Mit­
chell of Sanford: three
sisters, Mildred Rhodes.
Gloria Nathan and Pearl
Mason, all of Sanford; one
brother. Lawrence Mason
of Sanford; two grand­
children. Sunrise Funeral
Home Is In charge or
arrangements.
lO Ut. M ARY ANN REED
Mrs. Mary Ann Reed, 87.
of 840 Dunbar Terrace.
W inter S p rin g s, died
Monday at Florida Hospttal-Altamonte. Bom Nov.
15. 1895, In Brisbln, Pa.,
she moved to W inter
Springs from Harrison,
N.Y. In 1971. She was a
re tire d nu rsin g home
owner and was a Protes­
tant.
Survivors Include two
daughters. Mrs. Shirley

DeWall. Apopka, and Mrs.
Lots S lliste ln . Delray
Beach; six grandchildren
an d l O g r e a t grandchlldren.
C ox-P arker F u n eral
Home. Winter Park. Is In
chargeof arrangements.

/ J.VIAi

Fun«ral Notice
M ICK EL M S I. BOBBIE L.
— Funarol o t r v k * * ta r B abbl* L.
M lc fc tl. M , of M T E . It h St.,
Sanford, who d l*d Sunday, w ill b *
N rid S aturday *1 1 p .m . «t N «w
hatha! M lia to n a ry O a p tlil Church
w ith th * R rv Rabor*&gt; Doctor o f­
ficiating. V ta x in g w ill b * a t mo
church fro m 1 to t p j n . F rid a y .
B u rial M i l bo a l Shiloh Com ctory,
Sanford. S u n rlM Funo ral homo It
In c h a rg * of orranyom o ntt.

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�IX - E v e n ing Herald. Sanford, F I.

W tdnatday, Oct. I f , 1WJ

Y o u th s S h o u ld B e S c re e n e d
F o r P o s s ib le H e a r t D is e a s e

Report Warns VDT Users Of Eye Strain
WASHINGTON IUT1) - Workers who use
video display terminals suffer more de­
terioration of their vision and eye Irritation
and lose more time from their Jobs than their
colleagues who do not use the machines, the
Mount Sinai School of Medicine reports.

Environmental Health at the University ol
Kentucky, said there Is a large cost to
employers because "VDT users lost more
time from work than non-users."
He said that during a two-year period. VDT
users lost one-half day more time than
non-users.

Results of a Mount Sinai study, partially
financed by The Newspaper Guild, were
unveiled at a Tuesday hearing of the House
Education and Labor subcommittee on health
and safety.

“ While a small difference. If this Is
multiplied by the millions ol workers In­
volved. the dollar cost per year In lost time
wages Is quite large," Frank said.

Newspaper Guild President Charles Perllk
said the survey showed "there Is no longer
any question about the need for action to
remedy the problems." and urged adequate
funding to continue research by the National
Institute of Occupational Safety and Health.
"The health and safety Implications of a
machine that will become the occupational
tool of 40 million workers In the next decade
cannot receive too much attention." said
Perllk. whose union .^presents about 32.000
editorial and other employees at newspapers.
The 2Vi-year study surveyed health eltccts
of more than 1,100 workers In six Guild
locals — Memphis, Tcnn., Hawaii: St. Louis,
southern Ontario. Canada. Vancouver-New
Westminster. Canada, and the Wire Service
Guild, which Included employees of United
Press International and the Associated Press.
Dr. Arthur Frank, who was In charge of the

Me said VDT users, when compared with
non-users, showed slgnlflcnntly more head­
aches. eye strain, deteriorated vision, lowback pain, neck pain and shoulder pain.
Frank said they also arc more Irritable,
have more trouble sleeping, and feel
overworked while non-users "have more
energy."
He said the survey was Inconclusive In
regard to birth abnormalities and cataracts.
H erald Pftoto by Tom m y Vincent

Video display term alnal users like this
woman suffer more vision dam age and
lost Mme from work than their non-VDT
using colleagues, according to a new
medical study.
Mount Sinai study and now Is head ot the
Department of Preventive Medicine and

Only 16 VDT users reported having cata­
racts. with six developed during the past five
years. Frank noted five of the six were In St.
Louis.
Frank, recommended rest breaks for VDT
users be instituted while research continues
on the Issue, as well as regular eye
examinations.

CHICAGO IUPU - Cholesterol levels
currently considered healthy are too
high, studies show, and heart disease
can be detected early In youths and In
Immediate relatives of heart patients.
An Initial blood screening for ab­
normalities that coufd point to heart
problems should be done at or before
age 20. according to a report in the
Journal of the American Medical
Association,

Such screenings might Include"
singling out patients with only
slightly elevated levels of blood lipids,
or fats, "because the majority of
patients with coronary heart disease
emerge from tills group."
There arc Iwo kinds of blood fats —
cholesterol and triglycerides.
Also in the Journal, Dr. Basil M.
Rlfkln and colleagues at the National
Heart. Lung and Blood Institute In
Bclhcsda. Md. studied blood fat levels
In 60.502 people.
They established reference values
for low density lipoprotein cholesterol
— which al elevated levels 1b a risk
factor for coronary heart disease —
that are much Inwer than currentlyused Institute standards.
The new values for the best plasma

triglyceride levels nre slgnfflcnntly
higher than before, reflecting a belief
that there Is not enough evidence to
link higher triglyceride levels with
coronary' heart disease.
In another report. John A. Morrison
of the University of North Carolina
said screening lor coronary heart
disease should concentrate on the
families of heart patients, rather than
on the general population.
Morrison and colleagues studied
about 8,000 children or sisters and
brothers of people having either
normal or high cholesterol and
triglyceride levels.
They found the worse those levels
were, the more apt a patient's
children and brothers sod sisters also
were to have high cholesterol and
triglyceride levels.
Morrison advised patients with
persistently high levels of total
cholesterol and low-den9lty lipopro­
tein cholesterol levels to have thetr
relatives tested.
Blood fats and lipoprotein levels arc
related to "cultural inheritance." or
environm ental factors, he said.
Changing that risk factor may be
most successful when It occurs In the
family environment.

Kissinger Ponel: Optimism In The Face O f A Formidable Task
B y F r e d e r ic k K ie l

GUATEMALA CITY (UP1) - The Kissinger com­
mission. optimistic about future U.S. cooperation In
Central America following a week-long tour of th*
icglon. faces the difficult task of formulating a policy
acceptable to conservatives and liberals.
The presidential Commission on Central America
"went to these countries somewhat uncertain what we
would find," Kissinger said on hts return to Washington.
"It
was
an area in crisis but It also was an area of great
* .
**

Kissinger himself, for example, angered some com­
mission members when he met with pro-U.S.
Nicaraguan rebel leader Alfonso Robclo In Costa R!ea
afler announcing the group would not talk to any
guerrillas.
Sqn Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros, a liberal Demo­
crat and comission member, let reporters know he vas
A n a ly s is

nape.

Kissinger, who heart* ih» 1?-**g£ commission, sold ••psf* over the meeting with Robclo because th trJ -.»•»
the six countries the no stmillar discussion with Salvadoran rebels, who arc
Marxist and antt-U.S.
Kissinger later said the commission would meet with
"We were all very touched by the expectations they
had of a cooperative effort between the U.S. and their rebel groups from any Central American country who
countries." he said. "We’re coming back with con­ came to Washington.
The Kissinger report is scheduled lo be delivered to
fidence we will make a contribution — a united
President Reagan In January, the beginning of a
contribution to a solution to some of these problems.”
However, the task of coming up with a policy presidential election year, and It Is doubtful that
acceptable to Democrats and Republicans, given the partisan politics will be kept out of It.
Sources In Washington have said Cisneros has already
diversity of each nation's troubles and differing opinions
decided to Issue a separate minority report that would
among U.S. politicians. Is monumental.
the studies presented Dy omcials ol
pane! visited were weii thought out.

UO.OOO

Shir toy Me A t**, tg l to Raunda B
Menrwn, to t . Lot IN i S I t ol l i t ,
P ln e b u rtt S/O.VM.WO
Edw erd A B ryan A w f Edna lo
Castle Ann R rg u te f tg l . Lol M. Blk
A. C arriage HIM Un I.S20.000
D avid H all lo Chuck Blankanthlp.
tg l.. Lol 34. Slavic Colony Co »/d.
swore
J o trp h Passaiacgu* lo U ih a Jain
A *» Manonar H . Un. M F 1 H E .
A ltam onte R id g tC o n d 122.000
t
T ra cy C W ilbu rn A w l Carola 4o
C a ro l* 0 W ilbu rn . L o l IM Trailw uod
F t t i . Sec O n*. S100

W ilto n Knott to H a rry A. G ltlc h A
w f C h try l. Lol M . L e tt p a ri. Jennifer
E ltt.S J 1 .0 0 0
IO C D I W illia m J . R itte r to C lare
L R itte r, tig .. F ro m SE cor ol N W U
ot Sac la s t 5 1 .elc . t l W
C lare L. R itte r to J a m e t S
Sargeant. tg l . F ro m SE cor. ol
N W W o l Sac u 1 1 ) ) ate . t i 10 000
B andar A letaiby A w t Hend to
D onald R H a r r lt A w l Cynthia A .
Lot 21. Deer Run. Un a, 121,300
Sharon L. S ullivan, tg l lo Johnnie
R Thom pum A w f T e rri L , Lot M A
N IS ' ol X M M L ord’s F lr tl Addn
C itrus H i t . S47.700
Kensington P ark . L id to National
M a rc h a n d ita C o . Inc. Un JOT
Kensington P a rk . Cond . I t it.aOO

P R O M O TE IN TE R N A TIO N A L
S T U D E N T EXC H A N G E
Area Representative Opportunity

A r e y o u I n t e r e s t e d in h e l p i n g t o b u i l d
f r ie n d s h ip s w i t h y o u n g p e o p le f r o m m a n y
c o u n tr ie s ?
W e p r o v id e a p r o g r a m fo r E u r o p e a n s tu d e n ts to
s p e n d a h i g h s c h o o l y e a r in A m e r ic a a n d w e
a re c u r r e n tly r e c r u itin g A R E A
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
T h is is a r e w a r d in g p a r t - t i m e p o s i t i o n w it h
e x p e n s e s p a id .
A s a n A R E A R E P R E S E N T A T IV E y o u w ill:
’ S e le c t h o s t f a m il ie s a n d c o n t a c t h i g h
s c h o o ls
’ P r o v id e s u p e r v i s io n a n d c o u n s e l i n g f o r
s t u d e n t s a n d h o s t f a m il ie s
’ H e lp o r g a n iz e s t u d e n t a c t iv it ie s

To learn how you can participate,
please call COLLECT:
SUSAN JACKSON
(203) 629-2750 or (203) 629-2754
Educational Foundation for
Foreign Study
m

a non-profit foundation

G reater C on tlr. C orp to Jeffrey S
G elbeltan (m a rr ) Lol IM . S a u u iilo
Sec F o u r.in .3 0 0
IOCO) Je n o 't Inc. fo Lots Mae
P a u lu cd , L o tt J I A » B lk I. Bel A ir

VO1I00.

IOCO) Chun K ing Corp lo Etor
R ealty C o rp . L o ll 10 I I A N 1. ol
a ila y ad| of II. Blk V, Bel A ir S/O

1100

Barney W B e tk t A w f M a ry to
Royal H eritage B u tin e tt In ve tt
men f t In c . Lot 3. Sandalwood.
140,400
C. Jeffery Arnold. T ru tle e elc. to
W tn de ll A K a ite r A K athryn M . Lol
f. Blk A. The Sprlagt. Deer wood
E t l t .133 000
IOCO) M o rrlt C. W ic k t to M a rla A
W ickt. Un 3F Sheoah Sac One, 1100
Robert Jonet J r., tg l. A Helen
(marr.) lo C. RuLwiI June* J r., tg i a
A Luann Schautteet. tg l.. L o tt I A 1,
B it s. Rosalind H e ig h lt. 1100
Tom m y D Oevier A w t Diane lo
H arvey L. K antol A w f P a tricia . Lot
10 B lk C. Hidden Lake Un 1A.
114.000
FI, H om ecratter* Inc. to T.
Duncan R ot* III A w f Linda B . Lol
3. Shannon W etl. i n 000
Candace C B erry to C h tm tlo n *
C o rp . Lot 11. Shadow L a k * Wood*.

14.000

J o t lane M H ickm an to C ham tlon*
Corp Lol 13. Shadow L a k * Wood*.

11,000.

M id State la n d Corp lo A ubrey L
P o ll! A Tam lko. Lot 31, M y rtle Lake
H in t. IJ.eoo
J im m ie L F a rm e r A w f M a ry to
G ilb ert A. L v ta k e r A A ih e H *. Un
G I M a r bey a Club Cond . t i l . M 0
G erald J T r» m b l*y A w f Paulina
to Paul J. W ollt. t g l . From N 't m il*
cor of Sec JJ 21 JJ etc.. 112.300
(Q C D ) M a rk L. P ariow to M a rk L
P ar low A w f Joanna C , Lot 4. Blk A .
Nor If. Orlando R anchet. 1100
(O C D ) John M . L ow * Jr . A wf
J ta n n * to Jeanne C. Lowe, Lot IT.
B lk A. E atibroo k S /O Un. U . 1100.

C a ll!* Sim ont lo Nancy Weaver
(m a rr.) Lot 23. Duck Pond Addn CB
11/27 A Lot 24.1100
M a ry E Taagardan. tg l. A D avid
Saltvlck A w f B lrm a S to Edm und
Greenw ell A w f R ita J . W I 44 t ot E
124)1 C. Of Lot 2. le tt S 20 42 ch of
Sac 24 20 21.1221.000
G eorg* S M a lh ie u t A w f E lil. to

COSMETIC B O N D IN G
Bonding it the m o tt lought a lta r technique In c o im e lic
d e n tiitry today. Recent im p ro v e m e n t! in dental m a te ria l!
and tech niquei for " D ire c t Bonding" and "V e n e e rin g "
have opened up new a r e a i of c re a tiv ity in cosm etic den t­
iit r y . Often w ithout preparing tha tooth o r Injections, we
a re able to: U ghten, lengthen and widen teeth; restore chipi
in tooth en am e l; e lim in ate gaps and spaces; and even cos­
m e tic a lly "s tra ig h ta n " teeth.
In m an y In ita n c a i wa can raplacc worn o r d a rke n td
" s ilv e r " tillin g ! w ith tooth colored fillings which are Indis­
tinguishable from n a tu ra l tooth enam el. Bonding l i a lio
usad as a m a a n t of preventing decay. It i t painted on as a
sealant to correct defects in the enam el of p rim a ry and parm
D R . PARTICK L D E L F L O R E anant teeth. Lett untreated, these defects m ay trap food and
plaque, in vitin g e a rly d a rs y .
FAMILY DENTIST
Tha bonding m a la ria l! It a itro n g , new a c ry lic In pasta fo rm . Each la y e r l i hardened In
m ln u le t, and a lta r the lest coat the tooth It shaped and polished. In cases w here the paste
approach would not be enough — badly dam aged front teeth, lor Instance — thin acrylic shells
o r lam inated veneers, can be bonded to the teeth. This, of course, am ounts to an individual
decision.
W hile bonding .s a wonderful to :lw lq u e , it Is not yat the p o rte d solution to all dental resto ra­
tiv e problem s. In situations w here a larg e portion ol the tooth surface is dam aged, bonding
m ay not ba a t advisable as veneer crowns.. Also, the w n e e rin g m ateria ls a rc not considered
" p e rm a n e n t" In the sam e sense as proceleln o r gold crowns. Bonding does, how ever, pro­
vide an a flr e r tlv a and a ffordab le solution lo m an y cosm etic d ental needs.
W e ’re excited about bonding and w e ’ ll be happy lo a n sw er your q u e s tio n about how it m ay
fit into your sm ite. Ask us If you have fu rth e r questions.

OFFICE HOURS
Moo. thru Frl 1:30 IK 5:30
Evenings A Sat Avaiiaale

supplies and angering supporters of the Marxist regime.
When Kissinger arrived In Nicaragua, some 50.000
demonstrators marched to the convention center where
he was to meet with Junta leader Daniel Onega,
chanting "Kissinger, messenger of murder."
Kissinger responded by Implicitly criticizing the
one-party state Washlngtnn says Is being Instituted In
Nicaragua.
"1 said In Salvador that we should not be asked to
choose between security and human rights. I say here,
we should not be asked to choose between peace and
democracy." Kissinger said.
But even Nicaragua acknowledged V.S. power In the
region.
“The United States Is the great destabilizing factor
and cun also be the great stabilizing factor," Ortega said.

B A C K TO BASICS W IT H LO W B A R G A IN PRICKS!

REALTY TRANSFERS
M ontreal Spring* I n v , Inc., lo
A ltam onte Dev Corp . Lot St. The
Spring* W hispering P in ** Set. Two.

differ Irom the Kissinger effort.
Added lo the domestic difficulties in chairing future
U.S. policy are the many different aspects of Centra!
American countries.
Devoting one day lo cnch country, the commission
vis!led Panama. Costa Rica. El Salvador, Guatemala.
Honduras and Nicaragua.
Every nation except for Nicaragua asked for. formally
or informally, massive Injections of U.S. aid to help their
economic?! out of the rcgion-wldc depression, with Costa
Rica asking for the most — $10 billion spread over 10
years.
The stopover In Nicaragua developed differently as
expected. U.S.-backed rebels have carried out successful
sabotage raids uguinil oil storage facilities in the past
two weeks, destroying most of the country's gasoline

DR. PARTICK L DELFLORE
323-6174 OR 3234185
2040 HAWATHA AVF..
Sanford

Donald R Beach A w f A lina M , Lol
13 A W 2V Ol 14. Blk 24. T o w n tltt of
N orth Chuluota. SI 2.000
G ary D * Sue A V a n e tta lo M a ry L.
A m a t. T ru tle e . Lol I t San L a n la
T h ird Sec , 17* 000
(O C D ) Linda L e a d e n , tgl to Irvin
H Leader* $ 77' Ol L o U A N 24 J?
of 4. Quiet A cre*. 1100
IO C O ) Linda L e a d e n to Irv in H
L e a d e n . Lot t, lets S 73'. Quiet
A c re t. SI00
C ornellul J Van Houlen A w l
Lorraine lo W rrnco Inc.. Lol 3, Blk
L. N orth Orlando R anchet Sec. *.
177.000
Cleon M Bliss A wt Joy lo Jam as
C Lucas A w l E ula T . E 12' of Lol 4
A a ll of 2. Blk E . Amended P la l ol
O lm tle a d A M ille r S O , SI 1.000
J n c k w - C h lld tr i t * 1 B arbara !„
C y ril A. Schwenk* A wl Ram ona R .
Lol I2. Cedar Ridge Un. III.S27.S00
A llen B W allace J r A w l A n n * to
the H a rk ln t C o r p . land In tac
12 20 30. SI 40.000
Jam es L . W inlon A Sharon W lnlon
lo C hu-TtV H tu A wf Jin H tiano. Lot
203 W ekiva Hunt Club F o t Hunt Sec
3.1*2,000
(Q C D ) L P Auco.n J r A Donna lo
Leonard P Auco&lt;n J r.. In d lv .. Lot I.
Blk A. C harier O a k t Un 2.1100
P ele r A C a n n lu a ro A w l K *&gt; lo
A rm an d P irillo A w t B arbara S . Un
C.
Bldg
I W e k lv * F a irw a y
Tow nnom tt. Cond . 123.000.
B G A dkint C ontlr Co lo G arfield
£- ra ia rv e n a w l r a r r io a i . Lot 22.
T u tc a w illa . Un it, S il l J00
i
U rban E m . Corp k&gt; Co» C srp , Let
33, W ekiva C dvt. Ph O n a .U 4 .l0 0
S am * " Lot * * W ekiva C ovt, Ph
O n *. 122.200
Ronald T. P ic o lt* A Nancy to
Francis G Heuruog A w l E la y n *.
Lot I, Blk A . SI John* R iver E t l t ,
11*3.000
E ric Johnson A B a rb a ra to Bonni*
R W alton . T ru tle e , Lot I, Btk C.
Cr y tla i Bowl 2nd Addn. 1*2.300
Kenelh / A rdillo A D edra to Fl
Power A U g h ) C o , Lol 12. blk D.
Lake H arney A c r e titi 112400
Royal A rm s Cond Ltd lo T a rry W
P yle, tg l A A m y L Koopman. t g l .
U n 30a 73 R o y *1A rm s Cond SS3 400
Povl Street prop . Ltd *0 Live O a k t
R ealty Assoc . ltd . trom NW cor of
SW 'a of NW . of Sec 12 2 1 30 etc .
S3.1*0.000
W inter Spgi Dev to B G A dkint
C ontlr C o . Lot I . Bear Creek
E ita te t.U I.0 0 0
B G A d kin t C ontlr Co lo John W
W infrey A w t Janet W . Lol I Bear
C reek E t l t . 154.000
M ich ael H W inn lo Ronald E
B erger, tg l . Lol I * A R tp l Spr
ingda I*. 142.300
O lio F Christ A wl Susan to E lain*
C. Lang. Lot 12 Bik A . Sum m ers*!
N orth S * C 3 .152JW0
Thomas D an e* to R ichard H
fo w le r Trustee. Lot 77. S u n rlt* Un
O n *. 14**00

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�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI. Wednixfo/i Pel. If,

It's R ussian R o u le tte

Doc Has Smokers To Thank
For Son's College Money

There's No Limit With This Program
By Jessica Treadway
ROCHESTER. N.Y. (UPI) — Dr. Jcrld Fisher docs not
believe In beating around the hush. Wher^he thinks you
should (lo something, he'll tell you.
H ints why the name of Fisher's new health and
fitness program Is SKYS — short for Stop Killing
Yourself Slowly.
What we're trying to do Is make people realize how
their lifestyles may be affecting their health." savs
Fiahcr. 2S. n clinical psychologist at the University of
Rochester &amp;School of Medicine.
We want them to sec how the structure of our
society, particularly In the last century, has led people to
give up the responsibility for their own well being."
In comparing the 10 leading causes of death In 1900
and In 1983, Fisher said, he found nine of the early ones
have been eliminated, only to be replaced today by
diseases brought on primarily by fast or negligent living.
"It’s Ironic that we had beaten most of the Infectious
sicknesses by the turn of the century, and now we have
10 different ones. Including heart attacks, strokes,
cirrhosis and others related to lifestyle," Fisher said.
"They can also be beaten, but not by magic bullets."
Through SKYS. Fisher counsels clients — mostly
middle-aged men — In all the things that contribute to
symptoms of modem physical and emotional 111 health;
diet exercise, drinking habits, stress management and
outlook on life.
Besides treating SKYS enrollecs on a one-to-one basis,
Fisher gives speeches aimed at convincing people to
take an active role In their own health.

"Next to that I put another blender with yogurt, wheat
germ, skim milk, and other healthy foods, and then ask
people to come up and sample from both blenders,"
Fisher explained. "Needless to sav. nobody wants to
taste the fast food mlxtuic."
Fisher Bays the tendency to neglect personal health is
linked to the American lifestyle. So much attention Is
paid to new advances In medicine, he said, that people
believe iherr w|H be Instant cures "when their time
comes."
"Modern medicine Is wonderful, and I’m glad we have
it. but It won’t Ox everything." Fisher said. "All the
bypass operations In the world won't put Jack — or Jill
—back together again."
Fisher wants Americans lo realize that there's more to
life than being JubI healthy. The Ideal goal, he says, Is
"high-level wellness," or un optimum state of energy
and optimism.
“And I practice what l preach," he said. "I eut healthy
foods, and Jog or work out six days a week. If for some
reason I can't get to It. I feel like I've missed my fix."
While It's Important to make adults aware of the effect
their lifestyle has on their health. It’s even more vital to
educate children before they have a cnancc to develop
bad habits. Fisher says.
"Adults have to serve as models for kids, by raising
them with palates that don’t need salt and sugar, and by
showing them a solid family support system," he said.
"The goal Is to get everybody to realize that with a
little effort, they can live longer nnd feel better every
moment they’re alive."

BOSTON (UPI) - If you smoke
cigarettes, says a lung specialist,
cither you're a fool or you just like
to play "Russian roulette" with
your health and fork out cosh for
doctor bills.
Dr. David Sachs, of the Case
Western Reserve University School
of Medicine In Cleveland, says a
full 70 percent of Ills patients
weald not otherwise have to see
him If they didn't smoke ciga­
rettes.
"It's terrible, but at times I think
1 should write the cigarette manu­
facturers and thank them that I
will have the money to send my
son to college." he said.
"Here ore some statistics for
smokers to think about," he says.
• Last year there were 385.000
deaths In the United Slates from
diseases directly linked to smok­
ing. That compares to the 58.000
Americans killed In Vietnam in 15

The dangers of smoking also
may affect others as well, he said.
A recent study In the New
found that children of mothers
who smoked had slower develop­
ment of their lungs than other
children. The scientists said It was
unclear If the slowed development
was caused by the mothers smok­
ing while pregnant or was the
result of a child’s cumulative
exposure lo tobacco smoke In the
home.
But the results were clear about
one thing — there Is no advantage
to living In a smoke-clogged
environment.
Sachs said In the United States
currently ahnitt ,TF» percent of the
general population smoke ciga­
rettes.
"When you consider what these
people arc risking that's quite a
number.” he said.

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years.
• In 1982, the estimated cost of
smoking to the nation — In
medical bills, illness, lost time
from work, etc. —was $50 billion.
Sachs said cigarette smoking
has been found lo contribute to —
If not In some cases cause — heart
attacks, lung cancer, emphysema
and chronic bronchitis.
"When you warn smokers, a lot
of Uiem respond with the argu­
ment that their Aunt Millie lived to
be 83 and smoked two packs a day
for years." Sachs said.
"Well that may be tight. But
statistics show that one out of
three cigarette smokers come
down with a cigarette-caused Ill­
ness.
"Put it into perspective. How
many people would play Russian
roulette with a three-chamber re­
volver and one bullet? And that's
exactly what they're doing when
they smoke."

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By Susan Ooldfarb
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
A dozen businessmen,
scholars and corporate leaders perched themselves atop
soap boxes In fashionable Union Square like so many
Hyde Park orators. They held forth glibly on politics and
economics and whatever popped into their minds.
One day earlier, al! were stutterers.
But as Dr. Martin Schwartz showed them and and has
shown thousands of others throughout the world. "It
takes about five minutes to stop stuttering, about three
months for it to become automatic and about a year and
a half to change the self concept."
Schwartz, a New York University physiologist,
accidentally discovered his air-flow method 10 years
ago. when he was studying birth defects.
He said people focub tension In different parts of the
body — the shoulders, the stomach, or — In the case of
stutterers —In the vocal chords.
In examining a stuttering child's cleft palate, he
noticed the vocal chords were constricted. Ensuing
studies on other stutterers revealed all locked their vocal
chords w hen th ey w ere nervous, leading to th e habitual

speech struggle known as stuttering.
Schwartz' air flow method. In which speakers relax by
exhaling some air before beginning to speak, and slow
themselves down by pausing after the first syllabic they
utter, has prevented locked vocal chords In every
stutterer who has tried the technique, he said. The
National Center of Stuttering, which Schwartz directs,
has trained some 600 speech therapists In the past eight
years, who in turn, have cured an estimated 10.000
stutterers.
Schwartz culminates his training seminars, held In
cities throughout the nation, with public speaking
exhibitions. In San Francisco, his students used
downtown Union Square, where each stood up and
spoke. Schwartz said the experience offers the former
stutterers the confidence they need to show the problem
Is conquered.
He estimated there arc some 2.1 million stutterers in
the United States, with five times as many men as
women suffering from ther speech Impediment. Pro­
fessions with high Incidence of stuttering are account­
ing. computer work and engineering, he said.
"We can stop stuttering In Just about anybody," said
Sch^srtf. author of ".stuttering Stopped " He «Atrl he
has been successful In 20 different languages, through
Interpreters. "We enn stop It very quickly. Getting them
to practice requites the support network of clubs.”
The San Francisco Bay Area Speak Easy, headed by
recovered stutterer Steve Shank. Is one of many such
clubs throughout the nation.
About 30 members meet once every two weeks to
practice the method that has won them better jobs and
higher selfesteem.
Shank, a vice president at the Bank of America who
experienced only "minor Improvement" In years of
conventional speech therapy, said that when the chords
tighten once, the fear that they’ll lighten again leads to
recurrence of the problem.
"It's like Imagining yourself in an alley with a truck
barreling toward you. and the only escape Is a locked
door," Shank said.
"In a normal situation. I&lt; would not be difficult to get
the key out of your pocket and escape, but because of
the stress, your hand shakes and you can't get the key
out of your pocket. Tills method allows you to Btop your
hand from shaking.”
More Information may be obtained by calling the
National Stuttering Hotline at 800-221 -2483.

Kids Spot Textbook Snafu

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10A — Evening H e re ld , S enlord, F I. W e d n e id a y , Oct. IV, IW J

__________________

Doubles Takes Teamwork, Communication

C o u n ty
F o o tb a ll
L e a d ers

C a u g h e ll T a k e s T a c k le
L e a d W ith G r e a t E ffo r t
Like Mar&gt;’’s Bill Caughell came up with an
incredible 25-tackle. nlnc-asslst night against Lake
Howell last Friday to take over the lead for tackles In
the county with a combined total of 78 stops.
Caughell. a 5-10. 195-pound junior linebacker,
was about the Hams only line of defense for Lake
Mary .is Lake Howell fullback Jay Robey retook the
ni-liing lead with 124 yards on 17 carrier Robey
5C4 yards compared to 519 fui luuucrup Barry
Williams of Oviedo.
RUSHING
G Atl Yds. Avg. LSPlayer, School
6 66 564 6.6 54
Robey (LH)
6 83 519 6.2 6G
Williams (O)
5 73 316 4.3 41
Lucarelll(LM)
6 61 297 4.9 21
Yarborough (0)
5 59 279 4.7 22
Underwood (LM)
5 4) 273 6.5 30
Shatto(LB)
5 50 272 5.4 40
Lawrence (S)
4 48 258 6.5 47
GcmwnotL)
5 45 238 5.3 25
Wcllon (LM)
5 21 219 10.4 61
Pilot (L)
5 44 217 4.9 15
Campbell (S)
5 50 214 4.2 45
Armstrong (LB)
5 36 209 5.8 70
Emmons (LB)
6 35 194 5.5 26Hi
Solomon (LH)
s 15 136 9.0 DO
Bowers (0)
PASSING
Player. School G Att Com. lot. Yds TD
6
4
79
29
638
6
1 Slack. (LH)
#41,
4
49
486
29
| Horuifidu, (LMi 5
Qn
ri&lt;•* ipn
O
Q
6
2/
TiliilllJInuu. JO)
227
3
38
3
22
Grnseelose. (LB) 5
0
4
143
29
5
10
Futrell. (S)
0
1
109
11
. 5
5
Pilot. ILI
RECEIVING
G Rec Yds. Avg. TD
Player, School
23.0
3
367
5 16
Grayson. (LM)
1
19.2
250
6 13
Llngard. (0)
ri
A
31.2
w 312
W **0
(LH)
6
16.5
132
6
8
Bowers. (O)
67
13.4
2
5
6
Smith. (O)
1
14.4
72
5
5
Dewar. (LB)
0
11.1
56
6
5
Daniel. (LH)
23.0
1
92
4
4
McKay. (LH)
98
1
32.6
3
5
Foster. (LY)
0
19.3
58
3
5
Wynn. (S)
TACKLES
G Tac Ast Tot. Sacks
Player, School
0
51 27 7B
0
— * 6 29 38 67
2
5 27 31 58
ljenley.IL)
0
5 21 27 48
Crespo. (LY)
2
5 33 14 47
Kinkavage. (SI
2
5 30 16 46
D. O'Brian. (LB)
1
6 27 16 43
Ycntz, (O)
0
6 35 18 53
Lang. (LH|
0
5 28 14 41
Cut tin. (LM)
1
5 19 22 41
Simpson. (L)
2
5 26 14 40
Battle. (L)
0
5 18 22 40
Mcrweathcr. (L)
6
5 27 12 39
B. Debose. (S)
16 48
1
6 32
Cina. (LH)
2
5 23 14 37
Wynn. (S)
0
5 16 20 36
Hornyak, (LMI
0
5 19 16 35
Pilot. (L)
0
6 26 14 40
Qii.u kenbush. (LH)
0
5 18 15 33
Norton. (O)
5
6 25 11 31
Pughc. (LH)
6
9 33
Meyer. (LM)
P 24
0
12 33
5 21
.J. Hopkins, (LMI
1
5 17 11 28
Bush, (LB)
2
5 13 14 27
.unes. |LB|
0
5 10 17 27
Hughes, (LY)
0
4 25
5 21
Thompson. (S)

I

wyp-1..

in last week's column, singles play and
singles strategy were discussed. Believe
It or not, more than n few commented on
the column and asked If we could next
caver doubles.
Tills seems logical bexaose in leaiiiy u
lot more people ploy doubles than
singles. In fact, for most women In the
area doubles Is all thnt Is played. Every
club in Central Florldu has different
levels of doubles teams In the various
leagues so one can readily see why there
Is an interest in knowing more about
doubles.
I will briefly outline the role or each of
the players In the four positions that
occur when doubles Is being played. I
will start with the classic way of playing
but will also give alternatives for less
experienced teams or players.
Let’s begin with the server. The role of
the server In classic dnuhlrs Is, of course,
to get the serve In. It is much more
effective to get the first serve In and
hopefully to your opponent's weakness.
The server then advances toward the net
to take the first volley. This Is usually
done from about the service court line If
the return Is a good one. The server
volleys the ball back to the receiver and

basic rule in doubles. "Stay parallel with
your partner whrnevct jxis-dblr."

Former SCC
Tennis Coach
closes the net (or moves on in). If the
return Is weak the server will not need to
stop and make an approach volley but
rather proceed in as fast ns possible and
put the weak return away. (Either down
the middle oral the up person's left hip.)
The server's role then is to put the ball
In play by getting the serve in and to gel
to net as soon ns possible. To play this
type of doubles you must have a strong
and accurate serve and the ability lu hil
both approach volleys and regular
volleys. An alternative for the server
would be to serve and stay back. Then
come to net only when you get a short
ground stroke otf of a baseline rally. Of
course If you arc going to serve and stay
back your partner should also line up at
the baseline with you adhering to the

The next position Is the server's
partner. When your partncrls serving
you iiliuulu Ire uboui iwu nickel lengths
front the net and about in the middle of
the service court on your side. The net
pepson's Job is twofold. The first Is to
protect the alley nnd the second Is to
take advantage of a good serve and weak
return nnd volley the ball away. (Either
down the middle or nt the up opponent's
left hip.)
Unfortunately, so many of the more
inexperienced doubles players will never
move one' Inch from their position and
the server and receiver play singles,
while the two net players Just hold their
positions nnd watch. Ip classic doubles
the net person should always be ready to
conic into the middle ana put the ball
away. Of course It Is foolish to try this
every time because you have your alley
open, but a well-timed "Poach" can turn
many matches around. An alternative
position for the servers partner is to start
back at the baseline with the server and
then come to net only behind approach
shots.

Rivals Pull For
O ne A n o th e r
In Late-Season

Ovtroll

LYMAN (2-21

SO 4
........ Soon*........ ..........10
a 17............ Loto Brontloy........... i
* i 14 . ...
Cokmlol................20

Somind*......
a ll M u r
*prtlco Crooto
Dr Lond........

42 20............. Lai* Mary
0
24 II
Sprvct Crook
7
22 Otf 21.... ... .............at Somlnol*

22
24
24

LAKE BRANTLEY (4-1)

Thwrtd*r'*e*m*
rnday'ioaintt

0*Lom1*l SpruM Crook I p m
Lyman** Somtnoltlp m
Mivn’ond 4* L*k* M*-y ( p m
L* k* Brantley ol Apopk* I p m
L4k*Hu»*lt. ;di*
SEMINOLE 12-SI
4.
Aitronojt ...---------7.
Voyihwoil Miami
, l*k* Howell..........
..... . Mainland ..... .....
Apopka
Lyman

LAKE HOWELL (4-2)
44 ....
Blthop Moor*..... ... a
17
Sprue* Crook....... -.1 4
It
27...... .........Somlnol*------ --JJ ........... . D*L*nd...... .. _A
0
L*k* Brantloy ,----- ... a
22
.... Laka Mary ..... .... A
l*
Oil II... ......
. . . . . . . . .... M

LAKE MARY (2 It
14
1
N .
*

D*Land
.. 1J
Lok* Brantloy
..22
. 10
Lyman .......
BiiAOp Moor*
....I
Lake Howell ......
■X
Mainland

ie......
Otf 21

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.1
By Chris Fitter
c
X
Herald Sporta Writer
Although they are Intense rivals, the Seminole and L
Lake Howell volleyball teams will be pulling for each
other when It comes down to the nitty-gritty In the
regular season of the Five Star Conference.
Seminole, 5 3 In the conference, hosts Five Star
co-leader DeLand, 7-1. next Tuesday. On the other hand.
Lake Howell's Lady Silver Hawks. 7-1 In the conference,
face Lake Brantley. 5-3. next Thursday at Lake Howell.
If Seminole beats licLand and Lake Howell beats
Brantley, the Lady Hawks would be the regular season
champions and the number one seed In the district
tournament. It would also make the Lady Scmlnoles the
number three seed. However. If DeLand comes out on
(op of Seminole, they would get the number one seed
since Lake Howell's only conference loss was against
DeLand.
This week, though. Seminole and Lake Howell are
tuning up for next week's Important matches. The Lady
Tribe passed a tough test Tuesday night ns they
,upended iSpruce C reek's-Hawks.. 15..1.L i&lt;lU,14&gt;iat:
•bT.'l 7 (,'lT*t Seminole High. The Lady Hawks, meanwhile, swept two
matches Tuesday at Luke Howell, 15-3, 15-6 over
ebt.-iV
Up,
Apopka and 15-2, 15-13 over Lyman.
"We really needed to win tonight (Tuesday)."
Seminole coach Beth Corso said. "We'd want to beat
DeLand so we can be seeded In the upper bracket (In the
district
tourney). I'm sure Lake Howell would like to sec
S e m in o le fr e s h m a n
us beat DeLand loo."
q u a r t e r b a c k D a v id
Seminole got fine performances from all six starters
Rowland (top photo, no.
Tuesday. Including Toni Washington who was starting
12) looks for an opening
for the first time. Spruce Creek came out fast and built
as Stewart Gordon (no.
an early 7-1 lead over the Lady Tribe in the first game.
24) le a d s th e w a y .
Beth Nelson then served four straight points to cut the
R o w la n d p ic k e d up
Creek's lead to 7-5 and Janet Hauck served a point to
make It 7-6. The Hawks eventually took a 11-7 lead, but
some yardage^on the
Geuene Stallworth put an end to the rally wllh an
play, but it was his last
outstanding block.
p lay of the Tuesday
Hauck then look over the serve again and the Tribe
night's gam e against
reeled
off eight straight points, with a key spike from
Lake Howell. A fter the
Nelson leading the way. to win the first game, 15-11.
play, Rowland needed
In the second game, substitute Kcri Lake broke a 5-5
h e lp f r o m " D o c "
tic as she served four straight points to give Seminole a
Terw llleger (le ft) and
9-5 lead. Spruce Creek came back to take a 10-9 lead,
J im T e rw llle g e r, J r.
but Barbour put the Tribe back In front, 12-10, by
(rig h t) to get back on
serving three straight points.
his feet. Rowland suf­
Spruce Creek milled for a 14-12 lead, but they
couldn’t put the game away and Seminole got back the
fered a hip pointer and
serve. Hauck served the Lady Tribe to 14-14 bcfoic
missed the rest of the
Spruce Creek regained It. The Hawks couldn't score
g a m e. The Sem inole
though and Seminole got the serve back on a nice block
o ffe n s e had tro u b le
by Nelson.
getting on track after
Lake then came on to serve the final two points to
the loss of the young QB
wrap up the victory for the Lady Scmlnoles.
and Lake Howell went
The I^ady Hawks breezed to a straight set victory over
on to a 12-6 victory In
Apopka In the first game of a tri-match Tuesday. With
overtim e.
Lake Howell holding a 7-3 lead, Caryn Krumwelde
HiraMPhoto* by BUI Murpky
served four straight points for a l l - 3 Lake Howell lead.
Christy Scott then served three points for a 14-3 lead
and Eileen Theibaulh served the final point.
Lake Howell stormed to a 7-0 lead In the second game
and coach Jo Luciano put her second team In at that
point.'
Kim Montegny gave the Hawks a 6-0 lead and Apopka
broke the Ice with two points to cut Lake Howell’s lead
to 8-2. The Hawks to a 9-2 lead on Kim Newell's serve,
a five yard penalty. Lisle would but
came back cut it to 9-5. Sandy Gillies served I
Wllh starting quarterback David
altrmpt u 32-yard field goal. This two Apopka
points
for
Rowland sidelined with a hip point­
time though, he borrowed a kicking fora 12-5 lead. a l l - 5 lead and Montegny served a point
er. the Seminole freshman team
tec from Oviedo. Lisle, out of Shane
Apopka got one more point and Newell served for a
could not get anything going of­ second play. Cockcrhan again Leltcrto's hold, procedcd to split Ihe
fensively and wound up losing to blocked the point after, hut Lake uprights and give the Rams the 13-6 Lake Howell lead. The Lady Hawks regained the
serve on a nice block by Melissa Schneider and Gillies
Lake Howell, 12-6. in overtime Howell had a 12-6 lead and victor)’.
went on to serve out the match.
Tuesday night at Seminole High.
Seminole had four plays to try and
Oviedo took a 6-0 lead in the
The Lady Hawks came out blazing against Lyman as
Rowland went out with his Injury gain a tie or win.
second
quarter
as
wlngback
Tony
Beth
Saunders reeled off six straight service points and
early In the second quarter, after
The Tribe moved the ball to the
Lake Howell had taken a 6-0 two-yard line in two plays but. on Bclflowcr scored on a reverse from Krumwelde added five more for a 11-0 Lake Howell lead.
first-quarter lead. After losing third down. Dwayne Willis fumbled nine-yards out. The two point con­ Lyman got two points to make it 11-2, but Thlcbauth
Rowland In the second quarter, the and Lake Howrll recovered to clinrh version failed, but the Lions' lead served three points to make It 14-2 and Saunders served
held up until the fourth quarter.
the winning point.
Seminole of- ise aputtcrcd and the victory.
Lyman came back in Ihe second game and built a 5-1
Lake Howell’s ti-0 lead held up at Lake Mary 9, Oviedo 0 OT
lu Ihe fourth. Lake Mary's Doug
lead,
but Lake Huwcll tied It at 5-5 as Krumwelde served
the half. The Tribe frosh moved the
Bandy
partially
blocked
a
punt,
to
OT took on new meaning for Lake
ball on Its first possession of the Mary's freshman team Tuesday set up the Rums' tying touchdown. five straight. Cathy Saunders served three points for a
second half, but the Lake Howell night us the Hams edged the Oviedo Quarterback Letterlo hooked up 8-5 Lake Howell lead, bul the Lady Greyhounds showed
defense rose to the occasion and frosh In overtime at Oviedo High. wilh Steve Shaker on a 10-yard a little perseverance and took a 9-8 lead.
A Kathy Barma spike gave the momentum to Lake
stopped the Seminole scoring drive Lake Mary didn't Just win In OT. scoring strike to even the score at
Howell and that was the turning point In the game as
on the Hawks’ five-yard line.
they won with "OT.” That Is. the 6-6 and set up the overtime antics.
—Chris Fitter Scott came on to serve five straight points for a 13-9
Seminole didn't come that close [tains wot*with "Oviedo's Ter.”
lead. Lyman came back to pull within a point. 14-13,
again and Lake Howell's 6 0 lead
A fter Lake Mary sco red a
seemed like it could have held up touchdown to tie the game at 6-6 In
TRIBE TICKETS - Advance but an offspeed hit by Krumwelde fell In between the
until the end. But. with less than the fourth quarter. Ryan Lisle had a tickets for the Scmlnolc-Lyman Lyman defense to give the Lady Hawks the serve and
five minutes remaining In the game, chance to put Lake Mary In front football game Friday night at Barma finished the Lady Greyhounds off as she served
the Tribe's Eddie Banks returned a with a successful conversion kick. Seminole High arc on sale at the 15th point.
punt 59 yards for a touchdown to tie However. Lisle didn't have a (ec to Flagship Bank (Sanford I’luza),
Lyman dropped Its match with Lake Howrll hut the
the score at 6-6. The conversion kick off ol and his kirk, off the S w e e n e y ' s O f f i c e S u p p l y Lady Greyhounds upended Apopka. 15*12, 15-9. Kim
kick was no good and the score ground, was blocked. The result (downtown). Seminole High School, Reis served five Bimight points in the second game and
remained tied at 6-6 at the end of was a 6-6 tic and overtime.
S a n fo rd M iddle School an d Dawn Boyeson came In as a substitute and served the
regulation.
Oviedo failed to score In Itr. four Lakcvlew Middle School. Advance last four points to clinch the match. Regan Stump and
Lake Howell gol the ball first In pluys and Lake Mary couldn't move tickets art $2.25 while Ikkrls at the Kim Forsyth were the big hitters for the Lady*
overtime and they scored on their the ball In its first three plays. After gate are $3.
Greyhounds.
1

Then
Down

Prep Football

B ill C a u g h e ll...25 tackles and nine assists

*11
nl

'i

A T a le O f T w o O T 's : T rib e Frosh
Fall T o H a w k s , Ram s N ip Lions

l i t r t M Phot* tor Tom m y V in c trt

The receiver's task Is simple. Try to
get the serve back. Preferably bftrk cross
court and as low as possible. If you get It
too near the netman or too high back to
the server your poor partner will be
eating a fuzz sandwich. The service
return In doubles is a very hard one
because of the ever present net man and
the exactness of the shot. An alternative
Is to lob over the net man's head so that
neither of your opponents can hit the put
away volley.
The fourth position is that of the
receiver's partner. The normal position
in classic doubles Is on the line In the
middle of the server's box on your side.
Your Job is to take advantage of a good
low return by your partner and move to
the middle for the put away volley.
(Either down the middle or at cither of
vour opponent's left hip.) An alternative
position Is to line up in the back court
with the receiver and only come to net
behind an approach shot.
Doubles is not Just four people playing
singles. It demands teamwork, com­
munication, and an exactness of shot­
making that is often harder and more
demanding than singles.

�South Seminole
Junior Pee Wees
Blank Bobcats
For 4th Straight

Jactoor, Mvfghli
Rock Laka
S evlh StmS.--.tij

U h i r w r i reoultv
Toagvo 11, Lakavkv* 4
Joekoen Halghti4. South S*m,nol« 0

Week 4
Lakrvlrw
Ml two*
Jockton Halghti
Rock Ltko

w
3
3
3
)

E vtnlng H »r«ld, Sanford, FI. W tdntBday, Oct. I t , 13M — 11 A

fa s t*

SYSA
SCORE
CARD

M i r * w &amp; R o c k L a ta B

i
0
1
I

Junior Pss Woo
loom
T TutkawllU Bluo
0 South Stmlnol*
0 TwkawlltaGold
B ' MIIw m
o

South Seminole's Hurricanes only won one of their
3
five Seminole Youth Sports Association football con­
1 3 0 D a rk I * k *
frontations Saiurday with the Jackson Heights Bobcats Tukrst!!s
South Samlnoto
1 3
0 Jockton H o fe M t
—but It wus a beauty.
T tttiit
0 4
0 Lokovlow
feivrdar'i retulfi
South Seminole's Junior Pee Wees parlayed an
Saturdayi m utti
Tutkowlllo Slut 4. Tutkowlllo Cold 0
Laka 4. Ml two# 0
explosive offense with a stingy defense to blank Jackson Rock
South Somtnolo 37, Jockton Hotflhlt 0
Lakovlow 40, Taaguo 0
Heights. 27-0, and improve their record to 4-0 for the Jackton
MIIw m It, Rock Lott 4
H*ighl» 33, South Sombwio 0
Tutkowlllo Cold 13. South Somlnolo 4
season, best In the division.
jMIIJftl
Mlty Mitt
In the other South Seminole games, the Midgets lost to T u n
W
I T
Tttm
Jackson Heights. 32-0, the Junior Midgets dropped a Lokovlow
3 0
0
Jockton HoIghtt
3 1
0
26-7 decision to the Bobcats, the Pec Wees lost a 6-0 J a c tio n H a lg h ti
Lokovlow
M
II
wm
3
1
0
MIIw m
heartbreaker while the Miley Mites were blanked, 42-0.
South Somtnolo
3 1
0
In SYSA action this Saturday, all five Lakcvlew teams Rock Lako
I 3
0
Rock Lott
0 3
B Tutkowlllo
battle South Seminole, Mllwee goes against Tuskawllla. T v tk a w llla
Toaguo
0 4
0
South Samlnolt
Jackson Heights ukes on Rock Lake while Teague Is
M t u r X a f f reouNt
Saturday'! rotottt
Idle.
Jockton H a lg h ti N , South S am lnolt 7
Lokovlow 33. Toaguo 0
Coach Peter Bonaventure’s Junior Pee Wee wasted no M ltw o * 13, Rock L t k t I
Jockton HtlgMt a . South Somtnolo 0
MIIw m I, Rock Lott g
time against the Bobcats, pushing across two first- Lakovlow 37, T *a g j « 0
quarter scores on a 25-yard pass from Jerry Tucker to
Chris Reynell and a four-yard TD romp by Branlff
Bonavcnturc. Pat Newell booted the PAT for a 14-0
bulge.
In the second quarter. Tucker and Reynell hooked up Jimmy Espln tossed a 35-yard pass to Gabrovlc to tie
again for 20 yards and another tcfachdown and a 20-0 the score at halftime. Grabovlc was the leading rusher
advantage at halftime. In the fourth quarter. Reynell with 13 carries for 58 yards. Espln completed 3 of 4
capped a brilliant three-touchdown afternoon with a passes for 57 yards while Scott Meredith completed 1 of
14-yard romp.
2 for two yards. Gabrovlc caught one pass for 35 yards
Bonavcnturc led the South Seminole rushers with 32 and Meredith grabbed two for 22. Jud Ferguson led the
yards In four carries. Reynell's only carry resulted In a ladders with five.
TD. Chuck Lamb snatched three passes for 34 yards Lakcvlew Midgets 39. Teague 0
while QB Tucker hit 2 of 3 for 44 yards and Bonavcnturc
Sanford's Terrace Eddie did a little bit of everything In
hit 3 of 3 for 16.
the Midgets' third win against no losses. Eddie pulled In
Jackson Heights Jr. Midgets 20, South Seminole 7
three scoring passes of 42, 45. and 53 yards from
B.J. Mason ran for 122 yards and four touchdowns as quarterback Jeff Blake. In the fourth quarter. Eddie
Jackson Heights built an 18-0 first-half lead and coasted grabbed lateral from Blake and tossed a 62-yard bomb to
home. Rodney Thompson boomed the lone PAT.
Carlos Hartsfleld for the score.
Leading coach Anthony Mays' Bobcats In receiving
Blake also threw a 10-yard TD pass to Hartsfleld.
was Clinton Dunston with two grabs for 50 yards.
Arthur Bradford capped the scoring with a spectacular
Coach Greg Barnes* Hurricanes received strong efforts 58-yard touchdown run.
from Tyler Jack who ran the ball 12 times for 60 yards
Kyle Reynolds ran across two PATs and Bradford
and scored a imw-hdown. Raymond Williams chipped In tallied cr.e.
29 yards.
Bradford carried four times for 99 yards, Reynold
Jackson
Pee Wees 6, South Semlswla 0
toted the ball four times for 16. Blakr romplnind 6 of 13
A first-quarter Bobcat score stood up despite an for 191 yards. Eddie had 1 for 1 62 yards. Eddie hauled
excellent defensive effort by the Hurricanes.
In three catches for 150 yards and Hartsfleld gathered In
M.R. Horn scored the only TD of the day and piled up three for 113.
62 yards on 17 carries. Billy Newton added 36 on four. Lukevlew Junior Midgets 40, Teague 0
Quarterback Mark Madlgan completed 4 of 6 passes for
Jarod Jones and Tracy Turner reach rumbled for two
66 yards as Horn pulled in three for 54 and Blllly TDs and coach Wes Childers’ explosive Dolphins buried
Newton grabbed the other for 12.
anol her one for their third straight victory.
Defensively. Ricky Vaugh led with 10 tackles while
John Curry opened the scoring with a 23-yard run and
Madlgan Bnared two Interceptions. Billy Newton. Kevin Jones followed with a 34-yard gallop for another score.
Newton and Chris Baker each recovered a fumble.
Turner booted the PAT for a 14-0 lead. Kenny Batton
Larry Porter ran for 30 yards In three carries and Scott then recovered a fumble and ran It In for another score
Stahley toted the ball 26 yards In seven attempts.
and Turner again kicked the point after for a 22-0 lead.
Jackson Heights Mltey Mites 42, Bonth Seminole O
Jones made an amazing 80-yard kickoff return for a
Terry Smith ran for 49 yards and three TDs as the TD to booet the lead to 28-0 at halftime.
unbeaten (4-0) Bobcats crushed another foe.
Turner add his second TD with a powerful four-yard
Smith rambled 18 yards for the first score and run and Turner then capped the scoring In the fourth
followed It up with a 16-yard jaunt In the second quarter period with a five-yard burst.
fora 14-0 halftime bulge.
Joneu had 116 yards In three carries and Turner
In th e third quarter. S te v e W hltely gathered In a paae chipped In 55 tn eight. Tarance Can* completed one pass
from Ervin Alexander and rambled 35 yards for a score. for 80 yards to Jeff McNair. Jones completed two passes
McGill Hodges later tacked on a 30-yard scoring romp 1 for 27 yards to Lenard Edwards.
for a 28-0 lead.
Jones capped an outstanding all-around day with nine
In the fourth period, Alexander roomed 21 yards and tackles and one Interception. Ballon was the top
Smith added an exciting 60-yard punt return for a defender, though, with 15 tackles and a fumble
touchdown to close out the scoring.
recovery. Robert Moore and Dorey Williams both fell on
Brian Lawson and Alexander had six solo tackles fumbles.
apiece to lead the Bobcats! sturdy defense.
MIIwm Junior Midgets 12, Rock Luke 8
Tuskawllla Blue 0, Tuskawllla Gold O
Chris Radcllff scored on a six-yard run and Stephen
In a battle between the two of the toughest teams In Jen y tallied on a 14-ycrd Jaunt as the Spartans trimmed
the division, the Big Blue defense posted Its fourth the Raiders.
straight shutout as Matt and Thad Wallace. Frankie
Defensively. R om Urvhan had six tackles while Brian
Sales. Mark Arnold and Todd Streaen-Reuter led the Severance and Jevon Zlrkel had four apiece.
way. Tuskawllla Blue Is 4-0 for the year and plays a key
For the Raiders, Steve King had 11 carries for 87 yards
game Saturday against Mllwee.
plus a 25-yard kickoff return and an eight-yard TD run.
Sales scored the only TD In the third quarter. Strong Derrick Sims rolled for 53 yards In 15 tries. Clark Nash
blocking by Lee Wallace. Scott Byerly. Chris Llttrell and completed 2 of 10 tosses for 17 yards while Sims hit 1 of
Brian Moablech paved the way.
1 for 25 yards lo Nash.
Lakcvlew Mltey Mites 33, Teague O
Jay Cnlpchak had 10 solo tackles, one assist, one sack
Anthony Roberts punched across three touchdowns, and caused one fumble for the Raiders.
PhlUlp Bennett added two and Corey Bennett accounted Mllwee Pee Wees 2S, Rock Lake 0
for one as the Mitey Mites won their third straight game.
Coach Tom Demps had praise for his cheerleaders and
Roberts ran for 86 yards. Bennett canted for 54 as did his players as the Spartans slogged past Rock Lake In
King. Bennett caught one pass for 30 yards from Roberts the rain. “Our cheerleaders stayed out In the rain with
for a TD. Jermaln Hartsfleld, Jamie King and Kevin us the whole game." said Demps. "They're really
Johnson had five Uckles each while Jimmy Johnson. something."
Terance Lawson, Sammy Butler. Marvin Martin and
Todd Patterson paced the offense with a 35-yard end
Jermaine Jones had four solos each.
run for a score and a 35-yard punt return for another.
"The whole defense did a good Job In holding Teague Paul Bowan added a one yard run and Corey Anderson
to minus yardage." said assistant coach Jim Johnson.
scored the final ID on a two-yard. Roderick Roux busted
Teague Junior Pee Wees 20, Lakevicw 0
over for the PAT.
Teague broke open a scoreless tie In the second half
Patterson ran for 181 yards on 12 carries. Bowan had
with 20 points to Improve Its record to 2-2. Chris Stack. eight totes for 5Gyards.
Patrick Battle and Sadat Smith tallied the Teague TDs
Floyd Nelson lea the defense with eight solos and two
while Brian Meredith and Jeny Riddell ran In the extra Assists. Bowan (6). Roux (5)-nnd Herbert Jenkins (5)
points.
were next In line. Ryan Greene recovered two fumbles
Stack had four carries for 25 yards. Smith had three while Andrew Stribllng recovered one. Patterson also
for 51 and Battle added three for 23.
had two Interceptions. "That Patterson is really doing it
"Our offense was hard to stop with strong blocking this year," concluded Demps.
from Tucker Nixon. Michael Tsataros. Jon Dunn and Mllwse Junior Pee Wees 19, Rock Lake 0
Doug Hejtmanek." said coach Ron Meredith.
Todd Cleveland ran for two TDs and Gregg Gouch
Teague Pee Wees 13. Lakcvlew 0
rambled 35 yards for another as Mllwee tuned up for Its
Mark Grabovlc scooped up a fumble and returned In big game tills week against Tuskawllla Blue. Gouch also
65 yards for the winning score as Teague Improved lo ran over an extra point.
3-1. Bobby Morehead caught a two-yard pass for the
Cleveland totaled 68 yards on 13 carries while Steve
PAT.
Yurchlson added 65 In 14 tries for coach Don Harmon's
After Lakcvlew broke on top in the first quarter. ball club.

SYSA Football

Uncle Nick's Stuns Deluxe
Uncle Nick's Oyster Bar erupted for six runs In both
the first and second Innings Monday en route to a
stunning 15-5 victory over Deluxe Bar In Sanford Men’s
Softball League action at Plnehurst Field.
The victory pula Uncle Nick's In a tie for first place
with Deluxe. Both teams have a 6-1 record. Uncle Nick's
only loss was to Deluxe earlier in the season. The two
teams meet two more times before the season ends.
In the top of the first, a two-run single by Marty
Ceresoli and run-scoring Btnglea by Don Cauaaeaux and
Wayne Russell keyed a six-run explosion. Two Deluxe
errors kept the rally alive for Unclle Nick's.
Deluxe Bar answered with three runs In the bottom of
the ftret to cut Uncle Nick’s lead In half. Sam Raines
walked to lead off and Levi Raines followed with a
single. One out later. Billy GilflUh single to load the
bases. Lee Banks' fielder's choice enabled Sam Raines to
score and two more runs scored on a Uncle Nick s error.
Uncle Nick s came back to take a 12-3 lead with alx
runs in ihe second inning. Key hits Included a two-run
homer off the bat of Caussesux. a run-scoring triple by
Joe Ervin and « RBI double by Russell.
Don Hibbard's three-run double In the fourth put the
Icing on the cake for Uncle Nick's.
In Monday s first game. Session Time rallied for seven
runs In the bottom of the sixth and htld off a furious

Men's Softball

H*r«ld Ptwtoi br Dill, Murpft,

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Sanford Landing seventh Inning rally as Sessions
claimed a 13-8 victory.
Sessions turned a 6-2 lead Into a 13-2 advantage with
seven runs In the sixth. Key hits Included a two-run
single by Wayne Delawcjer and RBI singles by Jeff Taft,
Sam Van Ness and Rubble Hanrnhan.
Sanford Landing came back with six runs In the top of
the seventh but the rally fell ehort with the bases loaded.
Four walks and two Sessions errors kept the Inning alive
while William Harrison's two-run single was the big
blow for Sanford Landing.

Dykes 5th

It was breakaw ay day
during Seminole Youth
S p o rts A s s o c ia tio n
football action Sntirrriay
dt Sylvan Lake P ark.
A * w e l e f t . S o u th
Seminole M idget Tim
T h ra llk lll moves to get
a w a y fro m J a c k s o n
Heights' tackier Chris
Lopez. A bove, South
S e m in o le 's D o u g
Holmes strains to hold
on f-j running back K irk
R ozek of Jackson
H e ig h ts . J a c k s o n
H eights ripped South
Seminole, 32-0.

7.30

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-T rin ity Prep. 1:30 3.

Lake Howell senior Brad Dykes Is the county's fifth
ranked runner with a top time of 16:15. Dykes was listed
as the sixth ranked runner In Tuesday's County Cross
Country Honor Roll with a time of 16:32. Dykes turned
In his 16:15 In Saturday's DeLand Invitational

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�Green's Heroics Can't Save
Bucs; Booing Bothers McKay

U A — Evening H e ra ld , S «nlord, F I. V /td n c s d *y, Oct. I f , 11H

Refs' 'Unnecessary'
Calls Upset Henning
SUWANEE. Ga. fUPl) - Dan Henning
ha* no i-r*:v;.\V.r&lt;v~-' ~ tr tr tn g any NFL
game ofiictal in particular. That could be
costly.
Furthermore, a* a general rule, the
Atlanta Falcons first-year coach thinks
the men in stripe# — most of them
established businessmen who officiate
only on the weekends — "do a pretty
good Job under the most trying of
conditions.”
Uut Henning Is critical about what he
considers "unnecccsary calls.”
"From the standpoint of helping the
Falcons. I d ask the league to Instruct Its
officials to call only those violations they
arc sure of.” said Henning. "The rule
should be. when In doubt about a call. It
shouldn't be made.
"As far as I am concerned, the calls
that shouldn't be made arc usually the
ones that cause all the uproar."
Henning is particularly tnurhV about
officiating this week since hr feels two
calls, both of which he questioned, were
the deciding factors In the Falcons'
27-21 loss to the Los Angeles Rapt* —
the fourth straight game Atlanta. 2-5.
lost In the closing moments.
The first of those two calls came when
the Falcons, with the score tied 21-21.
were Inside Rams' territory and driving
toward a possible score with Just over
two minutes to piny.
Hilly Johnson caught a thlrd-and-5
pass from Steve Bartkowskl and ap­
peared to take two steps before being hit
and fumbling out of bounds. An official
called II an Incomplctlon and the Falcons
were forced lo punt.
Then, with time running out and the
Falcons trying to force the Rams to
attempt a field goul since they had
uiucked one c&lt;u!ici, * tviilroverilii
Interference call gave the Rams a first
down at the Falcons’ 1 and set up the

TAMPA (UPI) — Injured linebacker
Hugh Green put himself Into the game
Sunday after sltttng out the first half
promptly Intercepted a pass and scored.
Hut his heroics «-r? not enough of a
spark lo prevent the hapless Tampa Bay
Buccaneer* from dropping their seventh
straight game.
Coach John McKay confirmed Monday
Green went Into llv gnmr on hi* own
and said while he normally doesn’t like
for a player to do that. In Green's case he
was glad.
"I thought that Hugh thought that he
could do It and he was entirely correct."
McKay said. "He did do It. But he
couldn't play very long."
Green suffered a pulled hamstring In
practice Thursday and when he In­
tercepted a Nell Lomax pass and limped
33 yards for a touchdown In the third
period. It cut the St. Louis lead to 27-20.
But the Bucs never got any closer as
the teams exchanged fourth quarter
touchdowns and the 2-5 Cardinals de­
feated Tampa Bay 34-27.
"I like piavers who believe they can
play." McKny said. "Hugh Green
thought he could play but I watched him
warm up and It was apparent that he
couldn't play for very long.”
With Green sidelined, the Bucs were
wi t hout an e x p erien ced o u tsid e
linebacker. Both Andy Hawkins and
Cecil Johnson were on Injured reserve so
the Bucs were using one player who had
been with the team less than two weeks
and one less than one week.
The Bucs will be at home Sunday
against the 4-3 New Orleans Saints.

Pro Football
game-winning touchdown.
’•There's no question that lncomplct l on c a l l c h a n g e d t h e g a m e ’s
momentum." said Henning. "You know
how the Rams must have felt. It would
he like having me point a gun at you.
pull the trigger and hit the wall Instead.
"To dodge the bullet has to be a
tremendous emotional lift. One minute
we're heading toward a score: the next.
they are."
.
Henning said the NFL needs to con­
stantly monitor Us game officials In a
continuing effort to get the best officiat­
ing possible."
"It will never be perfect. You'll never
get seven people to make the right call
on cvrrvonc of more than 100 plays. Uut
it needs to be the best It can oe so fur
outcome of the game Is decided by Ihc
22 players on the field."
Henning noted that questionable calls
arc much more noticeable In close games
- "And we've played more than our
share of those of late. There arc a lot of
calls you could com plain about,
especially after looking at the films, hut
when one team or the other wins by a
commanding margin, those arc pretty
much overlooked by the fans and the
media.
"The system Is ns good as It can be.
under the circumstances." he added.
"The best we can do Is ask the league
office to make sure officials working our
game* call only what tLcy sec.
Henning said there were three or four
calls maac in tire Falcona-Rams ga*..c
that he felt should never have been
made.

Disgruntled fans wore paper bags ovci
their heads Sunday and a radio station It
Sharon Shank Is a key m em ber of Chowan playing a song "Go Away John McKay,
the public outcry Increases for McKay
College s ’ n a tio n a lly -ra n k e d vo lle y b a ll team . as
&lt;u step aside n* roach of the 0-7 Tampa
Shank, a graduate ot Oviedo High, Is a sophomore Bav Buccaneers.
h itler from th4* M urfreesboro, N.C school. She Is
th e Orlando Sentinel and the Sf.
the daughter of Stephan and Janet Shank of Pcictaburg Times recently published
result* of Dolls In which fan* afirced
W inter Springs.

Oviedo Grad Excels

Pro Football

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overwhelmingly that McKay should he
replaced as coach of the Hue*.
i
McKay has said he has no Intention of
stepping aside and Bucs owner Hugh
CulverliuuBc had publicly thrown his full
support behind McKay In the fare of the
wrath of the fans.
McKay was loudly booed and a few
Items were hurled In his direction
Sunday as he left the field with a police
escort following the Bucs 34-27 loss to
St. Louis.
The dour McKay usually Ignores the
taunts but Sunday he looked up and
blew a kiss to the booing spectators.
"I realize there arc certain of the media
trying to get my Job." McKay said at his
Monday news conference.
Attendance has dropped from 62.154
for the opening game with Detroit to
48.224 Sunday, the smallest crowd since
the Atlanta game Nov. 27. 1977 — the
Bucs second year In the NFL
when
they dropped their 25tn straight game.
Some fans wore brown paper bags
with holes cut In them for eyes and nose
and the record of the games —0-1 lor the
loss to Detroit. 0-2 for the loss to go. and
on up lo 0-6 for the loss to Dallas.
Some of the bags were bright "Bucca­
neer orange." with lettering referring to
the Tampa Bay “ Yucs." and the
"Bums.”
Another sack had the Inscription "Hire
Ed Biles." a reference to the Hn coach
who resigned last week when his club
was 0-6.
A wall-sign at the stadium said "we
came to the game for fun and enjoyment,
but we'd rather have McKay sign for
unemployment."
In the past there have been signs
calling for the dumping of McKay Into
Tampa Bay. and a sign last week read
"EPA regulations prohibit dumping
McKay in the Bav "

Leukemia Society ABC Cocktail
Hour Wed., Oct. 26, 6 P.M. til 7

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B EER • B EER • B EER

Hwy. 17-92 S O U TH C ITY L IM IT S

★ LONGWOOD

SU ITCASE
24-12 O Z. C A N S

24-12 O Z. CA NS

Hwy. 17-92 NEAR 434 -O PEN SUNDAY

DailatB.Pr-ledtkXil

* * ALTAMONTE

Kentat Oty X . N.V Giant* 17
Den »tr 14. Cincinnati 17
Seeme 14. L A RaUSenM
L X Serr-t 17. Atlanta 11

Limit Right* Reserved

Retell

Green 3 a , 44. WatNnptan 47
Seaday, 0 (1 . I I
(A * T u m &lt; E D I)
Atlanta at N Y Jett. 1 p m
CNc* 90* t P N l 4d e L ftU .lR m
C H ***««4 4l Om tnriatt. IF m
Detroit i t WaiMnpSan. I p nt
K am a* C i t y * Houston. 1 p m
M in n tto li * • Croon Bor. I p m

Hwy. 438 O N E BLOCK
EAST O F I-4 - O PEN SUNDAY

L i m it R i g h t * R e s e r v e d

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f

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1 .5 9

* * CASSELBERRY

6 .3 5

Hwy. 17-92 AT 436 O PEN SU NDA Y

EVERYDAY tOW PRICE
G ERM ANY'S FIN E ST BEER

KONIGSBACHER

N o. England ot Buffed. I p m
M iam i 0t Boltimore. l p m
H e * Or Mono ol Tempo Bo». 4 p m
P im feu rfp p IS o o n to .ip m
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Son Franc I k s ot L X Ham*. 4 p m
L X Raider* ot Oalta*. 4 p m
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VER M O UTH

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14 M D 74 — 41
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1.29

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750 M L

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C R Y S T A L C L ftA ri P L A S T IC

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C A N A D IAN

BEVERAGE
GLASSES
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60 00 U 0 * OCT 74

. G O R G IN
G R A C C IA N O
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�PEOPLE
Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

W ed n e id ay , Oc». I t , 1 W - 1 B

Cook Of The Week

Teacher Learned Culinary Arts The Hard Way
•

___

.icMeca
licgiecs lu-2G
lu-20 minute*
minutes or until heated througn. Serves
5-8.
RAW APPLE CAKE
Cream: Vi cup shortening
I cup sugar
I
I
,
,
Add: 1Vi cups chopped apples
Sift and add: 1 cup flour
Vi teaspoon soda
Vi teaspoon allspice
Vi teaspoon nutmeg
Vi teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Add: 1 cup raisins
1 cup nuts
Pack In 6x9-lnch pan. Bake at 350 degrees 45-bO
minutes. Serve warm or cold. Note: No liquid used in
this recipe.

Bv Lou Childers
Herald Correspondent
Patsy Hall had to Irani to cook the hard way - after
she was married.
Bom In Hopewell. Va.. Patsy attended Longwood
College where she received her B S. degree In Business
Education In 1970. When she met and married her
huband. Gary Hall. Patsy says. "I knew how to cook
your basic hamburger, but that was about all."
The solution to Patsy's dllemmn was to "study"
Patsy Hall prepares
cookbooks. Even after teaching college-level business
subjects at Katherine Gibbs In Boston. Patsy confesses
the 'creamiest
she still was working on the culinary arts. It became her
“new major."
gelatin salad you
"When we moved to Atlanta." Patsy says. "I decided
course from my cookbooks every
to try a different main course
ever had.' The
roved to be very Interesting, and
day for a year." This proved
ut" the reclps they did not like,
Patsy soon “weeded out”
secret? Sho adds
that appealed to her and her
ones
and saved the
husband.
orange sherbet for
"One of the recipes we were fond of nnd
make Is 'Chicken Chip Bake.'" This Is easy to
a soft orange color
good every lime.
The only recipe that Patsy has that Is an "heirloom Is
and creamy texture
the one for Qulckn-Easy Spoon Bread. "Every time I
H « r ,ld Photo bn Lou C h ild .r t
We Sell Only
went to my great-aunt'a (Fannie Swlneford) In
P R IC E S GOOD u s d .A. Choice
Richmond, she would make spoon bread. Was I ever
W E D . T H R U — N a tu ra lly Aged
shocked when she gave me the recipe and I found out
SAT.
W estern Beet
the basis for this great bread was a mix!" Somehow.
Patsy says she always thought her great-aunt was a
W E W IL L N O W B E C L O S E D E V E R Y M O N D A Y
"from scratch” cook.
__ _ ,
U S D A. Choice
^
Palsy and Gary moved to Fern Park In 1974 when he
became a business broker with Fllcklngcr. Guthrie &amp;
BEEF
$
Company In Altamonte Springs. Patsy spends a lot of
HINDQUARTER
Cut, W r**p*d And F r * in
time In her kitchen now cooking up good meals not only
Freeh lee Pack
for her husband, but also for daughters Melanie, 7, and
FRYERS
Lindsey* 4.
well-drained. 1 sliced banana. Vi cup chopped nuts. Pour
For Patsy, leisure hours arc often filled with creativity
4. Repeat layering, ending up with bread crumbs.
CUT UP
Into mold and refrigerate until firm.
as she busily designs her own stlchcry drawings for Press down to fit.
Kernel - Reg. S2-99 li.
needlepoint and crafts. "This hobby was born nut of
5. Beat eggs. milk, stilt nnd parsley and pour over
QUICK-uEABY SPOON BREAD
necessity," Patsy admits. When her husband was In
CORNED
BEEF
Mix on high speed or electric mixer until smooth:
graduate school, she needed to make gifts In order to bread.
6. Cover tightly with foil.
1 package Flnkocom muirin mix
ROUNI
economize, and boom, a hobby was bom.
7. Bake about 1 hour at 350 degrees.
3Vi
cups
milk
Best Bread — Reg. S2.M U .
Patsy's "Swlss-Onlon Chicken" Is a good company
8. Let stand 5 to 10 minutes before slicing. Serves 6-H.
4 eggs
meal when served with Yam Souffle. And. this week s
ALL BEEF
Pour Into prepared baking pan.
YAM SOUFFLE
cook says. "For the creamiest gelatin salad you ever
Bake about I hour a! 350 degrees Spoon bread will be
KNOCKWURST
had. try’ orange 'Galatln Salad."’ It Is made with the
2
cups manhed yams or sweet potatoes (frrsh cookedcustard on top and bready at bottom.
addition of a pint of orange sherbet which gives It a soft or canned, drained)
CHICKEN CHIP BAKE
orange color and Its creamy texture.
2 eggs
FRESH PORK
Vi teaspoon salt
2 cups cubed cooked chicken
SWISS—ONION CHICKEN
2 cups sliced celery
VAcup honey
.
M L
2 cups sliced onions
Vi cup chopped nuts
cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
V i teaspoon cinnamon
Vi cup toasted slivered-almonds
8 slices (8 cups) day old bread crumbs
Mix all Ingredients together with mixer until smootli.
2 teaspoons grated onion
2 cups chopped cooked chicken
Bake in casarolc dish 30-35 minutes ut 350 degrees.
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
1Vi cups shredded Swiss cheese (Boz.)
Does nt collapse when removed from oven.
Vi teaspoon salt
2108 S. FRENCH A V E . (17-92)
2 oz. (Vi cup) American cheese, shredded
2 cups milk
N E X T T O M R .C 'S C H IC K E N
1 cup crushed potato chips
ORANGE GELATIN SALAD
1 teaspoon salt
___
*
Com bine all Ingredients except chce*e u n d &lt; p o U to * 1 • 4i*i ia**-1
2 mblcspooiiSBundey ■
m
±. . ; . .
2 smalt b?t*ps orange gelottn with 2 cups boiling chips. Pile lightly In IVi-quart casserole. Sprinkle with
PH
O
N
E
O
R
D
ER
AHEAD
qaq j f a o
1. Cook onions In butter until tender.
wnter. stirring until dissolved. Add 1 pint orange cheese, then with potato chips. Bake In hot oven at 425
It's R eady Whan Y o u 're Reedy
O A O mgi J A O
2. Place Vi of bread crumbs in greased loaf pan
sherbet. Stir well. Add 1 small can mandarin oranges.
3. Layer Vi onions. Vi chicken. Vi cheosc.

IOW A
MEATS

5911.

65k

l His

Indian Photos
On Exhibit At
SCC Gallery

Not

Is

3 DAYS ONLY

—

Thurs.

Fri.

And
Sat.
Oct.

5 regular
in s to c k
early FALL

[20-21-22

- FASHION
PRESSES

DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE
519 W. LAKE MAI1Y BLVD.
LAKE MARY, PL

Winter Is
Almost
Here!

7 0 eon . ;

A a u ttfic

P ick Out H er Favorite
P erson al Gift#
Now While Our
/
S election s Are
f
Good . . . You’ll Be i
Glad You Did And '■
So Will She!

"Images of the North American Indian at the Turn of
the Century." a collection of photographs by Edward
Sheriff Curtis, will be the Inaugural exhibit In the new
Gallcry/Museum at Seminole Community College.
Located In the Fine Arts Building, the Gallcry/Museum
is open from 10:00 a m. - 3:00 p.m. Monday through
Thursday and on Friday from 10:00 a.m. until noon and
evenings when the College present* musical ami
dramatic performances.
Curtis. 1868-1952. attempted In his photographic art
to capture the spirit of Indian lifestyle. Ills work has
been called "the most profound document of pure
Indian culture ever made."
The 43 pieces In the exhibit arc on loan from the
Minnesota Institute of Fine Arts In Minneapolis through
the courtesy of Mr. Hon Libert us.
For further Information, please call Grady Klmsey at
_
.
.
„
....
I . ____ O O O l . t R n n r
7 &lt; Y l!
Seminole
Community
C«!!cg&lt;

The Prc School Center. Sanford. Is fqwinsoring a
"Christmas In October Fair" on Oct. 21. from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m., at the Woman's Club of Sanford.
309 S. Oak Avc.
,
The fair will feature a book fair, wooden puzzles
and boxes, puppets, dolls. Christmas decorations
and baked goods.

1 1 6 W . FIR S T S T.

.

3 2 3 -4 1 3 2

,

DOWNTOWN SANTO.0
U ,n t o r i 'i M o tt U nlouo t o u t Iquo

L O II DYCUS • O W N IR

D R IFTW O O D V ILLA G E
LAKE M A R Y BLVD.
C 1 C 7

&amp;
e e c //e c ta

IMPATIENS!!
ROSE-FORM
BLOOMS
LUSH FOLIAGE 5” POT

A

GRAFTED CACTUS
BRIGHT COLORS

OitUA
Z 9. ■45.0')

g y
" 4 ft

2 TOR * 4 ° °

SUCCULENTS
&amp; CACTI.
rig * i««

MANY RARE OR
HARD TO FIND
VARIETIES!!

1 1 3 W . 2 7 th S t.
{Next To Plnocretl School)
/
(r
PH 3 2 2 -8 9 9 1
S a n fo rd ^ fk
SUSAN W H E A TO N
O W N ER/O PER A TO R

OR

unusual

GOOD MON., TUES., WED. ONLY
ENTIRE MONTH OF OCTOBER

h-

3,.*5

•W U

REO. S2.W

In d u d s i Cut i Stylo
(Long H air Slightly H lghsr)

-V

OR

WITH EVERY NILSON OOSI in* M
A t Regular Price.
AMERICAN BRAND

I,,. *35

Aft

EACH

FREE ROSE FOOD

‘P v ttH

h a s m an y b eau tifu l w o o ls, a c ry lic s,
m o h a irs and b le n d s to h elp you k eep
w arm an d w ear th e la te s t in high
fashion. Let u s help you find th e p erfect
y arn for y o u r sp ecial
Rocking
p ro je c t.
le i lair
O u r s p e c ia lty is serv ice.

DOUBLE!!

T u rk u

GUYS &amp; GALS
HAIRSTYLING STUDIO

B r u n s w ic k Y a rn s

O '} 1

A ix q c r U c C U td

Christmas In October

&lt;H M TED F a sh io n s

O p e n 1 0 -5
T u e s .- S a t.

“D iu O u lt f

J

2035 HWY. 17-92

MAITLAND
834-2080

0

7

c

Mm _
BOTH NURSERIES
NOW OPEN SUNDAY 12-5
OPEN DAILY 9:30-5.30

271 W. LK MARY BLVD.

LAKE MARY
323-6133

�3B— Evening H erald. Sanford, FI.

Wednesday. O c t.'H , 1TM

Don't Blame Undertaker
For Pink Nylon Nightgov
H E A P . A n n v . w^it,

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

lived -10 years, and so Tar
I've managed to handle
jm
everything without having
UQGT
lo write to you. but the
.
time has conic when I
^ ' *
AhoV
need some help.
jj/R R fcX,
'
Three years ago, my
MtMMBMB.
mother, a hard-working,
God-fearing, 70-year-old
country woman, died. For some reason, my older slslcr
and stepfather, both religious and practical, selected a
fancy pink negiigee for her to be buried tnt

meet his/her maker.
Leave insinuations with your nearest of kin concerning
this mullet, uml ask that your wtshei he carried uul
when you are.

DEAR ABBY: Reading the letter from "Bully's Wife."
iwtng reprlm anrird for helntf "lazy and
stupid," hit a nerve with me. "Bully's Wife" said the lad
was neither lazy nor stupid: lie was a good kid who
works with his father putting in 9 10 hr
a day to cam
his college fees.
As a boy. 1 was forever being clouted for my
Tills weekend we attended the funeral of a friend's "stupidity"
and pushed with a firm shove by a father
mother. Same type situation, different funeral home, who complained
about my "laziness." Consequenlly .1
and she was laid out In a pink nylon nightgown! Is (his a grew up with an Inferiority complex, which took me
new trend? They don't bury men In p a j a m a s — they are
hurled in business sulls —so why sleepwear for women? years to overcome. Worse yet. II was accompanied by at
wh.OM *on was

I totd my husband that If 1 go first and I'm sent off to
meet my maker In something I wouldn't answer the
door In, I will come back and haunt him. I think some of
those funeral directors have been sniffing the
formaldehyde loo long. Abby. Do something!
C.C. IN
MISSISSIPPI
DEAR C.C.s Don't blame the funeral directors. The
"fumliy" decides how the loved one shall Ik * dressed lo

in pleiiNPtl t o a n n o u n c e (lie

H*r»id Photo by Tommy Vlnctnl

Id y llw ild e
C a rn iv a l

PROGRAMS a

A C C E P T IN G M O S T
D E N T A L IN S U R A N C E

J a m e s E. Quinn, HI.II.
Getting In the mood for Idyllw ilde School's annual Halloween Carnival are
Robbie Peters, 9, football player; Scott O 'Brien, 6, the Lone Ranger;
Jennifer M itchell, 6, clown; and Monica Thomas, 7, witch. The school PTA Is
sponsorng the carnival to be held at the school, 430 Vlhlen Road, Sanford, on
Saturday, Oct. 29, from noon to 5 p.m . The carnival w ill feature a Country
Store w ith handmade craft Items, an Olde Sweet Shoppe offering a variety of
baked dellcasies, a balloon man, clown face makeup artist, a pocket lady, a
m agician, a haunted house, a hay ride, booths, prizes, a potpourri of food and
m ore. The public Is Invited. There Is no admission charge.

o p e n i n g o f his o ffic e fo r

FAMILY PRACTICE

S** cot%|gy•

at

2209 French Avenue
Sanford

HOURS’ MO" Thru F«

•J0TJ1S3C
lix n t

Crt-v«(l l 6*r

By a p p o in tm e n t: 3 2 1 - 4 2 3 0

^
S**
3 2 3*8174
i or
FREE
3 2 3 -8 1 8 5
CONSULTATION]

GARDEN CIRCLES
MIMOSA Circle
Mrs. B.H. Jones was hostess at her Mayfair Court
home to the October meeting of Mimosa Circle of the
Garden Club of Sanford. Mrs D.C. Spivey, circle
president, conducted the meeting.
Mrs. Spivey will speak at the District VII meeting Oct.
20 In Winter Park. Her topic will be on the circle's
project of planting wlldllowcrs on U.S. 1-4.
CENTRAL CIRCLE
Mrs. Maty Elder was hostess to the Oct. 13 meeting of
Central Circle of the Garden Club of Sanford Inc. held al
the clubhouse.
Following the meeting, members visited the exhibits
and gardens at the Orange County Historical Museum.

CASH &amp; CARRY -

PINECREST SHOPPING CENTER (NEXT TO JEWEL T)

Chapter Leads
Ritual O f Jewel
Yearbooks were passed
out to members when XI
Epsilon Sigma Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi opened the
fall season with a lun­
cheon at a Longwood Res; taurant. Lisa Porzlg an. nounccd her engagement
at this time.
Four Ritual of Jewel
members of Theta Epsilon
: moved up to the chapter
. during the October meet­
ing held at the home of
Margo Shiver. Cheryl
Burch, past Exemplar
president, presided over
the candlelight ceremony
for Nancy Hack. Pat
S h a v e r and Sue
Schwegman who received
a yellow rose each follow­
ing he ritual. The fourth
c a n d id a te , Cathy

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS
Phone 323-0180

2 7 th &amp; 1 7 -9 2

Markowitz, was unable to
attend.
Members were served a
buffet dinner after the cer­
emony. Margo Shiver re­
ceived a flower as the
chapter's Valentine Girl
for 1984. She will repre­
sent the chapter at the
Feb. 11. 1984 Valentine
Ball to be held at the
Sanford Civic Center.

PRICES GOOD OCT. 19 THRU OCT. 25
WHOLE OR FULL
' SHANK HALF

SIRLOIN
STEAK

GRADE A

WHOLE
FRYERS

SEMINOLE TRINITY

LEAN &amp; MEATY BEEF

CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
A G nat Place
To Start

$2

FLA. PREMIUM
WHOLE, CUT-UP

322-3942

FLA. PREMIUM
FRYER WINGS
GIZZARDS, LIVERS
FRYER LEG QTRS.

INSUtMCI

m

$L 9 9 a

BONELESS

BOTTOM ROUND

LEAN BEEF

CUBE STEAK

ROAST

ACtmiD

*2
$ 1 . 8

MARCH OF DIMES

LB.

T-BONE STEAK

Otngw L.gnjii o4

Assouan

'tMAftPACK COM»*pyTLPMY t Ml

*

FREED

ALL

♦DEFECTS

. 7

PORTERHOUSE

SPINAL EXAMINATION
P N C M E 0 N ERVES

IN OUR FIGHT
AGAINST

SAN FO R D

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

9

l

,.

LEAN BONELESS

CALIFORNIA CHUCK

C hirdpractic Physician
30)7 F R E N C H A V E
SANFORD

ROAST

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

D ISCO UNT COUPON USER S!
D O N 'T THROW M O NEY A W A Y !

9

lb

O R . TH O M A S Y A N D E L L

SAVE

. 4

YOUR CHOICE

* 1 . 8

SMOKED PORK NECKBONES
FRESH PORK NECKBONES
SMOKED PORK TAILS

9

..

EXTRA LEAN

GROUND CHUCK

1\ V* PORK LOIN ib. $ 1
1 .4 9
CENTERCUTMARKETSTYLE' BAC
1 .3 9

V \y y

i

80 REG. SIZE, 40 JUMBO
|T
r -

S A V E h u n d r e d s o f d o lla r s a y e a r o n y o u r f o o d a n d |
h o u s e h o ld b u d g e t ! R e c e iv e t h e w a n t e d d i s c o u n t .

WEST FRANKS soliM
.

_

;

.

.

e

4 . 9 0r

,

&lt;

BONELESS-BOSTON BUTT

FROM OUR DELI
SLICED TO ORDER
—

D ISC O U N T COUPON U S E R S !
D O N ’ T THROW M O N E Y A W A Y !

m

L E A N B O ILED

CD

BOLOGNA
* 1 . 4 9. LB .
M

—J

lb

SWISS
CHEESE

K O LB

O'
K•

HAM
* 1 .5 9

.,

w

SAVE

•

PORK ROAST. . .
BOSTON
—- . _ BUTT

lB, / * ] 1
6

8

. 3 9
•

WHITE OR YELLOW

AMERICAN
CHEESE
$ 1
■ •

« Q
h alf
■ W . POUND

ITALIAN S A U S A G E lb* 1 . 5 9
LEAN &amp; MEATY-3 DOWN

PORK SPARE RIBS ib $ 1 . 4 9

�Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.. Wednesday, Oct. If, IW1- 3B

Frankly, M y Dear, You'll
Go For Scarlett's Treats
Frankly my dear, dun’l give u —desoca — nut without
flrat screening and taste-testing Scarlett O’Hara’s. No,
It’s not the famous Southern belle that’s the main
feature here, but tasty adnptatons of an original, classic
drink named after her. The liquid version first made an
»pj*e»rsnce in IC33, light after the famous Heroine
made her movie debut. And true to Us namesake, the
drink has conquered the palates of northerners and
southerners alike to become a starring attraction in
restaurants and homes all across the country.
Now. there are two new dessert acts that take their cue
from the drink and Join forces with the same tempting
and time-tested mix of Ingredients. Both feature a
flavorful alliance of "northern’’ and ‘‘southern’’ tastes
that serve as the corps of Scarlett O'Hara recipes.
To set the proper hue and tang, all are outfitted with
the taste of cranberries, a native "North" American
berry that grows wild In the cooler northern regions of
the coun«ry. Today. It’s not Just relished as the
traditional Thanksgiving sauce, but has won a following
as a Juice and Jelly. Serving as confederate to the
Yankee-gmwn cranberry Is a taste dial approximately
comes from "south" of the Mason-Dlxon line. It’s
Southern Comfort,* a unique distilled spirit that had Us
beginnings in Old World New Orleans.
United together, the zest of cranberries and the
one-of-a-kind taste of this special liquor are delicious
comrades In all the Scarlett O’Hara recipes. In fact, the
original drink Is armed with equal parts, about one and
one-half ounces each, of cranberry Juice and Southern
Comfort, along with the Juice of one-quarter lime. The
mix Is served on Ice In a cocktail glass.
So charge through the ranks of ordinary desserts and
try the following recipes for Scarlett's temptations.
There’ll be no seceding from the union when one or both
of these desserts march to the table.
For patriotic red. white and new temptation, there's
Scarlett's Parfaits. Its white and red layers of whipped
cream and flavorful gelatin are sure to flag down quite a
few recruits to this cool and refreshing treat.
For a multi-layered attack that your guests will gladly
surrender their taste buds to. try Trifle A La Scarlett. It’s
a flavorful salvo of cake. Jelly, pudding and whipped
topping. As pretty and tempting as the tiers on a
Southern belle's fancy dress, this BrUlsh-lnsplred
delight Is a true champion of good taste.
Call these recipes up for delicious dessert duty
anytime. They’re easy to make and for added
convenience, have orders to be prepared ahead of time.
Better make sure there are reserve forces of Scarlett
O'Hara desserts on hand for they have been known to be
gone with the wind.

14 cup cranberry juice cocktail
1 teaspoon grenadine syrup or 4 to 6 drops red food
coloring
3 (6 Inch) layers sponge cake, each V4 to Is inch thick
4'A to 6 tablcspbons Southern Comfort
*4 cup currant Jelly
2 cups frozen whipped topping, thawed or whipped
cream
3 taoiespoons bottled sweetened lime Juice
2 tablespoons Southern Comfort
Maraschino cherries, drained
Cook pudding and pic filling mix. using light cream
Instead of the milk, as directed on the package. After
mixture comes to a boll, remove from heat. Stir In
cranberry Juice cocktail and grenadine syrup. Chill for 1
hour.
In an 8 to 9-inch bowl, place 1 layer of cake. Drizzle
with 1V4 to 2 tablespoons Southern Comfort. Stir Jelly to
soften; spread V* cup over cake layer In bowl.-Top with
second layer and repeat drizzling and spreading with
Jelly. Top with the third cake layer. Drizzle with m to 2
lubicapoons Southern Comfort, Let stand while prepar
ing topping.
Fold lime juice and 2 tablespoons Southern Comfort
Into whipped topping.
Stir pudding, then spoon over cake layers In bowl.
Spread whipped topping over pudding. Cover with
plastic wrap. P.efrigrmtc for 24 hours before serving. To
serve, garnish with maraschino cherries. Makes 8
servings.
SCARLETT’S PARFAIT
1 O-ouncc) package cherry flavor gelatin
1 Vi cups cranberry Juice cocktail
2 tablespoons llmejulce*
5 tablespoons Southern Comfort
2V4 cups frozen whipped topping, thawed or whipped
cream
1 (8-ounce) can pineapple chunks, drained
Prepare gelatin as directed on package, substituting
cranbcny Juice cocktail for the water. After gelatin Is
dissolved, add lime Juice and 1 tablespoon Southern
Comfort along wllh remaining cranberry Juice cocktail.
Chill until* thickened but not congealed. Fold the
remaining 4 tablespoons Southern Comfort Inlo the
whipped topping. Chill until needed.
To layer the parfaits place 2 to 3 tablespoons gelatin
mixture In bottom of a parfalt glass or B-ouncc to
10-ouncc wine glass. Add a pineapple chunk, then top
with 2 or 3 tablespoons whipped topping mixture. While
preparing each gloss, chill others bo only one parfalt Is
out of the refrigerator at a time. Repeat layers In each
parfalt glass until gelatin and whipped topping mixtures
have all been used. Chill parfaits at least 4 hours before
serving. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
TRIFLE A LA SCARLETT
* Either fresh or bottled sweetened lime Juice may be
1 (3 14-ounce) package vanilla pudding and pie filling
used: or frozen limeade concentrate, thawed, may be
mix
used.
114 cups light cream or half and half

Chicken,
Grapes Star
In Entree
Marinated Chicken With Grapes Is a perfect main dish
for lazy late summer and early fall meals. Featuring
colorful grapes and strips of chicken melded In a cream
sauce, this delectable main dish Is wonderful served
over hot cooked rice.
Tender chicken breastB are cut into strips, briefly
marinated In a savory Soy Sauce Marinade, then quickly
sauteed In this skillet main dish. Half-and-half and the
remaining marinade cooks to a rich, slightly thickened
sauce In which the sauteed chicken and grapes are
heated for serving. Accompany with steamed fresh
vegetables and a dry white wine to round out the main
course.
Fresh California table grapes are available nearly
year-round — In at least one color — to add appeal to avariety of favorite foods. Wonderful with poultry, grapes
are also a delicious addition to salads, desserts and even
appetizers.
When shopping for grapes, select berries that are
firmly attached to pliable stems. Store In plastic bags In
the refrigerator and wash Just before serving.
MARINATED CHICKEN WITH GRAPES
2 (about 1 lb.) chicken breasts, halved, skinned and
boned
Soy Sauce Marinade
2 tablespoons each butler or margarine and oil
Is cup water
1V* cups half-and-half
2 cups green, red or blue/ black grapes, seeded If
necessary
Salt and Pepper
Steamed rice
Parsley sprigs, optional
Cut chicken diagonally Into 4 or 5 strips. Pour Soy
Sauce Marinade over chicken; marinate 5 to 10 minutes.
Remove chicken pieces from marinade: reserve
marinade. Heat butter and oil In skillet. Saute chicken
strips about 2 minutes on each side or until cooked;
remove from pan and keep warm. Add water to pan:
gently scrape bottom of pan. Stir half-and-half Into
reserved marinade; pour mixture Into pan. Cook and stir
over medium heat until slightly thickened. Return
chicken to pan; add grapes. Heat thoroughly. Salt and
pepper to tasle. Serve hot over steamed rice; garnish
with parsley. Makes 4 servings.
9oy Sauce Marinade;
Combine 3 lablespoons dry sherry. 2 tablespoons
cornstarch. 1 tablespoon soy sauce. Vt teaspoon grated
ginger root (or W teaspoon ground ginger) and 1 small
clove garlic, crushed: mix well. Makes about V4cup.
TAILGATER'8 TOTEM* ROLLS
1 pound ground berf
2 envelopes Instant onion soup mix
44 teaspoon oregano
44 teaspoon garlic salt
V4 cup catsup
2 packages (8 oz. ea.) refrigerated cresent rolls
I cup shredded mozzarella cheese
Preheat oven to 375°.
In medium skillet, brown ground beef; drain. SUr In
Instant onion soup mix. oregano, garlic salt and catsup:
cool.
Separate crcsctnt rolls Into 8 rectangles; seal
perioral Ions. Equally divide mixture along long side of
each rectangle; top evenly with cheese. Roll, starting at
long end. Jelly-roll style: seal ends tightly. Sprinkle. If
desired, with poppy seeds. Place seam-side down on
baking sheet and bade 15 minutes or until golden; cool.
Wrap In aluminum foil and serve at room temperature.
Makes 8 rolls.

N o rth m eets South in tr if le , p a r fa it and classic d r in k o f 1939,S c a rle tt s ty le
WHERE YOUR FOOD BUDGET WORKS BETTER WITH

DENNIS &amp; KATHY'S

DOUBLE DISCOUNT SAVINGS
2690 S. ORLANDO AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 323-4950
"A
C T A D r
O IU IIC .

LOCALLYOWNEDA OPERATEDRYDENNIS A KATHYCRINSTEAD

Vtw

PORK
LOIN CHOPS

WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS

WE CARRY ONLY
USDA CHOICE BEEF
AND FRESH PORK.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY OCT. 20 THRU WED. OCT. » , 1 M 3

PRICSS INCIRCULAR ALSOEffECTIVE THRU 10/2G/B3,

FAIRWAY OLD FASHION BARREL

LYKES U TROPtCAHA

USDA CHOICE BEEF-7 BONfc

SLICED

CHUCK R O AST.................... u.* 1 ,3 9
LYKES ENDS-N-PIECES

.

B A C O N ........................... 3 u .» i$1 . 3 9
LYKES MEAT

-

1 .2 9

CUT A WRAPPED FOR FREEZER AT NO EXTRA CHARGE

m

PEPSI COLA

POST
TOASTIES

BUTTERY OR REGULAR

SHORTENING
II 01.
MTTUI

* 1 . 4 9 lit * 1 . 9 9
___B U H L
,550

PAPER TOWELS

*1

PEPSI COLA *tim‘ M . M
am com
•HU.
I
MUFFIN MIX 4 Mitt
I MUl
uaMTiaacuaMi
CHOW MEIN 4i cr iw. 91.99
UCMTCWWMM
m Mm
NOODLES......... tor at 6 9 *
nitMttiM
PINK SALMAN ^ • 1 . 7 9
UPTON 20* OFF LABEL

TEA BAGS

£ * 1 .9 9

II 01.
B01

99c

DUNCAN HINES SPECIALS

DMCA, M l CHOC CMP . _ _ _
COOKIES., iiaz m i . . 91.39
ii
■.not
’ U f
BRAN MUFFINS

LOAVES

WITHCOUPON |

D ennis &amp; K a th y 's F a irw a y 'C o u p o n

FR O ZEN FOODS
COMBINATION ONLY

M EAT BOLOGNA

PIZZAS................. ..........1 0 J 02. PKG. 6 9 ‘
BORDEN'S ELSIE

*

ICE C R E AM ....................u mu $ 1 . 4 9
FROZEN TO PPING .......... ol. cih. 7 9 '

D AIRY FOODS
FRUIT D R IN K S ............. . . .
HYDE PARK REFRIGERATED

_ _ „
.G A L

8 9 '

■ 07

BUTTERMILK BISCUITS . .4 w

u n u i 14JG.il

CARDEN i FRESH PRODUCE
RED
DELICIOUS

MRS. Fll "CRTS 2 11. CTH.

MARGARINE SPR EAD .......... * , 1 . 3 9

WITH COUPON

UWT I D TI CMPM

* _

POT P IE S .........................S o o tu c s .* !

* 1.39

t LB.
PKG.

fHIM WHIP

BORDEN’S WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

APPLES
6

a _

,o .* 1

GOLDEN
DEUCOUS

GOLDEN

APPLES

BANANAS

6

FOR *

1

4

u

m

c m

m

* l

MINUTE MAID FRESH

* _

*1

_ ’

iiu k u i

12 0Z.

lo m i

* 1 .6 9
’

LARGE
EGGS

v

BAKING POTATOES .................S l i r a c 9 1 . 1 9 I
8 9 * ORANGE JUICE . . . .G4 0Z. c m * l « 4 9 LARGE TOMATOES............ .................L i . 3 9 *
. _
BROWNIE MlXnoz.mi 91 *59 BAKERY-FRESHLY BAKED YELLOW COOKING ONIONSi 3 LB BAG 8 9 *
MJMCAJI RMS,C»0C 00VAMLLAJ
MICHIGAN CARROTS
. 3 1 LB. BAGS 91
PLAIN OR SEEDED
_____
READY-T0 SERVE
..
FROSTING .m u u* 91.29 RYE B R E A D ........................... ,0„ 7 3 £ CALIFORNIA CANTALOUPE . . . .EACH 6 9 *
APPLE PIE.........................uch * 1 . 5 9 | SNOW WHITE MUSHROOMS . l. * 1 . 3 9 |
CRISC0
7 INCH CHERRY
* _
H0NEYDEWS CABBAGE
OIL
RADISHES
ANGEL FOOD CAKE . . . .EACH * 1 « 6 9
EACH
MOCM M l m m M n u s w i
CAKE MIXES ..usor.m i

FRENCH

_

_

4
us. * 1
5 c o z
* 1 .1 9
CHEESE CAKE •
■ * EACH
DENNIS &amp; KATHY'S FAIRW AY...DO UBLE DISCOUNT SAVINGS THURS: OCT. 20 THRU WED. OCT.26

HYDE PARK
GRADE “ A"

H I
I
I
I
I

urn 1 t u r n an* *u» tm a m
A *S rooo
rw a u u 1 rat court* up. n » u
purchase
...........................................................................I

SWISS CHEESE.................ib 51 . 7 9

JIFFY CHICKEN OR MAC A CHEESE
' CR1SC0

COUNTY FAIR BREAD

GARLIC BOLOGNA............u 52 . 0 9

UNO’S WHILE SUPPUES LAST

WHOLE PORK LOINS . . u *

D ennis &amp; K a th y 's F a irw a y C oupon

ROAST BEEF......................u . * 3 . 1 9

PLUMPER WIENERS IULM. * 1 . 2 9
S A L A M I.............. me.............$1 . 1 9

CHUCK ROAST

$3 . 0 9
H A M .................... .............u . * 2 , 2 9

CORNED BEEF ROUND . .„ * 1 . 9 9

.

BLADE ]
CHUCK ROAST

SHOULDER

DELICATESSEN

CHUCK ROAST..................... » * 1 . 4 9

\

USDA CHOICE
BEEF

PORK
LOIN CHOPS

USDA CHOICE BEEF-BONE-IN CAUFORNIA

r lL L C tf

sun. - vm s. s a.m . • 1 0 t m .
fri. a s a t . 6 a.m. - midnite

CENTER
CUT

ASSO R TED ^

™

uni
ID C
n U U lfO

HELPFULSMILE IN EVERY AISLE"

.r w s .* l

Q O U i l l D IS C O U N T A C O U P O N H I M * O N C IR C U L A R G O O D T H R U 1 0 / 3 4 A L S O

IB M
PARKAY
l LB. QTRS.
MARGARINE

1 LB.
TIIM IUU

ttUttkt ru iv iu

AM 1434*1

PRODUCTS

PLASTIC BOTTli W M
ntiMfluu
MWU MUUM CUtVtUTI
IW U tN M in U I

OLD
MILWAUKEE

RED
DELICIOUS

LYKkiS
&gt;AK CREEK

BEER

APPLES

BACON

M M U M K4M I CUTWKm

m an

�«B — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wedne»d--,y, Oct. I f , 1**J

Dogs Will Become
Dot's Will hrrnm" klr*S’ 2A&gt;mlnnif baking at 375 fi u iik fu ilc r «i7id
about 6 minutes longer,
best friends when they degrees F.
make scrumptious nnd
For S-shaped winners, until frank Is heated
f u n - t o - p r e p a r c Bagel cut 10 crosswise sills &lt;5 on t h r o u g h a n d cur l ed.
Barkers and Prairie Dogs one side nnd 5 on tlic Sprinkle each Prairie Dog
for themselves or for the other) on each frankfurter, with onion rings and re­
whole family.
cutting about Vi through. turn to oven for 1 to 2
Children will soon learn
Top cacti shell with 1 minutes.
th e v e r s a t i l i t y of
frankfurters by using
bagels and French rolls as
accompaniments. Bagel
Barkers and Prairie Dogs
arc so doggoned good,
youngsters’U'lll serve them
year round for lunches,
dinners nnd snacks.
nuwis nt amazement
and delight will be heard
In kitchens where children
watch dogs magically curl
Into fanciful circles and
S -sh a p e s. By s i mpl y
making 10-12 cuts down
each wiener, as shown on
the attached diagram,
frankfurters will curl as
they heat through.
Circular w ieners fit
neatl y on bagels de­
liciously combined with
PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., OCT.
pineapple slices and pro­
19 THRU TUES., OCT. 25, 1983
cess American cheese for a
Bagel Barker sandwich.
BO NUS
Prairie Dogs begin with a
BUY
hollowcdout French roll
f i l l e d w i t h an egg-chcese-soup combina­
tion s urrounded with
crispy onion rings and
topped with an S-shaped
frankfurter.
An Important note to
mom and dad Is that hot
dogs arc not only versatile
and convenient, they arc
good sources of protein,
carbohydrates, fat. Iron,
t h i a mi n e , riboflavin.
niacin, phosphorus, sin
Vitamin C. Vitamin B-6
and Vitamin B-12. all of
which are necessary to
maintain healthy bodily
functions.
BAGEL BARKERS
1 bagel, split
2 .slices process Ameri­
can cheese

IDAHO
SP U D
POTATOES

Dogs m a g ic a lly c u rlin g up in B ag el B a rk e rs w ill b rin g how ls of a m a z e m e n t to kids

WITH THIS COUPON

663

PILLSBURY
FLOUR

DIXIE CRYSTAL
BOX SUGAR
YOU PA Y &lt;39- WITH T H S C O U P O N AND A * 1 0 OO
o n M O P E F O O T OffO ER O O O O W ED . O C T . IB 1HHU
T U E S , O C T . 2 3 , 1 9 6 3 LIM ITONE C O U P O N P E R ITEM

BOMBS
BUY

BONUS
BUY

U .S E X T R A F A N C Y
W A S H IN G T O N S T A T E

S A C R A M EN TO

BAKING
POTATOES

TOMATO
JUICE

RED or GOLDEN
DELICIOUS

l-shew pineapple1

1 frankfurter
Make 10-12 cuts down
one side of frankfurter
without cutting complete­
ly through, as shown on
attached diagram. Heat
franks in simmering water
for about 5 minutes until
curled.
Place bagel halves, cut
sides up. on baking sheet
or toaster oven tray. Top
each half with a slice of
cheese.
On one bagel half, top
cheese slice with curled
frankfurter: on the other
half, place pineapple slice.
Bake at 400 degrees F
until1cheese Is bubbly,
about 3 minutes. Or broil,
about 5 Inches from heat,
for 2 to 3 minutes.
Makes 1 serving.
PRAIRIE DOGS
4 to 6 crusty French
rolls (6 to 8 Inches long,
about 3 ounces each)
1 can 110 to 11 ounces)
condensed soup
Choice of: cream of
tomato, cream of chicken,
cream of potato, cream of
c r e a m of
celery
mushroom, or Cheddar
2 eggs beaten
8 ounces shredded
cheese
Choice of: Swiss, brick.
Cheddar, hot pepper,
p ro c e ss Amer i can or
mozzarella
V4 pound frankfurters
Vt can fried onion rings
12.8 ounces)
Slice off lop 1 inch of
each roll. Remove center,
leaving shells with bottom
and sides about 94 Inch
thick. Place shells In
shallow baking pan. Bake
at 400 degrees F for about
6 lytnutcs, until golden.
Meanwhile, combine
soup and eggs: stir fn
cheese. Fill each shell with
soup mixture. Return
filled shells to oven for

COMPARE

GROCERY

COMPARE

COMPARE

JO A N O F ARC

Green Cabbage

N O RTHW ESTERN

TENDER

W inter Pears .

C risp Carrots . . 2 ^

. .„
_

Bell Peppers

1 2 /8 9

Chicken

lJt

. . .

SN O - WHITE

Mushrooms . . . . tW
DRY ROASTED- SALTED O F UNSALTED

Vlasic Dills

PEPSI COLA

YO U PAY

DIET PEPSI, PEPSI
LIGHT, PEPSI FREE-

Planters Peanuts

NORTHERN
. B A TH R O O M
TISSUE

!£

PUNCH
LAUNDRY '

|R E O Of I S U G A R F R F E )

OR MOUNTAIN DEW
B PACK- 10 o z BTL.- p l u s

d e p o s it

U M f T -1 C O U P O N PER ITEM GOOO
TH R U WED . O C T . 20 1083

ASSORTED JEWELRY

COMPARE

FR OM T H E ALU SON REED CO LLECTIO N

SU
D
UN
N SDHnIN
in E
c

CUBIC ZIRCONIA &amp; CULTURED PEARL RINGS, EARRINGS &amp; NECKLACES
IN GOLD FILLED &amp; GOLD PLATED SETTING, PLUS KEY CHAINS
MONEY CUPS, &amp; FOLDOVER HEART PENDANT

S U N S H IN E

IN OUR FIGHT
AGAINST

2 5 e OFF

2 0 c OFF

F L A V -O -R IC H
IC E C R E A M

NABISCO
OREOS
2 0 o z or
CHEESE N IPS

H A LF G A LLO N
UM fT -ONE C O U P O N P E R ITEM
O O O O TH H U W ED . O C T . 2 0 . 1 0 8 3

[

Fre sh Bananas

FR E SH GREEN C U K ES O R

I

IVt»VDA*

GROCERY

Butter Cookies . .

to w

mm m

«2/*1
_

*

Glass P l u s ............ ...
Q N TY MOOHE

Beef S te w

GROCERY

GOLDEN GRAIN

Macaroni &amp;c h e d o a a
K risp y C rackers 7

- - -

*145
|49

CAM

COMPARE

SU N S H IN E - SALTED OH UNSALTED

G raham s (OMMAItOti) ■ iion! f
TEXIZE

S E E YO U R LOCAL S TO R E FOR DETAILS.

MARCH O f DIMES
l
lVH| A

PRODUCE

FRESH

FR O M $ 4 .9 9 &amp; UP W IT H M OO IN
P A N T R Y PR ID E R E G IS TE R T A P E S

DEFECTS

COMPARE

PRODUCE

BAM A

Grape Je lly _____y

IV IM v O A V

iO H

P N C .*

3/*1
7 9*
99c

Apple Ju ice . . . . . * * *1

i4 .s o z

LIMIT-ONE C O U P O N P E P ITEM
O O O O T H R U W ED . O C T . 2 8 . 1 0 8 3 .

I
SAM FORD-2944 O R LA N D O ROAD. ZA YR E PLAZA AT T H E C O R N ER O F 17-92 G ORLANDO ROAD

�Evsnlng H triH l, Sanford, FI.

Say

W td ro d s y , Oct. 11, 1W —IB

' To Salt and ‘A y e ’ To Low Sodium Seafood Specials
o
\N

The Florida Department
of Natural R esources
Submits tfie following
Ipcs as low sodium seafood
specials.
The department says In
meal planning, low sodi­
um dieters should not
exceed 2 gms or 2.000
mgs of sodium per day.
SPICED OYSTERS
ON TOAST
1 can (15V4 ouncesl
oysters, fresh or frozen
1 tablespoon dry white
wine
V4 teaspoon sage
V4 teaspoon pepper

M teaspoon salt
1 small clove garlic
Vi cup dietetic marga­
rine
W teaspoon freeze-dried
chives
1 teaspoon dried parsley
8 sllrrs white mclbn
toast
I tablespoon chopped
parsley (garnish)
Thaw oysters if frozen:
drain. In a 2-quart mixing
bowl, combine white wine,
sage, pepper, salt. Add
oysters nnd stir to coat
well. Refrigerate and
marinate 20 minutes.

sauce, water, salad dress­
14 cup sliced green on­
ing. sugar, ginger and ions
pepper In a blender. Mix
2 tablespoons mayon­
until smooth; pour over naise-type salad dressing
fish mixture. Toss lightly.
2 t a b l e s p o o n s s our
Chill at least one hour. cream
Serve on salad greens.
Vi teaspoon salt
Makes 6 servings.
Vt t e a s p o o n w h i t e
2 teaspoons luayonpepper
nal&amp;c-type salad dressing
POLYNESIAN ROOK
I teaspoon s u g a r
SHRIMP
Paprika (garnish)
V4 t easpoon ground
Cut large rock shrimp In
1 (round cooked, peeled
ginger
half. Drain pineapple, re­
and develncd rock shrimp
V4 teaspoon pepper
1 cup fresh pineapple serving 2 tablespoons
Salad greens
Juice. Co mb i n e rock
chunks
Combine fish, celery and
1 cup thinly sliced celery shrimp, pineapple, celery,
green onions. Combine
•A cup seedless green grapes and green onions In
a 214-quart bowl. Combine
vinegar, cooking oil, soy grapes

Crush clove of garlic In an
81nch ulc plate. Add mar­
garine, chives and parsley
and spread evenly to coat
pie plate. Drain oysters
and place over margarine
mixture. Bake at 425°F..
for 6 to 8 minutes or until
edges of cystcra begin to
curl. Srrvc with melba
toast »nd garnish with
parsley. Makes 4 servings.

Vi cup sliced green on­
ions
3 tablespoons cider
vinegar
2 tablespoons cooking
oil
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespuoii water

TANTALIZING FISH
SALAD
2 cups cooKed flaked
fish
44 cup sliced celery

COUPONS AND SAVE!
WITH THIS COUPON

B U Y -1

GET-1

P AN TR Y PRIDE

ASSO RTED, REGULAR UR DECORATOR
YOU PAY 6 8 ' WITH THIS C O U P O N AND A J IO OO
OR MORE FOOO ORDER GOOD WED . OCT. IS THRU
t u e s .. o c t . a s . i 9 8 3 UMrr o n e c o u p o n p e r i t e m

U M IT -2 PKG S. W ITH A
S 10.00 OR M O R E P U R C H A S E
CHECK
THESE
PRICES

COMPARE
_

U S O A CHOICE

Ground Round

9

l u

9

f
•

„

5^99
AV1UI
QFKQ LB

LAND O' FROST SM OKED

T u rk e y Ham s

_

•

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lb

1»lI OR SIRLOIN HALF

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,

Fresh Pork Loins

LO

SUCED

QTR. PORK
LOIN

BONELESS
EYE ROUND

•_ | _*_ -■
-%

PER POUND

LB

PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., OCT.
19 THRU TUES., OCT. 25. 1983.

, U .S .D .A . C H O IC E

ROAST

$
j t v a ‘/ w a

_J i_..

BOTTOM ROUND

- 3 LB A V G . P K G .

*

UMrr-1 C O U P O N PER ITEM WITH A S 10 OO
OR MORE FOOO ORDER GOOD W ED . OCT.
10 THRU T U E S . OCT. 2 8 . 1 0 8 3 .

BONELESS

LOTS OF
CHICKEN

MARKET STYLE

H A LF GALLON

U .S .D .A . C H O IC E

U .S .D .A . G R A D E A

14 teasp o o n ground
ginger
14 cup aeaae seeds,
toasted (optional)
Thaw scallops If frozen.
Rinse scallops to remove
an y r e m a i n i n g shel l
particles. In a 2-quart mix­
ing bowl, combine lime
ju ice, off. Honey, soy
SCALLOPS
sauce, and ginger. Add
1 pound calico or bay scallops and mix until well
scallops, fresh or frozen
coaled. Cover and chill 3
3 tablespoons lime Juice
to 6 hours, stirring fre­
2 tablespoons vegetable quently. Remove scallops
and reserve marinade.
oil
1 tablespoon honey
Thread scallops evenly on
1 tablespoon soy sauce
4 skewers. Broil 4 Inches
from source of heat, turn­
ing o c ca sio n ally and
basting with reserved
marinade, 3 to &amp; minutes
or until opaque
throughout. Place sesame
seeds on wax paper and
roll each skewer over the
seed s to evenly coat
scallops. Serve immediate­
ly. Makes 4 servings.
•Note: Scallops may also
be broiled on wooden
picks and served as ap­
petizers.

ICE
CREAM

JUMBO
SCOTT TOWELS

Sliced Bacon

£5

pineapple Juice, salad
dressing, sour cream, salt,
and while pepper: mix
well. Pour over shrimp
mixture and toss lightly.
Chill 30 minutes. Serve on
salad greens. Sprinkle
with paprika. Makes 8
servings.

ROAST

•

W H O L E 4 T O 6 LB S

P ER P O U N D

s l 59
S A V E $ 1 . 2 0 P E R LB.
O C TO B ER S E A FO O D M O N TH
FROZEN CELLO W RAPPED
RED SN A P PE R . HADDOCK. TURBOT OR

Flounder Fillets
COO OR

•

&gt;«oa»

Perch Fillets

C B iO W M IW IO

139

EAT- ALL- REQ OR FLORENTINE

|39

SEA STAR BHEADCD COOKED
MRAffc

S^69
LB

S 4 39

LB

S te 3 9

Stuffed F lo u n d e r. tz
Fish Sticks

SM OKED NECK B O N E S-3 LB AVG. PKG

mMATLAWB
ah aw j

Sm oked Pork Hocks lb5 9

Stuffed Clam s

I

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1
^ 1
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CHECK
THESE

COMPARE

praces

AXELRODS WHOLE MILK OR LOW FAT

_

N O R M EL

_

Y o g u r t .................. ss 9 9 *

Sliced Pepperoni

OOLDEN OUAHTERS

PANTRY P R D E MEAT OR BEEF

_

_

Grill Franks . . .

Filbert’s Margarine . . . 1*5 4 9 *
BO RDEN'S SU C E D C H EESE FOOO

* ^

Am erican Singles xs Z

119

2«Of

s^ss

PRO

$ 4 4 9

Sw ift’s Sizzlean

Orange Ju ic e • * 0AU*CTN I

Sliced Ham . . .

PANTRY PRO E

GWALTNLY S GREAT

Half &amp; Half C re a m

89*

MEAT OR BEEF

LYKES AMERICAN OUALfTY

TROPIC ANA PU R E FRESH

WO

3 S ot

12o«
tmo *

Chicken Bologna

99*

2”

69*

nncik ooooONLYN
n umtoi county our toojh lowwci» wi mecnvif VMI w&gt;it toumtt quantityu
ONCSOLOTODUJItt NOTWfiPONUUKWT1KKAWMCMIWMCi
P A N T R Y PRIDE

■

SLIM
FAST

KING SIZE
BREAD

- c w ,T r m r rrn o c "—

7 ^ FRIED
CHICKEN

20oz LOAF

A B R EA STS. 4 THIGHS. 4 WINGS. 4 LEGS

3/sl 49

T H E DC Li OAK ER Y S T O R E S O N LY

COMPARE

GROCERY

BOTTLE

Rea Lem on Ju ic e .

|Vtn*OAT
to *

mu*: I

$ - |2 9

CHICKEN. CO RN BREAD. BEEF OR SA N
FRANC C C O

Stove T o p

DRESSINGS

TEXCOf B O N U S SIZE

Spray N ’ W ash » # IZfcU
REGULAR. MEAT OH M USH RO O M

REGULAR OR BUTTERMILK

2 LB

NO RM AL EXTRA BOI
JOJOBA OR H ENNA

99*

_

VO-5 Conditioner

99*

TWIN PACK

$ &gt; |a 9

S-jj40

C ricket Lighters . . 9 9 *
UNQCENTED- REGULAR OR EXTRA HOLD.
AEROSOL OR NON-AEROSOL

Clainmist h a ir s p r a y

. *&gt;,

POST
TOASTIES
BOX

S A V E 38*

COMPARE

V O -5 Sham poo . . , ^ 9 9 *

1 8 o z

PKG.

AllML
MHIAUlT
AIDS

FROZEN

PANTRY PRIDE

_

_*

_

Coffee U gh ten er .;^ .3 / s1

H ENNA OR EXTRA BOOY

IlfU K G R Y J A C K C O M P L E T E !

PANCAKE MIX

COMPARE

rVClU
tUAV
DA
PN
Ct

*1 “

PANTRY PRIDE

—-

Broccoli Spears

1

PANTRY PRSJE SLICED

_

_

(VtAftMV

COMPARE
KITCHEN FRESH

Shrim p Salad . . . s r * 1 "

.

HORMEL

man

Hard S a la m i. . . . mr *1Bn
FRESH UAKED- PEC A N OR WALNUT

.

Strawberries . . . ^ 7 9

Danish R in g ............ *1,B

PANTRY PRttJC

FRESH MADE ON PREM ISES SPICY

—

^

W hipped To p p in g ^ 9 9

HI-DRY
TOWELS

2/n
SAVE 9*

„

_

Carrot Cake . . . .
LOOK W H A T S DEVELOPIN G A T
P A N T R Y PRIOE

NEXT DAY

SHRIMP SALAD
VEROmgUK
44 pound cooked, peeled
and develned shrimp,
fresh or frozen
1 cup fresh pineapple
chunks OR
1 can (8V4 ounces) pine­
apple chunks In natural
Juice, drained, reserving 14
cupjulce
1 cup fresh orange
segments, drained, re­
serving V4 cup Juice,
seeded and membrane
removed
1 cup seedless grapes
1 small red apple*, un­
pared, cored and cut Into
1-lnch chunks
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
V4 teaspoon cornstarch
1 tablespoon water
V4cup raisins
Lettuce leaves
Thaw shrimp If frozen.
In a 2-quart mixing bowl,
combine shrimp, pineap­
ple. orange segm ents,
grapes and apple. Cover
and chill. Place reserved
pineapple, orange and
lemon Juices In a 1-quart
saucepan. Bring to a gen
tie boll. Mix cornstarch
with water attiring until
dissolved. Add to hot Juice
m i x t u r e . Cook u nt i l
thickened, stirring con­
stantly. Remove from heat
and attr In V4 cup raisins;
cool. Serve salad on 4
plates lined with Iettu *e.
Spoon 1 tablespoon raisin
dressing over each serv­
ing. Makes 4 servings.
•Note: C omb in e 1
tablespoon lemon Juice
with V4 cup water. Dip
apple chunks in solution
to prevent darkening.
Drain before adding to
other Ingredients
SCALLOPBERRY
MOLD
1 pound calico or bay
scallops, fresh or frozen
2 cups water
Vi teaspoon salt
44 cup boiling water
1 package (H ounce)
low-calorie cherry flavored
gelatin
44 c u p e v a p o r a t e d
skimmed milk
1 can (16 ounces) whole
cranberry sauce
1 large avocado, peeled
and cuttnto cubes*
Salad greens
Thaw scallops If frozen.
Rinse scallops with cold
water to remove any re­
maining shell particles.
Drain. Combine 2 cups
water and salt In a 2-quart
saucepan and bring to a
boll. Add scallops: reduce
heat and cover. Simmer 2
to 3 minutes, or until
scallops are opaque
t h r o u g h o u t . D r a (ln
scallops. Pour 44 cup
boiling water Into a small
bowl. Sprinkle In gelatin
and stir until dissolved.
Chili until thick but not
set. Beat thickened gelatin
with electric mixer at high
speed until foamy. Gradu­
ally add milk and continue
beating until mixture Is
fluffy. Stir In scallops,
cranberry sauce, and
avocado cubes. Chill sev­
eral hours or until firm.
Unmold onto salad greens.
Makes 6 servings.
•Note: Combine 1
tablespoon lemon Juice
with Vi cup water. Dip
avocado cubes Into mix­
ture to prevent darkening.
Drain before adding to
other Ingredients.

FILM DEVELOPING
OR YOU

GET IT FREE
I S E E Y O U R LO C A L S T O R E F O R D ETA ILS I

- F L O R ID A *

ARRIVEAUVE

V.V .SUNSHltf SUTE_

�♦ B - E v in ln f l H tr s M , M n fo rd , F I.

W ad n eid ay, Oct. I t , 1H1

Satisfying C how ders
G re a t O n e-P o t M e a ls
Chowders are among the most satisfying and basic
American dishes, yet their origin la not native but
Frenca. La Chaud/ere was the enormous copper kettle
Into which fishermen from Fra ore’s coastal villages
would toss ihelr catch. The community would make a
traditional mim — n chsuHUte — cclcbrctc the refr
return of their men. The chauillere came uuua» the
Atlantic with the French who settled In Canada. As It
traveled down the coast to New England. It became
known as chowder.
The classic New England clam chowder Is made with
milk, which was added to the recipe once cows were
brought to the colonics. The region feels so strongly
about milk providing the stock that the Maine
legislature once seriously considered a bill to ban
mixing clams and tomatoes. It Is a rare New England
restaurant menu that features the tomato-based
Manhattan chowder version.
Chowders provide excellent opportunities for a meal In
a pot. The Clam and Cauliflower Chowder, for example,
contains all the old standbys — clams, onion and celery
— with the wondnful addition of cauliflower. The
sophisticated sesonlng — wine, herbs and Tabasco
pepper saure — makes It perfect for company. Just add
a loaf of hearty grain bread and a tartly dressed green
Another old favorite Is Com and Chicken Chowder In a
rich version that blends the flavors of the field —onion,
potatoes and com — rather than those oPlhe sea. To
make an even more nutrient-rich chowder, use a
homemade chicken stock. The chowder has Just a small
amount of pepper sauce as Its only seasoning other than
salt, to accentuate the other flavors. This Is one of
Tabasco sauce's advantages: when used in the proper
proportion. It enhances other natural flavors.
Either chowder will start off the fall season In style,
warming your family and nourishing them...deliciously.
CLAM AND CAULIFLOWER CHOWDER
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
to cup diced onion (1 medium)
*1 cup diced celery (2 medium stalks)
1 clove garlic, chopped
2 tablespoons flour
2 cans (10 ounces each) baby clams, drained, reserve
liquid
2 cups water
1 bottle (Bounces] clam Juice
to cup dry white wine
to teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce
V* teaspoon dried leaf thyme, crumbled
1 bay leaf
1 small head cauliflower, cut In small flowerets
to cup heavy cream or half and half
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
In large saucepot or heavy kettle melt butter: saute
onion, celery and garlic until crisp-tender. Blend in flour;
cook 1 minutes. Gradually stir In reserved liquid from
canned clams, water, clam Juice, wine. Tabasco sauce,
thyme, and bay leaf. Add cauliflower. Bring to boiling;
reduce heat, simmer 10 minutes until claullflower Is
crisp-tender. Stir In clams and heavy cream; simmer 5
minutes. Just before serving, stir In parsley. Yield: 6
servings.
CORN AND CHICKEN CHOWDER
1chicken. 2to to 3 pounds, cut In quarters
2 cups water
2 large onions, cut In quarters, divided
1 large carrot, cut In chunks
2 stalks celery, cut In chunks
to teaspoon salt
pound bacon, diced
1 medium green pepper, diced (1 cup)
2 tablespoons flour
to teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce
4 medium potatoes, cubed (4 cups)

Proper Care
Needed For
Microwave
Proper care before and after using yoiir microwave
oven will ensure Its peak performance. The following
Ideas will help you do Just that!
To ensure the best possible performance, always
provide a separate 115/120 grounded electrical circuit
for your microwave oven. Be sure It's not connected to a
circuit with other kitchen appliances, as reduced power
greatly affects cooking times. Never use an extension
cord with your microwave oven, as It also aflects the
power going Into the oven.
Your oven performance can also be lessened If the
microwaves are attracted to food spilled inside the oven.
Keep It clean by simply wiping the oven off with a clean
damp clolh after every use. If food does spill and slick to
the Inside surface of the microwave oven, there are
several safe ways to remove It. A container filled with
water and boiled for c few minutes Inside the oven will
provide moisture for cleaning up spills. A
drops of
lemon Juice In the water will also help remove any odor
left In the oven. If you would rather use a commercial
cleaner, use the non-abraslvc type with a soft cloth or
paper towels.
ffow you're ready for a recipe developed by the
Banquet Foods Test kitchens and easy enough to be
prepared for dinner tonight.
BEEF &amp; VEGETABLE MEDLEY
1 package (32 oz.) frozen American Favorites Gravy &amp;
Sliced Beef Buffet Supper Main Dish
1 small eggplant, peeled and cubed (about 2to cups)
’ small onion, chopped (about to cup)
1 can (lb oz.) whole peeled tomatoes, drained and
quartered
Wteaspoon garlic powder
to teasjxxui pepper
2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine
to cup Kalian biead crumbs
Remove gravy and sliced beef from foil tray. Place In
2-quari oblung glass baking dish. Heat, covered, on
HIGH 14 to 16 minutes or until mixture is hot and
bubbly rotating dish once. Let stand covered. In large
microwavr-safc bowl, combine eggplant, onion,
tomatoes, garlic powder and pepper. Heat covered, on
HIGH 6 to 6 minutes or until eggplant Is tender-crisp,
stirring occasionally. Spoon vegetable mixture over
gravy and sliced beef. In small bowl, combine butter and
bread crumbs. Sprinkle bread crumbs on top. Heat,
covered, on HIGH 3 to 4 minutes or until hot. Makes 5
servings.

2 cans (12 ounces each) whole kernel com, vacuum
packed (3 cups)
1Vi cups milk
Vi cup heavy cream
In large sauce pot combine chicken, water, i onion,
parmf'
BTidi unit. Sri'!*—to St IjcI!* Cov?1’, SiniTncr 20
mimics °r until rhlrkrn Is lender. Remove chicken and
vegetables. Reduce broth by boiling rapidly until you
have 2 cups. Remove chicken from bones and cut In
small pieces, measure 2 cups; reserve. In large sauccpot
fry bacon until lightly browned. With slotted spoon
remove bacon bits: set aside. Dice remaining onion;
saute onion and green pepper In bacon fat until soft.
Blend In (lour; cook I minute. Gradaually stir In broth.
Add Tabasco sauce and potatoes. Cover. Bring to a boll.
Simmer 10 to 15 minutes until potatoes arc tender. Add
com and reserved chicken; heat 5 minutes. Scald milk
and cream; add chowder. Just before serving, sprinkle
with bacon bits. Yield: 8 servings.

CORONET FAMILY PACK

C a u liflo w e r and c la m s c o m b in e fo r a lu s ty c h o w d e r
MEAT OR BEEF

CORONET PRINTS

DAIRI-FRESH TASTY-LITE
ASSORTED FLAVORS

Lykes
Weiners

Paper
Napkins
160-ct. pkg.

S&amp;H Stamp
lgl cartflku

S&amp;H Stamp
,.r C a r in g

3n# S&amp;H Stam p

S&amp;H Stam p

S.v.rC.rtlhcsU

,#r C#rtlfl«*u

Making W hies
during,^*,
PuMix

D airy [2J D airy
Pillsbury Big Country Buttermilk
or Buttery

Biscuits.............. 3 c*m

Pillsbury Assorted Slice 'n Bake

Cookies.................. PVB'
Philadelphia Brand Light

Cream Cheeso......
Publix

Citrus Punch.......... St!'
KRAFT TWIN-PACK
SOFT OR DIET
OR SOFT BOWL

Parkay
Margarine

3rd B ig W eek To Save
THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURSDAY, OCT. 20

lIt's
i t a-s gala
n a ln occasion
n r ra c in n
P ilhlix
'
PuDlix'
Okloberfest Come on in for values wilh real
gusto! And eat heartily with delicious edibles
that will enliven any meal

Libby Recipe Pack,
No Salt Cream Style

Golden C o rn ...... 2 ,6
c^0.' C 8 c

ALL GRINDS COFFEE

Maxwell
Houseffl

Cycle Dog Food .. 3

if M

S w e e t Peas....... 2 2 S 88*
Ubby Natural Pack. No Salt, Cut

Nutritious Dog Food

Gravy Tra in ..........*»

W hole K ernel
C o r n .....................2 V2 *88’
Libby Natural Pack, No Salt

Assorted 1 , 2 , 3 , 4

Salt Alternative

Hunt's

» 2 et Tom a to P a ste ...... 3

»1

:------Whole Peeled Pear Shaped
■ D t s l Italian Style

Strawberries ’n Cream
Cookware

jjjc a l Hunt's T o m a to e s . T.“* 89 c
Hunt's

■ fa il)T o m a to P u re e ...... 89 *
Gorton's New England
m i W jI

Lay's Bar-6-0, Sour Cream &amp; Onion,
Zesty Cheese or No Salt Added

Potato Chips....... K M 1'
in Unsweetened Pineapple Juice,
Sliced, Crushed or Chunks

Dole Pineapple....

39c

75«-Off Label,
Heavy Duty Laundry Detergent

Wisk Liquid.......... Iff »2M
404-OFF LABEL
KING SIZE
DETERGENT

84-oz. pkg

0 0 $ -Off Label, 32-ct.
I Convenient Pack or 48-ct. Medium

L u v 's D ia p e rs ....... X

Whole Wheat
Bread.................2£?.*.»139

rozen Foods
Apple Juice ............... . . . .

can

Frozen Combination, Pepperoni
or Sausage 10-inch

Jeno’s Pizzas........
Patties, Sticks or Nuggets

^ p h n c ia m C h o w d e r .... '£.* 89 °
Publix Special Recipe
100% Stone Ground

Cheese................... ’AT $169

Seneca Frozen Natural or Reg.

Hunt's

Cycle Dog Food ... * *239 Tom a to S a u c e .....4 ££ *1

tremendous Savings On

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Mild
or Medium Cheddar, Mozzarella,
Colby Halfmooh or Monterey Jack

*7°» G reen B e a n s .....88 «

1, 2 &amp; 4 Dry

No-Salt..................V

Wisconsin Cheese Bar IndividuallyWrapped Cheese Food

Sliced American.... AT *138

Libby Natural Pack,
No Salt, No Sugar,

Sharing your love for your dog

1-lb. ctn.

Banquet Chicken.. p *s PEPPERIDGE FARM
CHOCOLATE FUDGE,
GERMAN CHOCOLATE
GOLDEN, COCONUT
OR VANILLA

*7”

N l Jj Orville Rodenbacher Gourmet

Popping C o r n .......
Coronet

Collect An
Entue Sei
THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM
314 qt. Covered Casserole
S p *c U i n ,t* d with 1 10 PurchuM

$1399
S p e o e iw K h o w lf V c * a s e | H H
(Issow O d IO N &lt;NU

jg| Facial Tissue ...

1 5 0 *1 .
pkg.

Freeze Dried Coffee
1‘TiWPaiWith ^ ulra Sweet! Upton

igjS§ 9 lce Te a M ix ............

With Nutra Sweet! Lipton

A a ^ l c e Te a M ix ............ 4

CORONET
DECORATED OR
SSORTED COLORS

MOTTS
NATURAL STYLE
OR CHUNKY

Bath
Tissue

Sauce
20-oz. Jar

MUSSELMAN’S
UNSWEETENED

�E vening H erald , Sanford, F I.

W ad n a td ay , Oct. I t , 1TW— 7B

Cross Creek Kitchens: A Celebration O f Place
Almost a half-ccntury after Pullizcr Prize winning
author Marjorie Klnnan Rawlings wrote Cross Creek
Cookery, her classic cookbook of Indiglnous -Florida
cuisine, the little village cf Cross Cierk is again Ihe focus
of a regional cookbook.
Cross Creek Kitchens, written by SaUy'Morrison and
lllustmlcd by Kate Barnes, with a foreword by Governor
and Mrs. Bob Graham*, (paper SB.95, spiral S 10.95.
hardcover gift edition $24.95. Triad Publishing Company) 13 os much a loving tribute to a special town as It
Is a cookbook. Homespun talcs of rural life and over 100
i lnk-nnr1-wn«h drawings ctKnhttvc ‘-r. v t t B E J i t #
„
p w e where wood cookstoves. harvest celebrations, and
the simpler, slower lifestyle of (he past arc preserved as
modern-day traditions.
An experienced band at cooking, canning and baking
on
a wckkIsIovc. Sally Morrison Is known regionally as
ft-:
"some Incredible cook." Her Floriria-frcsb country
I cooking Includes such specialties as grapefruit biscuits,
persimmon bread, "soppln shrimp." tangerine pie.
barbecued herb-smoked turkey, cornmcal peenn stuffing
with apricots, sweet potato salad, oyster pie, and
kumquat butler.
f e Artist Kate Barnes, who also contributed recipes lo.lhc
book. Is best known for her expressive Florida Images.

b

1

BREAKFAST CLUB
GRADE A FLORIDA

The pages of Cross Creek Kitchens arc filled with her
drawings of sandhill cranes, orange groves, cabbage
palms, old-fashioned kitchens and. of course, Cross
Creek Itself, resplendent with moss-hung cypress trees.
Morrison and Barnes share not only recipes and art In
their book, but a lifestyle that focuses on blending the
traditions of the past with the present. The two women
grow and gather much of the food they prepare, finding
great pleasure In "living and cooking In harmony with
the seasons," Just as the rreldcnta of this Icrtllc
hammock country have alwavsdone
".'»»&lt; ub." explains Morrison, "this book is a
celebration of place. The return of each season's special
harvests arc our tie to the past, giving us a feeling of
continuity with the history of Cross Creek. We get
satisfaction from knowing that these groves and berry
patches and pecan trees have fed many Cross Creek
residents before us."
Indeed, the lives of bolh women almost seem to be
extensions of Cross Creek's past. Morrison, a Florida
stale park ranger. Is caretaker of the Marjorie Klnnan
Rawlings home, now a state historic site. Having lived
there for the first eight months of her employment.
Morrison enjoys a unique, firsthand perspective on
Cross Creek as Rawlings knew It. She Is credited with

PUBLIX REG. OR DIET
ASSORTED FLAVORS

bag
Tasty Crisp Red

Delicious
Apples.......

Morrison and Barnes gleam as they talk about their
book. It Is, they say, the "end product of season upon
season of good food, good friends, and good times In
Cross Creek —the best recipe we've found!"
BUTTER PECAN RICE
2 tablespoons butter
Y cup chopped pecans
2 cups cooked brown rice
Salt and pepper to taste
In a 10-Inch skillet melt butter. Add pecans and stir
briefly, then add cooked rice. Stir and cook Just long
enough to brat thoroughly. Add salt and pepper to taste.
Serves 4 to 6.

RICH, THICK TOMATO

Purex
Bleach

Hunt’s
Ketchup

per dozen

Idaho
Potatoes

Cross Creek.

15*-OFF LABEL, LIQUID

Soft Drinks

g e n Oin e s Tz e a

transforming the Rawlings place Into a "living
museum." cooking on the original woodstove with
kitchen Implements from the 1930s and filling the
pantry with preserves she makes from the same trees
and gardens the late author tended. Many of the book's
recipes were created in the kitchen of this landmark
home.
Across the street. Barnes lives and paints In the
centurv-old "Grove House." once the home of Boss
Brice. Rawlings' friend and neighbor and one of the
main characters in her autobiographical chronicle.

&amp;

gal. b o t.

1----■ W hrlo*
Excellent Steamed, Yellow
and Zucchini

Good Anytime, Ripe

Golden Bananas...
Thompson and Red

Squash..................

Seedless Grapes..

Zosty Yellow

39*

Tropicana 100% Puro
Premium Pack

Cooking Onions. 3 &amp; 79e

Orange Ju ic e ......

Tasty Tom atoes..

Fresh Tender

Good Baked Acorn and Butternut

Salad Perfect Medium Size

Broccoli................

Squash..................

Good Baked or Candied
North Carolina

Fresh Firm

Sweet Potatoes...

Costa Brand

Green Cabbage ...

29e
19c

Apple Cider.......... ft *2”
Natural Foods..... K *1”

-BONELESS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

P u b lix T eller

Canned
Hams

Shoulder
1 Roast

Fall “Seasonal Bouquet” of Fresh

3-lb. can

per lb.

FOR 24 HOUR CONVENIENCE
YOU CAN BANK O N .flJ M JB jj

Assorted Colors

Potted M um s...... *&amp;h$499

a

J

FREE FILM

!

Roast

Delicious Snacks

Tootsie Rolls

KP a HX) Cordless

Telephone....

Vidal Sassoon

Shampoo...
Vidal Sassoon

Finish Rinse
W in e

BURGUNDY, CHABLIS,
RHINE,
FRENCH COLOMBARD
OR NECTAR VIN ROSE

Pork Sausage..... Us *2

Fresh Frozen

Fresh

Smoked M ullet.
Flounder Fillets

Rath Blackhawk Fully Cooked
2-4-lb. Avg.

^

Fresh Frozen

Boneless Ham..

■

Trout Fillets

*2 "

Tasty Head Cheese or

Souse Loaf...........T " 59*

Kahn’s Meat, Beef or
Beef &amp; Cheddar

Boneless Beef
For Stew

1 large sweet onion, chopped
1 large apple, peeled and chopped
1cup chopped fresh parsley
2 teaspoons dried thyme
1 teaspoon drirri sage
kb teaspoon dried rosemary
kb teaspoon black pepper
I trasjKXjn chopped garlic
1 cup water
1 cup raisins
6 slices whole wheal bread, toasted and cubed
4 to 6 cups crumbled com bread
3 cups cooked rice
1 cup chopped walnuts
In a large saucepan, melt butter. Add chopped onion,
apple, parsley, herbs, pepper, and garlic and saute until
onion is transparent, about 2 minutes. Add water, bring
to boll and stir In raisins. Simmer about 2 minutes.
Remove from beat. Stir In bread cubes, com bread,
rice, and walnuts and mix until all Ingredients gre
moistened, adding more water if necessary.
Makes enough stuffing for a 20-pound turkey.

O f a n * * , L a k i , ta m ln a la ,

;

A O tc a a la C a u n tla a 0«J»t

PLUS T A X « D E P O S IT,
D IET R IT E , REQ. OP.
SUGAR FREE R C 1 0 0 , OR RED

Delicious Yellow or White

Jumbo F ra n k s .

American Cheese, "“ft’*'69® \

Swift Premium or Lazy Maple

Flavorful Roast Beef

Sliced Bacon...... ‘ ft: *1*°

Sandw ich...............*&amp;*’ M 7B j

Swift Premium Cooked Salami or
Meat, Beef or Garlic

Groat Tasting Dessert!

Cherry Pie............#&amp;h * 2 " i
Sliced Bologna .... *1: *179 Hot From The Dell!
Veal Parmesan.... •' $3e9 |
Potatoes
A u G ra tin ............... »' * 1 "

3is q pleasure 7days a week
This ad effective in the following counties:
Brevard, Charlotte, Collier, Highlands, Hillsboro,
Lake, Lee, Manatee, Orange, Osceola, Polk,
Sarasota and Seminole only!

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
L0NGW 00D VILLAGE CTR.,
L0NGW 00D

W ith This Coupon ONLY

APPLE ONION STUFFING

Vi cup butter

Sunnyland Sliced

Almaden
Mountain

$100 O F F

Seafood Treat! Fresh

Cod Fillets........

Cooked Ham....
H e a lt h &amp; B e a u t y

per lb.

Oscar Mayer Meat or Beef Sliced
Bologna... K : 99® ' &amp; * V
Jimmy Dean Mild, Hot or Sage

n

W ith This C oupon ONLY

a. Hellmann’s
&gt;) Mayonnaise
\

3 2 -o i. Jar

;l
Jj
I

1 2-o*. ca n *

_
r im im ilT iH I III III IIII III III V ^

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE i
|
THURS.
OCT. 20
|
THRU
I
WED.
•
OCT. 26,
1 9 8 3 ...

40« OFF

|2|

With This Coupon ONLY IR S

Auto. Drip or
Electric Perk
Brim Coffee
13-oi. can

(EtfactW # O cl. 2 0 -28, t» 8 3 j

W ith This C oupon ONLY

W ith This C oupon ONLY

Anacin
Tablets

Holiday
Fogger

100-ct. bot.

jj

DIXIE TURKEY
1 12-pound turkey
kb lemon
lOcupsstufTIng
Wash turkey thoroughly with warm water, then dry
with a cloth. Rub the turkey cavity with lemon. Fill
loosely with stuffing (It will swell as It cooks). Extra
stuffing may be baked separately. Secure the Incision
with skewers. Fill the neck cavity and close It. Tie the
legs together and place turkey, breast up. In a roasting
pan.
Cover the pan and roast turkey at 325° until tender
(approximately 3Vb hours). Bast every kb hour with pan
drippings. Remove cover for last Vb hour of cooking so
the skin can get brown and crisp. When done, breast
meat and leg should hr tender, and leg? will pull readily
from the body. Serves 12 to 15.

r U.S.D.A Chuck
V''
• 1

N L

-jj j . „

Combine potatoes with syrup or hon ey'. Mix
thoroughly. Add eggs, milk, nutmeg, and salt. Add
orange Juice or mm. If desired. Pecans may be added to
filling or sprinkled on top. Pour Into shell.
Bake In a 450° oven for 15 minutes. Lower
temperature to 325° and bake 30 minutes or until
firmly set. Serves 8.

Cut Flow ers.........

mmmm

SWEET AND SOUR S TUFFED COLLARD ROLLS
1 dozen large collard leaves
Filling
2 tablespoons cooking oil
1cup diced onion
3 cups diced turnips
3 cups diced rutabagas
Vbcup sliced mushrooms
1 teaspoon each basil thyme, and nmijuram
I cup cooked lentils
1 cup cooked barley or rice
1 pound cooked lean ground sausage or beef (optional)
Salt and pepper to taste
Sweet and sour sauce
2 tablespoons cooking all
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 cups diced onion
4 cups diced tomato
2 tablespoons honey
2 tablespoons elder vinegar (or hot pepper vinrgar)
2 cups tomato sauce
Wash collard leaves and cut ofT stem ends. In large
Dutch oven steam leaves over boiling water until pliable.
Set aside to cool.
Heat oil In Dutch qven and saute onion, turnip, and
rutabaga until tender. Add mushrooms and herbs and
cook briefly. Stir In cooked lentils and barley. Add salt
and pepper to taste, and mix well. Remove to large bowl
to cool.
To make the sauce, cook garlic and onion in oil until
golden. Add tomato, honey, vinegar, and tomato sauce.
Simmer for 15 minutes.
Place 14- to kb-cup of filling mixture In each collard
leaf. Roll into a bundle, tucking in sides while rolling.
Layer In large Dutch oven and cover with sweet and
sour sauce. Cover and bake In 350° oven until collard
rolls arc tender (about 40 to 50 minutes). Serves 4 to 5.

9-lnch pic shells.

• ATMOSTPUOU*LOCATIONS U m Sm I ]

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

6.

SWEET 'TATER PIE
3 cups mashed cooked sweet potatoes
Vi cup cane syrup or honey
3 eggs, lightly beaten
1kb cups milk
1 teaspoon nutmeg
kb teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon orange juice or mm (optional)
kb cup chopped pecans (optional)
1 recipe 2-crust pie dough
Preheat oven to 450°. Line a 2-quart round ovenproof
casserole with thinly-rolled pastry dough, or make two

59e

Harmony Foods Assorted

HORMEL

1 4 -o z. b o t.

OERT’S BEST EVER PIE
2 eggs, sepal ated
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground cloves
Vb cup chopped pecans
Vi cup seedless raisins
1 tablespoon melted butter
1 l^blespeor. vlncgr..8-lnch unbaked pie crust
Preheat oven to 350°. In a medium bowl, beat egg
yolks well. Sift sugar, cinnamon, and cloves and add
gradually to egg yolks. Add pecans, inlslns. and butter.
In a small bowl, beat egg whites well. Fold Into above
mixture. As you fold, add vinegar. Pour Into crust and
bake at 350° until crust and top are nicely browned
(about 30 minutes). Don't overbake — bums easily!
Cool. Whipped cream may be served with the pie. Serves

14-oz. can

(tflacliva 0*1.10-IS, 4MS)

z

MARY'S CORNMEAL PECAN STUFFING
WITH APRICOTS
lkb cups dried apricots, soaked overnight, or Vb cup
sliced kumquats
Vi cup butter
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 medium onion, chopped
kb cup sliced celery
1 teaspoon each nutmeg, ginger, paprika
Vb teaspoon salt (optional)
1 teaspoon black pepper
2 cups cubed day-old bread (a mixture of whole wheat,
unbleached, or rye)
2 cups cubed, day-old combread
V4cup chopped dill and parsley, mixed
2 eggs, beaten
1Vbcups chopped pecans
Soak apricots overnight. Drain and chop. Reserve
liquid for moistening stuffing. If needed.
Melt butter and saute garlic, onion, and celery for 2
minutes. Remove from heat and add spices. In a large
bowl combine cooked mixture with breads, dill, and
parsley. Add eggs and mix well. Add apricot liquid tf
needed. Mix in chopped pecans and apricots.
Allow Vb cup stuffing per 1 pound of bird. Stuff bird
Just before roasting. Stuffing ts done when It reaches an
Internal temperature of 165® to 170®. YieldsScups.
Note For a crisp version, bake at 350® In a greased
9x 13 parr for about 40 minutes or until brown.

�BLONDIE

IB -E w r tlw fl H tra ld , Sanford, FI.

OAGWOOD, I W AN T
’-— / A FABULOUS
&gt; * ' HOME-COOKED

T H A T ’S N O T ASKlNO
V __ . T O O M U C H ,
4 19 IT ? 1

W ednttday, Oct. if . m t

N O T A T A L L . BOSS.
JL
•C A L L VO UP
-7 'VI PE AND r
&gt; £ I TELL HEQJ

ACROSS

by Chic Young
-* HELLO , COPA.. I'M
HAVH4G DINNER A T
BLONOlES HOUSE

1 Entity
S Opan a
package
B Spread to dry
13 Tree trunk
13 Eicuriion
14 Son-in-law of
Mohammed
15 Singer
Fiugerald
United S tatei
18 Deer
IB Villain's
eidam ation
30 Male cats
31 Needlefish
33 Strike oul

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

THAT REALLY IS
A NICE LETTER,
MISS BUXLEY /

by Mcrt WatV.fr

THANK
YO U,
i S IR

Ofeti*
SO Augmu .i
S3 ActounUnt
(abbr j
55 Forlorn
58 W all (Sp)
SB O d m ako
oi car
60 Spaca band*

p
HA
OU
s N
1 c
1 H

61 Story
63 Baking
chamber
63 Eye infection
64 Inner (p ref)

P

A
U
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6
R
A

17 News article
IB Jackie’s 2nd
husband
33 Measure of
land (metric)

DOWN

41 Egyptian
bud
43 Colorado

3
4
5
6
7
8

Unreadable
Light meal
Beehive State
Itinerant
Pending
Hockey greet
Bobby
9 Meiicsn
sendwich
10 Biblical land
11 Noise (p i)

notice (abbr)
27 Busm en dell
28 Rush
30 Undertiker
31 Hem
33 Feet
3 5 Y e » (S p )
36 SDinish for
one
39 Flying saucer
(ebbr)

TDB6D
, WOW...

T
i

1 °

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g
-

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a w d i 'm

)

/ 60NNA
\ (M POWERS...

c

j

= l l ________

47

A R C H IE
EVER SINCE I
CAN REMEMBER

IT 'S NICE TO LIKE
MONEY, AS LONG AS
YOU P O N T M AKE IT
RULE YOUR L IP E /

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; MEEK

THE W T H 15. m .&amp;K.M XJ
OFFER k)0 COMMERCIAL AD­
VANTAGE- 10 AfJ EMPICMER.

S O WHAT HAVE YOU \
LEARNEP LYING HERE J
AN P TALKING ) ----- —
TO ME ? r-^ IN V E S T /N
r r - r - . - _ - . r r LEATHER
J
V COUCHES/

OR FOR THAT MATTER,TO TH5
E M fW M E /JT AGENCY...1

YXJ’RE
F 1R £D !

ill

P Vv
m v-

by Hargreaves A Sellers

M R . M E N A N D L IT T L E MISS
ON WHAT
CHARGE?

WAITING

POLICE TIM E

A\R. LAZY/ I HAVE
HAD Y O U UNDER

SURVEILLAN CE FOR
THE FAST 2Y H^UR?

by Stoffel &amp; Heim dahl

BUGS B U N N Y

AND NOW LADIES AND
SSN7LSMSN, i will pull
A \\AB3rT a r t OF A MAT.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
n man In my early 40s and
have had vitiligo since I
wns 4 years old. I have
seen dermatologists sever­
al times, the lost time
being about five years ago.
Each time I have been told
there Is nothing that can
be done about It.

47 Certain
hairdo
48 Negatives
49 Horse’s gait
SI Marrowbone
53 Sprightly
54
__________Domini
56 Horse relative
57 Outfit
58 Farewell
sure.
(abbr)
I’m

MHSOW
r U&amp;EC&gt;~&lt;
tm w m .

I'M e o iw

Check
Hearing Difficulty

;y i o N
c 0 O
1* o L O
A V c s
c ( 0 1

by A rt Sansom

T H E BORN LOSER

SO HOW LONG HAS THIS
OBSESSION OP MONEY
BEEN WITH Y O U ? ___

T rrr
i V WiO
n A &gt; tr
1 c t■
1 10 (
0i N

cgtpnen doily 1 G»o&lt; |Ger j
2B Stuck
33 Newborn
infant
34 Secondhand
36 Elaborate
poem
37 Sick
38 Of liquid
waste
39 Egg on
40 Setting up
43 Having
dumps

NOW TRY
ANOTHER
LETTER

NEAT...WELLTYPEP.
NO MISTAKES...
PERFECT/

Antw tt to Prtvtout Punls

44 A ln k in ir
46 You ( F i)
47 C o n m n

48

49

52

55

58

59

61

63

84

S3

54

HOROSCOPE
YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 20. 1083
This coming year you
will prefer io work In close
association with others
rather than operatt In­
dependently. There is’ a
possibility that you might
form as mnny as four
partnerships.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ort.
23) Y’our instincts will
Impel you today to be
direct and frank. Even If
you have to handle a
volatile Issue, you’ll do II
so charmingly none will be
offended. Order now: The
NEW Matchmaker wheel
and booklet which reveals
romantic compatibilities
for all signs, tells how to
Rc‘
th c ri*
finds a,on«
rising wUh
signs, ohidden
qualities, plus more.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Put your Intuition and
reasoning powers collec­
tively to work for you
today and you should be
able to snlff-out a prof­
itable situation unnoticed
by others.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Adhere to your
Instincts to do what Is best
for the greatest number.
The more unselfish you
arc today, the surer your
chances air for success.
CAPRICORN (Dec.
22-Jan. 19) Let important
mailers happen at their
own pare today. Strive to
create a relaxed and
sociable atmosphere. Suc­
cess and calmness are
Interrelated.
AgUARIUS (Jan. 20Feh. 19) Your powers of
observation urc keen to­
day. You can learn a lot by
watching people you ad­
mire. Later, you’ll be able

to do what they did even
better.
PISCES (Feb. 20 March
20) Someone who thinks
highly of you may go out
of the way today to In­
troduce you to a valuable
contact. It’s advantageous
to develop IhU r e l a ­
tionship.
ARIES (Mnrrh 21 -April
19) You could be quite
fortunate lo be teamed up
with someone today who
Is a solid contributor.
You’ll both have ample
ideas and know-how to
contribute.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Because of something
nice you did in the past,
you may be invited today
to partlcl|&gt;atc !n u suc­
cessful venture another
lias originated.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc
20) The thing that makes
you such welcome com­
pany today Is your ability
to get along harmoniously.
An Imporlunt group may
invite you to join them.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) You have the rare
ability today to step In and
help where you are most
needed. Making others feel
good reflects favorably on
you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
There’s a possibility you
might be a trifle assertive
today, but your friends
will welcome this. They’ll
know you’re pushing (or
their good.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl.
22) Your thoughts today
will be focused on what
you can acquire for those
you care for. A supporter
In the background will be
thinking similarly,

afraid to ask my
doctor about It. I feel as If
hearing problems only hit
kids or old people. Could
there be something caus­
ing this? If you can’t help I
probably won’t bother
asking my doctor I’d feel
foolish.
DEAR READER - You
arc making your problem
worse because of u mis­
taken concept. Hearing
problems can occur nl all
ages. Many people In your
age group develop
otosclerosis, a disease ihnt
freezes the tiny bones In
the middle car. When they
can’t vibrate you lose your
hearing acuity.
There arc a number of
other diseases that can
also affect hearing. You
probably hear people bet­
ter when you nre facing
them because you arc get­
ting help from lip-reading.
Ask your doctor about It.
He can test you or refer
you to a bearing specialist
who can do further test-

Many forms of hearing
Ium i1i.i l occur in people In
your age group can be
helped dramatically. Tell
your husband. "I beg your
pardon." but I have a
medical problem and nerd
some help.
To give you an u n ­
derstanding of hearing
loss. I am sending you The
Health Letter 16-8. Your
Vital Hearing.

It seems to be spreading.
( have been given dyes fo
cover (he white spots but If
these arc not applied very
enrefully II looks worse

DEAR READER - As
you know, the loss of
pigment In patches from
your skin Is no! a serious
disease, but It Is distress­
ing 1o many because of Us
effects on one’s appear­
ance.
•
V’ o u s e e m h i g h l y
motivated and you may be
a candidate for one of the
photosensitizing drugs
such ns mcthoxsnlrn.
After taking the drug you
are exposed (o sunlight or
long-wave ultraviolet light.
It Is not an Instanta­
neous cure. It usually re­
quires two exposures a
week ut least and you may
require a lot of treatments
before you have any repigmentation. Hut some
recent studies report Im­
provement In 70 percent
of such cases within 12
months of such treatments
given three times a week.
Send your questions lo
Dr. Lamb. P.O. liox 1551.
Radio City Station, New
York. N.Y. 10019.

WIN A T BRIDGE
NORTH
14-1141
♦ AKJ 92
VQJ82
♦ Al
♦ 9J
WEST
EAST
♦ Q754
486
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V61
♦ KQJI
4 10 7 6 5 2
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SOUTH
♦ 101
V A K 107 S 4
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♦ A86
V u ln e ra b le . Both
D ealer: South
W rit

North

K stl

Pan
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P ais
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Pass

South
IV
JV
5V
Pus

• O pening lead: # K

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
It was the final round of
a Swiss team match. North
felt that his team needed a
good result and bid uns­
cientifically but most suc­
cessfully to a grand slam
In hearts.
His four no-trump call
wuss unscientific. If South
showed Just one ace there

might well have been two
quick losers in clubs.
When South did show two
aces. North Just bid seven
to save time und lo avoid
giving the defense any
Information

South won the diamond
lead, drew trumps with
two leads, led the 10 of
spades and let It tide. A
second spade finesse gave
him the chance to discard
one diamond and two
clubs on spades und make
the grand slam.
At the other table South
played In six he ar t s
ag ain st that same
diamond lead. He had a
simple safety play to make
It. He played A-K-J of
spades and chucked his
losing diamond. West
scored his queen, but
South look the rest.
For the record. It turned
out that North’s slam-ban^t
bidding had uctuully jeopa r d i z e d h i s t e a m ’s
chances. Somehow or
other at the other table
East and West had done so
well on the other boards
that a tie result on this
hand would have made
them a winner, but If the
grand slam had gone
down, so would the match.

G A R F IE L D
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

\$

tA O fA E ts iT u M B u

by Jim Davis

( I ’M 5 0 PEPRESSEl? )
V ’ l T' S P E P R E 55IN G j

1 I THINK IL L GO OUT \
V ANP SHOOT MY5EL f l

il d in g

__
( YOU’RE J U 5 T S
yT
' “V &gt; TRYING TO
&lt;
^ /- p ^ jjP ^ C H E E R M E UP J

r tf l l ME \
L ABOUT IT )

Fog THE HOUfF
To BuY A P o u n d ?

v Q V jr i

Jh A\*5 w-lT

JTM PAVT6

1019

C MU IMMOtMU** tynatolo lit

A N N IE

by Leonard Starr

TUM BLEW EEDS
i HEAR? THE 500NP OF
A PlS'iANT POOLE"
V CHECK ITOOTJ J-

LOOK FOK A GOY
/J ITH A HOKN IN

HIS MOUTH. „

GREAT GREAT)

_

\

( forme ,

Ufl-OH-THERE'S
TH' BORPEH
PATROL AGAIN...

DID YOUEfL .W
MARIA?-

-WHEN SHE RETURNS, 1 SEE.
PLEASE NOTIFY US- ALL RlfiM
OTHERWISE, TOU'LL U OFFICE!
BE HELP RESPONSIBLE, 1 WILL
MISS PEASE.

WHAT? WHERE
ARE YOU TARING
ME, IF NOT TO
MISS ANGELA'S?/

�E . t n l nj H «r» ld , Sanford, F I,

W ednesday, Oct. I t , W 3 - t B

TONIGHT'S TV
WEDNESDAY

tA b lf Ch

0(35)

EVENING

6:00
0 0 ® Q ® 0

fr.0S
u n it

house

in d rp rn d cn t
O rlando
f i j IW ) M A flTW I g C E T H E A T M

In d e p e n d e n t

fC B S ) O rlando

Melbourne

IN B C ) D a y to n a B each
O rla n d o

O rla n d o P u b lic
B ro a o c a tlm q S y ite m

© (10) EVENING AT POPS (WED)
CD(10) NOVA (THU)
fD ( 10) NATURE (FW)
CD( 8) MOVIE

new s

til IJ5)B J / LOflO
f t l (10) MACNEIL / l e h r e r
NEWS HOUR
© ( 8 ) ONE DAY AT A TIME
©

(35)THEFUW TSTO NE8
(10) POSTSCRIPTS
(O m o rn s c

C a b l* Ch

In a d d itio n la th e c h a n n e l! lu te d , c a b le v m o n t u b t c n b e n 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 ae,
i t p .i« M t m r g r ^ v ninq to c h a n n e l I . tu m n q to c h a n n e l t ) . w h ic h c a r n e t ip o r t i a n d th e C h r u tia n
B ro a d c a tlin g . p | j » ( C B N )

W W

O H /v j» nM -

7 :0 0
0 ® PEOPLE’S COURT
(D O P M MAGAZINE A look at
•om e of the mail-order catalogue*
ottering ware* thit C hrlitm e* teaton, find out about the only paper
to have lour ayndlcated certoonlal*
( 7 ) 0 JOKER'S WILD
© 0 5 ) THE JEFFERS0N8
(D (10) ODYSSEY Lucy And The
Flral Family” The dlacovery of a 3
1/ 2-mMlion-year-old akMelon and
the toMJhxed remain* of 13 ol her
coniemporarte* have (parked a
mafor controversy over human n u ©
(« r ROWAN
LAUGH-IN

J u lie A n d rew s sta rs as an , actress w ith a
wholesome Im age who must ma“ke some drdastic
changes to save her career and Robert Preston
(top) and L a rry Hagm an star as others in the
Hollywood gam e w ith an interest in Ihe outcome in
B la ke E d w a rd s ' com edy, S.C.B. (Standard
Operating Bull) fo be aired tonight at 9 p.m . on
CBS.

Hugh-Kelly Makes
Name For Himself
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) The next time you step in
front of a battery of film
lights, here’s a Up. It comes
from Brian Keith via his costar on the new ABC series
“Hardcaslle &amp; McCormick,"
Daniel Hugh-Kelly.
"Brian has been a big help
"Hp'i given me a lot of
inside tips that even some
veteran actors don’t know.
One day. he noticed that I
started to get tears in my
eyes in front of the bright
lights on camera.
"Like most actors, I'd
look away from the lights
until the last moment, then
try to look into them without
tears. Keith told me that
was the wrong way to do it.
He aald f should keep look­
ing at the lights, but with
my eyes half-shut, squmty.
Then when the cameras
rolled, I could open them
and it wouldn't be a prob­
lem. I didn't believe him.
but it works."
About that hyphenated
last name: Daniel Hugh-Kel­
ly is really plain old Daniel
Hugh Kelly from Elisabeth,
NS . When he started acting,
the actors' union already
had one Daniel Kelly, so he
had to find himself a new
name. For a while, he was
Hugh Kelly, but he didn't
like people calling him
Hugh.
“I just decided to hyphen­
ate it," he says. "But I'm
still Dan Kelly cr just D.
Kelly to my friends and
relatives."
He has a bunch of friends
He says be grew up in a
town that was ‘‘the kind of
ilace where kid* make
friends in kindergarten and
stick with them forever."
He has such a group,
about 20 pals who have
always been pals. They used
to think that acting was for
sissies — tike tennis - be
•ays But they were suppor­
tive anyhow.
"They helped me and I
helped them." he says. "My
gang was not very good with

Daniel llugb-Kelly
girls — quite a few of them
are still unmarried. But
when I was doing a soap
opera In New York, the girts
would come around, and I'd
say. ‘HI, I’m Daniel Kelly
and this is my friend, Frank
Hunter. Hunt, shes all
yours ’ ”
That's what friends are
for. Especially good looking
actor-type friends.
THERE IS LOVE - as in
boy meets girl — and there
Is love — the pure deep feel­
ing one human being has for
another. We are gathered
here today to consider the
effect of that second kind of
love on movie-making.
Steven Railsback is our
guest lecturer. The young
man who was such a big
part of ‘The Stunt Man" is
coming out now and In the
very near future In three
films — ‘The Golden Seal,"
‘Torch Light" and "The
Courageous." He is optimis­
tic about all of them.
But he Is particularly high
on ‘Torch Light" because,
he says, "it is only the sec­
ond time in my career that
there was so mbch love
around a set." The first time
was when he and Peter
OToole did "The Stunt
Man" for director Richard
Rush.
"Peter and I would have
done anything for Rush,"
Railsback says. "We were In
Peter’s dressirg room one
day and he was so emotional
about it that ha started
crying."

©
CAROL
FRIEND 8

A MARTIN'S

7 :0 5
BURNETT

AND

7 :3 0
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An interview wtth Richard Wldmark.
0 3 O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
0 9 O FAMILY FEUD
© ( 3 6 ) BARNEY M IL U R
© (B )T tC T A C O O U G H
7 :3 5
© G O O D NEWS
7 :5 9
® O WORLD 8ERIES G em * 7 (It
neceaaery. from the AL champion'•

city).

8:00
0 ® REAL PEOPLE An update
on date concerning MIA a from the
V ie tn a m *** government; male
dancer* from Chippendale * In Lo*
Angela*; obadlence-lralned pig*.
(53 O WHIZ KIDS Two criminal*
(Daryl Anderaon. Jed MiOal tram *
treble lor the embeutement of on*
mOlon dollar a from a bank
(E O
THE FALL GUY Cott a
attampt to ratrleve a bell Jumper at
a dud* ranch la complicated by a
former Green Betel colonel leading
a paramirl ary operation
(1] (36) HAWAII FIVE-0
© (10) HITLER'S NUMBER ONE
ENEMY; BURIED AUVE The true
(lory la I old ol Raoul Wallenberg,
who w e* per tonally reapontibl* tor
aavtttg more than 100.000 Hungari­
an Jew* from Noil * i termination,
and who later diaappeered and I*
t t ll believed lo be living
© ( 8) MOVIE
8 :0 5
©
M O VIE
"T h e Sugarland
Eapreaa’’ (1974) Soldi* Hewn. W i­
llem Albert on A young mother
become* a fugitive and * folk hero
during a a im * rampage designed
to prevent her infant t o n * ad op

betore ToolJ*'* boyfriend (Todd
HoHowefl) mutt lake a major anam,
ahe learnt ihal he la Illiterate. n
® O MOVIE "8 0 .B ." (1981)
William Holden. Jude Andrew*.
Directed by Blake Edwerda. Negalive reaction to a very coatty turn
cauae* a director to become suicid­
al until he Uecidet lo remake Ihe
movie ea e musical
CD O DYNASTY The identity of
the araontai who nearly kited Kryalle end Alania la revealed, end Ste­
ven rekindle* hi* allair with Cleudia.

a

10:00
O ® I LOVE MEN Donna M ila
boat* a look el Ihe queiltle* women
moat admire In men; gueati Include
Tom Wopal. Engelbert Humper­
dinck, Dr. Joyce Brother*, end
Weytend Flower i end Madame.
2 ) O HOTEL An attaaaln (Robert
Vaughn) plot* to kit a dignitary el
the St Gregory, while a young
houtew ifa (Chrlalopher Norrla)
retort* lo proatitution
© (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
( D ( 8)KOJAK

1 0 :3 0
© (35) BOB NEWHART
© (10) INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE
A beM nd-lhe-tcant* look at what
goea on inaid* the W hit* Houa*
during a campaign year I* present• 3
from ihe viewpoint ol lour WeahIngton preaa correspondent* who
» « * among the fwat women lo cov­
er auch an event art) whoto experi­
ence* d a l* back to the FDR adminiatraUon,

O ®®O

11:00

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I (35) BENNY HILL
1(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
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© (8) TWUJGHT ZONE

a

1 1 :3 0
0
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Ceraon Gueaia: Bari Convy ("tv*
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01 (35) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
Scheduled; Michefa# Lee. Fred W»-

12:00

® O WKRP M CINCINNATI
0 1 MOVIE "Hefter Skelter" (Part
1) 11975) Steve Rail (back. Georg*
O Cento
1 2 :3 0
O ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVIO
LETTERMAN Q uetta comedian
Gary Muledeer. opera Unger Bren­
da Boorer
® O POLICE 8TORY A veteran
o ffic er’* (Hugh O 'B rian) blea

1 What basketball player
was NBA Rookie of the
Year in 1960? (a) Oscar
R o b ertio n
(bL Wilt
Chamberlain (c) Jerry Lucas
2. Who was the 18th presi­
dent of the United States?
(a) James Buchanan (b) John
Tyler (c) Ulysses Grant
3. What city is the capital of
the Netherlands? (a) Rotter­
dam (b) Amsterdam (c) The
Hague

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© M O V IE

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MOVIE "The Story 01 Dr.
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9 :3 0
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® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
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®
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t i ) ( 10) OCEANUS (MON)
CD (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
©
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(WED)
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j

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(FRO
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(?) O NEWS
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tD (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

(WED)

(10) EARTH. SEA ANO SKY

© (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
5 :3 5
© BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

FAMILY DAY
SPECIAL
ALL DAY WEDNESDAY

Am i

a

r w iN « -.

T ry Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!

H w w

A IL S H O W S
-

If}

“ A2A'

on

S 4 SS S &amp; IftfA li
O CHEVY CHASE E
PLAZA tl )

3 p ie c e s o l g o ld e n b ro w n F a m o u s R e c ip e
F n e d C h ic k e n , m a s h e d p o ta to e s a n d g ra v y ,
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You Make Us Famous!

CLASS

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CASSELBERRY
41 H. Hwy. 17 «

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811-0151

a abootoul wtth fugitive! (R)

a

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

1:00

® 0 MOVIE "Some Lika If Hof"
11959) Tony Cun i*. Jack Lemmon
© (35) STREETS OF BAN FRAN­
CISCO
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General

USDA CHOICE REEF
BONELESS

Electric

2:00

W e a ttw rtro n C entral
A ir Conditioning System
w . I I P L U M B IN G A
r v a i l H E A T IN O IN C .

©
MOVIE "Return From The
Fast" (1947) Lon Chaney. John

1007 Sanford Av*. Sanford

CHUCK ROAST

FRESH

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1400 AM ...Carousel Radio 14

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6 AM to Noon....AL DUNAWAY
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5 PM to 11 PM.... Russ “ Uncle Russy” Ross
Sunday, AM “ Big A l”, PM “STEVIE STEVENS’*

Requests and dedications played. Request line 323*1414

MR. BUSINESSMAN...here are our special get
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TRADIO EACH SATURDAY 11 AM to Noon, Buy sell and trade
FREE to individuals. Phone Numbers 322-1400 &amp; 323-1414
Music ol yester year...mostly solid gold hits of the 50’s &amp; 60’s
Fabulous Fiftles...Super 60’s
DJ Line Up...

Those lovable Sesame Street characters come to
the Orange County Civic Center Nov. 2-6 for a
special country-style live stage presentation. Show
tim es are Nov. 2 and 3, 7 p .m .; Nov. 4, 10:30 a.m .
and 7 p.m .; Nov. 5.11 a.m . and 3 p .m .; and Nov. 6,
1 and 5 p.m . Tickets are S7.50, $6.50 and $5.50 and
a re a v a ila b le a t th e c iv ic c e n te r and a ll
Select—A — Seat outlets.

4 :3 0
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SEMINOLE COUNTY’S ONLY RADIO STATION...

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(35) SUPERFRIENDS
(10) SE 8AME STREET (R) □
in e
(T M
( 8)iliA
MOVIE

©

O ® OILUGAN’S ISLAND
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Edwin A to m i Boyd, la told through
taped recollection* which reveel a
life involving belrayel, love affair*
and a colorful group ol henchmen.
9 :3 0
0 ® FAMILY TIES Alea’a litera­
ture teacher (Edward Edwarda)
refuaei to grve him a much-needed
college recommendation.

2 :3 0
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Interview* with Richard Chamber­
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CD O

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�10B— Evening H p fa k i. S in lord, F I. W ednesday, O ct. t f , IM J

Legal Notice

: ■

This lim ited edition Avanti has been named the
official show car of the 13th South Florida Auto
Show scheduled for November 5-13 In the M ia m i
Convention denter. This hand-made Avanti
(only 200 per year are produced) w ill be on
special display In the convention center lobby.

O ffic ia l
Show C ar

• .

The South Florida Auto Show, ranked as one of
the three largest auto exhibitions in the nation,
w ilt feature S88 m illion worth of automobiles
and accessories In 375,000 square feet of show
space. Ticket prices are $4 for adults and $1 for
children age 6 to 12.

French Presidential Palace Gets A Facelift;
Replicas Of New Furnishings Made For Public
B y C la ir e R o s e m b e rg

PARIS (UPII - Francois
Mitterrand will go down In
French history as the pres­
ident who revamped the
official Elysec palace and
immortalized the Job by
selling ofT replicas of (he
ma d e - o v e r s u i t e s In
downtown department
stores.
Irked by the slightly
tawdiy look of the Elysee's
upstairs private apart­
ments. Mitterrand com­
missioned five young
French decorators to give

the stalely 18th century
p a l a c e an u p d a t e d
futuristic look.
With a Socialist-inspired
flourish, the president
then deeided to mass
produce copies of the
newly created decor as
part of a bid to revive the
ailing French furniture
industry.
The redecorated liv­
ing-room. daubed In gray
from wall to wall and floor
to celling, will feature a
convertible sofa bed.
Not that the palace is

expecting surprise guests,
decorators said, but sim­
ply because Ronald Cecil
Sportes ullia-modcm de­
sign should prove n best
seller in stores.
A masterpiece by the
same designer is to be a
"tabernacle of informa­
t i o n . ” a t wo - t i e r e d ,
d o m e - t o p p e d
radlo-tclcvislon-vidco
console that resembles the
R2D2 robot of " S t a r
Wars."
Jean-Michcl Wllmotte,
appointed decorator of the
presidential bedroom,
pointed to its gray flannel
bedspread and woolen
drapes ns an illustration of
"the art of the common­
er."
At Mitterrand's special
request, the chamber also
holds a fireplace and
shelves for 500 books.
The room allotted to the
president's wife. Danlclc,
w a s designed by IMilllppt
Starck. a well-known
French discotheque deco­
rator.
An "ergonomic" chair,
built to be knelt on rather
than sat on. gives the
sitter — or kncelcr — "a
dignified position ...
worthy of the great men of
the world," Starck said.
With novelties of this

sort to his credit. Mitter­
rand. a known culture
buff. Is sure to be re­
membered as a patron of
the decorative arts who
left his own Imprint on the
palace, ns did Madame dc
Pompa dour or LouisNapoleon Bonaparte.

In the sumptuous palace
j u s t off t he C h a mp s
Elysccs rather than In the
warmth of hts own Latin
Quarter home, officials
said.
The redone presidential
apartments will be used
pr i mar i l y for foreign
guests with mass produc­
He follows a t rend tion of the furniture repli­
started by former presi­ cas due to begin in 1984.
dent Georges Pompidou.
There were no estimates
In 1972. Pompidou In­ available on the decorating
stalled modern furniture costs.
and pai nt i ngs In the
Elysec. Most of it was
Legal Notice__
promptly removed by his
successor, former presi­ IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T . E IG H ­
L C IR C U IT , IN
d e n t Valery Gl s ca r d TA EN EDN TFOH RJ USDEICM IA
IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
d'Estalng.
F L O R ID A
Mitterrand' s doublepr onged plun for r e ­
furbishing the prestigious
downtown palace and
promoting modern French
furniture design was a
personal endeavor and
d e s i g n e d a r o u n d his
personal tastes.
Presidential aides say he
and his wife pored over
architectural drawings,
scrutinizing every detail
before approval.
B ut M i t t e r r a n d ' s
personal touch will not
al t er the p r e s i d e n t ' s
staunch refusal to reside

Hotline Advice Sizzles
MOSCOW (UPU — The first telephone hotline service
opened by the Soviet Union to help those with emotional
and other problems, apparently has a problem of Its own
—lack of tact.
The newspaper tzvcstla reported Monday the littleadvert ised service had been in operation for more than a
year in the capital and found "Moscow citizens have a
great demand for psychological help given by tele­
phone."
UI'I tried the number given — Moscow 209 90 04 —
and got a busy signal for half an hour before a weary
man's voice answered.
"I have a problem.” the reporter said.
"Well. I suggest you take some sedatives and call back
tomorrow," the man advised br-fore hanging tip.

E x h ib its
Soug ht
AT THEIR
FINGERTIPS!

READ
THE
C LA SSIFIED S
a n d y o u 're
g u a ra n te e d
a spin a ro u n d
th e w o rld of
b u y in g a n d s ellin g
...jo b s a n d h o m e s ,
c h o ic e b u sin ess
o p p o rtu n itie s
a n d s o m e tim e s
ju s t a frie n d ...
CALL
322-26 11 or 831-9993

EVENING IIEIIALII

Exhibitors arc wanted to
participate in the third
annual Central Florida
Fire Prevention Field Day
This annual fund-raising
event will be held at the
Orlando Centroplex
(across from the Boh Carr
Performing Arts Centre)
on Oct. 22 from 11 a m. to
7 p.m. All proceeds will
benefit the Bahia Shrine
Flying Fez Unit.
Exhibits are restricted to
non-food or beverage
Items. A tax-deductible
donation of $25 is re­
quested for each 10 by 10
feet space. Anyone Inter­
ested in promoting their
products, crafts or services
may participate.
In addition to the exhib­
its there will be an aublion, fire depar t ment
competitions, chill con­
tests. food, drinks, games
and fun for everyone.
More information may
be obtained by calling Lt.
Ernest Counts or Leslie
Brcwlngton at
the Orlando Fire Depart­
ment Fire Prevention
Division at 849-238G.

Logoi Notice
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 IC IA L
C IR C U IT . M A N D F O R S C M IN O L E
COUNTY . F L O R ID A
CASE NO, H 111] C A -6f K
G R A C E C . L IN D B L O M . AS
TRUSTEE,
P 'e m tllf,
Vs.
R O B E R T R. M E L V IN ,e t al.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F S U IT
To. Th# Defendants. G E R L IN E R.
M E L V IN , and *11 olhars whom II
m a y concern.
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
th a t * n * c l l o n lo fo r e c lo s e *
M ortgage on th * following described
real p ro p o rt, located In S *m ln o i*
County. F lo rid *:
Lot A 10 T h *t parcel ot land tying
In Section 19, Township 10 S&lt;Mth
R *n g * Jl E»-,t. Seminole County.
F lo rid * described a t follow * From
lh * Southwest corner c l M id Section
10. rt# i N orth MO 00 l* * t lo o point on
lh * c *n l*rlln o of th * SO loot R ight of
W ay ot O tco o l* Road; thane* run
E ast 15 00 I M l to tho E a tl R ight ot
W ay I In * ot M id Oscaola Road,
thane* run along lh * E * * t R ight of
W ay I in * ot Oscaol* Road. N orth
117100 I m I lo tho P oint of Beginning;
th *n c * run N orth 107 4 ] I m I, th *n c *
M aying M id R ight of W ay lln * of
O scaol* Road, run E ast 1050 00 fa tt;
thane* run South w r .41 I m I. thane*
run W a tt 1010 00 I m I to lh# P oint ot
Beginning
h a t been Ilia d age in ti you and you
# r * req uired lo m t v * a copy ot your
w rltta n defenses. It an y . to It on
C H A R L E S E M E IN E R . » W all
S trM t. O rlando. Flo rid a U W I. A l
to rn ty lor P la in tiff, and II I * th *
orig in a l w ith th * C lark of th * a b o rt
■tylad Court on o r b a to r* N ov* m b *,
S I H I , otherw ise, a |u d g m *n t m ay
b * anlarad a g a in *! you tor th * ra lla l
dem anded in lh * com plaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and te a l of
M id C ourt on Ihl4 Srd da y of Octobee.
IH S
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR .
C lark
of ltd C ircuit C ourt
B y: E leanor F . B urafto
D eputy C lark
P ubl i th October S. I ) . I f . I t . IH J
P C M JO

CASE NO. U ISSO CA-Ot E
D O R IS G R IV E R S .
P la in tiff
v*.

P E G A S O IN T E R N A T IO N A L . IN C .
a Florida corporation.
Defendant.
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N that
p u rtu a n t to Sum m ary F in a l Judg
m erit rendered on tho 4th day ot
O ctober. A D . I H I . In that certain
c a u .* pending In the above ity le d
Court w herein D O R IS G R IV E R S I*
P lain tiff, and P EG A S O IN T E R N A
T IO N A L , IN C -, a F lo rid a corpora
Hon, t* Defendant, th * underilgned
C la r k o t lh a C ir c u it C o u r t a t
Seminole County. F lo rid *, w ill at
11:00 o'clock A M on th * ]r d day ot
N ovem ber, A D IH J . offer lor M l*
and M il to th * h ig h **! and b o il
bidder for cavh. a t th * ( W t t l ) front
door o l th * C ourthout* of Sam lnol*
County, Flo rid a . In Sanford. F lorida,
lh * follow ing d a ic rlb a d proparty
lying and being In S am ln ol* County,
F lorida, to w it!
Tha N orth MS I m I ol th# N W Vk Ol
lh * SW W o l Section J4. Tow m h lp I f
South, R ang# 11 E a t l. S am lnol*
County, F lorida. Lying W a tl ot Slate
Road 411
T h * South *45 I m I ol th * N orth tJO
feel at lh * N W U ot th * SW V* ol
Section J4. Township I f South. R a n g *
I t E *i1 . Samlnol# County. F lorida.
Lying W n t ol S late Road 4IS.
T t» N W lk o l th * SW U o l Sactlon
14, Township t f South. R ang* I I
E a s t. S a m ln o l* C ounty. F lo rid a ;
Lass th * N orth fJO tM t 1hereof Lying
W e il ol S la t* Road f IS
Said M l * I t fo be m a d * lo M fltfy
the te rm s ol M id S um m ary F inal
Judgm ent.
D ated: O c to b e r*. IH J
A R T H U R M B E C K W IT H . JR .
C lerk ol C ircuit Court
S am lnol* County. F lor Ida
By C atherine M Evans
D eputy C lark
Thom as A . S p M r
O t Speer A Speer, P .A .
P O Boa 13*4
San lord. F lo rid * M 77I
Publish Octobar 11, I f , IH J
O f c M /l

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 IC IA L
C IR C U IT , IN A N D FO R S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
CASE NO. C IU 1*42 Of L
R A L P H P. A U T R Y , J R . and B E T T Y
A A U T R Y , H ll w ile , and H O
R E A L T Y , IN C .
P la in tiff*.
v.
JO H N N Y R
T A Y L O R and
K R IS T IN E M . T A Y L O R .h it w ita,
D alandants
N O T IC E O F SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N that
pursuant lo a F in a l Judgm ent of
Foreclosure dated lh * 4th day of
O c to b a r. i t l l , C asa N o :
U 1441 CA Of L r i th * C ircuit Courl
of th * E ightaanth J udicial C ircuit, In
and tor Sam lnol* County. Flo rid a In
w h ic h R A L P H P . A U T R Y . JR .
B E T T Y A A U T R Y , h it w ila , and
H O. R E A L T Y . IN C . a r * P laintiffs,
a n d J O H N N Y R . T A Y L O R and
K R IS T IN E M T A Y L O R , h it w lfa.
a r * th * D efendants. I w ill M il to th *
highest and bast bidder for cash In
H i* lobby a l th * West Iron! door of
lt&gt;* Courthouse In Sanford. S am lnol*
County, F lo rid a *&lt; 11,00 A M on lh *
ln d day of N ovem ber, IH J . th *
follo w in g described p ro p e rty M l
forth In th * order ot F in a l Judgm ent
ot Foreclosure .
Lot 4. R A V E N S D R O O K . according
to th * plat thereof, a * recorded In
P la t Book IS . P a g # J l, P u b lic
R a c o r d * o l S a m ln o l# C o u n ty ,
F lo rid *
D A T E D this loth d a * of O ctober.
IH J
A rth u r H. B eckw ith. J r.
CLERK
O F T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
By: C * t h * r ln * M Evans
D eputy C lark
R E O W A R D C O O L E Y , E S Q U IR E of
Shepherd. M cC abe end Cooley
Post O fllc * B o* 172*
J I f N orth M ag n o lia A venue
O rlando, F lo rid a JJS01
1305)415 0 » J
Publish O ctober I I . I t . IH 1
O E M 74

N O T IC E
N O T IC E Is hereby given lh * l lha
B oard ol County Com m issioners ol
Sem tnol* County, F lo rid a , Inlands to
o ic h a n g t th * follow ing d escribed
E asem ent property:
A strip ot land 40 00 le a l In w idth
and lying In th * West J l rods o l the
N orth H ol th * NW U ol lh * N W U ,
Section H , Township M South, R a n g *
I f E ast, S am lnol* County. F lorida,
and lying 4000 fre t on each side ot
th * lot lowing desci Ibed center Una:
C o m m e n c in g e t the Southw est
c o m e r ol tho N orth »s o l M id N W U
ot the N W Vk; thence S tf*4 J '0 7 " E
along the South line thereof tor 144 IS
tM t lo the point cl Beginning o l M id
c e n te r lin e , bein g a p s ln t cn j
c irc u la r curve concave E as te rly , a
ra d ia l lln * lo M id point bearin g S
• I ' l l ' M " W Ite m tli* center o l Mid
curve; thence northerly along lha
ore ot M id curfr*. having a radius ol
*0 0 0 0 I m I and a central angle ol
ira S 'S J " lo r TOO 00 I m I to the point ol
term ination o l said centerline and
M id ea la m e n t,
and
A strip o l land *0 00 (M t In w idth
and lying In th * N ortheast U ol
Section 17. Township 10 South, R a n g *
7 f E ast. Sam lnol* County. Florida,
and lying X 00 (M l on each l id * of
tho tallow ing described centerlin e:
C o m m e n c in g at th# N o rth e a s t
c o m a r ol Section 17. Township 10
South. R ang* I f E ast, proceed S
00*01*10" E (B earing based on an
assumed m erid ian I along lh * East
lln * of M id Section 17 lo r ltfl.3 0 teet
to th * Point ol Beginning ol M id
uantertin*. :har.ee Z t r j l ' a r W for
750 «J0 I m I lo th * point of term ination
ol M id centerline.
lo r tho following property described
OS:
An easem ent, being J0 00 I m I In
width and being that p a rt ot th *
N ortheast U ot Section 17, Township
10 South, R ange I f Eest, Seminole
County, Flo rid a , lying 15 00 I m I on
each side ot tha following described
centerline.
Begin a l lha Southwest com e r ol
L o t 14, W IN G F IE L D R E S E R V E
P H A S E I I , according lo th * plat
thereof a t recorded In P la l Bock I I .
P a g e t 41. t f and 70. P ublic Records.
S e m in o le C o u n ty ,- th e n c e N .
tf*17'J4* W ., (Bracings based on
M id p la l ol W IN G F IE L D R E S E R V E
P H A S E I I ) . lo r J0I Im I, m ore o r last
to lh * L im a W eklva R iv er and th *
P oint ol Term ination ot th# haraln
described easement.
T O G E T H E R W IT H
An easem ent, being WOO 'r e t In
width and b tln g that p a rt o l th *
riortheast la ol Section 17 lying 15.00
I m I on eech t ld t ot th * following
described eatem enl centrelin e:
Begin a t th * Southwest c o m e r ol
Lot I I . M id plal ot W IN G F IE L D
R E S E R V E PHASE I I ; thence S
■ f*5t'4n" W lo r 110 00 I m I; thence
N 4J*14'04" W . lor WO tM t. m ore or
less to th * U t i l * W aklva R iver and
th * P oint of Term in a tio n ol th *
h e re in des c rib e d e a s e m e n t cen
ter line
A N O A LSO T O G E T H E R W IT H
A n easem ent, b^lng W 00 I m I In
width end being that p a rt of th * N E
U of Section 17 lying 15 00 I m i on
each side of lha following described
easem ent centerline:
Com m ence a t th * most N ortherly
c o r n e r o f L o t * . s a id p la t ot
W IN G F IE L O R E S E R V E P H A S E II.
Mid com er b tln g a point on a curve
concev* E as te rly end lying along the
W esterly right ot way line ot Cluster
Branch C ourt, a rad ial line to M id
po’n l bearing $. 4**4S‘l l ' ’ W .: thence
N o rth e rly along th * a rc ol Mid
curve, having a radius of 50 00 tMt
and a central angle ot 0 7 * t r iJ " . lor
a J f tM t to th * Paint o l Beginning ot
th * herein after described easem ent
centerline, thanca S l* *4 5 ‘4 f" W. lor
77 00 tMt. thence S 7f*54’40" W lor
*00 teat, m ore or I n i to th * L lltl*
W e k lv a R iv e r and lh * P oint ol
Term ination ot tha herein described
centerline
A N O A LSO T O G E T H E R W IT H
A n easem ent, being 1000 tee I In
width end being that p a rt ot th *
N ortheast W of Section 17 lying 10 00
*eef cn each side of tha following
described a *la m e n t canteriina:
Com m ence at th * m ost N ortherly
c o r n e r o f L e t 5. l a i d p la t o l
W IN G F IE L D R E S E R V E PHA S E It;
thenc# S a r c s 'l l " W along th#
north lln * ol Lot t tor 01 05 I m I to lh *
Point ol Beginning ol the h erein after
d e s c rib e d l a i e n i i n l c e n te r lin e ;
thence N 70*07 11 ' W . lo r 44 07 feel
to th * Point ol Term ination ol M id
centerline end M id easem ent
owned by W ingfield D evelopm ent
Com pany o l Post O ffice Bom U17,
Long wood. Florida 171JO
T h * term s and conditions ol such
e x c h a n g e c l p ro p e rty a r * th a t
S am lnol* County w ill (re n tie r own
i f ship by County Deed lo W ingfield
D evelopm ent Company In a ic h a n g *
lo r a tra n s fe r ol o w n ers h ip by
W a rra n ty 0 * “ t to Seminole County
by W ingfield Developm ent Com pany
T h * Board o l County Com m issioners
Intends to hold a public hearing lo
consider tha adoption ol a resolution
a u th o rltln g lh * exchange ol th *
above described properties at 10.00
a m , or as soon Ih e r t a t t a r as
possible, a t Its reg ular m ealing on
th * Ith day o l N ovem ber, I f U . at th *
Seminole County Courthouse, Room
100, N orth P erk Avenue, San lord.
F lo rid a Persons are advised that. It
they decide to appeal any decision
m a d * a t this hearing, they w ill need
a record at th * proceedings, and, lor
such purpose, they m a y need to
Insure that a verbatim record ol th *
proceedings I t m ade, which record
Includes lh * testim ony end evidence
upon which th * appeal Is lo be based
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
C lerk lo th * Board ol
County Commissioners ol
Seminole County. F lorida
B y: Sandra L. W all
D eputy C lark
Publish October 1 1 1 *. I9«J
D E M II*.
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N otice Is hereby given that I a m
engaged In business a l 4 Algiers
A v # ., W in te r S pring s, S a m ln o l*
County. F lo rid * under th# fictitious
.same of M ID F L O R ID A B U IL D E R S
4 A SSO C IA TE S, end that I intend to
reg ister M id nam e w ith th * C lerk ol
th * C ircuit C ourt. Seminole County,
F lo rid a In accordanca w ith th * pro
vision* ol th * Ftctltlo u* N a m * Slat
sites, lo W it: Section tiS Of F lo rid *
Statutes lfS7.
HI W illia m P atric k K elley
Publish October 5.11. I f . » . IH J
D E M 11

People
Power
helps
prevent
birth
delects
Support

Marcn of Dimes

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sgmlnole
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

Orlando - Winter Park
8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
A .M . — S: JO P .M
M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y ? - Noon

1 :0 0

RATES

t tim e

. . H e a line

rn n c p c u tiv * tim e s S ic a line
7 consecutive lim e s 40c a line
to consecutive tim e s 47c a line
3

S 7.0 0

M inirpum

3 Lines M in im u m

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

33—Real Estate
Courses

12—Legal Services
Bankrupcy S1J0 end C hapter U
5410 F ree conference A ttorney
M P ric e . For A ppt. 4 7 U W 7
C U R L E Y R .O O L T IE
. A T T O R N E Y A T LA W
101 B W .ls l S frM l
Sanford F ie . 31771113 HOP

21— Personals
T A X P A Y E R S R IC it T i
Opposed to " F o x ” hunters. Pro
bla m tT Let m e know. P .O Box
4 f l Lake M a ry . F ie 31747.

BOB B A LL JR . S C H O O LO F
R EA L ESTATE
LO C A L R E B A T E S . J U 4111.
M A S T E R C H A R G E OR V IS A

45—Arts &amp; Crafts
A L ittle 1H om ew ork 'W itc h in g
the W ant A dt Can Bring
_______ Tep G ra d e ' R a m ils.

55—Business
Opportunities

23—Lost &amp; Found
B ik. neulered m e t* cat. w ith white
c h c il and p a w l L a tl teen en
Paring P a rk A v * T ra ile r P ark.
R ew ard! I J1J 1745 or M l f i t *
LOST
AM AZO N PARROT

m e t H o r iin m ______
LOST O c ' l i t F * m a l* Siberian
H u ik y . Blue a y t i. Laurel A v * A
15thA rea R E W A R D 1 1 J 1414
S M A L L W H IT E M A L E D OO . P a rt
poodle, p a rt coc k tr w ith long
w h ile h a ir . L o ti In a r e * o l
Vln+wood and 33th. H I f » 7

25—Special Notices
H a ir R eplacem ent and W lg t. For
c h a m e lh a r a p / and ra d ia tio n
pal fe n d M e n W om en C hildren
F ree c oniullatlon in your horn*
n r o u r ih o p . F u lly llc a n M d
P le a t* call tor an appointm ent
_____________ w a r n . _____________
N ew O fllc * now opening
VORW ERK
___________ I1 1 0W let St

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B A B Y S IT T IN G In m y horn* Ex
p *rl*n c *d m oth er, tree m eals
Ret given 171 *JfJ

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * I t hereby given that I am
engaged In b u t ln t t l e t 1154 Sipet
A v * ., S anford. Sem inole C ounty,
F lo rid * under th * llc tltlo u t nam e ol
P E R K IN S E N T E R P R IS E , end that I
Inland to re g u la r M id nam e w ith tha
C lark of th * C irc u it Court. Seminole
County, F lo r id * In accordanca w ith
tha provltfone ot th * Fictitious N a m *
S ta tu te * , to W it: S ectio n 145 Ot
F lo rid a S la lu te i ltS7
/ * / George C am bridge
P ubN ih October 5. I I . If . M. IH J .
D E M Jl
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 IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F T H E S TA TE O F F L O R ID A , IN
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
C IV IL A C T IO N
CASE N O .U I44S C A O f E
F R E E D O M S A V IN G S A N O LOAN
A S S O C IA TIO N .
P la in t III,
vt
O A V ID A O IN G E S S .e ta t.
Defendant*
N O T IC E O F SALE
N o lle * I * h e re b y g iv e n th a t,
p u rtu a n t to a F in a l Judgm ent ol
Fo reclo tu re entered in th * above
ity le d caute. in the C ircuit C ourt el
Seminole County. F lo rid *. I w ill M il
lh * p roperty il l u a t t in Seminole
County, F lo rid * d etcribed a t:
T hat certain condom inium parcel
known * • U nit No IJ1B and an
undivided i n t * m itre i t In Ihe land,
c om m on a l a m t n l t a n d c om m on
i i u t i u i appurtenant to M id unit,
a ll In accordance w ith and tu b ie c t to
th * covenant*, condition*, restric
lio n *, te rm * and other p ro v lilo n * ol
(hot Q tcS a ra tlu , u, Cwndunumum et
S P R IN G W O O D V IL L A G E , a Con
durolnlum , a * recorded In O fficial
R acord* Book IU 1 , page lOef. Public
R a c o r d * o l S a m ln o l* C o u n ty .
Florida.
at public M ia , lo the hlg h e tl and b e lt
bidder, tor cash. a l th * Iron! door ol
the Sem inole County C ourthouM , at
Sanford. Flo rid a , a l 11:00 A M , on
Novem ber 4, IH J
W IT N E S S m y hand and te a l ot ih lt
court on Octobar 13. IH J
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
C L E R K C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y: C a th a rln a M E v e n t
D eputy C lerk
Pub! Ith October (le n d If . IH J
O E M 71
I N 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 IO A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
File N um ber IS 111 CP
IN R E iE S T A T E O F
J O H N A S T R A IN .
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The a dm inistration o l lh * * * l * t * ol
JO H N A S T R A IN , deceased. File
N o. U S 1 1 C P . I* pending In th *
C ircuit C ourt lor Sem inole County,
F l o r i d * . P r o b a l* D iv is io n , th e
address of which I* P O . D ra w e r C,
Santord. F lo rid a 11771. T h * n am e*
and addrtsM* ot th * personal re p r*
te n ta tiv e and lh * personal re p r*
te n ta tiv e '* attorney e re Mt lorth
below
A ll Interested persons e re required
lo lile w ith this court. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N T H S O F T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N O F T H IS N O T IC E
(1 ) t i l claim s against lh * estate and
f i t any obiectic-t by en Interested
person to whom this notice was
m a ile d that challenges the v a lid ity ol
th * w ill, lh * q u a lific a tio n * ot th *
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction of the court
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C T IO N S
N O T SO F IL E D W IL L BE FO R F.V
ER B A R R E D .
P u b lic a tio n ol i h l i N o lle * has
begun on October Win 1193,
Personal R spresenlatlve
G O R D O N A S T R A IN
S 4J4G *ym ar D riv e
O rlando. F lo rid a » i l l
A ttorney lor P * r tn n * l
R epresentatives
B R U C E M W IG L E . I l l , E S Q ,
ol G U R N E Y 4 H A N D L E Y , P A
■ P O Box 117]
W I N M ag nolia A v *
O rlando. F lo rid a J i m
Telephone; 1105) 441 fMO
Publish October 11, I I . W J
O E M *4

T S H IR T P rintin g E quipm ent. Like
n ew c o n d itio n w ith supplies
T r a i n i n g a v a i l a b l e . S l.fS O ,

I 445-7031._______________ ____
• * a • U R O T IL E a a a a
M en needed to leern new tr a d *I
High profit m a rg in . I l f - 5515.

63—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
* CASH FO R M O R T O A O E 5 *
W # buy llr r l and second m ortgage*
on
horn**, fro m individuals,
builders, brokers, end ree l estate
com panies W e also m ake horn*
owner loans lo r horn* Im prov
m ent and bill consolidation Call
u * and let u * m a k e you an o ffer!
B a r b a r a C r a w lo r d 1 1 1 1 4 1 0 .
It you collect p eym ents from a first
or second m ortgage on property
y o u s o ld , w * w i l l b u y Ih e
m ortgage you a r * now holding
_____________ 7*4 7tee

71—Help Wanted
ASSEM BLY W O RKERS
Light assem bly w ork from your
home E xcellen t incom e eeoor
(unity lo r housewives. etc. Start
Im m e d ia te ly . C a ll M a g g ie a t
l - J l l f a t i t i a . A ls o o p a n
evenings________________________

ASSEMBLY_________$5W Mo.
C o m p a n y w ill tr a in . D a y * or
nights S aver*) o rd e r* com ing In
and they need now!
A A A E M P L O Y M E N T W - I1 7 I
Auto P a rti/C o u n te r Person. E x p *
r le n c e p r e f e r e d , s t a r t Im
m ediately Good pay 4 banlflts.
A pply In P e'von
P a ris C ity , *05 W . llt t i,

CARPENTERS HELPERS
Im m e d ia tly assignm ents In Senlord e re *
N fv te a ttf

A b le st
Temper*ytemcae
Tuesday 4 Wednesday
♦ I I 4 t J01 M
100 W est7m Si |FI*gsfvpBansBukkngj
S*nkrfJ21 3540
D IS H W A S H E R
M a tu re Apply In parson M F , t to 5
P M D eltona In n ________________

DRIVER___________ $750 Mo.
Local only. D riv e large strelght
tru c k , som e w e e rh o u s e .
E xcellent b e n lllts l
A A A E M P L O Y M E N T 111 5174

Legal Notice
FkTIlievt Nans*
N o lle * Is hereby given th a t I a m
engaged In business a t f* 0 A lb e rt*
S I.. Long wood. S am ln o l* C ounty.
F to rld * under th * fictitious nam e of
IKS A n n l a k e G A L L E R IE S , end
that I inland lo register M id nam e
w ith th * C le rk o l the C ircuit Court,
Sem inole County, F lo rid a In a t
cor da nee with ttw previsions of the
Fic titio u s N a m * S lalules. l o W ll.
Section MS Ot F lo rid a S tatute* It5 7 . .
/ * / G reg N . D rum m ond
Publish Septem ber 7* 4 October 5,
17. t f , U tJ
O E L 157
F lc tltle u * N a m *
N otice Is h tre b y given th at I a m
engaged In bvslntss a t 1441 Sam oran
B lv d , C o i i t l b e r r y , F L 11707,
S am lnol* County, F lo rid a under th *
l i c l l l l o u i n a m e o l A M E R IC A N
F IT N E S S A N D A E R O B IC S A N D
A M E R IC A N F IT N E S S A N D
A E R O B IC S C E N T E R S , and that I
Inland to reg ister said nam e w ith th *
C lark o l th * C irc u it C ourt, Sam lnol*
County, F lo rid * In accordanca w ith
th * provisions ol th * F ictitious N a m *
S ta lu le s , to W it: S e c tio n 1 *5 .Of
F lo rid a Statutes 1fS7
A m e ric a n Fitness 4 Aerobics. Inc.
/* 7 H E B ra m le tt.V .P .
Publish Septem ber IS 4 October 5.

tl. If. Itt]

D E L 151

F i d it levs N a m *
Notice is hereby given that I a m
•n g ag ed In business a l 1441 Sam oran
B l v d . , C a s s a lb e r r y , F L J1707,
S am lnol* County, F lo rid a under th *
llc tltlo u * nam e ol H O L ID A Y FIT­
NESS A N D A E R O B IC S A N O H O l l
D A Y F IT N E S S A N O A E R O B IC S
C E N T E R S , and th a l I Inland to
reg ister Mid nam e w ith th * C le rk of
th * C ircuit C ourl, Sem inole County,
F lo r id * In ic ro v d rn c * w ith th * pro
visions ot th * Fictitious N a m * Sfal
utas. to W il: Sactlon 445 Of Flo rid a
S ta tu lt* ltS7.
H oliday Fitness and A erobics. Inc.
/ s ' H E .B r a m ie H .V P
PiAilish Septem ber I I 4 October J.
I I . I t . IH J
OEL It t
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N otice le hereby given th at I a m
e n g a g e d m bus in e s s a l t i l N .
H i g h w a y 17 f l . C a s s e l b e r r y ,
Sam lnol* County, F lo rid a under lh *
fictitious nam e of T H E A Q U A R IU M -'
4 F O U N T A IN S HO P, and that I
tr.ftnd lo register M id nam e w ith Jh*
C lark ol the C irc u it C ourt, S am lnol*
County, F lo rid a In accordance w ith
■he provision* ol Ihe F lc lltlo u t N a m *
S ta tu te s . l o W H : S ec tio n M S Of
F lo rid a Statutes If57
T s /E .E B urke
Publish October 1. t l , t t , M . l f U
i D E M 31

�f

C O N V E N IE N C E Store c id d e T ?
Good salary
Jl!.'alio,,. I
w e e k p a id v a c a tio n e v e ry a
m onths., A ppiic a tio n i av a ila b le
a t 30? N L a u re l A y . itn lo r d
C O O K /S A L AD
N a w h e a d c o o k lo o k in g fo r
b r e a k t a t t c o o k /ta la d person

D ental Assistants F u ll and p a ri
t im e E x p e r ie n c e r e q u ir e d
E ip a n d e d D uty C e rtifies !# nec
_ m t a r y S a n 'c r d o tflc e .J iJ Iltj
A V O N C H R IS T M A S W O W It
* S TA R T S E L L IN G N O W II
____
123 0419 or ) 1 M » 1
Avon Ladles F u ll, p a rt Tim e over
t l Sanfotd, W ashington Oaks
M id way A Geneva 32J 4195
B i lin g u a l S t c r a la r y . S panish .
English Interview s 9 to S t i l l
Providence B lve. Deltona
__________ i n l o t
__
F IN A N C E M A N A G E M E N T
CAREERS
A re you looking tor a c a reer which
w ill s a t lt ly y o u r needs and
goals? W e a re In te re s te d In
c a reer m inded am bitious people
T ra in for m anagem ent p o iltlo n i
In our b ra n c h o tllc e O F C 's
branch m anager training pro
g ra m otters a secure fu tu re,
outstanding em p lo yte bene tits,
and com petitive salary. E O E
G E N E R A L F IN A N C E
C O R P O R A T IO N
3471 O rlando D riv e
a rn E x tra M e n ty . P a r t/T Im e
F u ll/T Im t
P r e p a id L e g a l
Services C all Don. 471 1407
Experienced journeym an pturhb
Ing m echanics, plum bing help
•r s , a ir conditioning m echanics
N ow co n s tru c tio n A s e rv ic e .
373 4543.
Food Concessions M an ag ers and
w ork e rs M a tu re , experienced
p r e fe r r e d . A p p ly F le a w o r ld ,
H w y. 17 *3, T h u n ., F r l., Sat 3 5
P M . 331 1733
Fro n t Desk C lerk w illin g lo w o rt 3
lo I I s h ill and to m e weekends
A pply In person H obday inn ol
Sanlord on the laka Ironl.

GAL FRIDAY............. .$600 Mo.
E n try level, ideal for trainee w ith
lig h t o tllc e t k l l l i and w a n ls
chanca lo Im prove on them
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
TO 1174
CAS A T T E N D A N T
(rood s a la ry , h o s p ita lis a tio n I
w eek p a id v a c a tio n a v e -y 4
m onths F o r in fo rm a tio n C all
T O 3443 between 1 5 P M

GENERAL OmCC...... ..$736 Mo.
A ccurate typing, light o lllc e skills
• Top com pany, personally plus
Benefits!
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
11) 517*
H e ir Stylist w w .'e d In Senlord.
F u ll o r p a rt lim a . E xp atlen ced
necessary C a llM n d x a l
H e a d lin e r* 111 1451
Join an exciting te a m . Apply Ken
tuefcy F rie d Chicken. 3*13 O U ndo A ve Interview s to be held
Oct 24th A 2Jlh. 2 P M lo 4 P M
and I P M to I0 P M
M aintenance W orker Im m e d ia te
Opening F ull tim e TO 1140
C a rria g e Cove

GENEVA GARDENS
- APARTMENTS

M A N A G E R T R A IN E E
5 day week, t a la r y p it,! com
m illio n and bon m e t Potential
a d v a n r .w .f s j, h s ip !la !li« l!o n
and retire m e n t M u tt work lo m e
evening! Apply In p e rio n at ABC
L iq u o rs , 7(45 O rla n d o A v e „
Sanlord,
M AN A G ER T R A IN E E ......$ 7 0 0 M o.
Several pasi&gt;&gt;ont available. N *
tlonal Com pany w ra ts la tra in
before holidays Q uick prom o
tlon*
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
321117*
Models W anted I I years to X
uid. iem ate or m ale. For
haircuts ond co,d '* " 5 C all Linda
a t H eadliners n i s a il.
N U R S E S A ID S . Experience pre
fared A pply Lakevtew Nursing
L a nier
t i t E . Tnd Street.
P A C K E R S , im m ed iate s la rl lor 1st
and In d s h u t H e a v y titlin g
involved A ltam onte a re a Ablest
Te m p o ra ry Service TO-3340._____
P H O N E S O L IC IT E R S
E ip a n d ln g again H ava openings
on night shift. H ourly wage plus
bonus Experience helpful, but
we do train . C a ll!? ? 7/14________
Physcien's n H Ic * M ed ica l seer*
tgry- to do transcriptio n and
insurance Send resum e to P O
Bo* 4040. Sanford. Fla . 1 V 7 I
PRO CESS M A IL A T H O M E ! 175 00
per hun d red ! N o e xp erien ce
P a rt or full tim e S la rf Im nu-ifl-

CtfCUMENTARY V
ZcA TnH UP
THE WPR5T / AT LEAST THE
THAT* UK1
IETR7WN flbiCE \ NEWSPAPER KNOWS \ WATOHIN*

1 B d rm . etticierK V . P *tlo . A iC,
\ W Fee Ph 112 7200
Sav O n-R entals In c . R ealtor
I Bedroom. 1 Bath. Furnished
USO M onth. No pets
______________ TO I W _____________

A

BAMBOO COVE APTS
3 0 0 E . A irp o rt B lv d . Ph 331 4430
E ffic ie n c y, fro m t i l l M o S %
discount tor Senior C ltliens
LUXURYAPARTM ENTS
F a m ily A Adults section Poolside.
1 B d rm !. M a s te r Cove Apis
37) 7900
________O pen on weekends.________
M a rin e r's V illa g e on Lake A da. I
b drm from 5275. 1 b drm from
U z 5 Located IT t l lust south of
A 'rp o rt Blvd. In Sanford A ll
Adults. 33) 1470
• M etlonville T race Apts, e
U nfurnished 3 b d rm . Spacious Apt.
W alk Tv L ake F ru n l No P e lt.

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

E x c . Sec for e v e nlng/w eekend
w ork C an 371 x 7 4 4 a lte ra P M
or weekends

93 — R o o m s f o r R e n t
C om fortable sleeping room w ilh
kitc h e n e tte . P riv a te entrance
141 a week. Includes u tilities and
m aid tervica. C all TO 4347 o•
TO 3343.
_______
S A N F O R D Furnished ro o m * by the
week Reasonable rotes. M aid
service c atering lo working peo
pie. TO 4507 500 P alm e tte A ve _
S A N F O R D R*A» w eekly A M on
thly rales UIM ln&lt; a lt. 500 Oak
Adults t 841 7413.

SHENANDOAH
V IL L A G E
^

• W / D C o n n e c tio n *

L t,«o l 3 1 0 00

• C a b le I V , P o o l
• S h o rt T e r m le a s e *

r U M IU P llU M K

Hrdtoeio Deplet Apt

3

t h e

,

f ir e

t r ie f

- ) a b i*
/
&lt; s c rr

s t o r y

.'t h

e y 'v e

f l a s h l ig h t

fc-r; .,i

;

l

c a t g h

J

a

h i &lt;s h

a c e

_

/ j

pr pm s

R A vC E L

TO SUBSTITUTE A TRVIig‘ T(0 n— ^
|

BETWEEN
b a r n a c l e s

. •&gt;t- ^ ft LIP/

Lie. B m I Estate Broker
3WO Sanford A y *

L E A S E O P T I O N . 4 / 1 . n ic e
neighborhood, 144,900.
S E M IN O L E W OODS S acres high
a n d d r y . b e a u tifu lly wooded
c o rn e r, u n b e lie v a b le , sje.soo

R E A L ESTATE

E Y R E

J U 6 T 5 L 0 W

W arehousing for Lease. 30.000 Sq.
F t., dock height, heavy power,
M l ronlng, (In d u s tria l), includes
e ttic e s , p a n tin g , and Itn c a d
r*!lr? s d t f f t on -r c m ic c t. J U u .
i t . * 0 0 Sq. F I. a v a lla b lt .
B e a e tllo lly la n d tc a p a d . C a ll
) 3 3 'U I ) a t k far M axine.

127—Office Rentals
T H E M E R C A N T IL E B U IL D IN G
B O B M B A LL J R . P A .
R E A L T O R 333 4111

INLAND
REALTY,
INC. [0

REALTY WORLD

3233145
A lte r H o u r! 311-1411
311-4733o r 133-3407
G eneva. W on Osceola Rd S acres
hi A d ry Zoned A gr. W allace
Cress R eally Inc 17)50*7
E X T R A larg e 1 story Colonial on I
acre ot O ak trees. AM the am enl
lies plus guesl apt Best local*.
1300.000 W M . M A L IC Z O W 1 K I
R E A L T O R 313 7 ft]

F O R A L L YO U R
R EA L ESTATE N E E D S

B e d ro o m , I f i O a th , fu lly
c a rp e ted , p e a c e fu lly
neighborhood 1400 per month.
1300 Security Deposit 133^T2S4 3 or 4 B drm s C entral heat and air,
t e r t t n s d p a tio , a p p lia n c e s ,
fenced, 1431 M o *311033
J/2, C /H /A . cat pot. Washer d ry e r
hook up. House lor lease. 1400 a
m o plus Sac. D tp W est ol
Sanlord. S m ile * Iro m 1-4.
i u w , , 3B&gt;yiB3s jj ., m
4 B drm . t l * B ath, living room A
fa m ily room , w a ll to w all carpal,
fenced y a rd , appliances 1*00 a
m o plus deposit. TO 3050.

323-3200
N E W H O M E S -444.100
Super 3 b d rm .. 2 bath. G re a t room ,
split plan. M ic a cabinets, ceram
k bath, m uch m ore Includes
75XIJC *reee4 Arf. As d C t'C c -it
v a lu e w ith I 2 k t \ fin a n c in g .
1453 00 P I p er m o 5 \ down C all
S. Swift R E A L T O R A S S O C IA TE .
44*4451. T O 3344.
543 W Lake M a ry Blvd
Suita B
Lake M a ry , F I * 33744
O R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E
SANFO RD R E A L T Y
REALTOR
133
A H . H r* TO 4354,333 4145

n u k w x /if

M a rk h a m Woods Rd Ravantbrook
4 B drm ., 2 B. By owner w ith
owner llnancing 331-1 H I ________
N ice 2 B drm , 1 B , Co Club
M anor. Fenced com e r lol. 13.000
down 1153 a m onth assum able
m ortgage. T O 1244

Sanlord Industrial P ark
12.000 Sq F t building, t 000 Sq F t
spec* , a r o il rooms. 400 A M P
service, zoned m anufacturing or
warehousing. N ew Building. For
ria la ilt. c a ll TO 7130.

U N D E R 41.000 D OW N
) B drm . D oll House A ffordable
m onthly paym ents. Call ow ner
broker salesm an. 131 1411.
*
e U N D E R P R IC E D •
H l.eoo ) B drm Us B alh M ove In
condition C all for appointm ent.
Broker 31) 4441 or t 7 » 4313

3 2 3 -5 774
F IR E SALE IN SA N O R A . Owner is
d e ip e ra fe ! M ust sell this week I
L e v tly 3 b d rm , 1 bath, w /la m lly
ro a m and Itn c a d y a rd l
Trem endous potential I Subm it
a ll otters. Assum able m ertgagel
Asking 443.540. M a k e afte r.

H U G E F A M I L Y R O O M , w ith
beaullful stone llre p la te . This 3
bdrm Is a greet s ta rte r home
A S S U M A B L E IN T E R E S T
R A T E . M an y ether extras lo r a
low p rice 011)5.330.

th r o u g h o u t! P lu s h c a r p e t !
sparkling pool I 1 paddle le n tl
L arg e shade tr*e s and c ilr v tl 3
g a r a g e s a n d F la . r m . ta o l
145.304.

P R E S T IG IO U S M A Y F A IR Execu­
tiv e S e c tie n l W a lk Is L a k a
M onroe from this com lartable
home w ith It's own p rivate In
door jungle! 55" x 31" screened
re a r p a lle t Custom b uill J a c u u l
o il M aster Bdrm I a paddle lansl
Kitchen equlppedl M an y custom
features throughout! 1141.000.
H ID D E N L A K E E S T A T E S At
1r4ctlve I bdrm , ] bath hom e,
d b l/c a r g a r a g e , k itc h e n
e q p t . , C / H / A , fe n c e d y a r d ,
w /p r lv a c y h e d g e ! S p rin k le r
system I C om m unity pool, club
houie and tennis I Low % asium o
m ortgage! 143.500
C O U N T R Y L IV IN G , a t Its b o il In
town I J large bdrm s! Sparkling
Ek,'.'.
l l M t i on a p *re x vs
acre corner to ll Coder and citrus
throughout! V a ry p rlv a ta and
foncodl O nly IS ).$30.
F H A V A S P E C IA L C om fortable
and affordable ) b d rm , t!s balh
hom e, w / l i r g t fenced y ard and
screened porchl Good location I
C all us quick I 447.104.

W E N E E D LIS T IN G S

323-5774
_________ 240* H W Y 17 32

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
itemebeiiri Specialist
W * handle The
Whole B a llo t W ax

B.E.Lnk Const.
322-7029
F Inane Ing A vailab le

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
• O IL H E A T E R *
C L E A N IN G A N D S E R V IC IN G
C « H R *lp h 371 4717
7 * \ Discount On A ll R tp a irs
For W indow A ir Conditioners
O n* D ay S e n lc * . Ph 377 1411

Automotive
20% On All Fofifn Cars
R epjifi October Only.
Major and Minor WotL
277-1631

Bookkeeping
C om puterized Boukkeepmg
W e 'll do your books on our com
puler lor os llt ll* a * 130 a month
R tc a lv * m onthly tra il balance
and statem ents w ilh p ro lit confer
II desired O ther reports a v a il
a b l*
C all O a il TO 0741

Cleaning Service
B A R M A ID S E R V I C E S
H ave you had your hom e c leaned
l a t e l y ? C le a n in g w i t h t h e
personal touch. 327 01 IS 471 4311

Electrical
No
ELCCTRICAL REPAIRS
s o r v l c # c h a r g e , r o a s c n a h i*
hourly ra le s F r o * estim ate on
now e le c tric a l w ork S erving
C e n tra l F lo rid * for over 10 years
V I H t . E N E L E C T R I C . Ph 11)
(O il.

Electrical
Q u a lity E le c tric a l Service
r „ . . . SLue.-i, M i n i f y
3*
lio n t. new -.r rv lc e v ln » u r*
M aster E tectricU n J a m e t P aul
T O )15k___________

Health &amp; Beauty
TO W ER 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a r r i o t t * Boouty
Nook. 51* E t * l $ t 322 57X7
A L ittle 'H o m e w p ik 'W atching
the W ant Ads C an Bring
’Top G ra d *' Results.

Home improvement
COLLIER'S HOME REPAIRS
c a rp e n try , r e e lin g , p a in tin g ,
w indow re p a ir. 231-4423__________
C OM PLETE CONSTRUCTIO N
N o |ob to tm a ll, M in o r A m a jo r
re p a ir* lic e n s ed A bonded

mini

P A R T N E R S Roofing rep air, paint
Ing, rem odeling and addition*
F r o * E st. C all E v o i. TO oao*

Home Repairs
Austin's M ain tenance C arpenlry.
p lu m b in g , p a in tin g , m asonry,
vp rin k lo n . rem odeling 331 170',
C arpentry a lte ra tio n *, g utter work,
p a ’nting, siding, porc h **, patio*,
etc A ik tor A rl Hubble
19*8 P ric e *!! TO 1717.
M a in tu n * nee of a lt types
C arpentry, painting, plum bing
4 ele ctric 323 *0 1 )
No |ob too sm all Hom o ro p a ir* and
rem odeling 25 Y e a r* exper lone*
C all TO 3445

Interior Decorating
Custom lirx p e rto v 'V e rtic a ls

AFFORDABLE PRiCES
Sharon’s Creations AT* 0151

Landscaping

Lawn Service
A L L Y O U N E E D IS US
333 0737
C rockett A W aters Law n Service
K IN G A SONS L A W N S E R V IC E
E a rly F a ll Clean U p. 11* Special
F a r A ny A verage Y a rd . 545-2334.
L A M Law n C a r* S o n ic *
M ow , edge, trim , and haul Contact
Loo or M a r k TO 5147 or TO 3141
W A D L A W N S E R V IC E
M ow ing, edging, lo rllllzln g
F ree estim ates P h 127 074*

Masonry
S E A L C oncrete I m a n qua llly
o p e ra tio n P o lio s , d riv e w a y *
P ay s 331 IT O E v e l T O IT O .
SWIFT C O N C R ETE
F o o le r s ,
drivew ays. padC. flo o r*, pool*.
CheH. Slone. Froo E l l / 123 7101

Nursing Care
OUR R A T E S A R E L O W E R
Lakeview N ursing C enter
( I f E Second St , Sanlord
333 *707

Painting
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
Hom e Im pro v e m e n t
P ain tin g . C a rp o n lry ,
S m all R epairs.
13 Y e a r* E x p e r'e o c * 233 1*49.
e * F R E E E S T IM A T E * .
Rhodes P ain tin g A ll Types
15 V rs E x p 3 4 H r, Phono 333 4311
P a in t in g - In lt r . a n d E il a r l o r .
M in o r h e m * rep airs O m r 11 yrs
experience F r o * E l l Ph TO
7111 E x t 503

Landclearing

P o sterin g /D ry Wall

L A N D C L F A H iN O . F I L L D I R T
C L A Y a Sh a l e
322 3411

A L L P h a io s ol P la s te rin g
P lastering re p a ir, s ix e s , h a rd
c o t*, sim ulated brick TO 5331

j

|

Roofing
Does Your Old O r N ew Roof Leak?
t f !! dSSL Cell D a v id Lee
T O 4455
Roof M aintenance
R e p a ir w o rk.N ew work
Troy or George for F re e Est.
305 3*5 1440
1 IR O O F IN G H
H I) I'm A rt H ubble
I do beautiful w ork I do now roof*,
roof le a k * I replace o r rep air
v a lley *, roof* vents, etc I w ill
save you money I T O 17*3.________
S E M IN O L E R O O F IN G
R eR oot*.N ew Roots Hoot R e p a ir*
F ro * E s tim a te * P h i n 45x4

M IN T C O N D IT IO N : Boauly and
qu ality abound In this 1 bedroom .
1 b a lh hom e. Wood A beam
ceilin g *, query t i l t A hardwood
floors, fi/o p U c * . Large, lovely

REALTY •

Sanford's Sales Leader
W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M E S TH A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN IO L E C O U N T Y
COZY A N D N E A T , 3 B d rm ..IW
bath hom e near shopping, school
M e t C /H /A . W /W /C .. paddle
Ians, O /R and m o re l Low down.
S U P E R 1 B drm ., I balh home In
Ravenna P ark . C /H /A . W /W /C
t a t in k it. g a m * room , fenced
re a r y a rd and m uch m o rel N e a r
M a y fa ir C .C lu b 157.590
C H E C &amp; S h)W ) ixsrnv, t bath
hom e on a largo lot, w ith a
fenced ro a r y a rd l Panelled fa in ,
room , w /b ric k F P L Split plan,
p a n try . C /H /A , W /W /C
and
patio. 1)3,000.
L O V E L Y 1 B drm . I I * bath home
on 4 acres in Osteen I A ll the
ex tras ! Enjoy horses and liv e ­
stock I 5 Acres fenced 147.000.
LO TS O F C H A R M . 4 B drm .. 1
b a lh , 1 slory V ic to ria n style
hom e, restored lo Its original
b aautyl 14 room s. 4 fireplaces,
spacious bedroom s a n d s v a r
J M O tq I I 433.0«A

C A L L A N Y T IM E
2511 S P a rk

Swimming Pool Service
S U N S H IN E P O O L S E R V IC E
W ilt m a in ta in y o u r pool Intop
condition, p riv e t* or com m or
v ia l Ph 12111*1. Sunshine P o rt
S o rv lc r. S’ * ‘A c llo n v lllo A m .
Sanford F I 32771 ________________

Tree Service
JO H N A L L E N LA W N A T R E E
A ny kind ol T re e Service
W o d o m o s i anything, 311 53&gt;0

321-0041
STIMPER AGENCY INC.
F IR S T T IM E O F F E R E D !
There's room to spread out In this 4
B r . 1 B hom e, located on quiet
cul de sac. M * |e * tlc o ak* give
country loellng You should tee
this! 145. MO
P ride ol Ow nership shows In this 3
B r.. I 6 dollhou M . noar high
school and shopping. H u l l s
llc a lly priced at 155.000.

By owner sal* or tease 3 B d rm .,
Iky B .C n t/H /A . g a ra q e Low
d o w n A a s s u m e m o r tg a g e
1)3.500 Ow ner is R ealtor Assoc
T O 4743. ' .
W
By O w ner Longwood 4 b r 2 balh.
pool w ith patio garden area,
fencad yd. s p -In k ie r system ,
stnrage sited R educed to 153.500
0 0 5 7 4 7 -__________________ ■
C A R O IN A L O A K S Z / l fa m ily
room , corner lot. fo rm a l dining,
b ric k . Im m a c u la te 1124. *00
SB* * » •
R A M B L E W O O D .O ',fa m ily room ,
poo l, d o u b l^ A g a ra g * 113.000
* * * *
R A M B L E W O O D N a w H a lin g .
1 /1 'z Sunken l# m ll« *tio m h u f*
V j ; u liro p ta c *. d i n - g room , oat
I t k ifclicn. assum e V A loan 7
Story. 1 *4 *0 0
* 0* 4
S A N F O R D 1 I's F a m ily room
good assum ption, excel Ian i con
ditlon. corner lot. 410.SOO M t k t
of lor
* * * *

S A N F O R D ) / l &gt; i pool g a ra g e ,
assum ption, larg o lot, 1x9 *00
T r l County Tree Service
T rim , rem o v e, tra s h hauling
tlro w o o d .tr** o il 121 *410.

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

H ID D E N L A K E : 1 bedroom. 3
bath, CB Stucco w ith wood trim .
B right, cheery oat in kitchen.
Covered patio, fenced back yard .
413,3*0

R esum e and Cover Letter
P reparation G eneral Typing and
Bookkeeping. TO 3*13.

S E W IN G M A C H IN E . Zig ta g . a ll
m a l a l . G u a r a n t e e d 1 4 3 .0 0 .
S e m ln o i* S ew ing. 17-22 L ake
M a ry B U d W in n D Is &gt; *Center
H I 0411. __________
V A C U U M C L E A N E R : E lectrolux,
n a w . g u a r a n t e e d 1 X9 O O
Som lnof* V a c ! 17 33 and Lake
M a r y B lvd. W inn D ix ie Cantor
333 *4 1 1 ,_________________________

REALTORS

G R E C N B R iA S . LAValy w ell kepi a
bedroom . 2 bath Isom* near C oll
Course Pool, scroonod patio.
1*5.00*-

Secretarial Service

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners

/ Furniture

REALTY

REALTORS

1 ACRE TRACTS O EN EVA
A R E A . E a t l a l Sanlord. Some on
hard surface reed . ION down.
Closing in J l days. I * Y e a r
m ortgage, a t 18% Interest. Call
tor details and inspection.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
1545 S. P ark

223—Miscellaneous
U p rig h t piano 113S. P honexitter.
telephone answ ering m achine.
$50 321 4)30
Used O ld * Trom bone.
Good condition
SlOO C all T O A IM Ask lor C indy.
W e buy fu rn itu re , antiques o r
accept consignments for Auction.
F la T ra d e r A u c tio n !]* I I I f .

A P P L IA N C E S . R E P O S S E S S E D
reconditioned, freight d im a g e d
F ro m see U p G uaranteed.
H e a rty N ew ?TY g Tdf 5* T O *15?
C ash lo r oood used fu ris ltp re
L a rry 's N ew A Used F u rn itu re
M a r t } I5 Sanlord A ve. 323 4133
K an m o r* parts, service,
used w ashers. 33 J 0497
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
Classfled Results W ill W in
Your Vote E ve ry T im e t
e e e e e e e e e e e e e e
Sleeper sola w ith m atching love
seal, neutral color, a * . Condi
tlon 1335 Ph 331 4T34 _____
S O F A /S L E E P E R
E X C E L L E N T C O N D IT IO N t l *
C A LL 1)4 7053. ________
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
3)1 SIS C F IR S T ST.
233 5*22

E L E V IS IO N - Z E N IT H 25" Color
T V In W alnut Console O rig in a l
P rlc a , over 1700. Balance due
13*5. Cash o r lake up paym ents
of 130 00 m onth. No M oney down
Still In w a rra n ty F re e Hom e
T rle l no obligation 143 U *4

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
C Y P R E S S M U L C H F O R S ALE
B A D S aw m ill
Port of Sanlord 133 4331
F IL L D IR T A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAND
C la rk A H lrt T O 7540, TO 3133

201—Horses

2523 5. F R E N C H A V E

D ial 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 or 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

1 8 1 — A p p lia n c e s

Deerhound m ixed O nly 21 Cute,
shots. A w orm ed 4 wks old 115
negotiable. T O 8034______________

C U STO M B U IL T I 3 Bdrm . 2 balh
ha m * on s + acres! M aster suite,
larg e F /R w ith F P L Country eat
In kltchan spacious Scr. porch
w ith paddle Ians and your own
splash pool and spat Two slory
barn w llh s o il* upstairs. 1212.500.

REALTOR

T o List Y o u r Business...

C O U N T R Y L IV IN G wooded large
lol on p rivate r o a d i * a r St Johns
R iv e r. TO] 4 *4 401J_______________

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

S O U T H E R N C H A R M . L a rg e 1
story. 4 b d rm . l l y bath home.
W /c a u n t r y k ltc h e n t F a m ily
room I B rick fireplace In m aster
b d rm ! F o rm a l d in in g ro o m !
C om m ercial toning I E xtensively
rem odeled! 145.000.

C O N SU LT OUR

A N D LET AN EXPER T D O TH E JOB

161—Country
P ro perty/S ale

183—Television/
Radio /Stereo

j

D R E A M H O M E IN C O U N T R Y !
Just like new, 1 story, I b d rm , 1

W E H A V E B U Y E R S II
W E N E E D L IS T IN G S 11

I

5 T A R T E R S

141—Homos For Sale

117—Commercial
Rentals

3 B a rm . u p i l t l r i Adults only 1375
plus 1 I H dam age lee. U l 1141
M r B arber or 411 447f.

pets. 1475 P h i l * 7413.___________
3 B drm . C /H /A , Inside u tll/r m .
Fenced ya rd , eat In kitchen, no
p e ll 4335 a mo 333 31*3._________
1 B drm house w ith w asher and
d ry e r. N ice neighborhood 1410 a
m onth C all 333 144*.
_______
3 B drm . kids, carpo rt, fenced y ard
1410 M o Fee P h. JJt 7300
Sev On R entals Inc. R ealtor

BATEM AN REALTY

CALL BART

141—Homes For Sale

In M a y la lr A rea.
3 b drm . P s b ath ,
c losed patio.
TO 334*.
___________________ ■
H ous* lo r R e n t. In D eltona. 3
B drm I B ath, c en tral a ir w ith
celling Ians, trncad y a rd , w ith
enclosed porch 5x00 332 4*30.

H I —Homes For Sale

D R IV E O f o i J U K U v c i m i v t .
Fresh p **n t (n am? out - h fw
carpet. P erfect J B drm , S tarter
H om e O nly 137.000 O w ner w ill
assist w ith F H A /V A financing.

117—Commercial
Rentals

oitvfic root
rttiCKXiks

n v

e a t e r

U n fu r n is h e d / R e n t

W anted exp D ental Assls. Tem po
r a r y fu ll lim e position C a ll
TO 5010Tu I h r u F . e i o i P M
W O RK AT H O M E
W a n ttd experienced telephone so
H ello's Top pay C all evenings.
331 3» S

W a n te d

?a

r

9 9 - A p a rtm e n ts

N E W I A 2 Bedrooms A d|acent to
L a k e M onroe H e a lth C lub.
R acquetball and M o re !
Sanlord Landing S. R , 44 371 4230
R ID G E W O O D A R M S APTS.
15*0 Ridgewood A ve Ph 333 4430
1.3 A 3 B drm s Iro m 1300.
t B d rm . appliances, carpo rt, 470 a
W k Fee Ph 333 7300
Sav-On Rentals Inc. R ealtor

7 3 — E m p lo y m e n t

H A V E T H E Y A X E P Y C R l T l C f ? . 1 YOU d U Y $ W iJ U L P ^ T &lt;;h E£F
Y0U R 6H O W V E T , J A H I6 H H V E R U N L E S S T H E W A T E F
P ik e ? y s u r
f t w a s f r o z e n ' i—

Furn A p ti. for Sanlor C ltlia m
J tlP a lm a tlo A w
J Cowan 'H fffB iW W C A Itt, ^
Lovely I B drm newly redecorated.
C om plale p riv ac y , U S W k plus
1200 security deposit. C all 323
22*9 or 331 4247.__________________

a o d re tte d stam ped envelope lo
C R I 300. P O Box 45. Stuart.
F I 33405
PRO CESS M A IL AT H O M E ! 175 00
p e r h u n d re d ! N o experience.
P a rt o r M l tim e. S tart Im m td l
a le ly
D e t a ils , le n d s e ll'
addressed stam ped envelope to
C R I 300. P O Box 45.
Stuart. F I 3)435
S U P E R V I4 0 R lo r te w in g da
p a rtm e n l In new g arm en t facto
r y M u tt have experience In
tellin g , construction o&lt; garm ents
and be qu ality cone lout. S alary
com m enu, ra le w ith experience.
San Del T.La,ii.|eclurl„a- 3340 O ld

• Adult &amp; Family
Section*

A v a ila b le

97—Aparlments
Furnished / R'.nt

7 1 — H e lp W a n te d

Evening H erald, Sen lo rd , FI. W tdM S dey, Oct. I f , IfM — I 1 B

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

7 1 -H e lp Wanted
CARPENTERSM CLTER
w anted M u s t h a y * experience,
• C a ll a lt e r * P N T O 1H 0

f *

E xp er. Hoot T rim m in g , looking lor
a house w ith acerage In country
lor leasa or ren t 313 4304

203—Livestock/Poultry
H O RSE H A Y
M ich ig an p re m iu m . A lla la .
H -S a/b ale or by lead. 4 77-W 4

Bed Credit?
N oC redtt?
W E F IN A N C E
No CredH Check Easy Term s
N A T IO N A L A U f O SALES
I IM S Sanford A vo
TO 4Q7S
D e b a ry A uto A M a r in a S ales

K ID D Y 'S K A R SALES
O vality Used Cars A Trucks
t i n s Sanford Ave. 133 l i f t

IS I0 P ontiac F ire b ird
Auto, A ir, S fe rto
C all TO MO!
75 A U D I A 7 t L T D
Ow ner has too m any c aret
M U S T S E L L TO 0 I3 f
7 5 Ford S idllcn Wagon. P.'S, P /B ,
a ir. auto tra n t. radio and h eater
• A4/1 /**— J W-Aw,w—«-■■»« *a»a»
43a *4(15 or J)e e 100

237—Tractors/Trailers
Buy Factory D ire c t. Lightw eight,
fiberglass S cam p 13’ and i t ’
(ra v el tra ile rs A new I t ' 5lh
w h e e l. C a l l n o w l o l l f r e e
1 100 344 4347 tor free brochure
and save I

239—Motorcycles/Bikes
13*0 Honda X R 300 Street or dirt,
i ; c ; ; Included 1400 Ph 143 5403
Geneva
13*0 Y am a h a XS450CC Shaft d riv a
V ery clean I t 500 o r best o ile r.
TO -5044.
'7 * C L 1000 G O L D W IN G
H O N D A D R E S S E R .7000 m l
11.500 C A L L 3374347

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
Country A lro tra v e l tra ile r,
74’, ta ll contained. Con. A 'H
1X9 4 0 4 a lte r I P M
Sm all C am per, sleeps 4 Stove, sink
A A /C . needs som e re p a ir* In
Iro n l, Ideal lor hunter. 1150. Ph.
TO S il l a lte r 4
_______________

207—Swap Corner
H a t F a ll H outtclaanlng
Turned Up Surplus Things
W a n t Ad W ill Turn To CashT

211—Antiques/
Collectables
F u rn itu re and rep air, stripping and
rofinlshlng. staining, antique* a
speciality. TO 0033.

213—Auctions'
F O R E S T A T E . C o m m e rc ia l or
R esidential Auctions A Appeals
a t* C all D e ll'* A uction T O 5*31).
FO R E S T A T E or C O M M E R C IA L
A U C T IO N S C all A I A U C T IO N
S E R V IC E T O 413*
______

215—Boats/Accessories

B U YJU N K C AR SA TR UC K S
F ro m 110 to 150 or m ore.
C all T O 1 4 1433!a l l ]
l O P D o llar P aid lo r Junk A Used
c a r*, trucks A h e *v y tq u Ip m tn t.
333 )390
W E P A Y T O P D O L L A R FO R
w hk.
.iv r rrp.vert.
CBS A U T O P A R T ! 73) 4)01

0FVSEMINOLE
"DAYTONA'S BEST'

SECA 550 J
♦ 1 8 9 5 "

SECA 750 H
’ iS Q S * *

73 C hrysler O utboard M otor. 120
H P . w ilt, pow er till and control*
USO T O 4415.____________________

M AXIM 650 J

217—Garage Sales

O rd er Tnur Y A M A H A
F a ir in t* and W ind sh ield*
N aw F o r S a i t a n C o lo r*.

C a rp o rt Sale 2 5 O ct 20 F ro m
Illinois and Tennessee Jew elry,
clothes, glassw are, sm all kllchan
appitcances and m l sc t i l l S.
S um m erlin Avo
G A R A G E S A LE 43
F rid ays 8 1 P .M .
F L E A W O R L D -H w y . 12 31
Barglns A Fun Buying A Sailing
* 4 ) 17*2
L O O K !N O F O R A TR E A T IN
I T E A D O F A T R IC K * U S E O U R
C l A H I F IE D S
Sunland E states O tl 17*2. 104
L ake Dot O r. Sat. * a 3 F a m ily
S a l* D ons iSasfses. M a d a m
A le x a n d e rs , E lc .) Toys, and
household Homs._________________
4 F a m llly y ard **&gt;e
V a ry R ta s o n a b la Sal Sun
I to 4 P M *14 R osalia D r
443 Rosalia D r Sm all to la rg *
Ite m *, v e ry nice. Some tools A
clothe* Good o lH a I vino

*2 3 9 9 °°

H W Y . IT -9 2 L O N O W O O D

8 3 4 -9 4 0 3

2 Dr. or 4 Dr. • 1 2 9 3

1978 Buick Regal
4 Dr. Ex C l « &lt; n * 3 8 9 5

1979 Pontiac
4 D r. WagM .
New Paint

Baby Beds, Strollers, C a rs a a li.
P la y p e n s , E lc . P a p e r b a c k
Books. T O *377 i l l 25*4
P aying CASH lo r A lum inum . Cans.
Copper. B ra t*. Lead. N ew sp*
per. G !** *. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Tool. 31* W 1st
• a 30 Sat * I T O MOD

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme

•3898
SANfORD
MOTOR CO
AM C JEEP
S O t5 . F r t n c h A v e

Resldentlol B uilding Lol 75X117
S em lnoi* C ounty. 17.500
_____________337 3 *51______________
ST JO H N S R lvor 3 's s c r* parcels,
w ilh rlvo r accost O nly 4 left.
S tarting Stf.tOO Public w ater. 10
m in to A lla m o n l* M a ll 12% 30
y r * fin a n c in g , no q u a lify in g
B ro ker 43B 4U 3_________________ _

157-M obile
Homes / Sale
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S hN C
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
P a lm Beach V illa
G reonleal
P a lm Springs
P a lm M an or
S io *t* Kay
V A F H A Financing X I TO 5300
N ow H o m o s '.ta rtin g fit U 335 Easy
c re d it and low down Uncle Roys.
Leesburg. US xxl 304 7*70334
R E S A V E S (F a m ily P e rk !
tl/e O M e e t 111.300
24X17 Spacious! 115.500
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S IN C
T O TO 5300 ________

159—Real Estate
Wanted
2 or 3 B E D R O O M H O USE
Y o u r P R IC E , M Y T E R M S
TO aaaf

W E B U Y A N T IQ U E S
F U R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C E S
T O 7140

221—Good Things
to Eat
0 *1 the "C re a m Of the Crop I
The Seasons Best Buys Art
In I he W ant Adsl

223—Miscellaneous
D e s k* c e n te re n c t ta b te i. c h a in ,
d iv id e ri. credenias. bookcase*,
c o l l * * fa b le * , c o u c h **, flo o r
m a t* *, hat ra c k *, elc. 440 W.
H w y a)4 behind K ershaw m ow er
231)444
________

*

133 4313

QUALITY
TRADE-INS
BANK .
FINANCING
THIS W a x ' S SPECIALS
l M O K 0 N T E CARLO
2 fir . P/S, A/C, P / l , A U T M R a d k ,
M m W ith M a tc b tn f in te rio r.
U T I A M ic a

1979 PlYMOUTN HORIZON
4 Or., A/T. t(% , A/C. Radk.
U T U

KKS

1 9 7 1 TOYOTA PICKUP
4 C ) t , S t d . T r a m , R e d *. Tapper.
N EW J U N G l E BOOTS 121.99 Pr
A R M Y N A VY SURPLUS
310 Sanlord A m
322 57!
R o l r l g / F r r t i t r . 21 C ubic Foot,
W h ile 175 M a y im * D ra ftin g
table anrtslan d 545 TO T a n
S EW IN G M A C H I N E . SIN GER
F U 3 U R A . i l k * n e w . o n * of
Singer's Top M odels A ll S lik h o s
bu ilt In. Sold now over 1/00 M ust
a s c rib e * lor U M B O or A x io m *
IIS M onthly paym ents W ill ta k e
tra d e is p a rt paym ent Froo
home T ria l C a ll B U U fa
D a y o r N lto

■ X T t A M IC 1
1 9 7 9 C K A NA D A
2 D r.. T * I U » W ith M atching UsU r ig r . 4 C yL, AJT, P /S , A /C ,

AMTM Radk.
A S T R A M IC *

ERNIE JACKSON
AUTO SALES
* ON HIGHWAY. 17 92

Carnet #t Lake Mary Blsd

3 2 1 *2 3 0 8

�12B— Evening H » ra ld , Sanford, FI

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SUPER B O N U S

SOPER BONUS

maxwell house

SUPERBRAND GRADE 'A

PILLSBURY

ALL GRINDS

IX T R A -L A R G L

'F lo u r

&amp; Star-Kj
6Vi-ox
CAN

SUPER

iSPICIAli
LEMON-LIME, PUNCH
OR ORANGE

DOWNY FABRIC

&gt;ERBRAND HOMOGENIZED,
LO-FAT &amp; SKIM

HICKORY SWEET

MON.
SAT
8 A .M . - I I P.M .
ORANGE * SEMINOLE COUNTIES

SUNDAY
zm rm T :
OSCEOLA, BREVARD, VOLUSIA
LAKE, CITRUS, SUMTER,
MARION, INDIAN RIVER
AND ST. LUCIE COUNTIES

l^ ia c a iO lM lIB
SAVE »1

PINKY PKJ FRESH PORK ICKN
SPUT/COUNTRY STYU

W O tRANO USOA CHOICE M IT CHUCK
SONTIFSS CAIRORNIA

Spo reribs . . . .

R c o s f ............... - sl 7f

USOA CHOCC » « F WMOif UNTHMMFO
STEAKS X (OASTS R » EYES/ (10/12 I t
AVO»)

Delmonico . . . u *3”

SAVE 59

SAVE 19
C O O P 'S

SUNK IT (WHITE OR YIUOW )

Tow els . . . . 2 «

APPLES

HARVEST PUSH LARGE YHE HPE

Mushrooms

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SAVE 90f

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CHUCK
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CHOPS

SAVE 78

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ORANGE, SEMINOLE
OSCEOLA, BREVARD,
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SUMTER, MARION,
INDIAN RIVER AND
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SWISS STYLE
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C h e e s e ............ '««

Spaghetti . . 2

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Hash Browns

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BEEF

$029

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                    <text>Evening H erald— (USPS 401-280)—Price 20 Cents

74th Y e ar, Nou 51—Tuesday. October IB, 1983— Sanford, Flotlda 32771

□

New City Manager Prepares To tackle Water Woes
By Donna Estes
Herald S ta ff W riter
Lake Mary's new city manager, Kathy Rice, will report
for duty on Oct. 28. And when she docs, she will be
prepared to tackle the city's water probltm as her first
priority.
Mrs. Rice, 36. said she is researching what has been
done about the city acquiring Its own water Bupply. She
also plans to attend the Oct. 27 city commission meeting
with developers on the water Issue
She Is also gathering Information on utilities available
to her at the East Central Florida Regional Planning
Council office where she Is principal planner.

"I plan to be prepared for that meeting on the 27th by
knowing what we need to do and what it will cost." she
said.
After buying water from Sanford under contract for
the past seven years. Lake Mary was asked lost summer
to acquire Its own water supply. Sanfotd officials urged
Lake Mary to go it alone.
Since her appointment Oct. 6, Mrs. Rice has spent an
afternoon In Lake Mary touring the community and
learning Its boundaries and she has attended a meeting
of the planning and zoning commission.
Mrs. Rice Is also reading and learning the city’s zoning
regulations and ordinances.

Mrs. Rice Is Lake Mary's second city manager and the
"The people at city hall have been helping pull things
together for me and helping me prioritize. They arc a first woman In Seminole County to hold a permanent
city manager position. Two others were acting city
really sharp bunch of people." she said.
She will be in the audience at the city commission managers while permanent ones were sought.
meeting on Thursday evening and at the planning and
They were thcn-CIty Clerk Mary ilawthome of
zoning commission meeting on the 25th. She said she Casselberry and Lake Mary City Clerk Connie Major,
will also attend as much as possible seminars on growth who continues to oversee city operations until Mrs. Rice
management sponsored by the University of Central arrives on the Job. Mrs. Major has served In the acting
Florida on Oct. 26 and 27 at Lake Buena Vista.
capacity since the first city manager Phil Kulbes
"I was not able to go to the Florida League of Cities resigned In June for personal reasons.
conference last week except for one dinner meeting
Mrs. Rice holds a masters degree In public ad­
because of the constraints of my present Job," Mrs. Rice
ministration from the University of Georgia at Athens.
said.

Brain Tumor
Killed Vet's
Aide: G aray

Restraint Of

Suit Alleges
Realty Firms
Developer
Illegal Tie-In
A pair of Seminole County real
estate firms and a development
company have been charged with
restraint of trade In U.S. District
Court In Orlando.
Attorney James Turner said "Il­
legal tle-ln" arrangements between
the three firms for mandatory
commissions at Springs Landings
olf Markham Woods Road near
Longwood. violate federal antitrust
laws.
The defendants In the suit are
Emerson &amp; Herod Realty, Springs
Realty Inc., and Springs Landing
Venture, a partnership of A.S.F. Inc.
and Downs Properties Inc.
Turner said lot-buyers have to pay
commission twice on the purchase
of their property. He said title to lota
In the development was required to
be taken Initially by a builder, not
the purchasers.
Lot sales were contingent on
buyers signing an agrecent to pay
com m ission s on both the lot
purchase and the contract price
with the builder for construction of
a house. Turner said.
He contends the tle-ln forced the
couples to pay exorbitant com­
mission charges on the lots. In
effect, causing them to pay com­
mission twice on the purchase of
the lots.
Turner represents three couples
— Kenneth V. and Linda R. Bevan.
William and Becky N. Brushwood
and Terence and Odalla S. Canfield
— who purchased lots for homes In
the development.

Two o f the couples paid six
percent commission for the lots and
a second six percent commission on
the combined value of the lot and
the home. The third couple paid a
six percent commission on their lot
but only three percent on the
c o m b in e d h o u se-lo t p a ck a ge
because the buyer was a licensed
realtor and acted as co-broker In the
deal.
Turner said the suit falls under
federal laws because lots are sold to
out-of-state buyers, services and
materials front out-of-state suppliers
are used In construction of the
homes, a substantial amount of the
money used for purchasing the lots
came from federal mortgages and
negotiations to purchase the lots
took p lte e by teleph on e and
through the mall.
No hearing date has been set In
the case, which has been assigned
to U.S. District Court Judge John
Reed.
William North, chief legal counsel
for the National Association of
Realtors, said he Is not famoliar
with the case but believes It is not
unusual for a developer to cover his
m arketing coats through com ­
missions to a real estate firm. But he
odded the arrangement can be
structured to avoid antitrust pro­
blems.
Mayanne DOwns. president of
Springs Realty, said the commission
arrangement Is a common practice
In this area.

M etric Signs
O f The Times
If you knock down a speed
lim it sign along a Florida
highway, when It Is repaired or
a new sign put up to replace it.
you will find something new has
been added. Speed limit signs
are getting a continental look.
The familiar 55 mph speed
limit signs will soon be Joined
with the metric version of 88
kilometers per hour In compli­
ance with a new law recently
passed by the state Legislature.
Posted under the standard
"mlles-per-hour" signs, thry
will be gradually phased In as
part of the routine maintenance
to the present speed limit signs.
Department of Transportation
Assistant District Maintenance
Engineer William A. Young .
whose office Is In DeLand. said
the metric signs will be phased
in gradually as speed limit
zones are changed or sign
repairs and replacements are
required.
"W e're not going out and
change them wholesale all at
once," he slad.

Florida DOT sign technician Michael G raff puts the final touches
on a m etric highway sign set to go up In Lake City.

Service Fees Top Lake Mary Agenda
A special committee looking Into
the adequacy and equltablllty of
various service fees In the city of
Lake Mary may be ready with Its
report for action by the City Com­
mission Thursday night.
The commission Is scheduled to
meet In workshop session at 7:30
p.m. and In formal session at 8 p.m.
at city hall. 158 N. Country Club
Road.
City Commissioner Harry Terry,
who has been working with Com­
missioner Colin Keogh and Public
Works Superintendent Jim Orioles
on the project, said today
a
recommendation may be ready In

time for the meeting.
The two matters being looked Into
specifically are water connection
fees and fees for rezonlngs. site plan
review and new development plat
approvals.
While the agenda for the com­
mission meeting two weeks ago
Included passage of an ordinance
raising water connections fees about
$200 across the board for all type
lines. Terry asked that the issue be
tabled for further study.
The Increases were designed to
Include costs of impact of new
development on the waier system,
but Terry said considering costs to

the city for the various size lines,
the Impact fees were not uniform.
Terry said that he. Keogh and
Orioles have held two meetings at
city hall working on the recommen­
dations because the Information on
actual costs Is there.
The Idea of Impact fees. Terry
said, is to provide funds for Im­
provements required by new devel­
opment from the new development
rather than from those already
living In the city and have not
caused the Impact.
"W e've also been working on
other fees.” Tciry said.

Humane Society Gets Custody Of Kennel Animals
By Charles Cobb
Herald S ta ff W riter
The Humane Society of Seminole
County has been granted permanent
custody of six animals seized at an
Oviedo area kennel last August.
Seminole County Judge Alan Dickey
ruled Monday that Laurian Spanklc.
owner of the Snow Hill Kennels and
Plant Farm was “ unable or unfit due to
neglect to adequately care" for the six
dogs that were seized at the kennel Aug.
25.

hearing to determine the exact amount
Mrs. Spankle owed the Humane Society
for the animal's care.
The Stale Attorney's ofllce has also
filed nine counts of animal cruely
charges against Ms. Spankle. A date for
this criminal trial has not yet been set.
Mrs. Spankle's attorney, J. Russell
Hornsby, had filed a motion seeking a
continuance of the civil trial to de­
termine custody of the animals, but
Dickey denied the motion at the hearing
Monday.

Gerald Korinan. attorney for the
Humane Society, said the Humane
Society has already run up a bill of about
$1,000 In feeding and caring for the
animals.

"Baaed on the testimony I've heard
and the pictures I’*** seen. Mrs. Spankle
should not have custody o f these
animals. ' Dickey said.

Dickey said he would schedule a future

Hornsby had requested that the civil

trial be continued until the criminal
charges against Mrs. Spankle were
disposed of. Otherwise, he said. Mrs.
Spankle should be granted Immunity If
she testified during the civil trial so that
her testimony could not be used against
her later In the civil trial.
But Dickey said he could find no
Justification for granting Immunity to
Mrs. Spankle or for continuing the civil
trial.

the trial began.
Dickey denied all motions to continue
the trial.
"W e are delighted with the outcome."
said Helen Wolk. president o f the
Humane Society. She said the six dogs
would be placed with private ownere
very soon. "W e already have people
watting to adopt them." she said.

On Mqnday Hornsby also requested a
continuance of the civil trial until blood
samples from the seized animals could
be analyzed to determine tf the animals
were suffering from malnutrition.

Authorities seized eight dogs and a
kitten Judged to need medical attention
at Mis. Spankle's kennel on County
Road 426 northeast of Oviedo during an
an im al c ru e lty In v es tiga tio n and
Humane Society representatives said the
animals were abused and neglected.

But Korman charged tlial Hornsby was
stalling for time and trying to reopen the
case because he was not prepared when

Two of the dogs and the kitten have
died. Mrs. Spankle's license to commer­
cially board animals has been revoked.

T h e death o f a 21-year-old
Casselberry mun was caused by a
hemorrhaging brain tumor, not
fluid In his lungs as originally
thought, according to Seminole
County Medical Examiner G.V.
Garay.
The body of James Kinsloc, of 232
Bridal Path. Casselberry, was dis­
covered the morning of Oct. 8
outside the An im al C lin ic of
C a s s e lb e r r y . 1025 S e m ln o la
Boulevard, where he was employed
as a aide to veterinarian Dr. Alex
Suerro. Fellow employee Denise
Caron found the body lying on the
ground when she reported to work
at 7:45 a.m.
He was believed to have died
about 10 p.m. the night before. Foul
play was ruled out In the prelimi­
nary autopsy findings, but a combi­
nation of a drug and alcohol was
originally thought by Garay to be a
possible cause ot the pulmonary
edema or fluid buildup In victim’s
lungs.
Klnsloe had pain from a long
standing leg problem for which he
sometimes took medication.
An analysis of tissue and blood
samples by toxicologists at a labora­
tory at Orlando Regional Medical
Center revealed only a trace of the
drug Vallum and only .10 percent
blood-alcohol level. Garay said that
was not enough to cause the fluid In
the lungs, which was caused by the
hemorrhaging.
Garay said the tumor, located as It
was at a vital spot at the base of the
brain, would have been Inoperable
even had It been diagnosed before It
was too late. He said the tumor, a
very rare type, could have been
growing for as mud&lt; as a year, but
a p p a r e n tly b een u n d e te c te d
because It was deep with In the
brain tissue. He said the type of
tumor sometimes grows very rapid­
lyRupert C. Klnsloe. o f 1112 Winter
Springs Boulevard. Winter Springs,
said his son did not suffer from
headaches as far as he knew.
Bom In Miami. James moved to
Winter Springs
from there In
1962 —Jane Casselberry.

TODAY
Action Reports.................2A
Around The Clock.......... 4A
Bridge................................6B
Classifieds.....................4,SB
Comics...............................6B
Crossword........................ 6B
Dear A bby.........................IB
Deaths.............................. 3A
D r. Lam b......................... 6B

Editorial.......................&lt;A

W ednesday

A representative of
U.S. Rep. BUI Mc­
Collum's office will
be In Sanford Wed­
nesday to meet with
persons who need
congressional
assistance.

No appointment Is
necessary to meet
Hospital........................2A w i t h t h e s t a f f
N ation................................ 2A member anytime be­
People................................ IB tween 0:30 a.m. and
Sports............................. 5.6A 11 a.m. in the county
Television......................... IB com m ission cham ­
W eath er............................ 2A bers at the Seminole
W orld................................. 3A County courthouse.

F lo rid a...............................3A
Horoscope.........................6B

It's Going To Get Spooky 'Round Here
by Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
If you want to be the ghost of the town now
Is the time to bleach' out your sheets and
prepare to visit your favorite haunts because
Halloween, the holiday for those who scare to
send the very best. Is coming.
There will be plenty of activities around the
county to give all the little guys and ghouls a
chance to show off their costumes and get In
some scream therapy.
The Sanford-Semlnole Jayceeo will hold
their "Haunted House" behind the Jaycee
building at 427 French Ave.. Sanford. Oct.
22-23 and 26-31. 7-10 p.m.. weekdays, and
weekends from 7 p.m. ’til as late as the
crowds keep coming. Admission will he $1 tor
children and $1.50 for those 16 years and
older.
The Altamonte-South Seminole Jaycees
a n i Women Jaycees are sponsoring "Igor’s
Haunted Mansion" located at State Road 436
and Park Place. Altamonte Springs (Just
behind Peaches Records). It will be open at
7:30 p.i . nightly Oct. 21-31.

Admission is $2 a ticket and discount
tickets are available to children through
Seminole County Schools. A portion of the
pioreeds will be contributed to the Diabetes
Research Institute and the Altamonte Springs
Historical Society. The remaining will be
used for various Jaycee community protects.
There will be 40-45 different monsters and
creatures on hand to provide excitement.
The Winter Springs Fire Department In­
vites you to the second annual "Haunted
House" to be held at the Village Market Place
Shopping Center on State Road 434. It will be
open from 6-10 p.m. Friday, through Mon­
day. Oct. 28 31. Prizes will be awarded for
coatume contests and more. Admission Is $1.
Tickets are available at the door.
Pine Crest Elementary School PTA Is
sponsoring
a Halloween Carnival at the
school at 405 W. 27th St.. Sanford on
Saturday. Oct. 29. horn 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. to
raise money to buy chorus risers and a
canopy cover or computer. Attractions
planned Include* a "Spook House," sponge
throw at the principal and coach, cake walk.

clown faces or Halloween faces painted, fish
pond and hay ride. There will also be good
things local.
The Sanford Recreation Department In
cooperation with the Seminole Dcmolay and
Rainbow Girls, will hold Its second annual
Halloween "Haunted House" for children 12
and under from 6:30-8:30 p.m. on Monday,
Oct. 31 In the Cultural Arts Building on the
comer of Fifth Street and Oak Avenue.
Admission will be 25 cents per person.
The recreation department will give each
child will be provlocri with an extra measure
of safety . a special Super Safety Trick-orTreat Bag (TM). which has been provided
through Sampling Corporation ol America for
the Citrus Hill Orange Juice Co. The plastic
bag Includes safety rules and Is printed on
both sides with a special fluorescent Ink. A
child carrying this bag will be visible to
motorists because of the bright reflection of
color. Each child will get a "safety patch"
with similar coloring and adhesive to hr worn
on the hack of their outer garments or
See SPOOKY, page 2A

�1A—Evsnln* Hsrald, Sanford, FI.

Tutiday, Oct. II, N il

5a

NATION
IN BRIEF
Last Ditch Effort
* r _ t»M
I V Stall
"
KingSIII
WASHINGTON (UFI) - The bill to establish a
national holiday In honor of civil tights crusader
Martin Luther King Jr. appears certain to pass
the Senate Wednesday but conservatives have
not abandoned hope of derailing the proposal.
Shortly after the Senate begins debate on the
bill today. Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., will call for
n vote that would send It buck to committee.
The Senate Is expected to reject Helm’s demand
overwhelmingly.
Another ploy of Helms Is scheduled for a
hearing In Washington at about the same time.
The conservative Southern senator Asked U.S.
District Judge John Lewis to unseal con­
troversial transcripts and tapes that came from
an FBI campaign to discredit King because of
alleged communist Influence on his crusade for
racial equality.
Helms and other conservatives rallied against
the Idea of adding a 10th national holiday say
there Is considerable concern about the cost of
giving federal workers another paid day off. an
estimated $18 million.

Reportedly Sold Missile Secrets

Soviet Spy Suspect SayslHe'il Cooperate
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — For eight years an
American electronics engineer sold
“ extremely
sensitive” U.S. missile secrets to Moscow In a spying
operation so successful it won the praise of Soviet leader
Yuri A n d ro p o v , the FBI says.
James Dunvard Harper. 49, a high technology
cunsuiiani who lives In California’s "Silicon Valley,"
was formally charged Monday with selling the secrets
about the Mlnuteman missile system for $250,000.
"I have no Intention of hiring a lawyer." the clean-cut,
well-groomed Harper told U.S. Magistrate Owen
Woodruff. "M y Intent Is to cooperate with the
government In every way I can to expedite the
proceedings."
Harper was ordered held without ball and a
preliminary hearing was set for Oct. 27.
The FBI said Harper’s announcement that he would
cooperate came as a surprise since he was planning
another trip to Eastern Europe when he was arrested
Saturday.
Starting In 1975. Harper provided more than 100
national defense secrets relating to the Mlnuteman

missile system to a high-ranking officer In the Polish
Intelligence agency at various locations In Europe, the
FBI said In a 33-page affidavit filed In federal court.
The FBI said the Polish Intelligence officer Immediate­
ly gave the material to the Soviet KGB.
Hamer nhfnin»yi ifc- sensitive material ft am liia wife.
Ruby Louise Schuler, who had top security clearance at
Systems Control Inc., a Palo Alto. Calif, firm with
numerous government contracts, the FBI said. Ms.
Schuler died June 22 of natural causes.
The FBI said a double agent, described as a
high-ranking officer In the Polish Intelligence communi­
ty, exposed the spy network to American officials.
The FBI said In 1961 Harper had attempted to come
forward and disclose Ills activities anonymously through
an attorney In exchange for Immunity. That plea was
rejected, the FBI said, and Harper continued his
espionage.
After the first documents were handed over, "a special
team of about 20 KGB analysts and engineers was
dispatched by plane from Moscow to Warsaw to evaluate
the Importance and authenticity of the material the

Historic G ra m m a r School Lunchroom To Close
By Micheal Bcha
Herald Staff Writer
The longest continuously used lunch­
room In the state will close Us doors for
the last time at the end o f the 1983-84
school year.
The lunchroom, the first In Seminole
County, opened at Sanford Grammar
School In 1921 thanks to a $2,000
donation from the Sanford Woman's
Club. Members o f the woman's club
were on hand recently to commemorate
the opening of the lunchroom 62 years
ago.
Mrs. Henry Wight, chairman of the
club's welfare committee, developed the
Idea for the lunchroom and a hot lunch
program In 1920 after visiting friends In
Orlando who talked about the hot
lunches their children were getting at
schools there.

Millions Down The Sewer
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Environmental Pro­
tection Agency Investigators report that the
federal government has lost $400 million from
delays In building hundreds o f municipal
sewage treatment plants nationwide.
In an Internal audit report released Monday,
the office of EPA Inspector General Donald
Klrkendall blamed the delays in 634 projects on
lack of aggressive enforcement action by agency
officials.
The report to EPA Administrator William
Ruckelshaus also cited the failure of state and
local officials to fulfill construction schedules
they had premised to meet.
Th e con stru ction gran t program was
authorized by the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act as part o f a national effort begun In
the 1970s to clean up massive waste water
discharges from municipal sewage facilities.

T h e lu n c h ro o m was b u ilt and
equipped by the Woman's Club and the
dedication took place Oct. 10.1921.

Botulism Reported
PEORIA. 111. (UPI) — At least 23 people who
ate “ patty melt" sandwiches at a restaurant
during the weekend were hospitalized with
symptoms o f botulism and M were in serious
condition, health ofllcfals said.
The numbers of victims taken to hospitals
escalated rapidly through the day and evening
Monday. Hospital officials said no new victims
had been admitted after midnight Monday.
Thomas Jackamore. acting Peoria County
health director, said more cases could turn up
because the first symptoms of botulism — dry
mouth and double vision — can appear as late
os 36 hours after eating the contaminated food.
Health officials did not blame the restaurant
for the outbreak, saying the tainted food was not
necessarily prepared on the premises. They
suspected pickles served with the sandwich may
have been contaminated.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Six-Inch rains deluged parts of
Texas for the second day running, heavy rains swamped
parts of Arkansas, and freezing temperatures moved
into Minnesota. Thunderstorms early today pounded
Florida, where Daytona Beach already had received 6
Inches of rain In two days. The mercury fell below the
freezing mark In Minnesota, reaching 29 at International
Falls and 24 at Warroad shortly after midnight. Rain
spread from Texas to Florida Monday night, and
stretched north to Illinois. Rain also was widespread
across the Pacific Northwest. Newly 6 Inches of rain fell
In five hours at Bevtl Oaks, Texas, causing local
flooding.

American had delivered. " the FBI said.
"The Soviet KGB personnel were extremely excited to
have the documents, which related to the Mlnuteman
missile and ballistic mlwil*- defense system? and which
the KGB had been unsuccessfully seeking all over the
world,"
The material covered "extremely sensitive research
and development efforts undertaken by the Department
of Defense." (he FBI said.
Agents quoted their double agent In Poland as saying
that at an annual department meeting a commendation
signed by Andropov, then the head o f the KGB. was
presented to the agents.
The FBI and other government sources refused
additional comments about what the Information
disclosed to the Soviets about the missile system.
The Mlnuteman III system, which is located In silos In
Wyoming. Nebraska. North Dakota and Montana. Is the
most advanced U.S. land-based missile system and
provides first-strike capability.

Members of the Sanford Woman's Club, which helped start the lunchroom
at Sanford G ram m a r School 62 years ago, enjoy their last meal in the
facility which w ill shut down when the school Is closed at the end of the
school yaar. Pictured from let!, Kale Nash, Sanford City Commissioner
Ned Yancey, P at Foster, Louise Nelson and M rs. Ralph Austin Smith.

"The club members held dances, bake
sales and pressured their husbands to
give everything they could." said former
club president. Mrs. Ralph Austin Smith.
"One company donated a lot of lumber."
In those days. Sanford Grammar was
the only elementary school In the city.
Lunches were 10 cents (needy children
ate free). Virginia Smith was the cook

No Casualties In Grocery Store Blast
DAVIS CREEK. W.Va. (UPI) - A
natural gas pipeline ruptured by a
w o r k m e n ’ s cran e set o ff an
explosion that leveled a grocery
store full of Bhoppers and Injured 17
people, but officials who feared as
many as 10 dead said today It
appeared "there are no bodies In
there."
C h arlotte M itch ell said the
explosion Monday at the Foodland
grocery store knocked her down but
an unknown man got her out of the
building.
"I thought I was trapped." she
said. “ When I got up. I was
disoriented and started toward the
back of the store, but fires started
breaking out around me and stuff
kept falling on me.
"He |her rescuer) kept helping me
up and told me to stay calm and not
panic. I didn't even see his face, but
it's Just by the grace of God 1 got
out."
A meeting was to be held today l&lt;&gt;
go over all available Information
about how the situation was
handled from the time a 4-lnch gas
pipeline ruptured until after the
explosion.

"smelled gas for two or three hours
before tne explosion."
"Everybody noticed It. It was real
strong. The whole store was smell­
ing." Moore said.
State medical examiner Irvin
Sophcr told reporters early today
that all vehicles found near the store
after the blast "have living drivers
and owners," that all 37 Foodland
employees were accounted for and
there were no reports of missing
people.
"The current feeling Is that there
are no bodies In there." Sopher said.
"That Is the greatest news we’ve
had all day.”
He said firefighters were able to
burrow Into the aisles burled
beneath the collapsed roof of the
10.000-square-foot store, but found
no bodies.
Sopher and state police had pro­
jected earlier that as many as 10
people may have died In the
explosion.
P a t r ic ia G o ld m a n , v ic e
chairwoman of the National Trans­
portation Safety Board who arrived
to head up an Investigative team,
confirmed that a crane operated by
a construction crew was responsible
for a rupture In a 4-lnch pipeline
that led to the explosion.
She said the pipeline was pulled
by the crane at one place and It

AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today with a
40 percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs In
the mid to upper 80s. Winds east 15 mph. Tonight and
Wednesday, partly cloudy with a slight chance o f mainly
Store employee Edward Moore,
afternoon and evening showers or thunderstorms. Lows
19. South Charleston. Ills hands
near 70. Highs upper 80s. Winds tonight east 10 mph.
co v e red with blood and still
Rain chance 20 percent both tonight and Wednesday.
trembling, said employees had
BOATINO FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Small craft shoexerclse caution.
Northeast to east 15 to 20 knots today und easterly 15
knots tonight and Wednesday, Seas 4 to 6 feet. Winds
and seas higher near scattered showers and scattered
thunderstorms.
A Longwood man was being held in the Seminole
AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 76; County Jail under $10,000 bond today charged with
overnight low: 71; Monday's high: 78; barometric sexually assaulting a 33-ycar-old Longwood woman.
Franklin Wood. 45. of 156 Manor Drive. Longwood,
pressure: 30.05; relative humidity: 76 percent; winds:
northeast at 8 mph; rain: .2 Inch; sunrise: 7:28 a.m., was arrested at 7:15 p.m. Monday by Longwood police
at hls home.
sunset 6:53 p.m.
Wood Is accused of picking up the woman, whom he
WEDNESDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs, 707
a.m.. 7:31 p.m.; lows. 12:45 a.m.. 103 p.m.; Port knew, and her two children at about 3 p.m. at the bus
Canaveral: highs. 6:59 a.m.. 7:23 p.m.: lows. 12:36 station in Apopka. On the way home, according to police
a.m.. 12:54 p.m.; Bajport: highs. 12:51 a.m.. 1:04 reports. Wood allegedly drove to an orange grove, got a
blanket out of the trunk and walked with the woman to
p.m.: lows. 7 :10a.m., 7:24
a secluded part of the grove.
She told police Wood took her clothes off and raped
her. After the assault, she said. Wood threatened to
harm her antf the children If she reported the attack.
The woman told her husband about the assault and he
called the police.

ruptured at another point It was
not clear how the gas Ignited.
Many witnesses reported smelling
gas In the area, located a mile or two
from Charleston, for about four
hours prior to the explosion.
Gov. Jay Rockefeller and Rep.
Bob Wise. D-W.Va.. surveyed the
debris at the explosion site and
Rockefeller said he felt It was a
miracle the roof fell In such a way as
to provide a tunnel through which
people could escape.
State police trooper C.R. Martin,
one of the first to arrive on the
scene, said the building was
enveloped In flames when he ar­
rived and three walls were gone.
"It was a tremendous explosion
plus several small explosions."
Martin said.
Once the flames were controlled, a
crane was used to partially lift the
store roof and firefighters spread out
In a line to comb the debris with
rakes.
A spokeswoman for Thomas Me­
morial Hospital in nearby South
Charleston said the facility received
seven of- the injured, with four
Admitted for treatment and the rest
released.
Only five of the Injured were
admitted to area hospitals. The rest
were treated and released.

and lunchroom supervisor and the
woman's club ran operations at the
lunchroom.
"They ran It well enough to pay for'
Itself." said Mis. Smith." ,
As the years passed and other schools
were built, workers In the Sanford
Grammar kitchen began preparing
meals which were sent to the other
schools.
Eventually though, the school's kitch­
en equipment became outmoded. The
kitchen was closed In the 1970s but the
lunchroom remained open, serving
lunches prepared at Seminole High
School? Today, lunch costs 90 cents.
Mrs. Smith said state education of­
ficials have told club members the
lunchroom has been used longer than
any other in the state.
When thfe Seminole County School
Board voted earlier this year to close
Sanford Grammar along with jwo other
Sanford elementary schools to make way
for Hamilton Elementary School, club
members started making plans to visit
the lunchroom they started all those
years ago for one last time.
"It will be a sad moment when they
close the school." said Mrs. Smith. "But
the Woman's Club can be proud we were
a part of Its history."

McFarlane Selection
Upsets Conservatives
WASHINGTON IUPJI - By selecting Robert
McFarlane as his national security adviser Instead of
U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, President
Reagan again snubbed his most conservative
supporters.
Reagan Monday announced his selection of
McFarlane, hls personal envoy to the Middle East, to
the national security post. He chose the 46-year-old
former Marine lieutenant colonel for the key foreign
policy position over Mrs. Kirkpatrick, who aides say
wanted the Job and was backed by conservative
supporters.
Reagan met with Mrs. Kirkpatrick Monday
afternoon before he went Into the White House press
center to announce hls decision to replace William
Clark with McFarlane. Clark was named lost week to
replace Secretary of the Interior James Watt.
Reagan rejected reports that Mrs. Kirkpatrick was
angry over being passed over and Insisted that she Is
remaining on as ambassador to the United Nations.
Mrs. Kirkpatrick has let It be Known that she la
Interested In returning to Washington.
Conservative fund-raiser Richard Vlguerte com­
pared the McFarlane appointment to that of
Secretary of State George Shultz, another ap­
pointment he opposed.
"For the first Umc since President Reagan took
office, the top two foreign policy Jobs, secretaiy of
state and national security adviser will be held by
someone who Is not a conservative," he said. "It Is
becoming more and more apparent that con­
servatives have next to no Influence on the major
decisions of the Reagan administration."

Longwood M an Accused O f Rape In Orange Grove

HOSPITAL NOTES
Ctn1r*l F ko d * Rtfltoriil Mjtptl.il
ADMISSIONS

Sipfofd Ch*'l*tW br*ntl*y
Mardtll Gontvfman
Op*IM Kfrrpckfr
L ia m i W Sl*»»rt

Ro m Wttion
MArttv* S. V»nt*f
Ch*r k i L Scuddtr, D*B*ry
F a r* M. Arktrt. Of Land
Kannttti H F m t , 0 * lion#
Hfttfi M Potter, Dot'ana
Thaon* M Jrfmton, Enterprlt#
Franca* P. OartaH.Oanata

E v e n in g H e r a ld

DISCHARQEt
Sanford
RobtMD.Coofe
Jam ftM McCf*
RobtriL McKartnfy
Sylvia 0 Sigmon
Tammy L Sion* and baby girl
William R. Jarman. Dtlhma
Mary Hill, U S * Monro*
Cnrlttl A Aabby, Tllwtvlll*

POWER OUT IN SANFORD
About 1.500 Florida Power &amp; Light customers were
without electricity for 14 minutes today when a circuit
breaker at a substation malfunctioned.
An FP&amp;L spokesman said a circuit breaker which
refused to kick back on at a substation on State Road 46
had to be reset by hand.
Power was out from 8:45 to 8:59 p.m.

BIRTHS
Jam** and Marla Wllfon. a baby
girt, Ofltena
Mr. and Mr*. Danny Barton, a
brby girl, DfBary

STOCKS

«»•* *»

Tuesday, October 11, 19*3—Vol. 7*. No. 51
Publltbfd Dally and Svnday, *r c *p ! Saturday t y Tha Sanford
Htrald. lac., M N . Frtnch A » * . Santerd, Fla. H i l l ,
Sacand C la ti P*ttaga Paid at taaterd. Florida JJJJI
Hama Datlvary: Watk. l i . t t ; Manta, M .U i I MantM. Ilf .M i
Yaar, 141 oo. By Mall: WtaA S M I) Maaflt. Si 11/ « Mentht.
I l f ao j Yaar. D I M

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Action Reports
★

Fires

zone.
—Richard Rose, 28. who wouldn't give an address, was
arrested at 8:32 p.m. Monday at the Mobil station on
State Road 15 In Casselberry. Police said he was driving
erratically on Slate Road 436 prior to hls arrest.

* Courts
★

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the
following calls:

Police

Monday
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were arrested In Seminole
County on a charges of driving under the Influence:
—Thomas Guessfond. 23. of Orlando, was arrested at
3:34 a.m. Tuesday on State Road 15 in Casselberry.
Police said he was driving 65 miles per hour In a 45 mph

—7:30 a.m.. 1975 W. 25th St., rescue.
— 11:35 a.m.. 218 W. 12th St., rescue.
— 12:05 p.m.. Apt. 79. Redding Gardens.
— 1:13 p.m., 301 N. Park St., rescue.
—2:08 p.m.. 161 W. Airport Blvd., rescue.
—7:52 p.m., 364 Gulf Cove Court, rescue.
—8:50 p.m.. 401 Holly Ave., rescue.

...Spooky Doings Set For Holiday Week
Continued from page 1A
costumes for further visibility.
Parents are welcome.
A Halloween Carnival Is also
scheduled In Geneva by the Geneva
Historical and Genealogical Society,
Saturday, Oct. 29. beginning at 5
p.m. at the Community Ccn'.er on
First Street. A costume parade will
begin at 6 p.m. There will be games
and contests appealing to older
youth, not to mention the "Museum
of Gore &amp; Guts." If that doesn't take
away your appetite there will be
food available Including Sausage
Subs, Mexican Pizza and cotton
candy.
During the week prior to Hallow­
een McDonald's Restaurant In con­
junction with the Sanford Police

Department and the Seminole High
School Anchor Club will be going lo
pre-schools and elementary schools
In Sanford to present a Halloween
"Safely Week” show to inform the
children the rules for safe trick or
treating. The McDonald's character,
Hamburglcr will be featured. On
Halloween night girls from the
Anchor Club, as well as some
off-duty McDonald's employees will
be stationed In pairs about the city
to look after the little Trick-orTreaters.
Debbie Hanna of McDonald's, who
will be coordlngatlng the safety
program, said those participating
will be given orientation before
going out and will have Identifica­
tion. She said she and the Anchor

Club sponsor will be driving around
checking on things. McDonald's will
also be giving out treats to Trick or
Treaters who come to the restau­
rant.
The Central Florida YMCA in­
cluding Its nine branches over a five
county area. Is planning "Operation
Safe Spookin'"In an effort to offer
parents and their children fun and
safe activities. Activities range from
c v e r n l g h t sl eep-l ns.
carnivals,"chambers o f horrors for
older children, to Casper's Ghost
Town for children six and under.
For more Information on the " Y "
nearest you. call 896-9220. Pro­
ceeds from Halloween events will go
lo the YMCA World Service Fund.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF

Tmtdiy, Oct. II, l»»J—1A

S h u ttle D e la y/
Launch Now Set For Late November Or Early '84

Rebels Cut Off Key
Salvadoran Town
United P r e u International
Leftist rebels In El Salvador cut off a key city
only 30 miles north of the capital and
U.S.-backed guerrillas In Nicaragua threatened
to destroy ships carrying petroleum In their
drive to starve the Sandtnlsta regime of vital oil
supplies.
Salvadoran authorities Monday closed schools
and other public buildings and placed the 300
security forces In the city of Suchltoto on full
alert, residents reported. Five miles outside the
city, the rebels took control of the only road
leading lo Suchltoto and turned traffic away.
The city guards the northern flank of San
Salvador and Is only 20 miles from two
hydroelectric dams that provide electricity for
more than 50 percent of the country. It has been
besieged by rebels twice In the Inst year.
In Nicaragua In the past six weeks, the
guerrillas have destroyed nearly 4 million
gallons of gasoline and diesel fuel In two
separate raids cn storage facilities.

North Says South Did It
TOKYO |UP1) — North Korea called South
Korean President Chun Doo Hwan a "truculent
m u rd erer'* tod ay and accused him o f
masterminding the Rangoon bombing that
killed 17 South Koreans. Including lop govern­
ment members.
The rharge carried by the North Korean
Central News Agency was the first accusing
Chun of a part In the explosion. The broadcast
reported the contents of an article In Rodong
S/nmun. the newspaper o f the ruling Workers
Communist Party Central Committee.
South Korea has accused North Korea of
setting off the bomb Oct. 9. and U.S. officials
have said circumstantial evidence pointed to
Pyongyang.
Following the explosion, which killed four
South Korean cabinet ministers and other
presidential aides, Chun reorganized his gov­
ernment and appointed a new Cabinet.

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - Space agency officials
today considered a laic-Novcinbcr biastoll or one early
next year for the shuttle Columbia, which was pulled
from Its seaside launch pad to undergo repairs.
In an unprecedented transfer. Columbia was removed
from Pad 39-A Monday and carried on a giant land
crawler to an assembly building so technicians can
replace part c f a potentially defective rocket booster.
n was the llrst time a shuttle had to be returned from
a launch pad for repairs. It was NASA's first "rollback"
since Apollo 16 was taken from the pad In January 1972
because of fuel tank problems.
The Columbia, carrying the $800 million Europeanbuilt Spacelab in its cargo bay, had been scheduled for
launch Oct. 28. but now will fly no earlier than Nov. 28.
However, some project officials arc pressing for a delay
until Feb. 27 to meet the requirements of several of the
72 experiments planned for the nine-day mission.
Some plasma physics experiments require night
conditions over the Southern Hemisphere for auroral

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) — Druzc and
Shiite snipers have escalated attacks on
Lebanon's army, U.S. Marines and other
peace-keeping forces to try to derail the
start of peace talks among Lebanon's
warring factions. ofTlclals said.
The rebels, seeking greater power In
the Christian-led government of Presi­
dent Amin Gemayel, killed a Lebanese
soldier and a civilian In east Beirut
Monday. An Italian soldier was wounded

d a y s a jju .o flr r tils .p la n to lin k tlie ccotiOrtiy.16

B orgon .H oh e w h e re p eace protesters

the U.S. dollar was disowned by Shamir.

were to demonstrate outside a

IN BRIEF
PSC Splits With Feds
Over Telephone Charge
TALLAH ASSEE (UPI) - Public Service
Commission Chairman Gerald Gunter says
Florida will be fair when Imposing Its telephone
access charge, while the Federal Communica­
tions Commission Is )&gt;clng unfair.
The PSC spilt with the FCC Monday,
establishing the conlrovcrtal new access charge
as purt of long distance rates, not local service
rates.
AH Florida telephone subscribers won't pay
the Intrastate portion of the access charge
necessary because of the breakup of giant
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph, although
they w ill pay the $2 Interstate charge
established by the FCC earlier this year.
The In state charge will be collected from long
distance customers und will be based on the
amount of long distance service so that people
making lots of calls will pay more than those
making only a few calls.
The permanent decision will be made after a
final round of hearings beginning Nov. 7. The
In state access charge must be In place by next
Jan. 1.

Asked what the crew thought about the long delay. I
Bilodeau sa'd, " I ’m sure this didn't please John Young. •
but then he didn't want a bad booster either."
Columbia's rocket booster problems surfaced last •
month when engineers discovered abnormal erosion on •
boosters that propelled the shuttle Challenger Into flight •
on Its August mission.
The carbon insulation In one ol Columbia’s two
boosters was made from Ihe same batch as Challenger's.
Engineers fear the Insulation lining might be
defective, so the nozzle on the right rocket booster will
be replaced.
Mission coordinator James Harrington said the
Columbia will be detached from Its rocket boosters and
external tank by Wednesday. Crews then will move the ;
sparcplane to a giant repair shed where the suspect •
nozzle will be replaced.
Harrington said workers would have Columbia ready
for a return to its launch pad by Nov. 10.

by cross-fire.
Intense gunfire also forced Lebanese
soldiers to close the main road to the
U.S, base surrounding the Beirut airport.
The guerrillas killed two Marines and
wounded seven others in four days of
attacks ending Sunday but the White
House said the Marines would stay put
"as long as the president thinks it's
necessary.'* deputy press secretary Larry
Speakcssald.

Six Marines have been killed In
combat and 56 wounded since the
peace-keeping force arrived last year. A
seventh Marine died In an accident
clearing minefields.
T h e M a r in e s r e m a in e d o h a
condltion-2 alert, minimizing their
exposu re and w earin g p ro tective
equipment.
Beirut Radio also reported Druzc
mortar attacks on Souk El Gharb. the

major NATO troop exercise area. In
Fulda, anti-nuclear protesters
scheduled protests outside U.S. milllury establishments.
The 10 days of nationwide de­
monstrations. which began Thurs­
day. are In protest of the scheduled
NATO deployment of 572 U.S.
cruise and Pershing-2 missiles In
western Europe to begin In De­
cember unless there Is progess nt
the U.S.-Soviet arms talks In
Geneva.
In an In terview with S te m
magazine Monday. Col.-Gen. Nikolai
Chervov, Soviet Red Army general
staff officer, warned the Soviet
Union will deploy nuclear missiles
capable of blasting targets In the
United States If the NATO deploy­
ment goesahead.
In what Stem said was the first
admission by a high-ranking Soviet
official that there ore Soviet nuclear
weapons deployed outside Russia.

Chervov said Soviet divisions sta­
tioned In East Bloc countries arc
arm ed w ith ta c tic a l n u clea r
weapons.
C hervov warned that If the
Geneva talks fall, Moscow will
deploy a new "and very good"
rocket in East Germany and move
e x is tin g SS-20 m edium -range
rockets Into the extreme western
part of the Soviet Union closest to
Europe.
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko, in East Berlin for talks
with East German leader Erich
Honeckcr. said a solution at the
Geneva talks was "still possible."
In a report by the official Soviet
news agency TASS. Honeckcr told
Gromyko NATO deployment of U.S.
Pershlng-2 and cruise missiles in
W est Europe would force thr
W arsaw Pact nallonq, to rlake
' ’counter-measures."

army-held Shouf Mountain town 8 miles
southeast of Beirut that rebels tried for
three weeks to overrun before the
cease-fire.
The talks among representatives of
Lebanon's warring factions, plus ob­
servers from Syria and Saudi Arabia, arc
scheduled to begin Thursday.
Representatives of the factions met Iasi
week and devloped an agenda for the
talks.

Mi l !

Anti-Nuke Protesters Target Consulates

TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) — Overcoming coali­
tion opposition. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir
designated a hawk with business Interests In the
occupied West Bank as the country's next
finance minister charged with healing Israel's
ailing economy.
The 120-member Knesset, or parliament,
must approve the choice of Ylgal Cohen-Orgad,
46. as flnunce minister In a vote Israel Radio
said was expected Tuesday. Non-ratlflcatlon
would be tantamount to a vote of no-confldencc
In Shamir's 8-day-old government.
Orgad will replace Yoram Arldor who quit five

FLORIDA

t r a in i n g d u r i n g t h e r.CX t «. ** w e e k s tu k e e p s it a i p.

Attacks Aimed At Delaying Start Of Peace Talks

BONN, West Germany tUPI) —
West Germany's peace movement,
staging ft 10-day protest against
new U.S. nuclear missiles, targeted
weapons factories and American
and Soviet consulates across the
country for demonstrations today.
The movement planned day-long
protests outside the American and
Soviet missions In Hamburg and
Munich while in Bonn and Freiburg
protesters prepared to march on
West German arms export compa­
n ies to d em o n s tra te a g a in st
weapons sales.
A peace movement spokesman In
Bonn said Monday the arms firms
bore the responsibility for the
"misery, death, and crippling of
hundreds of people — especially
those In the Third World."
Other actions were planned for
today In Hanover and in nearby

Shamir Chooses Hawk

studies and such conditions will not exist In N n v e m h e r
said Mary Jo Smith, Spacelab 1 project manager at
NASA headquarters in Washington.
Some astronomy and atmospheric studies experi­
ments also require dark conditions elsewhere and they
arc limited In November.
NASA ofTlclals are pushing for the late November
blastoff to keep the shuttle launch schedule Intact.
Officials said a new launch da&gt;e could be established
as early as Wednesday when NASA administrator
James Beggs confers with his counterpart In the
European Space Agency.
Columbia will carry a record six-man crew Into orbit
— mission commander John Young, copilot Brewster
Shaw, and scientists Owen Garriolt, Robert Parker.
Byron Llchtenbcrg and Ulf Mcrbold. a West German
physicist.
Ironically, Young was commander of the Apollo 16
mission.
Jim Bilodeau, head of crew training at the Johnson
Space Center, said the crew will undergo some brush-up

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Wednesday All Tickets $20
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3 2 3 -0 8 8 1

Billy Brooks Coffman
ir*. 62. of 701 W. 24th St.,
ianford. died Sunday at
lorldu Hospital, Orlando,
lorn Dec. 1. 1920. in
losep h ln e, T e x a s , he
noved lo Sanford from
.ubhork. Texas In 1962.
le was a general laborer
nd a Baptist.
He Is survived by his
rife. Kathleen.; mother,
fyrtle Coffman, Gunther,
’exas; sons. Billy B. Jr.
nd Stephen E., both of
an ford.; sister. Joyce
'artcr. Dallas; four grandhlldren.
Gramkow Funeral Home
i In charge of arrangetents.

ACHILLIAS FAS8A8
Mr. Achlltlas Faa&amp;as. 62.
f 6 6 5 C h e ls e a S t .,
ongwood. died Monday at
Is home. Bom March 21.
921. In Lowell. Mass., he
loved to Longwood from
rxlnglon, Ky. In 1973. He

was owner-operator of a
hay and feed company and
was a Greek Orthodox. He
was u U.S. Navy veteran of
World War II.
Survivors Include his
wife. Evelyn: sons. Tarcy
J.. Lexington, and John
A .. L o n g w o o d ; th re e
daughters. Mrs. Margaret
P a h lg ia n . L a w r e n c e .
M ass., Mrs. K ath leen
Gabriel, North Andover.
Mass., and Mrs. Evelyn
M a s s le . L e x in g t o n :
parents, Anastasua and
Sultana. Pelham, N.H.:
s i s t e r . M rs. T h o m a l
Slnopolous, Pelham; 11
grandchildren.
C o x -P a rk e r F u n eral
Home, Winter Park. Is In
charge of arrangements.

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C o lli *31-0*41

ORLANDO (UPI) — Investigative agents working for
the Environmental Protection Agency Increasingly are
confronting violent suspects and want Congress to grant
them police powers Including the right to carry guns.
But some members of Congress who support the EPA
request for powers akin to those of a U.S. Marshal are
battling meinbess of the Reagan administration who arc
reluctant to give the agents such authority.
Attorney General William French Smith and other
administration officials arc weighing whether EPA
agentB should have police powers, admln'stratlon
officials said.
Smith could simply grant those powers without
congressional action. But If he does not. officials say
Congress must amend 16 federal environmental laws to
achieve Ihe same end.
"The question of a criminal Investigation program at
any place but the FBI raises government-wide issues."
said Michael Brown, the criminal enforcement counsel
Tor EPA.
"A s often as people tell me that U.S.D.A. (Department
of Agriculture) Inspectors cany guns, people in the
federal government get nervous about a bunch of little
law enforcement agents ninning nround the various
ngrncles carrying guns." Brown said.
The resolution of the dispute could define the strength
of a new federal program to prosecute those who violate
the nation's environmental laws.
Among the powers the EPA agents are requesting arc
the right to make arrests and serve search warrants.
Internal agency documents dctnll 12 violent or
potentially violent confrontations Involving EPA agents
since they began conducting criminal Investigations Into
hazardous waste dumping In October 1982.

LUCILLE D. GRANT
Mrs, Lucille D. Grant.
82, o f 488 Tamarac St..
Altamonte Springs, died
Sunday at Florida Hospltal-Altantonle. Bom June
29. 1901, in Elwood, hid.,

DONALD J. KIRBY
Mr. Donald John Kirby.
50. of 693 Williams Road.
Winter Springs, died Sat­
urday at his home. Born
Jan; 11. 1933. in Pit­
tsburgh. he m oved to
Winter Springs from there
In 1 9 7 3 . H e w a s a
salesman and a member of

St. Margaret Mary Catholic
Church.
Survivors Include his
w ife. B everly J.; tw o
daughters. Janet L. and
Jill M.. both of W hite
Springs; molhcr. Florence
M.. Pittsburgh; two sisters.
Mary Ann D'Amico and
Lois Blppus. both of Pit­
tsburgh; brother, Edmond.
Pittsburgh.

Steak Dinner,Sauteed Onions,
Pumpkin Pie and Beverage.
Enjoy a juicy 5 oz. Choice Sirloin Steak, served with a crisp garden
salad, an oven-fresh roll and your choice of potato or rice. Plus, delicious
sauteed onions, your favorite beverage* and a
generous slice of pum pkin pie. All forjust

B a ld w i n - F a i r c h i l d
Funeral Home. Goldcnrod,
1s In charge of arrange­
ments.

Fu n eral N otice
COFFMAN. MR. BILLY S.
—Ftm *r«l iv rv lc t* Iof Mr. Billy
Brook* Cultm jn Sr , 47. of 701 W.
J*tti SI., Sontout, who
Sundiy.
w ill b t hold o l g ro r o tld * in
Evorgroon C*m»l*fy Wtdnotdoy
et 10 o m. with th* f it v Or,
Fro4d&gt; Smith otllcuting Frtondt
moy visit |u t' b*lor* th* torvlco ol
E v t r g r t t n Grom kow Funorol
Horn* In chorg*

Altam onte M ail
Open Sunday 11 nm-8 pm
Mondny-Thursday 11 am-9:30 pm
Friday &amp; Saturday 11 nm-10 pm
Offer good through October 30.1983

5

Hallowe'en Party i *

EPA Investigators
Want To Carry Guns

she moved lo Altamonte
Springs from Toledo. Ohio
In 1966. She was a retired
statistician. She was a
member of the Ladles Ori­
ental Shrine o f North
America. Inc. and Daugh­
ters of Mokanna.
S u rv iv o rs In clude a
brother, Robert' Davis.
Lucas, Ohio; sisters. Elsie
Ursrhel. Lillian Davis,
both of Mansfield. Ohio,
Eunice Howell. Perrysvllle.
O h io . M a rth a W e lls .
Lakewood, Calif.
B a ld w in - F a i r c h i l d
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

\

i---------------------------- 1---------------------------- |p

AREA DEATHS
BILLY B. COFFMAN 8R.

^

fit &lt;

L$» l

�Evening Herald
(USPS i*\ 7 K )

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993 ’
Tuesday, October 18. 1983—4 A

_

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

&amp;)mc Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month. $4 25; 6 Months, $24.00;
VAar MS m Ry M .I); w - k , !1.S; Hssth, 53.S; C
$30.00; Year. $37.00.

Passive Restraints
Should Be O rd ered

li
-i; Years o f research show that passive restraints —
air bags or self-closing scat belts that require no
effort on the d river’s part — arc the best w ay to
wive lives and m inim ize Injury in a car crash. Yet
file Reagan administration continues to fight a
rule Issued by the Carter administration that
Vi'puld make passive restraints standard equiptrient in all cars. If Congress wants to save the rule.
JtjShould make the rule a law.
No solution to the auto-safety problem Is perfect:
Air bags tend not to work well In side crashes:
automatic seat belts arc not as much help in
head-on collisions. But both work better than no
protection at all. Currently, only 15 percent o f
drivers regularly use lap and shoulder belts. Since
Congress resists mandatory scat-belt laws and
other strategies for forcing drivers to buckle up.
passive restraints seem the best alternative. Auto
and insurance experts say they would save 9.000
liyes a year and m arkedly reduce injuries, health
costs and insurance rates.
W hich o f the two devices offers better protection
is still open to debate. Th e Carter adm inistration's
passive-restraint rule, written to fulfill the Intent o f
A 1966 auto-safety law, w isely left that question to
automakers: It required automatic crash protec­
tion o f either sort In all cars by 1983. But
automakers argued that automatic seat belts
would be dismantled by drivers and that air bags
would be too expensive. The Reagan administra­
tion concurred and rescinded the rule last year.
- A federal court quickly reversed that decision,
finding that the administration acted "arbitrarily
and capriciously." In June, the U.S. Supreme
Court unanimously agreed. The Issue, the Justices
said, was whether the administration had fulfilled
Its congressfonally mandated duty to make cars
safe. If detachable seat belts w on 't work, they
wondered, why not make them undetachable? If
that can't be done, why not require air bags? Th e
court found that the administration had Ignored
the life-saving potential o f passive restraints and
ordered it to reconsider Its decision.
T h e ru ling leaves the adm inistration with
several options: It can require passive restraints, It
can m odify the rule, or it can seek reasons for
rejection that would pass supreme court scrutiny.
T h e administration seems Inclined to choose the
m id d le c o u rs e. But c r itic s w o r r y &lt; th a t the
modification will circum vent the auto-safety law
by w riting a weaker rule with a relaxed com pli­
ance deadline.
- Congress should not w'alt long to see what the
administration will do. If Congress wants passive
restraints, it should require them by law. A bill
sponsored by Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., would
flatly mandate the installation o f passive restraints
on autos beginning In Septem ber 1985. It would
$avc lives and money. It should be passed.

Helping The Hungry
W ith ch ron ic h u n ger and m a ln u tritio n so
prevalent in the world, it Is fortunate we have
groups such as the Davis. Calif.-based, non-profit
Meals for M illion s w h ich are try in g to do
som ething about the heartrending problem.
Global poverty, burgeoning populations, limited
International aid. droughts and other adverse
tmndltlons all figure In hunger. But It is especially
Iragic when people could feed them selves if they
Had the right know ledge and tools.
Meals for Millions, which m oved M head­
quarters to Davts this year because o f the
university's food science, agriculture and nutrition
curricula, is helping people become self-sufficient
in producing food at the local level.
Its activities have ranged from introducing
sim ple and easily maintained and duplicated food
technology, such as a solar cooker for baking
^ e a d in Bolivia, to developing foods such as a
Cereal from leftover milled grain in Honduras.
. In a world where tensions som etim es result In
cpnsidcrailon o f food as a weapon, it is gratifying
th at a g ro u p is a tte m p tin g to sh are food
production know-how as a weapon against em pty
stomachs. The efforts o f the group, which relies on
private donations for 36 percent o f its backing,
d e a rly merit support.

By Donna Estes

U.S. Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Lnkcland,
urges his constituents to watch "The
Chemical People." a two-part scries airing
on Channel 24 Nov. 2 and 9.
Chiles says the Nov. 2 segment provides
evidence seeking to knock down the wall of
denial behind which "w e so often hide
rather than con fron t" the problems
associated » Iih chemical— drug and
alcohol— abuse by young people.
He notes that following the program at
town meetings will be a discussion of die
local situation wllh a panel Inrlmilnu such
people as Judges, police, touchers and
teenagers.
On Nov. 9 the program will show how
other parents, schools and neighbors arc
fighting drugs and alcohol, spotlighting
how a community task force can be an
effective, ongoing force In the community.
Almost 300 Public Broadcasting System
stations throughout the nation arc
cooperating with this project. Chiles said.
Chiles In his latest newsletter said that
the statistics of chemical abuse by Young
people continues to be shocking.
He B a y s :
• The average beginning age of alcohol
use Is 12Vi years.

• One in 16 high bchool seniors smokes
marijuana on a dally basis.
Chiles sala this, believe it or not. is a
small Improvement over the magnitude of
drug use In the GO'S and 70's.
"Obviously, we still have a serious
problem which threatends the well-being
—even the lives— o f our sons and
daughters. Each of us must accept the fact
that teenage alcoholics and drug abusers
ore in our communities, our schools and
our homes. And we must do what we can
to help them." the senator says.
Speaking of "Th e Chemical People"
program. Chiles says the potential benefits
are borne out by the pilot program
conducted In Pennsylvania last year. Over
12.000 people attended 85 town meetings
In that area to sec the telecasts. This

resulted In the formation of 114 communi­
ty task forces, still operating today, that
offer counselling, provide training semi­
nars. opemte drug and alcohol hotlines,
work with lawmakers on needed legislative
changes and so on.
"Most of us readily acknowledge there is
a national problem, that millions of
teenagers are already abusers and many
more are threatened by drugs and alcohol.
But It's not Just national, it’s right where
we live and it's lime to admit (hat, too," he
said.
Law enforcement agencies do what they
can to fight drugs and abuse, but they arr
very limited. "W e simply cannot be
assured that the police can save our
children’s future." Chiles said.
The senator said "The Chemical People"
concept offers significant potential. It can
focus attention, provide organization for
those who are truly concerned, get parents
and children talking, get communities
doing.
"This outreach plan offers the opportu­
nity. and I earnestly hope you will respond.
The first step is to contact your nearest
PBS station or Florida Informed Parents
group for town meeting details. Please."
Chiles said.

FARMING WORLD

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

Sharing
W orld
M a rk e t

Champions
Needed In
Two Houses

By Sonja Hlligren
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A report by
Agriculture Department economists
suggests the United States embark upon
more aggressive marketing to expand,
or even to maintain. Its meager share'of
world trade in processed farm products.
The report recommends optimum
policies for Increasing the small U.S.
share nd lists processed products, or
high-value items as they are often
described, that the United States Is best
equipped to promote.
The report said the United States
should work to promote more trade In:
—Sem lprocesscd and processed
meats, especially poultry and pork,
because American feeding technology Is
the most efficient In the world. Potential
for beef exports should not be Ignored,
but Is more limited because of Import
restrictions and differences between
American and foreign tastes.
—Semlprocesscd oilseed products
because supplies and processing capaci­
ty give the United States a competitive
cost edge.
—Beverages, Including table wine and
fruit and vegetable Juices.
—Cereals, especially (lour, if headway
Is made In liberalizing other nations'
export subsidies.
—Fresh and processed fruits, vegeta­
bles and nuts — especially crops In
excess of domestic demand.
—Hybrid seeds, where American In­
vestment In agricultural science pro­
vides a clear cost and quality advantage.
—Cigarettes and sweeteners made
from com.
The report said It would be difficult for
the United States to penetrate markets
against established brand names and
quality differentiation o f European
cheeses. French and Swiss chocolates
and quality European wines.
"A n extended and costly market
development campaign with question­
able payoff potential would be involved
here." the report said.
The United States also would have a
hard time processing and reselling
coffee and Bugar products, and given the
current price support program. Ameri­
can dairy products are not competitive.
The report said U.S. success In
enlarging Its share of world trade in
bulk commodities like grain and soy­
beans from one-fourth to one-half dur­
ing the 1970s diverted attention away
from Its poor performance In growing
trade of high-value products.
The U.S. share of world trade in
high-value products, such as fresh fruits
and vegetables, wheat Hour and dairy
products, was only 10 percent during
the 1970s. while the European Econom­
ic Community dominated that more
lucrative area of farm trade.

WILLIAM RUSHER

'Hard-Headed Detente'
NEW YORK (NEA) - Richard Nixon
seems well on hln way to carving out a
new career for himself as an author.
First came "Six Crises" — In effect a
mid life autobiography, focused on ma­
jor climacterics in his political history.
Next were the "Memoirs," bringing his
own story — or at any rate his version of
It — down through his resignation from
the presidency In August 1974. Then
th ere was a q u ick ie volu m e on
geopolitics entitled "The Real War."
published in 1980. Last year he was out
with "Leaders" — his reminiscences of
great men he had encountered on life's
path.
Now Mr. Nixon has written a second
book about the ongoing struggle with
the Soviet Union: "R eal Peace: A
Strategy for the West." You won't find It
at your local bookstore Just yet. but
galley proofs have already been distrib­
uted to various favored Individuals, and
an excerpt showed up recently on the
Op Ed page of The New York Times. On
the evidence o f that excerpt. Mr. Nixon
has learned practically nothing about
the Soviet Union or how to deal with It
since he left the Oval Office nine years
ago.
The latest Nixonian prescription for
coping with this admittedly knotty
problem Is "hard-headed detente." Now.
we are all familiar with the word
"dclcntc," which served to characterize
the policy o f Mr. Nixon and his
Richelieu. Henry Kissinger, toward the
Soviet Union when they were in power

and thus able to prescribe one. The
adjective "hard-headed" Is new. howev­
er. and apparently Mr. Nixon has udded
It to distinguish his own brand of
detente from that allegedly favored by
certain others — perhaps most notably
Jimmy Carter.
New or not. It Is "hard-headed de­
tente" that Mr. Nixon now claims he
was pursuing when he was In the White
House. What's more, as Mr. Nixon
remembers It. the policy was a howling
success:
" A s w e practiced It from 1969
through 1974, hard-headed detente
worked. During that period, we used a
combination of military and diplomatic
pressures to block Soviet advances. We
were prepared. If n'ccssary. to give
direct or Indirect military aid to any
country they threatened. We also un­
dertook negotiations with the Soviets on
a broad range of Issues. Some, like nnns
control, were of mutual Interest. Others,
like the grunting of most-favored-nailon
status, were of particular Interest to the
Soviets. That gave us leverage over
them. When they threatened our inter­
ests. we slowed or suspended those
negotiations. When they relented, we
proceeded with them.”
Put that way. It does sound pretty
hard-headed, doesn’t it? Moreover, bar­
ring a country or two that the Soviet
Union managed to knock out of the
Western orbit while Mr. Nixon’s atten­
tion was elsewhere, one can even argue
that It worked

The future of the reforms introduced
by President Reagan depends very
much on the character of the United
States Senate after the 1984 elections.
Those reforms already are threatened
by liberal control of the House of ,
Representatives. If the liberals are in the
majority In the Senate, the reforms arc
likely to be abandoned.
Obviously, taxpaying, responsible
Americans have a tremendous stake In
the protection of reform efforts. Among
the most Important of those reform
moves Is Mr. Reagan's effort to restore
fiscal responsibility to the government.
While the cost o f government has
continued to move upward. Mr. Reagan
has been successful in slowing the rate
o f growth. He has made repeated)
attempts — frequently frustrated by
liberals in the House of Representatives
— to bring welfare-state programs under
proper control, as in the case of the
much-abused food stamp program.
President Reagan's reform movement
h as n o t b e e n c a r r ie d fo r w a r d
stnglehandedly. He has depended on
strong fiscal conservatives in the U.S.
Senate, such as Sett. Jesse A. Helms of
North Carllna. who has played a leading
role In exposing the food stamp abuses.
For this type of legislative effort. Sen.
Helms has received the Watchdog of the
Treasury Award each year since 1972.
As President Reagan and Sen. Helms
have learned, defense of the public
Interest In sound fiscal programs Is not
on effort that always Is rewarded with
applause. Powerful constituencies want
to expand welfare-state programs and
return to the spcnd-and-elect philoso­
phy that characterized the U.S. gov­
ernment for so many years. And when,
os Is the c a s c with Sen. Helms, a
national legislator also Is committed to a
strong national defense and foreign
policy, opposition becomes Intense. In
the 1984 elections, the welfare groups
and the anti-defense lobby plan to team
up to defeat senators who ore vigilant In
protecting the national Interest.
It will take many years to implement
the reforms that President Reagan has
introduced. The country has to be
mindful of the need for on-golng leader­
ship In this reform effort. After Mr.
Reagan completes his work, there must
be strong leadership In the congress
that will be dedicated in carrying on the
work that has been begun.
The American people labor under an
enormous debt built up over decades.
This debt threatens the well-being of the
rising generation. There is no more
important task, therefore, than ensuring
the continuing influence o f fiscally
respdnslble legislators who will work
against any reversion to
runaway
spending.

JACK ANDERSON

Crippling The Racket Busting Force
WASHINGTON - Labor lobbyists'arc
about to score a quiet legislative victory
that could cripple the efforts of the
Labor Department's racket busters to
clean up corrupt unions.
The coup could come today, when a
Joint Senate-House conference is sched­
uled to take up appropriations for the
department's office of Inspector general.
Tire IG has asked for 57 additional stafi
positions, which have been approved by
the Senate Appropriations subcommit­
tee. chaired by Sen. Lowell Welckcr.
R-Conn.
Bui under intense lobbying by the
unions, the House subcommittee,
headed by Rep. William Nalcher. D-Ky..
cut the requested staff Increase to 29
and lopped (1 million ofr the IG's (44.5
million request.

"There's the expression we want. Keep thinking
of Interest rates going up and stocks going
down!"

• There are twice as many 14-to
17-&gt;car-old alcoholics as there arc adult
alcoholics In this country.
• The leading cause o f death among
15-to 24-ycar-olds is drunk driving.
o Roughly two-thirds o f American
young people try an Illicit drug while still
In high school.
• More than n third have used Illicit
drugs other than marijuana.

Even this compromise isn't safe.
Lobbyists for the AFL-CIO and Its
building und construction affiliates have
their sights set on the 29 additional staff
positions the House hus approved. They
don't want the IG to have any new
Investigators.
Tlie lobby Isis* goal was spelled out
candidly in u July 22 progress repori to

Robert Georglne. president ol the build­
ing and construction trades department
of the AFL-CIO. It was written by Robert
J. Connerton of the Conncrton &amp;
Bernstein law firm In Washington. He is
also the general counsel of the Laboreis
International Union. Here's what Con­
nerton wrote:
"W e are working closely with the
lobbyists and wllh (House) committee
s ta ff to lay the grou ndw ork for
challenging the remaining |29) positions
... We have also met wllh committee
members to alert them to our concerns
about these positions."
Sources told my associate Tony
Capacclo that a prime target of the
unions' high-powered lobbyists Is the
Organized Crime und Racketeering
Section, which would be authorized
s e v e n n ew p o s it io n s . A u n io n
spokesman acknowledged this, saying
that the rackets section "doesn't need
these slots at the expense of other
Investigations." He cited the budget
cuts in occupational safety and wage
violation services.
" I f there is going to be a staff
reduction right down the line, it should
be all the way," he said.

Bui a close look at the racket busters
record of indictments and convictions
suggests another reason Hie labor
bosses would like to keep the section
understaffed: It has been too successful
In putting crooked union officials In
prison.
For example, since 1978 the IG's
rackets section Investigators have con­
tributed to the Indictment of 51 officials
and members of I he Laborers Interna­
tional Union, with 28 convictions to
date.
In all. 66 officials and members of
building trades unions. Including boil­
ermakers. bricklayers an ! Ironworkers,
have been Indicted since 1978 as a
direct result of the rackets section's
efforts. So far, 37 have been convicted.
WHOPPER OF THE WEEK: When the
public's fear of Acquired Immune Defi­
ciency Syndrome (AIDS) threatened to
dry up the nation's Hood banks, the
Health and Human Services Depart­
ment sprang into action. A television
commercial was rushed into production:
it showed HHS Secretary Margaret
Heckler apparently donating a pint of
blood, and saying: "Donating blood Is

100 percent safe. Blood banks use
sterile, disposable needles which cannot
transmit AIDS.”
But Heckler didn't donate a drop of
blood: the commercial was a phony. An
internal HHS memo explained that*
Heckler would only simulate her blood
donation because "It is not safe to
donate blood under the heat of TV
lights." The memo doesn't explain why.
BLASTING THE BRASS: The truth Is
no defense for a Journalist In Gen.
Augusta Pinochet's Chile, especially
when it's an unpleasant truth about the
military. On Sept. 18. Juan Pablo
Cardenas, publisher of the influential'
Journal Anallsls. was arrested.
His crime? He printed the embar­
rassing fact that Chile's armed forces
have killed more Chileans since 1973
than all the enemy soldiers killed In all
the wars Chile has fought. "It was the
single most provocative thing he could
have written." a Chilean source said.
"T h e olflccrs were howling for his
head." The brass hats were also furious
that the offensive edition was allowed to
circulate freely for three days before
being confiscated.

�spo r tsB
Evening herald, Sanford, FI.

TU

I t ' f i T iv n A
5 5

w

■ ■ ■ E i

W

A

Like those of most losing professional
sports franchises, the Tampa Bay Bucca­
neer's fans are wearing paper hags over
their heads Instead or stuffing their lunches
In them. One so called "U cs" fan had the
right Idea, he had the words "Impeach
McKay," written on the back of his bag.
While hundreds of these bag-heads chose
to sit In the stands Sunday In protest of the
Bucs hapless play this season, there were
nearly 12,000 people who bought tickets
but chose not to show up at all. Those
12,000 people made the right decision.
While coach McKay and quarterback Jack
Thompson were arguing over who's fault It
was, the city of Tampa, host of this year's
Super Bowl, was agonizing over the Bucs'
34-27 loss to the almost-as-hapless (until
Sunday that Is) St. Louis Cardinals.

l l

John McKay In Tampa

V V

As the losses keep piling up. seven
straight, excuses and arguments over who's
fault the losses should be blamed on arc
starting to make the Tampa Bay faithful 111.
McKay had an excuse in the Bucs' first two
miserable seasons, the team was new to the
league and It was like a small college team
playing In the pros. However, the coach Isn't
getting any sympathy for blaming himself
for this year's downfall.
When a team goes down the tubes, the
coach Is usually the first to go. And In
Tampa Bay's cose. It Is probably the best
thing that could happen to the team. There
arc two teams in the NFL that have had only
one coach in their history. The Dallas
Cowboys and Tom Landry and the Tampa
Bay Bucs and John McKay. Landry would
have been gone a long lime ago if he wasn't

Tuesday, Oc1. II, 1MJ—JA

and a "this season Is history," attitude, the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers are headed for rock
bottom. Maybe n change of coaches could
bring them out of It. Maybe a change of
quarterbacks. Maybe, maybe, maybe....
"In their first year, you didn't mind them
losing because th'-y were the new kids on
the block." a disgruntled fan said after the
Herald Sports Writer
game. "Now. it gets more disgusting every
week."
Its pretty disgusting to players like Hugh
successful.
Green too. The all-pro linebacker almost
When the season started the question slnglc-handldly brought the Bucs back from
was, "Can the Bucs win without Doug a 27-6 deficit in the second half. An he was
Williams?" The answer to that is pretty playing with a hamstring injury. Green
obvious. The question now is, " O n the didn't get rhuch help from the offense
Bucs win with John McKay?"
though, especially Thompson, who tin ew an
With morale at an oll-tlme low. players' interception right into the hands of SI.
criticizing other players behind their backs Louis' Benny Perrin that led to the Cardi­

Chris
Flster

nals' clinching touchdown.
"I owe somebody an apology." Thompson
said after the game. Tampa Bay fans don't
want an apology, they want a victory. If they
wanted to hear all this bleeding-heart
nonsense, they would turn on the television
and watch the Soap Operas. Fans aren't
moved by apologies, they want results. If
the Bucs play well In defeat, as they did in
most of the game against the Cowboys, the
fans will accept It. But. If they continue to
play terribly, as they have most ol tiie
season, 12.000 people could be half of the
number of no-shows in the future.
Some new faces on the sidelines might
bring the no-shows back and allow the
bag-heads to show their faces.
It’s time — Throw John McKay In Tampa
Bay.

Wild 1
Stenerud's FG Lifts Pack
Past Washington, 48-47
GREEN BAY. Wls. (UPI) — It was Lynn Dickey's line,
but It could have been said by any of the 98 players in
uniform.
"This is the wildest game I've ever been In." the Green
Bay quarterback said after the Packer*, edged the
Washington Redskins 48-47 Monday night. “ I think |ust

______ Pro Football______

Herald Pt.Jloi by Tammy Vincent

Edmonds Wins Bayhead Singles Title
Jim Edmonds and Scott Regan, left, battled three sets Monday afternoon to
determine the Bayhead Men's Singles championship with Edmonds taking a
6-2, 3-d, 6-2 victory. Regan form erly played at Seminole Community College
and West Carolina University. In the Women's Singles championship, Lois
M etts knocked off form er Seminolo High standout Candl Crocker. Bayhead's
Doubles championships begin Friday.

G M O w ens Begins To Phase O u t W h e e z e Kids'
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - After wat­
ching Joe Altobclll handle the heat in the
kitchen. Paul Owens turns his attention
to the hot stove meetings.
Owens, having taken tiie Philadelphia
Phillies to the National League pennant
before their nbrupt five-game loss to the
Baltimore Orioles in Hie World Series,
now puts on his other hat as general
manager.
" I ’ll report everything to Bill (team
owner Giles) and the people upstairs."
Owens said moments after the Phils’ 5-0
loss Sunday to the Orioles that clinched
the shortest World Scries since Cincin­
nati took four straight from New York in
1976.
And Altobelll. winner of the world
chumplonshlp In his first year as Orioles'
manager, appears to have a promising
future in the position. He certainly took a
huge step toward putting distance be­
tween himself and the shadow of former
Baltimore manager Ear) Weaver. And at
times he made it look easy.
"I don’t think It was done convlctngly
at all." said Altobelll. "W e lost the first
game then got a shutout to win the
second and then we won 3-2 and 5-4. We
had Just enough to hang on an win In
each case. What enabled us to win would

Baseball
be the one-run games and getting
excellent pitching."
Altubelil's managing, especially in
Game 4 when he artfully used four pinch
hitlers then neutralized Philadelphia's
bench In the ninth inning, made It seem
he had managed without the DH all year.
"W e did quite a few of these things like
this during the course o f the season.”
said Altobclll. "It was Just having so
many of you (press) here that magnified
everything. We've really been making
these moves all year long."
One reason for Altobclll's success Is
the talent on his bench and in the
bullpen. Finding more players is the Job
of general manager Hank Peters, who
sounds com pletely uninterested In
becoming the new president o f the
American League.
"R ight now I wouldn't have any
interest in a position that's almost 100
percent administrative." Peters said
amid the locker room celebration. " I like
the competition. I'm happy where I am."
As for ofT-season moves, Peters said
there would be some.

Polls
Cheesem an,
Politowicz
Set The Pace
Lake Howell'l Ken Cheetemen end
tr in ity Prep't Adrtonne Polftowicj
continue to w t the pec* tor county
c ro it country runner* Cheetemen
••o ily won F rk U v 'l county meet * t
Lyman while Polltowtci ron end won
• t Clcwltton on Thurtdey
la k e Ho-veil'* flirt* and L iU
Mao'* boy* polled norrow tw m
victor let to the county me*t to hold
on to Itielr top poiltton*
Saturday* big meet w ill b« the
Lake Mery Invitallonel.
COUNTY CROSS COUNTRY
HONOR ROLL
BOY I
t. LekeM ery (LM)
I,L ym a n (L y t
1 Seminole (5)

* Leke Howell ILMI
S. Leke B re n ile y lL B I
4. Trim ly Prep (TP)
t O.'ledo 101

Top 14 IndlvM uelt.................
1 K«nCh*e»*men (LH|
.14041
I Doug Me Broom (L y )..... 14:17.1
3 M lkiG a rrlq u e t (L B I...™. ... 14: SS
4 Corvh Tengemen (L M ).....
J M lrfy P h llllp t tOJ------ .. . . . .14:71
4 B re d D yktt IL H )----- ..J..... ...14:17
14 JJ
7 Billy Penlck IS1
a MerL Blythe tL M I............. ...14:44
f Merc Overbey (L y l.i, U&amp;ij
10 K*nt Treutman IS)...— ....
O IR L t
1 Leke Howell (LH)
I. Lake Brenltoy (LB)
J Lake M e ry l LMI
4. Trim ly Ptep (TP)
J Lyman (Ly)
e. Seminole IS)
7 Oviedo 10)

Apopka Still 6th,
Faces Pats Friday

CLASS AAA
1. Bartow, JO, d Heine* City JJ M
2. Jeckionvllle Lee. 40. d Blthop
Kenny 400

). F reden ton South** it. 40. d it

Apopke't Slue Oerter tubdued
D e l end J i l t , Frldey to hold onto
the il&gt;th tpot In the «A Stete F.-otbeM
Poll compiled by Ocele ite r Benner
•port* w riter Vince Murrey.
The Blue D erlert, JO. pley e
cruciel Five Star Conference geme
hit* Frldey et home egetnit the 4 1
Leke Brenlley Patriot*
High tcheet
t it le leelbellpell*
CLASS AAAA
t. Pemecole Woodhem. 4 0. 0
Mobile Montgomery 104
} M leml Southrldge. 40, d. Corel
Get&gt;le i. n 4

Peter tburg Lekewood 140.
4. Cyprett Leke*. 40. d North Fori
M yert JJ 7
i Fort Lauderdale it . Thome*
Aqulne*. SO. d. South Broward74
4 Oeklend Perk N orth***!. *0 . d
Pompeno Beech 410
7. Telleh***** Lincoln. 4-1, d.
Godby U 14
0. SI Peter tburg Lekewood. 41,
loot to Bredenton Soulheett14 0.
t . Fort M yert High 40. d
Chertottell-4.
10. Pemecole Etcem bl*. 4 1, tot!
to Penteceto Pine Fore*1 Jl II.

1 Tempt Plent. eO. d. .lettervan

1. Newberry, J A d WIIHtton 140.
J Crawford.UN A4kutU. 4 0. d
Florida High J40
J Dayton* Beech Father Lopei.
4 0. d PlertonSJ-7
4 Jetper Hamilton County, 40. d
Mad, ton 104
5 Palmetto. 40. d Lakeland Sent*

110.
Tep 14 individual*............... ...Time
1 Adrienne Pctltowlci U P I ..11:13
t. Kathryn Haywerd IL B ).... 11:57.7
J. Sue klngtbury (L M I......... ...11:11
4 Angle Smith ILH J
11:11
4 L ite S i mot hi ILH)...,.,..... .... 17:31
4. Tracy BldkeTy 1LV.J.
11:34
7 Joanne Hey nerd &lt;LBI .... .11:41
1 Cindy Geihell (Ly)
11:41
f Tree! Poe lard (L B ).......... ... 13:40
10 Martha Fontec* (LH).
.11 J)

"You never lose sight of the future." he
said. "I'm gonna savor this for a couple
o f days then sit down and begin
planning. Our boilclub from year to year
Is the type that needs to be tinkered with
as opposed to overhauled. You always
h a v e a few things you want to do."
W ith Series MVP Rick Dempsey
behind the plate. Rich Duucr and Cal
Ripken at the keystone and John Shelby
emerging as the center fielder of the near
future, the Orioles appear set at key
defensive positions tliat back their pit­
ching, Third base, where Todd Cruz
played with distinction during the
Series, will get a look at the planning
sessions.
The Orioles figure on entering next
season with a starting rotation of Scott
McGregor. Mike Flanagan. Mike Bodd icker. and Storm Davis. Dennis
Martinez looks like trade bait. Jim
Palmer’ looms as the veteran and At
Ramirez and BUI Swaggcrty will be
looking for Jobs. Relievers Sammy
Stewart and Tippy Martinez both were
impressive In the Series.
Whatever the cast, pitching will likely
be the heart of the club once again.
"This team has won more games in
the last 27 years than anybody In

4 Gelnetvllle Buchholti. 40. d
Jecktonvllle White 17 J
S. Winter Perk. U . d Winter
Gerden n 14.
4 Apopka, 1 0 ,d. tkeLend 11-14.
I. Leke City Cotumble, 4 1. d
Jecktonvllle Sandalwood JJ J.
t. Pinellet Perk. 40, d E e tl Bey

*10.

to M leml Nor*hw*ttom. 10. d.
e diton 4] I )

CLASS AA

Ft JJ 10
*. Pont St. Joe. 40. d Btountttown

no

7. Jecktonvllle Belie*. 41 did not
play.

baseball." said pitching coach Ray
Miller. "You hear talk about people
winning the most games for the last two
or three years. This team has won more
games in the last 27 years."
"W e were the best team in '83, we
have the best organization in baseball,"
said second baseman Rich Dauer. "W e’ll
win it again."
Owens has a much more difficult job.
First baseman Pete Rose Is odds-on to
leave leave the Phils, especially after
being benched In Game 3 of the Series.
Second baseman Joe Morgan is con­
templating a career in business and
center fielder Garry Maddox and first
bascinan Tony Perez are others who
may not be back. Steve Carlton's back
spasms and age (38) raise questions
about the pitching rotation, too.
"B ill’s got some tough decisions," said
Owens. "W e'll start going from there."
"I like to go with some of the younger
players and sec how good they can
play," said Phils’ scout Hugh Alexander.
” I*m a firm believer In seeing how good
they can play.”
It was Alexander who helped map out
the Phils' "Wheeze Kids" who won the
NLpennat.

about everything you could have wanted in a game
happened tonight."
The 95 points was a record for Monday night football.
Green Bay held seven different leads while raising its
record to 4-3. one game behind first place Minnesota In
the NFC Central. Washington had its five game winning
streak snapped as it fell to 5-2, two games behind Dallas
in the NFC East.
"It was a wild and woolly affair, up and down the
field." said Washington coach Joe Gibbs. "Everybody is
In a state of shuck.”
The Packers scored their llnal points with 54 seconds
remaining when Jan Sienerud kicked a 20-yard field
goal. But the game was not decided until Washington
kicker Mark Moseley was wide to the right on a 37-yard
attempt as time expired.
"There's no one else I would want in there (more) than
Mark." Gibbs said. "H e’s the best kicker In football and
he'll hit those again."
The Packers entered the game ranked last in the
league in team defense, while Washington was rated
26th in pass defense. Both quarterbacks exploited those
deficiencies to have outstanding nights.
Dickey completed 22 of 30 passes for 387 yards and
three touchdowns, while Joe Theismann connected on
27 of 39 passes for 398 yards and two touchdowns.
Washington fullback John Riggins was the game's
leading rusher with 98 yards on 25 carries as
Washington racked up 552 yards in total offense.
The Packers held the ball for less than 21 minutes but
still gained 473 yards.
It was the Packers defense that got the team going Just
one minute and seven seconds into the game, when
linebacker Mike Douglass tecovered a Joe Washington
fumble and ran 22 yards for a touchdown.
But the Redskins established the game's eye-for-aneye pattern three minutes later when Clint Didler
recovered Riggins' fumble in the endzonc to make it 7-7
before the Packers had run an offensive play.
After Stenerud and Moseley traded field goals, the
quarter ended 10-10.
Green Bay held a 24-20 halftime lead thanks to Dickey
to Paul Coffman touchdown passes of 36 and 9 yards.
The Redskins countered with a 1-yard Riggins run and a
28-yard Moseley field goal.
The Packers extended their lead on a 24-yard run
around right end by Gcny Ellis. Moseley connected on a
31-yard field goal and Theismann hit Washington with a
6-yard touchdown pass to make it 31-30. Moseley then
hit a 28-yarder with ten seconds left in vhe period to give
the Redskins their first lead at 33-31.
It took the Packers Just 25 seconds to regain the lead
on a 2-yard reverse by Gary Lewis. The score. 15
seconds into the fourth quarter, began a period In which
the lead changed hands five times as both teams scored
on every possession until Most ey'r miss.
"Both offenses were broom balling down the field."
said wide receiver John Jefferson. "It seemed whoever
had the ball last was going to win."
Riggins' 1-yard run gave Washington a 40-38
advantage but Dickey hit Mike Meade with a 31-yard
scoring pass to give the Packers a 45-40 lead. Five
minutes later it was the Redskins back on top as
Theismann connected with Washington an a 5-yard
touchdown pass to make It 47-45.
On their next drive, the Packers faced a 3rd-and -10 on
their own 36 when Dickey hit Ellis on a 56-yard pass.
Four plays later Stenerud. who lias connected on 51 of
61 attempts since Joining the Packers in 1980. booted
the winning points.
"I had trouble finding a good spot." Stenerud said.
"But It has to be a real bad kick to miss from 20 yards."

Shula, USFL Talks Not Cooling Off
MIAMI (UPI) — The long distance talks between tylaml
Dolphin Coa:h Don Shula and Donald Trump, the new
owner of the U.S. Football League New Jersey Generals,
don't appear to be cooling oft.
White said the llllnl will have to put last week's 17-13
Simla confirmed Monday that Trump had been calling
homecoming
victory over Ohio State behind them and
him on recent Monday nigh is to discuss his offer to
prepare for the Boilermakers at Ross-Ade Stadium In
coach the Generals, reported at $1 million a year.
"That's a time o f the week that doesn't distract me West Lafayette. Ind.. Saturday.
from preparations for the next game, and I'm going to be
home anyway." Simla said.
M ia m i Dolphin coach
Simla also confirmed reports in New York newspapers Don Shula, right, and
over the weekend that Trump wunted to meet with him Donald Trum p, owner
personally while hr was In town for the Dolphin game
of the New Jersey Gen­
with the Jets.
erals of the USFL, con­
"H e asked me and I told him that under no
tinue to talk contract on
circumstances would I do that," Shula said.
The coach also said he has begun talks with Dolphin Monday nights. Trum p
Is believed to have ot­
owner Joe Robbie about renewing his contract.
"W e have talked, but we haven't made uny progress," tered Shula S' m illion to
Shula said.
lu m p le a g u e s n e x t

Football

year.

Shula

has also

URBANA. Til. (UPl| - Because Illinois coach Mike begun contract negotia­
While knows football is a menial gome he understands tions with M ia m i owner
the problems posed by playing Ihirduc between Big Ten
Joe Robbie.
powerhouses Ohio State and Michigan.

�*A—Evanlng Herald, Santord, FI.

Tuatday, Oct, II, Itt3

Texas Bell Has Sweet Ring
For Baltimore's Hot Corner

-

Letchworth's 3
Goals Salvage
Tie For Panthers
The Sanford 080 Panthers put on a furious second-half
come back to avoid their first loss of Die season as the
Panthers and Downtown Orlando battled to a 3-3 tic In
Sanford Soccer Club 10 and under. Division III action.
Downtown Orlando rolled up a 3-0 lead by halftime
and It appeared the Panthers, which went Into the game

Sanford Soccer Club
with a 5-0 record, would lose their first game. However.
Josh Letchworth refused to be denied as he scored all
three goals In the second half and the game wound up
tied.
Mall Lovrlng and Steve Swanson led the defensive
effort In the first half while the entire team did on
outstanding Job In shutting down Downtown Orlando In
the second half and enabling the Panthers to come back.
Sanford 080. 5-0-1, goes up against Pine Hills this
Saturday at the Central Florida Fairgrounds In Orlando.

"

Sanford (801) 2, East Orlando O
Sanford 801. a under eight recreation division team,
scored a goal In each half and played a stellar defensive
game In a shutout over East Orlando. Sanford 801 now
stands at 2-1-1 for the season and will go up against
College Park Saturday at 2:45 p.m. at the Sanford
Airport.

Pine Hills 7, Sanford (480) 2
A powerful Pine Hills team was too much for Sanford
480 Celeste Industries, an under 14 division I team, to
handle as Pine Hills scored three times In the first half
and tacked on four more goals In the second.
Chris Ray scored Sanford's first goal on an assist from
Alex Plqucr and Plqucr scored the second goal on an
assist from Scan Sundvall. Steve Edwards. Cindy Benge
and Mike Altlzcr led the defense while goalkeepers Chuk
Roll and Troy Dcppcn came up with seven saves apiece.
Celeste Industries now stands at 1-4 for the season
and will go up against Winter Park 461 Saturday at the
Sanford Airport.

H*r» 'i Phot* by B*nnt« Wtateldl

Sanford's Ken Baker (left) fends off an Orlando opponent during soccer
action Saturday. Sanford's Panthers came up with three goals by Josh
Letchworth In the second half to deadlock Downtown Orlando, 3-3.___________

Bird, Auerbach Face Fines

BOSTON (UPII - Celtics star Larry
Bird and General Manager Red Auerbach
each face fines for their roles In Sunday's
exhibition game fracas between the
Boston Celtics and Philadelphia 76ers.
The National Basketball Association
continued Its investigation today of the
game at Boston Garden In which Bird,
team m ate G erald H enderson and
Philadelphia's Marc lavaronl were
P.C. United (880) 4. Sanford (880) 1
ejected
for fighting.
F.C. United exploded for three goals In the second half
The two Atlantic Division rivals meet
cn route to a victory over Sanford 880, under eight
Wednesday In Chattanooga. Tenn.
division II. Sanford 880 fell to 1-5 for the season with the
Jack Joyce, the NBA s director of
security, will conduct the Investigation
Chad Boss scored the lone goal for Sanford while
with the help of Scotty Sterling, the
Jason Itatscr. Bo Davis. Shawn Stewart and Holly Lyle
league's vice president for operations.
also had good offensvle games. Goalies Matthew Bowlin
Videotapes of the game and reports from
and Jonathan Duryea played well and Christopher Giles.
non-union referees Ralph Lembo and
Mark Cann. Steven Kyle and Travis Crawford led the
Jesse Hall arrived at NBA headquarters
defense*
Sanford 880 goes up against Pine Hills 880 Saturday Monday.
"The next step will be to Interview the
at the Sanford Airport.
participants.” NBA spokesman Alex
Sacharc said.
"The fact that this was a preseason
game doesn't affect the way we approach
It." he said.
Bird. lavaronl and Henderson may not
The score of Saturday's Alumnl-Faculty flag football
game was 16-12 tn favor of the faculty, not. 16 6. as be the only ones fined. Auerbach, who
also Is the team's president, left hts seat
reported In Monday's Evening Jlem/d. — 8am Cook

Faculty Won, 16-12

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Blue Admits To Small
Possession Of Cocaine
KANSAS CITY. Kan. (UPI) - An Investigation
Into cocaine trafficking In suburban Kansas City
has resulted In two more guilty pleas. Including
one from former Cy Young Award winner Vida
Blue.
Blue became the fourth member ol the 1983
Kansas City Royals to plead guilty to federal
drug churges. The left-handed pitcher Monday
admitted to U.S. Magistrate J. Milton Sulllvant
that he was guilty of possessing three grams —
not quite l-10th of an ounce — of cocaine, which
Is a misdemeanor.
A Johnson County. Kan., attorney also
pleaded guilty In federal court Monday. Ben
David Roselll admitted that on June 20. 1983.
he distributed two ounces of cocaine, a felony
with a maximum penalty of 15 years In prison
and a 825.000 fine.

Kelso Dies Of Colic
CHESAPEAKE CITY. Md. (UPI) - Just hours
after a nostalgic return to New York’s Belmont
Park. Kelso, one of the greatest handicap
runners In racing history, died of colic at
Woodstock Farm.
The gelding, a five-time Horse of the Year, was
26.
Jeffia Moore, wife of Woodstock Farm trainer
Gene Moore, confirmed Monday that Kelso died
Sunday evening at about 6:50 p.m. EDT.
"He was all right when he came back from
Belmont Park and he had been checked several
times Sunday.” Mrs. Moore said. "Late yester­
day (Sunday) afternoon, he began to to show
symptoms of colic and the veterinarian was
called In.”
Kelso was being treated for colic — the general
name for a number of abnormal conditions of
the bowels — but his condition continued to
worsen and he died about four hours later. Mrs.
Moore said.
She added that Kelso was buried Monday
morning on the g r o u n d s of Woodstock Farm.

Breakers Close To Move
HOUSTON (UPI) - All that Is keeping the
Boston Breakers from ending their four-month
eearch for a new home and moving to New
Orleans Is the approval of owners of other
United States Football Lr-^ue franchises, of­
ficials said.
Breaker's co«&gt;wncr Randy Vataha mtt with
the three-member owner's executive committee
lute Monday and said he expected the three.
John Baasett. Alfred Taubman and Tad Taubc
to recommend the transfer to the full board
today*
*
"It looks very good. 90 percent that we ll
move.” said Vataha from the site of this week's
USFL annual meetings.

Pro Basketball
and rushed onto the court when Bird and
lavaronl were ejected. In a scene that
recalled his 1957 decking of St. Louts
Hawks owner Ben Kcmcr. the Celtics
executive took on Moses Malone
verbally — for roughing up Cedric
Maxwell.
"Hit me. you big SOB." Auerbach. 65.
said to Malone after taking off his
glasses. "G o ahead. I'm riot big. hit me
you SOB."
" If Moses had hit Red. (Philadelphia
owner) Harold Katz would be paying
Red. not Moses." said Boston's M.L.
Carr. "Moses' money would be referred
Instead of deferred."
HOUSTON (UPI) — The Houston
Rockets have welcomed back two pre­
vious scoring stars with the club —
Robert Reid who took a year-long
religious sabbatical and Allen Lcav'ell
who was In heated contract talks.
General manager Ray Patterson an­
nounced the players had signed one-year
contracts
,
'&lt; - - ? T » t a r fcuvwww ■

On the morning before the last
game of the World Scries, while some
other baseball nen were still asleep.
Hank Peters, the man who runs the
Baltimore Orioles from the front office,
was In deep private conversation with
Joe Klein, his counterpart with the
Texns Rangers.
The two of them were sitting alone
at a table In the Phillies' hospitality
room and were talking about Buddy
Bell, the Rangers’ solid-hitting, con­
sistently fine fielding third baseman.
The Rangers have let It be known
Bell Is available. Not so much because
they’re that anxious for him to leave,
but only because he's so dead set on
going someplace else.
You might say a sickness has set In.
Bell Is sick of watching the World
Scries on TV. He wants to be In one.
and never has been during the last
five years he has been with Texas or
the seven previous ones he was with
Cleveland.
The Orioles would love to have Bell.
So would the White Sox and Yankees,
among others.
This year, the Orioles had enough
punch so they were able to struggle
along with weak-hlttlng Todd Cruz at
third base. They don't want to do It
again Aext year. That's why they're
after Bell, a .283 lifetime hitter who
generally drives in around 70 runs
and hits 15 homers or so.
Bell won't go cheaply. Before they
give him up. the Rangers would want
a couple of outfielders who could run
and hit the ball. Preferably from the
left side. Say someone like swltchhlltlng John Shelby and maybe Jim
Dwyer. It’s hard to sc« the Orioles
giving both up. I woildn't be sur­
prised If the Rangers got around to
talking about the Orioles' big right­
handed reliever. Sammy Stewart,
eventually.
The point ts the Orioles may be
baseball's new world champions, but
one thing they don't do la sit around
on their laurels.
If they feel they have a problem at a
particular position, they make sure to
fix It. Their minor league structure Is
so sound, they frequently can take
care of the problem from within by
promoting one of their own players.
Not always, though.
For some reason or other, the
Orioles never seem to have any
trouble coming up with outstanding
young pitchers. Down through the
years, they've developed enough of
their own Inflelders and outfielders as
well. Catchers are something else,
though. They never seem to be able to
find them In their own system. The
two Joe AltobelH relied on moat this

M idget Rebels
Win 5th G am e; Footba11
W arriors, 3-0-1
The All-American Midget Rebels, the defending slate
champions, won their fifth straight game of the '83
season by defeating Apopka this past Saturday. The

Pop Warner Football

NEW TOOK (UPI) - TN* United
P rtu lnNm*tim*l Bawd * Co*ch*t Tap
X HU a ll*p« ta#tb*il ratings.
V it
pUc* *W*t OTd fKordi In
(tout petals btt*d tn U petah tar
ptact. Id tar w and **c. I .
*14
t. NrbrtUo IN) ()«)
7*0
I Tens Ul ( it )
SU
} Non* Certain* ( I t)
K4
4 -Wnl Virginia l i t )
TO
I Auburn ( i l l
771
i. Florid* ( i t l )
747
7. O wn1* l i * »
704
|. Southern Mattod.it lit)
771
t Mlwni (FI*) ( i l l
744
It StKMgan I I I I

II llUntat lit)

TP
Ul
HI

Iw « ( i l l
Midget Rebels arc striving toward the Pop Warner II.
I) Maryland ( i l l
National Championship game.
100
14 Arliana ilata (4t i l
14
Running backs Chad Groseclose and Todd Fuggl have 11 Washington ( i l l
4)
each had 100-plus yards rushing In several games this M Bngh*m Young ( i l l
*1
17. Oklatom* !*))
year. Skip McMillan and Johnny Griffin arc averaging II Ota* Staff 147)
74
H
over eight yards per carry. The productive offense Is the l« Pittsbwph ( i l l
il
result of good blocking by offensive linemen Jack X : u ; AUUm* (43)
II
70 Hit) Bottan CPtag* ( i l l
Campbell. Derek Wllfong. Dennis Hoban and Wayne
Nfta: i f sprsomant with lb* Antrim *
Jackson. Kelly McKinnon has provided team leadership Fttahsll Cuchti AtttcUlta*. tasms •*
from his quarterback spot, where he has completed over prtbtlta* br A* NCAA * rt InPigibta tar SM
T*p 71 i»d M ltaM l ckomyoRtki*
60 percent of his passes.
a n M trtb ** *r lb* UPI Board ft
The defense has done an outstanding Job In victories Cuttat Tbt
over Eustls. Orlando Southslde, Pine Castle and ■ia. Arli***. Wkhtti Walt * * t Satakam
Titusville. The Rebels have not allowed a single point In M l l i l l l l p p l .
five games. Sean Casterline and Steve Ogler have played •MA* Bate's *M school
the defensive end position to perfection. The Rebel
defensive tackles. Jeff Frocmmlng and Scott Allen, have
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Amtrlca* C w ItrttK *
been tn the opponents backfleld all year long. The
Eait
leaders In tackles have been Frank Redding. Robb Boss.
W IT
Greg Markham and Mike Mandtvllle. When the Butt .1*
I 70
4 70
opponents have passed. Scott Stiles, Flip Page an Joe Miami
Baltimore
4 70
Baumgardner have Interceptrd on several occasions
NY lets
7 40
The Midge Rebel cheerleaders, led by Lois Gibbs and Not England
7 4I
Dixie Plank, have done a superb Job of supporting the
Cant ill
team with great enthusiasm tn rain or shine, said coach
Pittsburgh
S 7 0
Dennis Groseclose. Groseclose. the Midge Rebels' head Ofrf'and
4 7 0
coach, is assisted by Ron Brown. Jerry Lisle. Bob Cincinnati
1 4I
haul tan
I 7 I
Campbell. Bob Markham and Roger Casterllnc.
The next game for the Midget Rebels Is Saturduy
against Daytona Beach at Lake Brantley High School It
Is Homecoming for the Rebels and the game Is
scheduled to begin at 8 p.m.

The Winter Park YMCA Warriors, a member of the Jr.
Midget division of the Mid- Florida Pop Warner
Conference, have started out the season with an
Impressive 3-0-1 record. The Warriors' players consist
mostly of boys from the Tuskawllla. Casselberry and
Fein IJark arcus und most played for the Tuskawllla
Warriors of the SYSA Pee Wee division last year.
Each week, the Winter Park YMCA travels to play at
high school stadiums from the Space Coast to Eustls.
The Warriors currently lead the Tomlin Conference of
the Jr. Midget division, one game ahead of the Pine
Castle Rams and the Conway Dolphins.
This past Saturday, the Warriors rolled to a 45-0 rout
of the Union Park Raiders. John Mllllnog scored a pair of
touchdowns, one on a 11-yard run nnd the other from 10
yards out. Mike Julian added a 70-yard TD run and
quarterback Kyle Scott hooked up with Chad Duncan for
u 45-yard scoring strike.
The defense also provided u couple of scores as both
Zack Thomas and Gary Cordcr returned a puss
Interception for a TD. J tc Wallace was the standout on
the defensive line while Jason Rosenblatt was the
standout on the offensive line.
The Warriors' next game is Saturday at 11 u in.
against thr Eustls Lynx at Orlando's Oak Ridge High
School.

0*11*1

Washington
Phtltdtlphi*
NY Giants
it Louis
Mtamta*
Orton Bar
D**r*tl
Chicago
T*tnp« Bar

7
S
4
t
7
Cattral
t
4

714
J71
J7I
47*
47*

III
144
117
141
HI

Pet
I 000
714
J71
JM
704

PF
7IS
77*
111
174
177

SPda Zorrag*
1 Pinson Aron*

IPInton

m
,2

1100 740
1JO

440 4 00 1.40

4 Bilbao
4 00 1J0
7 R *y*t
14*
Q ( M l t f J t ) P ( M i *7JO) T
(2+11 IM .M
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sitquo-A rana
1*40 S00 4*0
iG a b io l* Elorta
4.70 I JO
400
7 Pinson Edtava
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( M I ) 14*00
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) Ran* M ontlll*
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1 Bilbao Y l*
7.40 400
0 74*gut Banjul"
410
Q (I D M .«ti P CM* 04.70) T
(1-1-0) 1141JO
l i i t b gam*
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17 10 1 40 4J0
4Echav*Zubl
0 40 5.40
1 Durango s»rpuln
4.40
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(4-4-1)441 JO
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17 40 7JO 7.40
1 Ricardo Arc*
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(1)4)43174

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(AS Than EDT)
Bwtlai* at PtttSbwgh. 7 71p m
Bottan al tXnb*c. 7 7Jpm
Calgary i t N Y Wandsrs I 01 p i

J&amp;i-alai
At Orlando Seminole
Monda r ntpbl r t t u llt
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I Bilbao M onllll*
7JO 7.40

year. Series' MVP Rick Dempsey, nnd
Joe Nolan, both were obtained In
deals with other clubs. Dempsey from
the Yankees, and Nolan from the
Reds.
Tippy Martinez, the Orioles' left­
handed relief ace. and southpaw Scott
McGregor were two of the five players
who came from the Yankees with
Dempsey In the 1976 deal for Ken
Holtzman. Doyle Alexander and two
others. Three years later, the Orioles
almost made the mistake of dealing
Martinez away for that all-elusive
catcher.
Bothered by tendinitis. Martlr.cz
didn’t have much a year In 1978 for
the Orioles. He wound up wlthh the
highest ERA of his career. 4.83. and
nearly went to the Tigers for Milt May.
but Detroit wouldn't make the deal.
That same year the Orioles also tried
to trade Martinez for Nolan, who was
with the Braves then. Lucky for them,
that one fell through.
How many times have you heard
the best deals are the ones that are
never made? It's true.
But the Orioles have made some
excellent deals. Tito Landrum, whose
10th-lnnlng homer broke up a score­
less pitching duel and also the backs
of the White Sox In the final playoff
contest, is a splendid example. He was
the player to be named In the trade
the Orioles made with the Cardinals
during the past summer.
After the Phillies were beaten In the
Scries. Tippy Martinez talked about
Landrum's fine catch on Gary Mat­
thews tn the ninth inning of Sunday's
game and the difference Landrum had
made to the club.
"He gives us more speed In the
outfield." the Orioles' reliever said. "I
meai. he went a long ways and made
a terrific catch on Matthews. We never
had that kind of speed for years. Now
that we've got It with guys like
Landrum and Shelby. It makes a big
difference.”
Joe Morgan, who might’ve played
his last game with the Phillies,
probably paid the Orioles the ultimate
compliment.
"I don't think there are many teams
that play 'team baseball' or play
together as a unit like they do.” he
said.

I Pinson A guirr*
TOM 4 00 7.00
SLaqut-Barquln
* N t.40
I CH«* R ry ft
4.00
Q I I I ) M t t ) P 11 1) 100.00) T
( l i t ) 7*54 *4; DO (1-1101.00
Third gam*

7

San Franches
LA Rams
Non Or ham
4
Atlanta
7
Santa rh Rmtah
Detroit li, Chicago U
Pittsburgh 44 Cltvtland 17
Mlnrmsi* 74 Htaittan 14
Miami TLN.V.JtH 14
SI Loud 44 Tampa Bay J
Not England 77, San Otag*It
Sot Frmdsca t t Not O rtar* U
Buftota &gt;0. Baltwnart 7
Dai 1*1)7. PN!*dtlpM*7
Kanaat Q t, ■. NYG*anh 17
Dsmtf 74 Cincinnati 17
S *o l1 l*M O Raiders)*
L A Rami 17. Atlanta 71
Mender's town
Green Bay 44. Washington 47

By MILTON RICHMAN

Q (1-1) 41.4*; P (1-J) OS.70) T
( l i l ) 71044

1

I
Wfit
I
i

Sports
Parade

MO

Eighth gam*
I Gall* Mandl
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SArraCTtatta
U J * SI0
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MO
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(0-0-4) HOJO
Ninth gam*
lOtaa-Zwbi
UJO MO MO
7 Aramayss Mantilla
*00 4-*0
3 T tllo Z arrt
M0
Q (IS ) 17J0) P ( M ) 07JO) T
(1+1) 170.10) Pith 4 ( 2 I + S + I ) I
sttanar 4 *1 4 pays MOJO) carry****
7 U U .lt
Ittbgam *
1 M IU I F orth
N X MO 1*0

4 Aramayo B*rquln
0.40 IS *
4 Eduardo Echos*
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lllh p t m *
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to o
4.40 1J0
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" 00 * 00
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(1+ 7 ) U U . lt
111b o*tn«
5 Durango Zorra
11.00 I1J0 14.40
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7.10 O.aO
7 A r r* F * r * h
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(1+71171 J *

Olbfam *

1 Charola C hitlo
2100 M 0 140
1 Durango KM Zubl
U N 14 20
4 Aramayo Y to
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(t-1 -4M 4 l.il
A - I M l i H indi*: *141.101

Bowling
WEDNESDAY
HINOONERS
Standings: Stanslrom Rtally lt d ;
Chord*'* Angels. IS*) Sanlord Htg
4 Air. 14-1*,- Hula Bates. ( M i l
Untorgatlobtat.
11-11) WOTMF1.
IP 14; WOTM/1. OVh-lSVb) F rilly
Fllli**.IW ISVY;
High Games Mary Elmor*. I f f )
D-mn* Alien, IN ; H*tan Harrison.
112171 I lf ) Ros* M a u m m llh . I l l ;
Phyllis -Molt.
174-170;
J**nnta
Adorns. 17B-440; Ida Bakar. 171171;
Thompson.
1 * 4 ISS;
Louis*
Martsock, fw ,
High Sortat: H*tan Harrison. SU;
Ida Bakor. *0*. Phyllis M otl, *07,
Sam Bodon. 471; LorpHa Slocoy. 4J1;
J*annl« Adorns. 471; Pal Thompson,
al*. Donna Allan. 411; Lour* L**hy.

CT;

Converted Splits: Barbara K*d*y.
O-7-t; Mary Elmor*. Jutelta Addison.
M id i* Murray. 210; Pal Thompson.
2 7 ,2t4h»tc* Barb Clark 2d;
O tter Highlights: 4 Strlkas Hatan Harrison; Turkeys — tto o
Elm or*. Ros* M*»»*r*mlth. Libia
Whltatead. Donna Allan; Qu#*n Ol
T h tW w k — M ar* Elm or* plus 104

Convenience &amp; Package Store

A grant ploca to buy
tondwlchat, grocaiiai
todos. lea, picnic suppllai
bear, and liquor

7 d o y t • ur*«k Irom
7 •.m . u n til • p.m . oni
I I p .m . M i v f**k *n d »
Visa 4 M asta ico id
cheerful I , occupied.

530 N. Palmetto A w . Adjacent To Th« Holiday Inn Sonford

�■BB—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Pel. 1», 1H)
X TT*«S (iPfftlMCt ANO SfRYlCt IN SANrOAO UM MOlt COUNTY

________________________

RUST PROOFIN G

Minnons

AUTOOIASS
STONE FRONTS
SHOWER DOORS
TABLE TOPS

"TRUST
US AGAINST

Review

PLEXIGLAS

MON.-FRI

318 S. French A«enue

$-5:30

IG CARS

- I

r

Coi£ 322-2611 Howl

Sanford. FL 337T1
iJ5»l U l-iie u 't r a r g » ^ Only: J2J-1174

a

^ o u t v n iiA d u c i u c c c n il r u e i i a i / c a
• PUT TOUH aUilNtSi UN INt MUVt •

7\&amp; 4t4M tot&lt; U ( f a t ( f a ll

323*7272

Ith ST. * HWY. 17-92
SANTORO
Glass Tinting - Auto Detailing • Fabric Protection

F M
W

"V /

r
M

K

r
f

.

M

A D V E R T IS IN G

MAKE YOUR STOOL THE
PjRFECT SPECIMEN
Wo W ill Strip Any

A SK ABOUT OUR
"H A L L O W E E N M A K E U P "

Jf

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

A D V E R T ISIN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

LET US HELP YOU CREATED
AN ORIGINAL COSTUME
-W
FROM OUR FABULOUS
■ COLLECTION OF CLOTHES
■ AND IDEAS.

T
= ~

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Straight Chair,
Melal Or Wood

Second Im age

$ A
O

b

A
W

3416 Orlando Dr. (Hwy. 17-92)
W Ml. N. ol Joe Creamons. Sanford

CONSIGNMENT CLOTHING
Hwy. 17 92 i 27th St., Sanford (N o il To J tw tl T) 323-9421

Connie Dye
(left), owner
of The Cut Shop
and hairstylist
Lau ra Lam bert

SUPPLIES™ CRAFTS
HOURS

OF ALL KINDS
TARN • RIBBON * DMC THREAD
BEADS*ASSORTED KITS
O il FAINTS *riOWERS • CRAFT BOOKS
ASK ABOUT OUR CLASSES

A&amp;ty

Suflfdtf

323-4569

It.

SANFORD

C O U PO N

PAGE'S 1-HOUR PHOTO

VOLKSHOP

S p e c ia liz in g In S erv ice &amp; P a rts F o r

iy

V .W .'s, Toyot&amp;and Datsun

2698 Zayre's Plaza

(Corner 2nd A Palmetto)

20 Exp. Slide of Movie Film u j

Va price $ 1 . 2 5
Z t X s F '" "

214 S. Palmetto Ave
K
SA NFO R D
f
PHO NE

g U fc rjB

321-0120

'

3 2 2 -0 2 1 6

SUMMER CLEARANCE!

o r n h i l f ’s i n t e r i o r s

S h e r l e e ’s
T h rift Shop

( jh

307 E. Second St
Sanford
m u s t i m 3 Dcucmnn shams
WITHANT DMKBY OKU*

(Form erly V irg in ia '! T h r ill Shop)

non t u rn

70S Hey. 434 - M tr K
LON6WOOO BUSINESS CENTER
IONGWOOD, a 327S0
|30S| 830-4386

Care About Your Hair

Seconds
IrrtfuUrs
Donations WtlceiM

We Welcome The
"Good Ole Boys" with 4-Wheel
Drive Vehicles, Pick-Ups, Jeeps
and Hard To Place Vehicles

If Your Hair Is
Not Becoming To You
You Should Be
Coming To Gs!

CALL VICKI AT

3 2 1 -4 5 8 0
— ( / &gt; ------------

VICKI JERNIQAN

3 n &lt; u &lt; * a tic 4 &gt;

r/ h

H a ir “ M ” P la c e
SANPOI

N ELSO N FLO R ID A

Formerly a hairstylist with Hair Now for five
years, Connie has had her own shop since April,
1982.
Laura Voltollne Lam bert, hairstylist, joined the

auiaiirnuiiM V iiM iilll
UNFINISHED

* |N |

SOLID W OOD

1

M

NO* F4TUTM

stair of The Cut Shop three months ago, A lifelong
resident o f Sanford, she specializes in haircutting
and perms.
The Cut Shop specializes In natural looking
custom cuts, perm s and coloring. T h ey do all the
advanced styles of haircutting, perm anent waving,
hair coloring and hair chemistry.
They use quality Jhlrm ack hair care products In
the salon and also have them available for home
use.

The Cut Shop has a clean, wholesom e at­
m osphere with contem porary
decor that Die
"T h e y know what 1 am doing lor their hair and 1 v/holc fam ily will enjoy. Connie em ploys only the
expect them to do their part to keep their hair highest Christian ethics and professional stnnd a id s In her business dealings.
healthy and natural looking," Connie explains.

T I L . 3 2 3 -S 9 S 0
503 ra iM C H A V E .

If you really care about your hair, The Cyt Shop
Is your kind o f place. O w n er Connie Dye says. " I
care more about m y customers* hair than they
d o ."
The Cut Shop is located at 2557 Park Drive,
S a n fo rd , (b e tw e e n 25th Street and F rench
Avenue.)
Connie gives her clients consultations and has
all of them on a continuous hair care program so
that their hair alw ays looks nice and in top
condition.
She keeps records of w hat Is done for their hair
and when

The shop Is open M onday. Tuesday. Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. Appointm ents are preferred.
They are also open some evenings by appoint­
ment. Cal! 321 -C U T S (321-2887).

F41UTU

W

Some Roses 1 .0 0 O ff Ref. Price
Cold Weather Annuals
,
Chests • Curios • Tobies
Choirs • Roll Top Dosks1
A n d M a n y U nusual Places
F IN IS H Y O U R S E L F O R H A V E
O U R P R O F E S S IO N A L D O IT.

THE WOODSHED

k Veggies

7 9

ph.

JEAN NORRIS
F E R N S A E X O T IC PLANTS

M

Specializing In Weddings - Receptions
*
Florist Supplies
601 Calory Ave.
Ph. 322-3976
Sanford

Cw - M m y Frsae Nm Mm

See Us Fer Details

SAI

LOVELAND’S

REFlNISHING NEXT

3 2 3 -5 1 0 3

DOOR

Ito lU M W N M U M M ftU M ia ilfliliil

S P E C IA L IZ IN G IN N A TU R A L LOOKING
CUSTOM CUTS, PER M S A COLOR
305-321-CUTS
32I-3B87
h i? Park Dr,

Seminole
Paint &amp; Body

7666 HIAWATHA AVE. (Behind Ceehs Cemer)

PH. 322-7496

"Only F o r Those Thai Care
About Their H a ir"

C a r -o -lln e r

8 3 4 -0 0 7 7

WtrM't Finest

CERTIFIED
We Specialize In Both

c h a in l in k

I'ii

!

Ratldenllal • Commercial

UU UlJj J

Or O o ln w s e ll

WOOD

J

&lt;|eanin9

company
w om en recom m end

h

Financing Available

rtOMPTi [/HIT INSTAIIAIION

The carpet

d

Sinlord

Driftwood Villa&amp;i

fniM TH TI CHAIN LINK &amp; WOOD FENCES

m

OWNER: CONNIE OYE

Repair System

A ll W c rk G u a ra n te e d

CLEM LEONARDS SHELL

PERKINS SEMINOLE FENCE

\SolutMwy

FINANCING
AVAILABLE

FA M ILY
H A IR
CENTER
R io d e J a n e ir o

KWY' i7 M *7 LAKE MARY UVD.
774-1800 Of 322-8060

m i
ESTIMATES

322-9430
2500 PARK AVE

SANFC

Reg 514 29

8 "
Trash
Container

Autiton/cd

KEN N EL

SiREDKEN

"KtM tul S m u iU y

Salon Prescription Center

Call Today

" v

Seminole Co.
Winter Park-Maltland

339-4969

629-0202

OUH CO M M ITM ENT We w ill (le a n e sm all section
Ol tour o rtievt carpel area If you are not completely
satisfied, w e 'll leave, at NO CHANCE to you

3 2 3 -6 5 2 2
HOURS
MON SAT. 9 AM 5 PM
MON. A ININS. EVENINGS
OPEN TILL I PM
SUNDAY 11 AM-4 PM

Lake M a ry
Travel
S49 W. Lob* M ary Bled,
ta k e Alary. PI 31744

3 2 3 -0 2 7 1

Kniyut

"N

Oott

All kennels are not alike
Those who care choose.

Apr Acute*

RjS

AIR CONDITIONING - FRONT END WORK
COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE - EXPERT TUNE-UPS

S p e c ia l
of the Month

UJ
l

Jr

Ss Anatte a came* * t-year warranty EiVi
»*» (Msec can has S^a Sd. umwu eon•eunon Hows up low gator* oi?i0«&gt;i &lt;u

v*

“r&amp;omt

Zkluu "PxivoU
tfieem U f &amp; *pUa C**£aU

2330 E. CELERY AVE.
SANFORD, FLORIDA

305-321-5709

UHtat U turn to bulwtu. mt gel ti. frauUnI

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tm»*day, Od. II,

Calendar
Thf Operlnf Of A
Unique fUnderprlen
Preparatory Prnfram For
4 Year Oldi Thlt f e ll

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser
A D V E R T IS IN G

A CHILD S WORLD
AN E X C E L U t il

• PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE

EDUCATIONAL O f P M T ilN R Y

CALI 323-8424 m«t. b &gt; M «n

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

Get Jump On Winter
See Ace Auto Radiator
D o n 't le t O ld M a n
W in te r sneak up on
you. T h e re ’s no need to
drive your car to work
without a heater. You
can get the Jump on
cold weather by letting
Ace Auto Radiator take
care o f your car's radia­
tor and heater needs.
W illia m " D i l l " MeCallcy. owner and oper­
ator o f Ace Auto Radia­
tor. 711 French Ave.,
Sanford, is a radiator
specialist and he knows
his business.
During the month o f
Novem ber he Is olTcrlng
senior citizens (65 and
older) an even better
break than his usual 10
percent off. He will give
them a 15 percent dis­
count on any work done
other than patchwork
during the month.

t PAINT
SUPPLIES
A COMPLETE LINE

Benjamin M oore Paints
Pen Paints

CLASS &amp; PAIN

S e i( M

COMPANY, INC.

(IjM rlc

(E y n ic s

(Connection
JU S T L IK E T H E G O O D O LO P A Y S

FREE GIFT WITH ANY
PURCHASE Of *20 OR MORE
Antiques • Collectibles • Cretts
133 W E S T B A Y A V E . LO N G W O O D
2nd St'M l South 01 longwood Potl Ohio*

^

—

lit 4 ltd Sun 14 PM

HOURS iu« sii iiAMSPM

CUSTOM DRAPERIES
ARE HOT.AS EXPENSIVE
AS YOU MAY THINK

CA LL 322 0953

T h e shop Is equipped
w ith m o d e rn In la n d
eq u ip m e n t. In clu d in g
fhc Flo Tester, to give
you com plete radiator
bcrvlec.

VER TIC A LS.* M INI BLINDS • W O VEN W O O D S

ALL AT DISCOUNT PRICES!*

; T his Includes clean­
ing. repairing, recorlng
and also Installing new
com plete radiators and
h eaters for cars and
trucks.

Ill FR EN C H AVB.

1J1-VUS

SANFO RD

O P E N M O N . T H R U F R I .M ____
SA T. H I
^
A L L W O R K G U A R A N T E E D ■■
1 D A Y S E R V IC E
&lt;M

A c e A u to R a d ia to r
can service large and
sm all radiators, heaters
and gas tanks. All work
Is guaranteed.

em it

10% DISCOUNT^

hi

TUESDAY, OCT. 18
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m., M«i?lah Lutheran Church
Highway 17-92 aouth of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
Overcatcrs Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Florida Power a
Light building, Sanford.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19
Sanford Klwanls Club. noon. Civic Center.
Free legal services by Legal Aid Society of Seminole
County for those who qualify, 9 a.m. to noon. Salvation
Army Center. 700 W. 24th St.. Sanford.
Casselberry' Rotary, 7 a.m. Ca-eelberry Senior Center.
Secret Lake Park. North Triplet Drive.
Sanford Breakfast Rotary. 7 a.m.. Skyport Restaurant.
Sanford Airport.
League of Women Voters Seminole-Orange Legislative
Reception, 5:30 p.m., John Young Museum. Loch Haven
Park. Orlando.
United Way of Seminole County Golf Tournament, 1
p.m. shotgun start. Sabal Point Country Club.
Longwood.
Golden Age Games Executive Committee. 8 -a.m..
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Rebos and,Live Oak Rcbos Club, noon and 8 p.m..
closed. 130 Normandy Rd.. Casselberry.
Altamonte Springs AA . 8 p.m.. closed. Altamonte
Springs Community Church. State Road 436 and
Hermil'ri Trail. Alanon meets same time and place.
Casselberry AA. 8 p.m.. closed. Ascension Lutheran.
Ascnsclon Drive, Casselberry.
Bom to Win AA. 8 p.m., open discussion. 1201 W.
First St., Sanford.
THURSDAY. OCT. 20
Lake Mary Rotary Club. 8 a.m.. Lake Mary High
School.
United Way of Seminole County report meeting. 8
a.m.. Senior Citizen Multipurpose Center, 200 N. Lake
Triplet Drive. Casselberry. Complimentary breakfast.
Fall Festival Bazaar sponsored by Episcopal Church
Women. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Holy Cross Episcopal Church
Parish Hall. 400 S. Magnolia Ave.. Sanford. Luncheon
servrd 11-2.
DeBary Blood Bank Red Cross blood drawing. 4-7
p.m. DeBary Community Center. Shell Road.
Good News Mission (Seminole County Jail ministry)
covered dish luncheon, noon. Community United
Methodist Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry. Opened
to the public.
Free oral screening sponsored by American Cancer
Society. 1*5 p.m.. office of Dr. Mlcheal Zcrtvltz. 916
Deltona Blvd.. Deltona.
-^jyhalr of a Book Sale sponsored by Friends o f the
a tra ry of Seminole County, 3-9 p.m.. Interstate Mai!,
Altamonte Springs.
Overeaters Anonymous, open, 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St. Open speaker.
Sanford Alanon. 8 p.m.. The Crossroads. Lake Minnie
Road off Highway 17-92, Sanford
Oviedo AA, 8 p.m., closed. First United Methodist
Church. Oviedo.
FRIDAY. O C T , 21
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls, 7 a.m., Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport.
Optimist Club of South Seminole, 7:30 a.m.. Holiday
Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte Springs.
Pre-School Center of Sanford benefit "Christmas In
October," craft show, Sanford Woman’s Club. Oak
Avenue. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.. gifts, decorations and baked
goods.

B r in g y o u r c a r to A c c

Au to Radiator for a free
go o lln g system check

W illiam " B ill" M cC a ile y , owner of A ce Aufo Radiator,
for bis father. W allace

Bill has owned and
operated Acc Auto Ra­
diator since May 1980.
Before then he worked

D .

M c C a ile y ,

w h o

opened the Acc Auto
R a d ia to r bu sin ess at
this location In 1969.

T H E SW EA1

BUI Is open for busi­
ness from 8 a.m. to 6
p.m. M onday through
Friday and 8 a.m. to
noon on Saturday.

F o r m a in t e n a n c e ,
repair or replacem ent
you can trust A cc Auto
Radiator. Call 322-0235
for one day service.

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S A N F O R D P A IN
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tt thou aho how been told nottimf
CMtd be done lor them cm Imd out
about the latest methods of heat
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R E N T A C A R *9??

Sanford

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Mnn. • Fri. H AM • 5:30 I'M Sat. 8 AM - I I’M

123 So H *i 17-92
Gavsclbecry
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|

�&lt;B—Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.______Tuetday, Oct. IS, 1H3

Legal Notice

Corporate Tax
Most Lawmakers Favor
Repeal Of The Measure
TALLAHASSEE (U N ) - A new survey
shows a majority of Florida lawmakers
want to repeal the tax on corporate
out-of-statc profits, but several fellow
legislators say that attitude Is hypocriti­
cal.
The Issue comes up today In the
Cabinet, where Secretary of State George
Firestone Is expected to Introduce a
resolution calling for a special session to
repeal the tax. But the resolution. If
passed, would not mandate a special
session.
House Speaker Lee MofTltt and Senate
President Curtis Peterson arc against a
special session, and so Is Gov, Bob
Graham. Graham can call a special
session, or MofTltt and Pon together can
call one.
The only other way to hold a special
session Is the complicated "selFstarter"
method, which has been attempted three
times since 1960 but never worked.
The results of the new survey —
published today in the New York Times
Florida newspapers, the PaJm Beach
Post and the M/amJ News — said 66 of
the state's 120 House members and 21
of Its 40 senators favored repeal of the
controversial tax.
In the House. 33 Democrats and an
equal number of Republicans said they
want the tax repealed, with 23 Demo­
crats and one Republican saying they
were undecided.
In the Senate. 14 Democrats and seven
Republicans favored repeal. Five Demo­
crats said they were undecided.
Rep. Ueana Ros. R-M!aml. was the sole
Republican House member to speak
against repeal. She sharply criticized
legislators favoring repeal.

“ They wnut to repeal this lax after
passing It three months ago. No wonder
people think politicians are hypocrites,"
she said.
“ They voted for It to get support from
school boards, but now they don't want
to alienate businessmen. They *e||
themselves out. You can't talk out of
both sides of your mouth. They knew
what the tax would do."
Sen. Frank Mann. D-Fort Myers, also
spoke against repeal.
"W hat’s the big problem? What In­
dustries are moving out of Florida? Who
is leaving? Everybody is saying the sky
is falling, but this chicken doesn't
believe It. 1 don't accept the doomsday
forecast of business."
The new tax was the cornerstone of
Gov, Bob Graham's education spending
plan approved by the Legislature this
summer. It allows the state for the first
lime to tax the foreign and out-of-statc
profits of Florida businesses and their
subsidiaries and affiliates.
Associated Industries of Florida, the
powerful business lobby which has
waged a campaign to have the tax
repealed, picked up an Important ally 10
days ago when Lt. Gov. Wayne Mlxson,
who also heads the Commerce Depart­
ment. broke publicly with Graham on
the Issue.
MofTltt. D-Tampa, Joined Peterson.
D-Lakeland. in backing the new levy for
now.
"W e’re not going to have a special
session. I haven't heard anything bad
about It (the tax), but l)ie perception. If it
is bad. I haven't seen It yet.” Peterson
said.

Administration Opposes
Network For Organ Donors
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Despite pleas
from families of patients needing lifesaving organ transplants, the Reagan
administration is opposing a move to
have the government set up a national
computer network to locate donors.
The administration's position against
government Involvement in a national
organ donor program stands In stark
contrast to President Reagan's personal
efforts to assist transplant patients.
In one of his more publicized efforts,
Reagan earlier this year volunteered the
use of a government plane to take a child
to a hospital for an organ transplant on
short notice.
"W hy shouldn't we let private organi­
zations do It themselves?" Edward
Brandt, assistant secretary for health in
the Health and Human Services De­
partment. asked a House panel Monday.
"I Just do not believe that government
involvement In the procurement of
organs will necessarily improve the
system any further," said Brandt,
espousing a traditional Reagan ad­
ministration line against big govern­
ment.
But In an ardent response. Rep. Albert
Gore. D-Tenn.. sponsor of a bill to set up
a national computer network, said the
government must step in to coordinate
the fragmented system that now exists
for matching kidneys, livers, hearts and
other organs with needy patients.
"(Private organizations) have been
involved for years." Gore said, "and they
haven't done it yet."
"Your whole approach is to wait and
wait and drag your feet and hope it takes

care o f itself." he told Brandt.
Gore's bill not only would get the
government Involved in meshing in­
formation gathered by 110 different,
private donor organizations, but also
would ban the sale of human organs and
pave the way for the government to help
pay for liver and other transplant
operations not funded now.
The bill was Introduced earlier this
month, following hearings this spring
where parents of children awaiting
critical organ transplants called on the
government to help pay for expensive
operations and asrlst In locating donors.
H ep. H e n r y W a x m a n , D -C a llf.
chairman o f the House health and
environment subcommittee, accused the
administration of taking an "Ideological
knee-jerk" approach to Gore's bill.
Dr. Thomas Starzl of Pittsburgh, a
pioneer in liver transplant surgery,
testified he cannot understand the ad­
ministration’s Btand In the wake of
Reagan's persona) involvement in organ
transplant cases.
"I'm absolutely convinced that (Gore's
bill) Is not only useful but obligatory."
said Starzl, who said It might save the
life of a Michigan mother of Jour who
cannot afford a much-needed liver
transplant.
Because government medical aid and
other programs do not cover liver
transplants, Starzl said. Jutile Tazelar
has been unable to receive a new liver.
Gore's bill would also authorize the
federal government to pay for liver and
other transplants at specialized centers.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Jay* Young, tgl. 4 Ernest L.
Young A wt Patricia to Joseph 8
Tesla &amp; wl Jsanm N . Lott I A 1. Blk
34 Suburban Hornet. *7* 000
Pout CHontkt A wf Marla to Paul
Ofcontkl A wl Marla 45% A Lidia
Okontkl t g l . 11%. E 100' ot N 1W cl
NWU Of Sec. * 71 30. UOJOO
Retort J. E van) A Paula to Ovid
M M aart A wl Joyce. Lot 1. Blk E.
Tha Woodland! M I ,100
Equity Realty Inc to Jam riL
Boablngar A wf Nancy M . Un. ttlO
Destiny Spring!. IS-rVOC
Equity Realty Inc to David J.
Kaplan A wl Martha. Un HID,
Dettlny Springt. (13. W0
Saba I Point Dev to Simoni Con
Ur.. Lot 41. Sabal Glen at Sabal
Point, tat.iod
Sabal Point Dav. to Simoni Can
t t r „ Lot *0 Sabal Clan at Sabal Point,

(at.100

Jeno F. Paulucci to David W
Zimmerman A wl Lanh T , Lot I}.
Maadowlandi. t'S.WO
Mellon Fin SVC to Virginia A.
Polverlno. Trustee, l o t 11 A NW ot
1}. Blk I J. Wynne wood. (eO.OOO
FRC Inc . to Hare! B Whitten, tgl
A Lawrence H Rund A wt Sally E .
Lot t l Welt lake Manor Un One.

(7M0Q
Cental Homat ot FI. to Char le i T.
M ille r A wt M arian L.. Lot 14.
Grorevww Vtll l i t Addn. S57.200
Spring wood VIII. A p t! Corp to
Neal 0 Gunderton. tgl A Jearml* K.
Smith, t g l. Un IttB . Springwood
Village, cond M l too
The w m owi to Rlverbend. L td .
portion of Sac
IS J iT f date,
( 100.000

Robert Hedrick A wt Suiarma to
K irk J. Adamt A wt Jeanette. Lot 2.
Blk B. Sweetwater Oekt. Sac. It,

1111.000
Magnolia SVC Corp to Mlchaal D
Walth, Lot J3. Wakiva Sac. Five.
U1.00C
Statay Juhen, Jr. A wt Juaniia to
E m a il McPherton A w l Kerera. Lot
TO.bik I, Fair view *14.500
Pew l Archer A Geneva W illiams
to Emery Green. Lott I I A 11. Blk C.
Plate Terr .13.000
M o ll A Bo lee A wt R a lly ! to
I tract L. Carriun A wt Edna Lott I)
A U &lt;leu E I f o' U .I Blk A.
Senlando Spring! Tr. It. I 14.100
Michael Jamet Nolan II A wf
Maureen O to Ocboreh J Boot M l .

Lot 25. Blk B. Carriage H ill, Un. a.
David Lee Lucet Iqcd) to Shande
Coe Lucet. that part ot W it ot SWU
ot SWU ot SC » I I S . S ot Lk M ill!
Rd.llOO
Ronald lo u rla A wl Suten W to
Robert E Laurie. Lot 123. Crane'l
Rooit V illa!. (100.100
IQCD) Edward Charlet Reining A
wt NlctJ to Ronnie D Cllmer A wt
France!. 13 600
The Anden Group to Douglet
Menlicalco A wt Melanie. Lot t&gt;.
Sun rite Village Un. 1, (M 100
The Anden Group to Douglat
Manitcalco A wf Melanie. Lot (e.
Sunrlte Viitaga Un. I. UO.IOO.
Anpen Group ot FI. to Patrick H.
Smith, tgl A Janette Buford. s g l,
Lot U. Sunrlte Village Un. 2 .154 (00
IQCDi Thornet L Sfiegfr.ed A
Donna C. Holland to Thomet L.
Siegfried. N 100' ot S 144*’ of W 100
Of unpl part of blk I t . Sanlendo, (100
Gatllmore
Homat.
Inc.
to
Divertified Real E tt SVC.. Inc., lot I
A II. Woodland! Eatt. (31.(00
R etort G. Feather to Mindich
Conttr. Co Inc., Loti 4 A 20 Brantley
Harbor/ E att Sat., Meredith Manor.
110.000
Romey Buret* to Alan W Brown,
t g l, Un |(7A Dettlny Springt.
u t.to o
20th Century Hornet to Jamet E.
M lllt. t g l. Lot 00 Tutcowllle. Un
IIA . (124.700
Ruth Hampton Indut
Inc. to
Gabel L Bauer A wt Amelia E . Lot
I. Spring! Landing Un. Two. (111.000
Chemttone Corp to Dwana A
Edward! A wl Nancy. Lot 12,
Shadow L ike W ood! (11.000
Tha Anden Group to Robert A
Bergby A Cindy A. Lot (7 Sunrlte VIII
Un 2.(14.100
Edwin Siciepenlk A wt Joanne to
Samuel A. W liliemton A wl Linda.
(117,000
Phillip Ciecornwtkl A Sutan lo
George Vogeiberher A wt Ugla. Lo*
II. Blk B. Long wood North, (IC.OOQ
Hot Hex G Dickey A wt Docle to
Philip C. D avit A wt Judy A . E 414'
Ot Lot » A W 4144' Of Lot 21, Blk 4).
Sen Undo The Suburb Eteaut, Palm
Springt Sac , 444,000
Batty J Denman (form M o tt I lo
Alien E De-imen hb of Batty J , Lot
J. Blk a Feirlene e ttt . Sac I. repl
(100
Date Jonet A OSJ Prop Inc lo

Edward W. White 44 4 4 \ Ini: S Vff
ot E tt of NWU ot SEU E of SR 424
SCC2I2I 20e&gt;C, (472.J00
Complete Interiors Inc. to Douglet
C. Gomber A wf Diene P , Lot 24.
Amberwood Un. I. (41.000
Ruttell E. Mollberg Jr. A wt
Dorothea J. to MentHeld M. Batchelder A wt Elian R , Lot I A E li o f ,
2. Blk K, Lake Waymen Height!.
Lake Add 1S7.100
M m Jonnton Speart A hb Wm. B.
Sr. to Carlton E. Hottrey A wt Suten.
L o ti I A 2. Chapmen Wood!. (10.000
Lea It Knoi A wt Thee to inomet
J. Col Iyer A wl Nancy K „ from NW
cor of E h of S W of Sec 21 2012 ate.
111,020.
Donald E. Stormar Sr. tnd. A Tr.
E tu i to Donald E. Stormar Jr. A wf
Janet B . Lot I A vacated Wilton Dr ,
blkS. Cryitel HeigMi.ltOO
Trendmaker Homat Inc. to Ranald
G Peliegrlnon A wt Gertruda. Lot
140Tutkewllla. Un tfl. t io i oor
IQCDI Cecil L. Berkley to Bobby
G. Parker A wt Carolyn, Lot 74
Springt Lending Un. E. 1100
Forretf H Doucette. Tr. to Nanette
0 Whidden. t g l . Lot 201 Windward
Sa . Sac 1. lee.ioo
John E. Hunter A wt Sfwllah to
Raymond F. Crotty A Deborah. Lot
A Blk E. Sterling park Un. Four,
472.700
Norman Lotorant A Bath lo An
to-nette Blanch!, tig . Lot 027 Spring
Oake Un. 4. (47400
Gerald L. Winterhalter A wf
Josephine to W illiam r. Manning A
wf Judith W . W 4T of Lot 4 A E U ' ot
1 Blk B. Tha Hills. (124.100
Jamat S Keln A wt Ann B. to
Larry P Kennedy A wt Mary M . W
244’ ot Lot 24 Long wood H lllA
(121400
Equitable Relocation Mgm Corp
to Joteh r. Demo A wf Brenda J , Lot
(3. Tha Highland! Sac One 141400
Derand Equity Grp Inc. ta Gary E
Wilton (M arr ) Lot U. Oakland VIII
$#€. T wo, 45). luo
Equity Really Inc. to Hanry J.
W ilU m t A Haifa. Un. 114D. Oetliny
So&lt;f AOQt. I54j600
t i l l . F. Carnevala, wld to Barbara
J. Walls, t g l , Lot 11A S IV of 11. Blk
H. Northgelt. 177400
Jot L Coker A wf Melba to
W illiam M Earnest A w Patricia.
Lot 1A Apple Valley Un. Four,
(34 000

Legal Notice

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I t hereby given that we a rt
engaged In business at «7 M l 11lend
Ave, Altamonte Springi, Seminole
County. Florida under the fictitious
n a m e e l T I C K A L -CO R I NO
PARTNERSHIP, and that we Intend
to register (Aid name with the Clark
of tha C irc u it Court. Seminole
County, Florida In accordance with
tha provisions o l tha Fictitious Name
Statute. to -W It: Section IA5 0»
Florida Statutes 1057.
■ i t ' Richard j Ticket
rt'M aureen A. Tlckol
/(/V in ce nt A. Cor Ino
/» / Dlrne M. Corl.no
Publish October t l. II, 2J A Nov
ember t, 1(11
DEM-70
Florida Statelet 1(7.244
Notice ol Application
tar Tat Deed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. Ihat
Seminole County tha holder ol the
toy owing certifier let hat Hied tpld
certificates tor a ta i dead lo to
Issued thereon. Tha c e rtific a te
numbers and yean ot Issuance, the
description of the property, and tha
n a m tt In which II wat attested a rt
a t follows:
Certificate No 1714
Year ol Issuance 1(11
Description ot Property: LOT 11
FOX RUN PB 14PG40
N am e In w h ic h a t t a t i a d :
Headlands Inc.
AH of said property being In the
County of Seminole, Slat* of Florida.
U nleti tuch certificate or c e rtifi­
cates shall to redeemed according to
.law tha property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill to told
,la&lt;the highest bidder at the court
houtb door on the l l t l day of
October, 1(*3*II1:OOAM
Deled this 20th day Of September,
11*1.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
of Seminole County, Florida
By: TheresaMecek,
Hat- t r lerk
Publish September 27. October 4. II.
11.1(42
DEL 127_____________________
Fictitious Name
Notice It hereby given that we are
engaged In b utlnett al 2JC Cypress
W ay, C a s s e lb e rry , F L 22707,
Seminole County. Florida under the
fictitious name of CASSELBERRY
PRINTING, end that we intend to
register said name with the Clark ol
the Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with tha pro
vltlo n t of the Fictitious Name Stat­
utes. to Wit: Section 4*5 Of Florida
Statutes 1(57.
/ ! / Marian J. Sperber
/ ! / Beverly J. Campbell
Publish September 27 A October A
11.11.1(42.
OEL-IS4
Florida d ilu te s 117.144
Notice of Application
lof T * i On#d
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, fhel
Seminole County the holder ot the
following certificates has filed said
c e rllflc e ltt for a fax deed to be
Issued thereon. The c tr tlflc a ta
numbers end years of Issuance, tha
description of the property, and the
names In which If was attested are
as tot lows:
Certificate No 1771
Year of Issuance 1(11
Description of Property: LOT 20
FOX RUN PB 14 PG 40
N a m e In w h ic h a s s e s s e d :
Headlands Inc.
All of said property being In the
County ot Seminole. Slate of Florida
Unless such certificate or ce rtifi­
cates shall be redeemed according lo
law the property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill to sold
to the highest bidder at the court
house door on the 14th day of
November. 1(42 e l 11:00 A M
Dated thleeth day of October. 1(42
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
ot Seminole County, F lor Ida
By: Theresa Macek,
Deputy Clark
Publish Octotor 11, II. 25. A Nov
amber 1 ,1(42
OEM 41
Florida Statute* 1(7.244
Notice af Application
(pr t §i [5§)£{ji
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Seminole County tha holder of the
fofiowlng certificates has ffiad said
certificates for a lax dead to to
Issued thereon. The c e rtific a te
numbers and years of Issuance, tha
description of the property, and tha
names In which tt w et assessed are
a t follows:
Certificate No, 1724
Yaaroi Issuance 1(11
Description ot Property. LOT 25
FOX RUN PB I I PGM
N im a In w h ic h a t i t s t a d :
Headlands Inc.
All ef t a li property Uir-g In the
County of Seminole. Stale of Florida.
Unless such certificate or cartltl
cates shall be redeemed according to
law the property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill be sold
to the highest bidder el the court
house door on the 21st day of
October, 1(42 a lU :M A M
Deled this 20th day of September.
1(42.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk ot Circuit Court
of Seminole County, Florida
By: Thereto Macek.
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 27. Octotor 4, II,
IA 1(42
DEL IK

The World Almanac9

Mitch each of the following
signers of the Declaration of
Independence with his voca­
tion:
(1.) John Adams (2) John
Hancock (1) Oliver Wolcott
(4) Benjamin Franklin (5)
Benjamin Harrison
. (a) Judge (b) Lawyer (c)
Farmer (d) Merchant (e)
Printer. Publisher
A NSW E H S

a sa&gt;« tP tq I
1. What bowler won the M il­
ler High Life Lite Classic on
the PDA winter tour on Jan.
9 .19S2? (a) Ear) Anthony (b)
Guppy Troup (c) Bill Straub
2 Who sang the duet, '‘Endleas Love." with Lionel
Richie? (a) Neil Diamond (b)
Juice Newton (c) Diana Ross
2 Which state U nicknamed
the "Pelican Slate” ? (a)
Florida (b) Louisiana (c) Cal­
ifornia
ANSV.EHS
q CJ gq

|

Fictitious h*m»
Nolle* Is h*r*by glv*n that 1 4m
engaged In butlnon t l Rt. A Boi 257.
S tn fe rd , 32771 (Oregon A v * .),
Senlnote County, Florldo under th«
fictitious rum * of ROYAL RIDING
ACADEMY, ond that I lnt*nd to
register M id nans* with th* Clerk ot
the Circuit Court, Somlnolo County.
F lor IJr In accordance with the pro
visions of tho Fictitious Nam* Stalutet. to-WIt: Section 145 Ot Florida
Stotutes 1(57.
/('C ornelius Lewis
Publish September 77 A October 4.
It. II. l( ( l.
DEL 152
Florid* Statutes 1(7.144
Notice ot Application
te rT a i Deed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. Ihat
Semins!* County the holder ot the
fofiowlng certificate* hes filed M id
certificate* for a la i deed to be
liiu e d thereon. The c e rtific a te
numbers and years of Issuance, the
description of the property, and the
names In which It wet attested are
a tlo lto w t:
Certificate No. 1722
Year of Issuance 1*11
Description of Property: LOT 21
FOX RUN PB 14 PGM
N a m e In w h ic h a t t e s t e d :
Headlands Inc.
A ll of Mid property being In the
County of Seminole. State of F lorlda.
Unless tuch certificate or certlfl
cafes shall be redeemed according to
law the property described In tuch
certificate or certificates w ill to told
to the highest bidder at th* court
houM door on the 14th day ol
November, 1(42*1 I t :00 A.M.
Dated this 4th day of October, 1(42.
(SEAL!
Arthur H . Be :kwlth. Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
ol Seminole County, Florida
By: T h e rtM Macek,
Deputy Clerk
Publish Octotor II . IA 35. A Nov
ember 1,1(43
OE7A43
Fter to* Statutes 1(7.244
Notice el Application
ter T a i Deed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Seminole County the holder ol tho
following certificate* hat filed Mid
certificates tor a ta i deed to be
Issued thereon. The c e rtific a te
numbers and years ot Issuance, the
description ol the property, ond the
names In which It wat asMtsed are
a t follows:
Certificate No 1731
Year of Issuance H4I
Description of Property: LOT 27
FOX RUN PB I I PGM
N a m * In w h ic h a t t e s t e d :
Headlands Inc.
A ll of M id property being In th*
County of Seminole. Slate of F lorlda.
Unless such certificate or c e rtifi­
cates shall to redeemed according to
law the property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill be told
to the highest bidder al th* court
houM door on th * 31st day of
Octotor. I*42at tl:0 0 A M .
Dated this 30th day ot September,
1(42
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
ot Somlnofe County, Florida
By: ThertM Macek.

Deputy Clerk
Publish September 27. Octotor A It.
t l. 1(42

DEL-141
Florida Statutes 1(7J44
Nolle* el Application
ter T a i Deed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Seminole County the holder ol the
following certificates has filed Mid
certificates tor a tax deed to be

Issued thereon. Tho c e rtlflc o le
numbers and years of Issuance, fht
description of the property, end the
names In which It wat assessed are
a t Id lows:
Certificate No 1730
Year ot Issuance 1(41
Description ol Property: LOT K
FOX RUNPB I I PGM
N a m e In w h ic h a s s e s s e d :
Headlands Inc
All of said property being in the
County of Seminole, Stole of Florida
Unless tuch certificate or certlfl
sales shall bo redeemed according lo
law Its* property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill be told
to th* highest bidder al the court
h o u M door on the lath day ol
November. t(42 e l l 1 00 A M .
Dated this ath day ol Octotor, 1(42.
(SEAL)
Arthur H Backwlth, Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
ol Seminole County. F lorlda
By: ThereMMacek.
Deputy Clerk
Publish Octotor It . IA 25. A Nov
ember 1,1(42
O EM M
Florida Statutes l(7.2«*
Hctlcs cl Application
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. Ihat
Semlnoie County th* holder ot th*
following certificates hat tiled M id
certificates tor a tax deed to be
Issued thereon. Th* c e rtific a te
numbers and year* of Issuance, th*
description ot tho property, and the
names In which 11 wet attested are
e tlo llo w t:
Certificate No 173*
Yaarof Issuance 1(41
Description of Property: LOT 31
FOX RUNPB 14PGM
N a m * In w h ic h a s s e s s e d :
Headlands Inc.
A ll of M id property being In th*
County of Seminote. State o* Florida
Unless such certificate or certlfl
cates shall to redeemed according to
tow th* property described in tuch
certificate or certificates w ill to told
to in* highest bidder at th* court
houM door on tho Mth day of
November. IttJ a t t l: « A M .
Dated this 4th d«y of Octotor, 1(42.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
ot Somlnolo County, Florldo
By: ThereM Macek,
Deputy Clerk
Publish Octotor It. IA 35. A Nov
ember t, 1(42
DEM K
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business *1 I t ! N.
Longw ood A venue. A lta m o n te
Springs. Semlnoie County, Florida
under th* flctifious name of ALTA
MONTE DEPOT, and that I Intend to
register M id name with th* Clerk of
th* Circuit Court. Somlnolo County,
Florida In accordance with th* pro
visions of tho Fictitious Nemo Slat
utet. to Wit- Section l « 0 l Florida
Stolutot 1(57.
/ ! / Kan Padtow
Publish October II, II. 25 A Nov
ember 1.1(43
DEM 41
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* la hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 142 Whooping
Loop. Altamonte Springt. Semlnoie
County, Florida under the fictitious
n a m e e t A A A A C O U R IE R
SERVICE, and the! I Intend to
register M id nans* with the Clerk ot
th* Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florid* in accordance with th* pro
visions of th* Flctifious Nam* Stot
utet. to Wit. Section 445 0* Florida
Statutes 1(57
/S /M ary K. Antiey
Publish Octotor A 11, I I . 25.1(23
OEM 24

Legal Notice
NOTICEOF PUBLIC
HEARING
NOV. A 1(12
Th* Semlnoie County Board of
Commissioners w ill hold e public
hearing to consider * request for a
change ot uta and i revised t il* plan
on Ih* tol lowing described property:
Th* NW 1* ol Ih* NE '« ol the NE
U. lets I he South 2d ft. for road and
less SR *34 right of way. Section IA
TwpSiS. Rng ifE . Fur flier described
e t on the south t d t of SR 411. *00 ff
westof Bear La ki Hoad.
Th* proposed um It for a one story
apartment p ro |K t with (4 units.
Proposed density Is IQ t u n lit per
acre.
Tha Public Hearing w ill to held In
Room 200. Seminole County Court
house. Santord, Florida, on Nov
ember I. 1(42. al 7 00 P M n r t t
toon thereafter at possible. Written
comments may be filed and th* Site
Plan may be reviewed at the Land
Management Division end those
eppearlng w ill be heard
NOTE: Persons ere advised that.
II they decide to appeal any decision
mad* al this meeting, they w ill need
a record of th* proceedings, and. for
tuch purpoM, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim record of Ibe
proceedings It made, which record
Includes the testimony and evldenco
upon which th* appeal It to to based
Herb Hardin.
Manager
Land Management D'vitlon
Seminole County, Florida
Publish Octotor tl. 1*43
DEM 115
Florida S lilu te i 1(7.1*4
Hal Ice ol Application
tor Tin Deed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Somlnolo County Ih* holder of I ho
following certificates hes filed M id
certificates for a ta i deed to be
Issued Ihereon. The c e rtific a te
numbers and years of Issuance, the
description of th* property, end the
names In which If wat assessed are
as follows:
Cert'flcato No. 1722
Year of Issuance 1(11
Description ot Properly: LOT 32
FOX RUNPB IIP G M
N a m e in w h ic h a s s e s s e d ;
H•*£ lands Inc.
All of taki property being In Ih*
County of f*;n ln o lt. State of Florida
Unless such certificate or certlfl
cates shall to redeemed according to
law th* property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill be told
to the highest bidder at Ih* court
house door on Ih* U lh day ot
November. 1(42 *111:00 A M
Deled this ath dav of Octotor. it u .
(SEAL)
*
Arthur H. Beckwllh. Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Court
of Seminole County, Florida
By: ThertM Macek,
Deputy Clerk
Publish Octotor II. IA 35. A Nov
ember 1,1f4J
DEM 42
Florida 11*1utet 1(7.144
Notice ef Application
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, the)
Seminote County th* holder of the
following certificates has filed Mid
certificates tor a fax deed to to
Issued thereon. T h* c e rtific a te
numbers and years of Issuance. I he
description ot the property, and the
names In which If was assatsed are
a t follows:
Certificate No. 172
Year ef Issuance 1(41
Description of Property LOT 34
FOX RUN PB I I PGM
N a m * In w h ic h a t t e s t e d
Heedlends Inc.
A ll Ol M id property M ing In the
County Ot Seminal*. Slate Of Florida
Unless tuch certificate or c e rtifi­
cates shall be redeemed according to
law th* property described In such
certificate or certificates w ill to sold
to th* highest b-dder al Ih* court
house door on th * l is t day r f
.October. lH J a t II OOA M
Dated this 20th day ol September,
1(42
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwjfh V.
Clerk of Circuit Couri
of Samlnol* County, F tor Ida
By: ThereM Macek.
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 27, October 4. II,
14.1(45
DEL 140
PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICE
As * result ol th* I (to Federal
Census and Estimate ol Increase In
Population. Ih* Division ol Alcoholic
Beverages and Tjbacco. Department
ol Business Regulation. Slat* ol
Florida, w ill fie accepting applica
lions for th* Issuances of quota liquor
licenses In th* following county and
amount:
SC7.UKSLE 12
Applications w ill be accepted
beginning October It. 1(42 a n j con
llnulng through January 14. 104 All
Interested persons should make in­
quiry and/pr file their application by
contacting Ih* O itlrlct Supervisor
Jecx B Wallace. District Office,
Division ot Alcoholic Beverages and
Tobacco. 5400 Diplomat Circle. Suite
III. Orlando. Florida
Howard M Rasmussen,
Director Division ol
Alcoholic U tve ra g a t and
Tobacco
Department ol Business
Regulation Tallahassee,
Florida 22701
By: J B Wallace
Publish: Octotor la. 17, IA 1*43
OEM 75
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fite Number U JU CP
Division Prebait
IN R E : ESTATEOF
THELMA H LEWIS.
Deceased
NOTICEOF ADMINISTRATION
Th* admlrtitlrefion ol Ih* eslete of
THELMA H LEWIS, deceased. File
No 43 525 CP, it pending In the
Circuit Court tor Seminote County.
F lo rid a . Probate D iv is io n , the
address ot which It Semlnoie County
Courthouse. N. Pork Avenue. San
ford. FL. Th* name and address of
tho personal represenlellv* and Ih*
personal representative's attorney
are tel torlh below
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJECTIONS
NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREV
ERBARREO.
A ll Interested persons ere required
fo file w ith this court. WITHIN
THREE MONTHS OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE
(1) all claims against Ih* estate and
(2) any ob|*c1lon by an Interested
person to wt-om this nolle* wat
mailed that challenge* the validity of
th* w ill. Ih* qualifications of the
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction of Iho court
Date ol Ih* first publication of this
nolle* of odminlsirallon. Octotor II,
1(43
Personal Representative:
/«/ Martha E . Barker
Attorney tor Personal
Representatives
/ * / Kenneth W. Me In loth. Esquire of
STENSTROM. MclNTOSH, JULIAN.
COLBERT A WHIGHAM. P A
P O Boi 1134
Sanford. FL 22773 1120
Telephone (105)1211171
Publish Octotor IA 25.1(41
DEM I I I

I

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
f:00 A.M. — S:jn P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY » • Noon

RATES

lllm e
S lcB lin o
3 consecutive tim es 54calin«
7 consecutive lim es 41c ft line
lO consecutlvetim es O c a line
53.00 M inim um
3 Lines M inim um

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

12—Legal Services
Binkrupcy 1720 and CTiapter 13
MIO. Free conference Attorney
M Price For Appt 477 7**7.
CURLEY R. DOLT IE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
101 B W.lsl Street
Santord Fla. 22771271(000

21—Personals
TAXPAYERS RIGHTS
Opposed to "F o x " hunters ProN e m tl Lei me know. P.0 Boi
H i Laka Mary. Fla 12147.

23—Lost &amp; Found
LOST
AMAZON PARROT
___
173 41(4 * r 4 2 U W
SMALL WHITE MALE DOO. Pari
poodle, pari cocker with long
w h it* h * lr . L o ti In a r t * of
Vlnewood and U lh 377 (377

25—Special Notices
New Office now opening
VORWERK
nTOW .ItlSt
Hair Replacament and Wigs. f V
chemotherapy and radiation
p a lltn lt Men Women Children.
Free consultation In your home
or our shop F u'ly licensed
Fleet* call for on appointment
________ _ t(4 « 3 » .___________

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
BABYSITTING In my home E«
p*r lanced mother, free meals.

33—Real Estate
Courses
BOB BALL JR. SCHOOL OF
REAL ESTATE
LOCAL REBATES. 272 J i l l
MASTER CHARGF OR VISA

55—Business
Opportunities
BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Jain IntT Service Co Full training
w/management assistance. High
M m lng potential. E iclm lve ter­
rito ry . Unlim ited opportunity
e v e ll. Am bitious Individuals
only. Cell John Williams collect
person to person.( Iin ts a - H ll.
NEW, b e a u t i f u l Ice
cream /Mndw ich shop Excellent
Sanford location Call today
221-4411 ( A M . to 12:00.________
T-SHIRT Priming Equipment. Like
new condition w llh suppllei.
T ra in in g a v a ila b le . 47.(50
1 445 7017.___________________
e * * a U R O -T IIE * a • a
Man naeded te team new fractal
High profit margin. I K 5515.

63—Mortgages Bought
___
&amp; S o ld ___
a CASH FOR MORTGAOES*
W* buy first and second mortgages
on
homes, from Individuals,
builders, brokers, and real estate
companies. We alto make home
owner loans for home Improv
men I and bill contc'ldafion. Call
us and 1*1 us make you on of ter I
B a rb a ra C ra w fo rd 131 7418.
If you collect payments from a first
or second mortgage on property
you sold, we w ill buy the
mortgage you are now holding
7M 2S(t

71—Help Wanted
ASSEMBLY WORKERS
Light atMmbly work from your
home. Excellent Income oppor
lunlty lor housewives, ele Start
Immediately. Call Maggie at
l- J I 2 - ( 4 * - 4 4 l * . A lt o open
evenings.___________________

NOTICE
BINGO

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice. It hereby given that I am
engaged In business at Loehmann't
Plaja af Altamonte Springt. Rte. 424.
A lta m o n te S p r in g t, S em inole
County, Florid* under the flctifious
name e* JUST STUOS. and fhal I
Intend to register Mid name with th*
Clerk of the Circuit Court. Seminole
County, Florida In accordance with
Ih* provisions of the F k flfio u t Nam*
Statutes, lo W it: Section las 0(
Florida Statutes 1(57
/t/H e d y J Bllndtrman
Publish Octotor 4. II. t l. 35.1(12
DEM IS______________________
Florida Statutes l(7.3U
Notice af Appiicalian
for T ai Deed
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
Seminole County Ih* holder of the
to fie wing certificates hat filed Mid
certificates lor a ta i deed to be
Issued thareon. Tha c e rtific a te
numbers end years ol Issuance. Ih*
description of the property, and Ih*
names In which II was assessed are
a t tol lows:
Carflflcato Ho 1715
Yaarof Issuance 1(41
Description ol Property- COT 34
FOX RUNPB I I PG 40
N a m * In w h ic h a s s e s s e d
Headland! Inc
All of M id properly being In th*
County of Seminole. Stett of F lor Ida.
Unless tuch certificate or certlfl
cates shall b* redeemed according fo
tew the properly descr'bed In such
certificate or certificates w ill to told
to th* highest bidder at th* court
h o u M door on th * lis t dav ol
Octotor. l(t3*M 1:O O AM
Dated this 20th day of September.
1(43
(SEAL)
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk of Circuit Co-rrt
ol Seminole County. F lorlda
By: ThereM Macek.
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 27, Octotor 4, t l,
11.1(41
DEL 114_____________________
NOTICEOF APPLICATION
FOR PERMIT
On July II. 1113, th* St. Johns
River Water Management District
received A p plication No 2 117
007AAN from City ot San lord. PO
B oi 1771. San lord. Florida 33m 1771.
A tte n tio n : W E. K n o w la t. T h *
applicant proposes to withdraw 4 445
mgd ot groundw ater from th *
Floridan aqulter via on* existing a” ,
three e ilsllng I ' ' and eleven ealtllng
17" wells for public supply to a
service area In Seminole County
located In Sections 4 t 11, Township
70S. Range JOE.
Th* Governing Board of th* D lt
Irlct w ill take action to grant or deny
Ih* application no sooner than 30
days Irom the date of this notice
Should you to Interested In this
application, you should contact th*
St. Johns River Water Management
District at P O Box I4K. Palatka.
Florida 22071 l42t. or in person at Its
office on State Highway 100 West.
P alatka. F lo rid *. (04/ 3)1 1321.
Written objection to th* application
may to mad* but should to received
no later then 14 days tram th* date of
publication o lilh lt notice. Written
objections should Id tn 'lfy th* oo
lector by name a.td address, and
fully d ttcrlba th* objection to Ih*
application (Filing a written objec­
tion does not entitle you to o Chapter
120. Florida Statutes. Administrative
Hearing: only those persons whose
substantial interests a t* afle ctei by
Ih * application and who f l i t a
pelltlon meeting Ih* requirements ol
Soctlan 215.201. F A C . may obtain
an administrative hearing ) All lim a
ly filed written objections w ill be
presented to Ih* Board lo r Its
consideration In Its de lito ra l Ion on
ttw application prior to Ih* Board
taking action on th* application
Vicki W Curlis
Senior Records
Technician
Division of Records
St Johns River
Water Management D ltlrtct
Publish October 14.1(4)
DEM 117

KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS
2544 OH t o

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30
Win $25-5100

TEMPLE SHALOM

&amp;
BINGO
Saturday 7 PM
Sunday M at. 12:30 PM

$25 - $50 Games
3 $2 50 Jackpots
178 S r ik u m Bird.
(Cenier Previdenc* Bled )
D ilte n i, F L

BINGO
Santord VFW
P ott 14141
Bingo Tuesday I.
Wednesday night
e a rtyblrd 7:7)
Ladies A u x ilia ry
Bingo
Sunday I t M P.M.
Log Cabin
on tha Lakafrant

WIN *100

BINGO
STARTIN G SUN.
S EP T EM B ER 18th
12:00 ON SUN DAY
BINGO M ON. MITE 7 PM
PUBLIC W ELCOM E!

AMERICAN LEGION HALL
ISOt Orlande Or, Saatard
122 ICSJ

Did you know that your
club or org a n iia tio n can *p
pear In this listing each
week for on ly 11.50 per
week) This it an Ideal way
te Inform Ih * public o l your
club activities.

If your club or erganliefion
would like to bo included In
this fitting call)

Evening lic iu id
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
331 3411

I

�f »

71—Help Wanted

71—Help Wanted

71-H clp Wanted

Auto Part*/Counter Ptrton Expo
rlo n e e p re fe re d , i l t r t Im ­
mediately. Good pay A bon) I Its
Apply In Potion.
Par1lClty,6CSW 15'h
AVON CHRISTMAS WOWII
START SELLING NOW 11
._______m u i w m n u _______
.Avon Ladle*. Foil. part-TIm* over
' '* Sentord, Waihlngton Oaks
Midway A Ganava. 313 4145

Front Dark Clerk w illing lo work 3
to II shift and tome weekends
Apply In peraon. Holiday Inn ot
Sanlord on ttw lake trent.______
GASATTENDANT
Good aalary, h oaplielliallon. I
week paid vacation every 4
monthi For Information Call
. Jtl 14&lt;J between I SP-M

OFFICE HELP Full A part llm t
opening* available now W ill
Tolly train. Phone 434 4044.

CARPENTERS HELPERS
Immedlalty asilgnmenls In Sanlord arta.
NEVER AKE

A b le s t
Temporxry »#«,«**
,
Tuesday t Wrdnrsday
t iu iie iM
JO C rw P n S i (Fiamhrp Bam Biltong)

Santod f it 3940
CARPENTERS HELPER
wanted M o il have tip e rltn c e .
Call alter 4 P N 3215320_______
CARVER
To aarve meat to our cuatomtra a I
bullet table. M u it be neat and
tnjoy meeting people. Apply 1 to
4 P.M al Holiday H o u m Restau
rent. &lt;300 Orlando Ave. Hwy
17 43. South ot Lake Mary eutoll.
CASHIERS A CLERKS Full A
part time opening* Good pay
Kalea. No exp noc. 434 4044
CONVENIENCE Store Cashier*.
Good aalary, hosptlallutlon. I
week paid vacation every 4
m o n th i. Applications available
•1303 N. Laurel Ave. Sanlord.
COOK/ SALAD
New heed cook lo o k in g lo r
b re a k la tl cook/salad per ton
F/T. Exp. only. Fine dining
Apply In peraon M F, 4 to 5 P M
Deltona Inn,_________________
Dental A atltlant* Full and part
lim e . E ip ir le n c t re q u ire d .
Expanded Duty Certificate nec
eaaary. Sanlord o llk o . 313*1*5
DISHWASHER
Mature Apply In peraon M F. f to S
P M Deltona Inn_____________
Earn E itra Monty. Part/TIm e
F u ll/T I m e . P re p a id L e g a l
Servlcea. Call Den, 47*7407
Experienced journeyman plumb
Ing mechanici. plumbing help
tn . a ir condlltonlng mechanic*.
New c o n tlru d lo n A aervlce.
333 4542____________________
FACTORY WORKERS Immediate
opening* High wegaa Some w ill
train. Call 414 4094____________
FINANCE MANAGEMENT
CAREERS
Are you looking lor a career which
w ill aatlaty your n e td i end
goelaT We are Interacted In
career minded ambit lout people
Train for management potltlont
j' In our branch office. GFC'a
! branch manager training pro
J gram otter* a aecure future.
• null land Ing employee beneflll,
J end compellllve aalary. EOE
GENERAL FINANCE
CORPORATION
; ______ 3434 Orlando Drive
____
• Food Conceatloni AAanegera and
! worker* Mature, experienced
• preferred. Apply Fleaw orld.
: Hwy 13 02. Ttiur* , F r l , S a t, * J
• P M U tim

SHENANDOAH
VILUGE

2

Badreeai Dwrki Apt £

from *310”

• tUlILKJ RUCfWf

[ • OttwriC &gt;OOI
! • rutttouto
' •anw usi

§

323-2920

K

4119 S. 09LAR90 DttlYt

iv i

SARTORO

GENERAL 0F&gt;IC€........... $736 Mo.
Chance to advance. D ie your good
otllc* tk lllih e re , loral top tool I
AAAEMPLOVMENI
ffl-S W
Hair Stylltt wanted In Sanford
Full or part time. Experienced
:*ces*ary. Call Linda at
Haadl Inert, WtSASl.
HOLIDAY HOUSE
Restaurant hat potlllont available
fo r C e t h le r i, H o a te iie i,
W eltretie*. Kitchen Help. Good
opportunity to work with pec
p it. Experience pretered. Appty J
to 4 P M 4300 Orlando Ave. Hwy
13-43. S. ol Lake Mery cutolt.
Join an exciting team Apply Ken
tucky Fried Chicken. 29Jf Orlendo Ave. Interview* lo be held
Oct . 34th A 35th. 3 P M to 4 P M
end IP A A to 10 P M.__________
MANAOER TRAINEE
J day week, aalary plot com
m in io n and bonuaei Potential
advancement, h o tp lta llta llo n
and rellrem ert. M utt work tome
evenlnga. Apply In peraon el ABC
Llquora, 3115 O rlando Ave.,
Senior d, __________________

MANAGEMENT COUPLE....IUS
Top notch couple for exclusive
tpot Apt. or motel exp., e m uit.
Maintanee and oltlce, mature
peraonatty, good aalary p lu t
house
AAA EMPLOYMENT 3335)74,

MANAGER TRAINEES ...T0 1,000
Ms. Career apola. aeveral avail­
able. RealeuranI or retail, lake
your plckl
AAA EMPLOYMENT 3331174.
Minimal day care help needed lor
elderly gentlemen, tern I mobile,
excellent mind, require* tome
light cooxing Pn 1712140 be
tween I and S. 445 SU) after S X
Pleate Contact M r. Rath.
Model! Wanted I I yeert to 10
ytera old. ftm ale or m ile. For
halrcuti and coloring. Call Linda
at Headliner*. I l l S45I________
★

★

*

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
• A dult A Family
Soctiont
• W /D Connections
• Cable TV, Pool
• Short Term lo o m s
A vailoble

1, 2. 3 Br. Apts., 2 BA Til
Front * 3 8 0
ISOS W. 25th St.

312*1090

TIME w ithout 8 E M
TICKETS P I WHO'S
BSW 6 PROTECTEP
^ AMP WHY?

R E C Y ^LE P

P U R lN ’
3HARIN ’
T IM E IN
6 RAPE

X
W A * I

EXPECTIN6
TC S E E
A N AP
ON T h £
BAC.K
OF HIS
TRENCH

c-C*r\

T IM E —

• KYUK-KYUK-

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

rvO 1 ’ &gt;
U

—
0 NE W 0U LP

f) RBHHI W ‘MH II I Pel 1

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
I Bdrm. appliance*, carport. 430 a
WV Fee Ph 334 7300
Sav-On-Rental* Inc. Realtor
1 Bdrm. A/C. pool. *341 Mo Fee Ph
314 7300
Sav-On-Rent*1Inc. Realtor.
3 Bdrm , uptlalra. Adult* only. 4371
plut 4110 damage tee l l l - l t a i
M r. Barber or t i l **74

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
InM aylatr Area.
1 bdrm. 15* bath,
doted patio.
311 33*4____________________
Lake Mary. Hidden Lake Villa.
New. 2 bdrm, 3 bath, garage, no
pett. 4435 Ph 214-7413._________
3 Bdrm. I 0, CHA. carpeted,
Adult* No pet*. 4330 per mo.
333 3104.____________________
1 Bdrm . C/H/A, In d ie u tll/rm .
Fenced yard, eat tn kitchen, no
pett 4341 a mo 333 3143_______
J Bdrm house with wether and
dryer. Nice neighborhood. 4410 •
month Call 333 1444.__________
3 Bdrm. kld v carport, lanced yard.
4410Ate Fee Ph 114 3300
SavOnRental* Inc. Realtor
1 B e d ro o m , Mb B a lh . f u lly
c a r p e te d , p e a c e fu lly
neighborhood J400 per month,
*300 Security Depotlf. 333 1314.
1 or 4 Bdrm t Central heal and air,
tcree n a d p a tio , app lia n ce*,
lenced.4431Mo.tll IQM._______
4 Bdrm.. i i i Bath, living room A
family room, wall lo wall carpet,
fenced yard, appliance*. 4400 a
mo. plut dcpo-.it. 311 3010.

Apt. lor rani i ~ ekterty couple. 1
B d rm . central A/H. Cell between! A.M. 10 4 P.M. 321 1353
BAMBOO COVE APTS
100 E. Airport Blvd Ph 123 4430
Efficiency, from S33S Mo. S %
discount for Senior C lliien*
LUXURY APARTMENTS
Family A Adult* section Pool tide,
3 Bdrm 1, Master Cove Apt*.
323 3400
______ Open on weekend*_______
Mariner*! village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm from 4373. 1 bdrm from
4121. located 17-41 just south of
Airport Blvd. In Sanford. AM
Adult*. 131 &gt;430._____________
• Mellon*III* Trace Apt!, a
Unfurnished 3 bdrm. Spec loir. Apt.
Walk To Lake Front No P ell
4131 Ph 131 3403_____________
NEW 1 A 3 Bedrooms Ad|acent to
Lake Monroe. Health Club.
Recqwelbell and Morel
Senfprd Landing S. R 441314330
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
2M0 Ridgewood Ave. Ph 133 *430
I J A 3 Bdrtnt. Irom 4300.

105—DuplexT rip le x / Rent
Sanlord Duplex 3 Bdrm., 1 Beth,
carport, laundry room, central
A/C , kitchen equip., cnrpel,
drapet 1434 Lake Ave 4300143

117—Commercial
Rentals
Sentord In d vitria l Park
12^00 Sq Ft. building. 1,000 Sq Ft
tpace , 4 rettroomt, 400 AMP
aervlce, toned menutecturlrg or
werthouting. New Building. For
detail*, call TOma_________
War*hevtIn f tar L e tt*. 34.000 Sq.
Ft., deck height, heavy power,
M-1 rating, I Industrial), Includes
• lllc e t . parking, and lanced
reitreed site on p rtra h c l. AJw,
11,111 Sq. F I. a v a ila b le .
B e a v tlfv lly landscaped. Call
113-4311 etk tor Maxine.

“

r/A~i
Buy TH E ■&amp;PACE «

10 -1 3

THE MERCANTILE BUILDING
BOBM. BALL JR. PA.
REALTOR M l 4111
RENT
SELL
BUY
With a
WANTAD
Dial 133-3411

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

RtmoMini Specialist
Wt handle The
Whole Bell of W ei

B.LUnk Const
322-7029
Financing AvaUah

r

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
• OIL HEATER e
CLEANING AND SERVICING
Call Ralph. 131A3I2
10% Oncount On All Repair*
Far Winds a Air Candlttonar*
One Day Service. Ph 13T-I4H.

Automotive
20% On All Foaign Care
Repeirs. October Onljr.

Major and Minor Work,

E L E C T R IC A L R E P A IR S . No
ta rv lc e ch a rg e , rta tn n a b le
hourly rale* Free estimate on
new electrical work. Serving
Central Florida lo r over 10 year*
VIHLEN ELECTRIC. Ph M l

Health &amp; Beauty
TOWER’ S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H a rrie tt’* Beauty
Nook 114 E. l i t St M l 5741

Home Improvement
C O L L IE R ’ S HOME REPAIRS
carpentry, ree ling , pelftl»a&lt;
window repair. M l-4433

COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
No |ob to email. Minor A major
repair*. Licensed A bonded
___________ M l 4131___________
PARTNERS. Rooting repair, paint
Ing, remodeling and addition*.
FreeEM Call Eves M l M X

277 1631

B o o kk e e p in g
Computerised (••kkeeplng
We’ll do your book* on our com
puter tor a i little •&gt; UO a month
Receive monthly tre ll balance
end 4tatement* with protlt center
I It desired Other report* evell
j able.
Call Gall m 0744

Cleaning Service
A Money Beck Oaurenleel
Ken Helden Southern Maid Ser.
»and/lmm. Meld 44A4434
PAR MAID SERVICES
Have you had your home cleaned
la le ly T C le a n in g w ith Ihe
personal touch 337 0111.43* *]11-

R o o fin g

A A J Landtcaplng
Complete Lawn Maintenance
M l 4341

Doe* Your Old Or New Root Leak?
If It does, call Oavld Lao.
___________ M3-441S.___________
Rod Maintenance
Repair work New work
Troy or.George lor Free E tl.
________ » 3QS145 *440_________
MROOFINOM
H ll I'm A rt Hubble.
I do beautiful work. I do new root*,
root leak*. I replace or repair
valley*, root* vents, etc. I w ill
taveyou money 1133 1343______
SEMINOLE ROOFINO
ReRoof*.New Rools.Rcof Repairs
Free Estimate* Ph 1231544

Lawn Service
ALL YOU NEED IS US
M l &lt;1347
C ro da tt A Wetor* Lawn Service
KING ASO Nl LAWN SERVICE
Early Fall Clean Up. 4M Special
Far Any Averape Yard. S4J-3434.
L A M Lawn Care Service
Mow, edge, trim , end haul Contact
Leo or Mark M l S347 or M l 4144
W A OLAWN SER VICE. •
Mowing, edging, te rillljln g
Free estimate*. Ph M l 0744.

Masonry
BEAL Concrete 1 man quality
operation. Patios, driveway*.
Oay«MI TAMEve* 137 IM I.
SW IFT CONCRETE. F oolers,
driveway*, pad*, floor*, pool*,
Chat! Slone. Free E *I/M 3 7 IM .

Maintenance ol ell lyp w
Carpentry, painting, clumblng
A electric 373 &lt;034_______
No |ob too small Home repair* and
remodeling 35 Year* eaperlence
Call M l 444J

Interior [&gt;ecorating
Custom Draper 1*1/Vortical*
AFFORDABLE PRICES
Sharon's Creelion* V i MSI

Resume and Cover Letter
Preparation General Typlng and
Bookkeeping M l 3413

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners

OURRATESARELOWER
Lakevlew Nursing Cantor
414 E . Second SI ., Sentord
M l 4307

Pointing

Swimming Pool Service

CENTRAL FLORIDA
Home Improvement
Pe’nllng. Carpentry,
Small Repair*.
I I Year* Expectance. m -*M 4.
• • F R E E ESTIMATE* *
Rhode* Painting All Typas
IS Yr*. Exp At Hr. Phone M l &lt;431
P a in tin g -In te r, end E xte rio r.
Minor home repair*. Over I I yr*
experience. Fre*. E»l. Ph. 321
MM Ext. 101

SUNSHINE POOL SERVICE
W ill m aintain your pool Intop
condition, private or commer
dal. Ph. M l M43. Suwhlno Pool
Sarvlca. SIS M elionvlllo Ave.
SeederdFI M77I

Nursing Care

Landclearing

Plastering/Dry Wall

LANDCLEARING. F ILL D IR T .
CLAYA SHALE

XLrThaToT'TTT'iaTTerlng

m w i

Secretarial Service

SEWINO MACHINE. Zig lag. all
m e la l. G u a ra n te e d *44.00.
Semlnol* Sewing 1741 Lake
Mary Blvd Winn Dixie Center
___________ M l 4411.___________
VACUUM CLEANERi Electrolux,
n e w , g u a ra n te e d * 4 4 .0 0
Seminole Vac I 17 41 and Leke
Mary Blvd Winn Dixie Center.
V3 441).

Home Repairs
A u tiln 'i Maintenance Carpentry,
plumbing, painting, masonry,
*prlnkler*. remodeling. MI-1701.
Carpentry alteration*, gutter work,
axalntlng. tiding, porches, patio*,
ate. A tk lea A rt Hubbla
I toe Price* II13113M

Electrical
Quality Electrical Service
14. timer*, security life*, eddloni. new service*. Insureo
Latter E le cirkla n James Paul
1U7U*

Landscaping

Platlerlng repair, ttucco. hard
cate, tlmulated brick. M l 3443

Tree Service
JOHN ALLEN LAWN ATREE
/ jiy kind 01 Tree Service.
We do moel anything. P I S340
Save! Credit an Oeed Wood!
JACKSON TREE SERVICE
M Y rt, ExperleaceTIM IH
Trl County Tree Service
Trim , remove, trash hauling
firewood, tree #•'. m 4410.

321-0041
Markhan Woods Rd. Raventbrook
4 Bdrm.. 2 B. By owner with
owner financing. 23t t) l* .______
Mayfair Pool Home
40‘sA tlu m a b l( 11W%Mtg.
231-0451 or 133 2350
SANFORO REALTY
REALTOR
133 5234
AH. H r* 333 4454. M 3 4345

H I —Homes For Sale
“B A TE M A N R E A L T Y
Lie. Reel E ila t* Broker
3440 Sanlord Ave.
L E A S E O P T IO N . 4 /1 , n ic e
neighborhood. *44.400.
SEMINOLE WOODS. 5 acre*, high
and d ry , b e a u tifu lly wooded
corner, unbelievable. 134.SOO

STEMPER AGENCY INC.
FIRSTTIMC O FFEREpi
There’s room to spread out in Ih li 4
Br., 2 B. home, located on quiet
cul de sac Majesllc oaks give
country feeling You should »ee
th ltl *45.500
Pride el Ownership shows In this 3
Br., 2 0. (tollhouse, -war high
school and shopping. Realis­
tically priced at SS5.000
Newly licensed A taper, full lime
reef ettete u let men needed.

321-0759

Eve 322-7643

By Owner, new Villa home In
Hidden Lakes 2 bdrm. 3 bath,
large lot, t car ga-ege. *50.300
II4.5UU to atsume. Payment tlto
mo M l 4337._________________
By ow ner. Hidden Lake, 114
Borada Road. 1 bdrm, 3 bath,
wooded lot. tcretried room, 1 car
garage, large kitchen. *41.400. Ph
231 4727_____________________
By owner u le or leete. 1 Bdrm.,
IW B ,C n l/H /A , garage. Low
down A assume m ortg a g e.
*14.500. Owner I* Realtor Astor
___________M l &lt;742___________
C AR D IN AL OAKS 1/2 fa m ily
room, corner lot, formal dining,
brick, immaculate. 1134,400.
• • * *
RAMBLEWOOSb«/2.l*mlly room,
pool, double _ .°*g e 114,000.

• e**
RAM BLEW O O O New llt t ln g .
J /lto Sunken fam ily room, huge
brick fireplace, dining room, eat
In kllchen, assume VA loan. 1
Story, U4,400
e* • *
SANFORD 3 /lto Fam ily room,
good assumpllon. excellent con
dlHon. corner lot *50.500. Make
Otter.

****

SANFORO 3 / IV* pool, garage,
assumption, large lot. 144.400

BOBM. BALL JR. PA.
REALTOR_____________ MS-411A
Ctoisfled Results W ill Win
Yeur Vet* Every Timet
•eeeeeeeeeeeee
For rent with option to buy, or tale
by owner. 1 Bedroom, I bath,
cenlral air and heat, carpet.
2311151. 507 B Tangerine Ave .
oHRI.437.___________________
Geneve. W. on Otceol* Rd S acres
hi A dry Zoned Agr. Wallace
Crest Realty Inc. 233 5043______

FIRE U L E IN SANORA. Owner It
desperate 1 M utt sell this week I
Levely 1 bdrm, 2 bath, w /lem lly
r o o m a n d la n c e d y a r d !
Tremandeut petoatUII Submil
all o ften. Assumable mortgage!
Asking 144J04. Make after.

To List Your Business-

HIDDEN LAKE: 3 bedroom. 1
bath. CB Stucco with wood trim .
Bright, cheery ra t In kttchon.
Covered patio, fenced back yard.
154.440.

127—Office Rentals

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Electrical

2523 S. F R E N C H AV E .

GREENBRIAR: Lovely well kept 3
bedroom, 1 bath horn* near Coll
Caurto. Pool, screened pallo.
141.440.

CONSULT OUR

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

REATO

MINT CONDITION; Beauty end
quality abound in Itot 3 bedroom,
3 bath home. Wood A boom
ceilings, query til* A hardwood
Ik o n , flraplaco. Large, lovely
tot. 141,104.

Exc. Sec. for evenlng/weekend
work. Call *7777*4 alter I P.M.
or weekend!

Furn. Apia, tor Senior Clliien*
311 Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowan No Phone Celia.
Bdrn. efficiency, pallo. A/C.
1344. Fee Ph 234 7300
Sav-On Rental* Inc. Realtor
3 Bedroom. 1 Bath. Furnlthed
USO Month. No pet*.
__________ 133 . 444,___________

H al t i l l Housecleaning
Turned Up Surplus Thing:
Want Ad Will Turn Te Cethf

COAT

73—Employment
Wanted

SANFORD Furnlthed room! by the
vwok. Reatonab’e rates. Maid
service catering to working peopie, 333* » 7 .500 Palmetto Ave.
SANFORD. Reat weekly A Mon
thly rata l Util. Inc. e ll 300 Oek
Adultt I H13I4J.

ST. JOHNS River. 2Vt acre parcels,
with river access . Only 4 Jett
Starling *14.400. Public w a te r,»
min. to Allamunte Matt 11% 30
y r* financing, no qualifying
Broker. 431 4112_____________

P IC K S '

Z W C L *A

tx p needed, tome own toolt. Welt
• a ta b lllh e d buay com pany.
Needtnowl
AAA EMPLOYMENT 2335174.
SUPERVISOR lo r low ing de
partment In new garment facto­
ry. M u ll have experience In
telling, contlrudlon of garment!
and be quality concloua. Salary
commemorate with experience.
San Del Manufacturing. 3340 Old
Lake AAary Road, 331-3110.
TRUCKS DRIVERS Local A Long
Haul poaitioni. High wage*. Call
today. 434-4044._______________
Wanted exp. Dental A a ili. Tempo
ra ry lu ll tim e p o illlo n . Call
331-»10Tu t h r u F . lt o lP M .
WAREHOUSE WORKERS AAany
opening*, full time, good starting
pay. Cell Immediately. 434 4041.
WORK ATHOME
Wanted experienced telephone so­
licitor*. Top pay. Call evenlngi.
373 3»S.

93—Rooms for Rent

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

TO O T H ‘

6HCVKER6

O FOR SHIPPIN' ^
*&gt; THE PiME THEY
4
CO U LP &lt;ERVE

Evgnlng Her«ld, Sentord, FI. ___ Tm *d«y, Oct. II, 1411— 5B

141-Homes For Sale

HE HA6 LESS &gt;
CLASS TH AN

THAT# A IL ?

STEEL ERECTORS___ $600 Mo.

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

10 neat appearing, aggretalve peo­
ple. No experience needed. W ill
train lor above average Income.
For Interview call 1311033._____
NURSES AIDS Experience pre
fared Apply Lakevlew Hurting
Center
»t» E. 3nd Street.
PACKERS. Immediate atari lor l i t
end 2nd th ill. Heavy liltin g
Involved Altamonte area. Ablet*
Temporary Service 131 340
Physoen's office. Medical sacratary. to do Ircnicrlptlon and
Insurance Send relume to P.0
Be* JS43, Sanford. Fie. u m
aaao_______________________
PROCESS AAAIL AT HOME! *75 00
per hundredi No experience.
Part or lu ll lime. Start Immedl
a t a ly . D e t a il* te n d s e lladdretted ttamped envelope to
C.R.I. 300. P O. Box 4S. Stunt,
FI.1344S.

thhtsmy proof or

AUTOdATE-ClOS&amp;JPS
X HEARP
OF CARS PARHEP OVER-' BlcSfSER

PROCESS M AIL AT HOMEt *75 00
per hundred I No experience.
Part or full time. Start Immedl
• le ly . O e t a lt i. te n d t e l l
addraated (lamped envelope to
C.R.I.3X, P.O. Bex 43,
Stuart, FI. 33445._______
RECEPTIONEST.____~*»40M a.
Friendly relaxed office need* your
bubbly peraonalty lo handle buty
phone Some light M thler.
AAAEMPLOVMENT 333SI7I.

A

NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY!

with Major Hoople

OUR BOAROINQ HOUSE

DREAM HOME IN COUNTRYI
Just Ilk* new, 1 story, 4 bdrm, 1
b a lh . w / c u s t o m c e d a r
th ra e g h e u tl P lash c a rp e tl
sparkling peell 1 paddle tonsl
Large shade trees and citrus! 1
g a ra g e * and F la. f ix . fe e l
*43.400.
PRESTIGIOUS MAYFAIR Execu
liv e Secllenl Walk to Leke
Monroe Irom this com tort able
ham* with I f * own prtveto In
door jungle I 55” e U ” screened
rear pett* I Custom built Jecutil
• ft Master Bdrm I I paddle fans I
Kitchen equipped! Many custom
feature* throughout! 1)45,404.
HIDDEN LAKE ESTATES. A t­
tractive 1 bdrm, 1 bath heme,
d b l / c a r g a r a g e , k it c h e n
e q p t..C /H /A , la n c e d y a rd ,
w /p rlv a c y hedge! S p rin kle r
*y*tem l Community pool, club
house end te n n lil Lew \ assume
mortgage) sel.see.

W E N E E D LISTIN G S

323-5774
________ 1404 HWY 17 01

REALTOR 1M-444I

X S H /lu

STENSTROM
REALTY •

REALTORS

Sinlwd’s Stln Leidet
WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE HOMESTHAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY
JUST STARTIN OUT. Nice 1
bdrm ., I b rfti home w ith ■
panelled family roam. C/H/A,
aat In kltchan. D/R, nlcaly land­
scaped with garden, t i t J W
SUPER. 1 bdrm, t bath twine tn
Sunland. Completely remodeled,
ori'a large fenced tot. Alt new
fixtures. C/M/A, W/W/C, decor
wall paper and |ust painted
HUM.
SOUTHERN CHARM. 4 bdrm. 1
bath. 1 story r t mode led home
w ith lots a l extras, C /H /A .
W /W /C I Ira place, aat In kitchen,
D/R, split plan and matlter-litlaw quarters. 15( 500
POOL ANO PATIO. I bdrm., 1
bath, pool home with fully eqpt.
klicnan. lanced yard, paddle
Ians, u tility shad and more.
153,400
LOVELY, 1 bdrm, 1 hath homo In
Sanara an a landscaped lot.
Newly painted, split plan. D/R.
F/R, fully eqpt. eat In kitchen.
C/H/A, W/W/C. fireplace, lanced
yard and mare. 173.444.
BEAUTIFUL 1 bdrm., IV* balh.
brick ham* on 1 acre. Country
kltchan with microwave. Split
plan. 1 way brick fireplace,
spacious m a tte r tu lle and
d rtttin g area. F /P . screened
porch and mere. STt.StC.

CALL ANY T IM E
IMS S. Park

322-2420
UNDER 41.444 DOWN
2 Bdrm Doll House Affordable
monthly payments Call owner
broker sstotman. 121-1411.
a UNDER PRICED •
*47.100 1 Bdrm tto Bath Move In
condition . Call for appointment
Broker 222 4441 or t 731411 J.

EXCELLENT LOCATION AND
CONDITION. 1 bdrm. IV* beta
w it h le m ily re a m , In t ld e
laundry, fenced rear yard. Treed
tol.*S1,SM.

321-5005
153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

Attar Hours 333 3431
MI-47U0TMI 2447

M

e?

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
tl4 W . L a kt Mary Blvd.
Sulla B
Lake Mary. Fla M744
DRIFTWOOD VILLAGF

STENSTROM
REALTY •

REALTORS

S ACRE TRACTS G E N E V A
ARCA. East el Sanlord Seme an
hard surface read. M l daw*.
Closing In M days. I t Year
mortgage, a l 144; interest Call
tor ttolails and Im pel Hex

GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC.
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
SKYLINE DEALER
FEATURING
Palm Beech Villa
Greenleal
Palm Springs
Palm Manor
Siesta Key
VA FHA Financing 305 3315300
New Homes sterling at *1445 Easy
credit end low down. Uncle Roy*.
Leesburg. US. a&lt;l 404 747 0334
RESALES (Fam ily Park)
13X40 Nice! 111,400.
34X53 Spacloutl *15.500
G R EGOR Y MOB IL E HOME S INC.
_________ 205 333 5300_________

159—Real Estate
Wanted
PRIVATE INVESTOR
WANTING TO BUY
MULTI FAMILY UNITS
NO REALTORS
CALL 323-2269,
3or 3 BEDROOM HOUSE
Your PRICE.MY TERMS
133 4441.

161—Country
Property /S ale
COUNTRY LIVING wooded large
lot on private roaa near St. Johns
River. 205 »44 4014.____________

101—Appliances
/ Furniture
APPLIANCES. REPOSSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged
From *44 Up Guaranteed
Nearly New. 317 E. tot SI. 2 0 7410.
Cash lor good used lu rnllu re .
L arry’s Hew A Used Furniture
Mart. I l l Sanlord Are 222 alM
Kenmorepart*. sarvlca.
used washers 373 0447
MQOhSY APPLIANCES
Large Upright Freeter
Good Condition. S1J0.
__________ 142*441___________
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
311 3t5E. FIR5TST,
___________ 333 5421___________
2 Year old 1SJ upright Ireeter.
*300. Gas g rill used 1 times, *150
Ethan A llan d ru ts ln g table.
U m g » » to *o o t*0 MI-4737,
J ,»lec* bedroom suit. Walnut
fn ith . bookcase, headboard with
lu ll sir*. Ilk* new mattress set,
1340. Call 4 to * P M 133 1344,

YARD SALE. October 14th.
104 Laurel Dr
4 A M to5P.M-

219—Wanted to Buy
Baby Bads, Slimier*, Carseeto,
P la y p e n s , E tc . P a p e rh tc h
773*377
133 45*4
Paying CASH for Aluminum. Cent.
Copper. Brat*. Lead. Newtpa
per. Glass. Gold. Sliver.
Kokom o TOOL *1 1 W lit

• 4 .X Sal 4-1 232-1100._____
Plant a Went Ad
And Harvest D oilartl
WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE A APPLIANCES.
131 71*0

221—Good Things
to Eat
Get the "Cream Of the Crept”
The Seasons Best Buy* Are
In the Want A dtl

223—Miscellaneous
Complete |rwelry ceiling eqpt.
Everything lor Ihe pre I
___________144 5701.___________
Hunt Herat There’s ‘ He L im it' on
the Bargain* You’ll ’ Bag1 ire
Easy to Ptac* a WANT ADPHONE 333 2411._____________
NEW JUNOLC BOOTS 111.44 P r .'
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave_________ 133 1741
R e illo r'i Attention: Tom Hopkins
Listing Tapes. Never used
_________ *50.144170)__________
R efrig/P reeier. 32 Cubic Foot.
White *75 Mayline Drafting
table ar-d stand 5*1.____________
SEWING M ACHINE. SlitO E R
FU TU R A . Ilk * re w . on* of
Singer’s fop Models. Alt smenes
built In Sold new over 1700 Must
sacrifice lor S IM M or Assume
*15 Monthly payments. W ill lake
trade as part payment. Free
home Trial Call 142 M44.
_________ Payor Nlto__________
Upright piano f i l l Phonesltfer,
telephone answering machine.
130 13I-4540______________ ___
Used Od» Trombone
Good condition*180 C a lim ilt O A U tor Cindy.
W* buy tu rn ltu r*. antiques or
•crept consignments for Auction
Fla. Trader Auction 1341114

231-Cars
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Easy Terms
NATIONALAUTO SALES
1110 S Sanford Ave
P I 4875
Debary Aufo A M arine Seles
across Ihe river top of hill 174
Hwy 17 43 Debary e g ISM
KIDDY'S KAR SALES
Quality Used Cars A Trucks
1117 S. Saatard Ave. M2-SSS4
Mercury Grand Marquis. 71. 3
door, fu ll power. air, tteceo*3500 322 1344_______________
1470 V.W." Van. some rush runs
great. 20.000 m l. on engine
overhaul *1.000 Ph 144 5004
Geneva.___________________

183—Television /
Radio /Stereo

A Little 'Homework 'Watching
the Went A d i Can Bring
'Tep Grade' Results.

TELEVISION • ZENITH U " Color
TV ivi Walnut Console. Original
Price, over *700. Balance due
*345 Cash or take up payment*
of *30 00 month. No Money down.
Slilt In warranty. Free Home
Trial ■no oblige I Ion. *43 *244.

1too Pontiac Firebird.
Auts. Atr, Stored.
_________Call 23i sees_________
’73 Ford LTD. Good condition.
11.000 or best offer.
_________ Ph 2337/7*._________
’ 75 AUDI A 71 LTD.
Owner has too meny caret
MUST SELL. 231 0334.
75 Ford Station Wagon P/S. P/B.
air, euto Iran*, radio and hnator.
*450 Good, clean running car.
*24 4405 cr 224 410J.______

167—Sporting Goods
Walker hunting dog*.
FREEH
Phone 122 3440 alter 4 P M

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
CYPRESS MULCH FOR SALE
■ A D Sawmill
Port ot Sanlord 121-4341
F i l l DIRT A TOP SOU
YELLOW SAND
Clark A HlrJ JJJ 75*3.3313*3]

201—Horsei
Exper. Hoot Trimming, looking lor
a hoot* with ecerage In country
lor lease or rent 131 *304

207—Swap Corner
A Little ’ Homework ’Welching
the Want Ads Can Grtng
'Too G rids’ Results

237—Tradors/Trailers
Buy Factory Direct. Lightweight,
fiberglass Scamp 13' and 14'
travel trailer* A new i r 5th
w h e e l. C e ll now t o ll fre e
1MG244 K*1 tor free brochure
end save!

239—M o to rc y c le s /Bikes
Honda f 'A40Q Almost new, still
under warranty. Only 2700 mile*.
11100 Include* helmet and rain
g re r,C a ll233 5031 a lte r* P M
1Mb Honda XR 4UU Street or oin.
• c u t included UOO Ph 244 5004
Geneva.____________________
T4M Yamaha XS150CC Shall drive
Very clean *1500 or best offer.
___________2322044___________
74GL1M0 GOLDWING
HONDA DRESSER.7000ml.
*2.500 CALL 233 4447

241—Recreational ,'•*■
Vehicles / Campers
Country Aire travel trailer.
14’. M il contained. Can. A/H.
4*4 4424 otter 5 P M

243—Junk Cars
AUCTION WEDNESDAY 7 fM
* AI AUCTION SERVICE*
Professional Drum Set. SJIngerland
brand name with microphone*
end complete set. Apprelted
value over SLOW Furniture end
table*, couch. 2 dinette te l*,
chairs. T.V ’«. stereo *, gasoline
portable generator, power sax*,
new toy*. c*no*y bod. glassware
e 313 W. 3RD STREET M M lto e
FOR ESTATE. Commercial or
Residential Auction* A Appralt
alt. Call Dell * Auction 2315430
FOR ESTATE or COMMERCIAL
AUCTIONS Call A I AUCTION
SERVICE 233 4 ito ____________

215— B o a ts /A c c e s s o rie s
71 Chrysler Outboard Motor tie
HP w’th power tilt And control*
1450 J31 441*

BUY JUNKCARSA TRUCKS
From *10 to *50 or more.
Call 331 1434 232*111
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A Used
car*, truck* A heavy equipment
___________233 5440.___________
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 342 4505.

YAMAHA
OF SEMINOLE
"DAYTONA'S BEST"

SECA 550 J

♦1 8 9 5 °°
SECA 750 H

*aS 9 5 M
MAXIM 650 J

$2 3 9 9 00
Order Yeur YAMAHA ‘
Fair inf* sad Windshields
Ne« Fm Satn«is talar*.

CALL A N Y T IM E
IMS S. Park

322-2420

OARAOESALE *1.
F rid a y !* I f.M .
FLEAWORLD Hwy. 17 41
B4trg lm A Fun Buying A Selling.
4451743.__________________
'LOOKING FOR A TREAT IN
STEAD Oh A IRICKT USE OUR
CLASSIFIEDS.

tiim m m m ti

157-Mobile
Homes /S ale

213—Auctions

WE HAVE BUYERSII
WE NEED LIST1NOSII

__

Sandlewoodbyowner I Bdr
1 b fh , c a rp e t, lu ll k itc h e n ,
wesher/dryer, A/C, poof end
m a ln t. 134.500 323 4047
________alter 5,233 1442

Furniture end repair, stripping and
reflnlshlng. staining, antiques •
speciality. 3310043___________

REALTY W ORLD.

323-3145

155—Condominiums
Co-Op /S ale

211—Antiques/
CoUectables

INLAND
REALTY,
INC. [H

4.5 Acres. Lake Sylven Area.
U3.300 W. M alik/ow tU Realtor
__________ 133 7443

217—Garage Sales

CALL TOLL IK E E
iM s m u . 'i

H W Y . 11-41 LO M O W O O B

•3 4 -9 4 9 3

I

�4B—E vtn ln g H erald, Sanlord, FI.

B L O N D IE

|J/i

TM E M O S T PA0UUOUS

Tuesday, Oct. 1», I f &gt;3

by Chic Young

WHENEVER THERE'9
A SMASH HIT, TH E V
ALWAYS M AKE
A SEQUEL

IT WAS A SMASH HIT
O PEAM OF THE

'

y

by M o ri W alker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

WHAT'S THAT
ON THE
FLOOR?
fCA

by Art Sansom

T H E BORN LOSER

40 Act of
carrying
1 Heroic
41 Large
B Bath
gateway
8 Fencing,
43 Poisetiive
(word
pronoun
12 Pition M in t 44 Rages
of lellort
46 Cote sound
13 Anger
47 High hatter
14 Ftsgrsnt
48 Compass
ointment
point
15 Knock!
50 Song for one
18 license piste &amp;t Color
17 A gtl
52 On same side
18 Frost t C(ke 53 Bird r ifts
10 Form of
54 Fish
erchitecture
55 Superlative
21 Adtoclrvnl
suffix
ending
22 Downy duck 56 Surrender
24
spsrt
DOWN
20 lion’* horn*
27 Mikes sleep
Spooky
noise
Sarant
28 Dey of week
Hamper
(ebbr)
Lettuce
31 Noun suffn
Late graat
32 Everything
Yugoslav
33 Kind of breed
Planet
34 Caused agony
Tyro
37 Betrayer |sl)

by Bob Montana

umuKJ

□

tu rn

d d q b e id

Vitamins Will Not
Make You Energetic

n n n ra u u

n

mi
5 ■■ ”
1
I■

Ll2

A COMPUTER COES
THE ACTUAL CHECKING

L O O K ./ V A 'T H E CHECK­
OUT CO U N TER H AS A NEW
ELECTRONIC SC A N N ER .'

fa

DEAR DR. LAMB - I want
to know what can be done
about weakness. What
could be causing It? The
doctors say I'm OK. but
they don’t help me. so I'm
disgusted with them.
The only suggestion !
34 Oister'a
! Chemical
have
Is a lack of appetite. I
concern
fulfil
eat slowly, chew well, but
8 Without meat 35 Roman deity
38 Actor Weaver only one helping, not a big
or milk
38 Niche
cr.c, and It's always too
10 Hub: cut
38 Spad down
much.
11 Auto failure
road
Do I l ack s ome
18 Iridium
40 Pipalinet
vitamins? What can I do to
symbol
41 Afterthought
20 Old pal
get rid of the feeling of
(ebbr)
23 Involve
weakness?
42 Hangman‘1
26 Aorta
DEAR READER - I'm
knot
28 Of arm bona 45 Ordeal
glad you had a medical
30 Tasteful
48 Young flower examination. As many as
luiury
50 Cyst
20 percent of the people
who complain of fatigue do
have a medical problem
8
10 I t
7
6
0
4
5
t
2
3
that causes It. That leaves
about 30 percent who
14
13
12
have fatigue and no medi­
cal cause can be found.
17
10
15
Since you mentioned
your appetite. I would like
21
20 &gt;
18
10
'
to say that If a person
f n
doesn't eat enough he Is
25
22
likely to become fatigued.
That Is the problem with
20
fad diets — they really do
cause
fatigue.
31
20 28 30
After all. your energy
docs come from the calo­
33
32
rics In your food. If you
don't get enough calories,
33 38
34 35
then you can't expect to
feel energetic.
42
4t
40
A deficient diet may lead
to vitamin deficiencies.
44
45
43
Vitamins do not give you
energy as some people
50
48
40
47
mistakenly think, but they
are Important In enzyme
S3
52
51
systems your body uses to
break down your food and
56
55
54
release energy that Is In
your food. Why not take a
One-A-Day or multiple
vitamin tablet to be sure
you are getting y o u r re­
commended dally allow­
ance (RDA) of the various
vitamins.
And you should know
vivid Imagination could that a sense of fatigue Is
YOUR BIRTHDAY
have a favorable Influence often a sign of boredom or
OCTOBER 19. 1983
In the y r a r ahead y o u on your thinking today. dissatisfaction with life.
may experience rewards Arm ed with your new Improving your social life
and b en efits In areas perception, good things o f t e n I m p r o v e s y o u r
energy level.
which stymie others. It could haopen.
You will understand the
PISCES
(Feb.
20-March
will he your Ingcn'.nus
ways of handling things 20) Look for the possibility problems of fatigue better
of a small windfall today. after reading The Health
that will bring this about.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ocl. Conditions are such that
23) You seem to come they could create Just this
alive under pressure to­ type of situation for you.
ARIES (March 21-April
day. This hidden atiihutc
19) Don't be hesitant
gives von quite an edge
over your competition. about disregardin g an
NORTH
1S-1SSI
You 'll catch them un­ outdated plan for n bright
♦ K JOT
awares. Libra predictions new one Ideas you get
♦ 152
for the year ahead are now t o d a y h av e e x c e l l e n t
♦ J
ready. Romance, career, chances of succeeding.
♦ A J 1013
TAURUS
(April
20-May
luck, earnings, travel and
WEST
EAST
20) Prompt action or a
much more arc discussed.
♦ IC 4 3
♦
10 5 2
quick
decision
may
be
Send SI to Astro-Graph.
*K J
♦ A 1074 2
Box 489. Radio City Sta­ called for today when an
♦ KI 72
♦ 154 2
opportunity
pops
out
of
an
tion. N.Y. 10019. Send an
♦ KI 5
♦ 4
unexpected quarter. Be
additional 92 for the NEW
SOUTH
Astro-Graph Matchmaker alert. It could be a good
♦ AQ
♦ QM
wheel and booklet. Re- one.
GEMINI (May 21-June
♦ A Qt O I
velas romatlc c o m ­
♦ Q»72
patibilities for all signs. Be 20) A newly awakened
Interest which came about
sure to state your zodiac
Vulnerable: Both
from an acquaintance may
Dealer. South
sign.
begin today to show early
8C0RPI0 (Oct. 24-Nov.
Sooth
West North East
Indications of being quite
22| This Is an excellent
1 NT
worthwhile.
28
day to present Ideas to the
Pass
:♦
Pass
CANCER (June 21-July
Pass
2 NT Pan
Pan
boss. If he or she likes
Pan
them (a distinct possibili­ 22) Today and tomorrow
will offer some unique
ty). there could even be a
possibilities that could
bonus In It for you.
Opening lead: V t
advance your position at
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
work or with your career.
23-Dec. 21) A chance
Jump on them.
meeting of a new acqualnLEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
tance could prove
By adding just a slight
By Oswald Jacoby
pciooiially rewarding for
twist to something which
and James Jacoby
you. He or she may add
has always been a stan­
Three no-trump Is a
zest and excitement to
dard procedu re y o u 'll normal contract and the
your life.
show others how to gel four o f hearts a very
C A P R I C O R N ( Dec.
better results.
normal lead against It.
22-Jnn. 19) Over the next
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
Normal defense Is for
couple o f days things
22) With a little Imagina­ East to go up with his king
could move off of deadtion today you can do and return the Jack. De­
center regarding a matter
wonders with your home clarer will have a problem,
Important to you. Stay
surroundings, even If all but will probably solve It
with tt and you'll be able
you
have..................—
to work with -are by ducking. West won't be
j
... ........
to conclude It.
attic furnishings. Give It a able to do anything better
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20shot.
than play low and the
Fcb. 19) A friend with a

1

A R C H IE

Answer to Pravioua Puiile

across

m it #

HOROSCOPE

What The Day Will Bring...

Letter 9-6. Fatigue: Feel­
U
2 ».t* U
was
j •
ing
which I am sending you.
DEAR DR. LAMB Since becoming a vegetar­
ian about a year ago I have
gained 10 pounds. 1 have
been eating a fair amount
of nuts and grain dishes.
Could this be the cause? II
so. could you suggest
another source of protein
that would enable me to
keep my weight under
control?
DEAR READER - You
have probably found the
mai n reason for your
weight gain Nuts contain
lots of calorics. About 70
percent to 85 percent of
their calories are from fat.
I hope you are a lactoovarian vegetarian. In that
case you could get the
complete protein you need
from milk. And to keep the
calories down you could
use fortified nktm milk or
reconstituted non-fat dry
milk powder. That would
also gi ve you a good
source of calcium.
If not. your best source
of complete protein would
he soybeans. Or you could
u te a combi nat i on o f
mature bean seeds and
com.
Keep In mind that gain
In body fat can also be
from a decrease In physi­
cal activity.
Also I would like for you
to check with your doctor
and be sure you have not
developed a deficiency of
vitamin B-12. iron or cal­
cium. These arc apt to
occur, particularly If you
arc a strict vegetarian and
do not use any animal
products such ns milk.
’ Send your questions to
Dr. Lamb. P.O. Dox 1551.
Radio City Station. New
York. N.Y. 10019.

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

M R . M E N AND L IT T L E MISS

, M IN ll/T E !
______ ___

S A W

I

KN O W

YO U1R E A REAL
POLICEMAN ?!

2\«a*

PO YOU HAVE
AMY A\EAN£ O F
ID E N T IF IC A T IO N ?

OPEN UP
IN THE
NAME
O F THE
LA W !

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

BUGS BU N N Y

1VE NEVER SEEN GYMNASTIC
SUZF\NG 3 EFO RS-

by Jim Davis

G A R F IE L D
by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNEST

&gt;

POW N, POW N, POWN,
POO&amp;V POO
P O W N , POWN

I A M P O W N .~

N ,, POW N, PO W N,)
PO W N
A* • *%• n r w k iL i
v
POW N, POWN

I ’VP
AN
" a W A ^ H fo to 6i&gt; T pop
THlRTY-&gt;FvPN

contract will make —
possibly with an overtrtek.
Now l e t ’ s see what
happened to one unfortu­
n a t e d e c l a r e r In a
duplicate game.
He had been taught to
think before playing from
dummy at trick one. This
pause gave East a chance
to do some thinking of his
own. East knew from the
two-diamond response to
Stayman that declarer
hel d f e we r than four
hearts. Could he hold Just
two? No! West's lead was
standard — fourth best
against no-trump — and
only one heart lower than
the four was missing.
N ow East c ou n t e d
points. Dummy held 10.
He held 10. Give South his
16 and West would hold
exactly four. If the lour
points were two queens,
game was sure. If the four
points were the ace of
hearts and East played
king and then Jack. South
would surely duck.
Fi nal l y, a card was
played from dummy and
East played his jack, not
the king. Poor South was
afraid to let the Jack hold,
took his queen, lost a
finesse to the king or dubs
and went down when the
defense cashed four heart
tricks.

COMMA, COMMA.
POWN POOBV POO
P O W N, POW N

|\jo&amp;oDY KNOIV5 THE
X'VE’ /F5N .
. • •

• *

T tA v r fl

10-10

ICH6

JT M F K V T S

by Leonard Starr

A N N IE
by T. K. Ryan
FOfl -moSB.OF
C0UK5E, WHO REVEL IN
P IS G U S W DISPLAYS
OF GLUTTONY.

P ^ M M li
BUR&amp;ERS

-MOUCRASHEP INTO NO&amp;OPY HURT,
TtlE B0RPER PATROL WARIA-JU5TA
ON PURPOSE?/ ARE WT 0‘ WRINKLE"
FENPER/
YOUCRAZY,
COYOTE?/
W ’

^

15f

S f 5 ?

4

_______ J L
V *

/IV

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                    <text>Evening Herald-(USPS 481-260)—Price 20 Cents

•

,

F a rr Poo-Poohs D ow fTTow rrR edevelopm ent Threat
In the downtown section In the circuit court and the
By Donna Estes
state appellate court for three years, thus holding up the
Herald 8 ta ff W riter
The city or Sanford may begin Its pari or renovating work. However, the father-son team lost In both
Instances.
the downtown section or the city soon.
Alter being notified that the state appeal court for
At least one city commissioner, David Farr t« "not
reluctant" to move forward with the project despite the Florida's fifth district at Daytona Beach, turned down a
request for a clarification or Its ruling upholding a circuit
threat or a lawsuit In federal court.
"I don't think we ought to be Intimidated." Farr said court decision favoring the city. Thomas Speer said In
today. "W e can't walk around and be afraid that some July that they would lake the Issue to the federal court.
Thomas Speer said today that the suit won't be filed
action might be taken."
The other members or the city commission were either unless some action Is taken by the city on the project.
Earlier the Speer team said a federal ault would
out or town on business; or on vacation or couldn’ t be
Involve
the part or the beautification effort Involving the
reached for comment.
Meanwhile, Thomas Speer and his rather. George proposed closing or Magnolln Avenue to vehicular traffic
Algernon Speer, fought the against the city doing work and Its conversion Into a pedestrian mall.

resurfacing part of First Street and to Installing new
In Its 1983-84 budget, the city commission continued
a sum of $60,000 as It has In Ihc capital Improvements street lights.
Circuit Judge Roger Dykes said In April. 1982 that ti e
account since 1680 for materials for city streets and
city has the right to spend money In the downtown and
sidewalks for the downtown redevelopment.
The project has been held up for three years while that none o f the proposed Improvements represented a
safety hazard. The appeals court upheld the decision
court action was on-going.
" I f the next step Is for the city to take some action, and and then later refused to clarify Its decision.
If they (the Speers) are waiting to go to federal court for
Thomas Speer said earlier that closing of Magnolia
us to take a step. I am not reluctant to do so. said Foit Avenue to vehicular traffic would be the "taking of our
today. "It's full steam ahead. Let's go." he said. "I don't private property rights and damaging us without due
think we ought to be Intimidated."
process of law."
Among the Improvements planned by the city in
The Speers law office building faces Magnolia Avenue.
addition to the pedestrian mall arc: constructing
He
said he and his father would ask the court to prohibit
planters for flowers at designated areas on First Street
from Park Avenue to Palmetto: widening sidewalks: the closing of the street.

Murder
Witness
Examined

Clinic Board
Tries To Oust
Buratti, But
Move Fizzl
By Dlsne Petryk
Herald News Editor
An attempt to oust Tcri Buratti
from membership on the board of
directors of the Central Florida
Migrant and Community Health
Center failed Sunday when the
board was unable to muster the
required two-thirds vote.
The effort came during a special
meeting at the clinic's Sanford office
when the board voted 8-4 to remove
Buratti following a letter from the
b oard c h a irm a n q u e s tio n in g
whether she "acted In a manner
detrimental to the corporation."
There arc 14 members on the
board.
Two members of the press and
several Interested citizens were
excluded from the meeting.
Before hr would ImCr however.
Sanford Housing Authority Com­
missioner J. Wain Cummings told
the board since the clinic Is taxpay­
er supported. It Cannot hide Its
business from the public.
"There's no such thing as secret
meetings." he told the group.
But th e y d is a g re e d . Board*
member Pat Southward said the
clinic Is a private, not-for-profit
corporation and not subject to

Mw.w fsrtw SrO**»» s»inrs

press was excluded, the board's center nearest the wall, Lillian Hess, center, and
meeting was observable through the clinic's Cay Westerfleld.
windows. Dr. Luis Perez, left, Pat Southward,

„ _

.u’kTeri Buratti

----------- ------ Also excluded from the meeting
were Louise Crawford, vice presi­
dent o f Central Florida Legal
Services' board of directors, who
had Intended to appear as Ms.
Burattl'a advocate: Chief Rhoden,
chairman of the board of Seminole
Community Action: and a Head
Start teacher who did not wish to be
Identified.
In a letter calling the special

meeting, clinic board chairman
Adeline Tinsley said by-laws of the
corporation provide for removal of a
board member when he or she ' la
acting In a manner detrimental to
the corporation."
According to the letter. Ms.
Buratti had been suspected of:
• Releasing confidential Informa­
tion to the press without securing
board approval.
T h is

D e s p ite P ro m is e

Polk Still Skeptical
On Computer Dispatch
By Mlchesl Beha
Herald Staff Writer
Development o f a computer-aided
dispatch system to speed response to fire
and police calls Is going well and should
be completed by January. Seminole
County Computer Services Director Jack
Harward said today.
SherifT John Polk, however, remains
skeptical.
Harward who was asked to develop a
system to enhance the county's fire and
police dispatching capabilities using the
county's IBM System 38 computer, said
he will have no problem In meeting a
January deadline. He said design work
on the project has been completed with
the programming left to be done.
Polk said he doesn't believe Harward
can come up with a system which will
work without buying a new computer,
said today he’s advertising for bid
proposals for his own computer aided
dlvoatch system.
D u rin g J u n e b u d g et h ea rin g s .
Harward was given the assignment o f
adapting a computer program already In
use In Manatee County to fit Seminole
County's needs. Faced with a possible
budget deficit and growing needs for
more dispatchers In both the Sheriff's
Department and the Department of
Public Safety, county commissioners

voted to spend about $20,000 to adapt
the Manatee County system.
County Administrator T. Duncan Rose
promLsed to have a CAD system devel­
oped for Public Safety by Jrnuary and to
tie the Sheriffs Department In within
another six months. If the deadline Is not
met. Rose said, the county should
examine other systems.
Rose admitted trytng to adapt the
Manatee County program "Is a gamble"
but said the ln-house work could save
the county several hundred thousand
dollars by not purchasing new com­
puters for the system.
CAD system s tie Into telephone
systems to provide dispatchers with
Immediate Information on the location of
incoming calls and tells them the
location of the closest em ergency
vehicles.
By using the CAD system Polk and
Public Safety Director Gary Kaiser
believe they can save time In responding
to calls and avoid adding new dispat­
chers.
But Polk and Kaiser both said during
budget hearings they are wary of the
plan to use the same computer being
used by other county departments. If the
machine is overloaded or breaks down
they believe It would cripple the CAD
system.

S.R. 436 Construction Begins
Construction began today on the $4
million. 21-month project to make a
one-mllc portion of State Route 430
through Altamonte Springs a slx-lanc
highway.
The Wiley N. Jackson Co., of Roanoke.
Va.. began work at 10 a.in. on the
project, designed to alleviate traffic
congestion on the heavily traveled corri­
dor between
Poston Avenue and
Douglas Road.
Completion of the project Is antici­

a p p a r e n tly

r e fe r r e d

to

publication o f the Director's Report
on the c lin ic and o b stetrica l
services, published In the Herald
after last month's board meeting.
Publication of the report, critical of
obstetrical services, led to the resig­
nation of Dr. Bruce Bevltz. who
provided the c lin ic 's prenutal
services for three years.
• Repeatedly and consistently
behaving In a disruptive and rude
manner at board meetings.

pated In the summer of 1985. When the
road Is finished It's capacity will Increase
from Its existing 27.000 cars per day to
about &lt;0.000 cars a day.
But will that be sufficient to eliminate
traffic Jams? Not likely, soys DOT
engineer Bill Gray. The road already
carries about 50.000 vehicles per day
and when the road la widened "drivers
who hove been using alternate routes
w i l l b e g i n u s i n g t h e
highway."—M lchesl Beha

• Attempting to undermine Ex­
ecutive Director Susan Moore In
performance of duties placed upon
her by the board and spreading
rumors and creating, dissension
among clinic stafT.
• D is c u s s in g c o n f i d e n t i a l
personnel matters with persons off
the board with damage resulting to
the clinic.
• A tte m p tin g

to

ham per

clinic's board for 11 months, said
her troubles with colleagues may
have begun because she was the
only board member to vote against
sclecUon of Mrs. Moore as director.
Ms. Buratti charges that the board
did not follow equal opportunity
procedu res b efore selectin g a
director.
Last month. Mrs. Oulda Stacey.
32. of Sanford, filed a complaint

th e

clinic's continued operation “ by
leaving the board meeting during
which a grant application had to be
approved to meet o deadline.
Mrs. Tinsley's letter urged all
board members to appear for the
special meeting because "as you
can see these are '•ulte serious
matters and this may be one o f the
most Important board meetings you
have been asked to attend."
Ms. Buratti. who has been on the

board d en ied her ap p lica tion
because of her age. did not review
her application, did not Interview
her for the position until after they
had hired Mrs. Moore and failed to
fo llo w Its ow n g u id e lin e s as
published In ads seeking a new
director.
Her complaint is awaiting an

See CLINIC, page 2A

Defense lawyers began their cross
examination today of Susan Barret
Assald about her contention that
her boyfriend beat and tortured her
5-year-old daughter to death last
year.
In testimony Friday. Mrs. Assald
claimed her boyfriend. Donald
Glenn McDougall. abuvd Ursula
Sunshine Assald while she stood by
and watched. Mrs. Assald, 30. said
McDougall also deprived the child of
food and water.
Friday was the first day of testi­
mony In the trial of McDougall who
Is charged with first-degree murder
and aggravated child battery. The
trial Is expected to last at least a
week.
Seminole Circuit Judge C. Vernon
Mize Jr. moved the trial from
Sanford to SL Petersburg because
the case received such extensive
news media coverage In Central
Florida that attempts to pick an
impartial Jury In Seminole County
bogged down.
Mrs. Assald said that after Ursulla
died In September. 1982. she and
McDougall put the girl's body In a
canvas bag and threw It Into a pond
In Altamonte Springs.
McDougall and Mrs. Assald moved
to California alter UrauUa's death
and Mrs. Asssald told police In
Riverside. Calif. In November that
McDougall had killed her daughter
and he was arrested there.
Mrs. Assald later pleaded guilty to
manslaughter In connection with
the child's death and Is serving a
15-year prison sentence. If con­
victed, McDougall and could be
sentenced to death.
—Charles Cobb

TODAY

Kid Napping
No Crime

AHIm Ri»nor1s................ ........... 2A
ArmmH Thl Clock........... ........... 4A
Q
_
ftA
or_iuy«..............................
Calendar...........................
Classifieds....................... ......10,11B
Cnml 7*............................. ............ 8A
Crossword....................... ........... 8A
Dear Abby.....«.................
Deaths.............................. .......... 12A
Dr. Lamb......................... ........... 8A
Editorial.......................... ........... 4A
Florida............................. ............ 3A
Horoscope........................
Hospital'...........................
Nation..............................
People............................................1A
Sports........................................ 5-7A
Television..................................... 9A
Weather..........................
2A
World........................................... 12A

W h ile the H enry 8.
Sanford Memorial
Library and Museum
was packed with those
Interested In finding
out the worth of their
heirlooms in s one-dsy
sntlque appraisal
session Saturday a f­
ternoon, 10-month-old
Heather Melvin of Banford could see what all
the fuse was about. Held
by Joan S to ck a Z U l.
Sanford, she found the
mnaeum cham bera a
great place to take a
nap, but nobody seemed
to mind. The appralsale,
by Harriett Cordell, who
has an antique shop in
Or l a n d o , were
sponsored by the Henry
8. Sanford Historical
Preservation Society.
Originally scheduled for
1 -3 p . m . , It w a s
extended to 7:30 to
appraise Items for the
more than 70 persons
who turned out.

Politics In south Florida has
gotten to the point that can­
didates unashamedly court an­
ti-Castro terrorists In return for
the large Hispanic vote they
Influence. Miami Mayor Maurice
Ferre, for example, has intereced with police on behalf of
six reputed terrorists during his
career. Story on page 3A.

H*r«M Photo by (Mono Potryk

Blacks Want More Police Protection
Brazen street crime which has residents ol
a low-income residential area near Altamonte
Springs living In fear has prompted a meeting
Tuesday between Seminole County Sheriff
John Polk and the city's black leaders to
discuss ways of combatting the problem.
The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the
New Bethel A.M.E. Church. 307 Marker St.
Church pastor, the Rev. James E. Stephens,
and a large number of area residents are
expected to attend.
The meeting coincs in response to a
petition signed by more than 100 persons
who live In the hlgh-crtmc area, according to
sheriff s spokesman John Spolxkl.
The petition, culling for a crackdown by
authorities, was presented to Polk when he

held an Initial meeting with black leaders last
week. Spolskt said.
Many residents In the area of Marker. North
and Jackson streets are "alarm ed" and "feel
Intimidated" about the crime situation In
their neighborhood. Spolskl said.
"Lon g time residents of that area. Including
teachers, nurses and business people, zee
drug transactions being conducted on street
corners when they wslk through their
neighborhoods." Spolksl said.
' Some have seen displays of guns and have
heard guns discharged. They have asked us
to put an end to these activities and we are
going to oblige them." he said.
He said the sh eriffs department has
received 321 calls from that area during the
first nine months of the year. Including

disturbances, suspicious persona, narcotics
transactions, speeding vehicles and drug
sellers biaxenly harassing motorists.
At Tuesday’s meeting. Polk Is expected to
detail his plans to use marked and unmarked
patrol cars In the area, police dogs to sniff out
drugs and video equipment to record drug
transactions. Spolskl said.
The unlawful assembly law — allowing
authorities to disperse groups of three
petrous or more — will be more rtglgly
enforced. Spolskl ssld. "W e have already
used a helicopter to take aerial photographs
of the area to detect hiding places." he said.
"W e are on top of this situation. We have
the cooperation of the area residents and we
arc going to enforce the law." Spolskl said.

�JA—Evening H e ra ld , Sanlord, FI.

Monday, O cl. 17, IW J

NATION
INBRIEF X - J I

I I

C al-B erkeley Professor
Wins Economics Prize

Politicians Woo Anti-Castro Terrorists
MIAMI (UPI1 — Leading Miami politicians, mindful of
the growing Hispanic voting bloc, are courting support
from anll-Castro terrorist groups viewed by the FBI as
little more Ilian common criminals, according to a
published report.
Mayor Maurice Ferre and his leading opponent, Xavier
Suarez, have openly sought the approval of reputed
terrorists. The Miami Herald reported Sunday.
The mayoral candidates, like many other local
politicians, concede they want the support.
"The only cause you need In Miami to be accepted in
the Cuban community is to wrap yourself in the
anti-communist flag." said Miami Commissioner Joe
Carollo. who (s seeking re-election and facing opposition
from both Inside and outside the Hispanic community.

United Press International
Gerard Dcbieu of the University of California
at Berkeley won the 1983 Nobel Prize for
Economics today.
The French-bom Debreu, 62, won the prize for
refining the classic theory of supply and
demand In economic systems, the Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences announced.
Debreu received the award 11 years after his
research partner. Kenneth Arrow of Harvard
University, won the Nobel award In 1972.
Debreu has expanded on a mathematical
model designed by the two men In the early
1950s that confirmed the logic of Adam Smith's
"theory of general equilibrium" In which prices,
supply and demand tend to reach a balance
within a free market economy.
Of the 20 people who have won or shared the
1.5 million Swedish Kronor ($200,000) prize.
11 have been professors at American un­
iversities.

According to Miami political observers, the growing
Hispanic voting bloc supports most any kind of
anti-Castro effort, even ft terrorism Is Involved.
"There Is a great deal of reluctance to say. 'I condemn

your tactics,"' Suarez said.
The Herald reported that Ferre has Interceded with
law enforcement authorities on behalf of six reputed
terrorists during the last 10 years.
Five of those Incidents were publicized, including an
attempt to free reputed terrorist Orlando Bosch. Bosch
was accused of masterminding the 1976 bombing of a
Cubana Airlines jet In which 74 persons died. He Is
Imprisoned In Venezuela.
But according to the Herald, one Incident In which
Ferre became Involved was previously not msde nubile.
The newspaper said Adain Kllmkowskl, former acting
police chief, asked for a federal grand Jury Investigation
following Ferre's Interference In a Miami Police
Department investigation on terrorism. No official
investigation was undertaken.
Kllmkowskl said Ferre discussed with him the
Impending extradition of two suspected terrorist bom­
bers to Mexico and "Indicated he heard quite a bit
(about) bombings coming up." The now-retired police

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan
signed documents today making him a legal
can did ate fo r re-electio n and began a
multlmllllon-dollar fundraising drive by his
“ Reagan-Bush ’84" campaign committee.
In a late morning meeting with Sen. Paul
Laxalt, R-Nev., Reagan signed a letter to the
Federal Elections Commission technically
establishing his candidacy for a second term.
His new re-election campaign headquarters on
Capitol Hill also opened today.
Campaign director Edward Rollins said In an
Interview on ABC-TV Sunday that even though
little opposition Is expected. $21 million will be
spent In the primaries to promote Reagan.

Tylenol Trial Begins

Thanks

CHICAGO (UPI) — Federal prosecutors expect
the extortion trial of James Lewis, accused or
trying to extort $1 million to "stop the killings"
during last year's seven cyanide-Tylenol deaths
In Chicago, to last about a week.
Jury selection began today In the court of U.S.
District Judge Frank J. McCJarr.
Authorities have said Lewis Is not a suspect In
the Extra-Strength Tylenol deaths and In­
vestigators admit they have no motive and no
suspects In th.- case.
Lewis allegedly sent a hand-printed letter to
Johnson &amp; Johnson Co., the parent company of
the maker of the popular pain reliever, deman­
ding $ 1 million to "stop the killings."

I

*

Mary Joyce Bateman, right, who has announced her plans to retire In
January as director of business education for Seminole County schools,
received a resolution of appreciation Friday from School Board member
Jean Bryant.

»■• -»

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 74;
overnight low: 73; Sunday’s high: 85; barometric
pressure: 30.10; relative humidity: 90 percent: winds:
northeast at 7 mph: rain: trace; sunrise: 7:27 a m ,
sunset 6:54 p.m.
TUESDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 6:25 a.m..
6:49 p.m.; lows. 12:23 a.m.. — Port Canaveral: highs.
6:17 a.m.. 6:41 p.m.; lows. 12:14 a.m.. — p.m.;
Bayport: highs. 12:27 a.m.. 12:25 p.m.: lows. 6:36
a.m.. 6:55 p.m.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with a 40
percent chance of showers or thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Wind east 10 to 15 mph. Tonight partly
cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows In low 70s. Wind light east.
Tuesday partly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of
Bhowers or thunderstorms. Highs In upper 80s.
BOATINO FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Winds northeast to cast 10 to 15 knots
through tonight becoming easterly around 10 knots
Tuesday. Seas 2 to 4 feet. Scattered showers and
thunderstorms.

HOSPITAL NOTES
M*ry T. Johnton, Oit**n

UbtrUy

ADMISSIONS

A D M IS S IO N S

i*ntord:
Lucll* X Echoli
Georgia LW tth b v m
Margaret P MacGrtgor. D*B*ry
Mar |or I* L Keeling. Del ion*
Maria L. Wilton. Del Iona
DISCHAROES
Debra L. H .tledge and baby boy.
D*L*nd
Jean In* M G**&lt;i&gt; and baby girl.
Dalton*
B IR T H S
M ic h a e l and M e lo d y W P h a rlt. a
b a b y b e y. O ttw n

San lo r d :

Tammy L. Sion*
DISCHARGES
Ssntord:
Elba I BrIUon and baby boy
TottwM Butkt
M*rg*r*1 0 John ion
M*i*n Rsfablm and baby boy
PamaU L TfO**f *nd tutor boy
H*ttl* B Soane*. 0*B*ry
Jhomai B. B*flf *nd. Dalton*
Antoni* C u r. Dolton*
F ro d T H o w tll, D a tlo n *
A n th o n y K . B a m a v Longw ood

Authorities were continuing their search today for a
gunman who robbed a Fern Park service station of an
undetermined amount of cash Saturday night.
The man entered the Phillips 66 station on State Road
436 at Oxford Road at about 10:20 p.m. Saturday, a
Seminole County sheriff"s report said.
The man asked the attendant If ho could use the rest
room, then entered the office and pulled a blue steel
, revolver op the attendant, llic report said.
The gunman ordered the attendant to hand over a
blue and white Flagship bank bag which contained the
dally cash receipts, the report said.
The gunman then ordered the attendant to get under
a desk and the gunman ran out' of the station. The
Altamonte Springs police canine unit was called to the
scene and the dog traced the gunman's path to the
parking lot of the Sun Bank on Oxford Road where the
gunman apparently had a getaway car waiting, the
report said.
The 21 -year-old attendant was not harmed.

H e r a ld

iu s p i

BICYCLES REMOVED
Bicycles were stolen from two Sanford residents
Thursday.
John Busstngcr. 41. of 2605 Georgia Ave.. told police
someone entered his garage between 8:50 a.m. and
12:30 p.m. and stole a Murray bicycle valued at $90.
Barbara Stair. 37. of 2300 Sanford Ave., reported that
another boy stole her son's bicycle at 3 p.m.
She told police that her son Doug parked the bike In
front ol a 7-11 slorc at Park Avenue and Twelfth Street
and while he was In the store he saw a boy. who was
about 15 years old. get or the bike and ride north on
Park Avenue.

DUI DISPOSITIONS
The following persons have been cither convicted or
pleaded guilty In Seminole County Court to driving
under the influence. Most of them, as ftrst-time
offenders, have had their driver's licenses suspended for
six months, fined $250 and ordered to perform 50 hours
of community service. In cases where a different
sentence has been Imposed, the actual sentences are
reported.
—Jedrry Dwaln Quescnberry, 352 Withers Circle.
Danville, Va.
—Marvin E. Avery Jr.. 11507 Baltic St.. Orlando.
—Lori Lee Covingtpn. Bowling Lane, Orlando.
—Egard E. Culpepper. 712 Gregory Court. Altamonte
Springs.
—George E. Grek. 431 E. Pennsylvania Ave., Winter
Garden.
—Connie E, Harrell, 51 W. Edgemon Ave., Winter
Springs.
—Douglas G. Sanders. 163 Goodhart St., Lake Mary.
—Regina C. Ludwig. 3 14 W. 6lh St., Sanford.
—Tony Lee Pugh. 220 Cherokee Lane, Altamonte
Springs.
—Steven N. Behrens, State Road 46. Sanford,

P u b lis h e d D a ily a n d S u n d a y , e n c e p t S a tu rd a y b y T h « San la r d
H e ra ld . In c ., M S N . F re n c h A v # ..S a n fo rd , F la . » m
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H a m * O a ttv a r y ; W e a k . SI M , M o n th , la IS ; I M a n t h i. IJ « SS;
Y e a r , M i Id B y M a ll: W eek S l. I S i M a n n . IS I S ; S M a n t h i.
U J S i; Y e a r . IS ’ .##
_____________________________________________

I

whether EPA will revamp Us Superfund
toxic waste cleanup program to Include
dioxin sites that do not now qualify for
top-priority under Its current hazards
ranking system, although dioxin Is
considered the most dangerous chemical
made. The agency also could seek
special legislation providing funds for up
to 1,500 man-year's work over the next
decade, the sources said.
The agency still Is exploring ways to
clean up dioxin sites, such as pouring
cement over contaminated soil or in­
cinerating It.
EPA's Office o f Solid Waste and
Emergency Response already has begun
Implementing parts of the new strategy
by seeking Information from present and
former herbicide manufacturers whose
products and manufacturing wastes
were contaminated with the most
dangerous type of dioxin, detectable
levels o f which have been lethal to
laboratory animals.
Missouri's dioxin crisis surfaced when
It was discovered that Russell Bliss, a
Rosatl. Mo. salvage oil operator, used
dioxin-contaminated wastes from a
former Agent Orange and Northeastern
Pharmaceutical plant to spray roads and
horse arenas for dust control.

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JO M U

Action Reports

...Clinic Expulsion Move Fizzles
Continued from page 1A
EEOC hearing.
Ms. Burattl said she also believes
board members were Irked when
she protested not being allowed to
tape record meetings and when she
suggested that a fellow board
member may have a conflict of
interest.
Ms. B’lrattl. who is the board's
secretary, complained In a letter to
Mrs. Tinsley that not being allowed
to tape-record the meetings discrim­
inates against her as a handicapped
person.

Ms. Burattl said Injuries she
sustained In an accident make It
difficult for her to write. She also
said It would be an advantage to the
board to have taped meetings, since
written minutes can be tampered
with.
She pointed out that the 1973
Rehabilitation Act prohibits dis­
crimination on the basis of handi­
cap.
In the conflict of Interest matter.
Ms. Burattl suggested the board
should consider whether In voting
to purchase hospital services, board
member James Tear./ had u conflict
o f Interest as administrator of
Central Florida Regional Hospital, a
for-profit corporation.
Voting for Ms. Burattl's expulsion
were Tinsley. Southward, Fannie
P ow ell, L illian Hess. Ora Lee
W alker. B erth en la Bobb. Cay
Westerflcld, and Othcl Duvall.

event of a tie. In any case, the board
did not muster sufficient votes to
oust Ms. Burattl.
Mrs. Moore did not attend the
meeting.

that counts but "how you spend the
time."
Apparently referring to the new
physician on the clinic's staff.
Bevltz wrote:

Earlier, she said she would not
release the resignation letier of Dr.
BevlU.

" I f you think a resident with 14
months' total experience can deliver
better care than a board-eligible
obstetriclan/gynecologlst. then you
are a bit misinformed,”
Bevltz said he would respond to
questions from his former patients
but refused to work at the clinic any
longer.

Bevltz was angered by statements
Mrs. M oore m ade c r itic a l o f
obstetrical services at the clinic.
In addition, Ms. Moore said Bevltz
had been providing a fee-for-servlces
pre-natal clinic two evenings per
week for which he was paid $25 an
hour for one four-hour session
"although In reality the clinic lasts
only one and a half to two houra
nights."
Mrs. Moore said he was under
pressure to see 25 to 30 women "In
that very brief amount of time,
which Indicates that the patients
are receiving very little attention."
Bevltz was apparently outraged
by these and other statements by
Ms. Moore, but refused to comment
on the record for the media.
Although Ms. Moore refused to
release his letter o f resignation,
obtained from another source, the
letter stated:
"It was with surprise. Indignation,
horror and a feeling of betrayal that
I read the article In Ihe Evening
Herald dated Tuesday Sept. 27." he
wrote.

Fla P ro g'M i...............II* m «
Fraadom Saving*.... ...» M U MU
MCA ...... .......... U N unchanged
Hvghat Sugplr— .......... 22U UVt
Morrlion i ...... — ___ _ M U 7QH

Doard members voting not to
expel were Tesar. Dr. Luis Perez.
Thelma Mike and Ms. Burattl.

He said the statement that he
worked one and a half to two hours
per evening was false.
H e ‘said he arrived at 5:30 p.m.
and often did not leave until after 8
p.m.

NCR C a r p ...............1 1 *U u n d a n g a d

There was some discussion con­
cerning whether Mrs. Tinsley's vote,
as chairm an, would count or
whether II would count only In the

'Patients do receive individual
attention." he wrote.
Further, he said It U not the
amount of time spent with a patient

«*» j * o i

M o n d a y , O c to b e r 17, 19B3—V ol. 74, No. SO

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The govern­
ment Is beginning a nationwide effort to
Investigate, and clean up where neces­
sary. as many 89 200 sites contaminated
by the deadly chemical dioxin.
But a potential pricetag of $100 million
annually for 10 to 12 years could hurt
the plan.
The program, spun from an as yet
unpublished Environmental Protection
Agency "dioxin strategy" paper. Is being
undertaken as a reaction to Missouri's
massive dioxin problem.
Michael Cook, deputy director of EPA’s
office of solid waste, said that cost
figures still arc wild guesses because of
variables — such as whether herbicide
manufacturers can be held legally re­
sponsible for cleanup costs.
EPA has "quite a ways to go before we
have numbers together" on the longrange costs, he said.
But agency sources put the cost at
, $100 million a year for 10 to 12 years.
Other sources said officials of the Office
o f Management and Budget arc so
wonted about the financial Implications
of the new dioxin effort that they sought
late last week »o delay release of the
strategy paper pending further review.
Officials said ft has yet to be decided

Wymore Road, Altamonte Springs, was arrested follow­
ing an accident at 11:53 p.m. Friday on Interstate 4.
—Thomas Jones, 34. of 446 E. Orange Ave.. Longwood.
was arrested at 12:03 a.m. Saturday on State Road 436
★ Fires
at the Intersection of U.S. Highway 17-92 after he was
oberved driving erratically.
* Courts
—Daniel KHne, 41. of 111 Elderberry Road. Longwood.
was arrested at 11:38 p.m. Friday on Weklva Springs
* Police
Road. Police sold Kline's car made a turn too wide and
collided with another vehicle.
—James Reamer. 44. of Orlando, was arrested at 12:05
-Raym ond Norris. 1000 E. 9th St.. Sanford.
a.m. Saturday on Airport Boulevard In Sanford. Police
AMENDED DUI*
said he was driving erratically.
The following persons, who were arrested on a charge —Anthony Hart, 26. Orlando, was arrested at 2:30 a.m.
of driving under the Influence, have had that charge Saturday on County Road 434 and Douglas Road in ;
amended to the lesser charge of willful and wanton Longwood. Pollc said his car was weaving between
lanes.
reckless driving:
—Mark E. Carter. 30 Lilac. DcBary.
FIRE CALLS
—Larry Alan Cook. Sheoah Boulevard. Winter Springs.
The Sanford Fire Deparment responded to the
—Winford Cummings. 6615 Yucatan Drive. Orlando.
following calls;
—Donna L. Dial. 3 Carriage Hill Circle. Casselberry.
Friday
SANFORD MAN ARRESTED
-Charles W. Hall. 205 Justin Way. Sanford.
—9:57 a.m.. 2440 Bay Ave., rescue.
Gregory Oucttner 18. of 515 Myrtle Ave. Sanford, was -G eorge M. Starks. 205 Birch Terrace. Winter Springs.
— 10:15 a.m.. 110 W. 19th St., rescue.
arrested at 4:24 p.m. Friday on charges o f burglary and
DUI ARRE8T8
— 12:36 p.m., 1001 W. 1st St., rescue.
grand theft In connection with the theft of $200 worth of
The following persons have been arrested tn Seminole —5:55 p.m., 1803-DSanford Landings, rescue.
Items from a Sanford home.
—6:30 p.m., 401 S. Summerlin Ave., false alarm.
Police said Buettner Is accused of breaking Into the County on charges o f driving under the Influence:
home of Dawn Bowman, of 600 Laurel Ave., Sanford, on —Richard Colvin. 30. o f Spanish Trace Apartments. -9 :2 9 p.m.. 107 W. 30th St., rescue.
Aug. 26. Jewelry and other Kerns were reported stolen
In the burglary.
He was Jailed and later released on $ 1.000 bond.

, STOCKS
E v e n in g

"... It Just happens to be a part of political life In the
same sense that. In yesteryear, people like Mayor
(Coleman) Young In Detroit and some of the older black
mayors and politicians had to deal with the Black
Panthers."

Fern Park Service Station Bandit Being Sought

NATIONAL REPORT: Thunderstorms that flooded
south Texas with up to 10 Inches o f rain stretched from
Texas to Kentucky and Southern Illinois today. Storms
near the Texas Gulf Coast dumped 6 to 10 Inches of rain
In three hours Sunday southwest of Houston In Fort
Bend and Wharton Counties, causing flash flooding and
minor water damage to homes. Floods briefly closed
Highway 442 Into Wharton and Boling. Damaging hall
the size of walnuts and golf balls smashed windows at
Antbn and Littlefield, northwest of Lubbock, Texas.
Thunderstorms and showers stretched from the Texas
Panhandle to Illinois and Kentucky today along the
southern edge of a very slow-moving cold front. Heavy
rains Sunday along the same line caused scattered
flooding In southwestern Missouri, and high winds
caused damage near Lamar, Mo. Storms dampened
Florida, where the 24-hour rainfall total climbed to 4
Inches at Daytona Beach. An autumn chill stretched
from New England to the Rocky Mountains, where the
nation's low was 19 degrees at Alamosa, Colo.

C a rtra l F la riS # R r |» * A jl H * t g « * l

Herald.

Cost May Hurt Federal
Dioxin Cleanup Effort

Reagan A Candidate

W EATHER

chief says he viewed the statement as a "threat there
would be more bombings "
But Ferre refused to provide specifics.
"I was flat Irritated." Kllmkowskl said. "Here the
mayor was saying he had Information (on lerrolam) and
he won’t divulge It to me."
Ferre said he was not trying to Interfere. Hr said he
wanted to make sure Ihe suspected terrorists would not
be turned over to Cuba once they were returned to
Mexico. He also was concerned that police might have
U«=ri harassing cue suspect's wife.
"I think In Miami politics. (Involvement with violent
anti-Castro groups) Is unavoidable." Ferre told the

F lo r'O * P o n t
L U g M -------- ---------------- M U M H

Pltuay------ --------M l* unchanged
ScsMy*»........ -... ... 17* ii
ion B a n k .............. ................. W U 1 5 *
South***/ Bank U * unchanged

Despite their disagreements, how­
ever. Bevltz and Mrs. Moore seemed;
to agree that communication be­
tween the clinic and doctors and
Central Florida Regional Hospital,
who are often called upon to deliver
the babies of women given prenatal
care at the clinic. Is poor.
Bevltz and Mrs. Moore said they
feel the hospital doctors should
become acquainted with the cases
beforehand, but complained that
the doctors resent having to deliver
the babies of women who cannot
pay.
Bevltz said he repeatedly tried to
Improve communication with the
obstetricians but has been "r e ­
buffed. rejected and belittled" In the
attempt.
He said the doctors stated they do
not want to have any responsibility
for the women until they are
admitted and they would not assist
In prior tests, such as sonograms,
for women who cannot pay.
But Bevltz disagreed with Mrs.
Moore who said women who have
had previous cesarean sections are
always at risk If not admitted before
they go into labor.
Bevltz said this Is not always so.
" I think I am qualified to M y who
is and who Isn't high risk." he
wrote.

�FLORIDA
'VMM

IN BRIEF
Proposition 1 'Not
The Juggernaut W e Think'
KISSIMMEE tUPIl — Political pollster Lance
loiTancc Jr. says If a vote were taken now. the
Proposition 1 tax-cut proposal would pass
easily, but he Insists "It's not quite the
Juggernaut we think."
Tarrance told the Florida League o f Cities
annual convention Saturday that support for the
amendment would be reduced considerably If
the proposition were pitted against alternative
tax relief measures.
Proposition 1 would reduce state and local
revenues In 1985 to 1980 levels, partially
adjusted for Inflation. Under Ihe plan, property
taxes could not rise more than 5 percent
without voter approval.
The poll showed 65 percent of Florida
residents would vote for the amendment.
Tarrance. whose polling operation Is based In
Houston, said Proposition 1 got only 35 percent
of the voter support when pitted against an
alternative measure that offered property tax
relief, Tarrance said.
State olllclals predicted that If the measure
passes, the state's $11.4 billion budget would be
cut 22 percent during the first year and could be
cut In half during the next decade.

'Bloodbath' Predicted
GAINESVILLE (UPI) - As a federal judge In
Tampa considered written arguments Intended
to save a man from the electric chair Tuesday,
those attending an anti-capltol punishment
meeting this weekend were offered a grim sort of
hope for death row Inmates of the future.
A Tufts University profTessor predicted a
pending "bloodbath" of executions could trigger
public disgust that would change America's
attitude toward the death penalty.
"W e are surrounded by a potential bloodbath,
an avalanche of executions without precedent
that may begn to unfold," author and educator
Hugo Bcdau said In his opening address
Saturday at the Florida Conference Against the
Death Penalty.
Written arguments (lied on behalf of Joseph
Brown, are being studied by U.S. District Judge
W. Terrell Hodges. Gov. Graham signed death
warrants Sept. 23 for Brown and Charles
Messer. Messer was granted a stay of execution
Friday by U.S. District Judge William Stafford.

Borman Sees Turnaround
MIAMI (UPI) — Eastern Airlines Chairman
Frank Borman said Sunday he was confident
the ailing carrier can reverse Its severe financial
woes and make a profit os early as next year,
Borman made his assessment three weeks

bankruptcy.
Borman said he expected the results of an
Independent audit on Eastern's financial trou­
bles to lead to a recovery plan that will end the
airline's losses. Eastern has lost more than &gt;300
million since 1980.
The results of the audit, being conducted by
Lazard Frcres &amp; Co. and Locker-Abrect
Associates Inc., are expected to be complete
within several weeks.

Evsntng H erald, S anford. F I.

Education

M onday, P e l. IT, 1WJ—M

In Rush For Excellence, Will Blacks Be Left Behind?
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Florida education officials arc
trying to make sure black youths aren't left behind as
the state stiffens its neademte standards to achieve
quality and the nation's "upper quartlle."
Black cduLuluis have been wanting for months that
the drive for nationally-recognized excellence, with Its
heavy reliance on standardized testing, was taking an
unfair, heavy toll on blacks.
White educators. Including Education Commissioner
Ralph Turlington, have concluded they are right and
special steps are necessary to ensure that blacks aren't
left behind.
Turlington attended a two-day conference In
Jacksonville earlier this month on Florida's quality drive
and the Impact on blacks In the public schools.
I^ast week, a commission created by the Legislature to
look for ways to get more black students Into college and
university programs and keep them there began work. It
will report to the Cabinet's Postsccondnry Education
Planning Commission.
It Is chaired by Dr. James Gardner o f Fort Lauderdale,
the first black to sit on the Board of Regents, and also
Includes three black legislators. Sen. Carrie Meek of
Miami, and Reps. Douglas Jamerson o f St. Petersburg
and Alzo Reddick of Orlando.
One of the Gardner committee's special concerns is
that the new College Level Academic Skills Test

(CLAST) which sophomores must pass beginning next
August will keep many b!nc..s out of upper division
work.
On Friday. Turlington appointed Gardner as chairman
o f the committee to develop passing scores for CLAST.
These groups' special studies are In addition to the
program headed by Turlington and Chancellor Barbara
Newel) to satisfy the U.S. Department o f Education's
Office of Civil Rights that all vestiges of the old dual
higher education system have been eliminated.
"W e want to be sure that »he entire state Is really
heading In that direction (toward quality and the upper
quartlle). not Just part of the population," says Walter
Smith, president o f Florida A&amp;M University In
Tallahassee.
"There Is a need for something special (for blacks) but
It really requires n special effort from everybody."
Turlington says. "Black students are going to have to
make a special effort....If you're behind, you don't gain
by Just doing what someone else Is doing. You have to
do more.
"The system has to do more. We have to develop
programs for students wilting to put In some special
effort to take advantage of."
Turlington believes the rigid high school graduation
requirements established by the Legislature will have a

Congress Facing Battles
On Spending And Defense
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Congress,
returning from a 10-day recess,
launches the traditionally hectic
drive for adjournment today with
major battles due In over spending,
taxes, the MX missile and nerve gas
production.
But legislation creating the third
Monday in January as a national
holiday In honor of martyred civil
rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Is certain of approval by the Senate
and could become law by the end of
the week.
The Senate Is expected to act
quickly on the nomination of
William Clark, now White House
national security adviser, who has
brm named to succeed James Watt
as Interior secretary.
Speaker Thomas O 'Neill and
Senate Republican leader Howard
Baker have agreed on Nov. 18 as the
target date for final adjournment of
the first session of the 98lh Con­
gress.
Target dates frequently slip. But
the lure o f going home before
Thanksgiving and the option of
postponing bills until next year
should help Congress wind up on
time.
Two "m ust" Items on the agenda
for this week are extensions of the
export-import bank authorization,
which expired last Friday, and
extended Jobless benefits for the
long-term unemployed, which stops
Tuesday.
The Senate and House have been

unable to com prom ise on the
benefits bill.
The Senate, backed by the ad­
ministration. wants an 18-month
extension, past the elections, with
reduction In the number of weeks of
benefits.
The House wants to Increase the
number of weeks beyond the cur­
rent 8 to 14 and "reach back" to
give additional compensation to
about 1 million who have exhauled
other benefits.
In contrast to the turmoil over
Jobs, the Senate is expected to
ovcrwhcmlngly approve the King
holiday Wednesday and Reagan has
said he will sign the legislation.

time since 1969 and allocation of
money for the B1 bomber.
Moving faster than they have In
yeare, the Senate and House have
passed six appropriations bills,
leaving seven to go.
A compromise &gt;7.9 billion Interi­
or Department appropriations bill,
already approved by the House,
should get through the Senate and
go to the White House this week.
Senate-House negotiations arc
expected to start on the nearly $100
billion Labor and Human Services
money bill this week with no fight
over abortion expected. It will mark
the first time In five years that
Congress has approved a I-aborHHS appropriations bill. Other ap­
Watt's resignation freed the State
propriations bills are pending.
Department authorization bill.
Somettme before adjournment,
Democrats, with considerable Re­
congressional taxwriters are de­
publican support, had offered an
termined to pass a bill but It will
amendment which would have
produce far less than the &gt;73 billion
called on Reagan to ask Watt to step
three-year Increase mandated by
down.
th e b u d g e t r e s o lu t io n . T h e
But the blit already includes an estimated Increase is &gt;10-12 billion
a m e n d m e n t u n d e r w h ic h
over three years.
U.S.contribut!ons to the United Na­
The so-called reconciliation bill Is
tions would be cut about &gt;500 also expected to Include &gt;12.3
million over four yews, or roughly billion In tax cuts.
half of what Is now being paid. The
Sen, James McClure, R-ldaho.
amendment Is bitterly opposed by
chairman of the Senate Energy and
the administration.
Natural Resources Committee, said
The House Appropriations com­ he will try to hold confirmation
mittee Is to consider, possibly as hearings on the Clark nomination
early as Thursday, the huge mili­ before the end of November.
tary money bill, totaling around
Said B a k e r , ''A b s e n t
&gt;250 billion, with fights due on the extraordlnanry circumstances I
MX nuclear missile, the resumption think the Senate will give its
of nerve gas production for the first consent to this nomination."

special benefit for blacks.
Only about 20 percent of black students have been
taking ihe Hirer years of high school math which will be
required In I3G7. No wonder many blacks have done
poorly when tested In math, he says.
The situation with white students hasn't been much
better. Only about 40 percent of whiles have been taking
three years of math.
"The graduation standards In themselves are going to
enhance our programs and they are going to enhance
opportunities for blacks. In a sense disproportionately.
Many blacks haven't been taking challenging academ­
ic courses because their high school counselors didn't
encourage them to do so. Turlington, Ms. Newell and
FAMU president Smith agree that better counseling Is
critical to see that blacks aren't left behind.
Smith also says the evaluation of whether a youth
should go Into gifted student programs should Include
much more than Just "pure I-Q." Many youngsters
capable of performing well if challenged by gifted
student programs arc denied the opportunity because
they don’t do well on I-Q tests, he says.
Chancellor Newell says financial assistance programs
arc necessary In ensuring black access to higher
education, noting that the average Income for a while
family In Florida Is $19,000, compared to about &gt;12,000
for blacks.

W a te r B ed s M a y H e lp
P r e m a tu r e B a b ie s S le e p
STANFORD, Calif. IUPJ) - Water beds help
regulate the breathing and heurt rate of premature
babies by simulating the womb and may improve
their behavioral development, researchers at Stan
ford University Hospital say.
Dr. Annvilese F. Komer. professor of psychiatry
and behavioral science who heads the three-year
study funded by the National Institute of Mental
Health, said she Is seeking lo determine whether the
rhythm and motion of water beds affect develop­
ment In premature babies.
Dr. Komer said her research will determine
whether premature Infants should sleep on plain
water beds, water beds with continuous oscillations
or ones that move only at Intervals.
The water beds are programmed to move In the
pattern of maternal biological rhythms that the
Infants would have experienced If they had not been
bom prematurely. Dr. Komer said.
"W e believe lack of exposure to such rhytnuts
may be one of the factors responsible for the
disorganized sleep and movements frequently seen
In premature babies." she said.
"The continuous water bed movements are based
on the maternal respiration rhythm, about 12 to 13
oscillations per minute. The intermittent oscillations
are based on the basic rest-activity cycle, which for
adults alternates between quiet and activity about
every 90 minutes.'*
In ihe Iasi decade. Dr. Korncr hu» found that

gently moving water beds can significantly reduce
apnea, or periodic stops In breathing, and
bradycardia, cr slowing o f the heart rate.
A pilot study showed premature Infants lying on
water beds for long periods were more alert, less
Irritable and showed more mature spontaneous
motor responses than babies in the control group.
What effects water beds have on long-term
development remains to be seen. Dr. Komer said.

'No Complete Security In A Free Society'
Your

'Crazies/Terrorists Possible Threat A t Olympics
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The possibility
of chemical and biological warfare by
terrorist groups and the actions of
"Individual crazies" In the mold of
Charles Manson are threats to the 1984
Olympics, law enforcement olllclals say.
Cmdr. Paul Myron, head of the
sheriffs department security planning
for the Games, said the department has
drawn up a list of 100 foreign and
domestic terrorist groups that could pose
a threat o f violence at the 1984 Games In
Los Angeles.
Myron said the sheriffs department
will have sole policing responsibility for
only two of the 23 game sites at the
Olympics, which are scheduled to run
from next July 28 through Aug. 12.
During that time, Myron said. Los

Angeles will be host to 12.000 athletes,
more than 10,000 members of the media
and up to 300.000 visitors.
The tnreat of terrorism ts always a
possibility, Myron said, but turning the
city Into a police state. Is simply not
possible.
"There Is no complete security In a
free society," he said.
Myron said In addition to organized
groups, a main source of concern would
also be "the Individual crazies ... the guy
that has never been Identified before as a
potential troublemaker." He mentioned
John Hinckley, who tried to assassinate
President Ronald Reagan In 1981. and
mass murderer Charles Manson as
examples.
"Whoever knew these people existed
before they came out of the woodwork

and did what they did?" Myron said.
"Those are the ones that scare me."
Myron said security planning also
includes the possibility of chemical or
biological warfare and said special teams
trained by the Centers for Disease
Control In Atlanta will be on alert to deal
with such emergencies.
He refused to specify the number of
sh eriffs department personnel that
would be used to staff the department's
two areas o f responsibility — the
velodrome in Carson. Calif. — for cycling
events — and Pepperdlne University In
Malibu. Calif. — for water polo. But he
said police and sheriffs department
officers would combine forces with 4.000
private security guards throughout the
sprawling five-county area where the

Games will be held.
Myron said the sheriffs department
security planning team has Identified
100 groups In the U.S. and abroad that
could pooc the threat ol violence at the
Olympics, and is concentrating its
energy on "the top 10." He refused to
name any of the groups on the list.

BEST FRIEND
KNOWS...

Of the 100, he said, about 20 are
domestic, including Los Angele^ street
gangs, and the rest are foreign.
The threat of street gang violence Is a
real one. he said, but he would not
disclose the strategy being designed to
ofTest possible violence, eaying he didn't
want to divulge strategy to the gangs.
"Those guys have lots of time to sit
and think how they'll outscam us the
next time.” Myron said.

Computer Custom Designs Medication
GAINESVILLE (UPI) Within the next decade,
new technology will ena­
ble doctors to customtailor medication for their
patients, says a University
o f F lo rid a C o lle g e o f
Pharmacy professor.
Dr. Daniel Robinson has
designed a computer pro­
gram titled SIMKIN. which
he says can predict accu­
rately the effect a certain
drug w ill have on an
Individual patient over an
extended period.
The program performs
mathematical calculations
based on a simulation of
t h e d r u g 's p a s s a g e
th rou gh the patien t s
body, and sketches graphs
Illustrating the predicted
drug level In the patient's
bloodstream at any given
time.
"This computerized aid.
combined with the clinical
knowledge of u trained
c l i n i c a l p h a r m a c is t ,
creates a new service that
can greatly improve a pa­
tie n t's care," Robinson

said.
S IM K IN p r o v id e s a
c o m p u te r-g e n e ra te d
"c o n s u lt " or advisory
prlnt-out and a graphic
plot of the patient's blood
level for the physician, he
said.
R obinson's com puter
program Is distributed
th r o u g h a c o m p u te r
software firm and Is being
used now nationwide by
clinical pharmacists In
family practice centers,
university-affiliated hospi­
tals and community hospi­
tals.
The program analyzes
all the important Informa­
tion about a patient —
diet, weight, age. diseases,
medications, lab results,
diagnoses and treatments,
for example. It also allows
the user to alter the drug's
dose, dosing Interval and
dosage form.
It is based on a new
discipline called
"pharmacokinetics," the
m a t h e m a l I •
cal description of what

drugs do In an Individual
patient's body. With the
advent of technology for
m e a s u rin g dru g c o n ­
centrations In blood, the
pharmacokinetics field has
g r o w n by le a p s and
bounds.
"Every month the scien­
tific Journals are full of
new, highly technical In­
formation that is difficult
to remember and place
Into context with general
m e d ic a l p r a c t i c e . "
Robinson said.

‘ ‘ Computerized
pharmacokinetics services
such as SIMKIN become a
useful tool that can advise
the physician regarding
the most appropriate dos­
age regimen for each pa­
tient "

fA L l
October 17-November 30

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Monday, October 17, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation D irector
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, (4.29; 6 Months, $24.00;
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c ioc^

Flexible
Russians
Less than a montji after a Soviet warplane shot
down an unarmed civilian airliner. President
Reagan, speaking to the United Nations General
Assembly, was heard to say: “ I urge the Soviet
Union to match our flexibility (on arms control). If
the Soviets sit down at the bargaining table
seeking genuine arms reductions, there will be
ai ms reductions."
If that is the case then there will be no arms
reductions. Prior to these comments. Mr. Reagan
had described the details of yet another U.S.
proposal to reduce U.S. and Soviet levels of
Intermediate-range nuclear weapons in Europe.
This newest offer, like all the others, featured
U.S. concessions, or. as Mr. Reagan said, "flexibili­
ty." The United Stales would reduce the number
of Pershing II and cruise missiles it plans to deploy
In Western Europe beginning in December, If the
Soviets would destroy enough of their nucleartipped. three-war head, mobile SS-20 missiles, to
match the U.S. total In launchers.
The new feature of this proposal is that the U.S.
is now willing to accept reductions of SS-20s on a
"global" basis. That means that we'll cut our
deployment of Pcrshlngs and cruises to Europe
from 572 to 75. If the Russians will cut back their
missile total, including those stationed in Western
Asia. In other words, we’ll back off on our
commitment to the defense of our allies In Western
Europe if the Russians will cut back their missiles
aimed at Japan and China. They could meet these
conditions by Just moving 168 SS-20s back into
Central Russia, out of range of Europe.
The President has come a long way since
November 1981. when he boldly proposed his
"zero option." meaning no U.S. deployment in
exchange for no SS-20» aimed at Europe. The
Soviets' efforts at flexibility are limited to the
ingenuous suggestion that they retain 162
missiles — the same number of weapons as
possessed by the British and French — and the
U.S. scrap Its deployment entirely. That is. 162
modern, sophisticated, multiwarhead Soviet
launchers to match antiquated, Inaccurate, single
warhead missiles not under U.S. control.
As a premium, the Reagan admnlstration Is now
willing to consider cutbacks of U.S. nuclearcapable F i l l fighter-bombers, now stationed in
Great Britain.
Essentially, the debate over intermediate range
nuclear weapons is a sideshow. Today, the Soviets
have the conventional military strength to overrun
Western Europe without resorting to nuclear
arms. The terrible decision to use them would be
left to the NATO allies. Thus any movement
towards reducing or delaying the deployment of
new U.S. theater nuclear weapons is welcome to
the Soviets, although only marginally important.
That Is because the Soviet military plan for
Europe, should it one day be launched, doesn't
give any considertlon to the butcher’s bill.
Casualties, military or civilian don’t matter in the
Soviet scheme. If the West wants to limit them, so
much the better. But should NATO forces fall back
on their nukes, the Soviets will accept the
Invitation to return fire.

Please W rite
Letters to the editor arc welcome for
publication. All letters must be signed and
include a 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.

BERRYS WORLD

By Micheal Beha

Just mention Proposition One around a
state, county, city or school board
employee and watch them shudder.
For the uninformed, Proposition One is
the constitutional amendment proposed by
1-akc County Property Appraiser Ed Havlll
nnd the group Floridians for Tax relief,
which would roll back taxes to their
1980-81 levels nnd limit future lax In­
creases.
The Intent of the amendment is to stop
what Havlll calls unnecessary tax nnd fee
Increases by all government bodies in the
state.
But Proposition One may lie the only
thing on which politicos from both parties
can agree. They all think It's bad. They
also think it's going to pass.
Seminole County officials oppose Prop
One because they feel It makes the
county's current growth problems almost
unsolvablc.
Thousands sf new residents pour into

Seminole County annually. Increasing the
demand for roads, water, sewer, police and
fire protection. If they’re tennis players or
golfers, they create a need for more
recreation facilities. If they build a house or
open a business. Inspectors must look over
the house and clerks must license the
business.
If Seminole County has to roll back taxes
and fees to their 1980-81 levels the county
will have to reduce or eliminate services at
a time when demand is continually
Increasing.
County and city staff are opposed to Prop
One on a p erso n al le v e l. For a d ­
ministrators. planners, directors and aides,
they believe Prop One means the people
have lost faith in their ability to ad­
minister. plan, direct and aide. Ultimately.
It means Job Instability.
School officials share the negative feel­
ing. Growth also Impacts the schools,
creating a need for more teachers, more

buildings, more buses and more ad­
ministrators.
But administrators arc In a quandary
about how they'll be able to meet those
increased demands with reduced funds.
Of courac. Prop One allows voters to
approve higher taxes for themselves but
that's sometnlng they seldom do.
The Oviedo High School band, directed
by It.A. Fclnbcrg and Connie Clark will
perform at the 1981 World's Fair In New
Orleans on May 13. 1984.
The band will participate In opening
week ceremonies at the fair and will stay
five days In new Orleans and two days in
Tallahassee during the trip.
The band also performed at opening
ceremonies for the World’s Fair In Knox­
ville. Tcnn. In 1982 where the group
received a superior rating in the fair'B
"Festival of Tomorrow” competition.

ROBERT WALTERS

SCIENCE WORLD

Herbs May
Help Fight
Cancers

"THARK YOU FOR
FLYlHq BANKRUPT
AIRLINES! I'M
CAPTAIN CRANK,
HOUR PiLOT.CO-RLOr,
NAVIGATOR AND FLIGHT
ATTENDANT... JUST
RELAX, ENJOY YOUR
FLIGHT AND, WITH
LUCK, I'LL GET THESE
DRINKS SERVED BEFORE
WE HAVE TO LAND!’

By Ted Chan

PEKING (UPI) — Preliminary studies
by the Peking Cancer Institute indicate
certain Chinese herbs may help the
body fight cancer.
Using Western clinical methods for
the first time. Chinese doctors found the
use of herbs can help strengthen or
enhance the body's natural defense
mechanisms.
When herb doses arc combined with
radiation and chemotherapy treat­
ments, patients who have not reached
the late stages of cancer may be curpd
or have their lives extended by years,
said Sun Van. the head of research In
traditional medicine at the institute.
The test results were announced at an
international symposium on the in­
teraction of traditional Chinese and
Western medicines.
Now. with Its first commercial cooper­
ative agreement with a foreign com­
pany. Newport Pharmaceuticals In­
ternational of Newport Beach. Calif., the
institute hopes to sell the herbs to
hospitals and pharmacies abroad.
Sun and Newport Pharmaceuticals
officials cautioned, however, that me­
ticulous. time-consuming research lies
ahead before the herbs can meet
regulations set by the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration and similar bodies
in the West.
They would not even guess when the
testing may be completed.
If further testing falls to meet Western
standards. Newport Pharmaceuticals
and the Peking institute probably will
have to lower their ambitions and
market the herbs as simple health
additives, which would not require FDA
approval.
"There is a treasure house of tradi­
tional Chinese m edicine." said Lu
Welbo, one of Sun's chief assistants.
"Our people could contribute to the
whole world.” he said.
The herbs now exported are confined
to traditional Chinese medicine shops in
Aslan communities To prove they are
effective tn enhancing the body’s natu­
ral defenses and can supplement cancer
treatment, the^ herbal components will
require purification, measurement and
testing.
"The Chinese have been using the
herbs for hundreds of years and know
they work.” said Gene O'Brien, vice
president of research and development
of Newport Pharmaceuticals.
But by Western standards, they
"leapfrogged," finding out the herbs are
effective in humans before testing them
In a laboratory. O'Brien said.
Chinese researchers must now "back
up. purity and produce exact dosages"
and do more Western clinical testing, he
said.
The use of cancer fighting herbs is
collectively known as Fu-zheng therapy,
which literally means "promoting or
enhancing the host defense mechanism
in treating diseases."
In the mid-1950s, researchers using
ancient Chinese medical books screened
about 600 o f the estimated 5,000
medicinal Chinese herbs to discover
effective anti-cancer components.
The selection was narrowed to 300
and a dozen of them arc being tested
under Wrstcm clinical methods.
Herbs called ' 'astragalus
membranaceus." found In northern
China, and "lingnustrum lucidum.”
grown in several Aslan nations, arc the
most widely used in treating cancer.

JEFFREY H A R T

'Right On Course'

North
Country
Campaign
WHITEF1ELD. N.H. (NEA) - Some,
presidential aspirants have made the
political pilgrimage to New Hampshire's
north country in the balmier days o f the
fading summer, while others surely will
follo w In the frigid days o f the
approaching winter.
On this day. however. It's Sen. Alan
Cranston's turn. With the state's famed
autumn foliage providing a brilliant
scarlet, gold and orange backdrop, the
car carrying the California Democrat
slices across the White Mountains, from
Littleton to Whiteflcld to Berlin.
Cranston Is perpetuating a unique —
some would call it bizarre — tradition
that has transformed presidential
campaigning from an esoteric enterprise
Into a mulUmllllon-dollar quadrennial
Industry In New Hampshire.
No other state Is more enthusiastic
about presidential politics or more
hospitable to Its practitioners. Indeed,
many other states arc openly antagonis­
tic to the notion o f politicians from other
venues badgering their citizens for
support more than a year before the
general election.
New Hampshire, however, guards the
flrst-ln-thc-natlon status of Its presi­
dential primary with a degree of ferocity
other states reserve for protecting their
leading Industries.
That’s because presidential cam­
paigning is a big Industry here — and
New Hamphlre’s voters and politicians
arc determined to prevent It from being
lured to another state.
Several year* ago. Tor example, when
alien Jurisdictions were threatening to
schedule presidential primaries ahead of
the contest here. New .Hampshire retali­
ated with a warning — half tn Jest but
half in earnest — that It would. If
necessary, hold Its election during the
halftime ceremonies at the Rose Bowl
game on New Year's Day.

The pilot's voice comes over the
Intercom: "W e arc right on our flight
plan."

plan." says the pilot evenly. "W e will
arrive at the San Diego airport 22
minutes early."

I am flying from New York to San
Diego as the first leg of a national
Journey to check opinion a year before
the 1984 presidential election, but at the
moment my old feeling about the
symbolic meaning o f a great Jet airliner
moves Into the foreground.

We arc headed for California, Reagan
country, and the pilot's matter-of-fact
announcement takes on a symbolic
quality ofltaown.
For an Easterner fly in g out to
California, it Is impossible not to reflect
upon what California's president has
already achieved, with apparent effort­
lessness. The appearance of effortless­
ness has been so successful that some
pundits call Reagan "indolent."
On the domestic front, Reagan has
entirely changed the American agenda.
S om e o f the m ore d eterm in e d
Even the most left-wing Democrats are
challengers refuse to be Intimidated,
not proposing vast new federal spending
however. Iowa's precinct caucuses
programs. They arc fighting desperately
precede
New Hampshire's primary by
to hold territory already won. threat­
one week and almost — but not quite —
ened by the Reagan onslaught.
rival the political significance of the
Abroad. Reagan has played the
voting here.
Korean airliner disaster as If It were a
Stradlvarius, and he has driven Yurt
Two neighboring states. Maine and
Andropov up the wall. Andropov, of
Vermont, have started to compete for
course, has to answer to the Politburo
early attention in recent years. Maine's
for his sorry scorecard, and he has had
Democrats not only arc pressing for
to admit that during the last month
early precinct caucuses next March but
every one of Reagan's political ob­
this month staged a political extrava­
jectives has been advanced, and every
ganza whose only purpose was to lurr
Soviet objective damaged. Andropov
politicians and voters to the state capital
has utterly failed to stop the deployment
of Augusta for an unofficial straw poll.
of the Pershing II missile, a prime
The amount of money expended by
objective, and has even gone so far as to
the candidates on that dubious en­
mobilize huge "peace" demonstrations
terprise demonstrates how lucrative
within the Soviet Union Itself — from
presidential politics can be. Former Vice
his own point of view a very dubious
President Walter F. Mondale acknowl­
strategy.
edged spending *100.000 on the oneBack again to the domestic front. With
day event, but the actual figure may
Inflation all but killed and the economy
have been closer to *200.000.
booming. Reagan can run and win. If he
wants to. He even has a large measure
Cranston spent another *100.000 and
o f tactical freedom.
the other five candidates probably spent
Suppose, nominated unanimously by
a total o f *100,000. For that money,
the Republican convention next sum­
suggests Maine political activist Gordon
mer, he engineered the nomination of
Weil, "You could have carried each one
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor for vice
of these people (the 1.900 Maine Demo­
president. There goes the "gender gap"
crats who turned out for the event) Into
and it would be a hard act for Mondale
. the convention hall In a sedan chair."
and Whoever to beat.
Determined not to be outdone. New
My plane Is out over the Pacific, the
Hampshire's Democrats have scheduled
sun is a golden ball o f fire heading
an even more ambitious state conven­
westward, and wc are landing at
Ltndburgh Field — Reagan country,
tion featuring a straw poll for the end of
this month.
where anything Is possible.

This DC-10 Is immensely powerful —
as Is our modern civilization. But like
that civilization, It Is also immensely
vulnerable. We bud an Intimation of
that during the oil boycott. The interna­
tional banking structure Is quaking
under the burden of bad loans to Third
World and communist countries. The
word ",'rnsh" Is being murmured at the
highest levels of banking.
And yet. for ull Us fragility, this
e n o r m o u s p a s s e n g e r j e t Is an
exhilarating experience — In that,
again. It is like modem civilization.
The plane is full of ordinary Ameri­
cans who want to fly, for whatever
reason from — breathtaking thought —
New York City to San Diego. It will take
only a few hours.
The bicycle the automobile, the
airplane: all of them great Instruments
o f freedom, mobility, and Individuality.
It cannot be an accident that all of them
arc inventions of Western civilization.
From that perspective, there Is a
poetic appropriateness In the fact that
the Soviets shot down the Korean
Boeing 747 passenger Jet. The Soviets
do not like Individualism or personal
mobility. Furthermore, the passengers
on that plane did not have a Soviet
license to be Inside Russia, even by
mistake. Russia is a place where you
can be shot for trying to LEAVE, where
you can be Jailed for an unlicensed
poem. Who should be surprised that
they shot down the plane?
I always experience a tremendous
emotional lift flying out to California,
the plane chasing the sun us both of
them cross the Amcriran continent. The
sun goes faster, you chase It over the
plains an the dessert, and then It is
going down behind the Rockies.
"W c arc now ahead of our flight

JACK AND ERSO N

T h a tc h e r T rie d To B la c k m a i ' R e a g a n

*7 LOVE your new hairdo. I had one similar to it
back in the early 50$ "

WASHINGTON - Margaret Thatcher
tried a bit of diplomatic blackmail on
President Reagan during her recent visit
to Washington. It was the best-kept
secret of a supposedly chummy confab.
Thatcher's little power play was
confided to my associate Dale Van Atta
by sources familiar with the Incident.
They said she succeeded only In getting
Reagan's Irish dander up. Here's the
story:
The British occupy e. strategic, little
piece of earth that straddles the routes
into southern Mexico. It's called Belize,
and it's tucked under Mexico's big toe.
The toe is heavily infected with
Marxist revolutionaries who are biding
their time until Mexico becomes ripe for
revolution. Given the raging inflatiun
and rampant corruption that afflicts
Mexico, this could be all too soon.
H o w e v e r d eterm in e d P resid en t
Reagan may be to stop a Marxist

takeover in El Salvador, he Is 10 times
more concerned about Mexico. He docs
not want the revolutionaries, therefore,
to get amis from Cuba. Happily, the
most convenient sm uggling routes
through Belize have been effectively
blocked by the British.
Thatcher was aware o f all this as she
enplaned for Washington. But she also
had a worry of her own: She feared that
Argentina still has designs on the
Falkland Islands. So she tried to
persuade Reagan not to resume sales of
U.S. arms to the Argentines, whose
arsenal was badly depleted by their
d isa stro u s a tte m p t to s e iz e the
Falklands last year.
So under Thatcher's tutelage, British
officials coyly Informed (heir U.S. hosts
that Britain was "willing to keep troops
tn Belize" as long as the arms embargo
on Argentina stayed In effect. The
implication was that the British might

pull out If Thatcher didn't gel her way.
White House sources reported that the
president was Infuriated by this "obvi­
ous blackmail."
Though the British garrison in Belize
is small. It has been essential In limiting
the flow of Cuban arms through Belize*
to the Marxist rebels In the Mexican toe.
"A s long as the British stay tn Belize,
they and the United States will be able
to prevent large shipments of arms from
Cuba reaching the rebels In Mexico," an
Intelligence rourcc explained.
There's also another reason Reagan
wants the British troops to stay: Their
presence will discourage the neighbor­
ing Guatemalans from Invading Belize,
which they claim belongs to them.
A (op secret CIA report warns that
Guatemala would invade ehortly after
tlte British pulled out. The result would
be carnage on an appalling scale.
Guatemala's rulers arc notoriously an-

ti-black. and a large percentage of
Belize’s 143.000 inhabitants is cither
black, creole or Garlfuna. a black-lndlan
mixture.
Reagan doesn't want to risk the
slaughter ot the black population. But
he a ls o d o e s n 't w an t to o ffe n d
Guatemala, whose good will Is essential
to his efforts to subdue the Marxist
revolution tn Central America.
It was this situation that Thatcher
tried to exploit. The utlempt failed, but
It left a sour taste. As one source
explained, the United States sent the
British millions of dollars worth o f arms
during the Falklands war and had to
redeploy NATO forces to cover the loss
of British ships.
"And now they threaten to pull out of
Belize, which would risk another war."
the oource said. " I t ’s damned un­
grateful."

�■PORTS

E vtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday

Faculty

Afternoon

Outlasts
Alumni

Quarterback

S VC

Rams Suffer Growing
Pains Against Rivals

Monday, Ocl, 17, I t M —SA

Patriots Slosh
Past Buccaneers
DAYTONA BEACH - The Lake Brantley Patriots
feasted on the misfortunes of Daytona Beach Mainland's
Buccaneers as the Bucs turned the ball over six times In
their own territory, opening the door for a 21-6 victory
for the Patriots In Mainland's raln-soacked homecoming
game Saturday afternoon at Welch Memorial Stadium.
Lake Brantley Improved to 4-1 for the season with Its
third straight victory and the Patriots now stand at 3-1
In the Five Star Conference. Mainland fell to 1-5 overall
and 1-4 in the conference. Lake Brantley goes up against
conference co-leader Apopka Friday night at Apopka In
the Patriots' most Important matchup of the season,
thus far.
"Mainland made some mistakes early," said Lake
Brantley coach Dave Tullls. “ They fumbled two punts
Inside their 20 which lead to the first 10 points."
Following one of those punts, the Patriots took a 3-0
lead In the first quarter as Chuck Stallings booted a
28-yard field goal. Lake Brantley's lead stayed at 3-0 at
the end of the first quarter, but the Patriots converted a
pair of Mainland turnovers Into touchdowns In the
second quarter to take a 15-0 halftime lead.
Brantley's first touchdown came on a one-yard plung
by senior running back Allen Armstrong. The extra
point was no good, however, and the Patricia had a 9-0
lead.
The Patriots came back before the half ended to add
another touchdown after another Bucs* turnover. This
time, quarterback Dennis Groseclosc hooked up with
Armstrong on a 15-yard scoring strike. Groscclose
completed 3 of 6 passes for 33 yards. He threw one
interception. The extra point was missed again as the
Patriots built their cushion to 15-0.
Bill Black put the final touches on for the Patriots os
he rambled In from nine yards out In the third quarter to
give Lake Brantley a 21-0 lead. Mainland continued to
have turnover trouble throughout the third quarter and
the Bucs finally got on the scoreboard In the fourth as
David Jones scored from one-yard out. The two-point
run failed to make the final. 21-6.
Fullback Greg Shatto took advantage of the sloshy
condition to lead the Patriots in rushing with 75 yards In
11 carries. "A s soon as Greg walked onto the field, he
got a big smile on his face,” said Tullls. "There was
water all over the field and those big fullbacks like that
kind of stuff."
Armstrong added 46 yards In 13 tries while BUI Black
chipped In 38 yards on nine tries. The Big Blue
outgained Mainland, 186-45, on the ground.
Defensively, the O'Brian brothers — Donnie and Scan
combined to keep the Bucs in check. Dcnnle had a
season-high 13 tackles and four assists. He also sacked
quarterback Eric Childs once. Sean, starting in place of
Injured Pat James, contributed seven solos and three
assists. Chris Anderson and Bobby Garrison had six
tackles each w ;lle Burger King Player of the Week Scott
Horwltz added eight stops.
Along with lackluster running stats, Mainland had
trouble throwing the ball. too. It gained Just 41 yards
through Uic air. Jeff Morris pick off one pass and
Brantley recovered five fumbles. James. Fnx-inmUig.
c o v e re d
WUlUuui. Hurwllz and D ean Shitlcy eachi &lt;
Clarkei 1
a fumble.

Seminole High Assistant Prin­
c ip a l L a M a r r Ri c ha r d s on
(right) calls for the bail during
the Faculty-Alumni flag football
g a m e S a t u r d a y n i g h t at
Seminole High. Richardson got
his wish os quarterback Bobby
Lundquist tossed him an fiveyard TD pass which helped the
Faculty to a 16-6 win despite two
touchdowns by the Alumni's
Tim Raines. Lundquist also
added an 11-yard scoring toss to
Ron Merthle for clinching score.
Lundquist ran over the first
two-point conversion and hit
Merthle for the second. Raines
grabbed a scoring pass from
Brent Carll and returned a punt
36 yards for a touchdown.
Below, Raines (middle) Is sur­
rounded by family and friends.

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Growing pains can hurt. Ask the Lake Mary Hams.
For the third time this season, a Seminole County
team took the Rams out behind the woodshed and
whipped them soundly. The mufTIcd cry was that of a
second-year varsity program trying to compete with Its
V
peers.
Counting Friday's lopsided loss to Lake Howell (32-6),
the Hams are 2-3. But the two other losses hurt. too.
Thpy both came to county rivals Lake Brantley (32-6)
and Lyman (20-0). That's a total outlay of 12 points for
the Ram mins and 84 for the opposition. Ouch!
If anyone seriously believed Lake Mary could compete
with the 1983 versions of Lake Howell. Lyman and Lake
Brantley — I've got a whole lot of swamp land 1 want to
— Geoffrey Giordano
show you.
Lake Mary Is predominately a Junior team. Outside of
H*r*M Photo* by Billy Murphy
center Ned Kolbjomsen, guard Ed Adcs. hr.ifback Neal
Wellon, linebackers Jeff Hopkins and Steve Machlonc
nnd hard-hitting safety Tim Curtin, the Rams rely
mostly on the younger fellows.
Without senior leadership at the skill positions
(quarterback, running back and wide receiver), it's
tough for a young tram to beat anybody.
Against Lyman, senior quarterback Greg Pilot and
senior fullback I’hll Germano made the difference.
Against Lake Brantley, a rock-rtbbcd senior linebacking
crew of Donnie O'Brlan, Byron Bush, Pat James and
rover Scott Horwltz made life miserable for Lake Mary.
Friday night, senior fullback Jay Robey tore the Rams to
shreds while another pair of seniors — Bill Lang and
Darin Slack — each accounted for a touchdown.
Anybody who was expecting the Rams to step Into the
Five Star Conference and tear It up Is delirious. The wins
came against DeLand. which the Rams surprised, 14-13,
nnd constantly rebuilding Bishop Moore. 29-3. DeLand
has won two games and Bishop Moorr hasn't won any.
"For us to he successful,*’ reasons coach Harry "The
Ram" Nelson, “ we have to get our tracks one on one
against the opposition. Wc have a good group of running
backs, but most of them are young."
Junior fullback Scott Underwood, junior running back
Charlie Lucarclll and sophomore QD Ray Hartsfleld have
all shown flashes of brilliance. Underwood Is built low to
the ground nnd Is hard to slew down and knock olT his
feet. Lucarclll Is fast and follows his blockers better than
any runner In the county. Hartsfleld could be a future
star. He's very elusive and his throwing has Improved
tou percent. Cut. he Iras to grow.
"Four or five weeks ago," maintains Harry, "Ray
couldn't even throw the ball. Now, he could throw the
tomb, and he can feather It If he has too."
L»k* Sr*ntl«r J IS 4 • - * )
- jorwt I run (run
Widcoul Donald Grayson, too, should be the premier
I
I
I
4 - *
player at his position next fall. He has the speed,
LAKE BRANTLEY
M A IN L A N D
l » k * B ra n tle y — FG S ta llin g * X
strength, size and hands to be a major-college football
Flr»! Down*
f
4
(k ic k n o pood)
x in
Ru*ne* Yard*
IS *S
player. Right now. the 195-pound Junior provides half of
La ka B ra n tle y — A rm s tro n g t ru n
j* i
Peuet
*» t
(k ic k n o good)
Lake Mary's offense with 16 catches for 365 yards and
Patting Yard*
41
L a ka B ra n tle y — A r m t t r o n j IS n
three TDs.
Fumble* loti
S3
H
p e u fro m G ro w c to te (k ic k no good)
Punt* Avg.
)H i
S IS
L a ka B ra n tle y — B ill B la ck I ru n
So much for the offense. Defensively, next year,
Penalties yard*
S IS
00
(k ic k no good)
linebacker Bill Caughel) will be as good as anybody
who's played around here for the past few years. The
In other high school action Saturday. St. Petersburg
195-pound Junior la a ferocious hitter out of the Mike
Richmond's defense was able to
By Lee Lerner
Admiral Farragut exploded for 20 points In the fourth
Hill-Tommy Johnson-Donnle O'Brlan mold. But. he
shut down crucial Knight drives.
Herald 8aorta Writer
quarter en route to a 20-7 victory over Trinity Prep's
can't do It all by himself, and for about three quarters
For UCF. the defeat Is much
RICHMOND - Although the Uni­
Saints In Trinity's homecoming. The Saints fell to 1-4
against Lake Howell, he tried to.
easier to stomach than the VMI
versity of Richmond Spiders were
for the season.
The Rams can move the ball between the 20s which Is 0had
to
on
both
olfense
and
defense.
massacre. In actuality, Head Coach
5 this season and had lost their
Trinity Prep took a 7-0 lead In the first quarter on
another sign of an cxexpertenced. leader-less club, but last 15 games, Saturday afternoon Leading the offensive charge for the
Lou Saban and his Fighting Knights
David
Lllley's one-yard TD run and the Saints' defense
once It comes time for the big play — It’s no go. "W e at Richmond Stadium they showed Spiders was senior runnlngback
were not out of this game until the
haven't been able to make the short yardage play all the Unlversty o f Central Florida that Jarvis Jennings. The 5-foot-9-lnch, final two minutes. Nevertheless, held up until the heartbreaking fourth quarter.
The Saints had a chance to add to that lead In the
year." Nelson has said time and time again.
coming that close to victory against
they were no easy marks as they 204 pounder from Jefferson City,
fourth quarter, but a clipping penalty thwarted the
I've seen the Rams twice and they have not converted lopped the Knights. 31 -26.
a Division l-AA opponent left Saban
Tenn. ran through, over and around
scoring drive. Admiral Farragut's Ed Mandcrson then
on a fourth down play. You might say a loi of teams
vlsably concerned after the contest.
While Richmond, a Division l-AA the young Knight defense on way to
scampered 49 yards for Farragut's first touchdown.
199
rushing
yards
on
30
carries.
don't do that — but the good ones do. And Lake Mary school, never manhandled the
"Th ey (Richmond) haven't been
Mandcrson added the conversion kick to tic the score at
has tried Its share o f them In the games I've seen.
Knights like Virginia Military In- Twice Jennings carried the ball for getting any breaks. They got them
7-7.
Nelson, In his first year, knows It Is tough building n ■stltute did last year (VMI 69 UCF 0). touchdowns runs.
all today." Saban said. "I am reallyTrinity Prep's next drive was stopped by a fumble and
The Spiders* defense, although
program. Especially a program which you have taken the Spiders did make It perfectly
upset because I wanted these
Farragut Immediately cashed In on the miscue as Chris
over. "W e've got a nice bunch of kids who work hard," clear to UCF and 3,413 fans that penetrated by four UCF scoring y o u n s te r s to w in so b a d ly ,
Robinson darted 75 yards for Admiral Farragut's second
he said after Friday's loss. "Bui. right now, we’ re Just a there Is a difference between a drives, got stingy when It had to and especially since we had a chance."
score.
Manderson's point made It 14-7. Gary Espaxcla
cute ball club. We're not a tough ball club.
virtually
snuffed
out
any
potential
Division II school and a Division
It was breaks Indeed that helped
scored from onc-yard out for Farragut's final TD. Icing
scoring threats by the Knights that
"There Is a lot of second guessing and dqubt when you 1- AA school.
the Spiders to victory. Although
the game for the visitors and spoiling Trinity Prep's
arc afraid to lose. You begin to play tentatively. There Is
Richmond's experienced plavcrs would have put them In the lead.
Homecoming.
Bee SPIDERS. Page 7A.
uncertainly. Good teams from established programs dominated the Knights when they T w ice during the second-half,
don't play that way. They can win. 21-14. when they
play badly. That Is what we have to learn." he added.
Lake Mary's next game Is Mainland. The Bucs are
greatly Improved after a sorry start. They whipped
Seminole nnd Dctond before losing Saturday to Lake
three scoring passes gave him six In the
Brantley. ,
Bell on a 23-yard scoring strike in the
TAMPA (UPI) - St. Louis Cardinals'
last two games. He had three TD passes
third
and
with
one
second
left
in
the
Coach
Jim
Hanlfan
says
his
club
has
had
After Mainland, it’s powerful Apopka and sporadic
last week In hls first NFL start, a 38-35
game,
passed
11
yards
to
tight
end
more
than
Its
share
of
adversity,
and
Spruce Creek. Both will be lough. Then comes Seminole
overtime loss to Buffalo.
Jimmy Giles.
and Oviedo to close the season. Sanford has floundered midway through the fourth period
Marino hit Nat Moore with a 66-yard
"W e have serious problems." McKay
two minutes later but again the Cardi­
after a pretty good start. Oviedo gets better every week, Sunday he probably was beginning to
TD
pass on Miami’s fourth offensive play
wonder
what
his
charges
had
to
do
to
said.
"W
e
can't
play
Green
long.
Wc
had
nals'
defense
came
up
with
a
big
play.
playing Jones very tough last Friday.
of the game, threw a 24-yard bullet to
The score still was 27-20 and the Bucs to make adjustments against their run­
The Rams could win four or five games, or they could win.
Joe Rose seconds before halftime and
ning because of the outside (Tampa)
The Cardinals led 27-6 and with Nell
had the ball on their own 20 when
lose the rest of them.
then hit Dan Johnson from 5 yards out
Lomax picking the Tampa Bay Bucca­ Thompson tried to hit wide recover people. When you make adjustments on
In the third period to put the game out of
a
sound
defense,
you
normally
get
hurt."
neers defense apart, it looked like St.
Kevin House on a fly pattern down the
reach. Kim Bokampcr also had a 24-yard
Lomax completed 17 of 22 passes for
Louis was on it way to an easy victory,
sideline.
Interception return fora I D.
166 yards and the Cardinals rushed for
Its second of the season against five
But Benny Perrin picked off the pass at
Judson made all three of hls Intercep­
losses.
the Tampa 45 and returned It to the 15 another 136 yards as they controlled the
tions In the first half, one In the end zone
boll 35 minutes and 13 seconds to 24
But In a 63-second span, the Bucs and five plays later Randy Love rammed
and two others deep In Dolphin territory,
minutes and 47 seconds for the Bucs.
closed the gap to 27-20 and midway over from the one.
to help Miami lift Its record to 4-3 and
Thompson was 20 of 30 for 212 yards
through the final period, had the ball 1st
Lomax threw for three touchdowns for
drop the listless Jets to 3 -4.
but the Bucs rushed for only 74 yards.
and 10 at the C ardinal 46 after
the first tim e as a pro and Nell
linebacker Hugh Green separated Lomax O'Donoghui had two fteid goals, one a
"W e had to have a football game
NEW YORK (UPI) - While Don Shula
from the ball on a hard hit and Dave club record 52 yards and the other from
where we put It all toge hcr." Shula said.
appears to be gaining the balance he
Stalls recovered.
43 yards, while Thompson countered
"W e were struggling. Wc had been all
Three plays were good for five yards, with three touchdown passes of his own
seeks. Joe Waltcn Is on the verge of
offense one week and all defense another
and on fourth down Jack Thompson and Green raced 33 yards with a Lomax
losing hls patience.
week. Today wc trad a good drive for an
appeared to have James Wilder open Interception for Tampa scores.
Shula has been looking for balanced
early TD and after some injuries to our
coming out of the backfleld. But de­
Lomax, who gave the Cardinals a 13-6 performances from Miami's offense and
linebackers, our defense rose to the
defense and he got them Sunday, thanks
fensive end A1 Baker stuck up a hand halftime lead by hitting Doug Marsh with
occasion. When things looked as bad as
to rookie Dan Marino and unheralded
deflecting the ball and the Cardinals took a five-yard scoring pass with Just 22
they could look, our defense rose up and
seconds to play, broke the game open In William Judson.
over.
I'm very proud of them.
Marino. Miami’s No. 1 draft pick from
Each team was to score a touchdown the third period with two touchdown
"I'm very pleased with Marino and the
Pittsburgh, sparked the offense, passing
after that, but the play meant Tampa passes in a 26-second span.
way he operated. He gives us the
for
225
yards
and
three
touchdowns.
would drop Its seventh game without a
He passed six yards to wide receiver
blg-play potential. It was a day where the
Judson. a second-year man replacing
victory, while St. Louis Improved to 2-5.
Roy Green, and then on the Bucs' first
offense and defense came togrthcr and
Injured All-Pro comerback Don McNeal.
"That was a big fourth down play by play after the kickoff Tampa’s Melvin
we needed that.”
shone on defense, making three of
A1 Baker." Hanlfan said.
Carver fumbled and defensive tackle
Miami’s club record-tying six Intercep­
"Th e hand wasn't there whm I threw Hush Brown scooped the ball up at the
Marino, who hit 17-of-3Q passes, said
tions that led to a 32-14 rout of the New
the ball." a dejected Thompson said. “ It 21 and carried ft to the 16. On the first
he got lots of help In engineering Miami's
«ld Fk*1» by T*mniy VIi k m I
was a nice play, but that's just another play, Lomax hit March for hls second
YorkJeUr.
fourth consecutive victory over the Jets. H
Lake Mary's Donald Grayson doesn't catch every example when we didn't get the Job touchdown of the day.
For Marino, who was elevated to a
"I think 1 did pretty well."' he said. "1
starting berth last week in an effort to
completed a couple of good passes but
pass thrown to him as Lake Howell's Troy done, when I didn’ t get the Job done."
Thompson passed 11 yards to Wilder
r , - v lu r M ia m i'* * l u 0 f l * h
o ffe n s e , th e
Tampa liad another opportunity about in the first period, hit wide receiver Theo
my rece*ver» made some great catches."
Quackenbush comes on to break up the play.

Spiders Nip Knights
College Football

Lomax Picks Apart Bucs — Miami, Marino Find Balance
Pro Football

�&lt;A— E venlne H e ra ld , S in lo rd , FI.

M onday, O n . 17, m i

Murray's Blasts Propel Orioles Past Feeble Phils
PHILADELPHIA (UP!)— Not even champagne (lowed
as freely as the praise for Rick Dempsey did.
"It’s the greatest Justice In the history of baseball,"
Baltimore pitching coach Ray Miller gushed Sunday
night afler Dempsey was named Moat Variable Player In
the Orioles' flve-dame WnfW
rout of the
1111If T ' I----•(IUIUJ.ImMa *HI******
"He called the right game for the pitchers," added
Baltimore first baseman Eddie Murray.
"He's a gamer," allowed Philadelphia manager Paul
Owens. "H e’s always there when you need him."
Dempsey homered and doubled In the Orioles' 5-0
clinching victory over the Phillies. Murray hit two
homers and Scott McGregor fired an artful five-hitter,
but Dempsey finished at .385 with five long hits and a
game*winning RBI.
A team player on a club that stresses teamwork.
Dempsey helped the Orioles capture their first title since
1970 and third overall. It was a rosy performance from a
guy whose usual colors are black and blue, and It made
him a unanimous choice os MVP.
"I was definitely prouder of my offensive contribu­
tions." said Dempsey. "It seemed like the little guys
were the ones to do things In this Scries, not the big
guys. It was a battle of the little guys."
Actually, Philadelphia had some big guys who wound
up doing little. Mike Schmidt finished l-for*20. The team
batting average was .195. Baltimore recorded two
shutouts, allowed only eight earned runs and posted a
1.60 ERA.
It didn't match the classic 1966 Oriole domination ot
the Dodgers. In which Baltimore allowed only two runs
over the entire Series, but that's Just as well. To see the
"Wheeze Kiris" looking any older would have been
painful.

Sports
Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN

Owens Enjoys New Job,
Wants To Manage Again
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - No matter what he says
publicly, Paul Owens already has made up his mind
and expressed himself privately.
He wishes to come back and manage the
Philadelphia Phillies again next season, and If that's
what he wants, they’ re not about to tell him he can't;
So as matters stand now. he'll be directing the club
once more, from downstairs In the dugout instead of
upstairs In the front office In 1984.
That wasn't the original game plan when Owens
put aside his General managers duties and replaced
Pat Corrales as the Phillies' field manager last July
18. He was only supposed to be Interim manager. It
was understood he’d return to the front office now —
after the club concluded Its season.
Even after the Phillies won their division title and
then the pennant, the plan was for John Felskc to be
their new manager next year. Felske. tt was felt, had
earned the opportunity by leading the Phillies'
Portland club to the Pacific Coast League champion­
ship this year and by his other previous years o f fine
service, mostly In the minors.
But Owens found himself enjoying his new Job
more and more. He didn't pay a whole lot of attention
to the jokes about him managing the Phillies "by
committee," meaning with the help primarily of
Bobby Wine and two of his other coaches, Claude
Osteen and Dave Bristol. His critics could say what
they liked. The Important thing was that the Phillies
were winning and he was having fun. Much more so
than he did when he came down fron the front office
the first time to take over the Phillies* managership
from Frank Luchesl during the 1972 season.
For the past couple of weeks, Owens has been
dropping hints to Bill Giles, the Phillies part owner
and President, that he might like to handle the club
again next season. Giles hoped the 59-year-old Owens
would forget about the Idea, but he hasn't. On the
contrary, the more he thought about managing again
next year, the more he saw no reason why he
shouldn't especially since It made him feel at least 20
years younger being around the players.
Naturally, he was asked by the media whether or
not he had made up his mind after the Baltimore
Orioles had closed out the Phillies In the World Scries
by blanking them. 5-0, In Sunday's fifth game. t
"I Just don't knew,” he said, unwilling to reveal his
decision right there.
Then, pretending he expected the Phillies to fire
him for not winning the Series, he said with a straight
face, "I was Just Informed that I have to attend a
meeting at 10 In the morning..."
* It was a little Joke. He started laughing about It and
switched the conversation instead to his players and
their showing against the Orioles.
"The players certainly have nothing to be ashamed
of." he said. "They don't have to walk down any dark
alleys. If Baltimore car win again then we'd like to
play 'em again next year." Owens was sitting at his
desk as he spoke. He looked up Into the faces of all the
newsmen clustered around him.
"1 want to thank you gentlemen and tell you how
much I appreciate all the patience you showed during
the Series," he said to the writers. "Some people
don't like the press, but I don't feel that way."
Owens made no mention of an Informal meeting
which took place between him and Hugh Alexander
an hour and a half before the final game. Alexander is
the Phillies Player Personnel Advisor, hut more
Important than that he Is a close friend of Owens and
one of the beat baseball men you'll ever find.
The meeting between Owens and Alexander was
merely one between two very good friends. It was
held In Owens* office and they were the only two in
the room. Owens said what was In his heart and
Alexander expressed what what in hts own and it was
at this get-together where Owens revealed exactly
how he felt.
To give you a little background on Alexander, he
has been with the Phillies 13 years. He worked for the
Dodgers 15 years before that, bolt) In Brooklyn and
Los Angeles, and prior to that he was with the White
Sox four years and 14 years with Cleveland.
Alexander Is 67 years old and looks 10 years
younger. He was an outfielder In the Cleveland
organization who hit .350 for Fargo. North Dakota.
Following his second season In the minors, the
Indians brought him up. but his career was abruptly
ended when he lost Ills left hand after catching It In a
gear working In an oilfield In Seminole. Oklahoma
during the off-season. The Indians then d&lt;d some­
thing few other blg-league clubs ever had — they
made Alexander a scout at 20. He's been working In
baseball ever since and there Isn't anyone tn the
game who doesn't have the highest regard for him or
doesn't like him. Including Giles, who has enormous
respect for his opinion.

\

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"I'm not going on record as saying their pitching is
unhlttpblc," said Pete Rose, switched to right field
Sunday to allow Tony Perez to play first base. "1 don't
think we played up to par. especially defensively."
But the Philadelphia shortcomings resulted from
Oriole excellence, which In turn reflected well on Joe
Altobclli. By winning It all in his first season as Orioles
manager. "Alto” may finally escape the shadow of Earl
Weaver.
"Not really." said Altobclli. "I said back In spring
training it would never stop. Earl talked to me and the
coaches during the spring and I think he set the tone of
this ballclub. It's not as tf wc were rebuilding. This club
won 94 games last year and I Just wanted to keep us
going In the same direction.”
He did even better than that. The Orioles captured the

American League East by six games, captured the AL
playoffs by beating the Chicago White Sox three of four,
then became the fourth team to rebound from an
opening loss and win four straight In the Scries. It
snapped a streak of four NL triumphs.
"I would like to congratulate Joe Altotxlll and igcncral
manager) Hank Peters and the entire Baltimore club."
said Owens. "They are a fine organization. I'm proud of
them. If we couldn't win it 1 was pleased that they
could."
Philadelphia may have lost Its chance in the first
Inning. With one out. Pete Rose singled and Schmidt
came to the plate. If he was ever to break out, this was
the perfect spot. But he lofted a harmless fiy to right
field and the Phils were never In the game.
Scott McGregor
Eddie Murray
Murray ripped starter Charles Ifudson for n long
homer tn the second inning and. after Dempsey
connected In the third. Murray hit a two-run hnmer In games for Baltimore than anyone else. And by the way,
the fourth for a 4-0 lead. Even the President of the he hit .286 tn the 1979 Series, when Baltimore blew a
United States was Impressed with the shots.
3-1 lead to Pittsburgh.
"He plays 110 per cent every day." said McGregor,
"Joe. I thought Eddie Murray's two home runs were
terrific." President Rc&amp;gan told Altobelll. "Thirty-three whose father, John, watched from his room at Thomas
Jefferson University Hospital In Philadelphia where he
was my number when I played football."
Dempsey scored the final lun in the fifth on a sacrifice wns recuperating from major surgery performed Friday.
fly by A! Bumbry. By then, the Phillies' agony was "H e’s the kind o f guy you want on your club. I'm really
visible. Phils' catcher Bo Diaz forgot the count l.i the excited Hint he received the MVP."
"Nobody who ever put on a baseball uniform ever
fifth and rolled the ball back to the mound, thinking the
Inning was over. In the eighth. Joe Morgan slipped and tried harder than Rick," added Miller. "He blocks balls
fell trying to score from third on a ball that would have better than anyone In baseball. The pitchers never hang
a curveball. They can really yank It because they're not
been a sacrifice fly.
"You can’t have any sour grapes in a situation like afraid to bounce a curveball In the dirt.
this." said Morgan. "They deserve credit for the way
" I f they do, hr Just blocks It and throws It back. Then
at the end of the Inning he says. 'Am I going to pick you
they went about things."
Dempsey Is now reaping credit for Ihc way he has up all day or arc you going to throw u good curveball?’
gone about things for a long time. He has caught more That's the kind of guy he Is."

Defensive Demon Dempsey
Turns Offensive, Wins MVP
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - It
would have been something to
sec. a 21-year-old rookie telling
off a respected veteran.
That might have created a
fuss, even considering the
normally unflappable Baltimore
Orioles’ personality. Instead,
Storm Davis held his tongue
and opened his ears to what
Rick Dempsey was trying to
say.
"H e‘» «ueh a defensive de­
mon." Davis said Sunday after
Dempsey wns named the Most
Valuable Player in the World
Scries. “ I'm glad his offense
came around so he would gel
some recognition."
D e m p s e y h o m e r e d and
doubled In B4dtlmore‘s 5-0 vic­
tory that capped a five-game
rout of the Philadelphia Phillies.
The veteran receiver finished at
.385. Including five long hits
and one game-winning RBI.
"H e fs so gung ho." said
Davis. "When I first came up 1
almost told him to shut up. He
was distracting me from the
things I was trying to do. But
now I'm used to it and I look
forward to It. He takes that into
every game. He loves playing
this gome."
He certainly showed It In the
Series. The 34^ycar-old veteran
fro m F a y e t t e v ille . T en n ..

d ou b led h om e the gam ew in n in g run In G am e 2,
doubled twice to help chase
Steve Carlton In pivotal Game
3. th en ad d ed tw o m ore
extra-base hits In the clincher to
help the Orioles to their third
world championship.
"I congratulated him on his
award," said Philadelphia man­
ager Paul Owens. "I tnld him.
'You are iny type o f player.’ He
handle* those pitchers well. He
was a big cog In Baltimore'^
success."
Dempsey became a favorite of
interviewers In the Scries long
before his offensive contribu­
tions began to emerge. When
President Reagan called the
Baltimore clubhouse, Dempsey
was quick as ever with a quote.
“ Mr. President, you go tell the
Russians that we're having a
good time over here playing
baseball," said Dempsey.
it's doubtful the Russians
appreciate Dempsey's perfor­
mance. but his teammates do.
"With him back there the
pitchers didn't have to worry
about holding the base runners
on so much." said Baltimore
first baseman Eddlr Murray.
From his spot behind the
plate, Dempsey Is a valued
custodian of the Orioles’ pit­
ching staff, and he credited the

World Series

was tough every time out and
really only Storm Davis had a
bad time, and that was only for
one Inning."
But most of the credit wound
up going to Dempsey — by
unanimous vote. It made for a
satisfying day.
"Yes. I've never had a day
when I won a World Series and
got some MVP votes at the same
Ume." said Dempsey. "I feel
very lucky and fortunate."

BALTIMORE (UPI) - Orioles
fans erupted In gleeful celebra­
tion and geared up for n big
parade today to celebrate
Baltimore's first World Scries
victory In 13 years.
Garry Maddox's line drive
Rick Dempsey
was scarcely secure In Cal
h i Ripken's glove Sunday night
pitchers with Baltimore's sue
when car horns In Baltimore
cess.
began to blare and bar patrons
"W e seemed to come olive to hug each other, screaming
against the White Sox (AL
with Joy.
"This Is It. This Is what we've
playoffs) and In the World Scries
everything came together." said been waiting for," shouted bar
Dempsey. "Sammy Stewart’s p a t r o n C h r i s L a w s o n .
regular velocity came back and "Baltimore deserves this. We're
he was throwing the ball over a great city. We have pride."
90 m iles per hour. Scott
"This means more to me than
M cG regor threw his usual
my girlfriend," he said.
fuslball, curveball repertoire.
Lawson, wearing the Orioles'
And Tippy Martinez was hts colors o f black and crange,
usual self throwing hts sharp
whipped out a credit card and
breaking ball. Mike Boddicker
declared drinks for Orioles' fans

were nn him. "I will go into debt
tor this night," he said.
The city planned a parade
today at noon to honor the
home team, which wrapped up
the 80th World Series In five
games with a 5-0 victory over
the Philadelphia Phillies Sun­
day.
" I wish I was somewhere
e ls e .. . c e le b r a t in g l i ke
everybody else in this crazy
town." moaned Jerry Whitley,
21. an employee on duty at
Connolly’s Seafood House.
Fans flocked Sunday night to
a Memorial Stadium parking lot
to await the return o f the
Orioles. Beer and champagne
flowed and people climbed atop
tiiclr cars and vuns to ensure
their scat.
Police estimated (hat 25.000
to 40.000 fans were gathered
outside the stadium when the
players arrived by bus at about
12:30 a.m. EDT. The team was
escorted Into the stadium and
o n to a t e m p o r a r y s ta g e
overlooking the cheering fans In
the parking lot.
"It really makes It all worth
while to come back to this kind
o f r e c e p t i o n . " said fir s t
baseman Eddie Murray, clut­
ching a bottle of champagne.

Orioles' Finely Tuned Machine Clicks On All Cylinders
P H IL A D E L P H IA |UPI| - If the
Baltimore Orioles played the same way
they indulge In self-analysts, their season
would have ended back in June instead
of with Sunday's World Series-clinching because Scotty McGregor (who pitched a
flvc-hll complete game) was so tremen­
5-0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.
For the live games of the 1983 World dous."
Other reasons cited for Baltimore's
Series, the Orioles played like a finely
tuned machine, each part complement­ dominance over Philadelphia Included
ing and working in perfect harmony with snuzEt managing by first-year skipper
Joe Altobclli: ar. ability to shut down
the others.
But when It came to analyzing how Phillle third baseman Mike Schmidt,
they were able to defeat the Phillies so who was l-for-20; the Orioles’ "little
handily — winning four straight games. guys" making up for a similar slump by
Including three tn Philadelphia, after Murfay; and a burning desire to prevent
dropping Game I In Baltimore — the the World Scries history of 1979 — when
Orioles had us many reasons as they did Pittsburgh rallied from a 3 I deficit In
games to defeat Baltimore — from
players.
"Our strength is someone else doing it repeating Itself.
But. when pressed, most players
every day," said first baseman Eddie
Murray, who took hls turn "doing It" agreed that better teamwork was their
Sunday by ending a 2-for-16 Scries biggest advantage over the Phillies.
"W e didn't rely on Just one. two or
slump by driving In three runs with two
towering homers o ff losing starter three men." said Ken Singleton, who as
a displaced designated hitter saw only
Charles Hudson.
"The relief pitchers — that was the limited action plnch-hlttlng. "Each guy
factor," said pitcher Dennis Martinez, tn the lineup knew Just what he was
who did not get a chance to do anything going to do and what each other guy was
going to do. You try to do other things
exrrpl watch the Scries.
"A ll the games were close games, outside yourself, that’s when you can get
except for today, and that's because the Into trouble.
'T v c been on other teams where the
bullpen came tn and did the Job. Of
course, they didn't have to do that today guys Just cried all the Ume how they

World Series

Philadelphia's 3 Stooges

Mike Schmidt
...hitting evil

Joe Morgan
...running evil

Bo Diaz
...fielding evil

wanted to play, they wanted to play. But
they wanted to play for themselves, not
for the team.
"W e play together as a whole. We have
guys who knew Just what to expect out
o f each other and they got It."
Catcher Rick Dempsey, named Most
Valuable Player both because of timely
5-for-13 hitting and his handling of
Baltimore's fine pitchers, said Ute fact
that he was able to contribute offensively
was a good example of the teamwork
that had carried the Orioles to their first
world championship since 1970.
"For the first couple of gomes. It was
the little guys doing all the producing on
b.th sides." Dempsey. "It was really a
battle of the little guys, and we were the
ones who came through. Wc took all the
pressure off our big guys When Eddie
(Murray) came up today, you could sec
he was swinging free and easy with no
pressure on him, and that's because we
had come through.”
McGregor added. "The way wc played,
we showed that you can't build a team
around one guy. It takes everybody."
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - For the first
four games of the World Series. Mike
Schmidt had been able to compare hls
batting slump with that of opposing
slugger Eddie Murray.
On Sunday, however, while Schmidt
was going 0-for-4 for the fourth time,
Murray came alive with two monstrous
home runs. Thus, it was the Baltimore
Orioles, and not the Philadelphia
Phillies, spraying champagne after their
5-0 victory clinched the world champi­
onship.
In five games. Schmidt, the National
League home run leader with 40.
managed Just a broken-bat single In 20
trips to the plate. Needless to say, he
didn't have much fun.
"It wasn't any fun not contributing.”
the Phillies third baseman said. "W e
didn't represent the National League as
well as we’d like to. Wc haven't been
beaten two in a row In a month and a
half. That Icam came In and beat us
three In a row at Veterans Stadium.
They did It. They deserve the credit.
"It's a grest thrill to play In a World
Series but It sure wasn't as much fun as
\

the '80 series. When you're not tn the
flow and you can't find it and they're
pitching you the way you should be
pitched, It's not fun.”
Schmidt batted .381 and was named
MVP of the 1960 World Series won by
the Phillies over Kansas City, but he
could never find the groove against the
Orioles. Schmidt did not even manage a
walk after leading the league during the
regular season with 128.
"Any time you keep Mike Schmidt
quiet, the pressure is on us throughout
the lineup." manager Paul Owens said.
"Schmidt ts the type of hitter who can
carry a club for two weeks. He can sour
once In a while but he's always been
there when we've needed him. I think
the Orioles keyed on him."
W hile not contributing wus bad
enough, Schmidt also had to contend
with the boos from moat In the crowd of
67.064. He admitted that the boos
bothered him.
“ I’ve been booed all, year here, and
they've hurt all year." he said. "In
Baltimore. Murray goes 0-for-20 and they
yell 'Ed-dle, Ed-dic.' This is a different
type of crowd."
The crowd didn't get on Phillies static)
Charles Hudson but the rookie right­
hander was disconsolate after the game.
Hudson sat at hts locker and stared at
the back wall and carpet us hls teorOmates came over to console him.
M urray, who entered the gam e
2*(or-16, homered In the second and
fourth off Hudson and added a single
later off Ron Reed. Series MVP Rick
Dempsey touched Hudson for a thlrdInnlng homer.
"The two pitches to Murray were up.*'
Hudson said when he finally faced
reporters. "Dempsey hit a fastball up.
But all my pitches were up. Even the
guys who struck out swung at pitches
that were up.
"This is pretty hard to Bwallow. This
being my first year, maybe I wanted it
too much. This would have pul &amp; chary
on everything, coming back and winning
this game and then going to Baltimore
and winning two more."

�M onday, O O . t 1, l f U - / A

fcvgaino H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

S eattle Uses 8 Turnovers
To Flip Flop Raiders, 38-36

Kickoff

Return
South Seminole's Bo
Marshall (left) follows
blocker Nell Matlock
on a kickoff return
-25ir*2t Jsck.on
Heights. The Jackson
Heights Midgets
routed South
Semi nol e, 32-0, In
Seminole Youth Sports
Association football
action Saturday at
Syl van Lake P a r k
west of Sanford. See
Wednesday's Evening
Herald for a complete
rundown of SYSA ac­
tion.

United Press International

M triH Photo by till M-irphy

...Spiders
Continued from BA.
they fumbled the ball three times,
twice during the fourth quarter,
UCF was unable to recover and the
Spiders were able to continue their
time-consuming drives.
UCF had Just the opposite luck.
Mistakes haunted them all after­
noon. They fumbled the ball twice,
losing both. The first fumble came
on the Richmond 12 yard line early
In the first quarter as Junior
q u a r t e r b a c k D ana T h y h s c n
mishandled the snap. UCF had
moved the ball down to the 12.
thanks to a 36 yard surprise pass
from freshman runnlngback Kim
Nixon to senior wide receiver JefT
Frochllch.
In addition to losing two fumbles,
the Knights were penalized six
times for 63 yards.
Klchmond got on the board first In
the game with a 35-yard field goal
by sophomore Bredan Tolbln at
6:07 In the first quarter.
The Spiders got the ball back at
the end of the first quarter and they
marched 87 yards on nine plays
with sophomore quarterhark Bobby
Bleler (cousin of former Pittsburg
Stccler. Rocky) running It In from
22 yards out.
The Knights, however, were not
going to let the game get out of
hand. They took the ball and drove
45 yards on eight plays before
freshman runnlngback Elgin Davis

muscled It Into the end zone from
six yards out Davis appeared to
have fumbled the ball on the goal
line but game officials ruled It a
touchdown. Davis was the Knights’
only real offensive threat of the day.
He gained 93 yards on 19 carries
and scored twice.
Richmond made It 17-7 In the
th ir d q u a r te r on a 4 4 -y a rd
touchdown run by Jennings.
The Knights bounced back with a
78 yard drive culminated by an
eight yard scoring run by Davis at
7:30 In the third quarter.
At 4:22 In the fourth quarter.
Richmond's sophomore split end
Lceland Melvin nabbed a 19-yard
touchdown pass from Bleler. On the
play. Bleler. under heavy UCF
pressure, rolled right and threw a
strike to Melvin In the end zone.
But UCF wouldn’t die. With 2:53
left In the game Thyhsen connected
with sophomore tight end Glenn
McCombs for a 28-yard touchdown
pass. Saban opted to go for the
two-potnt conversion but the at­
tempt failed os Thyhsen threw out
of the end zone.
The hopes of a Knight victory
were finally lost when the defense
was unable to stop Bleler from
gaining a first down on a third and
nine situation on the Richmond 21
yard line with about two-and-a-half
minutes left In the game. Bleler hit
Melvin on the sidelines for 11 yards
on the play.
"W e knew they were going out­
side but we have a very young,
inexperienced secondary and they

took advantage of ft."
oaid.
"Th ey hit it nnd we didn't cover It."
Two plays Inter Richmond scored
It* rapper point* on n 66-vnrd TD
run by Jennings. The UCF* defense
perhaps thought Jennings would be
falling on the ball to run out the
clock. Instead, he squirted through
a gapping hole In the left side of the
UCF line, making his way around
some sloppy tackling, en route to
the score.
On U C F 's fin a l possession ,
Thyhsen hit McCombs with a 36yard TD pass to make It 31 -26.
Richmond Head Coach Dal Shealy
w-as relieved to win a game after 15
consecutive losses and he heaped
much credit on Bleler. " He threw
great today. F o r*a sophomore
quarterback, he made good choices,
lie played well," Shealy said.

KNIGHTLINES - UCF suffered
two more key Injuries against the
Spiders. Cornerback Greg At*
terberry went out with a groin
Injury and free safety Victor Riddle
Injured his knee...Knights are still
winless against Division 1-AA teams
(0-8)...This was UCF’s first game
ever on an artificial surface. Saban
said the Knights' play on the Super
turf was tough to adjust to, but he
didn't blame the loss on lt...Shcaly
was very im pressed with the
Knights’ overall team speed ond
said Thyhsen had a "great" arm
and Bald he could play with any­
one...Knights' freshman retumman
Ted Wilson had an excellent day
rctunlng four kicks for 177 yards...

in the age ot awesome aerial displays In the NFL, the
Seattle Sealiawks scored 38 points and won a game
Sunday despite finishing with Just two yards passing.
Eight Ruldcrs’ turnovers helped In Seattle's 38-36
victory, with fb-e giveaways coming In the second half
when Los Angeles blew a 17-7 lead. The Seattle victory
pulled the Scahawks, 4-3, to within one game of the
first-place Raiders, 5-2, In the AFC West.
"It feels good to win even though we didn't look that
good offensively." Scahawks quarterback Jim Zorn said.
Raiders quarterback Jim Plunkett threw three In­
terceptions and coughed up two fumbles In the fourth
quarter that led directly to Seattle touchdowns.
“ It was almost like a nightmare," said L.A. coach Tom
Flores. "Everything we did went wrong. You Just can’t
play anyone that way nowadays and expect to win."
The Scahawks ulso got a boost from Paul Johns, who
returned a punt 75 yards for a touchdown In only his
second game since returning from a knee Injury to give
Seattle a 21*17 lead.
Seattle's Kenny Easley got the Scahawks started when
he recovered Marcus Allen's fumble at the Raider
21*yard line on the second play after halftime. Zorn,
who sulTercd through one of his worst throwing days as
a professional, scrambled 18 yards for the touchdown to
narrow.Los Angeles' lead to 17*14.
After Johns' punt return. Easley picked off a Plunkett
pass an the next play from scrimmage to set up a
22-yard field goal by Norm Johnson, but the Raiders
responded with Chris Bahr's 42-yard field goal and a
safety to pull to within 24-22 at the end of the third
period.
Seahawk linebacker Shelton Robinson teturred a
Plunkett fumble 9 yards for a fourth-quarter TD and
Curt Warner scored on a 6-yard run following another
Plunkett fumble to finish Seattle's scoring.
Washington Is at Green Bay tonight.

Steelers 44, Browns 17
Cliff Stoudt awoke Pittsburgh's slumbering offense by
passing for 194 yards and one touchdown and the
Steelers' defense parlayed five of six Brian Slpc
Interceptions Into points. The win left the Steelers In
sole possession of first place In the AFC Central with a
5-2 record.

Bills 30, Colts 7
Joe Ferguson completed 21-of-30 passes for 230 yards
and three TDs to lead Bulfalo. upping the Bills' record to
5-2 and giving them sole possession of first place In the
AFC East.

Patriots 37, Chargers 31
Rick Sanford raced 26 yards with a fumble recovery to
set up the go-ahead touchdown by Mark Van Eeghen
and Tony Collins ran fr.r a pair of TDs. lifting New
England over error-prone San Diego.

INBRIEF
H arris, D efense Lead
W ildcats Past Bulldogs
Anthony Harris’ five-yard touchdown run in
the first half proved to be all the Wildcats
needed as the defense came through with a fine
performance In the Wildcats’ 6-0 victory over
the Bulldogs in Sanford Recreation Flag Football
Junior League action at Chase Park.
After Harris' run came with 6:45 left In the
first half. The point after failed, but the
Wildcats’ lead held up the rest of the game.
Neither team managed to reach paydirt after
Hants' score as the defenses took control.
in Midget League action, Arthur Polk darted
for a touchdown In overtime os the Steelers
edged the Bucs, 12-6.
Polk scored on a five yard run with 9:45 left in
the first half to give the Steelers’ a o 0 lead. The
Bucs' Lome Jones returned the ensuing klckoft
45 yards for a touchdown to tie the score at 6-6.
Both (cams couldn’t find the end zone In the
second half and the game went Into overtime.
Polk’s two-yard run In OT provided the Steelers*
with the victory.

Show ers Wash O u t Racing
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - On Saturday night
at New Smyrna Speedway, continuous heavy
rains prompted the stock car drivers to vote In
favor of postponing the Fifth Annual 100-lap
Thunder Car Shamplonshlp of Florida to this
Saturday night, race lime: 8:00 p.m.
Former World Sries o f Asphalt Stock Car
Racing Champions Bruce Lawrence of DeLand
(1982) and Oak Hill's John Cochran (1981) are
among the favorlles to win the coveted slate
title.
Joe Coupas o f Port Orange who qualified
fastest in the 1981 version of the event, and was
leading the race when he lost a wheel and
crashed, Is also among the experts’ choice,
along with Barn* Ownby. David Russell, plus
strong running, aggressive young rookies
Chuckle Lee and Mike Goldberg.

D u p ree W ill W ith d raw al
JACKSON. Miss. (UPI) — The mother of
Oklahoma running back Marcus Dupree says
she will travel to Norman, Okla., this week to
pick up her son’ s clothes and withdraw him
from classes.
Celia Connor said Sunday In an Interview
from her Philadelphia. Mis*., home that a
decision on Dupree's future In football will come
later.
"W e ’re Just trying to calm down and get him
straightened out from out there (Oklahoma), as
far us Ills withdrawal and whatnot.
Mrs.
Connor said.
After traveling through several Mississippi
to w n s la st w e e k . D u p ree re tu rn ed to
Philadelphia during the weekend.

The victory snapped a three-gnme
losing streak for the Scmlnolcs. 3-3.
Florida State scored on Its open­
ing drive and never lost the lead
before a homecoming crowd of
55.102.

Billy Sims, seeing his first action In four games, scored
his first touchdown of the season nnd Eric Hippie and
Gary Danielson each threw a TD pass for the Lions.

Rams 27, Falcons 2 1
Vince Ferragamo hit Mike Guman on a 2-yard TD pass
with 17 seconds remaining following a controversial
pass Interference penalty to lift the Rams. The winning
score came Just seconds after Atlanta's right cornerback
Kenny Johnson was whistled for Interference on a pass
Intended for Otis Grant.

Cowboys 37. Eagles 7
Danny White threw for 266 yards and a blitzing
defense shut down Ron Jaworskl to keep Dallas as the
NFL's lone unbeaten team. Dallas, which produced a
team record-tying 32 first downs, ran its record to 7-0,
one win short of Its fastest start ever.

Vikings 34, OUers 14
Minnesota capitalized on a blocked punt and three
Houston turnovers — scoring on Charlie Johnson’s
50-yard fumble recovery — to spoil new coach Chuck
Sturtlcy’s rirhut. Ted Bmwn nishpd for two second-half
touchdowns for Minnesota while quarterback Steve Dlls
completed 20-of-34 passes for 227 yards.

Chiefs 38, Giants 17
Bill Kenney passed for a career-high 342 yards and
four TDs and reserve safety Durwood Roquemore
returned an Interception 42 yards for another score as
the Chiefs handed the Giants their third straight loss.

NFL Standings
NATIONAL FOOTSALL LEAGUE
Amtfluo Conlortnco

EoU

Buffalo
Miami
Baltimore
NY Jote
Now England
Pltflburgfi
Ctevotend
Cincinnati
ftoutten
LA Rtldon
Soottto
Domrtr
Kontoi Oty
Son Otego

W L T
5 1t
4 3t
4 3f
5 4t
5 40
Control
S I 1
4 51
1 10
5 70
Woil
S 5«
4 5f
4 3«
5 4a
5 40

in
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144
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Mlnntute
Groon Boy
Dotroll
Chicago
Tampo Boy

College Football
Florida State quarterback Kelly
Jyywrey scored on s 2-ysrd keeper In
the first quarter and hit Weegle
Thompson with a 16-yard scoring
pass with 11 neconds left In the first
half. Lowrcy completed 11 o f t 19
passes for 164 yards and one
touchdown.
Cincinnati’s Troy Bodlne com­

pleted 17 of 30 for 210 yards and
two touchdowns before leaving the
game when he broke his left arm.
while being sacked for the fifth time.
In the third quarter by an aggressive
FSU defense led by Sanford tackle
Issac Williams.
Maitland's Chuck Scott snared six
passes for 55 yards, but Vanderbilt
d ropped a 20-13 d ecisio n to
Georgia.
Florida was Idle.

Martina Sinks Shriver; McEnroe Suspended
— U.S. Trims Europeans For Ryder Cup Title

SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) — John McEnroe was fined
91.500 and suspended from tournament play foi 42
days Sunday after he abused an umpire during the final
of (he 9255,000 Australian Indoor Tennis champion­
ships.
McEnroe was down 3-2 to Frenchman Henri Leconte
In the second set when he approached the umpire’s
chair and said, "How many imaginary lets do you Intend
to call, you fa t..."
Umpire Ian Basey. a police oftlcer from South
Australia. Immediately gave McEnroe a "code conduct"
pciialty nnd called In tournament supervisors.
After the singles match, the supervisors fined
McEnroe 61,500, which pul him over the maximum
penalty and prompted the suspension.
McEnroe came Into the tournament with a mere 9200
balance, plus a credit o f 9500 that he won on appeal.
The fine put him well over the limit and he was
automatically suspended.
McEfnroe went back onto the court to play In the
doubles semifinal and was unable to speuk to reporters.

714 ID
US
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Ray Werschlng kicked a team-record six field goals
and safety Dwight Hicks returned an Interception 62
yards for a TD to lead San Francisco. Werschlng kicked
field goals of 47, 52. 24 and 23 yards In the second half
as the 49crs overcame a 13*6 halftime deficit.

Steve DeBerg completed 25-of*37 passes for 284 yards
and two TDs to help the Broncos to their first win at Mile
High Stadium since Sept. 26,1982.

Cistrtl
5
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1
1
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Roundup
PALM BEACH GARDENS (UPI) - The Untied Stales
Ryder Cup team staged a narrow escape this time, but
both team captains think it might be a different story In
two years.
The United States contingent captured the thice-day
event 14 Vi-13 Vs by winning five matches against the
Europeans, losing four and halving three on the final
day of match play Sunday. The two teams had gone into
the final day tied at 8-8.
"Having II so close will be good for golf," said Jack
Nicklaus. the Americans' non-playing captain. "I don't
believe we will be Uie favorites when we go over there."
The 26th biennial Ryder Cup will be played In 1985 at
The Belfry, near Birmingham, England, home of the
British PGA.

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TARPON SPRINGS (UPI) - Martina Navratilova’s 27th
birthday Is Tuesday and she’ll have an extra 828,000 to
celebrate ft with.
Navratilova cruised to a 6-3, 6-2 victory over doubles
partner Pam Shriver and the first prize check Sunday in
the $ 150,000 Florida Federal Tennis Open.
Her win lengthened her winning streak to 35 matches.
Navratilova has not lost since she faced Kathy Horvath
In the French Open this summer and her 1983 singles
record now stands at 72-1.
Navfatllova, the No. 1 seed, has now beaten the
second-seeded Shriver tn 16 of their 19 career matches
Including the last six in a row. Shrtver’s last victory was
in the 1982 U.S. Open, when she eliminated Navratilova
in the quarterfinals.
A crowd of 5,184 watched the 77-mlnute match
between two of the tour's best scrvc-and-vollcy players.
Navratilova consistently beat Shriver to the net. When
Shrtv'/ did come In. Navratilova used her Improved
backhand and passing shot.
"I can't attack her backhand anymore." Shriver said.
"I used to chip it to her backhand and come In. but she
hits It so hard now. It's a heavy-duty shot now."
"The court Is slow and It's easy to hit the top-spin,"
said Navratilova said. "1 never felt threatened by her
coming in to the net. My backhand Is getting better."
Navratilova was able to get In 77 percent of her first
serves. In the set oml set, she lost only one point In four
service games.
Later, In the doubles final, Navratilova and Shriver
defeated Bonnie Gadusek and Wendy White, 64). 6-1.

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49crs 32, Saints 13

Broncos 24, Bengal* 17

W illiam s Helps FSU Crush Cincinnati
TALLAHASSEE (UP1) - Greg
Allen and Roosevelt Snipes rushed
for 125 and 121 yards respectively
and scored one touchdown each
Saturday night to trigger Florida
State to a 43-17 victory over
Cincinnati.

Lions 31, Bears 17

National Contennc*
Eott
471-J. rr
ar rm
II#
T rcl.
JB.A
W1if* T
Dallat
7 « 0 1900 515 US
Woifilngtsn
S 1 « ID 113 in
r' «-* , ,
4 3 « r e 111 ta
NY Gtente
5 S • 1*4 ia 155
SI. Lout!
5 S 0 2M 117 in

..........................
a

Pro Football Roundup

NHL
NATIONAL SOCKET LEAGUE
W tlti C n lt r iid
Poktefc Dhrtitea
W L T H i c r GA
PNtedtfpkte
a *
I • • n
NY Rangon
I 1 1 a
a 14
NY lite n d c n
5 14 IS
1 1 •
Nov J tn o y
1 1 •
i
IS U
t
Pim burgh
14 a
1 •
i
Woiftlngton
• 1 •
i
ts 3'
A dorn Dhrhioa
Boiton
4 1 •
« a U
Quoboc
1 t 1 7 53 a
Buffalo
1 1 1 1 It n
Hartford
} i 1 S II a
Montreal
2 1 1 4 » :s
f impfejM CenFtftfice
N orrl* Ck.luofl
w L T Ph. or O t
St. Loud
a a
s l 0 M
Chicago
I t 1 5 it a
Toronto
1 l 1 5 a V
Mlnnowto
1 1 1 S &gt;4 □
Dotroll
0 5 5 I
17 V
Smylht DfrUloa
Edmonton
S 1 1 a a i*
Vancouver
1 4 •
4 77 a
Wlnnlpog
1 ) t
4 I I 14
1 ! ■1 1 14 u
Coigory
Loo Anjotet
• 4 I
U 54
t
(Top tear In M d* dictatori gaakfy ter
StenhiCogployotH.1

it M iy 'ilm in

BatsnJ. Gwflte*]
Philadelphia L N.Y. I t M n I
Hartford5. Pltteburgh4
Montreal L Vencouror
Toronto 1}. Chicago I
Edmonton4. Ceigory)
SI louhlN Y. Ronganl
M.
mnote1, Amrupeg I
Dofre.1 L- Loo Angottt I (he)
l i l d l f ' l Gamer
(JUITLomi EOT I
N.Y. IliMtrtet BufleM. 1 H p m
Ouetnc ot Weahlngten. 705p m
ot N.Y Rengen. 7.15
Torontoof Nov JtrMT'7.H R.m
CetgoryatEtenaiten.1 #5pm.
»4ten*to*o ot CNcags. I S pm
htendar't Geewi
No Gome* Scheduled

Control FlorMo
Richmond

I T T 11—10
1 I 7 10-51

U R -FG . TotbtnlS
UR - Biolor a run (Tolbln Kick)
UCF — Devlit run (Ryorton kick)
UR — Jennings 44 run (Tolbln
kick)
UCF — Davlslnm (Ry**»or kick)
UR — Melvin if port 1mm 8toter
(Tolbln kick)
UCF — MrCombt 70 poM hvm
Thyhkan (pou lotted)
UR — Jonntng* M run (Tolbln

CtevotendolCIncInralUpm

Datrelt at Widdnjten. I pm.
fcanuaCityat Novatan. I pm.
Mlmowte at Grow Bay. I pm
Nr* Englandat Buffalo. t pm.
AUtml at BtMmort I pm
NowOrtemel TampaSay. 4pm.
Ptthteogh at Saatttt. 4pm
SanOtagoat Denver, 4 pm.
SanFranchcaat L A Rama. 4pm
LA Raidart at Dallat » pm.
IMay.0ct.14
N.Y. Glanh at U. Intel, t pm
in 11 ‘Aini-Api

Hompten Im t 14. Norfolk SI. I I
Hem pdw Sydnoy &amp; Wetfdngten 1 Loo I
J o c k io n S f.il. SouthomU I
Jo cu o n rlllo SI. 57, V kteokli St 11
Kontucky 11, Location* Slot* l)
L lrltytlo n o 31. JcftnunC Sm .tnl

Maryland14. WTakt Form U
/Worn! (Flo) 51. M iu lu ip p t St 7
AAlddteTonn. If.M w TO yS I 14
M iu iu lp p l V lllo y &amp; Gr ambling a
HE louhteno 47. N kh e ilt Stite 27
Newberry K Wottord 5
No Caroline 45. N o CoroJJno SI. U
Norte A U bom i 51 Tm nouoo M orhn 7
No T o u t St II.M c M o n o S t.H
Plttdburgh SL Louhrtlte 15
Randolph Mocon 17. Emory 4 Honry ’. I
Richmond 5L Cant. Florida B

Em
AfertgM 17, Lobonon Valter I
Am hor*na. Hamilton I

Bo*dnyXThtefl
Bbumburga. Miltenrtlte14
Brown1CC em tll ]
Ssfllfe " X, LStiS t
Collter*4o( Pt)C. Lock1(4rM 14
Cmlklma Brockportl
Cimogte Motiona W o * AJeff.I
CotfoftJCSt FranchI
Core Com 11. Springfield3
GartenXSHppmy Rock5
Cofeyte. Tritely ti
Cdhmbtelt. Yolo I I
ContendSI U. Albany SI 7
CurryI7,w Ht*Engirt7
Dortmnr*. 5L Harvard I]
Dotewero SI. 54, No C o m te * AIT &gt;
E S fro u d te u rtfilM o m fto ld l
E m C o r tlm iK T tm p lo ll
Geneve M .G rpvi City I
GoftyW wg 51. U telnui 7
Iteborl 7. Alfrod 7
H o h tro M K te g tP t I
HoTy Crow 55. Connecticut U
Indteno (Po) XL Etertooroll
tte X !3 tU .B te l4 te i5
kteJtown a. CTvynor 7
Lycoming ll.U p u te I
M ouechutetti 17. Maine 7

Baseball
ZtmBock
Foil Loopvo Slonding*
Somlnote Community College
Rolllni College
Orlando B.B. Comp
FlorldaB 8 Blue
Florida B B Rod

PI
7-4
54
54
If

FREEu
S P IN A L E X A M I N A T I O N
Oangw Senate of
PdOiEOteCRVES

t la lk u o H *

UCF — Mt Combo 54 pool Irora
Thyhsen (run lotted!
ii k v d ir * ! L o tte fi Foo te r! Return
By United Pm ateTorM hoaal

Akron51.Morvheed SI I
/ppeUctrenll 11. Gardner Wot* 17
AuburnJl. Gomgte Tocfc U

So«uwCaokina*|4.Atebom«ll t
Canon Newmantl Mart tilt) I
Cartel Il.Obariina
ControlSt a. KentuckySi 5
CtemaenB Duu31
Fairmonts.* Virginia St II
Forrurr 17. Muter 12

Hondo Aimtt AteonyP *

i Vh.rT

(AH Timn EOT)

WaiNngfcn at Craan Bay. t p n,.
Sandai. Oct n
AltanUttN.YJth.lpm.
CNcapatf PWtedteptea. 1pm.

Uch)

Hondo SI 4). Cincinnati 17
Fl.1ValteylMl.AM AAMIt
Georgia mVwdtetelt IS
GtemrVte 14. Saten 15

m
V

in
is
US
145

scorecard

Football

John McEnroe was
suspended for 42
days from tourna­
m en t p la y for
abusing an umpire
S u n d a y at the
A ustralian Indoor
Tennis cham pion­
ships.

tan Franclies
1 It
TU TO
LA Hama
I I I
m in
Nr* 0»Irani
4 J t J71 IB
Atlanta
1 5 1 5U 145
Smdar'i Rtwfh
Ctetreii 31. Chicago 17
Ptthbvgh 44. Ctevotend II
Mlnnoief* 14. Howten U
4Altmin.NY.JthU
it. LoutaX Tampa Bay 57
Nri England37, SanDug* II
SanFranchcstlNrwOrloini t)
BuffaloB. Saltimoral
Oatlat 17. PWladat^iir 7
karoo* City N. N.Y. Glanh If
Dtmw 14. Cincinnati II
teamaS. L A RakSmM
LA Rami 17. Atlanta II
M l t l t f ' l Cam#

&gt;» *4&gt;« 01Irut■*,
*Ao nuol M* M&gt;w, it fro#

: SANFORD PAIN .
CONTROL CLINIC '
D R .THOMAS Y AN D E L L
C lb rapt a cl ic Phy vicu n.

WW FR E N C H AVE .
SANFORD
.

323-5763

�i»«a+

M

&gt;A—Evm lng H ir ild , U n fo rd . F I.

D LON DIE

Mondsy, O t». »/, 1913

m

by Chic Young
TH AT MAKES TW O
THINGS YOU'RE QONNA

HAVE TROUBLE
KEEPING COW N

BEETLE BAI LEY

THE BORN LOSER

ACROSS

ID Sf Ifv*, for One

46 By birth
I Befor* (p rifit) 47 Needle c ite
4 P laintiff
48 Dance ite p
8 W in lir bird
SO Christen
food
52 Chrutlanla
12 O rg in for
50 Container*
h tir in g
58 Incited
13 I d iM iC l l
61 Narrow
14 Agile
aperture
15 B it« « o f
62 Small bill*
judgm ent
63 Chemical
•7 b u ffe r *
auffix
bugtiboo
64 Sound
18 Relative of
65 "A uld Lang

S

t

Aniwer *o er?vieui PuMli
pho
SAFI
U U IJ
a A i
0 N
OTI C
A M &lt;
n OAT
E N T t)
■ I i 3.1
a n
E
X I Hi t
DJ m s
( N
□ ii p ■ ■ A 0 K
0 U
□ n s
n u • □□
7 A p1
i 1 L
l u N A R
A O 0 1—
s—I M
O n JL T
T W' A 0 u 1
f
n l N *
7 6 t S
N
E JL A 1
S
V
1 R n ■

"&lt;*’W

Sit-Ups to fight
Battle O f The Bulge

DEAR DR. LAMB — 1
am 53 years old. weigh
115 pounds and am 5 foot
7. I have a nice figure and
no extra wclght^inywhcrc
But lately I have a stom­
ach which I cannot hold
bingo
In. It Just came. I get a
10 Epochi
43 W in t befor*
IB Three (prefn) 66 Equality
11 Typing
21 S i f t iprefir)
45 H**v«niy city reasonable am ount o f
oiunoer
exercise and am most
22 S loth*
DOW N
47 D*rk *o o d
eliminate body fat despite •I
16 Implement
25 Atk for
active.
48
Yor*
20 Nigerian tribe
the fact that you arc
1 Volume
chin iY •
Is
It
possible
to
eliminate
49 Folktmgar
23 Billboard*
underweight In terms ot
meaaura
by Mori Walker 27 Trillin *
(bis problem by exercise,
Guthrie
24 Fight*
2 Uncommon
beloved
pounds for your height.
26 Environment 51 Flying t i icer* or Is a "lummy-tuck" the
30 M in * o p e n
3 Ireland
DEAR DR. LAMB - In
agency (abbr)
4 C om pait
onlv answer?
h e id g e ir (2
(abbr)
one
of your columns you
27
Roman
date
point
w d i)
DEAR READER - It
stressed
the dangers of
28 Water drain 53 Pice
5 Former
33 Sepia
depends upon what Is
54 Soviet river
29 Very thin
M ideatt
34 Reliable
coconut oil..
causing
It.
Since
you
In­
55 Baltic river
paper
alliance
36 B im it e r
W h ile I w as in the
dicate you arc healthy I
30 Dogma
( Ib b r)
(ib b r |
u7 Female le in t
grocery
store I checked the
have
no
reason
to
think
31 Tiny particle
6 Give* forth
37 E xhile
(abbr)
labels on all major brands
32 Kind
39 M ild expletive 7 Stern
you
would
be
accumulat­
59 Guy*
4 I Trim o ff
8 Swift aircraft 35 Fgyptian daily
ing fluid In your abdomen, of Infant formula and all
6 0 A d je c tiv a l
(ibbr,)
38 Even icora
bnnehet
or
that you have a tumor listed coconut oil In the
ending
42 B ooty
v Ereci&gt;f
40 W ildebeeit
— or that at veur age you first few ingredients.
t
If coconut oil Is a real
2 3
arc pregnant.
iC A U T lO N
Assuming that you have threat to health, how could,
12
the usual girth control the Food and Admlnlslra-. MEN,
problem, there Is a lot you tlon allow Its use for the •
W O R K IN G
16
15
can do about It without n entire diet of Infants?
DEAR READER - I wish ;
"tummy-tuck."
by Art Sansom 18
Stt-ups strengthen the (hey would not use coco--,.upper nbdonirn. Leg-lffts nut oil. Fortunately, the. .
22 23 24
strengthen the lower ab­ baby’s metabolic system Is .
domen. But I think It ts such that he docs not hav*
27 28 29
best to not use a straight high cholesterol levels as1
leg-11ft but bend your adults do. There are a few 33
exceptions. Coconut oil &lt;
knees.
does stimulate the forma-,
You
should
also
do
vol­
37
3 ^|
untary abdominal con­ tlon of cholesterol In peo-. •
tractions. Lie down and p i e p r o n e t o h i g h . * .
42
pull In your abdominal c\olestcrol levels. That Is muscles as strongly as you because of Its high satu--.46
&gt;1*
can and bold them In that rated fat content.
So an Infant or a young
posit Ion for 30 seconds.
48 49
50 51
52 53 54 55
Relax and repeat the con­ child who uses an artificial. .
milk substitute that con- •
traction.
56
57
58
59 60
Your posture Is also tains coconut oil docs not
by Bob Montana 61
Important. If you tend face the same risk os an-,,
62
63
to slump, you will bring adult would.
BUT EVERY FEW HOURS
WHICH IS WHY HE
I hnvr suggested In the
64
65
your lower chest cage
66
POESN T HAVE TO WORRY
HE HAS TO BREATHE THE
past In one of the large
ABOUT BEING POLLUTED
closer
to
your
pubic
bone.
ATMOSPHERE OF HIS HOME
-1 Z
PLANET FROM A CONTAINER
BY THE
E EARTHS
.
This decreases the tension companies that they use
HE CARRIES/
SP H E R E / J - n f l
o n y o u r a b d o m i n a l something besides coco­
| | t ^ ™ 05PHEeEmuscles and contributes nut oil or palm oil. I f they .
did I would be more com- ,
to an expanded waistline.
If you just have slack fortublc In recommending
muscles, a good program these same products to . •
for your anal muscles and adults who cannot tolerate
Feb. 19) Regardless of
YOUR BIRTHDAY
your bark muscles and milk and need a milk .
what types of situations
OCTOBER 18, 1983
good posture will probably substitute for cereals and
T h e p r o b le m s t hi s you find yourself in today,
take care of your bulge. other uses.
Send vour questions to T
coming year will not be count only on youi icBut If you arc gaining fat
due to an absence of op­ sources and abilities, not
while you are losing mus­ Dr. Lamb, P.O. /fox 1551. '
portunities but can be on those o f others.
cle. then you will definitely Rid to City Stat/nn, New'.
PISCES
(Feb.
20
March
attributed
to
the
fact
that
need In make an effort to York. N.V. 10019.
by Howie Schneider
you’ll have so many from 20) Appreciate the worth
which to choose that' It of suggestions your com­
YXMX&amp;U....S&amp;.'5 CREATED
panions have to offer to­
could confuse you.
THE SCIEWCE OF 3A S T O L 0G V
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. day. but don't use this as
231 Your word must be an excuse to (ail hlnk for
you bond when you make yourself.
Jim: "He gets to discard
10 17II
NORTH
com m itm ents today to
his
losing heart and nine '
ARIES (March 21 April
♦ 6 4I
those you love. Broken 19) If you do something
o f s p a d e s on t h e '
V A 7i
p to m ls e s cou ld le a v e kind for another today, be
diamonds, loses one club '
♦ AQJI J
wounds that will be dif­ certain your motives arc
♦ 97
and the ace of spades and1
ficult to heal. Order now; sincere. Being good for
has a very good result
WEST
EAST
The NEW Matchmaker false reasons will leave a
A tO I 5
since neither six clubs n or*
♦ 71
f QJ 103
V K 942
wheel and booklet which bad Impression.
three no-trump makes."
♦ 75
♦ 109643
reveals rom antic com ­
TAURUS (April 20-May
Oswald: "H e has also
♦ QC 4
♦ 52
patibilities for all signs, 20) Normally ave the in­
made the correct rubber'
SOUTH
tells how to get along with nate sen sitivities that
bridge play. He Is not
♦ KQJ 9
others,
finds
rising
signs,
Interested In other dc- ’
enable you lo maintain
by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers
V *4
hidden q u alities, plus pleasant associations with
clarcrs. but only wwnts to
♦K
more. Send $2 to Astro- persons from every strata.
g iv e h im s elf the best
♦ AKJ10I1
Graph, Box 489, Radio T h is q u a lity m ay be
chance for his contract."
Vulnerable. Both
City Station. N.Y. 10019. absent today.
Jim: "Let's look at the
Dealer: South
Be sure to give your zodiac
club finesse play. Suppose
GEMINI (May 21-June
Weil North Kul
South
sign. Mail an additional $1 20) In Instances where
he leads dummy's seven of;
!♦
for your Libra Astro-Graph discipline is required for
clubs and lets It ride. West
Pus
Id
Paw !♦
predictions for the year those In your charge,
tnkes hla queen, one heart
Pa** 2NT Pui
&lt;♦
ahead.
rion 'ttltute perm issive­
and one spade for a quick
P *«
46
Pus
!♦
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ness. Be firm where neces­
one-trick set."
Pus
Pass Pan
22) To Impress others to­ sary.
Oswald: "Suppose he
day you might be tempted
CANCER (June 21-July
cashes two diamonds to; I
to lay It on rather thick. 22| Tasks you usually
get an Immediate heart-:
Opening lead. VQ
Use a thinner brush and perform with ease should
discard and then loses that-;
smaller strokes.
not be taken for granted
club finesse. West wins ;
SAGITTARIUS (Nov
today. Unless your mind Is
and |p«ds another heart. ;
By Oswald Jacoby
2 3 - D e c . 2 1) Y o u 'r e centered on your work you
South ruffs."
and James Jacoby
Jim: "South has tw o! •
by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl basically an adventurous may make a foolish mist
Oswnld: "In match point
person and this Is an
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) dupllcale play South has Ilnrs of play. He can lead a '
3 H A D N O IP E A M Y S O N A T A I N 3 R - A T
adm irable quality, but Subdue extravagant de­ no problem. He lookB over club to dummy's nine and '
today don't rush into situ­ sires today, or they may dummy and secs that If try for a quick spade ;
M IN O R SO U N PSD U &lt; E AN OCtjPuS M ATIN6CAU-.
ations where angels fear to Impel you to purchase clubs work for him he Is discard on the Jack of ;
tread.
something now which you cold for either four no- diamonds. West ruffs and ;
C A P R I C O R N (D e c . could laier buy at a better trump or six clubs. Since beats him. Or he can ■
22-Jan. 19) There Is a price If you wafted a bit.
five clubs, making six. simply run off a lot o f '
definite dividing line be­
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. would lose to either of trumps and hope for a 3-3 I
tween being positive or 22) Praise, politeness and those contracts, he must spade break, a drop of a - !
overly optimistic. Today, diplomacy arc tools which assume thal the club fi­ doubleton 10 or bad dls-x
you might not be able to should work very well for nesse should be avoided. carding by his opponents.!*
distinguish between the you today. However, all of So he cashes the top clubs But spades don't break-l­
two.
| the aforementioned must im m ed iately. Then he and West can't go wron*fv
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20
have a ring o f sincerity.
In bis plays."
&gt;;
starts on diamonds."

Dr.

Lamb

£

58,d

ARCHIE
'' t m r e a p i n g a n e a t
SCIENCE-FICTION STORY/

IT'S ABOUT AN ALIEN
BEING WHO TAMES HUMAN
FORM ANP BECOMES
PFESIPENT OF A LARGE
MANUFACTURING
CORPORATION/

HOROSCOPE

W hat The D a y W ill Bring...

EEK &amp; M EEK
'z

V

^

7\

^ fr A L ^

/

Z

T H E W S A fc o u

//
/ /

IS IK) VIRGO A
JW S M O K JT H

fa

MR. M EN AND LITTLE MISS

BUGS BUNNY

WIN AT BRIDGE

» •
» •

by Jim Davis;*:

3U’ ’ &gt;1 t I f , ; *

TUMBLEW EEDS

by T. K. Ryan

W H tfS lW E O W - O ttr P U F F

W U M T K E iV H IS ^ y T A I L

PERSPICACITY.

M EAN0

Q
O
/
t

ANNIE
-H-H0W DOES
I PON'T KNOW.
COYOTE FIQQEH &amp;UT ELOPING -me
T'KEEP THEM G0RPER PATROL IS
FROM m o i t r hiS PROFESSION«
MARIA?

1-.;

by Leonard Starr

:kJ 1 PUHNO-BUT

-DIP THAT TRUCK

SIPESNIPE US T IT LOOKS LIKE
OH PURPOSE?.’ WE LOST HIM/------M 7 — UNLESS HE
OOUBLEPMCHff

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Oct. IT, 10*1—»A

'renatal

TO N IG H T'S T V
11:00

12.-00

Extended

EVENING

6:00

An extended session on
parenting as well as Infant
CPU has been added to the
IPrenatal Classes being ofIfcrcd by Central Florida
Regional Hospital next
month.
S e t fo r T u e s d a y
evenings from 7:30 to 9
p .m . In th e h o s p ita l
classroom, the course will
start Nov. 15 and continue
through Dec. 20.
Designed to educate the
expectant mother and fa­
ther In all facets of pregnancy, childbirth and
p r e p a r a tio n an d im ­
mediate child care, the
course promotes family
centered maternity care
for(hc community.
In addition to the paren­
ting and CPR classes, the
cudrsc will cover physical
and emotional changes
during pregnancy Includ­
ing danger signals; fetal
development: mild condi­
tioning exercises; nutri­
tion: smoking and drugs:
labor and delivery. Ineluding available
medication and anesthe­
sia, os well as care of the
newborn.
Expectant parents are
encouraged to enroll very
early In the mother-to-be's
pregnancy.
The courBc Is free to
those planning to deliver
at Central Florida Regional
and $3 If d e liv e r in g
elsewhere. For further in­
formation call nursing ed­
ucation office, 321-4500,
extension 607.

S
0

323-5763

O ® L A T E N IG H T W ITH D AV ID
L E T T E R M A H G u e it: c o m e d ia n e c to r Bitty C ry *;» l
CD O A B C N EW S N IO H T U N E

7:00
0 ® PEOPLE S COURT
® O P-M. MAGAZINE A ratlturanl whara patron* din* whila Mak­
ing In a hoi tub, an Iniarviaw with
lor mar Daliaa Cowboy* alar Roger

®
O
C O L U M B O I L C o lo m b o
• ta lk * a la ia v tiio n n e tw o rk n e c u liv * (T rt*h V an D a v o r*) tu tp e c te d ef
alaytno h e r b o a * (R)

1:00

The Second Annual
Hobbycraf t Show
was held at the Sen Ior Citizen
Multipurpose
C e n t e r 1 n
Casselberry's
Secret Park. About
50 senior citizens
exhibited their
crafts In the event
with more than 200
persons attending.
In top photo shows
h er B a t i k and
Russian punch nee­
d l e w o r k . Gl adys
M c C r a r y , l owerphoto, stands in
front of a Christmas
tree she decorated
w ith old costume
|ewelry a n d s h o w s
other decorations
she crafted.
H e ra ld P ho to * b y T im m y V in c e n t

BURNETT

AND

S

7:35
0 0 0 0 0 NEWS

3. Remember, parents arc human; they get tired, have
their bad days and make mistakes, too, so forgive them
like they forgive you.

4. Always be totally honest In what you say or do.
even if It means getting busied.

4. Don't lie and sneak around, then expect your
parents to trust you.

6. If you have a change in plans or know you're going
to be late, call and lei your parents know.
7. Say "Please." "Thank you” and "Excuse m e" at
home, and you will do so automatically everywhere else.
B, Be willing to work for what you want.
9. Take pride in the way you look.
10. Let your parents Know that you love and
appreciate them. Tomorrow may be too late.
10 TIPS ON HOW TO BE A
GOOD KID FROM AN 8-YEAR-OLD
1. Help with chores.
2. Say. "Yes. ma'am" and “ Yes. sir."
3. Do what your parents say.

James E. Quinn, M«D,
is pleased to announce (he
opening of his office for

F A M IL Y PRACTICE
2209 French Avenue
Sanford

B y a p pointm ent: 3 2 1 * 4 2

5. When you're wrong, admit It. and take the
consequences.
6. Pick up after yourself. Your mother Is not your
maid.

2:30
O ® E N T E R TA IN M E N T TO N IO H T

book

3 ) O C B S N EW S N IQ H TW A TC H
17.) O M O V IE "W o m a n ’* W o rld "
( 1054) C h ito n W tb b , Ju n e AO yton

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11:05
11:30
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I?) O LOVING
9 E (35) IN D EPEN O EN T N ETW O R K
NEW S
0 3 (10) P O STSC R IPTS

11:35
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ln)urad whan h* attempt* to raacua
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M O V IE “ P o ltc a w o m a n
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(35) BEVERLY H ILLB ILLIE S

1:30

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TH E Y O U N G A N D TH E

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10:05

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RESTLESS
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TUESDAY

6:05

10:00

12:05
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4:05

7:35

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8:00

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□ D O N EW S
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CD (10) NEVER TU R N B A C K : TH E
LIFE O F F A N N IE L O U H A M E R
(M O N )
f f l (10) M AS TER P IEC E TH E ATR E

12:30
O ® SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

3:00

0 ® N B C N EW S OVERNIGHT

©

0:30

A COLLECTION FROM OTHER LISTS SUBMITTED
1. Don't swear, drink or smoke. It makes parents
wonder where they went wrong.
2. Don't ask your parents If they had lovers before
they were married. It's none of your business, and you
probably won't get a straight answer anyway.
3. Don't complain when you’re served spaghetti three
times In a row. It beats going to bed hungry.

2:20
0
M O V IE
" S tra n g * In tru d e r"
( 1956) E d m u n d P urdo m , Id a L u p L

4:00

® O N EW H AR T (S *a *o n P ra m la m ) A a a d u c tfv * a ctra a * (S ta ll*
S tr» -n » ) w ith a n o t or lo u t re p u ta ­
tio n c o n to rt w ith D ick o n h e lp in g to
m rtta bar m e m o irs. (P a ri 1)

4. If you hurt someone, or hurt their feelings, say you
are sorry.
5. Be nice to guests.
6. Don’t say bad words.
7. Use good manners everywhere.
8. Be nice to your brother or sister If ypu have one.
9. Say your prayers every night.
10. Love everybody, especially your parents.
JEFF PURINTON.
PALATKA. FLA.

0 ® N BC N EW S O VER N IG H T

D ick C a va tt ta lk * a b o u t h i* new

Q
(1 0 ) T H E S H A K E S P E A R E
P LA Y S "M a c b e th ” N ic o i W W a m aon a n d J a n * L a p o ta ir* sta r a * th *
m u rd a ru u *. p o w a r-n u n g ty to u p t* m
O il* d ra m a tiz a tio n o l S h a ka ap a a ra ’a
c ia s u c p la y

DEAR READERS: It all
began when I published
“ 10 Tips on How to Be a
followed by
Good Wife,
"10 Tips on How to Be a
. * *
Good Husband.*’ Then a
AOuV
reader signed “ Old-Timer"
suggested that I Invite the
—
younger generation to ---------------------------------submit Us " 10 Tips on How to Be a Good Kid."
I did, and the response was heartening. (Many
elementary school teachers made It a class assignment.)
This list, from a 16-yeanr-old Dallas girl. Is one of the
best:
1. Show appreclaton. Most parents give more then
they can afford.
2. Take responsibility for your own actions. If you
want to be treated like an adult, act like one.

OH O BENCON (R)

A FTER N O O N

7:39
0 ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Intarvia* with Shaltay Ft bare*
O WHEEL O f FORTUNE
O FAMILY FEUD
(35) HARNEY MILLER
(f) TIC TAC DOUGH

Craft
Show

O ® W H E EL O f FO R TU N E
tT ) O THE PRJCE 13 RKJHT

9 2 TH E C A T U H 8

12:30

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(1037) O livia d a H a a tte n d . tan H u n t­
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0 (35) STR EETS O F S A N FR A N -

7:05

5. Do your homework and chores without having to be
reminded.

Learn by
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0
M O V IE
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F ra n k S in a tra , R )ia H a yw o rth

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12:05

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SEMINOLE TRINITY
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

news

6:05

The Leukemia Society of
America, Central Florida
Chapter, held Its fifth an­
nual Leukem ia SuperSwim Classic on Sept. 25.
According to Sam Thom­
as, executive director, over
6104.000 was raised by
swimmers of all ages.
This record compares to
$60,000 raised last year or
a 60 percent Increase. The
event attracted over 700
swimmers ranging In age
from six months to 67
yean* of age. The average
pledges per swimmer was
over $140.

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10:30

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5:30
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BEHAVIOR (TUE)
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(WED)

03 (10) EARTH. SEA AND SKY
(THU)

CO (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FW)

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CD (10)3-1-1 CONTACT
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5:35
0 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

7. If your parents' marriage breaks up. don't act like
they've ruined your life. They may have Improved It.
8. Take good care of the body your parents (and God)
gave you.
9. Do your best In school. Your future depends on It.
10. Include your parents In your prayers. You are
always in theirs.
Every teen ager should know the truth about drugs,
sex and how to be happy. For Abby'a booklet, send $2
and a long, stamped (37 cents), sell-addressed envelope
to: Abby, Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood,
Calif. 90038.

SPECIALl
O

CHEVY CHASE

IS

(W ith Thl* A*l)

SANDWICH OF YOUR
CHOICE PLUS
1 SMALL DRINK PLUS
1 DIP OF ICE CREAM

Linda Keeling Valentine

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Noon

Preceptor Delta Delta Chapter of Beta
The chapter welcomed Carol Trent as
Sigma Phi met at the home of Kitty a new member to the chapter.
Corley. Linda Keeling was elected the
The cultural program was given by the
Chapter Valentine Girl.
hostess, on "What Our Dreams Mean."
President Margie Bcine announced
Members attending were: Margie
that a meeting was held with the other
chapters and Beta Slmga Phi Guest Day Bcine. Suscn Byrd. Helen Hamner, Eve
Rogcro. Betty Jack. Ellen Keefer. Marlon
Is being planned for November.
The all-chapter luncheon Is to he held Farrlla. Viola Frank. Lcssie Pauline,
at the Sweetwater Country Club with XI Ltnda Keeling, Wanda Hubbard and
Phyllis Scnkarik.
Theta Epsilon being the hostess chapter.

JUST *2.25 3
7 41

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CLASS

SANFO RD P L A Z A
3214621

FIRST BLOOD

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I y * * # . * ^ ^ -W -to -P -h

io a — Evening

H e ra ld , S a nlord, F I.

M onday, P e l. 17. m 3

E n v iro n m e n ta l
Q u e s tio n s To
C o n fro n t C la rk
WASHINGTON (UP1) — Several critical conservation
and resource Issues that embroiled James Watt during
his stormy term as Interior secretary are likely to
confront William d a r k during his Senate confirmation
hearings.
They Include such politically explosive questions as
olTshore oil leasing, federal coal leasing, strip mining
regulations and protection o f national parks, wildlife
refuges and wilderness areas.
Clark. President R eagan's personal friend and
nominee to succeed Watt as Interior Department chief,
has virtually no background In conservation or natural
resource policy.
That fact outraged environmental leaders when
Reagan made the surprise announcement Thursday.
Officials o f some environmental groups — Including the
Wilderness Society and Friends of the Earth — vowed to
fight Clark's nomination. Those who didn't — such as
the Sierra Club — warned they will be closely examining
his positions on the key policy questions.
"You r tack o f a public record on natural resource,
public land and environmental matters concerns us."
Sierra Club President Denny ShnfTer said In a letter to
Clark.
Shaffer Is asking for a meeting with Clark before his
confirmation hearings. "W e wish to understand your
Intentions, your present views on policy matters, and
most especially the degree to which you may be bound
In your understandings with President Reagan to adhere
to the policies o f Secretary W att." he said.
White House chief of staff James Baker put environ­
mental activists on notice Sunday that with Clark there
will be no change In President Reagan's push to swing
the government pendulum toward development of
federal lands.
Baker, appearing on CBS's Face the Nation, defended
the selection o f Clark, as a logical extension o f Reagan's
approach to husbanding the nation's vast mineral
wealth.
In Clark. Baker said. Reagan has chosen "someone
who Is ... going to pursue his policies, which Is
Important to his basic constituency. He gains someone
who Is readily acceptable to the strength the president
has In the West.
"A n d 1think also that sometimes the best politics Is to
choose the best person to perform public responsibility."
Among Watt's most controversial programs were
massive plans to open ofTshore areas for oil and gas
drilling and lease large stretches o f federal land for coal
mining. Environmentalists and congressional critics
called the effort a "fire sale" o f federal resources during
a period of depressed energy prices.
Wait planned to lease virtually the entire Outer
Continental Shelf — 1 billion acres o il the Atlantic.
Pacific. Gulf and Alaskan coasts — to Industry In just
five years.
He ran Into several roadblocks — court rulings,
congressional action and lack o f Interest from Industry.
The Supreme Court, for example, will hear arguments
Nov. 1 on California’s challenge to a key part o f the
ofTshore oil leasing program. It focuses on the demand of
California and 14 other slates that federal officials
consult with states before conducting the massive lease
sales.
Watt also planned to lease 15 billion tons o f federal
coal by 1985, but ran Into tough court rulings and a
congressional moratorium this year on further coal
leasing.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

IN T H E C O U N TY C O U R T O F T H E
■ IO H T E E N T M J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT , IN A N O FO R S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A .
CASE NO. S3 I444-CC-S3-D
T R O P IC B A N K O F S E M IN O L E . •
F tor Id* Sinking Corporation.
P la in tiff.

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F T H E
E IO H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT , 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. S3-SS4-CA-44-K
P IO N E E R F E D E R A L S A V IN G S
A N D L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N , a te..
P la in tiff.
vs.
V A N . IN C ., a F lo r id * c o rp o ra tio n ,
o ta l..
D efen d a n ts
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO :
V A .N ..IN C .
S30 S ugar R id g e C o u rt
Lonow ood. F L
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D th a t an
a c tio n to to re c to i* tw o m o rtg a g e s on
to * fo llo w in g p ro p e rty In Ja m I note
C o u nty, F lo rid a .
L o t IS. S UG AR R ID G E A T S A B A L
P O IN T , a c c o r d in g to t h * P la t
th e re o f, a t ra co rd a d In P la t Book 71
P a g * SI. P u b lic R ecords o t S a m in o l*
C o u nty, F lo rid a .
.h a s baan tile d a g a in s t yo u a n d you
a re re q u ire d to se rve a copy o t yo u r
w ritte n defenses. It a n y , to It on
V ic to r E. W oodm an, o t W ln d tr w * * d le . H a in e s. W a rd A W oodm an, P A ,
P la in t if f s a tto rn e y s , w hose address
Is Poet O tflc a Boa MO. W in te r P a rk .
F L 377SOOMO. o n o r b e fore N ov
e m b e r 7. I M 3, a n d I I I * tha o rig in a l
a rlto tha C lo rk o t th is C o u rt a ith a r
b e fo re s e rv ic e o n P la in t i f f s a t ­
to rn e ys o r Im m e d ia te ly th e re a fte r,
o th e rw is e * default w ill be e n te re d
•g a in s t yo u to r to * re lie f d e m anded
In toe c o m p la in t o r p e titio n .
O A T E O on S eptem ber 30. 1443.
(S E A L I
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR .
AS C L E R K O F T H E C O U R T
B y E ve C ra b Ire *
A s D e p u ty C la rk
P u b lis h O c to b e r 3 .1 0 .1 7 .1 4 1M3
OEM II

JA M E S 0 . C H A N C E Y a n d L IN D A L.
C H A N C E Y. h ls w tta .
D e fen d a n t*
TO :
L IN D A L. C H A N C E Y
231 H llltb o u g h D riv e
S orrento. F lo rid a
N O TIC E O F A C T IO N
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D m a t an
a ctio n to r d e m e g tt o f S l.fS tT I, p lu s
In to ra tl, a tto rn e y s ' t o n and su it
casts, has baan tile d a g a in s t yo u and
you a ra re q u ire d to s a r v t a co p y ot
yo u r w rltto n d e te n te *. It a n y, to It o n
J. DON F R IE D M A N . Ot F R IE D M A N
1 F R IE D M A N . P A . P ost O tflca
B o i M l, U7 W ast C h u rch A venue,
Longwood, F L
A tto m a y F o r
P la in tiff, an o r b a to r t th s 3 rd d a y ot
N o v tm b a r. I f U . and III* th a o rig in a l
w ith t t » C la rk o f th is C o u rt a ith a r
b a to n c a rrie s on P la in t if f s A tto rn e y
o r Im m e d ia t e ly t h e r e a f t e r ;
o th e rw ise a d e fa u lt w ill b * e n te re d
a g a in st you to r th * ra lla t dem anded
In tha c o m p la in t o r p e titio n .
D A T E D th is I t t h d a y o f Sap
to m b tr. I t o
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H . J R .
C LER K
OF TH E COURT
B y : E le a n o r F. B u ra tto
D so u tv C la rk
P ublish O ctober J, | 0 . 17, K IM J
D E M IS
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T , E IO H
T E E N T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT . IN
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N
F i ll N u m b e r, C *21 CA
IN R F ; E S T A T E OF
L IL L Y O 'D O N N E L L , * / k / a L IL Y
O 'D O N N E L L .
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Tha a d m in is tra tio n o f too ts to to o f
L IL L Y O 'D O N N E L L , a s k /a L IL Y
O 'D O N N E L L , d e c o a s a d . F i l e
N u m b e r M 431 C P . Is p e n din g In to o
C irc u it C o u rt to r S em inole C o u nty.
F l o r id * . P r o b a ts D iv is io n , t h *
address o t w h ich Is: S e m ln o i* C o u nty
C ourthouse. S anlord. F lo r id * 31771
0*34 T h * nam e and a d d re ss o t too
personal re p re s e n ta tiv e a n d to * a t ­
to rn e y ta r to * E tla ta Is sat fo rth
A ll In te re ste d p a rsons o r * re q u lrd
to t i l * w ith t o l l c o u rt. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N T H S O F T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N O F T H IS N O T IC E :
I I I o il c la im s a g a in s t to o e sta te and
11) a n y o b je c tio n b y o n In te r acted
parson to w hom n o lle * was m a lla d
th a t ch a lle n g e s to * q u a lific a tio n s o t
to * p e rso n a l re p re se n ta tiv e , venue,
o r lu r ts d td lo n o tto # c o u rt
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B JE C T IO N S
N O T SO F IL E D W IL L BE F O R E V ­
ER BAR R EO
P erso n s! R * e r# * * n te tl ve
R O B E R T A M O R R IS . E s q u lr*
SIS W est IS th S N a a t
Peat O ff it s D ra w e r use
S an lo rd . F lo rid a 32771 1430
Telephone (M S) H I 7iso
P u b lis h O cto be r M . 1 7 .1 4 I I . IM S

DEMto

N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
T h * S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y B O A R D
O F C O M M IS S IO N E R S w ill conduct a
P u b lic H e a rin g to c o n s id e r a request
lo c o n s t r u c t a 17‘ i l l ' B O A T
S H E L T E R o n t h * fo llo w in g d e ­
s c rib e d p ro p e rty :
L o t 30 o t to * v a c a te d P la t o t P a lm
Shadow s. P B I I . P g SS. S em inole
C o u n ty . F lo rid a . F u rth e r d e sc rib e d
1740 M U L L E T L A K E P A R K
ROAD
T h * P u b lic H e a rin g w ill be h e ld In
R oom M 0. S em inole C o u n ty C o u rt
house. S a n lo rd . F lo rid a on N O V
E M B E R I . IM J . o t 10 00 AM . or os
soon to o re o fto r as p o ssible W ritte n
c o m m e n ts m a y be Ilia d w ith to *
L a n d M a n a g e m e n t D iv is io n e n d
those a p p e a rin g w ill be h e a rd
N O T E : P erso n s a re a d vise d th a t,
i t th e y d e cid e to a p p e a l a n y d e cisio n
m o d * a l these m e e tin g s / h e a rin g s.
I h e y w il t n e e d a re c o rd o t th *
p ro ce e d in g s, a n d . to r such purpose
th e y m a y need to e n su re to o l a
v e rb a tim re c o rd o t to * p ro ce e d in g s
Is m o d e , w h ic h In clu de s to e te s llm o
n y a n d e v id e n c e upon w h ic h Ih *
ap p ea l is to be based, p e r S ection
30*0103 F lo rid a Statutes
H a r t H a rd in
L a n d M *ia g a m a rrt
D iv is io n
S a m in o l* C o u nty, F lo r id *
P u b lis h O c to b e r 17, IM J
D E M IM

Legal Notice
O R D IN A N C E N O . M I
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
O F LO N G W O O D . F L O R ID A . A N ­
N E X IN G T O A N D IN C L U D IN G
W IT H IN T H E C O R P O R A T E A R E A
O F T H E C IT Y O F LO N G W O O D .
F L O R IO A . A N A R E A O F U N O
S IT U A T E A N D B E I N G IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , A N D M O R E
P A R T IC U U R L Y D E S C R IB E D AS
F O L L O W S : P A R C E L
« » » JO 3 M 0 ! » 0000 0 /0 S E C I *
T W P MS R G E M E B E G SE COR OF
N W O F SE U O F SW te R U N N
14SM F T N *4 D E G 15 M IN W 101J 7
F T W 417.74 F T S I4» F T W 7*7 F T
S W LY O N R D U O * F T E 107*31 FT
TO B E G R E C O R D * O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A : P R O V ID IN G
F O R C O N F L IC T S , E F F E C T IV E
DATE
W H E R E A S , th e re has been file d
w ith th * C ity C le rk o t th * C ity of
L o n g w ood F lo rid a , a p e titio n con
te ln ln g I h * n a m e s e l p r o p e r t y
o w n e r* In th * a m e o f S am inol#
C o u n ty , F l o r id a , d o t c r lb o d os
ta llo w s :
P A R C E L t it M J H 0 M B 0 O 0 0 M /0
SEC I t T W P MS R G E M E B E G SE
COR O F N H O F SE U OF SW
R U N N 14* M F T N *4 D E G IS M IN
W 101 J t F T W 417.74 F T S I4 t F T W
117 FT S W LY O N R O IM A F T E
1071 31 F T T O B EG
W H E R E A S , s lid p e titio n w a s d u ly
c e rtifie d to to * S em inole C o-eity
P ro p e rty A p p ra is e r p u rs u a n t to to *
C h a rt* / *1 to e C ity o f Longw ood.
F lo rid a , C h a p te r * 4 1 1 * 4 L o w s o l
F lo rid a . I H * . a n d C h a p te r 731*7,
L a w s o l F lo r id a . t*7S . a n d th *
c e rtific a tio n o l th * S am ino l* C ounty
P ro p e rty A p p ra is e r as to th * s u ffi­
cie n cy o l such p e titio n p u rs u a n t to
th# te rm s o f sa id C h a rto r re ce ive d ,
W H E R E A S , to # C ity C o m m issio n
o f to * C ity ot Longw ood. F lo rid a , has
deem ed II In th * best in te re s ts o f to *
C ity o t Longw ood to a cce pt said
p e titio n a nd to annaa said a re a
N O W , T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
O R D A IN E D B Y T H E C IT Y C O M ­
M IS S IO N O F T H E C IT Y O F
L O N G W O O D , F L O R ID A . AS
FO LLO W S:
S E C TIO N 1: T h a i toe ta llo w in g
d e scrib e d p ro p e rty to w ll: P A R C E L
1 1 4 1 0 30 JCO 0 7 7 0 0000 0 0 SEC I *
T W P M S R G E M E B E G SE COR OF
N IS O t SE '4 O F SW 1* R U N N 144 41
F T N *4 D E C 13 M IN W 101.37 * T W
*17.74 F T S l« * F T W 1*7 F T S W LY
O N R O 154.4 F T E 7071-51 F T T O
B E G . S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y R E
C O RDS. BE A N D T H E S A M E IS
H E R E B Y A N N E X E D TO A N D
A lA D E A P A R T O F T H E C IT Y O F
L O N G W O O D . F L O R ID A ,
PUR SU AN T TO THE TE R M S OF
T H E C H A R T E R O F T H E C IT Y O F
LO N G W O O D . F L O R ID A . C H A P T E R
4411*4. U W S O F F L O R ID A . 1 H 4
S E C TIO N 1: T h a t to * c o rp o ra te
lim it s o t t h * C ity o f Lon gw o o d .
F lo rid a , bo and Is h e re w ith and
h e re b y re d e fin e d so as to Include
sa id la n d h e re in d e sc rib e d and an
n o x td .
S E C T IO N 3: T h a t to e C ity C le rk Is
h e re b y a u th o rlre d to a m e n d , a lte r,
a n d su p p le m e n t to * O ffic ia l C ity
M e p o f th # C it y o l L o n g w o o d ,
F lo r id * , to In clu d e to * a n n exa tio n
co n ta in e d In S ectio n 1 hereof.
S E C T IO N 4, T h a i upon th is o r d i­
nance b e co m in g e ffe c tiv e , to * re s i­
d e n ts e n d p ro p e rty o w n e rs In to *
above d e sc rib e d annexed a re a s sh a ll
be e n title d to a ll to * rig h ts and
p riv ile g e s end Im m u n itie s as a re ,
fro m tim e to tim e , d e te rm in e d b y toe
g o v e rn in g a u th o rity o l to e C ity o l
Longw ood. and to * p ro v is io n s o l sold
C h a rte r o t to * C ity o t Longw ood.
F lo rid a . C h a p te r *41244. L a w s ot
F lo rid a . I H * . and C h a pte r 73 3* 7.
L a w s ot F lo rid a , 1*73.
SECTION St II any section or
portion ol a section ol this ordinance
proves to be Invalid, unlawful or
unconstitutional. II shall not be held
to Invalid*!* or Impair to* validity,
tore* or effect ol any other section or
pert ot this ordinance.
S E C T IO N « ; A ll o rd in a n ce s o r
p a r ts o t o rd in a n c e s In c o n f lic t
h e re w ith be and to * sa m e a re h e re b y
S E C T IO N 7. T h is o rd in a n ce s h a ll
ta k e e ffe c t p u rs u a n t to toe p ro v is io n s
o f F lo rid a S ta tu te S171.044
F IR S T R E A D IN G : S eptem bar I t .
1M3
SEC O N O R E A D IN G :
P A S S E D A N O A D O P T E D T H IS
DAYOF
A .D 1 M J .
JU N E LO R M A N N
M a y o r,
C ity o l Longw ood.
F lo rid a
ATTEST:
D .L . T E R R Y
C ity C la rk
P u b lis h O cto be r 17. 3 4 31 4 N o v ­
e m b e r 7 . 1M3
D E M 17

Legal Notice
F lc t lt la e i N am e
N o lle * Is h e re b y Qlven th a t w e a re
engaged In business a t 701 C o rn w a ll
R d., S anford. F L 31771. S om lnolo
C o u nty. F lo r id * u n d e r to * tlc fltto u s
n a m e o f N EC O E N T E R P R IS E S , and
th a t w * In te nd to re g is te r sa id n a m e
w ith Ih * C le rk o l th * C irc u it C ourt,
S e m ln o i* C o u n ty , F lo r id a In a c ­
co rdance w ith I hi* p re v is io n * o t the
F ic titio u s N a m * S ta tu te s, t o W it:
S ection 1*3/24 F lo rid a S tatutes I f 57.
/ a / E lm e r C. S m ith
/ * / N a th a n A W ishon
P u b lis h S eptem ber la 4 O c to b e r 4
14 17. IM J.
D E L 14*
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T , 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
CASE NO. 43-134-C A-4A P
S O U T H E A S T B A N K . N .A ., f / k / a
S O U TH E A S T B A N K O F V O L U S IA , a
N a tio n a l B a n k in g A sso c ia tio n
P la in tiff.
vs
L E O N A R D R. F R A Z IE R . * / k / a L .
R U S S E L L F R A Z IE R , and S Y L V IA
C F R A Z IE R a / k / a S Y L V A N IA C.
F R A Z IE R , h is w it* , e l a l.
D efendants.
TO :
L E O N A R D R. F R A Z IE R a / k / a L.
R U S S E L L F R A Z IE R , and S Y L V IA
C. F R A Z IE R , a / k / a S Y L V A N IA C.
F R A Z IE R , h it w ll*
1404 N a rcissu s A venue,
S a n lo rd . F lo rid a
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D t o t l an
a c t io n t o f o r a c lo s e m o r t g a g e
p u rs u a n t to p ro m is s o ry n o te end
m o rtg a g e on th * fo llo w in g p ro p e rty
In S a m in o l* C o u nty, F lo rid a :
T h * South 113 fee* o t to * W e ll 40
fe e l o f the E a s t 140 to e t o f L o t I t ,
F L O R IO A U N O A N D C O L O N IZ A ­
T IO N C O M P A N Y ’ S C E L E R Y
P U N T A T IO N . a c c o rd in g to to * p lo t
th e re o f a t re c o rd e d In P la t B ook I,
P a g * 11*. o f to # P u b lic R e co rd s o l
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a
has been tile d a g a in s t yo u a n d yo u
a re re q u ire d to s a rv * * copy ot y o u r
w rltto n defenses. I f a n y , to It on
R a ym o nd J. R o te lla . P la in tiff'* A t ­
to rn e y , whose a d d re ss Is P ost O ffice
Box 111. O rla n d o , F lo rid a 13101, o n o r
b e fore N o ve m b e r 11. IM J , a n d tile
toe o rig in a l w ith to o C le rk o f tots
C o u rt, o llh e r b e fo re s e rv ic e on
P la in tiff's A tto rn e y o r Im m e d ia te ly
th e re a fte r; o th e rw is e a d e fa u lt w ill
be e n te re d a g e lru t yo u to r to * re lie f
d e m anded In to * c o m p le ln t.
D A T E D th is 7th d a y o l O cto b e r.
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , J R .
C lo rk o t to * C o u rt
B Y : E le a n o r F . B u ra tto
a * D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h O c to b e r 14 17.34.31, IM 3
O E M -47
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T , O F T H E
E IO H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT , 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 N O .4 3 1111-CA-44-P
M A T IL D A JO A N N E M O O D Y .
P U In lttf.
vs.
ROBERT LE E MOODY,
D efen d a n t.
AMENDED
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
lO :
ROBERT LEE MOODY
I I E . W a shin g ton A ve.
P .o e n lx . A Z
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
th a t a P e titio n fo r A n n u lm e n t o t
M a rria g e has been tile d a g a in s t you,
a n d th a t yo u a re re q u ire d to se rv e a
e sp y ot y o u r Response or P le a d in g to
t h * P e titio n upon th * P la in tiff's
a tto rn e y , A -A . M cC la n a h a n , J r ., 104
S. P a rk A ve. - S u it* B . S a n lo rd . F L
31771. and tile toe o rig in a l Response
o r P le a d in g w ith to e C le rk o t the
C irc u it C o u rt, on o r b e fo re to * I t t h
d a y ot O c to b e r, IM J . It yo u fe ll to do
so. a D e fa u lt Ju d g m e n t w ill be ta ke n
•g a in s t yo u to r to * re lie f dem anded
In to * P e titio n .
D A T E D a t S a n fo rd . S e m ln o i*
C o u nty, F lo r id * , th is 13rd d e y ot
S eptem ber. 1M1.
(S E A L )
A r th u r H . B e c k w ith , J r .
CLERK
O F T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : P a tric ia R obinson
P u b lis h S eptem ber 24 4 O cto be r 3.
14 17,1M l
DEL-131
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
N E A R IN G
Tha S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y B O A R D
O F C O M M IS S IO N E R S w ill h o ld a
p u b lic h e a rin g to c o n s id e r * re q u e st
to w a iv e to * tw o -y e a r w a llin g p e rio d
to Increase to e d e n sity ot la n d use In
co n n e ctio n w ith a n n e x a tio n b y th *
C ity ot S anford. Th# p ro p e rry Is
d e sc rib e d i i ;
Th# N W U o f SW U Ol SW \a Of
Sec. IG IP S JOE. P a rc e l 11. (O n to *
n o rth side o f La ke /A e ry B ir d and
w est side i t S ir L a w re n c e D riv e )

(DIIT.fl)
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
F ile N u m b e r 1 3 3 * 4 C P
D iv is io n
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
IS A B E L L E M O M M E N S D E N Y t,

D tC tiM K j
N O T IC E OP A D M IN I IT R A T IO N
T h * a d m in is tra tio n o t to * e state o t
Isa b e lle M a m m ens D enys, deceased.
F ile N u m b e r S3 M G C P , Is p e n d in g In
th e C ir c u it C o u rt lo r S e m in o le
C o u nty. F lo rid a . P ro b a te D iv is io n ,
to * address o f w h ic h Is S e m ln o i*
C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e . P ro b a te
D iv is io n . P .O . D ra w e r ” C " . S an lo rd
F lo rid a 32771.
T h * nam es and a d d re s s ** o f the
p e rs o n a l r e p re s e n ta tiv e a n d th a
p e rso n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e 's a tto rn e y
• r e set fo rth be lo w .
A ll In te re ste d p e rso n * o r * re q u ire d
to f ile w ith th is c o u rt. W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N T H S O F T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N O F T H IS N O T IC E :
( I ) a ll c la im s a g a in s t th a e sta te and
t l ) a n y o b je c tio n b y an In te re ste d
p e rso n to w h o m n o tic e w as m a ile d
th a t ch a lle n g e s to * v a lid ity o t to *
w i l l , th e q u a li f i c a t i o n s o f th e
p e rso n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e , venue, o r
ju ris d ic tio n o tto # c o u rt.
A L L C U I M S A N D O B JE C T IO N S
H O T SO F IL E D W IL L B E F O R E V
ER BARRED.
P u b lic a tio n o f t o l l N o tic e has
begun on O c to b e r 10. IM J
P erso n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e :
JO S IE D E N V S H A R IN G
110 S he rid a n A venue
Longw ood, F lo rid a J I7 M
A tto rn e y to r P erso n a l
R e p re se n ta tive :
W, J e ffr y Stein
S ediak and S tain
P .O . Boa I I I *
W in te r P a rk . F L 317*0
T e le p h o n e 1303)443 2443
P u b lis h O c to b e r 14 17. IM J
D E M 44

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * la h e re b y g iv e n th a t I a m
engaged In business a t zm Lake
H o w e ll L a n e, W in te r P a rk , 337*2,
S em ino le C o u nty, F lo rid a u n d e r toe
fic titio u s name o t S U P E R O F F IC E
S E R V IC E S d /b /e A A B L E T V P IN G ,
a n d th a t I In te n d to re g u la r said
n a m e w ith C le rk o t to * C lrcu H C o u rt,
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a In a c ­
co rd a n ce w ith to * p ro v is io n s o t to *
F ic titio u s N a m * S ta tu te *. T o w ll:
S ection 145 0* F lo rid a S tatutes iy j7
/ • / B o b Jana

Publish October 1. 10.17.1 4 IM J
D EM If

T h * p ro p e rty Is p re s e n tly to n e d A l
A g r i c u l t u r e , w h ic h r e q u i r e s
m in im u m lo t s ite s o f o n * a cre . Th e
a p p lic a n t is re q u e stin g a w a iv e r to
a llo w toe C ity o f S an lo rd to re ra n * a
te n a c re p a rc e l, lo ca te d 440 f t n o rth
o t La ke M a r y B o u le va rd , to SR IA
S ingle F a m ily R e sid e n tia l. R rto n in g
w ill p e rm it s in g le fa m ily d w e llin g s
on 7300 sq u a re fo o l lots.
A p p lic a tio n h a s been s u b m itte d b y
LENSLO BO O A.
The h e a rin g w ill be h e ld In R oom
700. S e m ln o i* C o u nty C ourthouse.
S an lo rd . F lo rid a , on N o ve m b e r 4
I M J a t 7 :0 0 P .M ., o r a s so o n
t h e r e a ft e r a s p o s s ib le . W r it t e n
co m m e n ts m a y be file d w ith to *
L a n d M a n a g e m e n t D iv is io n e n d
to o ** a p p e a rin g w ill be h e a rd .
Persons a re a d vise d to o l. II th e y
d e cide to a p p ea l a n y d e cisio n m a d *
a t th is m a ttin g , they w ill need a
re c o rd o t to * p ro ce e d in g s, a n d . lo r
such purp o se , th e y m a y need to
e n su re to e t * v e rb a tim re c o rd o t toa
p ro ce e d in g s Is m ad e , w h ic h re c o rd
Includes to * te s tim o n y and e vidence
upon w h ic h to * ap p ea l Is I t be based,
p e r S ection 344 0)05. F lo rid # V a t
utos.
B o a rd o f C ounty
C o m m issio n ers
S e m ln o i* C o u nty,
F lo r id *
B y : Sandra G lenn.
C h a irm e n
A tto a l; A rth u r H . B e c k w ith , J r .
P u b lis h O c to b e r 17. IM J
O E M 144
P U B L IC L E G A L N O T IC E
A s a re s u lt o l the IM 0 F e d e ra l
Census and E s tim a te o l In cre a se In
P o p u la tio n , to * D iv is io n o t A lc o h o lic
B everages and Tobacco. D e p a rtm e n t
o f B usiness R e g u la tio n , S tate of
F lo r id * , w ill be a cc e p tin g e p p lic a
Hons to r to * Issuances o t q u o te liq u o r
f lc u n it t In Ih * following c o u n ty ond
•m o u n t:
S E M IN O L E I I
A p p lic a tio n s w il l b o a c c e p te d
b e g in n in g O c to b e r I f . IM 1 e n d cevt
lin u ln g th ro u g h J a n u a ry 14 IM 4. A ll
In te re ste d persons Should m e t# in
Q ulry a n d /o r t il * th e ir a p p lic a tio n b y
con la c tin g the O ls tric t S up e rviso r,
Ja c k B . W a lla ce . D is tric t O ffic e .
D iv is io n o f A lc o h o lic B e v e ra g e s and
Tobacco, se w D ip lo m a t C irc le . S uite
114 O rla n d o . F lo rid a
H o w a rd M . R asm ussen.
D ire c to r D iv is io n H
A lc o h o lic B e v e r e g js e n d
Tobacco
D e p a rtm e n t o f Business
R e g u la tio n T e lle h e sse *.
F lo r Ida 2X301
B y : J . B W a lla ce
P u b lis h O c to b e r 14.17, ! | , IM J
O E M 73

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F
S H E R IF F 'S S A LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N t h * l
b y v ir t u * o f th a t c e rta in W r it o f
E xe c u tio n Issued o u t o f a n d u n d er
Ih * te a l o f th a C o u nty C o u rt o l
D ra n g * C o u n ty , F lo rid a , upon a (In a l
ju d g e m e n t re n d e re d In th e a fo re sa id
c o u rt on Ih * l l h d a y o l J u ly , A .D .
1M3. In th a t c e rta in case e n title d .
G e n e ra l E m p lo y m e n t S e rvice s, In c.
d /b /a A c tio n P erso n n el. P la in tiff,
•vs- M ik e Snnll, D e fe n d a n t, w h ic h
• f o r e s * 1'* W r it o t E x e c u tio n w as
d e iiv e . u u to m e a s S h e r if f o f
S a m in o l* C o u nty. F lo rid a , a n d I have
le v ie d upon th a tallowing d o t c l b t d
p ro p e rty o w ned b y M ik e S nell, said
p ro p e rty b e in g lo ca te d In S e m ln o i*
C o u nty, F lo rid a , m o re p a rtic u la rly
d e sc rib e d as fo llo w s :
One If7 3 F o rd 104 P ic k u p T ru c k .
G reen In C o lo r. ID f F 10A N P 4J IJ 4
b e in g sto re d a l D a ve Jones W r e c k tr
S ervice , F e rn P a rk . F lo r id *
and to * u n d e rsig n e d as S h e riff ot
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a , w ill a t
11:00 A M on th * l l h d e y o t N o v
e m b e r. A D. 1M3. o ile r lo r s a l* and
s e ll to th * h ig h e st b id d e r, fo r cash,
su b je c t to a n y and a ll e x is tin g le ln s.
a l Ih * F ro n t ( W e il) D o o r a l ih * s le p t
o l toe S e m ln o i* C ounty C ourthouse In
S a n fo rd . F lo r id a , Ih * a b o ve d *
s c rib e d p e rs o n a l p ro p e rty .
T h a t said sale I t be in g m a d * lo
s a tis fy th # te rm s o l sa id W rit ot
E xo cu lto n .
Jo h n E . P o lk.
S h e riff
S e m ln o i* C o u nty. F lo rid a
P u b lis h : O c to b e r 17, 14. I I . 4 N o v ­
e m b e r 7, w ith th * s a l* on N o ve m b e r
4 IM J.
D E M 71
N O T IC E O F
S H E R IF F 'S S A LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N th a t
b y v irtu e o l th a t c e rta in W r it ot
E x e c u tio n Issued o u t o l and u n d er
to # seat o l to * C o u nty C o u rt ot
O ran g e C o u n ty . F lo rid a , upon • (In a l
lo d g e m e n t re n d e re d In th * a fo re sa id
c o u rt on th * 7th d a y o l F e b ru a ry ,
A .D . 1M 1. In th a t c e r ta in case
• m ille d . Sun B an k. N A . P la in tiff,
-vs- J u d ith E . G lo v e r. D efen d a n t,
w h ic h a fo re s a id W r it o t E xe cu tio n
w as d e liv e re d to m e as S h e riff o l
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a , a n d I have
le v ie d upon t h * fo llo w in g d e sc rib e d
p ro p e rty o w ned b y J u d ith E . G lo v e r,
s a id p r o p e r t y b e in g lo c a te d In
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id * , m o re
p a rtic u la rly d e sc rib e d as fo llo w s :
O ne I f 77 F o rd F I00 C u sto m . G reen
In C o lo r. ID f F I0 B N X I3 4 M being
sto re d a t F o s te rs ' A u to C lin ic In
Longw ood. F lo rid a
a n d the u n d e rsig n e d as S h e riff o f
S e m ln o i* C o u nty. F lo rid a , w ill *1
11:00 A M on ih * | t o d a y o f N o v ­
e m b e r. A .D . IM J . o ffe r to r s a l* and
sett lo th * h ig h e st b td d e r, to r cash,
s u b |e c l to a n y end a ll e x is tin g le ln s.
a t to * F ro n t (W e s t) D o o r a t to * steps
o f th * S e m ln o i* C o u nty C ou rth ou se In
S a n lo rd . F lo r id a , to e a b o ve d e ­
sc rib e d p e rso n a l p ro p e rty .
T h a i sa id s a l* Is be in g m a d * to
s a tis fy th * te rm s o l sa id W r it of
E xe cu tio n .
John E . P o lk .
S h e rlll
S e m ln o i* C o u nty. F lo rid a
P u b lis h : O c to b e r 17. 14. 11. 4 N ov
e m b e r 7, w ith th * s a l* on N o ve m b e r
I . IM J
D E M 71
N O T IC E O F P R O C E E D IN G S FOR
T H E V A C A T IN G , A B A N D O N IN G ,
D IS C O N T IN U IN G . A N D C LO S IN G
O F R IO H T S O F -W A Y
OR D R A IN A G E E A S E M E N T
T O W H O M IT M A Y C ONCE R N :
Y O U W IL L P L E A S E T A K E
N O T IC E th a t th * B o a rd o l C ounty
C o m m issio n e rs o t S e m ln o i* C ounty.
F lo rid a . *1 10.00 o ’c lo ck A M . on to *
t t o d e y o‘ N o ve m b e r. A O .. IM J. In
to * C o u nty C o m m is sio n e rs' M e e tin g
R oom *1 to * C o u nty C ourthouse In
S anford. F lo rid a , w ill h o ld a P u b lic
H e a rin g to c o n s id e r a n d d e te rm in e
w h e th e r o r n o t Ih * C o u n ty w ill
v a c e lo . abandon, d is co n tin u e , close,
re n o u nce end d is c la im any r ig h t of
th e C o u nty a n d to * p u b lic In a n d to
t h * f o llo w in g r i g h t s o l w a y o r
d ra in a g e e a sem ent ru n n in g th ro u g h
o r a d ja c e n t to th * d e sc rib e d p ro
p e rty , to w it :
E a st 13' o t to # N E k o t toa N E U .
S ection 13. ond th e W est 13' o f th *
N W te o t Ih * N W W o f S ection 14. both
In T o w n sh ip 11 South. R ange X E ast.
P E R S O N S IN T E R E S T E D M A Y
A P P E A R A N D BE H E A R D A T THE
T IM E A N O P L A C E A B O V E
S P E C IF IE D
B O A R D OF
C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N E R S O F
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
(S E A L I
B y A rth u r H B e c k w ith , J r .
C le rk o l to * C irc u it C o u rt
S e m ln o i* C o u nty. F lo r id *
B y S .W a "
D e p u ty C le rk
P u b lis h O c to b e r 17. !7 t3
D E M 100
IN 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 IO A
CASE NO.
IN R E : F O R F E IT U R E O i* tt77
C A D IL L A C V .I N .
FLA7Q209527C
N O T IC E O F F O R F E IT U R E
P R O C E E D IN G
TO :
THOM AS H E R N A N D E Z
1171N W I f t h A vonue
M ls m l. F lo r Ida 33141
LEANDROHERNANDEZ
241 South R o ya l
P o in cla n a B o u le va rd
M ia m i S prings. F lo r Id *
a n d a ll o th e rs w ho c la im an In te re st
In to * fo llo w in g p ro p e rty :
O n * ( I ) I f 7 / C a d illa c . V .I.N .
F LA TQ lO fJTIC
J A M E S A . F O W L E R . C ity A t
to m e y to r th * C ity o t A lte m o n to
S prings, F lo r id * , w ill a p p ea r b e fore
to * H o n orab le S. JO S E P H D A V IS ,
Ju dge o l to * C ir c u it C o u rt, E ig h ­
te e n th J u d ic ia l C ir c u it on N o ve m b e r
I f . I M l. * t 1: IS P - M , to r t o t purpose
o t tilin g a R ule to Show Cause w h y
to * d e sc rib e d p ro p e rty should n o t be
fo r to lle d to to * u s* o f, o r sold b y to *
A lta m o n te S prings P o lic e D e p art
m e r i t , p u r s u a n t t o S e c t io n *
f l l . 74l - t l l . 744. F l o r id * S le lu t e i
( I N I I T h e ve h ic le w as ta ile d b y to *
A lta m o n te S prings P o lk a D e p art
m e n t a n d I t c u rr e n tly b e ing h e ld b y
th a t A g e n cy. I I no c la im a n t com es
f o r t h t o d is p u t e t h * p e n d in g
f o r f e i t u r e p r o c e e d in g * a l th e
e b o v * m e n tio n e d d a l* end tim e , to *
u n d e rsig n e d w ill re q u e st e F in a l
O rd e r o f F o rfe itu re p e rfe c tin g to *
r ig h t , t it le e n d In te re s t In M id
v e h ic le to to * A lta m o n te S prings
P o lk a D e p a rtm e n t
I H E R E B Y C E R T IF Y th a t th is
N o tic e a id It* a cc o m p a n yin g p le a d
Ings a re b e in g ta rv a d p u rs u a n t to the
n o l l e * p r o v i s i o n s « t S e c tio n s
431 741 433 744. F lo r id a S ia tu to s
( I M I ). th is 11th d a y o t O c to b e r, IM J
J A M E S A F O W L E R . ESQ
C ity A tto rn e y
C ity o l A lta m o n te S prings
P O B ox t i l l
O rla n d o . F lo r Ida 33403
JGS/433 1444
F O W L E R . W IL L IA M S
A N D A IR T H
P ro fe s sio n a l A sso c ia tio n
E m p ire B u ild in g
34 W est C e n tra l
P O. Boa t i l l
O rla n d o , F lo rid a J3M1
1303)433 3*44
P u b lis h O c to b e r 17,14. IM J
D E M 107

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

NOTICE OF P U B LIC
H IA R IN O
TH B BOARD OF COUNTY COM­
M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y w ill hold • p u b lic (w a rin g
In R oom MO o f th * S om lnolo C ounty
C ourthouse. Sentord. F lo rid a , on
N O V E M B E R 4 1M3 a t 7:00 P M . , o r
• s to o n to e re a h o r os possible, to
co n sid e r a S P E C IF IC L A N D USE
A M E N D M E N T to th a S em inole
C ounty C om p re h e n sive P la n and
R E Z O N IN G o l to * d e sc rib e d p ro ­
p e rty .
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
7 /2 1
W H IC H
A M E N D S TH E DE (A IL E D LA N D
USE
ELEM EN T
OF
THE
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
CO M
P R E H E N S IV E P L A N F R O M G E N ­
E R A L R U R A L / P R E S E R V A T IO N /
C O N S E R V A T IO N T O P L A N N E D
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T FO R T H E
P U R P O S E O F R E Z O N IN G F R O M
i A l A G R IC U L T U R E T O P L A N N E D
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T , th * fo llo w ­
in g d e sc rib e d p ro p e rty .
T h * S M o f NW I* o t SW U ot Sec.
11 IIS H E . le ts rig h ts o f w a y o t re ­
c o rd a n d A LS O LESS: B e g in n in g a l
N E c o m e r o l S Is o t N W U o t SW U
o l Sec. » 1 1 S H E ; th e nce ru n S
alo n g Ih * R /W o t A la te y a T r a il 330
t l; thence ru n W a d ista nce o t 440 t t ;
I hence N 330 ft to to # N o rth e rn
b o u n d a ry o l the su b je c t p ro p e rty ;
thence E 4*4 t t . to P O B ; a n d th e E VS
o l N E to o l SE 14 o t Sec 11-1143IE ,
S em inole C o u n t/, F lo rid a , co n ta in in g
33 a cre s M O L . (F u rth e r d e sc rib e d a t
on to e W slda o l SR 510. I* m il* N o t
C ha pm a n R oad) (D IS T . f 1)
The proposed M e tie r P la n In ­
d ic a te s 170 townshouses w ith * g ro ss
d e n s ity o t 7.41 u n its p e r a c re .
A d d itio n a l In fo rm a tio n m a y be
o b ta in e d b y co n ta ctin g toe L a n d
M a n a g e m e n t M anager a t 3134330.
E x t. 140.
P ersons unable to a tte n d to *
h e a rin g w ho w ith to c o m m e n t on to#
p ro posed a ctio n s m a y s u b m it w ritte n
tts te m e n t* to to * L a n d M a n a g e m e n t
D iv is io n p r io r to tha scheduled p u b lic
h e a rin g . P ersons a p p e a rin g a t toa
h e a rin g s m a y s u b m it w ritte n sta te ­
m e n ts o r be h e a rd o ra lly .
Persons a re advised th a t. II th e y
d ecide to appeal a n y d e cisio n m a d *
• I these m ee tin gs, th e y w ill need a
re c o rd o l to * proceedings, e n d . to r
such purp o se , th e y m e y need to
e n su re th a t a v e rb *M m re c o rd o l the
p ro ce e d in g s Is m ade, w h ic h re c o rd
In clu de s th * te stim o n y a n d e vidence
u p o n w h ic h Ih * appeal Is to be based
B o a rd o t C ounty
C o m m issio n e rs
S e m ln o i* C ounty,
F lo r id *
B y : S andra G lenn,
C h a irm a n
A tte s t: A r th u r H . B e c kw ith . J r .
P u b lis h O c to b e r 17,14. IM J
D E M 104
N O T IC E O F
S H E R IF F 'S S A LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N th a t
b y v ir t u * o f th a t c e rta in W r it o t
E x e c u tio n issued o u t o l end un d er
to * seel o l th * C irc u it C o u rt ot
O ran g e C o u rtly, F lo rid a , upon * fin a l
ju d g e m e n t re n d e re d tn toe a fo re sa id
c o u rt on th * l i s t d a y o f M a y . A .O .
I M l. In to o l c e rta in casa a n tllle d .
C o n tra c to r's S upply o l O rla n d o . Inc.
P ia ln till, vs R o b ert S. M a y , D efen
d a n l, w h ic h a f o r e s a id W r it o f
E x e c u tio n w os d e live re d to m e a t
S h e rlll o l S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a ,
a n d I h a ve le v ie d upon toe lo t lo w in g
d e sc rib e d p ro p e rty o w ned b y R o b ert
S. M a y . sa id p 'o p e rty b e in g lo ca ted
In S em inole C ounty, F lo rid a , m o re
p a rtic u la rly d e scrib e d a t lo lto w s
A ll lands, tenem ents, c h a tte ls , end
h e re d im e n is o f R o b e rt S M a y 's
o n * h a lt In te re st In p ro p e rty lo ca ted
a t:
51I I L a ka H o w e ll Roed
W in te r P a rk . F lo rid a l i r e *
L o t 3 4 B lo c k M „ Tenglew ood. Sac
lio n J. R e p la t B ook 14 page I f
a n d to * und ersign e d as S h e rlll o t
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a , w ill a l
11:00 A M . on to t I t h d a y o t N o v ­
e m b e r, A D 1M3. o tte r to r t e l* and
s e ll to the h ig h e st b id d e r, to r cash.
tu b |e c t to a n y and a ll e x is tin g le ln s.
a t t o * F ro n t (W estI D o o r e l to * steps
o l t o * S e m ln o i* C ounty C ourthouse In
S e n to rd . F lo r id a , Ih * e b o v * d t
s c rib e d R E A L p ro p e rty
T h a t said s a l* It be in g m e d t to
s a tis fy to * te rm s o t said W r it ot
EaecrOton.
Jo h n E . P o lk.
S h e riff
S em lnoi# County,
F lo rid a
P u b lis h O cto be r 17. 14. ] | . 4 N ov
e m b e r 7, IM J .
OEM -77
N O T IC E O F
S H E R IF F 'S S A LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N th a t
b y v ir t u * o l to o l c e rta in W r it ot
E xe cu tio n Issued o u t o l and un d or
to * seal o l to * C irc u it C o u rt o*
O ran g e C o u nty. F lo rid a , upon a fin a l
lo d g e m e n t re n d e re d In to * e lores*&gt; d
c o u rt on th * 15th day o f A u g u s t. A D ,
IM J . In th a t c e rta in casa a n tllle d .
M a g u ire , v o o rtie e s 4 W ells. P la in l i t t , -VS- F lfte a n C o rp o ra tio n o l
C a sselb e rry, In c .J a m e s H . B otlo n fc
C a r o ly n * J . B o lto n , D e fe n d a n t,
w h ic h a fo re sa id W rll o f E xe cu tio n
w as d e liv e re d lo m e *1 S h e rlll o t
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a , and I ha ve
le v ie d upon th * ta llo w in g d e scrib e d
p ro p e rly ow ned by J a m e s H . B olton
A C a rq iy n * J . B olton, sa id p ro p e rty
b e in g lo ca te d In S e m ln o i* C o u nty.
F lo r id * , m o re p a rtic u la rly d e sc rib e d
* s tot low s:
17-11-14 SOI-OCOO 0140 0 1; N o rth
h e ll o f lo ts 14 a n d 15. B lo ck C. P a a rl
L a ke H e ig h ts. F irs t A d d itio n . P le l
B ook 4. P e g * **0 o f the P u b lic
R ecords o f S em inole C o u nty, F lo r Ida
a n d th * u n dersigned as S h e rlll o f
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a , w ill a t
11:00 A M . o n t o * 15th d a y o f
O c to b e r. A D . IM J. o ffe r to r s a l* end
s e ll to to * h ighest b id d e r, to r cash,
su b je c t to e n y and a ll e x is tin g lio n s,
a t to * F ro n t ( W t t i l D o o r o f to *
S em lno i# C o u nty C ourthouse In Senfo rd . F lo r id * , to * • b o re de scrib e d
R eel p ro p e rty .
T h a t said s a l* Is be in g m a d * to
s a tis fy to * ta r m i o f M id W r ll o l
E xe c u i Ion.
John E . P o lk .
S h e rlll
S e m ln o i* C ounty, F lo rid a
P u b lis h O cto be r 3. 14 IT, J l. w ith Ih *
M le on Ih * 33th o f O ctober, IM 3
DEM J

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o tic e Is h e re b y g iv e n ta e l I i m
engaged In business a t 430 B a y b re e te
L a n e , A lt e m o n l* S p rin g s 32714,
S e m ln o i* C o u nty, F lo rid a u n d er to *
fic titio u s n a m e o l T A T A R 4 SON.
and th a t I In te nd to re g is te r M id
n a m e w ith th a C le rk ot th * C irc u it
C o u rt, S e m ln o i* C ounty, F lo rid a In
a cco rd an ce w ith the p ro v is io n s o l th *
F ic titio u s N a m # S le lu le s , t o W lt :
S ection 443 Ot F lo r Ida S ta tu te s 1*57
/ * / L o u is J .L e g ts rs
P u b lis h O c to b e r 17, 14 31 4 N ov
e m b e r 7. IM J
D E M 114

C A U .lu U .fh tt
1444-341-1411

Seminole

O rlando • W in ter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 ]

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
B:00 A .M . — 1:10 P.M .
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
SA TU R D A Y f Noon

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

RATES
I tim o —

....................... 5 4 c ■ lin e

Ic o m tc u ilv t lim e s . 54c • lin t
7 consecutive flm e i 44c a lin t
10coniocutlv* times rzc a lln o
SI.04 M inim um
3 Lines M inim um

DEAD LINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M onday-5:30 P.M. Friday

12—Legal Services
B a n k ru p c y 1210 a n d C h a pte r 13
3410. F re e co n fe re n ce . A tto rn e y
M P ric e F o r A p p t 472 I f f ?
C U R L E Y R .D O L T IE
A T T O R N E Y A T LAW
101 B W . lt l S treet
S anford F la . 31771 313 4000

33—Reai Estate
Courses
BO B B A L L JR S C H O O LO F
R E A L ESTATE.
L O C A L R E B A T E S . 1714111
M A S T E R C H A R G E OH V IS A

45—Arts &amp; Crafts

21- Personals
T A X P A Y E R S R IO H TS
Opposed to " F o x " h u n te rs P ro ­
b le m s? L e t m e kn o w . P O Box
4f 3 L a ke M a r y . F I * 31747.

23—Lost &amp; Found
LOST
AM AZO N PARROT
323-4144 e r 131 12 *]
S M A L L W H IT E M A L E DOO. P a rt
poodle, p e rt c o c ke r w ith long
w h it * h a ir . L o t i In a re a o l
V lnew ood and 13th. 171 411?

25—Special Notices
N e w O tflc a now opening.
VORW ERK
l l l O W . l i t St.

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
B A B Y S IT T IN Q In m y hom e E x
perte n ce d m o th e r, tre e m eets
R ef. g iv e n . J71 4343

Legal Notice
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y ,
F LO R ID A
N O T IC E O F PU B LIC
N E A R IN O
T O W H O M IT AAAY C O N C E R N :
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N b y
to * B o a rd o f A d ju s tm e n t o f to * C ity
o f L a ke M e r y , F lo r Ida. to e t M id
B o a rd w ill h o ld * P u b lic HMrlng e f
4:04 P M . , on W ednesday. N o ve m be r

1, IfU. to:

a ) C o n s id e r • r e q u e il t o r a
v a ria n c e to tn c re a te toe m a x im u m
h e ig h t lim ita tio n fro m t h ir ty liv e toet
(1 3 ') to to rty -a lx p lu s o r m in u s toet
(44 p lu s o r m in u s ), to a llo w ta r toa
co n str u c tion ot c o n d o m ln u m i. In an
a re a to n e d R - l M u ltip le F a m ily
D w e llin g D is tric t, sa id p ro p e rty b e ­
in g s ltu e te In to e C ity e f L a ke M a ry ,
F lo rid a , and d e scrib e d a t ta llo w s :
L o ts I th ro u g h 4 L a ka E n m a E a s t
S u b d ivisio n , as r e co rd e d In P la t Book
17. P a g * IA a t t o * P u b tk R ecords o f
Sem inote C o u n ty , F te r M a i A N D *1*0
to e South » to e t o f toe W est 143 toet
e f to a E a s t 744 to o t e f to * N o rth e a s t
U a n d to a W est 345 to e t o f th e E a s t
744 to e t o f toa N o rth Vs o f toe
N o rth e a s t 1* o ' toa Southeast Vk,
S ection 7, T o w n sh ip 20. R a n g * X ;
m o re c o m m o n ly kn o w n as R in e h a rt
R oad a n d A n d s rso n L a n e, co n ta in in g
4 p lu s o r m in u s a cre s.
T h * P u b lic H e a rin g w ill be h e ld In
to * C ity H a ll. 134 N o rth C o u n try C lu b
R oad, L a ka M a r y , F lo rid a , a t 1:10
P . M , on N o ve m b e r 2. IM J . o r a *
to o n th e re a fte r as possible, a t w h ic h
11m # In te re s te d p a r t ls s f o r a n d
•g a in s t toa re q u e st sta te d a b ove w ill
be h e a rd . S aid h e a rin g m a y be
co n tin u e d fro m tim e to tim e u n til
fin a l a c tio n Is ta k e n b y to e B o a rd o f
This n o lle # sh a ll bo posted In to re *
p u b lk p ie ces w ith in to * C ity o f La ke
Mary. F lo rid a , a t to a C ity H a ll and
p u b lish e d In toa E ve n in g H e ra ld , a
n ew spaper o f g e n e ra l c irc u la tio n In
to * C ity o f L a ko M a ry , o n * t lm * a l
to a s t f lf t e a n d a y s p r io r to th *
o f o r t M ld h o e rin g In a d d itio n . M id
n o fk e s h a ll be posted In to * a r t e to
be con sid e re d e f toast fifte e n deys
p r io r to th# d a te o f p u b lic h e a rin g
A ta p ed re c o rd o t th is m e e tin g Is
m a d * b y to * C ity to r lls convenience.
T h is re c o rd m a y n e t co n s titu te an
adequate re c o rd to r to * purposes o l
a p p e a l fro m a d e cision m a d * b y the
C ity C o m m is sio n w ith re sp e c t to th *
f o r e g o in g m e t i e r . A n y p e rs o n
w is h in g to e n su re to e t an a d tq u a to
re c o rd o f t o * p ro ce e d in g s I t m a in
ta ln e d fo r a p p a l la te p u rp o se s I t
a d vlso d to m a k e to e n e ce ssa ry a rra n g m a n ts a f h it o r h a r ow n expense.
D A T E D : O c to b e r M t f t l
C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y ,
F L O R ID A
/ * / C onnie M a jo r
C ity C le rk
P u b lis h O c to b e r 1 7 ,1M1
O E M 143
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 IIIO N
F ile N u m b e r 13 57t CP
D iv is io n P ro ba te
IN R E i E S T A T E O F
F R A N C E S W . R IS E R .
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Th# o d m ln ls tra tlo n o f Ih * e sta te o l
F R A N C E S W . R IS E R , decoasad.
F ile N o 41 S it C P. I t p e n d in g In to *
C irc u it C o u rt to r S e m ln o i* C ounty,
F lo r id a , P r o b a te O l v l il o n , t h *
ad d re ss o f w h ic h l i C irc u it C o u rt,
P ro b a te D iv is io n , S e m ln o i* C o u nty
C ourthouse. S entord. F L 377)1 Th#
n a m e end a d dress o t to * p e rso n a l
re p re s e n ta tiv e and th * p e rso n a l re p
re te n te llv e 't a tto rn e y e re Ml to rth
b tio w ,
A L L C L A IM S A N O O B JE C T IO N S
N O T SO F IL E D W IL L B E F O R E V EP BARREO
A ll In te re ste d persons e re re q u ire d
lo I I I * w ith th is c o u rt, W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N T H S O F T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N O F T H IS N O T IC E
( I I 411 c la im s a g a in st to * e sta te end
( I I a n y o b je c tio n b y a n in te re s te d
person to w h o m t o l l n o tic e w as
m a ile d th a t ch a lle n g e * toa v a lid ity o l
to * w ill, to * q u e lilk a B a n i o f the
p e rso n a l r e p r tta n la 'lv e , venue, o r
ju ris d ic tio n o f to * c o u rt.
D ate o f Ih * fir s t p v t lk e t lo n o t t o i l
n o tic e o f a d m in is tra tio n O c to b e r 17,
IM J
P arso n a l R e p re s e n ta tiv e :
/ * / D o ro th y S W illia m !
A tto rn e y to r P e rso n a l
R e p re se n ted v e s.
/ * / D o u g la s S te n ttru m , E sq u ire ot
S T E N S T R O M .M c lN T O S H . J U L IA N .
C O L B E R T 4 W H IG M A M . P A
P O B ox I I X
S a n lo rd . F L 31771 I I X
Totophono. (303 ) 311 l l / l
P u b lis h O c to b e r 1 7 .1 4 ,IM J
O E M 104

A L ittle ’ H e m tw o rk ’W e lc h in g
to * W a n t A d i Can B rin g
'T a p G ra d e ' R e tu lli.

55—Business
Opportunities
BE YOUR OWN BOSS

Legal Notice
IN 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. 331444-A-44-0
E O L. H A M M O N D .
P te ln tiN ,
C H A R LE S B, K A S P E R , and
M O B E D IC K A S S O C IA T E S . •
p a rtn e r ship.
D efendants
N O T tC E O F A C T IO N
TO :
C H AR LES B. KASPER
1340 L a M esa B o u le va rd
No. 141
La M o m . C A 42041
M O B E D IC K A SS O C IATES
address u n know n
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D to o t an
action to forecloM a mortgage on tbo,
t a llo w in g p r o p e r t y In S o m ln o iq
C o u nty. F lo rid a :
*■*
L e t 341, W IN T E R S P R IN G S . U N IT
A a cc o rd in g to toa p la t th e re o f a t
re co rd e d In P la t Book IA Pages 4.7 A
4 . P u b lic R a c a rd a a t S a m in o l*
C a u n ty , F lo rid a .
has boon tllo d a g a in st yo u a n d you
• r e re q u ire d to se rve a copy ol yo u r
w ritte n d e te n te *. If a n y , on D A V ID
K E R B E N . P la in tiffs ' a tto rn e y . M l
E . R obinson S t . O rla n d o . F L 12* 01.
on o r b a to r t to * 17th d e y o f N o v ­
e m b e r, IM J , end file t o * o n g m .i
w ith t o t C le rk o f t o ll C o u rt e ith e r
b e fo re te re te * on P la in t if f s a tto rn e y
• r I m m e d ia t e ly t h e r e a f t e r ;
o th e rw is e a d e fa u lt w ill be e n te re d
a g a in s t yo u to r th * r e i k i d e m a n d e d
In to * co m p la in t.
W IT N E S S m y h a n d and too saol o f ‘
to te C o u rt on to * t lt o d a y o t O cto be r.
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , J R .
a t C la rk o f to o C o u rt
B y : J o e n B rllte n t
• I D e p u ty C la rk
P u b lis h O cto be r 17, 34. 11 A N ov
e m b e r 7.1441
D E M 111
N O T IC E O F R E C E IP T O F
A P P L IC A T IO N F O R P E R M IT TO
C O N S T R U C T A IR P O L L U T IO N
SOURCE
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
T h e F lo r id a D e p a r tm e n t o l E n v iro n m e n ta l R e g u la tio n has re ■
ca lve d a p p lic a tio n s fo r p e rm it to |
co n s tru e ! tw o p o ln l sp ra y booths and •
d ry in g o ve n sources o f a ir p o llu tio n . ‘
a t IM I S ilv e r L a ke R oad, S anford. !
F lo r id * . T h a t* a p p lic a tio n s h a ve ■
been s u b m itte d b y R u th H a m p to n 1
In d u s tria l. In c. p u rs u a n t to C h a pte r
17-1, F lo rid a A d m in is tra tiv e Code, o l '
to * d e p a rtm e n t's ru le s re g a rd in g to *
c o n tro l o l e m is s io n s w h ic h m a y
•N e e l too m a in te n a n c e o f N a tio n a l.
A ir Q u a lify Standards.
C o p ie s o f th e a fo re m e n tio n e d
a p p lic a tio n , to a te ch n ic a l a n a ly s is
p e rfo rm e d b y to a d e p a rtm e n t's I t e t f
a n d th a lr p r o p c i. d d e c is io n a r e *
a v a ila b le to r p u b lic in s p e c tio n a t to *
fo llo w in g lo c a l Ion:
T h * S late of F lo rid a
D e p a rtm e n t o f
E n v iro n m e n ta l R e g u la tio n
I f . Johns R iv e r D is tric t
3314 M a g u ire B ou le va rd .
S uite 133
O r U n d o . F lo r Id * 72*03
Persons w is h in g to c o m m o n ! on
a n y aspect o f th is a c tio n a re re q u ire d
to u to m lt th e ir c o m m e n ts In w ritin g • .
to to # ad d re ss above w ith in th ir ty
d a y * o f p u b lic * !! &lt;1 o f t o ll n o lle *
B re n d a Jo in e r
R ush H a m p to n In d u s trie s
- P O . Boa 3300
S entord. F I »7S0
P u b lis h O cto be r 17, IM J
D E M 1 I1

O W N YOUR OWN-1
DKSIONER JEAN AND
SPORTSWEAR STORE
Notional Company off*r»
unlqu* opportunity telling
nationally
advatllsBd
bfands al substantial sav­
ings tc your customers. This
is loi thg fashion minded
Person qualfl*d lo own
ond opgratg mis high pioftl butlngu
520,000.00 Invgitmgnt In­
cludes boginning Inven­
tory, fa tw M , suppllgt. hom ­
ing, grand opening a n d all
tot# 111 pgrson to c o rp o ra l*
training c * n l* r .
FO R BROCHURE A N O
IN F O R M A T IO N
C A U Y O U FREE
1 -R O O -H 1-A 4 5 I

I

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f

.

Jo in In tT S ervice Co. F u ll tra in in g
w /m a n a g e m tn l a u lita n c o . H ljk j
e a rn in g p o te n tia l. E x c lu s iv e ta rt
r lt o r y . U n lim ite d o p p o r tu n ity
a v a il. A m k lt la u i In d iv id u a te
o n ly . C a ll Jo h n W illia m s c a lle d
p e rso n to p e re a n .(llH 7 3 * -3 ll3 . - .
N E W , b a a u t l t u l lea
c re a m /s a n d w ic h shop. E x c e lle n t
S a n fo rd lo c a tio n . C a ll to d a y 331-4411-4 A .M . to 11:44.
T -S H IR T P rin tin g E q u ip m e n t. L tk f
n e w c o n d itio n w it h l u p p l l t l .
T r a i n in g a v a i la b le , 31.430.
1443 7031.
e e e e U R O T IL E x • * a
M an needed to la * rn n ew tra d e I
H ig h p r a llt m a rg in . UT-533J.

I

■

�M—Mortgages Bought
&amp;Sold
• CASH FO R M O R T O A O E S a
W« b u r l l r t l and second m o rtg a g e *
op
hom es. fro m in d iv id u a l*,
b u ild e rs . b ro k e rs , and re a l ts tg te
co m p a nie s W t a lto m ake hom e
ow n er lo a m lo r hom e Im p ro v
m s n t and b ill co n s o lid a tio n . C a ll
u i a n d lo t us m a k e yo u an o ffe r I
B a r b a r a C r a w t o r d JJ J ] t i o
II you c o lle c t p a y m e n ts fro m a llr a l
p r second m o rtg a g e on p ro p e rty
y o u » o ld . w e w i l l b u y th e
n~&lt; Igage yo u a re n o w h o ld in g
7*4 35*4.

7t—Help Wanted

AAA EMPLOYMENT
OUR SERVICE IS M SP
.OUR JOBS ARE GREAT*
IF YOU NEED A JOB
DON'T HESITATE
C L E R IC A L .....------------------- t7 M M a .
B u iln e tt Is g re a t, e m p lo y e r need*
to add to s t a ll U le y o u r s k ills
R E C E P T IO N E S T ________ 1110 M o.

Oganlie, coord'nale and handle
oirtee operation*. Inturance
background helpful
C A S H IE R .................................1 tea M o
Good telephone v o ic e g e ti you a
ip o t In t h lt b u ty co m p a n y . H an
die,cash d ra w e r.
B O O K K E E P E R .................... I7JS M o.
J u a r t e r ly i and p a y r o ll! a m u it.
C b m p u te r I t g o ing In. A |rb
e ve ryo n e w a n ts

323-5176
R O U TE S A L E S .............T O il.S M M o .
E lla b lllh e d ro u te . L o o kin g lo r a
good ita r tT T h lt n a tio n a l c o m ­
p a n y w ill tra in to r c a re e r ip o t.
M AN AO ER/TRAIN EE.....WPS Mo.
R e te ll e xp e rie n c e tg fp lu t T ra in
b e fore h o lid a y !, p ro m o te io o n
a fte r I
IN D U S T R IA L R E L A T IO N S ......M K
O rg a n lte , t u p e r v lie end co o rd l
n a le . I n d u i l r l a l b a c k g r o u n d
needed fo r t h lt tu p e r spot
T R A IN E E S ---------- ------ --------------- S it
L a n d s ca p e rs. p a in te rs , m a c h ln a
ih o p h e lp e r! needed u rg e n tly Be
e m p lo ye d n o w ! P a y w h ile tra in

H
TOO M A N Y T O L IS T
D isco u n t F e e -} Wk t. S ala ry
tiOt F re n c h Ave
ASSEM BLY W ORKERS
L ig h t a ite m b ly w o rk Iro m yo u r
h o m e E x c e lle n t Incom e o p p o r­
tu n ity lo r housew ives. e tc. S ta rt
Im m e d ia te ly . C a ll M a g g ie a t
I.-3 I2 -4 4 4 -I4 I4 . A lt o o p a n

L O O K IN G F O R A T R E A T IN
S T E A D O F A T R IC K T USE O U R
C L A S S IF IE D S .
A von L a d &gt; ti F u ll, p a rt-T im a o ve r
I I . S en lo m . W a ih ln g to n O a k i
M id w a y i G eneva H 5 * ; * S .

CARPENTERSHELPERS
Im m e d la lly a ttlg n m e n lt In San
lo rd a rea

* NEVER A tE E

A b ie s c
Tkwporery Bervtcas
lu e M a y k W ednetday
* it a t » ) »
JC O W M F n tS l (F la jth p B in * BixkJngl
Sank*) 3713940
CARPENTERS H ELP ER
w a n te d . M u t t h a ve e xp e rie n c e .
C a ll a lte r a P N, 377 0 3 0 .________
CARVER
T o te rv e m ee t to o u r c u tlo m e r t a t
b u ffe t ta b le M u tt be r e e l and
e n |o y m e e tin g people. A p p ly 1 lo
a P M a t H o lid a y H o u te R t t la u
ra n i. &lt;200 O rla n d o A ve. H w y
IT W . South o t L a k e M a ry c u to ff.
C A S H IE R S A C L E R K S F u ll A
p a rt tim e openings. G ood p a y
te a le t N o e x p n e c t T f ao»&lt;
C O O K /S A L A D
N e w h e e d c o o k lo o k in g f o r
b re a k fa s t c o o k /ta la d p e t to n .
F /T . E xp . o n ly . F in e d in in g
A p p ly In person M -F , f to 1 P M
D elto n a In n ._____________________
C O U P L E to w o r k a t M a n a g
a r r O p e r a t o r In Ice
C rta m /S a a d w ic h Shop. C a ll to r
a p p o in tm e n t
_______ J7i a a t l. t A M . t o i l .
D e n ia l A ssista n ts F u ll a n d p a rt
lim a . E x p e r ie n c e r e q u ir e d .
E xp a n de d D u ty C e rtific a te nec
e t t a r y . S antord o f fle e . 323 1115.
D IS H W A S H E R
M a lv ra . A p p ly In person M F . * to 5
P .M . D e lto n a I n n _______________
E a rn E x tra M o n e y , P a r t/T lm e
F u ll/T Im e
P r e p a id L e g a l
S ervices C a ll Don. 4712407
F A C T O R Y W O R K E R S Im m e d ia te
openings H ig h w ages. Som e w ill
tr a in C a ll 47* *0*4.______________
F IN A N C E M A N A G E M E N T
CAREERS
A re yo u lo o kin g lo r a c a re e r w h ich
w lil s a llily y o u r n e e d* and
g o a ls ? W e a re In te re s te d In
c a re e r m in d e d a m b itio u s people
T ra in to r m a n a g e m e n t p ositions
In o u r b ra n c h o ffic e . G F C t
b ra n c h m a n a g e r tra ln lh g p ro ­
g ra m o ffe rs a secure fu tu re ,
o u tsta n d in g e m p lo ye e benefits,
a n d c o m p e titiv e s a la ry . EO E
G E N E R A L F IN A N C E
C O R P O R A T IO N
'
2471 O rla n d o D riv e
Food C oncessions M a n a g e rs and
w o rk e rs M a tu re , e xp e rie n c e d
p r e f e r r e d A p p ly F le a w o r ld ,
H w y . 17 « . T h u r s , F r l., S a l, M
P M M l 17*2___________________
F ro n t Desk C le rk w illin g to w o rk 3
lo I I s h ift a n d som e w eekends
A p p ly In p e rto n . H o lid a y In n o f
I r . f r i ort th e la t e h g r t .
H O L ID A Y HOUSE
R e ste u ra n t has p o sitio n s a v a ila b le
f o r C a s h ie r s , H o s te s s e s ,
W aitresses. K itc h e n H elp. Good
o p p o rtu n ity to w o rk w ith peo
p ie .E x p e rie n c e p re le re d A p p ly I
to 4 P .M . 4200 O rie n d o A ve . H w y
17 W. S o t L ik e M a r y c u to tt

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*

SHENANDOAH U
VILLAGE

. 1, 2, 3 B&gt;. Apts., 3 M. T.H.
Front * M O
IS O S W . 2 5 Ut S t

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J o in an e x c itin g te a m . A p p ly K en
tu c k y F rie d C h ic ke n , 2t2» O r­
la n d o A ve . In te rv ie w s lo be held
O ct 74th A JSth, I P M to 4 P .M .
and 6 P M . to 10 P M ________
M A N A O E R T R A IN E E
5 d a y w e e k, s a la ry p lu s co m
m lt t t o n a n d Iw M w rt. P sfohJIa!
a d v a n t s m e n t, h o s p lt a llia t lo n
a n d re tire m e n t. M o il w o rk som e
in n i n g * . A p p ty m p e rso n a t A B C
L iq u o r s , 2111 O r la n d o A v e .,
S entord.
M in im a l d a y c a re h e lp needed lo r
e ld e rly g e n tle m e n , se m i m o b ile ,
e x c e lle n t m in d , re q u ire s to m e
lig h t co o kin g P h 12J3I40 be
Iw e e n ta n d L 445 54*3 e t t t f J: JO
P lease Con ta ct M r . R a th.

10 neat a p p e a rin g , ag g re ssive p e o ­
p le N o e xp e rie n c e needed. W ill
tr a in to r ab o ve a v e rs g e Incom e.
F o r In te rv ie w c a ll J2t 1022
N U R S E S A ID S . E xp e rie n c e p r#
fa re d A p p ly L a k e v le w N u rsin g
C e n te r
S H E . 2nd S treet
O F F IC E H E L P F u ll 1 p a rt tim e
o p e n in g s a v a lle b le n o w . W ill
fu lly tra in . P lio n e 429-4924,
P A C K E R S . Im m e d ia te s ta rt fo r 1st
a n d 2 n d s h ift. H e a v y H tttn g
In vo lve d . A lla m o n lt a re a . A blest
T e m p o ra ry S ervice 331 J*4C
P h y s c la n ’s o tflc e M e d ic a l secre
la r y . to do tra n s c rip tio n and
in su ra n ce . Send re su m e to P .O .
Box 4M0, S entord, F la 22772
4040____________________________
P RO C ESS M A IL A T H O M E I 175 00
p e r h u n d re d ) N o e x p e rie n c e .
P a rt o r f u ll tim e . S ta rt Im m e d i­
a t e ly . D e ta ils se n d t e lf addressed s ta m p e d envelope fo
C .R I. J00, P O Box 45. S tu a ri,
F I. 534*5_______________________
PRO CESS M A IL A T H O M E I V i 00
p e r h u n d re d ! N o e x p e rie n c e .
P a r i o r lu ll lim e . S ta rt Im m e d i­
a t e l y . D e t a i l s , s e n d s e l laddressed sta m p e d envelope lo
C .R .I. iv ) . P .O . B ox 45.
S tu a rt. F M 3 4 1 S ____________ _ _ _ _
S U P E R V IfO R lo r t e ll in g de
p a rlm e n l in n ew g a rm e n t la c io r y . M u s t h a ve e x p e rie n c e In
s e llin g , c o n s tru c tio n o t g a rm e n ts
and be q u a lity cone lo u t S a la ry
co m m e n s u ra te w ith e xp e rie nce .
San D el M a n u fa c tu rin g , 2240 O ld
L a k a M a ry R oad. P I JHO.
TR U C K S D R IV E R S L o ca l &amp; Long
H a u l p o illto n s H ig h w ages. C a ll
to d ay. 47* 40*4.__________________
W anted e xp D e n til A ssls. T e m po
r a r y lu l l tim e p o s itio n . C e ll
331 IQ lO T u th ru F t to I P M
W AREHO USE W ORKERS M any
openings, f u ll lim e , good s ta rtin g
p a y . C a ll Im m a d la ta ly . 42* 4044

73— E m p lo y m en t
W a n te d
E x c . Sac. lo r a ve n ln g /w e e k e n d
w o rk . C a ll 322 4744 a fte r 4 P .M .
o r w eekends

91—Apartments/
House to Share
M a le o v e r 40. sh a re w ith sam e
H ew tu rn ith e d h o m e w ith pool
1240 4 m o n th p lu s a d e p ot It.
In c lu d e s u fllllle s In S an fo rd
321 0544

t*
S A N F O R D F u rn is h e d ro o m s b y the
w eek. R easonable ra te s. M ale
se rv ic e c a te rin g to w o rk in g peo
pie. 323 4507, too P a lm e tto A ve.
S A N F O R D . Reas, w e e k ly A M on
th ly ra te s. U t il In c. e tf. 500 O ak
A d u lts 1141 7*43.

323 -2 9 2 0
4 1 2 0 S. ORLANDO DRIVt
SANfORO
—

REALTOR
p p t

© N E . WAY JO IMPROVE tR E lR R A T IN G *
C ^Ae««A*^ tsanetm

ttv rw

/ |? » /7

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
F u rn . A pts, to r Senior C tilie n s
311 P a lm e tto A ve .
J . C ow an. N o P h o re C alls.
L o v e ly 1 b d rm . c o tta g e . C om plete
p riv a c y , n e rrity d u tora la -J. S Ji •
w eek, p lu s 1200 te c dep. 323 734*
o r M 3 1401_______________________
I B d rm . e ffic ie n c y , p a tio , A /C .
534* r * e P h J M 7200
Sav On Rentals Inc. Realter

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
A p t. lo r re n t to r e ld a rly couple. 1
B d rm .. c e n tra l A /H . C a ll be
tw e e n !A M . t o 4 P M 372 5732
B A M BOO C O V E A P TS
300 E . A irp o rt B lv d . Ph. 323 4430
E ffic ie n c y , fro m 1235 M o 5 V
d isco u n t to r S enior C ltlre n s
LU XU R YAPAR TM EN TS
F a m ily A A d u lts section. P oolside.
1 B d r m i. M a tte r C ove A pts
323 TWO
________ O pen on w eekends.________
M a rin e r's V illa g e on L a ke A d a . 1
b d rm fro m 1275. 2 b d rm fro m
IM S . L o ca te d 17-92 ju s t south of
A irp o rt B lv d . In S anford A ll
A d u lts . 223 *47 0 _________________
e M a llo n v life T ra c e A pts, e
U n fu rn ish e d 2 b d rm . Spacious A p l,
W a lk To L a ke F ro n t. No P ets.
1325 P h 731 3X13_________________
N E W t A 2 B ed ro o m s. A d ja c e n t to
L a k e M o n ro e . H e a lth C lu b .
R a cq u e tb a ll and M o re I
S an to rd L e n d in g S R. 44 M U 2 2 0
R ID G E W O O D A R M S A P T S .'
2510 R idgew ood A ve . P h.M 3 A420
l . l A l B d r m i . fro m 1300.
1 B d rm . a p p lia n c e s, c a rp o rt, it o a
W k. F a e P h 33* 7300
la v -O n -R e n ta ls la c . R eel lo r
1 B d rm . A /C , pool. I2«5 M o Fee P h
33* 7200
Sav-On- Rental Inc. Realter.
1/2 B d rm . A p a rtm e n t
N e w , re m o de le d. A d u lt i o n ly , not
p e ts Sa x * o m o p lus s e c u rity .
43* COBS o r 444 1417 o r 14* 54*4.
2 B d rm .. u p s ta irs A d u lts o n ly . 1375
p lu s 1130 d a m a g e leu. 4 3 1 -IU t
M r. B a rb e r o r i l l 4 1 7 * __________

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
3 B d rm . k id s , c a rp o rt, fen ce d y a rd
1410 M o Fee Ph. 13* 7200
S e v -O fi-R in te li In c . R e a lto r
3 S . d r s o m . I t s B e t i i, f u l l y
ca rp e te d , p e a c e fu lly
n e ig h borhood laCO p e r m o n th ,
t w o S e c u rity D e p osit. 122 1/54
4 B d rm ., 1W B a th , liv in g ro o m A
fa m ily ro o m , w a ll to w a ll c a rp a l.
I tric e d y a rd , a p p lia n c e s. 1400 e
m o. p lu s d e p osit. M I-3010.

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
S a n fc rd D u p le x 1 B d rm , I B ath ,
c a rp o rt, la u n d ry ro o m , c e n tra l
A /C , k itc h e n e q u ip ., c a rp e t,
d ra p e s. 2424 L a ke A ve UOOStS

117—Commercial
Rentals
S an to rd In d u s tria l P a rk
12.000 Sq F I. b u ild in g . 1,000 Sq F t.
sp e c * , 4 re stro o m s. 400 A M P
se rv ic e , to n e d m a n u fa c tu rin g o r
w a re h ou sin g . N ew B u ild in g F o r
d e ta ils , c a ll M J 1330._____________
W arehousing lo r L e a s*. 7C.OOO Sq.
F I., deck h e ig h t, h e a vy p o w er,
M l to n in g , ( In d u s tria l), Includes
e lllc e s , p a r k in g , a n d la n c a d
ra ilro a d s lt t on p ro m ise s . A lso .
1 4 ,* 0 1 S q . F t . a v a l l a b l a .
B t a u t i lv ll y la n d s c a p e d . C a ll
322- t i l l ask to r M a x in e .

127—Office Rentals
~ T H E M E R C A N T IL E B U IL D IN G
B O B M B A L L JR P A .
R E A L T O R 323 4111

141—Homes For Sale
BATEMAN REALTY
L k . R eal E s ta te B ro k e r
2440 S a n fo rd A ve
L E A S E O P T I O N . 4 / 1 , n ic e
ne ig h b o rh oo d . S44.*00.

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Renf
L a ke A la ry , H id d e n L a ke V illa .
N ew . 2 b d rm , 3 b a th , g a ra g e , no
pels. 1475 P h i l * 7411___________
3 B d rm . I B . C H A . c a rp e te d .
A d u lts . N o pets 1170 p er m o.
323 730*._________________________
J B d rm . C /H /A , Inside u t il/ r m .
Fenced y a rd , e a t In k lic h e n , no
p a ll . ll * 3 a m o 3231111_________
J B d rm house w ith w asher and
d ry e r. N ice n e ig hborhood. 1410 a
m o n th C a ll JM l4 4 f.

SRMIMOLR WOODS. S acres. Mgh

A cco u n tin g and T a x S e rv ic e ! No
b w il a e i i te la r g e e r s m a ll.
. P fe tji-ia e e .

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
itmodtfini SfwcWtJt
We h a n dle The
W hole B a ll o f W ax

B.LUflh Const
372-7079
’

rin a n c tn g A v a ila b le

* Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
a O IL H E A T I R e
C L E A N IN G A N D S E R V IC IN G

cotiiu&gt;ph.«t-*m.

M % D is co u n t On A ll R e p a b i
F a r W ln d e w A ir C o n ditio n # . s
One D a y S ervice PR 177-1431.

Automotive
: m On JUI FofiptCin
Repairs. October Orly.
• M i j o r i m f M in o r W o d

277 1631
Bookkeeping
W e 'll d o yo u r b ooks o n o u r com
p p le r to r a t lit t le M 130 a m o n th .
R eceive m o n th ly t r a il b a la n ce
Wsd it a te m e n ti w ith p m f ll ce n te r
l l d e sire d O th e r re p o rt! a v a il
C a ll G a ll 323 * 744

; Cleaning Service
A M »n e y B ack O e n ra n io e l
K an M aiden le u th e m M a id Ser
■ e a d /ta s o r. M a id 4«4-«*7d
P A R AAAID S E R V IC E S
lava you h u d yo u r hom o cleaned
l a t e l y ? C le a n in g w i t h th e
p e rso n a l to u ch . M 7 -0 IIJ . 4 7 1 4 l l t .

E L E C T R I C A L R E P A IR S . N o
s a r v lc a c h a r g e , r e a s o n a b le
h o u rly ro te s. F re e e s tim a te on
n e w e le c tr ic a l w o rk S e rv in g
C o n tro l F lo rid a lo r o v e r 30 years
V IH L E N E L E C T R IC . Ph M l

A A J L a n dsca p in g
C om p le ts L a w n M a in te n a n c e
M io a t

Landscaping

B y O w n e r, n e w V illa hom e In
H id d e n Lakes. 1 b d rm , 3 b o th,
.la rg e lo t. 1 c a r g a ra g a . 110.300
114,100 to assum e. P a y m e n t U t l
m o . 221-4717._____________________
B y o w n e r , H id d e n L a k e , t 2 *
B o ra d o R oad. 3 b d rm , 3 b a th ,
w oodad lo t. le ra a o a d /g u m , 2 c a r
g a ra g a , la rg e k itc h e n . 142.T O Ph
M I-4727_________________________

Lawn Service

C O L L IE R 'S H O M E R E P A IR S
c a r p e n tr y , r e e lin g , p a in tin g .
w in d o w re p a ir. M l -4 0 3 __________

A L L YOU N E E D IS U !
123 « * 7
C ro c k e tt A W a te rs L a w n S ervice
K IN O A SONS L A W N S E R V IC E
E a rly F a ll Clean U p. 1M S pecial
F a r A n y A v e ra g e Y a rd , 1452*34.
L A M L a w s C are S ervice
M o w , edge. t r im , a n d h a u l. C on ta ct
Lae o r M a r k . M l 1147 o r 331*144
W A D L A W N S E R V IC E .
M o w in g , e d g in g .ta rt 1111 In g .
F re e e s tim a te s . P h 332-0744

W M P L m CONSTRUCTION

Masonry

Health &amp; Boauty
T O W E R S B E A U T T S ALO N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie t t 's B e a u ty
N ook. I t * E . 1st S t. 322 5743

Home Improvement

No |ob lo s m a ll. M in o r A m e |o r
re p a irs . L icensed A bonded
_____________M l 4171______________
P A R T N E R S . R o o fin g re p 4 lr.p a in t
lo g . re m o d e lin g e n d a d d It Ions
Free E li C a ll E ve s J210IO4.

B E A L C o n c ra lt I m a n q u a lity
o p e ra tio n . P a tio s , d riv e w a y s .
P a y s l i t T i l l E ve s. M 7 IM 1.
S W IF T C O N C R E T E . F o o le r s ,
d riv e w a y s , pads, flo o rs , pools.
C h a t! Stone F re e E s t/1 2 1 7HO

Home Repairs

Nursing Care

A u s tin 's M a in te n a n c e C a rp e n try,
p lu m b in g p a in tin g , m a s o n ry .
tp rln k le rw ro m o d e lln g 3 2 M 7 0 I.
C a rp e n try a lte ra tio n s , g u tte r w o rk ,
p a in tin g , sid in g , porch e s, p sflo s.
e tc. A sk lo r A r t H u b b le .
i m P ric e s ! I 53117P

OUW R A T E S A R E LO W E R
L a k e v le w N u rs in g C anter
f i t E . Second S I., S an to rd
121-4707

M a in te n a n c e o t a ll typ e s
C a rp e n try , p o in tin g , p lu m b in g .
________ A e le c tric M l 4074_______
N o |o b to o s m a ll H o m e re p a irs ond
re m o d e lin g . 25 Y e a rs e xp e rie nce
C e ll m *441

Interior Decorating
C u sto m D ra p e rle s -'V e rllc o ls
A F F O R D A B L E P R IC E S
S ha ro n 's C re a tio n s 471055J

D o e * Y o u r O M O r N ew R oof L e a k?
II It does, c a ll D a v id Lee
_____________ 3214451_____________
Root M a in te na n ce
R e p a ir w o rk N e w w o rk
T ro y o r G eorge lo r F re e E st.
___________ 303 3454440.___________

SOUTHERN C H AR M . U rg e 2
f ie r y , 4 b d rm . 2V1 b a th b a m *.
W / c e u n t r y k l t c b e n l F a m ily
re a m I B ric k fire p la c e In m e s ta r
h d r m l F o r m a l d in in g re a m !
C o m m e rc ia l te n ln g l e x te n s iv e ly
remedied! 50,501. 'A

Painting
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
H em e tm p re v e m e n t
P a in tin g . C a rp a n try ,
S m a ll R e p airs
11 Y e a rs Ic p e rk s n c e . I152441,
• • F R E E E S T IM A T E # *
Rhodes P a in tin g A ll T y p e !
11 Y r v E x p . K H r . Phone M l a r i l

Plastering/Dry Wall
ALlTTTaieTTrTiaTferTng
P la s te rin g re p a ir. Stucco, h a rd
co le , s im u la te d b rlc A . M l iW

V

M R O O F IN O tl

SEM IN O LE ROOFINO

H ID O E M

LAKE:

J bedroom.

C O U N T R Y L I V I S ! L a t IH bast In
te w n l J la rg e b d rm . I S p a rk lin g
pool I 17 f r u it tre e s ! on a p p ro x Vs
a c re e a rn e r t a ll C edar a n d c itru s
th re u g h o u ti V a ry p riv a te and
ta n cad I O n ly U1.544

b a th, CB S tucco w ith w ood t r im .
B rig h t, c h e e ry e a t In k lfc lw n .
C overed p a tio , fen ce d b a ch y a rd .
U * ,* w .
______________1 3 1 - 0 0 4 1 ______
LARG E 3 BR. O LD E R HOM E
In S uper Shepe L a rg e lo t, q u ie t
lo c a t io n . In c lu d e s s e p a ra te s
g a ra g e /s h o p . 141.100 w ith o w n e r
fin a n c in g 11.000 dow n, balance.
S M t 34 f o r 11 y rs . * t 11%.

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R _________________222-74*1
M a rk h a m W ood* Rd. R avensbrook
4 B d rm ., 3 B . B y o w n e r w ith
o w n e r fin a n c in g . 221-t i l l , ________
M a y fa ir P ool H om e.
40's A ssu m a b le 1IVk% M tg
___
M l 0411 o r 322 2110
P A O L A . 2 /2 . C / H / A , S a c r e
U k e fro n l. ITf.fOO. W a lla c e Cress
R e a lty In c. 223-50*2.
R IG H T ON L A K E M O N R O E .
F is h in g p la r. L a rg e screened pool
a n d p a tio , w ith 3 b d rm . I t s b a th .
A ll o v e rlo o k in g the la k e O w n e r
fin a n c in g . 1*1.000. C a ll C h a rlo tte
C ro slyn . W a ll St. C o m p a n y, R»
a lte rs . M t-1001 o r 331 *071
S A N FO R O R EA LTY
REALTO R
123 SM4
A lt. H r * M l 4 *1 4 ,3Z14141

STEMPERAGENCY INC.
F IR S T T IM E O F F E R E D I
T h e re 's ro o m to sp re a d c u t In th is a
or.. 2 B . hom e, lo ca ted on q u ie t
c u t de sac. M a je s tic oaks g iv e
c o u n try ta e l Ing. Y ou sh o u ld see
th ls l 145,500.
P rid e a t O w n e rs h ip shows In th is 3
B r., 2 B . d o ilh o u ta . n ear h ig h
sch o o l a n d s h o p p in g . R e a d s
t k e lly p ric e d a t lii.0 0 0
N e w ly lls c e n te d A e x p e r. f u ll lim e
re a l e state sa le sm e n needed.
K « A L T O A » a W t _______ U

STENSTROM
REALTY • REALTORS
Sanford’s Saits Leader
W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E HOM ES T H A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN IO L E C O U N TY

S U P E R , I b d rm . I b a th h e m * In
Sun la n d . C o m p U te ly re m e ld la d ,
on a la rg e fenced U t. A ll new
fix tu r e !. C /H /A . W /W /C . d e c o r*
w a ll p a p e r a n d | u t t p a in te d .
HUN.
S O U T H E R N C H A R M . 4 b d rm , 1
b a th, 3 sto ry ro m o ld lo d h e m *
w lt b lo ts *1 e it r a s , C / H / A ,
W /W /C flre p U c a . e a t In k lic h a n .
D /R . s p lit p U a a n d m o th a r inU w q w a rta rs. 1143*0.
P O O L AM O P A T IO . J b d rm . 1
b a th.p o o l h o rn * w ith fu lly e q p t.
k lic h a n . fa n c o d y a rd , p e d d la
f a a i, u t il it y shad a n d m e n .
I l l AM.
L O V E L Y , 3 b d rm , 3 b a th h o rn * In
S a n e r* a n a la n d sc a p e d U t.
N e w ly p a in te d , s p lit p la n , D /R .
F /R , ta lly a q p t. o a t In k itc h a n ,
C /H /A . W /W /C . flra p U c e . lanced
y a rd and m o re . 17S.1M.
B E A U T IF U L ) b d rm , IW b a th ,
b ric k hem e en I a cre . C o u n try
k itch e n w ith m ic ro w a v e . S p lit
p la n , J w a y b r ic k fir e p la c e ,
s p a c l e u s m a i l e r s u it e a n d
d re s s in g a re a . F / F , screened
p e rch and m e re . H U N

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners

WE N EED LISTINGS

CALLANYTIME

S E W IN O M A C H IN E . J 'J sag. i l l
m e t a l . G u a r a n t a a d 1 4 * .0 0 .
S e m in o le S a w in g . I7 -*1 L a k a
M a r y B lv d W in n O lxta C anter
_____________ m e a n .
V A C U U M C L E A N E R ) E le c tro lu x ,
n e w , g u a ra n te e d 14* OO
S em inole V ac I 17*3 a n d L a ke
M e r y B lv d W in n D ix ie C e n te r.

__________ 3404 H W Y 17*2__________

Secretarial Service
R esum e and C o ve r L e tte r
P re p a ra tio n . G e n e ra l T y p in g and

bookkeeping Hl-2413.

323-5774
INLAND

REALTY,
W E H A V E R U Y E R S It
W E N E E D L IS T IN G S It

jm a ,

Swimming Pool Service
S U N S H IN E P O O L S E R V IC E
W ill m a in ta in y o u r p o o l In to p
co n d itio n , p riv a te o r c o m m a r
c u t . P h. 322 4547 S unshine P ool
S e rv ic e , i l l M e llo n v llla A ve
S antord F t. M771.

Tree Service
JO H N A L L E N L A W N A T R E E
A n y k in d o f T ra * ta r v tc a .
W e do m o t I a n y th in g . 331-SIR*.
L e vs I C re d it an Qaed W aadl
JA C K S O N T R E E S E R V IC E
to Y rs E x p e rt*e r e TB M I11.
T rt C ounty T re e S ervice
T rim , re m o ve , tra s h h a u lin g
tir e wood, tre e o st. 323 *410

323-3145

322-2420
3 B d rm D o ll H ouse. A tfe rd a b U
m o n th ly p a ym e n ts C a ll o w n e r
tv o k x r salesm an M l l t l l .
a U N D E R P R IC E D a
147,100. 3 B d rm . I Vs B a th . M o ve In
c o n d itio n . C a ll &lt;or a p p o in tm e n t
B ro k e r 323 4441 o r 1 7154313.

A Tter H o u rs 223 3321
________ 311-4733 * r 233-3e&gt;7________

I

K e uF x xea n sw
FOR A L L YOUR
R E A L ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
S 4»w . L a k a M a r y B lv d
S u it* a
L a ke M a r y . F la . 327x4
D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E

1 ACRE TRACTS OENEVA
A R E A . E a st a t S antord. Soma an
h a rd su rfa c e re a d . J0% dow n.
C lo s in g In M d a y s . I t Y e a r
m o rtg a g e , a t 11% In te ra ct. C a ll
U r d e ta ils a n d In s p e d U n .

CALLANYTIME
3541S. P a rk

322-2420
155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
S andlew ood b y o w n e r. 1 B d r.
1 b ih , c a r p e t, l u l l k i t c h e n ,
w e s h e r / d r y t r , A /C . p o o l end
m e ln t., 124,100.123 1047
a fte r 5 ,3M *442

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S IN C .
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 F R
F E A T U R IN G
P a lm B a tc h V illa
G ree n le a l
P a lm S prin g s
P a lm M a n o r
Siesta K e y
V A F H A F in a n c in g . 305 3251200
N ew H om es s ta rtin g a t U ** 1 . E asy
c re d it a n d lo w dow n. U n cle R oys.
Lee sb u rg US. 441 *04 7W BM 4.
R E S A L E S ( F a m ily P a rk )
12X40 N lc a l 111.100
24X52 Spacious 1111.500.
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S IN C .
____________ 301 323 1700____________

159—Real Estate
Wanted
PRIVATE INVESTOR

WANTING TO W T
MULTI FAMILY UNITS
NO REALTORS
CALL 323-2269.
lo r J B E D R O O M H O U SE
Y our P R Ite , M Y TERM S
323 4411.

H I—Country
Property / Sale
COUNTRY LIY'NO
to t on p riv a te ro a d n e a r S I,
R iv e r. 30544* 40)4__________

A P P L IA N C E S , R E P O S S E S S E D ,
re co n d itio n e d , fre ig h t dam a g e d ,
F ro m 1*1 U p G u a ra n te e d .
N e a rly N ew . 217 E . I t ! St. 322 7450
C a sh f o r g o o d use d f u r n itu r e .
L a r r y 's N e w A U sed F u rn itu re
M a r t. 315 S an to rd A ve . 3M 41M
K e n m o re p a rts , sa rv lc a .
used w e sh a r*. 221 Oat7
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
L tr g * U p rig h t F re e ie r
G ood C o n d itio n . 1150.
____________ 143 4*44____________
S ID E B Y S ID E K E N M O R E re trig
• r a to r , 3 y rs . o ld . E x . C o n ditio n .
M i l o r best o tU r. F u ll M a ttre s s ,
b o x sp rin g s, h e a d b o a rd A fra m e ,
n e ve r used. 175. C a ll 225 « *I7 ,
W IL S O N M A I E R F U R N IT U R E
3 t lU S E . F IR S T ST.
______________222 5422 ____________
2 Y e a r o ld 11-2 u p rig h t tre e ta r .
1300. Gas g r ill used 5 tim e s , 1150.
E th a n A lla n d re s s in g ta b ta .
1125 00 S tereo 150 221-4727.
3 p la c e b e d ro o m s u it. W a ln u t
fin is h , bookcase, h e a db o a rd w ith
tu tl tir e , Ilk * new m e ttre s * set.
5140 C a ll * t o * P .M . 322 52*1

183—Television /
Radio /Stereo
T E L E V IS IO N • Z E N IT H 2 5 " C o lo r
T V In W a ln u t Consol# O rig in a l
P ric e , o v e r 1700 B a la n ce due
12*5. C ash o r ta k e up p e y m e n ts
o t S30 00 m o n th . N o M o n e y dow n.
S till tn w a rra n ty . F r a * H o rn *
^ r ia H n o c 6 i^ a tto m * * 5 D * ^ _

B E A U T IF U L S H A D E T R E E S ,
h ig h lig h ts 1/1 w ith U m lly ro a m .
E n c le ia d p o rc h lx .ic e d b a ch
y a rd w ith s p e c * ta r t e r tia n ,
g ro a t U r r e t ir e * * H ig h 41'*.

321-5005

217—Garage Sales
O A R A O E S A L E S3,
f r ld e y s t 1 P .M
F L E A W O R L D -H w * . t? -F l
D a rg ln s A F u n -B u y in g A S ailin g ,
441 17*1
A L ittle 'H o m e w e rk 'W a tc h in g
th * W a n ! A ds Can B rin g
• t a p e r e d * ' R e su lts

219—Wanted to Buy
B a b y Beds, S h e lto n . C e n ta ls ,
P la y p e n s , E t c . P a p a r b a c k
B eaks. 3 334377123*1*4__________
Paying CASH for Aluminum. Can*.
C o p pe r, B ra ** . L e a d. N e w sp a ­
p e r, G lass. G old, SHver.
K oko m o T o o l. *1 1 W . Is)
1-4:30 Sat. *-12351190m u im iiiin u
F l i n t * W a n t-A d
_______A nd H a rv e s t D H U n l_______
W E B U Y A N T IQ U E S
F U R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C E S
______________i n m o ______________

221—Good Things

to Eat
G et th e " C re a m O tth a C re p t"
The S e a tM l B ast B uys A r t
_________ I n t o * W a n t A d st_________

223—Miscellaneous
C o m p le te |# w # lry c a s tin g e q p t.
E v e ry th in g lo r t h * p ro I
54*5701_____________
H e re ! T h e re 's 'N o L lm lT en
th * B a rg a in s Y o u 'll 'B a g ' It's
Easy U P U c * a W A N T A D P H O N E 323-2411.________________ _
L ik e n e w , 1*13 A r l a n s r i d in g
U w n m o w e r, IS t-o., 3 2 " b la d e ,
e le c tric it e r l . U n d e r w a rra n ty .
P ric e l* * 5 . C a ll 22245«a._________
M od a l 1400. C o d * * P hone. 30
M essage cap. R e m o te C o m m a n d .
__________ *10 00 322 7*42__________
N C W J U N G L E BOOTS t t J . f * P r.
A R M Y N A V Y S U R P LU S
310 S an to rd A ve.___________ 222-57*1
R e a lto r's A tte n tio n : T o m H o p kin s
L is tin g Tapes N e ve r used.
158.14* 1701.___________
R e lr lg / F r n e t e r . 22 C u b ic F o o t,
W h it* *75 M ay lin e D ra ftin g
ta b le and stand 141________________
S E W I N G M A C H IN E . S I N O E R
F U T U R A . Ilk a n e w . o n e o f
S in g e r'* Top M o d e ls. A ll S tltc fw i
b u ilt In. Sold n ew o v e r *700. M u s t
s a c rific e to r *201 K o r Assum e
t t l M o n th ly p a y m e n ts . W ill la k e
tra d # as p a rt p a ym e n t. F ro #
hom e T r ia l. C a ll a*7 52*4.
___________ D a y o r N it* .
V ffT Used O ld t T ro m b o ne .
Good co n d itio n .
*100 C a ll 12341)0. A sk to r C in d y.
W * b u y t u m lt u r a , a n tiq u e s o r
a cce pt c o n s ig n m e n t* to r A u c tio n .
F U T ra d e r A u c tio n &gt;3* 31W.
S u m m e r t i m e |$ P a n n i n g
O u t......B u t a n y tim e I t C la s sifie d
T im * I C a ll U t N ow

231-Cirs
B e d C re d lt?
No C re d it?
W E F IN A N C E
N o C re d it C h e ck-E a sy T e rm *
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A LE S
1130 S. S an to rd A ve .
331 *075____
D a b a r y A u to A M a r in e S ale s
• c re a t tfw r iv a r Sep o t h ill 174
H w y 17-01 f l j b j f l 4480144_______
K ID D Y 'S K A R S A LE S
Q u a lity Used C ars A T ra c k s
1177*. l* * M r U A v » . 325-i55t
M e r c u ry G ra n d M a rq u is . 71, 2
d o o r, lu ll p o w e r, a ir , stereo
*2100 223 lie * .___________________
1*70 V .W . V o n , som e ru s t, ru n *
g r e a t , 30,000 m l. o n a n g in a
o v e rh a u l 11.000. P h 5*9500*.
1*71 C O R D O B A
C U a n. L a w M ile s , W V B r e .
A ll F e w e r *1.444.
_______Ca ll 331 )444 A tta r 5.
1*14 C H E V E T T E . 4 c y l, a ir .
a u to /tra n s . m a g w heels, tin te d
w in d o w s. 400 w a tt ste re o syste m .
A s k in g S3.500. P h 323 0577 o r
B31015C. A sk to r Joe._____________
tM 0 P o n tia c F ire b ird .
A u to . A ir , S tereo.
___________ C e ll 231 IM S .___________
7 2 F o rd L T D Good c o n d itio n .
*1.000 o r b a st Oder.
____________ P h 3257*70.____________
‘ 7* A U D I A 7 ) L T D
O w n e r h a * too m a n y c a rs I
M U S t S E L L . 32T-OCO*.
7 * F o rd S ta tio n W agon P /S , P /B ,
a ir , a u to h e n s , r e d h e a le r.
*150 Good, c le a r 'L in in g c a r.
034 4405 o r 22* *100
*4 M o n te C a rle . Leaded, b u ck e t
seats, b lu e w ith m a tc h in g In te r i­
o r . E x t r a n lc e l 74 M a rc w ry
M a rq u is 1 d r ., s m a ll V-B. A /T .
P /S . A /C P /B , A M /F M r h n o . 7*
Toyeta P ic k u p 4 c y l., std I r a n i ,
ra d io , to p p e r. E rn U Jack te n
A u to S a U t u t i m

239— M o to rc y c le s/ B ik e s
H onda CAA400 A lm o s t new s till
u n d er w a rra n ty O n ly 3700 m ile s .
*1200 In c lu d e * h e lm e t a n d ra in
g e a r C a ll 327 M J t o tte r « P JW

187—Sporting Goods

1M0 H onda X R 300. S tre et o r d ir t,
a c c e t In clu de d t*0 0 P h 3 4 * 500*
G aneva

W a lk e r h u n tin g dogs
F R E E It
P h o n e rn 2 4 *0 a f t e r * P M

I M 0 Y a m a h a XSB50CC S h a ft d riv e
V a ry c le a n 11500 o r b e sl o tte r.
225 5044

193—Lawn &amp; Garden

243-Junk Cars

C Y P B E S S M U L C H FO R S A LE
B A D S iw m lll
P e rl at S aatord 22542*1
F IL L D IR T A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W S AN D
C la rk A H lr t 323 7540.22] 2*23

B U Y J U N K C AR S A T R U C K S
F ro m *14 to *30 o r m a re .
C a ll 5 0 1424 325 4312
TO P D o lla r P a id to r J u n k A U sed
ca rs , tru c k * A h e a v y e q u ip m e n t.
_____________ 223 M M _____________
W E P A Y TO P D O L L A R FOR
J U N K C AR S A N D T R U C K S .
CBS A U T O P A R T S 2*3 4585.

m l S. P a rk

UNDER IL 444 00 WN

INC.JB REALTY WORLD.

REALTORS

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

F H A V A S P E C IA L C M t ^ a b l a
a n d a tte rd a b ia 3 b d rm , 1Ve b a th
hom e, w /la rg a lanced y a rd and
screened p o rch I Good le c a tle n l
C a ll us q u ic k I M 7 .5 M .

R e R oo fs.N e w fio o ls .R o o t R e p a irs
F re e E s tim a te s P h 322 4 5 -*

REALTY •

&gt;

JU S T S T A R T IN O U T . N ice 1 b d rm .
t b a th h e m * w ith a paneled
f a m ily re a m , C /H /A , e a t In
k itc h e n . D /R , n ic e ly landscaped
w ith g a rd e n . 14*300,

Roofing

H it I'm A r f H u b ble
I do b e a u tifu l w o rk . I do new ro o fs,
ro o f leaks. I re p la c e o r re p a ir
v a lle y s , ro o ts ve n ts, e tc. I w ill
save you m oney I 323 1713.________

G R E E N B R IA R : L o ve ly w e ll ka p t 1
b e d ro o m . 1 b a th hem e n e a r G e lt
C ourse. P eel, scre e n ed p a lm .
m ,* o a .

321-0759 Eve 322-7643

D R E 4 M H O M E IN C O U N T R Y I
l u l l Ilk a n o w , 2 s to ry , 4 b d rm . 2
b ath, w /c u s to m ce dar
t h r e u f h a u l l P lu s h c a r p a t l
s p a rk lin g p o o l! J pad dle la n il
la r g e shade fre e s and e l tru s t 2
g a r a g e s a n d F la . r m . t e a l
U i,* W .

Landclearing
L A N D C L E A R IN G . F IL L D IR T ,
C LA Y A SHALE.
3M1423

M IN T C O N D IT IO N : B ea u ty and
q u a lity abound In th is J b e d ro om ,
1 b a th h e m * . W ood A beam
c e ilin g s , q u e ry tile A h a rd w oo d
flo o rs , flre p U c a . la r g e , lo v e ly
le t. ltS .seo.

e n d d r y , b e a u t if u lly w o o d e d
c o r n e r , u n b e lie v a b le , t lf . 5 0 0

B y o w n e r s e k o r lease. 3 B d rm .
m B ,C n t / H / A . g a ra g e . L o w
d o w n A a s s u m e m o rtg a g e .
13*. 100 O w n e r Is R e a lto r Assoc.
323 4743,

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

Electrical

ST. JO H N S R lv t r . 2W a c re p a rc e l*.
w ith r iv e r •C (ev&lt; ( M y 4 U N
S ta rtin g Stt.100 . P u b lic w a te r, 23
— •».
a
r * fin a n c in g , n o q u a lify in g
lu h e r. 4 M -4 U J

STENSTROM

2523 S. FRENCH AVE.
^

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Q u a lity E M e tric a l S ervice
Fans, tim e rs , s e c u rity llte s . o d d l
lio n s , n e w s e rv ic e s , In su re d .
M a tte r E le c tric ia n Ja m e s P aul.
______________ 225755*

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

i ( K A i ; 'i i s T v n ■

CONSULT OUR

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service

S a le b y O w n e r. L e n g w o o d . 3
B d rm ., 2 B a th . l / R . D /R , F a m i­
ly R oom w ith fire p la c e , po o l, a n d
r m x h r r v ir t 1 t; , 000 t i l 0*0)

S

j\is ir

■

* ★ ★ *

93—Rooms for Rent

• lU l ll U t RUCOMt
•o m s fc ro o i
• ru T c n tm o
*C U /I NOW?

c u t file d R esults W ill W in
Y e w V o lt E v e ry T lm a l
_ * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
E X T R A la rg e 1 sto ry C o lo n ia l on 1
a c re e l O ak tre e s A ll th e a m e n i­
tie s p lu s g u e it a p t Best lo ca le .
S200,000. W M . M A L IC J O W S K I
R E A L T O R 3 2 5 7 m _____________
F o r re n t w ith o p tio n to b u y , o r s a l*
b y o w n er. 3 B e d ro o m . I b a th ,
c e n tra l a ir a n d h e a t, c a rp e t.
A r i r i a r w r b ta n g e rin e A v e ,
o ft R l, 427,

A V O N C H R IS T M A S W O W II
S T A R T S E lL IH G N O V .ll
321-041* o r 22M S SI

NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY1

M onday, O ct. 17, 1W 3-11A

141—Homes For Sale
141—Homes For Sate

X&amp;Tt ft Family

S a c t io n t
• W / D C o n n a c t lo n *
• C o b le T V , P o o l
• S h o rt T e rm L e a te t
A v a ila b le

71— H e lp W a n te d

A uto P a rti/C o u n ta r P erson. E xp e ­
r ie n c e p r e le r e d , t i e r ! I m ­
m e d ia c y . G ood p a y A b t m lllt i.
A p p ly In P a r to n
P a r t ta t y . a 0 1 W . M t h

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
* V

E vening H e ra ld , S antord, FI.

71-Help Wanted

307—Swap Corner
H a * F a ll Heusac le a n ing
T u rn e d U p S urplu s Things
W a a t A d W ill T u rk T a C a rt?

YAMAHA

211—Antiques/
Collectables

OF SEMINOLE

F u rn itu re a n d re p a ir, s h ip p in g end
re ltn ls n ln g . s ta in in g , a n tiq u e s a
ic r o x l lt y , 3214*13

SECA 550 J

313—Auctions

SECA 750 H

F O R E S T A T E C o m m e rc ia l o r
R e s id e n tia l A u c tio n * A A p p ra la
a l* C a ll D e ll's A u c tio n 323 1430
FO R E S T A T E o r C O M M E R C IA L
A U C T IO N S C a ll A l A U C T IO N
S E R V IC E 323it * e _______________

215—Boats/Accessories

“DAYTONA'S BEST"
* 1 8 9 5 00§
&gt;159500

MAXIM 650 J
*2 3 9 9 °°
0r4ar Yaw YAMAHA

Fauiftfi and Wiadthtolds
Nae Far Saroigt Gators.

ir -*2 Loeae

73 C h ry s le r O u tb o a rd M o to r tlQ
H P . w ith p o w e r t i l t a n d c o n tr a il
SMO 223 4411

•1 4 -9 4 0 1

.

�UA~ !!* nlrg H*l&lt;.ldj fantordLF? . . M,;w&gt;,y’ 0c1-

WORLD
IN BRIEF® j B j Times: A rg en tin e N avy
Plotted To K ill rrin c e
LONDON (UPI) — The Argentine navy plotted
to kill Prince Andrew toward the end of the
74-day war last year between Britain and
Argentina over the Falkland Islands. The
Sunday Times reported.
The plot was one of several undercover
operations planned. Including attacks on the
British military staging post on the Ascension
Island In the Pacific and the naval dockyards at
Portsmouth, said the newspaper, qu otlr^
so'brces In Buenos Aires and London.
The Sunday Times said the Argentine plot
called for a submarine landing of a killer squad
on the Caribbean Island of Mustlque where the
second son of Queen Elizabeth II was staying
with American former movie actress Koo Stark.
But the operation was canceled “ probably
because of the shift In power within the
Argentine Junta following the Falklands defeat."
It said.
Andrew served as a helicopter pilot aboard the
aircraft ca-rier HMS Invincible during the
74-dav war that ended with Argentina’s surren­
der June 14 last year.

Marcos M eets Advisers
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) - President
Ferdinand Marcos today convened his top
advisers for a crucial party caucus that Is
expected to approve changes In the constitution
and avert a drift toward political and economic
anarchy In the Philippines.
A government announcement said the meet­
ing would discuss proposed electoral reforms to
be taken up In a special session of the National
Assembly beginning Tuesday.
A proposal to redlstrict election constituen­
cies. along with an ofTer by Marcos to appoint
two opposition nominees to an eight-member
election watchdog committee, were seen as
major concessions to his political rivals.
The party caucus today also was expected to
consider urgent measures to stem runaway
Inflation and capital night triggered by the Aug.
21 assassination of popular opposition political
leader Benlgno Aquino Jr.

Thatcher Shuffles Cabinet
LONDON (UPI) — Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, acting swiftly to defuse the bad
publicity her government Is getting over Bri­
tain’s sex scandal, rcshuflled her cabinet and
replaced the disgraced trade minister who got
hls secretary pregnant.
Just 48 hours after Trade and Industry
Secretary Cecil Parkinson resigned. Mrs. That­
cher announced she was replacing him with
tough-talking Employment Secretary Norman
*rebblt.
The embattled Parkinson, married with three
daughters, was forced to quit Friday after hls
pregnant secretary told the London Times he
twice asked her to marry him and twice Jilted
her.

Grenada Hardliner Takes
Control Of Ruling Party
ST. GEOROES. Grenada (UPI) — The Marxist
government of Grenada said today the deputy prime
minister, a hardliner who favors closer ties with
Moscow, has taken over control of the ruling party from
popular Prime Minister Maurice Bishop.
Bishop, who took control of the Caribbean Island In a
1979 coup, has not been heard from since he was placed
under house arrest Thursday. A broadcast on the new
government by official Radio Free Grenada made no
mention of hls whereabouts today.
Although the radio Insisted Bishop was still prime
minister, ft said Deputy Premier Bernard Coard has
assumed control of the ruling party, the New Jewel
Movement.
The radio report repeated charges that Bishop had
.spread "false rumors" about an attempt to kill him and
disobeyed orders from the New Jewel Movements
central party committee.

Calendar
MONDAY. OCT. 17

f/ v e

Marines Wounded

Marine Killed; Lebanese Fighting Spreads
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - Fighting spread from the
city’s southern suburbs to the mountains cast of the
capital today hours after a U.S. Marine was killed and
five others were wounded In a gunbattle near Beirut
airport, military sources Bald.
r_n!ri
U.S. UfftCtito. amending earlier casualty

five Marines were wounded and one was killed Sunday
when unidentified militiamen !n a Moslem slum opened
fire with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms.
The Marines returned ftre with Dragon missiles nnd
machine-gun ftre during the seven-hour attack on their
Alpha Company base at the Lebanese University near
Beirut International Airport.
The name of the dead Marine, who was shot In the
head, was not released pending notification of hls
family. A spokesman said today two other Marines were
hospitalized for surgery, but three others suffered onlyminor shrapnel wounds.
Military sources quoted by state-run Beirut radio
reported sniper ftre today aimed at Lebanese army
positions near the U.S. Marine base wounded a Lebanese
soldier and a civilian.
The Lebanese troops returned the ftre. but the Marines
were not Involved In the Incident, the sources said.
The sporadic sniping In suburban Beirut came as
violence spread to Souk cl Gharb. a strategic town 8

miles cast of Beirut and the focal point of last month s
futile onslaught on the capital.
Military sources said Druze militiamen opened
artillery ftre on government troop positions In Souk el
Gharb. The firelight was brief and there were no

during a religious festival celebrated by an estimated
100.000Shiite Moslems.

Israeli troops at first fired In the air but the crowds
pressed ahead, hurling stones and daggers at the
soldiers, five of whom were killed or wounded, the radio
T t.-j- «-»r r.o
brtesSW te -casualties the snnrnwo s-Jd.
mllltary casualties or the 10 civilian casualties reported
Ten civilians and five Israeli soldiers also were killed
by the radio.
and wounded in a clash between Israeli troops and local
Military spokesmen In Israel denied the report.
Shiite Moslems In the village of Nabatlyeh. 45 miles
Prospects for Lebanon’s national reconciliation con­
south of Beirut. Beirut radio said.
ference opening as scheduled dimmed when Suleiman
Marine spokesman MaJ. Robert Jordan said the
FranJIeh. leader of the Syrian-backed National Salvation
Marines fired two powerful Dragon missiles. M-16 rifles
Front, demanded cancelation of the Lebancsc-Israell
and M-60 guns In response to the attack Sunday
May 17 security agreement as a pre-condition for hls
launched from the southern Beirut Shiite slum of Hay el
participation.
Sallom.
The talks, due to open Thursday, are to group leaders
The unidentified attackers also fired on a Mnrtnc
of Lebanon’s 10 warring factions with government
helicopter ambulance as it was ferrying the wounded to
representatives to formulate a plan to reunify the
the USS Iwo Jlma. a helicopter carrier that Is one of 12
country, possibly by a fairer distribution of power
American warships patrolling off the coast of Lebanon.
between the ruling minority Chlstlans and the majority
Jordan said.
,
After four straight days of attacks against u.b. Moslems.
With Sunday’s Marine death. U.S. peacekeeping
peacekeepers. Marines were on Condition 2 alert today
casualties rose to six dead In the last year. A seventh
— a high stage of readiness but not requiring troops to
Marine, not attached to the peace force, died In the U.S.
remain In bunkers around the clock.
embassy bombing and another was killed In an
Beirut radio said the clash at Nabatlyeh occurred
when two grenades were hurled at an Israeli patrol accident.

Number O f Nucelar Weapons
Growing ; N ow Total 50,000
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Despite arms
limitation treaties, the nuclear arsenals
of both the United Stntcs and the Soviet
Union have continued to grow and there
are now 50.000 nuclear weapons In the
world, a new report says.
The 1983 annunl edition of World

Military and Social Expenditures by
Ruth Lcger Slvard also said 16.359.000
million people have died In wars since
1945.
’
The report, put out by several private
pro-arms control groups such as the
Arms Control Association, said "an arms
race no country can afTord" continues to
crowd out social needs.
The report said both superpowers
continued to test new nuclear weapons,
with the United States out-testing the
Soviet Union. 407 to 336. since the
Limited Test Ban Treaty of 1963.
Despite the SALT I and II treaties, the
nuclear arsenals of both the United
States and the Soviet Union have
continued to Increase.
In 1971, the year before SALT 1. the
United Stales had 4.600 strategic
nuclear weapons. Now It has about
10,000. The Soviet strategic arsenal has
grown from 2.100 strategic weapons to
7,400 In the years from 1971 to 1983.
The world now has a total of 50.000
nuclear weapons, according to the sur­
vey released Sunday, and current
wot Id wide military spending Is $660

billion, or Just slightly less than the
world spends on education.
"T w o superpowers, locked Into cold
war antagonism, arc the driving force
behind an arms buildup without parallel
■n history." the report said.
The report counted weapons owned by
countries that officially have nuclear
weapons: the United States. Soviet
Union. Britain. France. China and India.
Others such as Israel and South Africa
may have nuclear weapons but have not
acknowledged so.
The report said military assistance to
the Third World by the developed
countries has far outpaced economic aid
tn the lost 20 yeare. $400 billion In
military aid to $25 blillon In economic
“ ' I . the same time, according to t)\e
survey, about half the world's population
lives on an Income below $500 per year
and "at least one person In five Is
trapped In absolute poverty."
The survey for 1983 Includes a body
count of all known wars since 1945. The
total number of victim* of war, the
survey said Is 16.359.000 people. 9
million of them civilians.
The most deadly wars In the period
were In Asia: the Bengali war In 1971.
1.5 million dead: the Pol Pot government
massacres In Cambodia. 1975-79. 2
million: the Korean war. 1950-53. 2
million: and the Vietnam War. 1965-75.
2.2 million.

Seminole County Association of Children with Learn­
ing Disabilities*. 7:30 p.m.. Winter Springs Elementary
School. State Road 434. Speakers: Rose Alcorn. SLD
coordinator for Seminole County Schools, and Laura
Williams. SLD teacher at Lake Howell High School,
discussing RAISE bill requirements and learning
disabled children.
RAYMOND MORRIS
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First St.
Former Casselberry City
Alanon Step and Study. 8 p.m.. Senior Citizen Center,
C ou n cilm an R aym on d
N.Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Fellowship AA Group. 8 p.m.. closed. Senior Citizens Morris. 83. of 239 Sun
nytown Road, Casselberry,
Center. N. Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
died Friday at hls home.
TUESDAY. OCT. 18
Optimist Club of Sanford. 11:45 a.m.. Western Slzzlln Born Dec. 1, 1899. In
Sparta. 111., he moved to
Steak. Highway 17-92.
Casselberry from
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on lakefront.
Historic Longwood Rotary Club. 7:30 a.m.. Longwood Pennsylvania In 1950. He
was a printing company
Hotel. County Road 426.
owner, a former newspa­
Winter Springs Scrtoma. 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress.
Sanford Toastmaster. 7:15 a.m.. Holiday, Inn on Lake per correspondent, and u
Monroe.
, Jehovah's Witness. He
Rotary Club of Longwood. 7:30 a.m.. Cassidy s was a charter member of
the Casselberry Lions Club
Restaurant. SR 434.
.
Sanford Senior Citizen Club. noon. Sanford Civic and was a 32nd degree
Center. Speaker- Alina Ortiz. Social Security Branch Mason.
Survivors Include hls
Manager. Mary Schuenemann will sing.
Seminole County Historical Museum will be open to son. Karl Morris. Warner.
receive materials und displays from organizations and Ohio, and three grand­
children.
Individuals from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
B a ld w In - F a t r c h l l d
South Seminole AARP. 1 p m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Speaker. Dr. S. Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
Levine.
American Association of Retired Persons South arrangements.
Seminole Chapter. 1 p.m.. Senior Citizen Multipurpose
MARQARETM. MILLER
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Mrs. Margaret N. Miller.
Speaker- Dr. Steven Llvlne. chiropractor. Open to
44. of 408 Alcazar Ave.,
anyone over 55.
Altamonte Springs, died
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
Sunday at Florida Hospi­
Highway 17-92 south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
tal. Orlando. Bom April
Ovcrtatcrs Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.. Florida Power v
22. 1939. In Huntington.
Light building. Sanford.

| W$r$$« FmI

MA7Mt&gt;k Gtbran.l

SOURCE Canta&lt; h* Da'anta Wormal«n

The world's three ma|or concentrations of m ilitary power are at a standoff
In manpower, but show striking variations In other areas. The U.S. and Its
NATO allies lead In wealth, total m ilitary spending, strategic nuclear
weapons and surface warships. The Soviet Union and Its allies are far
ahead In tanks and have the edge In the air and underesea. China leads
only In population.
*ff»V

Shamir Faces No
JERUSALEM . Israel (UPI) Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir,
under pressure to name a new
finance minister before a parliamen­
tary no-confldence vote this week,
grappled with "mass panic" and
work stoppages sparked by Israel’s
economic crisis.
After a Cabinet meeting that
extended Into the early houis today.
Israel Television reported Shamir’s
choice for the Job was Energy
Minister Yitzhak Modal. 47. a leader
of the Liberal Party with a reputa­
tion for being a tough political
Inflghter.
Modal was an outspoken oppo­
nent of former Finance Minister
Yoram Arldor. who resigned In
disgrace last week alter hls scheme
to link the Israeli economy to the
U.S. dollar was rejected by hls
Cabinet colleagues and caused a
public outcry.
As Shamir wrestled with hls
choice to fill the finance post,
thousands of Israelis staged twohour walkouts Sunday protesting
last week’s 23 percent devaluation
o f the shekel and 50 percent
Increase In the price o f basic
commodities as part of on austerity

□ «»o

program to shore up the country’s
battered economy.
The port of Ashdod closed for the
entire duy. travelers at the Interna­
tional Ben Gurion Airport were
forced to wait an extra two hours for
baggage handlers and ticket agents,
high schools closed early, and Israel
Radio stopped broadcasting In
mid-afternoon.
Leaders of the Hlstadrut. Israel s
version of the AFL-CIO, threatened
more' strikes If the government
failed to consult with the giant labor
federation before Imposing new
austerity measures.
The prime minister was under
pressure to name a candidate before
a scheduled poiliaineniary vote of
no-confldence by the opposition
Larbor Party later this week that
could topple hls week-old govern­
ment.
A parliamentary spokeswoman
said If a new finance minister was
named today, the choice would be
presented to parliament for approv­
al Tuesday and the no-confidence
vote would be Wednesday. If there
was no candidate, she said the vote
would take place Tuesday.

Despite words of reassurance from
government spokesmen, the stock
market remained closed today and
Israelis lined up at banks to
exchange shekels for dollars. Swiss
francs or Japanese yen.
"The best thing Is to take your
money out." one bank customer
told Israel Radio Sunday. "When
the house Is burning, you get out."
A bank clerk In the northern port
city of Haifa described the scene as
"mass panic."
"Everyone who came In wanted to
withdraw greenbacks. There is no
faith whatsoever In the shekel," he
said. " I t ’s a crime. Something
terrible is happening here."
Cabinet Secretary Dan Mertdor
said the run on the Israeli shekel
had eased and that September’s
economic statistics showed Im­
provements In the balance of pay­
ments d eficit, w ith Increased
exports and lower Imports.
"In the first half year we saw a
deterioration and this Is the first
month we have seen an Improve­
ment. a very significant improve­
ment." Mertdor told reporters after
Sunday's Cabinet meeting.

Political Solution
In Nicaragua Unlikely
United Press International
A high-ranking Western diplomat ruled out a
political solution to the conflict In Nicaragua,
charging also that the Marxist-led Sandlnlsta
government poses a serious threat to democracy In
neighboring Costa Rica.
"Hie diplomat, who asked to remain anonymous,
said In the Costa Rican capital of San Jose that
democracy cannot survive in Costa Rica If the
Sandlnlstas remain in power.
"Costa Rica will not survive with a Marxist
Nicaragua." the diplomat said, adding "It Is too late
for a political solution" to the conflict between the
Sandlnlsta government and U.S.-backed rebels
fighting to overthrow It.
The diplomat said Nicaraguan government agents
are Inciting strikes and Incidents of land seizure by
peasants In Costa Rica, the showcase dcmociacy of
Central America and the only one of five nations In
the region that does not have an Insurgent
movement.
"They are poisoning the region. * he said of the
Sandlnlsta government.
Nicaraguan leaders have repeatedly charged the
Reagan administration Is seeking to overthrow them
by using as proxies four rebel groups maintained
with more than $20 million In covert CIA aid.

AREA DEATHS

I

I

Long Island. N.Y.. she
m o v e d to A lt a m o n t e
Springs from Miami In
1973. She was a homemaTcr and a member of
the Annunciation Catholic
Church.
Survivors include her
h u s b a n d . J a m e s M .:
daughter. Susan E. Moore.
Altamonte Springs: four
sons. Thomas E. Moore.
William M.. James C.. and
Scott A., all of Altamonte
Springs: parents. Mr. and
Mrs. George Nicholson. St.
Petersburg: six brothers.
C e o rg e A. N ic h o ls o n .
D ubnl. S au di A ra b ia .
Michael M. Nlcholeon. St.
Petersburg. James
Douglas Nicholson. Moore
Haven. John R. Nicholson.
Key Largo. Thomas A.
Nicholson. Davie. Glenn F.
Nicholson. U.S. Navy.
Baldwln-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs Is In charge of
arrangements.

PAULETTE D.CHILIK
Mrs. Paulette D. Chlllk.
41, o f 207 Brombonea

Lane. Lon gw ood. died
Friday In South Bend, lnd.
Bom April 28. 1942. In
Chicago, she moved to
^ongwood from there in
1 9 7 9 . S h e w a s an
Episcopalian.
Survivors Include her
husband. Jerom e: two
daughters. Linda
md
Denise Chllhk. both of
Longwood; parents. Paul
m d D o ro th y F esu k .
Burbank. III.; a sister.
Baldwln-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In charge of
arrangements.

MICHAEL W. ROEBUCK
M r . M i c h a e l W.
Roebuck. 26, of Oviedo,
died rtlday in Orlando.
Bom April 2. 1957. in
Orlando, he was c lifelong
resident of Central Florida.
He was a pipefitter and a
Protestant.
Survivors Include hls
wife. Carol: jments. Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Anderson.
Orlando: maternal
grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Rudolph Schnell.
Orlando; paternal

Survivors Include her
husband. William J.; two
daughters. Viola Laspee.
Sanford. Joan E slln g.
Croydon. Pa.: three sons.
E d w a r d L o n k ,
Wllllamstown. Pa.. John
Reifnelder. Sllcklervllle.
N.J.; Charles. Croydon;
three sloters. Olivia Forst.
S u e S o m e r s h o e . and
Thelma Schneider, all of
Philadelphia; 14 grand­
c hi l d r e n and seven
great-grandchildren.
Gr a mkc w Funeral
H om e. S a n ford . Is In
ANNAC. NEALON
Mrs. Anna Charlotte charge of arrangements.
Nealon. 78. of 2440 Bay
JAMES C. OWENS
Ave.. Sanford, died Friday
M
r. J a m e s C a r lto n
at her home. Bom May 4.
1905. In Philadelphia, she Owens. 27. of 7184 Lake
moved to Sanford from Road. Appleton. N.Y.. died
there in 1974. She was a Thursday at hls home.
retired bank elevator opei- Bom Dec. 25. 1955. In
ator and member of All Mims, he moved to New
Souls Catholic Church. York In July. He was a
She was a member of the laborer and a Protestant.
Survivors Include hls
Catholic Women's Club.
mother.
Ethel L. Owens,
Over 50 Club. Seminole
County Federation of Se­ Mims; four sisters. Gall
nior Citizens’ Clubs, and McCullough. Titu sville,
American Association of D tlo rls B row n. M im s:
Carolyn Owens. Titusville.
Retired Persons.

grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Nelson. Plant
City: three brothers. Rob­
ert S. Roebuck. Oviedo,
JefT Anderson. Orlando.
Michael Anderson. Tampa:
five sisters. Lori
R o d rig u e z. La Habra.
Calif.. Shelly and Laurie
Anderson, both o f Or­
lando. Terri Zeh. Tampa.
Alesla Phillips. Clermont.
Garden Chapel Home for
Funerals. Orlando, is in
charge of arrangements.

and Angela Owens. Mims:
two brothers. Horace qpd
Anthony Owens, both of
Mims: grandparents. Mr.
and Mrs. James Owens.
Mims.
W lls o n - E lc h e lb e r g e r
Mortuary, Sanford, is In
charge of arrangements.

Funeral Notices
N EALO N . MRS. A N N A C
— Funaral Mou tor Mr». Knot C.
Naaton, 71, o t 1440 Bay Av a,
Unford, oho diad Friday will b*
calabratad at » : U Tuatday at All
Soul, Catholic Church with th*
Rav. William Authanrlath official
Ing Burial will ba In All Soul,
Catholic Camatary Frlanda may
call at tha tunaral homo today front
I I and 7-f pm . with a Rotary
Sarvlca at t .N p.m. Gramkcw
Funoral Homa. Sanford. In charga
OWENS. M R . JA M B S C.
— t u n a r a l t a r v lc a t lo r M r. J a m a ,
C a rlto n O w a ra . 17. o f 7114 L a ka
R oad. A p p la to n . N Y ., w h o d la d
T h u n d a y . w ill ba a t 4 p m W ad
n a td a y a t SI. M a r y 't M ita io n a ry
B a p tltt C h u rch . W lia y R ood. M lm i.
w ith t h , R a v. R o o aa va it G roa n ,
p a t to r, In c h a rg a C o llin g h o u rt
w ill ba T u a td a y noon to » p m
B u ria l ts fo llo w In L a G ra n p a warn
a ta ry . M lm t W ilto n E k h a fb a rg a r
M o r tu a r y , S a n lo rd . In ch a rg a

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                    <text>Evening Herald—CUSPS 481 280)-Prlce 35 Cents

76th Vear, No. 49—Sunday, October 16, 1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

By Charles Cobb
Herald Staff Writer
Millions of people who watched the NBC-TV movie
Adnm earlier this week know that Adam Walsh was Just
six years old when he was kidnapped In July 1981 from
a Holly wood. Fla. Sears store.
Adam's mother. Rcvc Walsh, had left her son In the
toy department while she looked at lamps three aisles
away. When she returned minutes later, he was gone.
After a lwo-week search — described as the largest
manhunt In Florida history — Adam's decapitated head
was found In a ranal near Vcro Beach, about 150 miles
north of his home.
It happened In South Florida, but obviously It could
happen anywhere, including Seminole County.
How well prepared Is Sem inole tn respond to such an
event? What happens here when a young child Is
reported missing'?
Seminole authorities say they can't remember a
recent case of a child being abducted and murdered In
this area, but children here do disappear and sometimes
with tragic results.
The biggest manhunt In Seminole County history took
plucc In 1979 when a five-year-old boy was reported
missing from his mobile home In the Casselberry area,
according to sheriffs Capt. Jay Leman.
Just like in the Adam Walsh case, authorities had no
clues and "w e had to suspect a possible abduction and
foul play." said Leman.
Two helicopters, one from the Orange County sheriff s
department and a second donated by a private citizen tn
A|x&gt;pka. were brought in.

More than 200 person* - deputies. oCTlrers from every
police force tn the county, housewives, school students
and a scout troop — Joined the six-day search.
Volunteers on horseback scoured wooded areas. Three
psychics volunteered their services.
The Red Cross served coffee and donuts to the
searchers. "W e had great cooperation from everyone."
said Leman.
Six days after the boy vanished, another little boy who
lived nearby solved the mystery. A few neighborhood
kids hnd been playing hide-and-seek In an unoccupied
mobile home nearby. One of the boys climbed Into a
refrigerator to hide, the door closed, the boy was trapped
and suffocated.
The other boys left nnd were nfrald to tell anyone that
they had been playing In an area where they weren't
supposed to be. Finally, six days later, one ol them told
his mother what had happened and the body of the dead
child was found.
In Seminole County, most reports of missing children
involve teenagers rather than very young children.
Lcmunsald.
„
The sheriff's department receives "two or three
reports of missing teenagers nearly ever)1day. Most turn
up safe within 48 to 72 hours, he said.
Often teenngers will leave home after an argument
with a parent or will run ofT with n boyfriend or
girlfriend. If they come from a broken home, they
sometimes visit the other parent without notifying the
parent they live with.
Reports of missing toddlers and children of 2 or 3
years of age arc "very rare." said Leman.

When this happens we can'l wall before starting a
search to see If the child will turn up ns we might do In
the case of n missing teenager. We have to start the
search Immediately."
"W e would prolrably call In a helicopter from Orange
County and dogs." he said.
Detective Karen Reynolds, who handles missing
persons cases for the Sanford police department, said
she also Is unaware of n case similar to that of Adam
Walsh ever occurlng In Sanford.
"I'm thrilled to death that we don't have that problem.
Even If a child wanders ofT for Iwc hours. I know what It
can do to the parents." said Mrs. Reynolds.
But If Seminole County has been fortunate In not
experiencing any child abduction-murder cases, many
uicaaof the United States know the l.nrrornll too well.
Children often fear the dark, but they usunlly can rest
in the knowledge that mommy nnd daddy are nearby
ready to offer shelter In their anns. Children In America
today, however, have every right to fear the dark. It
swallows thousands of them every year.
The statistics arc staggering. More than two million
children arc reported missing each year. As many os
50.000 disappear without a trace. They either wander
ofT by themselves or arc the victims of abductions by
strangers.
But these numbers, startling as they may be. do not
tell the whole story. They do not convey the anguish fell
by parents of these missing children. Nothing Is more
heart-wrenching for mothers and futhers lhan not to
See MISSING, page 7A

T h e c a s e of A dam W a lsh . Ih e 6 -year-o ld
Hollywood, F la . boy who was abducled and later
found dead, focused national attention on the
problem of missing children.

Marines, Snipers
Exchange Fire;
2 French Wounded
Controversial Drug Rehab
Program Moving To Sem inole?

The eruption of violence hours before cease-tire taiKs
were to begin coincided with n sudden deterioration of
security In the Kharoub area south of Beirut, where
Christian and Druze militias swapped artillery nnd
rocket fire, state-run Beirut Radio said.
The two French members of the U.N. peace keeping
force were escorting a U.N. convoy to Beirut when a
bomb exploded at the side of the road In the Kharoub
region. 11 miles south of the capital, a U.N. spokesman
said. The soldiers' conditions were not Immedlatery
known.
The U.S. Marines came under fire at the same spot
where one Marine was killed nnd another was wounded
by Bnlper flrr Friday. Warrant Officer Charles Rowe said
"T h e Marines at the Chnrllc Company on the
northeast cornet of Beirut airport came under sniper fire
and returned fire with special sniper M-40 A 1 rifles."
Rowe said.
"The sniping began at 8:20 a.in. and lasted till 9 a.tn.
nnd there were no casualties among the Marines. Rowe
said.
Apparently to avoid Inflicting civilian casualties. U.S.
Oth Fleet warships offshore did not take part In the
fighting Frlduy atound the American compound at
Beirut airport, adjacent to the Shiite Moslem slums of
south Beirut.
The dead Marlnr. Identified by the Pentagon as Sgt.
Allen Solfcrt. was the fifth American soldier killed In
combat since the Marines went to the Lebanon 13
months ago to help keep the pence. Another Marine was
killed In an accident during that lime and a U.S.
Embassy gudi d died in u bombing.

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer
Straight Inc., the controversial drug
rehabilitation program for young people,
has received nationwide attention since
First Lady Nancy Reagan became M | of
its most vocal supporters.

Hwcltf Phot* by Sj b i Cook

Em m a Spencer (left) and Buddy Lake, both elected to the Seminole
County Sports Hall of Fam e this past week, rem inisce about old times
as they head out to hit a few for old times.

A Golden Moment In
Their Golden Y ears

TODAY

By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
Seminole County's Sports Hall of
Fame Selection Committee turned
back the athletic clock this week and
voted In two of Sanford's most famous
and beloved senior citizens.
Emma Virginia Spencer. 76. and
Bernard David "Buddy" Lake. 70. will
be Inducted into the Hull ol Fame

Horoscope......... ......... 6B
Hospital............ ......... 2A
Nation................
Opinion............. ......... 5A
People................
Religion............ ......... 53
School Menus..... ......... 7B
Sports................ ..... 9 11A
Television......... ......... 7B
Weather............ ......... 2A

Action Reports....
Around The Clock
Bridge
Business
Classifieds
Comics
Crossword.
Dear Abby
Deaths.....
Editorial
Florida

together during halftime of the
Seminole High School and Lake Mary
High School football game on Friday.
Nov. 11 at Lake Mury.
Spencer, a talented tennis player
and coach, and Lake, one of the top
baseball pluyers to come out of
Sanford. Join last year's Inductees
"R ed " Barber. Joe Sterling and Tim
See SPENCER, page 9A

Hundreds of parents In Florida and
from ucross the country arc touting It us
the last hope In saving their children
from the drug culture that was leading
them on a certain path to physical,
mental and moral destruction.
Critics, on the other hand, say that the
treatm en t Is harsh und and the
youngsters are brain washed.
Three lawsuits have been filed against
Straight charging the organization with
holding young people against their will.
The treatment may be drastic, but
necessary, according to Bill Oliver,
national director of Straight Inc. His
story Is a simple one. He got Involved in
Straight when his child almost overnight
changed from a seemingly good kid into
a stranger, one hopelessly hooked on
drugs and nlcohol.
"Our only choice was to get the child
Into Straight or let him die." Oliver said.
Straight entered the spotlight locally
when a request came to the city of
Longwood for permission to place a
rchaWlltatlon center In the Longwood
Industrial Park.
It was to be patterned after the one
that has operated In St. Petersburg for
the past seven years. Its backers have
since withdrawn their request, at least
tcm|K&gt;rarily.
In the meantime, four of Longwood's
five city commissioners and several
members of the city's land planning
ngency traveled to St. Petersburg to see
the Straight operation there, and came
away very Impressed.
There Is a success story to be seen In

Straight of St. Petersburg.
The Longwood officials found a ;
number ol Seminole County parents ;
working with the program to help their 1
children there.
And. uf course, there w « • SeminoleBrevard Circuit Judge Dominick Salt!.

who makes no secret of the fact that he
R elated story, page 7 A
nnd his family became Involved to help a
daughter. Dawn, now fully recovered
and a student at Seminole Community
College.
Dawn Is not only willing, but euger to
talk ubout Straight, convinced that the
program saved her life. A happy and
bubbling young lady, she is unxlous to
tell her story of traveling from hope­
lessness and despair to victory, all
through Straight.
The parents and the children Involved
In the program, like those In such groups
us Alcoholics Anonymous, usuully prefer
anonymity.
The program Isn’t any easier for the
parent than h Is for the chemicallydependent child. Before u child Is
admitted, his or her parents must
promise to follow Straight rules and
|&gt;artlripatc In a therapy and rap session
once a week. The trip to the center at St.
Petersburg takes about two hours by car.
but It can be long und hard ut the end of
a workday. The parents commit to
Involvement as long as their child Is
being treated and that can l&gt;e two years
or more.
The success rate at Straight — success
Is defined us permanent recovery from
chemical uddlctlon nnd use — at the end
of Its first year of operation In 1977 was
57 percent, program officials say. adding
See STRAIGHT, page 7A

Woman's Complaint Prompts County Promise To Do Better
'

By Mlcheal Beha
Herald Staff Writer
It’s true what they say about not being able to fight
City Hall. A Winter Springs area woman tried this week
and lost, but at least she may have made things easier
for those who come after her.
Susan Lawyer wanted a buffer built between a local
convenience store and four homes. She didn't get II.
Whal she did gel. however, was the satisfaction ol
knowing that county Inspectors will be more responsive
to future complaints.
Mrs Lawyer, a resident of Nature s Wuy. a dirt road
one block from the Intersection of State Road 419 and
Tuskawilla Road near Winter Springs, complained that
It took Seminole County land management officials
nearly a week to rrspond to her complaints that an
adjacent property owner was clearing trees without a
^She received no satisfaction from the Seminole County
Commission this week but her gripe prompted commis­
sioners to make code violation complulnls u top priority

ft
y9

Friday’s
Football
Results

..
.
&gt; **
.
O—.. .1 ,,
—* a — (Jolinrt Clnrttt anlrt till*
for the Land Management Division.
,
Mrs. Lawyer's problem Is not unique. "The problem
she brought up happens a lot." said Commissioner Bill
Klrchhoff.
Commissioners directed County Administrator 1.
Duncan Rose to develop a policy for giving quick
response to complaints like Mrs. Lawyer's.
"The way It should work Is we set a buffer. When a
report comes In that someone is disturbing It someone
Commissioners chose not to take legal action against
should drop whut they're doing and go out there to the Hardin showed up with a stop work order.
But by that time. Mrs. l-awycr said, the damage had Ondlke at this time, choosing Instead to let Sturm speak
site." Klrchhoff said.
to him personally. Sturm said he would try to convince
He suggested having an Inspector available on been done. Virtually all the trees had been removed.
Hardin said Ondlke agreed to get an arbor permit und Ondlke to construct a fence or wall.
weekends. "That's when a lot of this stuff takes place."
Mrs. Lawyer said the trouble began on Sept. 8 when w.ts not penalized, even though most of the 50-foot-wldc
Should Sturm not be persuasive enough. Ms. Clayton
Edward Oudikc. owner of 3.4 acres at the Intersection of swath had already been cleared. When the work was
said, there is still another chance to force Ondlke to
done.
Hardin
said,
two
pine
and
two
oak
trees,
six
to
SP 419 nnd Tusknwtlla Road, began clearing a stand of
construct u fence. She said the property will probably be
scrub oaks and palmettos from the rear of his property. eight feet tall, were planted to serve as a buffer.
Mrs. Luwycr said the residents now have no bufler developed und come before the board for site plan
The trees had been there for more than two years as u
from
the sight j and sounds of the Hundy Wuy store. She approval.
buffer between the four homes on Nature’s Way and a
Ms. Clayton said Mrs. Lawyer und her neighbors will
wunts a wull or fence constructed at the rear of Ondlke's
I landy Way »toi e at the Intersection of Tuskuwlltu Road
be Informed of uny hearings on the property.
property.
und SR 419.

Jones 13
Oviedo 10

Lake Howell 32

The Lak e M ary R am s boys' cross country
team broke the Lym an domination of the
Seminole County Meet F rid a y when It edged
the G re y h o u n d s by four points for the
championship. See Sports, page 10A.

Eu ro p eV s Spacelab, soon to be lifted Into orbit
by the shuttle Columbia, will become the first
retrleveable space experiment station. Sim ul­
taneously, the mission's crew will m ark two
firsts of its own. See stories, puge 12A.

�IA—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Pel. U, 1&gt;M

NATION
IN BRIEF
Administration Doing
The Jordanian Sidestep
WASHINGTON (UPl) - The administration's
$225 million secret plan to equip a Jordanian
brigade as a mobile strike force Is a way of
getting around Israeli and congressional opposi­
tion to modernizing Jordan's armed forces, a
congressional source says.
The Jordanian force could Intervene In
Internal crises in Persian Gulf slates. Pentagon
officials, congressional and diplomatic sources
said Friday.
The administration refused to confirm or deny
the existence at the proposal but the officials
and sources said $225 million has been hidden
in this year's $251 billion defense budget to
carry out the program.
Disclosure of the U.S. plan comes against a
backdrop of renewed concern that Iran may try
to close the Straits of Hormuz, the gateway to
the Persian Gulf that Is the exit loute for oil
tanker traffic to the West and Japan. The
administration has pledged to use military force.
If necessary, to keep the straits open.

Clark Approval Expected
WASHINGTON IUPII — Senate leaders predict
William Clark will be approved to head the
Interior Department despite his lack of experi­
ence In the management of public lands and
natural resources.
Both Republican and Democratic members of
Congress noted Clark, a California ranch owner
and longtime friend of President Reagan, has no
experience In the management of public lands
and natural resources.
But Sen. Charles Mathias. R-Md. pointed out
that Clark also had no experience In foreign
afTalrs whrn Reagan made him deputy secretary
of slate prior to his service In the White House
as national security adviser.
Clark was named to succeed Interior Secre­
tary James Watt, who was finally forced to
resign after his widely publicized comment that
a coal-leasing advisory committee Included "a
black ...a woman. twoJcwsand a cripple.”
Reagan flew to Camp David, Md.. for the
weekend without announcing his choice to
replace Clark.
Speculation on a new national security
adviser centered on Robert McFnrlane. Clark's
deputy who has been acting as special Middle
East envoy.

Guaranteed Deadly
WASHINGTON (UPl) - A federal appeals
court says prisoners facing execution by lethal
Injection have the right to know whether drugs
used to put them to death have been proven
"safe and effective” for that use.
, In a 2-1 ruling, the U.S. Circuit Court of
l i

I

(or l li r litncrlct ot C o lu m b ia M id F rid a y

Inmates awaiting execution In six states pro­
perly questioned whether the method of execu­
tion Is “ cruel and unusual punishment.”
Inmates in Texas and Oklahoma challenged
use of baibiturates and paralyzing drugs to be
used In lethal Injections because the FDA
refused to Investigate whether they were
appropriate for that use.
"Even a slight error In dosage or administra­
tion can leave a prisoner conscious but
paralyzed while dying, a sentient witness of his
or her own slow, lingering asphyxiation." Judge
Skclly Wright said.
The appeals court rejected claims from the
FDA that lethal Injection laws passed by the
states were outside the Jurisdiction of the federal
agency, even though the execution involved the
use of federally regulated drugs.

Pilots Proposal An 1Insult1
HOUSTON |UPI| — Officials at bankrupt
Continental Airlines called a contract proposal
offered by striking airline pilots an "insult to the
negotiating process."
The proposal, requesting a 5 percent pay
Increase, was made Friday by the Air Line Pilots
Association, which went on strike Oct. 1 In the
wake of Continentals' bankruptcy application.
Continental Friday won a temporary injunc­
tion requiring suppliers to continue doing
business with the airline while It reorganizes
under bankruptcy supervision.
Dennis Higgins. Continental's new ALPA
executive committee chairman, said the con­
tract proposal called for higher pay and shorter
work hours than Continental has Imposed since
Its bankruptcy filing but dramatic wage cuts
from the old contract.

Innocent Man Freed
ST. JOSEPH. Mo. (UPl) — Inmates In prisons
across the country look at Melvin Lee Reynolds
as the lucky one.
Reynolds. 30. returned to his hometown
Friday after serving four years in the Missouri
Slate Penitentiary for a murder he never
committed.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hetpi'tl
Friday
ADMISSIONS

Sontord
R D H ayrm
Brand* S Mig*&gt;*t
Thomai B Barirand DtIlona
William R Jarman. Deiior*
Mary T Jotmton.Otlaan
Chrittl A Aahby
D ISCH ARGES

Sanford
M arfhaL Coa
Em m a L Kay

E i« ‘ninf&gt; H erald

Elan aG Oakat
Eliiab athR Pangl*
Rubai
John J Longa. Oellon*
Morg«r*t E Poyntt. Deltona
Samuel P Verger. Dalton*
BalttaR Emanual. Enterprise
Anna M Futrallam Jbabygirl
BIRTHS
Barnard F and Pamela L Trover,
a baby boy. Sanlord
Jerry D A Debra L Rtrtledg*. a
baby boy DeLand

iu»« «•»•*«»

Sunday. October is. IW -V o l. 76. No 4»
Publubed Dally and iunaay. eicept Saturday by The Sanlord
Herald. Inc., MO N. Francs Ay*., laniard, Fla. M m .
Second C lo u P*»taga Paid *1 laniard. Florid* m i l
Ham* Dollyary: Weak. II.SS; M o n th . M .X li 0 M oa lM , 111.00.
Year, H I M By Mail Waah I M S ; Moats, t i l l ; 0 m * m m .
110 00; Year, 1 1 1 . 0 0 _____________________________

Problem Is Faulty Rocket Insulation

Shuttle Flight Delayed At Least A Month
WASHINGTON (UPl) - The space begin Is Nov. 28. although the spare
agency's decision to delay the flight of agency said there Is a possibility the
(light might be postponed to late Febru­
the space shuttle Columbia deals a blow
to both the European and American ary when seasonal conditions are better
for some experiments.
space programs.
NASA said Friday the lllght of die ....
..^oar»..
shuttle with its Spacclab cargo was
European Space Agency which built the
being postponed by at lenst a month
$800 million Spacclab and Is sponsoring
because of fear thpl Insulation on a half Its experiments along with one of Its
booster rocket nozzle might burn
six crewmen. West German physicist Ulf
through and cause a disaster.
Mcrbold.
The agency said the Columbia will be
A delay to late November means B o rn e
rolled back to the Vehicle Assembly
of
the Earth observation experiments
Building at Kennedy Space Center
Monday and the suspect booster re­ aboard Spacclab will not achieve their
placed The action marks the first time a objectives because of seasonal changes.
shuttle has had to be returned to the
A delay to late February' would meet
building after reaching the launch pad.
the scientific objectives, but disrupt
The earliest dale the mission now can NASA’s shuttle schedule and add extra

cost to thr European Space Agency.
The new shuttle prohlcm developed
after engineers examined the two boost­
er rockets that parachuted Into the
Atlantic Ocean after the Aug. 30 launch
of the shuttle Challenger
The three-inch thick carbon cloth
insulation lining the Inside of one of the
two booster nozzles had eroded to within
two-tenths of an Inch of the metal.
Normally. 1.5 Inches of material Is left
after the two-minute firing.
Lt. Gen. James Abrahamson. NASA
associate administrator in charge of the
shuttle program, said the hot exhaust
would have burned through the nozzle
in another 14 seconds.
What would have hnppcned then Is

Man Jailed In Burglary At
Longwood Sporting Good Store
A Longwood man has been arrested on chnrgcs of
armed burglnry and grand theft In connection with the
theft of several Items from a Longwood sporting goods
store two weeks ago.
Longwood police reported that James Lorcflce. 18. of
★ Fires
358 E. Jessup Avc . Longwood. was arrested at 5:15
★ C o u rts
a.m. today In a van parked at a Tenneco gas station on
Rangcllne Road and Stale Road 434.
★ P o lic e
Police reports said an officer went to Inspect Loreflce’s
van when It was spotted parked In the lot so early in the
morning. A surfboard was seen In the van which later
EAT AND RUN
turned out to be one of several Items stolen from The
A man drove off from a Sanford area restaurant
Connection, a sporting goods store at the 434 Center, at
Thursday without paying for a steak dinner he ate.
the Intersection of SR 434 and Rangcllne Road.
A waitress at the Waffle House. State Road 46 at
Longwood.
Interstate 4. said the man entered the restaurant at
Two skateboards, two surf fins and a wet suit. about 3 a.m., sat In a booth, ordered a $4.99 steak
Identified as being stolen in the burglary from the store
dlnncrandatelt.
were also found In the van. The Items are valued at
While the waitress went Into a utility room to get a
$617.
mop. the man left the restaurant and drove away lna red
Lorefice was placed In the Seminole County Jail on
Chrvette. the waitress told Seminole County sheriffs
$5,000 bond.
deputies.
JEWELRY STOLEN
VAN BURNS
A thief removed a Jalousie glass pane In the kitchen
A 1978 Chevrolet van that was parked on the shoulder
door of a Sanford woman’s home and unlocked the door of Interstate 4 in Longwood was destroyed by fire
and removed $2,400 worth of Jewelry between 11 a.m. Tuesday afternoon.
j
and 5 p.m. Thursday.
A passing motorist noticed flames coming from the
Mary Helen Haddad. 29. of 1404 E. Fourth St., is the van and notified the Seminole County fire department at
victim
about 2:30 p.m., according to chief fire Inspector Ray
Pippin.
•
The van belonged to Fred Harrison of Orlando. Pippin
SHOP BURGLARIZED
Someone broke Into a Sanford beauty shop between 1 said damage was estimated at $3,000. He said the cause
p.m. Tuesday and 9 a.m. Thursday and stole $209 of the fire has not been determined and the Investigation
Is continuing.
worth of beauty supplies.
Police said there was no sign of forced entry at
FIR E CALLS
Evelyn's beauty shop at 300 Magnolia Ave.
The Seminole County fire department responded to
the following calls:
Thursday
COINS TAKEN
Someone broke Into a Sanford woman's home and —5:48 p.m., 1305 Forest Drive, false alarm.
removed a number of old coins and an old railroad —6:51 p.m.. 17190ak Drive, grass fire.
F r id a y
watch between B a.m. and 1:20 p.m. Thursday.
Suzanne Ryan. 27 of 1505 Palmetto Avc.. said the —9:57 a.m.. 2440 Bay Ave.. rescue.
thief entered her home through a dining room window — 10:15a.m.. HOW . 19thSt..rescue.
— 12:36 p.m.. 1001 W. First St., rescue.
and left through a rear door.

Action Reports

only conjecture. There could have been a
catastrophic explosion but Abrahamson
said the ship more likely would have
beer, driven off course, forcing the
flve-mnn crew to attempt an emergency
night landing back ni the Kennedy Space
Center.
Engineers determined that the carbon
cloth lining the right nozzle of the right
booster now attached to the Columbia
came from the same batch of material
that went Into the faulty nozzle lining for
the Inst flight.
Two test firings of small-scale rockets
using identical liner material produced
mixed results. One nozzle had severe
erosion like that seen on the last launch,
and one nozzle was normal.

T ip s F o r V e t s
A t t e n d in g S c h o o l
U n d e r G l B ill
St. Petersburg Veterans Administration Regional
Office officials expect some 23.700 veterans and

eligible dependents to enroll In Florida schools this
fall under the Gl Bill. Regional office director Carlos
Rainwater said those sludents can keep their
monthly VA checks coming regularly by following
these suggestions:
0 Double check your choice of courses to be
certain they will count toward your educational
objective.
0 Register early. VA and your school need time to
process your registration so that Gl Bill checks can
be started your way promptly.
0 File for your Gl Bill benefits as early ns possible.
0 Avoid dropping classes after registration.
0 If you have to interrupt your education, notify
VA promptly and advise the date you expert to
return to classes.
0 If you reduce your course load, also notify the
VA promptly to avoid overpayment of your benefits.
° If you change addresses, notify VA promptly. Of
course, you'll want to notify the school and the post
office, nlso.
0 Submit transcripts to the college admissions and
records office Immediately after application is made.
This will speed up the school's certification to the
Veterans Administration.
Rainwater reminded eligible veterans that they
have 10 years from their dale of last discharge (but
not later than December 31. 1989) to take advantage
of the many programs available in the Gl Bill.
Among these are apprenticeship or on-the-job
training, tutorial assistance, and a work-study
program, under which veterans enrolled as full-time
students may perform services and receive an
additional allowance.
He said students with no dependents enrolled In
school full-time receive $342 per month; vets with
one dependent receive $407 monthly; and veterans

with two dependents receive $464. An additional
monthly amount Is provided for each dependent In
excess o f two.

Road Plans
County Discussing Ways To Spend Gas Tax Revenues
Although the, first funds from Seminole County's
four-ccnt gasoline tax won't be coming for several more
weeks, county commissioners are already discussing
ways to spend the money.
County officials expect to receive about $2 million
annually for 10 years from their 65 percent of thr gas
tax. The cities, which receive the remaining 35 percent,
should get about $ 1.2 million.
The county's first gas tux revenue Is expected early In
November, according lo senior budget analyst Pam
Hastings. She said the county should get about
$165,000 the first month.
Commissioners have already authorized spending
9357.000 tills year l o replace old equipment In the
Public Works Department and up to $125,000 for a
nine-month study of the county's highway needs.
But commissioners are anxious lo get on with road
building and (hey don't want to wait for their money.
"W e don't need to wait nine months to bond or lo

WEATHER
NATIONAL WEATHER: Heavy snows in the West
closed roads In Yellowstone National Park today and a
hurricane described as "extremely dangerous" with
winds of 135 mph churned across the Pacific toward the
Hawaiian islands. "This is one of the most powerful
storms ever to enter this part of the Pacific," Saul Price
of the National Weather Service said of Hurricane
Raymond. Winds clocked up to 60 mph whipped the
East. Virginia surveyed tornado damage estimated ut
more than $1 million. Forecasters predicted a half foot of
snow for the Colorado mountains. Heavy snows In parts
of Yellowstone forced officials lo close Dunraven Pas«
between Canyon and Tower. Forecasters said the Big
Island might begin feeling the first effects of Raymond —
rain, strong winds, and high surf — by noon today. The
center of the storm was expected to pass the Island
Sunday.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 76:
overnight low: 73: Friday's high: 85; barometric
pressure: 30.11: relative humidity: 93 percent: winds:
northeast at 8 mph: rain: .12 Inch; sunrise: 7:26 a.m.,
sunset 6:56 p.m.
SUNDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 4:48 a.m..
5:20 p m : lows. 10:51 a.m.. 11:28 p.m.: Port
Canaveral: highs. 4:40 a.m.. 5:12 p.m.: lows. 10:42
a.m.. 11:19 p in.: Bayport: highs. 10:31 a.m.. 11:58
p.m.: lows. 5:06a.m.. 5:38 p.m.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly cloudy today with show­
ers or thunderstorms likely. Highs In the low 80s. Wind
northeast ioeast 10 lo 15 mph. Rain chance 60 percent.
Tonight mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Lows In (tie low 70s. Wind light east. Sunday
partly cloudy with u slight chance of showcis. Highs In
the mid to upper 80s. Rain chance 20 percent.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Wind easterly 10 to 15 knots today and
tonight and around 10 knots Sunday. Seas 2 to 4 feet.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms today, then
widely scattered show* rs tonight.

build." said Commissioner Robert Sturm. "W e know
there arc priority projects out there. Let's Identify two or
three of them and get something in the ground."
C o m m is s io n e rs Sandra G len n and Barbara
Christensen agreed with Sturm and they've asked
county stafT to study a potential bond Issue, which
would allow the county to build roads and use the
revenue from the gas tax to pay back the bonds. That
study should be completed In about a month, said
Budget Director Eleanor Anderson.
Sturm said there shouldn't be any trouble finding road
projects. A county survey done last year put the
county's road needs at mere than S I00 million.
" If we do bond we're only going lo provide 25 percent
of what we're going to need."
Sturm and Mrs. Glenn feel the construction costs will
escalate tremendously during the next decade and
building now will save money.
Mrs. Christensen said the bond Issue could be a hedge

against the possible afTects of Proposition One. which
would roll back taxes to their 1980-81 level and limit the
rate which county officials can raise taxes without n
voter rcfcrcndcum.
Mrs. Christensen favors the bond Issue because she
feels Proposition One. on the ballot In November. 1984.
won't be able to cut funds which are obligate I to repay
bond Issues.
County Attorney Nikki Clayton agreed 1ml said the
consequences could be felt elsewhere. " If you bond thut
revenue the Havlll Bill won't be able to afTcct bond
payments. But you'll have to cut revenue In other
places."
Ms. Clayton said If Proposition One passes It may be
some time before It actually goes Into efTect. The
constitutional amendment will probably face a court
challenge which could delay its Implementation for up
to 10 years she said.—Mlcbeal Beba

Who's The Doctor - Man Or Machine?
CHICAGO (UPl) — Machines that save and prolong life
are reducing personal Involvement between doctors and
patients and may be contributing to a loss of faith in
physicians by the ma|orlty ol Americans, the Jo u rn a l o f
the A m erican Medical A ssociation says.
" A serious breach exists between patients and
p h ysician s." Dr. Lawrence D. Grouse, J o u r n a l
contributing editor, said In the latest issue. "Physicians
as a group appear to the public to be less personally
Idvolvcd with their patients."
A recent AMA survey showed about 60 percent of
Americans ure losing faith In physicians, think physi­
cian fees are excessive and that physicians spend too
little time with patients.
Almost half said doctors did not explain things to their
patients.
For Instance, patients may be told CT scanning is
simply the physician's diagnostic tool.
"But they (patients) sec a different picture," Grouse
said. "The diagnosis that seems to Issue from the
machine is of paramount importance to the patient."
A specialist's process of correct diagnosis becomes
almost an end In itself — but the patient Just wants to
feel better. Grouse said. The patient receives a message
of an "lmpersonul. technology-dominated system."
"Th e fact that the health care provided In the system
muy be improved as a result of the technology does not

have us much Impact as the subtle and hidden message
that the machine has become the physician: the
definitive adviser," he said.
He said doctors must consider "the negative side of
medical technology - the erosion of the physicianpatient relationship."
Dr. Ralph Cruwshaw of Portland. Ore. said in u
Jo u rn a l editorial that physicians must recognize and
control thr problem of the machine dictating Ihe
treatment.
Cruwshaw related a surgeon's complaints about the
use of Intensive care, hemodialysis und other life
support procedures to extend the life of his 81-year-old
brother, who appeared not to want the machines used.
The surgeon said the kidney specialist treating his
brother would not discuss the matter with him. nor did
he listen to the patient.
"Finally, with the help of other altcndlngs (physi­
cians). we stopped the machines." the surgeon said.
"T im grew brighter each day and we talked of old times.
Tim lived five days and then died In his sleep."
Crawshaw said: "Certainly this problem of ...
pre-empting medical decisions by way of a fancied.
Hippocratic right to preserve life must be happening In
other hospitals. Hippocrates elevated the goals of ull
physicians by writing down our humanistic trudlllon.
but did he dream of such a thing us a medical
machine?"

Economic 'Emergency' Aside, Statistics Cheery
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The latest
string of healthy economic statistics
shows factories are almost as busy
as they were before the recession
and inflation Is still resisting the
upward pressures of recovery.
The cheery figures provided an
Incongruous background lo Friday's
unusual presidential declaration of

an economic emergency. The de­
claration was Intended lo maintain
export restrictions on shipments lo
(he Soviets after the Expert Ad­
ministration Act expired at mid­
night.
F e d e ra l R e s e r v e S y s te m
economists. In reporting Friday a
strong 1.5 percent Increase In facto­

ry production, said manufacturing
output was now Just below the
all time peak reached before Ihe last
recession In July 1981.
The business Inlluilon rate, up
only 0.2 percent at an annual rate
from January through Sept* tuber,
w as m is le a d in g ly lo w . som e
analysts said.

�A rgentm am tM

Sunday, Gel. 1i , 1PS3~3A

Chaos Prelude To First Election In 10 Years

IN BRIEF
Warsaw Pact To MA TQ:
Delay M issile Deplovment
MOSCOW (UPI)
The seven Wursnw Pact
nations called on NATO and the United Stales to
postpone the deployment of new missiles In
Europe In order lo continue arms control talks
In Geneva.
Foreign ministers or the scvcn-nntlon East
bloc alliance, ending a two-day meeting in
Bulgaria Frldny, decided "If no ngreement was
reached by the end of the year, negotiations
should be continued, provided that the United
Slates and Its NATO allies gave up the
December drndllnc they have fixed for deploy­
ing nuclear missiles," Moscow Radio said.
Western experts In Moscow said the statement
was Intentionally ambiguous to give the appear­
ance that the Soviet Union was being reasonable
without having to change Us stance.
They said the statement Implied Moscow
would not continue the Geneva arms talks once
deployment begins, but gave the Kremlin
sufficient leeway to alter Its position.

Berlin Rally Planned
BERLIN (UPI) — Demonstrators carried their
nationwide anti-nuclear cditipaign 10 West
Berlin today despite threats o f fines and
Imprisonment If protesters breached restricted
areas.
The antl-missllc movement scheduled other
blockades at the U.S. Army European head­
quarters In Heidelberg, the U.S. Air Force
European headquarters at Ramstcin Air Base, a
Pershing-1 missile base near the Dutch border
and the U.S. armed forces supply harbor In the
northern port of Brcmrrhavcn.
In the capital of Bonn, demonstrators planned
lo form a four-mile human chain between the
Soviet and American embassies on the third day
ofa 10-day campaign against nuclear anus.

Rebels Sabotage Pipeline
MANAGUA. Nicaragua (UPI) — Americanbacked rebels claim ed responsibility for
sabotaging Nicaragua's vital oil pipeline for Ihe
second time In a month and the Sandlntsla
government said it wants more weapons to
counter the "U.S. aggressions."
Rebels of the U.S.-funded Nicaraguan Demo­
cratic Force, or FDN. said In Honduras Friday
they rendered "totally usclcss*'.a key oil pipeline
in Puerto Sandlno. 30 miles west of Managua.
The pipeline Ont damaged by FDN saboteur
last month, carries crude oil from the jiort to a
Managua refinery.

By Daniel Drosdoff
UPI Senior Editor
HllENOS AIRES. Argentina (UP1I Argentina holds Its first free eleellnns In
ID years on Oct. 30. tiic trrndscttcr In u
move afoot In Lffttn America to Junk
military regimes In favor of civilian rule.
In many ways.’thc elections could not
have come at a worse lime.
Argentina Is bankrupt. Its labor
movement restive. Its middle class
disillusioned, and Us government rud­
derless.
This Is no coincidence.
Military rulers arc quitting not because
they want to but because they have no
other cholcr.
For them. Argentina Is ungovernable.
The nation's defeat by Britain last year
In the eight-week Falkland Island war
punctured the myth that the men In
uniform knew Ihe best way to run
affairs, much less the best way lo fight a
diplomatic and military’ battic simulta­
neously.
R u n a w a y m ilit a r y s p e n d in g
heightened by the war and Us aftermath
— especially the replacement of dozens
of destroyed nlrcrcdt — prolonged a
recession that already has dragged on for
iwo years.
So far In 1983. the prestige of military
leadership has been battered by three
general strikes.
The judicial branch Is in open rebellion
against the military administration,
overturning u controversial amnesty law
aimed nt absolving officers guilty of
excesses during repression.
One Judge Jailed the president of the
Central Bank against the wishes of Ihe
government.
"What wc have Is complete nnllon^l
disintegration." said Juan Jose Taccone.

'The new government
will have to move fast
to dismantle
the military apparatus.

Little Boys
Get New Toys
MUNCIE. Ind. (UPI) Boys have added cooking
sets and apruns lo thrlr
arsenal of toys, hul girls
have no! given up their
dolls for trucks und other
traditionally mule play­
things. two Ball State Uni­
versity researchers say.
After studying the play
patterns of 25 girls and 25
iioys ugrd 3 lo 5. Betty
B eeson and R . Ann
Williams, profess*a • of el­
ementary education, con­
cluded relaxation of sexual
s lc r c o l y pea has been
mainly umong boys.
"W c found that while
little girls' play choices
have remained tHc same
— art projects and house
play — hoys’ activities
have expanded lo Include
house play. Ms. Williams
said ihe change In boys"
play appears lo be related
lo what they are seeing at
home. Boys see their fa­
thers w ashing dishes,
shopping for groceries and
taking care of ihe children.
"During free time play,
boys are enthusiastically
sharing In activities such
as cooking breakfast." she
said. "There was a time
when boys would have
been considered sissies for
playing house."
, Ms. Beeson said she
suspects girls still are not
choosing lo play with toy
trucks and blocks because
they do not see their
mot hem In those activities.
" T h is indicates that
children’s play still Is re­
stricted by sex stereotyp­
ing. Since play Is the way
In which children develop.
It Is essential lliul u wide
range of play activities be
open to all children to
allow them to develop to
their fullest potential." Ms.
Beeson said.
Historically, boys liuve
been con sidered more

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

however,

lapse and

political chaos will make It difficult for 11
civilian government to last very long
when ambitious and resentful military
officers arc waiting In the wings for their
chance to strike again
"The new government will T’ave lo
move faBt lo dismantle the military
apparatus," one |K&gt;lltlcal source said.
"Now you have active duly officers
running factories, airports, radio and
television stations, the weather service

'What wo have
is complete
national disintegration
and all kinds of government organiza­
tions that were divided up between the
armed services.
"This power structure must he dis­
solved."
One of two main presidential can­
didates will Inherit the mess — Peronlst
hopeful Italo A rgcn tln o Ludcr. a
67-year-old nattily dressed laxv professor,
or Raul Alfonsln. n 56-ytar-oid lawyer
representing the Radical Party, a cen­
ter-left coalition supported largely by (he
middle class.
The Peronlst party has the advantage
of a solid core of support within th?
Argentine working class and ihe labor
movement, which fondly remembers the
salary and social benefits decreed by the
late three-time president Juan Domingo
Pcron.
The Peronlsts have not lost an election
since Pcron led the ticket in 1946.
Radical party leaders are confident ofa
comeback Ibis year for a variety of
reasons;
• Pcron died In 1974. leaving his
party without a strong leader.
• 25 percent of this year's voters will
cast ballots for the first time In their
lives, and the Rudlcals arc confident
youth will swing lo Alfonsln.
• Peronlsm's base in the Industrial
work force has diminished because of
(he closing of basic Industries In the past
five years of economic mismanagement.
An Independent polling source told
UPI (hat Alfonsln's campaign has been
helped considerably by a crossover of
voters who normally vote for consei vaiive puny candidates.
The source said these voters, fearing a
P ero n ls t v ic t o r y , arc tu rn in g lo
Alfonslnhas the lesser of two evils.
"This time around the conservatives
will be virtually eliminated as a source of
third party strength," the source said.

from the recession with two years of
Industrial peace.
The strongman of the Pcronlsl party some say he will he even stronger titan
the nation'* pretfldWt *l.ou !J I.c
Peronlsls win - Is Lorenzo Miguel, elder
of the powerful Metallurgist* union and
vice president of the Pcronlsl Parly.
Shrewd, tough, and practical. Miguel Is
nicknamed "c o m p a d r c "-ih e godfather
- by both friends and critics. Ills
e n e m ie s sny he con d on es union
hooliganism to enforce his orders, and he
has filed a libel suit uguinst one private
Investigator who accused him ordering a
murder.
,
Miguel and other union leaders will he
able to make the social pact stick.
Peronlst officials argue.
A diplomat warned, however, that the
pact could easily fall apart once the
honeymoon period o f the new ad­
ministration Is over and the union chiefs
begin fighting with one another for the
loyalties of the rank and file
The Peronlsls and Radicals as wrll arc
picking up support from both the left
and the right:

I be Communis! party Is supporting ;
the Peronlsts us the party most repre- j
tentative ol the Argentine work* r.
hr the pas! the Communists asked for
3 Peronlst J
l» r t y *&gt;urrc - "That wc keep up grain I
wheat sales to the Soviet Union and I
wo keep up at least some anti-»
United States rhetoric."
Peronlsls. like the Radicals, have.
support from many businessmen. One o f .
‘ hem Is Volkswagen distributor Julio,
Alberto Mlglfozzl. Pcronlsl candidate for .
‘ he chamber of deputies, who says his »
Party Is Ihe only one who can lead us j
outdfour present difficulties.”
A lf o n s ln has p ic k e d up n o n - ;
Communist leftist support with a strong ;
anti-military human rights crusade. {
promising to abolish the post of army }
commander, to crack down on torture t
and illegal arrests and to punish those I
guilty of human rights abuses.
In foreign affairs Alfonsln is linked to i
the Western Europe Socialist Jntcma- {
Ilona!, and his aides expect him lo differ !
with the Unlird States In Us policies t
toward Central America.
\

VETERA N S
* Revised booklet of Veteran benefits recently published by the
•ft Veterans Administration now available to honorary discharged
ft Veterans at no cost.
ft

ft
*
*
*

ftftftft^ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftft********
Dll ind null lo:

OAKLAWN'S v e t e r a n s
Route 4, Box 244
Sanford, Florida 32771

d iv is io n

Name _

The Peronlsts arc campaigning heavily
on a pledge to achieve a "social pact." an

Address

accord between management und labor
that wilt enable the nation to fecdVef

City___
For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1,1955 Q ]

active, noisier and messier
than girls. In a rrflcrllon of
society's altitudes toward
sex roles. Ms. Beeson said.
"This Is what society
thinks little hoys and girls
should Ik- like and It is
reflected In the play activi­
ties children choose." she
said.

For Veterans with military service since Jan. 31,1955 Q~j
Year of Discharge_______________________ _ A g e ________

kin the

Type of Discharge__________________________________ ___

322-2611

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Evening Herald
(USPS 411M)

as?

300N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F U . 3277)
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-9993
Sunday, October 16, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, 124.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, 11.25; Month, *5.25; 0 Months,
$30.00; Year. 157.00.

The Olympics
Are For Everyone
Politics encircles every’ Olympic Games the way
flics plague a picnic, and the 1984 games In Los
Angeles Inevitably will be no exception. Even
assuming the furor over the Soviet downing of a
Korean airliner Is but a dim memory by next
' summer, any number o f nations can be expected
to find various ways of making political pro­
paganda out of an event that, In an ideal world,
would be a celebration of Individual achievement
and international amity, without the nationalistic
trappings that cloak contem porary Olympic
events. Faced with this Inevitability, It behooves
Americans lit particular, as host* of the 1984
Games, to do as much as possible to minimize the
damage.
In that spirit, a group of businessmen — two of
them Korcan-Americans with understandable bit­
terness toward the Soviet Union — would have
been well-advised to quietly and swiftly abandon
the circulation of a petition to submit to President
Reagan, urging him to ban Soviet athletes from
(he games. The petition Is a misguided gesture
fhat would unfairly punish Soviet athletes for the
actions of their government and do Incalculable
harm to this country's reputation In the world.
Apart from
,’ing misguided, the "ban-lheSovicts" move overlooks the fact that this country
is only the host of next year’s summer Games, the
International O lym p ic C om m ittee has sole
Jurisdiction over who may participate, and the Los
»’ ’A ngeles Olympic Organizing Committee Is obliged,
as a creature of the Olympic movement, to accept
the rules laid down. Any action by the U.S.
government or the organizing committee to bar
athletes from any accredited country could result,
justifiably, in the removal o f the games from the
United States.
Fortunately neither President Reagan nor any
significant group in Congress shows any sign of
making a move to bar the Soviets from participat­
ing. What makes the businessmen's petition
harmful, though. Is the way it feeds grist to the
Soviet propaganda mill, which is already working
bvertlme with stories about crime, air pollution,
price-gouging and the general "unreliability" of
this country as an International host. Much of that
Will continue anyway, but that's no reason for
A m e ric a n s to c o o p e r le w ith the K re m lin
Ideologues. Fnr better to be gracious hosts to the *

'•.Whole world at a 1984 Olympiad that, with luck,
will be remembered for Its performances, not Its
.politics.

Tax Cheat Trap
The Internal Revenue Service has come up with
. yet another tax requirement.
It Is Introducing W-9 — a form that requires
taxpayers to swear they aren’ t tax cheats. It
Requires them to swear they have provided their
correct Social Security number to banks and other
financial Institutions that pay them interest and
dividends.
W-9 was instigated by Congress after it bowed to
the bank lobby and ruled the nation didn't need
the withholding of 10 percent of interest and
dividends.
At that point, the IRS told Congress that some
20 million individuals and couples could continue
to hide their interest Income and the government
would continue to lose about $8 billion a year.
Congress said. "W e 'll stop that by getting
taxpayers to swear they arc honest."
Those who do not provide the banks and savings
Institutions with their correct Social Security
number will be penalized $50. In addition. Interest
and dividend payments made to them will be
subject to 20 percent withholding.
•i We hope W-9 works. But we believe at best It
will give the IRS some document to go to court on.

Please Write
Letters to the editor are welcome l o r
publication. All letters must be signed and
include a 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.

Vtf

BERRY'S WORLD

TH
uV
c’ i

OJ

“Can you B E U E V E II? Daddy says he cut the
phone line 20 minutes ago. I mean REALLY —
talk about HARASSMENT. CLASSIC INEQUI­
TIES OF LIFE... honestly. *'

By Doris Dietrich

Brandy is the big beloved brute standing
watch In our neighborhood. She seems to
sense the instant when any neighbor’s
range is turned on and lopes In the
direction from where the culinary odors
are drifting.
Brandy Is a freeloadtng St. Barnard with
a ravenous appetite. She also has her fharc
o f vet bills but she cannot be claimed as n
tax deduction.
When I try to shoo Brandy away, she
Justs stands there grinning, licking her
chops and wagging her tail knowing full
well that she will probably get a few loving
pats and another handout.
No way does Brandy lead a dog's life.
And she has her legal rights In many
areas. However. If Brandy were n person
and even so much ns walked across nn
irate homeowner’s property, she could be
taken to court, according to a local
attorney, when we were discussing tres­
passing.
But the attorney cxplnlncd that If a

homeowner allows a person or persons to
wnlk actoss the properly several limes,
then It ceases to be trespassing. The
properly owner “ permits" the Illegal vio­
lation and should he later decide to take
the trespasser to court no matter how
much the property Is defaced, forget It.
The simple mattcr’ ls Ihnt the tresspassing
Jerk has been given carte blanche or a
blank check from the homeowner.
I disagreed with the attorney by citing an
Incident that happened In August. I wns
headed west on Country Club Road when a
law enforcement officer motioned me off
the road, I sincerely did not know why he
was directing me to turn right on An­
derson Circle. He said I was doing sonic
figure over 30 mph In a 25 mph zone hardly speeding, but a moving violation.
He carefully examined my driver’s license,
recorded the necessary Information con­
tained on it while stnnding at the side of
my automobile and gave me what I term a
"speeding ticket.”
It never occurred to me to take the case

to court. I Judged myself guilty, felt like 2
cents, and wrote out a check for the
requested $25 fine before the ink was
hardly dry on the ticket with no questions
asked.
1 mentioned*to the attorney that I was
probably guilty on many occasions of a
"moving violation." He tried to convince
me If the cops allowed me to "speed"
previously without stopping nlc, then I
might have won the ense had I gone to
court.
Maybe If a person has money to burn
and lots o f spare time, he (or she) would
take on the court "just to try to beat the
system." Perhaps 1should have argued the
case and lied to the Judge that 1 have been
getting away with speeding down Country
Club Road for years and that the law had
been giving me carte blanche to speed by
not complaining before now
What Is the Judge’s decision supposed to
be?
Wcndcr If Brandy has any answers.

AN THO N Y HARRIGAN

DICK WEST

Reaching
Political
Accord

On The
Necktie
That Binds
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tlie advent of
October means another Christmas
shopping season is almost at our
throats. So let us forthwith give some
thought to Christmas neckties.
Not that one has to wait for a holiday
to visit a haberdasher. At last report,
about 200 miles of neckties were being
sold In this country every day.
These. 1 assume, are American-made
ties. Although I've heard that some
Japanese ties can get up to 60 miles ip a
gallon of gravy, the demand for foreign
cravats appears to have peaked.
Imported or domestic. It Is during the
Christmas shopping season that the
necktie really comes Into Its own. But.
according to a survey I saw earlier this
year, men generally are fed up with
receiving ties as gifts.
Enough already! Although the first
mile may be the hardest, the average
male wardrobe Is now deemed by Its
owner to have a sufficiency of cravats.
At least of the gift variety.
Only 18 percent of the male partici­
pants In the survey said they would
welcome a gift-wrapped nccktlc. None
indicated a tic would be first choice In a
letter to Santa, and about half said they
already owned 20 or more tics, gravy
spots and all.
The largest number (27 percent)
ranked books os the gift they would
most like to receive. Literature was
followed by booze, toilet articles, Bhlrts
and sporting goods.
Conceivably, surveys of this sort
could work a hardship on female
shoppers, who buy 65 percent of the
neckties, moutly as presents for
husbands or gentlemen friends.
This year, they need to exercise a little
more imagination In thrlr gift selec­
tions. although goodness knows plenty
of imagination has gone Into the
purchase of Christmas neckties.
As a rule of thumb (the thumb can be
a big help in tying knots), tics that
appear under a Christmas tree quickly
make their way to the back of the rack,
and are never seen again.
Be wurned.Tiowcvcr. that gift books
aren't all that easy to choose either.
Unless due care is exercised, Christmas
books will be as unread as Christmas
ties arc unworn.
If the same taste that has governed
the sale of Christmas tics goes Into the
selection of Christmas books, the big­
gest sellers will have red dust Jackets
flligreed with sprigs of mistletoe and
other seasonal vegetation.
The watchword will be: damn the title
and contents: full speed ahead with
bizarre dust Jackets
Bear in mind that books are highly
personal Items, at least as individu­
alistic as neckties. Perhaps the following
fashion guideline will be of some help:
The vogue In literature right now is
toward thick books. If a female shopper
doesn't buy the male of her gift list a
book that is at least 2.5 Inches thick,
that can be taken to mean she doesn't
really love him.

RUSTY BROWN

Learning From Men
"What I’ve learned from men."
When I henrd that a friend of mine
had given a talk with that title, I was
intrigued. I wanted to find out what she
said,
She got the idea, she said, after being
the only newswoman working with 10
newspapermen on the 4 p in. to 1 n.m.
shift. In that male-dominated situation,
she observed how diffei cully men
operated from women.
"Built Into all those guys." she said,
"was an assumed confidence about
themselves and their Jobs that I did not
have.” She went on to say that the men
did not seem to need approval from
others as did she. Their behavior
Implied "I'm OK." They didn't stew
over self-doubts or worry that they were
In the wrong field. "Men are cither
kinder to themselves or more realistic,"
she concluded.
I decided to poll a few other women to
discover what they had learned working
with men. One of the women Is a
high-ranking manager at a public utility
company, another a graphic artist; one
Is a counselor with a social service
agency, and another a public relations
executive.
All agreed that successful men exhib­
ited characteristics they admired and
wanted to emulate. Some of these
attributes may be exaggerated in the
eyes of the beholders, of course: Not all
men are ’ as confident as they seem.
Nevertheless, here Is what these women
have learned:
Don’ t flip over a flaw. When men goof,
they consider It a bad day or an Isolulrd
incident. “ They can blame the mistake
on someone or something." said one
woman, "but I used to always worry.
'What did I do wrong?’" The public
relations executive said. "Men h«vc
taught me not to be such a perfectionist
— to give myself a break."
Don't expect more uf the Institution
(or system or bureaucracy) than It can
give. The woman counselor said: "If the
power structure didn’t ask for my
opinion, I was hurt and fell I wasn't
valued. Men taught me not to take It
personally because the power structure
is an impersonal thing."
Pick your battles carefully. The public
utility manager says the most valuable
lesson she learned from men Is "to pick
battles on my own turf where I have the

upper hand." She also learned to line up
her allies ahead of time: "Never be out
In left field, crusading alone."
Don't be afraid of confrontations. Said
the counselor: " I worked with a
psychologist who felt good after he had
a showdown with his bosses. 1 learned
to do the same and not worry about It
rtfiei wuid."
Added another woman: "A woman
perceives a clash with a co-worker as a
defeat: n man Just looks upon it as a
skirmish and doesn't bear a grudge
because of It."
Don't worry about being well-llkcd.
The five women all agreed they had
spent too much time on this. "I used to
try to get even Ihc Jerks tn tlie office to
like me." said one.
Forget the Job when you leave the
office. "I would carry my work home
with me in my head." said the graphic
designer, "until I realized that men
didn't do that. Now. I too turn off the Job
when I leave. I play violin in a string
quartet and paint watercolors."
Said another: "Men don't get hung up
about balancing roles between home
and family. They seem to Instinctively
find a balance that's comfortable fur
them."
Don't second-guess yourself. "When I
first started working." said one woman.
"I would keep thinking of different
approaches to an assignment. Men
usually find one Idea that works and
stick with It. That's better."
Set your goals high and don't be
afraid to go for them. The woman
manager explained: "I was loo timid to
say I wanted to tie a CEO someday, until
I noticed that men aren't afraid to say
what they arc aiming for.”
Moat of these male characteristic's
could be called survival tactics or u
primer on how to get ahead. Yet, there's
one attribute I have learned working
with men that’s completely selfless:
their willingness to encourage others.
A college professor coaxed me to go
into independent studies — which I did.
My first boss thought 1 should go Into
politics, which — lacking both con­
fidence and female role models In those
times — I did not.
Years later, a newspaper editor en­
couraged me to write a column for
women — I do.

Farmers In the Midwest apparently
h ave m ore p o lit ic a l c lo u t than
employers and employees In textile and
apparel manufacturing areas.
That's a realistic way of appraising
the meaning of the new textile trade
accord with the People’s Republic of
China. Under the terms of the accord,
apparel Imports from China where
wages arc but 20 cents an hour, will rise
by 3 to 4 percent a year. A flood of
Chinese-made textiles already Is coming
into the country and causing a loss of
Jobs and profits. "I can only call it a
disaster." said Kurt Barnard, executive
director of the Federation of Apparel
Manufacturers. More textile and apparel
plants can be expected to shut down
during the life of this agreement. Last
year. China boosted Its sales In the U.S.
by 25 percent.
Mac Levy, executive director of the
New York Coat and Suit Assn., said, In
commenting on the accord, that the
Chinese have such a huge production
“ that even a single percentage point
Increase Isa very large amount."
It Is clear, on the basis of this accord,
that the Reagan administration. like Its
predecessors, regard the textile and
apparel industries as expendable in­
dustries.
One likely result of the accord will be
an increase In sales of American groin
and other agricultural products to
China. The Chinese, who are tough
bargainers — much shm-per than their
U.S. counterparts, have declined to
purchase U.S. cotton, corn, soybeans or
wheat since January, as a way of
indicating their displeasure at not get­
ting their wny on a textile agreement.
China is dependent on the United States
for a wide range of technological Items,
but the administration apparently
feared to use the threat of a cutofT of
sales as a negotiating tactic. The United
States long has lacked a militant
posture In negotiations with foreign
powers.
The Jo u rn a l o f Com m erce has said
that the Chinese gesture "was not lost
on Republican members of Congress
representing the Midwest, who pre­
ssured the administration to settle the
Chinese dispute."
Well, that's politics. And Midwestern
farmers undoubtedly rejoice at the
prospect of renewed sales to Peking.
Perhaps that rejoicing will translate Into
votes in 1984. However, those who arc
concerned about Industrial jobs in the
United States can only be dismayed at
what they wili regard as a sellout o f u
basic Industry. According to the Con­
gressional Textile Caucus, the textile
and apparel Industry "employs 2.5
million people — one out of every eight
manufacturing Jobs In the United
States."
At a time when the administration Is
proudly reciting the numbers of Ameri­
cans who went back to work this
summer, it should tie remembered that
the textile accord will put Americans
out of work.

JA C K ANDERSON

'Dream Vehicle' May Be Nightmare
W AS H IN G TO N - A m erican in ­
fantrymen may lie in more danger
riding to the battlcfront in the Army's
newest dream vehicle than they would
be from enemy fire.
The High M obility Multipurpose
Wheeled Vehicle — called the "Hum­
mer" — is intended to be the infantry’s
wheeled workhorse of the future. It's
supposed to replace the Jeep, Ihc
weapons carrier and the personnel
carrier — with missile-firing capability
to boot. The Army wants nearly 55.000
Hummers at about (22,000 apiece.
But the diesel-powered vehicle has
aheutdy umusM.il a dismal it cold for
reliability. And now a series of internal
A rm y rep orts, exa m in ed by my
associate Donald Goldberg, shows that
the Hummer gets a flunking grade for
safety as well.
A report Bent to tlie Army's deputy
chief of staff for research, development
and acquisition lists a number of serious
safety problems:
— A badly placed safety strap can
result In "p a ssen gers potentially
ejected" from the carrier.
— The driver's field o f vision is
restricted. "This Item is particularly

important during driving over the crest
of hills and in traffic on roadways," the
report notes.
— There is no "P A R K " position on the
Hummer's automatic transmission.
This oversight, "m ay result In accidents
... due to potential driver error (In­
advertently leaving transmission In a
DRIVE' position)."
— The brakes aren't protected from
objects kicked up from below by the
wheels. Result: "Potential brake fail­
ure."
— The Hummer's 62-pound "T O W "
missiles cannot be tied down properly.
"Failure uf missile rack to adequately
secure TOW missiles may result in
missile becoming dislodged during
vehicle operation over rough terrain,
with subsequent dumage or personal
injury."
— If they avoid getting conked by a
dislodged missile, the Hummer's crew
faces serious danger from the ever­
present possibility of a missile misfire.
"T h is may result In a number of
different accident situations, ranging In
severity up to subjecting all crew
members to TOW exhaust blast and
flame."

— And even If everything goes like
clockwork, tlie Hummer missile gun­
ners will be subjected to deafening blast
noise. "This will result in permanent
hearing loss (even with double hearing
protection) unless the number of
exposures is limited to one per gunner
per day" — hardly the kind of quota
that wins any battles.
Army spokesmen stoutly IiibIs I that
the Hummer won't be accepted until the
bugs are worked out; they say testing is
continuing. But other Army sourres
doubt that the safety Issues will ever be
resolved.
There's good reason for these doubts.
Officials at the Army's safety center at
Fort Rucker, Ala., have urged further
tests and correction o f the safety
problems. But a July 7 memo from the
safety center said: "Verification o f these
fixes In a realistic environment is
needed to ensure their operational
adequacy, but additional operational
testing is not currently planned."
SCANDAL OF THE WEEK: With
callous unconcern about the poisons
that seep Into our food supply, pesticide
producers are lobbying strenuously
against legislation that would tighten

the testing requirements for deadly
agricultural chemicals and the people
who use them.
Industry pressure Is expected to kill a
requirement, for example, that older,
never-tested pesticides be checked.
What consumers don’t know, it is
presumed, won't hurt them.
The pesticide companies are ulso
protesting the b ill’ s proposal that
"applicators” — the Individuals who
actually spread or spray the deadly
poisons — must show that they know
how to use and dispose of the chemicals
beiorc they gel the necessary certifica­
tion.
In some states, minors allegedly take
the applicator tests for their Illiterate
parents. State officials deny this can
happen, but it Is legal for a wife or an
18-ycar-old offspring to take the test for
an illiterate farmer — on the assumption
that they will then supervise the use of
the pesticides.
To their credit, some reform-minded
pesticide manufacturers support the
legislation. "W e want the sloppy opera­
tors out o f business, because they give
us all u bad name," one explained.

�OPINION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. H , 1 » 3 - 5 A

OUR READERS WRITE

P o litic a l Process Ills :

Congressmen Offer New Approach To PACs
House or Representatives
Washington D.C. 20515
We are writing to call attention to a
new approach to the so-called PAC
(Political Action Committees) problem
In congressional elections — and to seek
your help In securing Its enactment.
The measure Is the Political Tax Credit
Reform act of 1983 (H.R. 3737). known
In Congress as the McHugh Conablc bill.
We are the primary sponsors of H.R.
3737. We arc Democrat and Republican,
liberal and conservative. Three of us are
sponsoni of public flnanclng/PAC limit
legislation and three of us arc not. In
short, while we represent a range of
different perspectives, both politically
and In terms of campaign reform, we
believe our proposal deals with the PAC
problem in a way which all sides can
accept.

parties — rather than by limiting the
amount of funds a candidate can receive
from PACs, as Is proposed In other hills.
Basically, our proposal would convert
the current 50 percent federal tax
credit, which applies to virtually every
type of political contribution. Into two
separate and more narrowly focused
credits, as follows:

\NE CAUEp-mtS meeting because
GOME OF US THQU6HT WE SHOULP
GETTO6ETHEE ANP KAI5E SOME
MONEY TO PONATE JO ELECTED
OFFICIALS WHO WILL WORK TO
WIFE OUT POLITICAL ACTION
COMMITTEES &lt;

1) a 100 percent credit for contribu­
tions to House and Senate candidates
which would apply only to contributions

from residents of the candidate's home
state; and

2) a totally separate 50 percent credit
for contributions to political parties,
including their state and local affiliates.
The limit for each credit would be $50
for an Individual and $100 for a Joint
return.
^TA
The 100 percent credit Is designed to
wrcm^TACTrirc,’
Hu l m £ 0 &lt; w j
, We do not subscribe to the notion that Increase the Incentive for candidates to
PACs are Inherently bad. Most PACs locus more effort on small-glvcr fund the current credit. This Is accomplished
represent legitimate Interests of various raising by making It as easy ns possible by eliminating the credit for all other
segments of our society. But they do not for the average person to make a entitles — specifically, PACs, newsletter
represent everyone and there is growing contribution.
funds, and presidential, state and local
concern that congressional candidates
Creating a separate tax credit for
candidates.
— particularly Incumbent Members of contributions to political parties will
In addition, the bill contains pro­
Congress, many of whom receive more strengthen parlies In three ways: 1) It
visions to ensure that the revenue loss
than half of their campaign funds from will eliminate competition both from
In future years docs not exceed the
PACs — arc- becoming overly dependent candidate fund raising and from PAC
revenue loss from the current tax credit.
on PAC money.
fund raising: 2) It will give parlies a • and to prevent candidates from using
As a result. PACs play a dispropor­ distinct advantage over PACs and other
the new 100 percent credit to build up a
tionate role In both the legislative fund-raising entitles whose contributors
big fund reserve for future campaigns.
process and the electoral process. The would not be entitled to a tax credit: and
Rc&amp;^rdlpg elimination of the tax
growth of PAC influence has un­ 3| It will open the door to a closer
credit for PACs. we believe there Is no
dermined public confidence In Con­ relationship between parties and their
Justification for the government to be
gress. diminished the role of political congressional candidates. For example,
subsidizing groups whose main purpose
parties, and caused candidates to focus slate and local panics could develop
Is to lobby Members of Congress on
their fund-raising efforts on PACs
fund-raising expertise to assist congres­ behalf of their particular Interests.
Our bill is an attempt to address the sional candidates in their grassroots
With respect to state and local
"PAC problem" by Increasing campaign fund-raising efforts.
candidates, we believe that providing
funds from other sources — small
We want to emphasize that the tuo
assistance to them should be a state
Individual contributors and political new tax credits will cost no more than
rather than a federal responsibility.

We know our proposal does not deal
with all of the problems that need to be
dealt with In the area of election law
reform. It Is not Intended to.
Instead, It Is an effort to make some
modest progress at a time when most
observers believe It Is unlikely we can
pass any kind of significant legislation
dealing with campaign finance. We
disagree.
We believe that H.R. 3737 can be
enacted this year.
We hope you can support us In this
effort.
Thank you for your consideration.
Matthew F. McHugh
Morris K. Udall
Ed Jenkins
Barber B. Conable
Thomas J.Taukc
Carl D. Pursell
Congressmen

Communists Poised To Bump U.S. Satellite

A Fine Hospital'

Among the less painful lessons driven
home by the Korean airline massacre Is
that communist nations cannot be
trusted in their dealings with the free
world. Cuba has recently presented the
Reagan Administration with a possible
legal fait accompli which will test
w hether we have learned this lesson.

I would like for the public to know
what n fine hospital we have here, and
the doctors also. I was a patient in
September. I had a serious operation,
h avin g my right leg am putated.
Everyone from (hospital administrator)
Mr. Jim Tesar on down to the cleaning
girls were so kind. The nurses were kind
and on the Job. The food was real good,
and even though I ate smnll servings. It
was more than enough.
I want to thank all of them at C.F.r /'
Hospital for making my stay pleasant.
Also. I want Dr. Clonz. Dr. Knrgent and
Dr. Perez to know how kind and patient
Re: Abortions Growing Much Safer.
they were. There were other doctors
Safer for whom? Certainly not one of
who were good, too.
those who will be added to the "18
million — since 1960 — o f the unborn
1 Just wanted the public to blow and who have been aborted (murdered) In
to appreciate and count our blessings that time." (Review of the News 10/5/83)
for what we hove. 1 am a great believer
Truly, the zero population people and
In giving bouquets while you can still those femalrs who wish to do. "their
smell them. I would give up the own thing" must be doing nlp-ups In
morning paper before I would give up the streets. No matter that In doing their
The Herald, so this Is the bouquet for own thing they, the females, are vio­
you all.
lating God's will — First Thcs&gt;dontans.
Love and Prayers always from “ Just Chapter 4-Verse 3, not to mention the
males, for without their cooperation
Me."
Lida Stine there would be no life to abort.
(Mrs. George A.)
S.B. "Jim " Crowe
Sanford
Sanford

Safer For Whom?

Cuba has taken the necessary steps to
place a communications satellite In the
orbital slot presently occupied by an
American RCA communication* satel­
lite. The Cuban saHllte would use the
same frequencies RCA uses and would
ennble Cuba to transmit to and receive
transmissions from large portions of
North America as well as all of Central
America und the Caribbean Basin. If
Cuba Is allowed to go through with Its
plans. Interference with the RCA satel­
lite could severely disrupt our domestic
telecommunications system.

law center In the nation devoted
exclusively to communications related
Issues.
ALF believes the State Department
should attempt to persuade Cuba to find
another orbital slot for Its satellite. The
slot now occupied by the RCA satellite
was. at the time the Federal Com­
munications Commission authorized
RCA to launch Its satellite, the only
available orbital slut capable of provid­

PACs Not
To Blame

.k

Freedoms Foundation Features
A3 the 1984 elections draw near, the attacks on
political action committees (PACs) will surely Intensify.
If their critics are to be believed. PACs arc responsible
for most of the ills that beset the American political
process. The Irony of this current reform movement Is
that PACs arc the product of an earlier reform
mo'vcmcnt.
In existence since the 1940's when labor unions
started them. PACs dldn'l begin to proliferate until
Congress passed election iuw reforms In the cafly
1970's. These statutes and eventual court Interpreta­
tions of them created the legal framework for busi­
nesses. special interest and Ideological groups to collect
voluntary contributions and make donations to political
campaigns. Many of the groups now critical of PACs
were supporters of these changes In election law.
The additional irony Is that In most respects the
reforms have worked. Limits on contributions and
reporting requirements have eliminated the ability of a
few "fat cats" to unduly Influence the electoral process.
Campaign finance Is cleaner and more open than It was
15 years ago.
In spite of this, critics, many of whom are self-styled
public Interest groups, continue their attacks on political
action committees. Their arguments, stripped of rheto­
ric and distilled to essentials, are that business PACs are
gaining control of the political process and. unless
stopped, will take control of the governor otal de­
cision-making process. A frightening prospect If It were
about to happen, but the facts suggest otherwise.
Of the 3.371 PACs registered at the end of 1982.
1.570. less than half, were corporate PACs. and some o f
them were Inactive. PACs as a whole accounted for 24
percent of the money spent In the 1982 Congressional
elections. Business PACs accounted for only 8 percent o f
the total.
In the 1980 elections, the average corporate PAC
contribution to a candidate for the House of Repre­
sentatives was $471, and 80 percent of these P A C s’
contributed less than $500 per candidate. Corporate
PAC contributions to Senate candidates In that election
averaged $824, and 77 percent gave less than 81.000
per candidate. These figures arc well below the $5.o6o
per election limit established by law and hardly suggest
that businesses arc "buying" elected officials.
Those who wish to abolish or restrict PACs may he
correct In sensing something Is wrong within our
political process, but they have mlstdcntlflcd the cause.
Our problems stem not from the way we choose our
elected representatives but from why we choose the

ing full communications coverage U&gt; Ihr

ones we do.

48 contiguous states. Cuba can lino
another spot In space to park Its
satellite.
ALF deeply believes that the Reagan
administration. State Department, and
FCC should move to establish the
United Stales' international law- rights
to this orbital slot.

If Interest groups exercise undue Influence over opr
political system at all levels, it Is not because of PA£s
und the current modes o f campaign finance but because
o f a post-World War II change In political thinking which
accepted brokering between Interest groups as the
legitimate and primary function of government.

ALF has urged our Government to
lake these (and other) steps. We hope
The American Legal Foundation
the Reagan Administration has learned
(ALF) Is using every appropriate means
Its lesson and will act. before a crisis
and legal alternative to persuade the • arises, to prevent a communist govern­
U.S. Government to take a strong stand
ment from bumping U.S. satellites.
against the Cuban satellite.
William A. Kchoc 111
ALF Is a nonprofit, public interest law
Executive Director
center dedicated to ensuring that the
AMERICAN LEGAL
nation’s electronic and print media are
FOUNDATION
members and supporters. ALF Is the
Washington.
D.C.
only pre-frec enterprise, public Interest

........... * ,

PACs aren't the cause of the problems within our
political system and eliminating them won't prove a
cure. Because the current accepted purpose o f govern­
ment Is to distribute resources between competing
Interest groups. Interest groups will always have the
ability to place their demands before government.
&lt;
The desired clennslng of our political system won't
occur until we rethink the role of government In our
society und look beyond narrow self-interest to the needs
of the nation as a whole. Maybe then we can produce
politicians who offer the nation a vision and a sense of
shared purpose rather than politicians who seek to build
a coalition of Interest groups totalling 51 percent of the
vote.

Amtrak Offers A Good Deal, But There's No Turning Back
seconds. That was about the only nostalgic experience 1 discovered Ihclr experience was the same.
Soon after we published a story on our business page
There are several fine hotels In the Penn Station area,
had.
about the special All Aboard America fares Amtrak has
* They've made a lot of changes since I traveled and one can find a comfortable room from $80 up, I
In effect through Feb. 29. a Sanford man and his wife
extensively by train. For one thing, they don't have chose a hotel almost directly across from Penn Station,
came in complaining they were never told their tickets
separate bathrooms anymore. Just one for men and which Is underneath Madison Square Garden, and was
were non-refundoblc.
women, and one for the handicapped. When the able to walk to it. Since we were only two blocks tram
Which Is what they found out when they tried to turn
bathroom Is In use. there's a light on Indicating It. And the Empire State Building and a number of other
Tom Giordano
them In for a refund after traveling to Vermont.
U'b only a small bathroom. Instead of the lounge-toilet sightseeing spots, wc spent that evening and a good part
And since I have an Insatiable curiosity. I decided to
area they used to have so one could sit In the lounge of the next morning walking around New York City.
buy one of the specially-priced tickets and give It a try
section to smoke. One womnn I spoke v..ih vb o
Hut durU'g the night I had a bizarre experience at the
myself. While the price 1s right and the experience
remembered the old days complained the bathrooms are hotel. 1 was awakened about 2 a.m. by loud voices In the
interesting. It isn’ t without Its drawbacks. And I found
that New York City Is as kooky and unpredictable as that still would have cost him $544.50. Instead of the now too small to change clothes In. Which Is apparently hallway. 1 got up. walked over to the door and peeked
$350 for their All Aboard America tickets. The main what she used ! j do when traveling coach some years through the security hole that gave me a clear view., jo!
ever.
Here's the deal: you can buy a roundtrip ticket to any difference, however. Is that If they chose not to return by ago.
two young men pulling the fire hose from Us cabinet in
There Is a vast Improvement, however, In the ride. It the wall, unrolling It wTdle running to thetr room next’to
point In one of three regions In the United States for train from Vermont under the family-fare plan, they
$175. In the Eastern Region, one can travel from Miami. could have turned In the unused tickets for a refund, seemed much smoother. I suppose that's because many mine.
of the cars are relatively new,
St. Petersburg-Tampa or Orlando to as far north as according to Cooper.
Fortunately. I didn't panic. I waited and pecked unity I
You can still s]&gt;cnd time In the lounge and drink your
But the Sanford man's beef essentially Is that no one
Montreal or as far west as Chicago. Or any poinl in
saw a security man with walkle talkie In hand check
between serviced by Amtrak. The return trip has to be told him or Ills wife thut the All Aboard America tickets favorite hard or soft drink at reasonable prices, but the Into (he matter. When I heard him report that the ffre
made within 30 days, and reservations have to be made arc non-refundable. Nor. he said, was It Indicated on his lounge was. of course, packed and noisy. I guessed was out in room so-and-so. I decided I didn't havc!to
tickets or any of the other literature he got when he that’s why the coach was so bare.
for the entire trip.
dress and head for Ihe fire exit. If l could get to L safely
I noticed one other major change. Thai was In the
Now then, you must pay for your ticket, or tickets, five bought them.
there on the fourteenth floor.
Cooper confirmed the man was not told about the dining room. Gone was the elegant sterling silver
days In advance. You may. according to Chuck Cooper
After a restless night of half-sleep, not wanting to miss
tableware,
replaced
by
plain,
cold
stainless
steel
at the Sanford Amtrak ticket office, turn in the ticket for refund policy In this case. Nor was Cooper told by the
any
additional fires. I checked out that Saturday
utensils.
Gone
was
the
china
and
sterling
sjlver
servers,
a full refund up to one-half hour before the train leaves. company to Instruct customers of that policy.
replaced by plastic plates and. cups and a plastic morning before going on my sightseeing tour. My train
But, once you’ ve begun your Journey, there are no
Cooper says he now Is telling those who buy the dish containing half-and-half for your coffee or tea. The back to Sanford was scheduled to leave at 3.35 p.m.
refunds.
low-priced fares about the non-refund jmllcy, and food prices, however, were more than reasonable,
I got to Penn Station about two hours before train time
In the case of the Sanford man and his wife, they had wondered why the company didn't provide ticket agents
and stopped for lunch at one of the restaurants in the
ranging
from
$2.75
for
spaghetti
and
meatballs,
to
$4.75
traveled by train to Vermont and. because of an accident with a stamp to post the message clearly on such
for roast turkey or a vegetarian dish. $6.25 for chicken station. Before 1 finished, a man went running past my
his wife had. he was uneasy about having her return to tickets.
klev. $0.75 for a seafood platter, or about $10 for a table with two- policemen In hot pursuit My curiosity
Sanford by train. He decided, tnsleud. to fly back with
When I called the Amtrak reservation service to book sirloin steak. For a $1.50 you can have a split of wine still unsated. I followed them Into the main waiting area
her and later turned in the unused tickets In Florida pussage through the All Aboard America fare, the
where the men was arguing with police who wanted to
thinking he'd get a partial refund. That's when he woman never mentioned It was a non-refundable ticket. that will fill two medium-sized glasses. No gourmet
arrest hint for smacking hts wife. When police were
treat,
you
uudcistand,
but
tasty.
And
eating
In
a
dining
learned he had no refund coming. Of course, had he Stic did remember to tel! me to pa&gt; fot it five days in
satisfied the woman wouldn't press charges, they
contacted Amtrak in Vermont ooktng for a refund, he advance, though. She also took the time to tell me that car on a train as you whiz across the country is still as
walked away. I went back to my pastrami sandwich.
exctllngal
It
was
years
ago.
would have learned It then, and could have flown his the $175 fare was for u coarh. und that for another $30
W r got to Jacksonville about two and a half hours
A few minutes later. 1 saw a crowd assembling In the
wife back, while using one return train ticket himself each way I could tuke the couch to Jacksonville, then
after Icuviug Sanford and made the switch to lhe main waiting room and once again left my sandwich to
and saved some money.
switch cars to a slumber rar to New York City. I'd have
But. as I said, once the ticket is used at the beginning the slumber car from New York to Jacksonville, and the slumber cur. After a short wall, wc took off again, find out what was going on. When I asked u'man
standing at the edge of the crowd why the woman up
heading for New York.
of the Journey. It no longer Is refundable. You either use coach to Sanford on the return trip.
II you're a light sleeper and noise or rattling lend to fro n t w as s o b b in g , he sa id , c a s u a lly . "O h .
it for the return trip, or throw it away.
Not bad. I thought. I left Sanford at 2 p.m. on a keep you awake as they do me. you’ re In for a rough nothing ...some guy Just grabbed her purse and took
Now that isn't really unfair, since the cost of a
roundtrip ticket to most of the northeast region’s Thursday afternoon scheduled to arrive at New York’s time. Even though the slumber car liad a bed with two off."
thrcc-Inch-thlck mattreuscs and I was able to strelch out
I he return trip to Sanford was about the same as the
destinations would cost considerably more than $175 Penn Station 10:30 a.m. the next day.
during
the
night.
It
wasn't
enough
to
overcome
the
trip
to New York, except this time I had to put up with a
1
hadn't
been
on
a
train
for
a
long
time
and
was
anyway. In the Vermont case. Cooper explained the
one way fare alone from Sanford would have cost the anxious to see If It still affected me as it did when 1 was tossing and turning that comes from a train traveling on waller In the dining car who. rather than concentrating
man $181.50...16.50 more than he paid for the special younger and fought a hundred tired soldiers, sailors and less than straight und smooth tracks at 85 miles on hour on serving Ills customers, seemed bent on telling them
or so. The constant rumbling noise Is difficult to how Amtrak would never make money in the dining car.
roundtrip ticket. The additional $181.50 for the return marines for a seal.
wlutl with having to pay hint and the other (our
overcome
too.
I
didn't
have
to
fight
anyone
this
time.
The
coach
was
trip at normal fare would have cost him a total of $363.
I got about two hours sleep that night, and tn talking employees $10 an hour, or about $2,000 a week.
Had the man chosen to buy a family-fare ticket for he near empty. As we left the Sanford station, the dull, long
It wusgood to get back to Sanford.
and his wife, she would have traveled for hall-fare, but train whistle brought back memories, but only for a few with other guests o f the slumber car the next morning.

Editor's
Choice

�I

ift-Evening Herald, Sanford, F I.

Sunday, 0$l. U, i m

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Hospitals A g ree To Cut
Costs By Two Percent
TALLAHASSEE (UPI| - The slate's Hospital
Cost Containment Board has accepted the
budgets of 33 hospitals and 23 of them have
agreed to the board's voluntary 2 percent cost
reduction-proposal. HCCB officials say.
The board also rejected the 1984 budgets of
Clearwater Community Hospital and proposed
Leesburg Regional Medical Center but has no
authority to require changes. HCCB Executive
Director Jerry Conger said Friday the board's
only weapon Is "public disclosure."
He said If every hospital In the stale could
meet the 2 percent cost reduction goal for each
of the next two years. Florida’s hospital costs,
would match that In states with rate-setting
authority.
If Insurance Commissioner Bill Gunter had
had his way with the Legislature this year, the
HCCB would already have the authority to set
hospital rates, but lawmakers turned back
Gunter's proposal.
Gunter has already announced his Intention
to try again next year.

Festivities Fill 'Homestaying' Week
Homc3taylng Week begins this week
us Student G overn m en t sponsors
"Friendship Day.”
In correlation with the Newcomer's
Club. Student Government Is organizing
a breakfast for all of Lake Mury High
School's new students. Eaclt club at
LMHS will have a representative present
to discuss the opportunities that each
club oilers.

by Jolene Becktcr

Also. M onday's dress-up day Is
"Tw ins." All students arc urged to pair
up and dress alike.

supply n Jar for each of a variety of
popular rock groups. Into these Jnrs.
students may toss loose chntigc to show
their suppott. and the winning group
will be announced at the end of the day.

Tuesday will be "Camouflage Day."
and Wednesday is "Rock T-Shirt Day."
Each student should wear his or her
favorite rock concert T-shirt, and ns a
fund-raiser, student government will

‘ Hawaiian Day" will be Thursday, and
in keeping with the spirit o f thr
Homestaying football game. Friday will

The Homestaying dance will be held
on Saturday. Oct. 22 at the Sanford Civic
Center, from 8-12 p.m.
Excitement will abound this week as
this year’s Homestaying activities arouse
LMHS to show their support of those
around them.

The Office of Commutilly histructlcnal Services at Seminole Communlty College will offer a speed reading
class to begin October 24.
Class will meet each Monday evenIrtg 7-10 p.m. on the Adult Education
Campus, building *38. Fee is $15.
The course attempts to Increase
comprehension along with reading
rntc. Speed reading is especially
helpful for persons who must cope
with a massive flow of paper work,
college officials say. noting there is an
Increased demand for this class.
For further Information, call SCC,
323*1450. ext.304.

S la c k

Sale
Men’s Par Four®
Larg e S e le c tio n
Fall C o lo rs.
Reg. *23.

Of

Men’s Sport Slack
B e lte d
S ty le
Polyester/Cotton.
Reg. ‘ 26.

In

Young Men’s
Colter® XR88

S a le 13.99

Reg. *26.

Stafford * dress shirt.

Sale

Best D ressed Bandits

Reg. $18. Essential to the well-dressed man
The Stafford™ button-down oxford shirt of
cotton/polyester lor lasting crispness More
comfortable details in the back box pleat,
placket sleeves Solid colors in sizes 14’ jto 17’4.

19"

SARASOTA IUPI) — Four suspected bank
robbers dressed In tuxedos and evening clothes
for a night on the town Friday ran Into police
who carted them off to Jail.
Police immediately charged Michael D.
r Oruhnm. 35. of Knoxville, Tentt.. and Jerrold D.

Women’s Packaged Briefs
Cotton or Nylon Tricot

Co,,on T e *
Tricot Briefs
Reg. 6.50

«

,

- 99

4

Sweaters And Je a n s
7-14 Shetland Crew Neck

Children’s And
Boy’s Sizes.
Orig. To *20

ReS-,5
Jr. HI Cords
Reg. *19

Sale 11"
C o jp
O d lC

Plain Pocket®

For Women
In Cotton And Cotton Polyester

Boy’s W estern Je a n s In
P o lye ste r Cotton Denim

Stripe Knits

Big Boys'

Reg. *14

Striped Sweater
Reg. *21

Sale 10"
Sale 16"

.

• &lt;

Tennis Shoe Closeout

Sale 4 "
O d lC

S iie prices effect.** through Stturday.

Girl’s Hunt Club'“ Sale

Par Four™ Tops

T a p p e d F o r T r ib e
Congratulations to Susana Huuman. Penny Morris.
Tom Stlffey, Rob Cohen, Steve Grey. Sherrt Buddies.
Susan Maun, and Alison McCall for being appointed by
Principal Wayne Epps as the members of Tribal Council
luy the '83-'84 year.
Tribe Is made up of students who have shown their
school spirit by being active in school-related events and
participating in clubs nnd'or sports.
S tu d e n ts arc r e ­
c o g n iz e d for th eir
achievements by beir.g given the honor of
membership in Tnbc.
— ‘/ 9 k M T O U n d
Two students will be
H
iu
CU C
chosen each week by
O tlS
the Tribal Council and
_
Epps. They will be T
ByJIllJanak
selected on the basts of
srjh oo! s p ir it and
participation, rather
tliim on popularity.
The first Tribe members of this year are Gencne
Sib 11wort h and Sue Bsignl. both seniors.
penene participates on the girls' varsity volleyball and
basketball teams. She is also a member of Future
Biislness headers of America. Fellowship of Christian
Atihl etesand National Honor Society.
fcuc Is the senior class president and u member of
PGA. Keycttcs and Alpha-American United. She is a
varsity bat girl, a member of the surf club and
Tliesplans. and will be pictured on the senior calendar.
bon't forget about the big faculty vs. alumni game
Saturday tOct. 15) at 7:30. Some of our favorite faculty
members will take on the Seminole alumni, with an
excited group o f faculty cheerleaders encouraging them,
■pie events occurring this week Include:
• Monday — Cross country. County Postal Run at

T h e fo o tb a ll gam e a gain st the
Mainland Bnrcanrors will begin at 8
p.m. During halftime, the parade will
resume and the Homestaying King and
Queen and Princes nnd Princesses will
be announced.

In Speed Reading

F o u n d e r ’s D a y S a l e

MIAMI |l)PI| — The president of the Better
Business Bureau of South Florida has been fired
amid an investigation into whether he doctored
BBB reports on three allegedly bogus oil- and
gas-leasing firms.
Suspended BBB President Henry S. Harris
was dismissed Friday In a closed-door meeting
of the bureau's board of directors. The board
also took steps to change the way the
organization does business.
Harris declined to comment. He has pleaded
Innocent to the fraud charges.
The indictment charges that Harris was paid
to alter BBB records on complaints against the
Miami-based oil- and gas-leasing companies. On
Wednesday, a federal Judge ordered the compa­
nies — which are suspected o f tricking
thousands of customers out of $56 million — to
stop doing business.
Amst said the board approved a series of
protective measures recommended by the
national council after the review of BBB records
The bureau plans to change the way consumers
report complaints and to begin providing more
information to people who ask about a com­
pany's business standing, he said.

S p i r i t e d E ig h t

The Homcriaylng festivities Friday
night will start at approximately 7:30
with a parade of adorned automobiles
representing the school's various clubs,
and a parade of fourteen Corvettes
carrying this year’s Homestaying court.

Around
LMHS

BBB Chief Fired

Alexander. 18. of Houston. Texas, with two
j counts each o f armed robbery. Graham's
fiancee. Kathleen Marie Vandcnburg. 31, of
Niles, Mich., and Andy Jackson. 21, no known
address, were held for questioning Friday night.
According to police Information officer Sgt.
Mike Schott, the pudgy Graham entered the
Bayshore office of Barnett National Bank In
, adjoining Manatee County on Wednesday and
handed a teller a note. The note demanded
money and said the bearer was armed. The
holdup man collected about S I.000 and fled on
fool.
About 2:45 p.m. Friday, Schott said. Graham
pulled the same operation at the City Commer­
cial Bank of Sarasota, getting away with $1,000.
Schott said Graham and the others also arc
suspects In bank robberies at Tampa and
Knoxville.

SCC Offers Class

q

Reg *12

P,,c sr , .

,

O d lC

-JC 99
IJ

q99

Sale 2 "
Men’s Sport Shirts
Long Sleeves
Button Down Collars
Assorted Plaids
Orig. *15

O

Sale 10“

Solid Or Stripes
Orig. *16

20% Off

Leather Sale

A ll K id ’s S l e e p w e a r

Smooth Grain Leathers
Nylon-And Zip Out Linings
The Short And The Long

Bedtime warmth
for girls and boys.

Light Lined Shortie
Orig. *100

S a le

S a le

Sale 69"

6.40

Rag. $8. Sweet dreams with cartoon favorites
screenprinted on a poly knit dorm shirt. Big
girls’ sizes 7 to 14
Little girls' ankle-length dorm style in sizes
4to6X. Reg. 7.50 Sale S6
C.'txu) - 1111U«t»« F . . I . If noted* Inc.

7.20

Reg. $9. Ski paiamas with
sporty subjects lor aspiring
athletes Poly flannel.
Big boys’ tlzes S.M.L.
Little boys’ sizes B.C
Reg $8 Sale 0.40

Sale 9 "
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Quilted Lined
Orig. *135
-»r* me
JVM **\
r*nrr t

Sale 99"
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Orig. *150

Sale
109"

Ljjman.
p Tuesday — JV and varsity volleyball with Spruce
Crpek. home. 4 p m.: swim team meet with LteLand.
Inane. 3:30 p.m.: frrshman football with Lake Howell,
hohie. 7 p.m.: PSAT-N'MSQT Test
p Wednesday — JV and varsity volleyball with
Ovjlcdo. home. 4 p.m.: Jv football with Dr Land. home. 7
p tit.: College night at SCC. 7 9 p.m.
p Thursday — JV and varsity volleyball at Lake
Ihiwell. 4 p.m.: Swim meet with Apopka, home. 3:30
p.m;: European trip assembly, 2nd and 3rd periods,
b Friday — varsity football with Lyman, home, 8 p.m,
h Saturday — Swim team. Five Star Conference.

XMrti

Quantities
Are Limited

JCPenney
Sanford Plaza Only

J

Open
Sunday
12 To 6
Mon. Thur Sat.
9:30*9

|

�Evsnlng Herald, Sanford. FI.

...G e t t in g

S t r a i g h t In

Continued from page 1A
lhat thr rate continues to Improve.
Dr. M ille r N ew ton , e x e c u tiv e
director of Straight Inc., calls the drug
r e h a b ilita t io n p ro g ra m " r e acculturation —the process of learn­
ing the values and rules of one's
culture."
"Drug use." Newton says, "has
Involved ullenation from fam ily,
achievement, and other mnln cultural
values. The kids become pari of a
deviant, chemienl.based subculture
with values, rules and behavior which
arc alien to the dominant culture. The
therapeutic process Is the re-learning
of the values, rules and behavior of
the main culture ... und rc-cntrv Into
it."
Since It is believed thnl peer pre­
ssure nudged the kids Into tirug-use in
the first place, peer pressure Is a vital
tool of recovery, Newton says.
"Finally, the program uses a com­
bination of intensive therapy, lhat is
12 solid hours a day of therapeutic
work, and a structured program In
which patients earn their way through
five phases of the rehabilitation to
graduation."
The first phase is the period Imme­
diately after a child enters the pro­
gram. It lasts Tor a minimum of 14
days.

S e m in o le

According to Straight literature:
"The child Is working on 'self.' This
Involves developing honesty about
one's past as a druggie and about
one's thoughts and feelings. The child
lives with a more advanced child In
the program, who is his oldcomcr. and
Is In the Straight Inc. building from o
a.m. to 9 p.m.. Monday through
Saturday and 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
Sunday.
"Second phase Is ihe exciting mo­
ment when the child 'comes home,’
Now the child lives al home Instead of
the foster home and adds working on
the family relationship to working on
himself.
"Third phase has to do with work­
ing on achievement through school or
a Job while continuing to work on self
and family. This phase also represents
the first time a child faces ‘do drugs'
peer pressure again.
"Fourth phase H the lime when the
child begins staged withdrawal, from
netive Involvement In the program.
"Finally, fifth phase means only
ihrec days In the building, more
personal freedom, and working on
service to others.
"The program lakes Irom six to 24
months to complete, depending on the
Individual child. Most children romplelc their program In 10 (o 14
months." Dr. Newton said.,

O c to b e r S a le
“We’re Suited For You ”

Sunday, Oct. U , IM J - 7 A

1 Love You /\Aom...Tm Coming Home1
Dy Donna Eatea
Herald Staff W riter
A tall, attractive, athletic-looking young
man takes a microphone In hand and begins
his story.
"M y name Is Joe (not his real name). I am
IB. t did sdcnhnl. pot. twd\, v,ps. d rrr. 3 . cckc.
quaaludcs. hash, prescriptions..." and more
In a long list of drugs and combinations.
He Is one of dozens of children, some as
young as 13, who sll on bard blue chairs In e
large meeting room at Straight Inc.. St.
Petersburg, baring their souls at open
meetings.
Joe has been through the program and
feels he is ready for the world again. And. like
a new religious convert, he wants to share
and save. He says what he would really like to
do is go out on street corners to Bharc what he
has found In the Straight program with other
young people who arc drowning In a sea of
drugs.
Joe has told his story many, many times
hilt tears still spill from Ills eyes In the
retelling and despite bis breaking voice, he
goes on.
He began with alcohol at 13. then a student
In middle school, quickly moving on to pot
and then Just anything or any combination
that would get him high.
Aflcr a while, he did drugs Just to feel
normal.
During those times, he taunted lib mother
by telling her what drugs he was doing, fully
aware of the suflcrlng he was putting Ids
family through.
In the audience, they nod In agreement. His
younger brother, alter following him Into the
drug scene, also followed him into Straight,
hoping for recovery.
"There was a whole year of my life that I
can't remember except for cither l&gt;clng high

or thinking about how I would tie high the
next time." he says.
And then. Joe remembers being in a slore
and taking money from the cashier as one of
his druggie friends holds a gun. He wonders
What he isdoingthere.
As fate would have it. Joe was the only one
that the cashier could identify, the only one ol
the group caught and the only oi^e to spend a
year In prison for armed robbery.
But be got a break. He was ofTercd early
release If he would commit himself to
Straight.
While the Straight building was built and
designed specifically for Straight, it resembles
a converted warehouse. It Is plain and stark.
Al meetings, newcomers, each with an
oldcomcr at Ills side, can be spoiled by the
absolute misery their blank, tearful faces
reveal.
Around the large meeting room stand teens
“ motivating." moving their arms In rythmn
with a dong they each sing as loudly as they
can. One suspeefs that the motivating Is a
way to releasing unspent energy and frustra­
tion.
These are the elites who have moved Into
an advanced phase of therapy and thus no
longer must sit on those hard, blue chairs.
The names o f the young people are called,
one at a time, and as each rises, his parents in
the audience first tel! the story of Bow
disappointed and hurt they were when they
discovered their child was on drugs.
“ I love you." family members will say. And
the child will respond. "Love you Mom. Love
you Dad."
As one youngster's name Is called, he runs
to a parent In the audience for a hug. saying
as he nins. "I'm coming home."
The large m eeting room at the St.
Petersburg facility Is devoid of decoration.

Large posters proclaiming the program 's;
seven steps, a modified verson of the
Alcoholics' Anonymous 12 steps, occupy a ;
prominent place on the wall.
NrarHy (• posted the "three signs." slogans :
also adapted
A.fcv^as well as the:
"Serenity Prayer" and the five guidelines of
"Straight Thinking."
The seven steps arc: ■
• Admitted that I was powerless over
dntgs and came to believe lhat a power
greater than myself could restore me to
sanity.
• Made a decision (o turn my will and my
life over to the care or God as I understood
him.
• Made a searching and fearless moral
Inventory of myself.
• Admitted to God. myself and another;
human being the exact nature of my wrongs.
• Made direct amends to such people
wherever possible cxrepl when lo do so i
would injure them or others.
• Sought thruugh prayer and meditation to
Improve my conscious contact with God as I
understood hint, praying only for knowledge
of Ills will for me ami the power to carry’ that :
out.
• Having received the gift of awareness I
will practice these principles In all my dally .
affairs and carry the message to all I can help.
The Three Signs are: Think, flunk. Think:
First Things First: and Easy Does It.
The guidelines to Straight Thinking are:
"Based on objective reality; Protect my life:
Goal Producing: Feel and act the way I need,
and keeps inc out of trouble with others."
Lastly, the Serenity Prayer: "God grant me
the serenity to accept the things I cannot
change, the courage lo change the things I
can. and the wisdom to know the dtllerence."

...Missing Children: How Can You Prevent It?
Continued from page 1A
know whether their beloved
children are dead or alive.
Six-year-old Adam Walsh was
Ihe pride and Joy of his parents.
When dental records confirmed
lhat ihe remains of the murdered
child found In (he canal was
Adam. John and Rcve Walsh
were overwhelmed with grief.
Bui Adam's death was not In
vain. His parents began a na­
tionwide campaign for a missing
children's bill. About a year later,
Congress passed the Missing
C h ild ren Act which a llo w s
parents access to FBI computer
records and cstablshcd a national
clearinghouse for Information on
unidentified dead children.
In 1982 the Florida Legislature
funded the establishment of a

Missing Children Information
Clearinghouse with a toll-free
telephone line (1-800-342-08211
lhat Is available 24 limns a day.
T h e c le a r in g h o u s e a ls o
publishes a monthly bulletin of
missing children with plelures
and information about missing
Florida youngsters.
But what can you. as a parent,
do to protect your children?
Authorities urge you to teach
your children:
• Their full name, address and
phone number.
• How to make a long distance
phone call (directly lo you and
dialing "O " for ihe operator}.
• That a stranger Is someone
they AND YOU don't know very
well.
• To never go near a car with
someone In It: never get into a ear

AREA
DEATHS

Saving On Suits And Sport Coats
Save 7500
W oodm ere ™
3-piece Suit
Polyester/W orsted Wool
Solid And P atterns ong. *175

Sale

9 9 "

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P o lyeste r Wool 2 P ie ce Suit
Solid And Pattern s
e
.
Orlg. * 1 5 5 ____________ 0 3 1 3

8 9 "

Save 30"

W oodm ere™ Wool Sport Coat
Nubby/Tic Weave And Plaidsc
.
Elbow Patch
Orig. *90
O a lG

Q Q

59

w w

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W oodm ere™
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Orlg. *60
VISA-

Sale

Funeral Notice
MAFFETT, MRl MARGARET M.
— F u n tril t t r v lc c t for M rt
Morgorel M Molltll. U. ol J«1
PolnuttH A w , Sonlord, who died
thli morning, will bo Sold Ol 1 p m
Mondoy *1 Britton Funorol Homo
with tSo Rov Chari** W. Hommlll
Jr. olltclotlng Burlol will lot low ol
Evorgroon Comolory, Sonlord In
llou ol llowort, contribution!
t-'iould bo modo lo Iho Thornwcll
Homo lor Chlldron VlilUHon will
bo &gt;rom I to 4 p m JundOf Britton
Funorol Homo In chorgo ol or •

Hunt Monument Co.

3 9 "

Display Yard
Hwy. 17H — Feni Park

Ph. 339 ita i
Gone Hunt, Owner
|Bronte, Mart It &amp; Granite.

EB

Open
Sunday
12 To 6
u.

Cotton Corduroy

HATTIE H. HANSON
Mrs. Hattie H. Hanson.
93. of 123 N. Sunland
D r iv e . S a n fo r d , d ied
Thursday al the Sanford
Nursing and Convalescent
Ccnlcr. Born bom Dec. 14.
1889. In Germany, and
moved to Sanford 4lk
years ago from Coral
Gables.
She was a homemaker
and a Lutheran.
Gnimkow Funeral Home
In charge.
MARGARET M.
MAFFETT
Mrs. Margaret M Maffelt. 85. of 2441 Polnocllia
Avc.. Sanford, died toduy
al home.
Born Mardi 2. 1898. In
Thomaavtllc Ga., she had
lived In Sanford for 57
years. She was a member
of the East Side Baptist
Church tn LaBcIlc. Fla.,
and was a retired teacher
who worked In Oviedo and
Sanford.
Survivors Include her
husband. George A.: son.
George A. Jr.. Bay City.
Texas: two sisters. Mrs.
Charles W. Hummlll. of
Sanford, and Mrs. CIKlord
McRae o f Torrance. Calif.;
a b r o th e r . F lo y d W .
McRae, of Athens. Ga.:
and three grandchildren.
Brlsson Funeral Home.
Sanford. Is In charge of
arrangements.

ENJOY

JC P en n ey
O'

M. I V
D l f t f ri
Sanford
Plaza

* *

GRAPEFRUIT
FROM KLOOIUA

without your permission.
• To never admit to anyone over
the phone that they arc home
alone.
• To never answer the door when
home alone. Call a neighbor or
the police If someone tries lo gel
into the house.
• To never go into aiyon c's
home without your permission.
• That no one has die right tn
touch then or make them feel
uncomfortable. They have the
right to say "n o."
• To tell you when any adult
asks them to keep a "secret."
• To tell you If someone offers
them gifts or money or wants in
lake Ihclr picture.
V o lu n te e r s w ho w ish i a
participate In the fingerprinting
program to be held In ScinlnoJc
— ----------;------ .---------------------

C ounty schools are Invited to
attend a free training session al
the Altam onte C ivic Center. Oct.
25. from 9 a .m . un til 12 :30 p.m .
R e p r a e n t a t l v c s fr o m th e
Sem in o le C ou nty shcrlfiTs de
partitiont w ill dem onstrate the
proper m ethod for fingeqirlntlng.
The program , sponsored by the
G reater Orlando ehapfer o f the
N a tio n a l C o u n c il o f J e w is h
W om en and the s h e r if fs d e­
p a r tm e n t . w ill b e g in In a ll
S e m ln n h - p u b lic e le m e n ta ry
schools In early November.
Participation In the program
w ill be volunlary. Stu d en ts who
wish to participate and who have
their ;virents' perm ission w ill be
finger printed and their parents
w ill receive a co py o f the p rin ts.
The purpose o f the program Is to
help locate missing children.

t

M ETW O R K L
TH E BO TTO M U H E

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StmHvsavingstrom
Othersurroundingcities
NIGHT
CHICAGO
DAY
WASH.b.C.
DAY
ATLANTA
Sun.Eve.
NEWYORK
DAY
SEATTLE
DAY
HOUSTON
DAY
■■ h
DAY
DAY
MIAMI
W
KNO.
NAPLES
D
AY
ORLANDO
DAY
ST. PETERSBURG
DAY
W. PALMREACH

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S A V t to

SA V E% \

61MCinuteCall 5 Qr!te%Call 75 %
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ORK1
BELL NETW
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• !3
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.37
,58
.15
.23
.28
.16
.51
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.58
.37

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V

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»

�IA —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Sunday, Oct. U, lfU

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
K-Mart Corp. To Launoh
Olympics Fund Drive
TROY. Mich. — K-Mart Corporation’s major
fund-raising campaign to support the U.S.
Olympic Team begins this month In all 2.000
U.S. K-Mart discount department stores. K-Mart
Chairman Bernard M. Faubcr announced.
Named "Give for the Gold,” the campnlgn will
focus on more than 13.000 canisters placed at
each cash register In U.S. K-Marts for customer
contributions. Target for thr public fund-raising
campaign Is a minimum $1 million, which will
all go directly to the U.S. Olympic Committee for
training, travel and living expenses for the team.
K-Mart will also be the exclusive retail sponsor
of ABC's telecast of the 1984 Winter Games
February 6 through ’ 9 In Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
and will co-sponsor the Summer Games In Los
Angeles from July 27 through August 13.
*’Wc nre pleased to support the U.S. Olympic
Team and hope the public will Join us In
assisting wllh this Important effort.” Fnuber
said. ” Wc view the Olympics as a singular
opportunity to show the rest of the world what
the American spirit is all about.” he added.
In addition, on October 19 K-Mart will launch
the “ Olympic Winter Games Sweepstakes" In
Its all U.S. stores. Grand prize is un all-expense-paid trip for two to the Winter Games In
Yugoslavia. Other prizes Include 100 Texas
Instruments home computers. 25 sets of
Olympian radial tires and 500 Kodak disc
cameras. No purchase Is necessary.

Federal Comptroller Warns:

Bank Services Could Become Unaffordable
By Gary Klott
UPI Business Writer
HONOLULU (UPI) - The federal
comptroller has warned that unless
banks receive congressional authority to
enter new businesses many consumers
will find traditional bunkina sendees
unaffordable.
C. Todd Conover, comptroller of the
currency, said none of the 538 banks on
his agency's "problem" list has run Into
trouble becaure of the deregulation of
many types of ha nk accounts.
But should Congress fall to give banks
permission to offer new sendees —
particularly in the face o f growing
competition In financial sendees from
non-bank companies such as Sears

Roebuck &amp; Co. — many banks may find
themselves In trouble.
“ We'll sec the problem brought about
by partial deregulation." he told report­
ers after addressing the nnmial conven­
tion of the American Bankers Associa­
tion Monday
Congress has authorized the deregula­
tion of Interest rates on accounts but has
not allowed banks the freedom to enter
new areas such as real estate, insurance
and securities.
While the lifting of government Inter­
est rate ceilings on many types of
accounts allows bankers the opportunity
to better compete by being able to offer
higher rates, higher Interest rosts puts
pressure on profits margins.

Without the abllltv to ollscl those
higher costs with revenues from new
businesses, bankers arc only left with
'he option of either cutting costs, such as
by closing brnnrhes or raising customer
fees and loan charges,
One of the rrsuils ot (hat is that
certain categories of consumers moy find
It difficult (o obtain banking services at
an affordable price." Conover wild.
The power to offer new services such
as securities. Insurance and real estate
"could breathe new life" Into the In­
dustry and benefit the public, he said.
A number o f bills granting banks more
(Hiwers have been drafted but Conover
said the Insurance, rcnl estate and

He said there Is no logical reason wh&gt;
a customer should not be able to go to a
bank and book a vacation, buy Insur­
ance. buy stock, and Invest In real estate.
"W hy do I have to go to four or five
places io do all that?1' he said.
The live-day convention attracted some
6.000 bankers from across the nation.

The Idustrial Development Commission of Mid-Florida
hns announced 60 new or expanding projects In Its fiscal
ycarjust ending,
The projects represent 10.000 new Jobs for are*
residents. 3.5 million square feel of new space absorbed
or under construction and an Investment of &lt;300
million.
"Though we didn’t have the major announcements
that we have been forlunanle enough to have In the past
several years, these 60 companies arc one of Ihe reasons
our economy is strong.” said Roy Hurrls, IDC executive
vice president.

Jerry Brown, former owner of Park Place
Associates, Inc., realtors, which was purchased
by Merrill Lynch Realty In 1982, has opened a
new real estate firm. Parkway Associates. Inc.

Winter Park

William M. Isaac. chairman of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.. agreed
that bankers ought to be able to oiler
more services so long as ihosc act ivines
nre conducted In separate subsidiaries
and they arc separately capitalized."

IDC Notes
Mid-Florida
Expansions

Real Estate Firm Opens

Leasing and pro­
p erty m anagem ent
services arc presently
being ofTered at the
new firm.
Full-service residen­
tial and commercial
sa le s s e r v ic e s are
scheduled to com ­
mence In January,
brown said.
The firm is located
in Suite 100. 222 West
C om stock A venu e,

securities industries are lobbying hard to
prevent bankers from receiving congres­
sional approval to enter their businesses.

Included among the new or expanding firms arc these
companies In Seminole County:
• Bavarian Specialties of Orlando, Inc., a manufactur­
er of Bavarian-style meats and meat products. The firm
opened a 10,000 square-foot complex In Altamonte
Springs with un initial employment of six people.
H trtM PSofi fcr T»m m f Vlnctrit

Through The
Looking Glass
J e rry B ro w n

Don M yers, right, owner of Don's G lass &amp; M irror, 3 IB S. French
Ave., Sanford, shows Wade Nleld and Wayne Keeling from the
Greater Sanford Cham ber of Com m erce around the new store
during a recent open -house. The business is located In ihe former
Sherwin-W illiam s store building.

Lobster Short-Weighted

pan ot August tor violation ot the Florida food

State's G rocers To M eet
OCALA — More than 3.000 supermarket and
convenience store operators and food industry
suppliers will converge on Orlando October 23
for the start of the three-day 46th annual
convention of the Retail Grocers Association of
Florida.
The convention, to feature one of the largest
retail food trade shows in the southeast, will be
held at the Sheraton Towers Hotel
In addition to educational seminars on crisis
management and effective advertising tech­
niques. retailers will discuss legislative Issues
affecting their Industry. Including bottle bill
legislation, raising the drinking age to 21. unfair
trade practices laws, recovering the sale tax
collection allowance, a proposed advertising tax
and the new septic tank regulations.

Card Interest Low ered
MIAMI — Southeast Bank has lowered the
interest rate charged to customers on unpaid
balances of Preferred MasierCard accounts from
18 percent to 16.5 percent per year.
"Because of higher loan volume and reduced
levels of credit risk associated with Preferred or
’gold’ Mastercard accounts, we feel confident In
reducing our Interest charges on this type of
account ” said James Dranam. Jr., senior vice
President at Southeast Service Inc., the bank
card subsidiary of Southeast.

Just The Sling
Certified Slings, Inc., 30 N. Highway 17-92 ,
C asselb erry, has modernized its operation and
moved into a new 30,000 square-foot building,
which has been nominated for aw ards for its
unusual architectural design. The firm , which
m anufactures and sells a variety of wire, rope,
cab les and other m aterial handling products, has

• Rush-Hampton Industries, a manufacturer of air and
water treatment systems, celebrated the opening ol Its
new 172.000-square-foot International headquarters.
The $H million facility Is located on 26 acres In
Sanford.

Cardinal Honors Employees
For Outstanding Achievement

T A L L A H A S S E E — C o m m is s io n e r o f
Agriculture Doyle Conner reported Monday that
food inspectors have halted sale of 91.250
pounds of frozen lobster tails since the latter
law.
The frozen lobster tails were removed from
sale because o f mislabeling and short weight,
according to Dr. John Rychener. chief of the
Bureau of Food Grades &amp; Standards. Florida
Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services.
These lobster tails wholesale for up to $7 a
pound. Conner said. Some packages found In a
suK’cy of stores and cold storage warehouses
from Jacksonville to the Florida ifeys contained
as much as 40 per cent Ice Instead of lobster.
Some o f the lobster tails were imported and
some were processed tn Florida.

The company makes nnd distributes Its fresh product*
wholesale throughout mid-Florida.

jlHQwt* 5wn*hirw

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NCA.Marty*PmI

A Consuming Passion
What's the top cookie among adult Ameri­
cana? It'a chocolate chip by a landslide: Chips
were rated tops by almost two-thirds of
respondents in a recent poll conducted by
8unshine Biscuits without any brand iden­
tification. Even the second-rated sandwich
cookie couldn't be considered a threat.

A llstate O ffers Flexible
Life Insurance Program
NORTHBROOK. III. — Allstate Life Insurance Company
Is making available to residents of Florida. Universal Life
policies.
"The product Is an extremely flexible one." said an
Allstate Life spokesperson. "Adjustments for buyers can
be made as needed In the amount of permanent life
Insurance they carry. They must quullfy for Increases,
and they get competitive high Inlrrest rates on cash
accumulations at Ihe same time."

SANFORD — Linda DeLaney.
accounting manager for Cardinal
Industries Florida Region and a
10-ycar veteran with the Columbus.
Ohio, headquartered company, was
one of 13 employees recognized for
outstanding achievement ut the
firm’s recent annual picnic.
DeLaney. who began her career
with Cardinal In Columbus In 1973
before relocating to Florida in 1977.
was selected as the outstanding
Boss of the Year In the Florida
Region.
M ore th an 1.000 C a rd in a l
employees and their families and
friends attended the picnic which
was held at Wet 'n Wild In South
Orlando and featured unlimited use
of the theme park, fried chicken
dinner, free beer and door prizes.
In addition to het award plaque,
DcLanev received a pin for 10-year's
service.
Other award winners included:
L u k e G e n t r y . D ay S h ift
S u p ervisor o f the Year: Tom
McGovern. Night Shift Supervisor of
the Year: Employees of the Year —
Francis Daub (Production, day).
Frank Bonilla (Production, night).
Don Fann (Transportation) and
DeWayne Low (Office).
In addition, several employees
were cited for perfect attendance,
Including
Ira G lrvln (second
straight year). Day Armitagc, Frank

Dallabrida. Don Fhnn. William Tyrr
and James Gcmind.
Five-year service pin winners In­
cluded Ronald Watson. Jerry H.
'' •
'

Jackson. Anthony T. Shahnn. Roger
A. Hamlin. John Cover. Shirley A.
Howe. Lynda Rutenkroger. Moses D.
Tiller and Emily Holbrook.

1
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E m ily Holbrook of Sanford, leff, a supervisor In Cardinal Industries
Production Department, was one ot a number of employees
honored recently at the company's annual picnic at Wet 'n Wild.
Ms. Holbrook received a plaque In recognition of five years service.
Presenting her plaque is B arbara Swenson, Longwood.

Tobacco Prom ising A s Q u ality Protein Source
GAINESVILLE — Researchers In the Institute of Food
and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) at the University of
Florida aren't Just blowing smoke when they talk about
using tobacco as a future soucc of high-quality protein.

HtnM Phot* br J*n* CtlMlbtrrr

been operating In C asselb erry since 1950 and has
approxim ately 50 employees. It Is owned by
Ronald J . W orswlck and his partner Jam es A.
O liver. C lark Construction Service Inc. of West
Palm Beach was the contractor for the building,
w h ich w a s d esig n ed by B u rk e and B a le s
Associates Inc. of Winter P ark. The landscaping is
by Quality Landscaping, a local firm .

In fact. Dr. Jim Rich, associate professor at the Live much more effectively than traditional protein."
Oak Agricultural Research Center, said a process for
IFAS researchers arc also looking at the by-products of
extracting protein from tobacco has already been the process for use In the tobacco Industry, us well as
developed. Rich and Dr. Ed White, assistant professor using them for precursors to vitamin A nnd B compfex
and animal nutritionist, are now working to make vitamins.
widespread use o f the technology economically
Because the technology can extract protein from green
practical.
plant leaves. Its application Is practical In a wide range
"W r know the process works." Hich said. "W e're of climatic and geographical areas. It would not be
trying tn t a k e it beyond Ihe discovery stage to limited only to regions where ccrluln food crops grow.
application."
White said.
If the process can be made economically feasible, its
"There's getting to be u tremendous interest In this,"
application could have worldwide Importance us a Rich noted. " I ’ve got letters on my desk from all over the
source o f human food protein. Protein extracted from world asking for Information."
tobacco could be used in Infant formulas for children
Rich. White and Dr. Ben Whltty. professor of
with lactose Intolerance or other allergies to milk, he agronomy, have been studying using green plants for
said, and. because It can be prepared to contain no protein for about four years. A recent grant from General
sodium or potassium, the protein could have medical Foods Corp. of u pilot manufacturing plant allowed them
value for people on restricted diets suffering from to accelerate their research.
chronic kidney, heart and liver diseases.
The process was developed by a professional
Tobacco protein can be whipped, liquified or gelled, biochemist In California. Many green plants can he used
and If can take on the flavor and texture of u variety of for protein extraction. Rich pointed out, but IFAS
foods. It Is an odorless, tasteless while powder. Tims, scientists discovered that tobacco protein fell out In
White said, It could be added to cereal grains, larger and purer quantities.
•
vegetables, soil drinks, and even "Junk food" to make
The tobacco to be used for extraction Is grown as a
them highly nutritious.
forage crop and harvested when still young and ubout
White said a recent publication from the National three feel tall. The entire plant Is pulverized Into a moist
Academy of Sciences Research Council concluded that mass, the pulp Is discarded, and the Juice is healed to
41.7 grams of the substance would be required to aliout 120 degrees Fahrenheit, which causes the protein
sustain a human adult's dally protein requirement. In to crystallize and precipitate when the liquid ts later
comparlnort. soybean concentrate requires 83.9 grams: cooled. Particulate matter and chlorophyll urc removed
hamburger. 225: wheat grain, 495; and fresh mlik. Jo eliminate its green tint, and the liquid Is cooled In a
1452.2.
tank to about 40 degrees. It Is then allowed to come to
"This Is a pure protein," While said. "It's noi a room temperature.
heterogeneous mixture. Therefore, you ran utilize this

B

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Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

' * ■'
. ■. .-v*

' 1' '

Sunday, Oct. U, 1M3-9A

H ow ell, Robey
M anhandle Rams
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
The Five Slar Conference's presenson
favorite football team finally played like
a preseason favorite Friday night.
Lake Howell fullback Jay Robey shook
o ff a two-game slump with three
touchdowns and 124 yards on 17 carries
as the Silver Hawks manhandled the
Lake Mary Hams. 32-6. before 3.700 fnns
at the Lake Mary Sports Complex.
"T h e difference was the offensive
line." said Lake Howrll coach Mike
Hlscrglia. "The line did the job tonight
nnd Robey had a good game. We said we
were going to come right out and run
and them...and we did."
Disdaining the pass |3 of 8 for 65
yards), ta k j Howell ran early and often.
Robey, who was held to 18 yards last
week In a loss to Luke Brantley and 50
yards the week before against DcLand.
was simply too much for the overmat­
ched Hams.
"Robey's a football plnycr." confirmed
Lake Mary coach Harry "The Ram"
, Nelson. "H e's got that good lean to hint,
he bounces off tackles well and lakes a
good hit."
Holiey, a 5*11, 190-pound senior, did
all those things nnd morr while piling up
96 yards In the first half on 12 carries.
"W e worked a lot harder tonight." said
Hol)cy about the Hawks' fourth win In
six games. "(Tackle) Jim Royal, (guard)
Austin Manuel and (center) Tim Pafford
did n beautiful job blocking. The 35
veers and takes (dive plays) were going
nil night."
Lake Mary took the opening ktekoff
and m oved the ball im m ediately
Fullback Scott Underwood scooted for 11
yards on the first play nnd the Hums had
a first down at their 38. Sophomore
quarterback Hay Hnrtsfleld then rolled
out and found junior Donald Grayson,
who made a spectacular lunging catch
for 38 yards und a first down at the Lake
Howell 28.
Afler halfback Charlie Luearclll went
for three, though, halfback Neal Wcllon
lost 11 when he fumbled a pitch.
Harfsficld got nine back on a keeper, but
his fourth down pass was Incomplete,
turning the ball over to Lake Howell.
Quarterback Darin Slack picked up 15
big ones on a keeper and Jeff Solomon
smirk for two and Hobey added nine
m d r F fd r 'ft f l l s f d o w n m th e L n k c M a r v ’

47. The teams traded penalties around a
Slack incomplction before Hobey boiled
for 11 and &amp; first down at the Ham 35.
Three plays later. Robey followed Royal
nnd Manuel through a gigantic hole for
28 yards to the Lake Mary 1. Safety Tim
Curtin saved a TD...temporarily.
On the next snap. Robey bolted In for
the score. Robert Kerr was wide wllh the
PAT. but Lake Howell led. 6-0, with 5:15
to play in the first quarter.
The Hams, ncvcnhclcss. came back
with two consistent drives, but each time
Martsflrld was sacked to hamper the
effort. Lakr Howell's Hick Pughe nailed
Lakt Howell
Lakt Mary

* * It o - 31
« * * * - *

Lakt How*I! — Robey I run (kick
wlda)
Lak* Howell — Robey I run (pau
tailed)
Lake Howell - Lang f l kickoff
return (Karr kick)
Lake Howell — Rnhey 5 fun (Kerr
kick)
Lakt Howell — Solomon 37 pan

P re p S co re s

■I

Gladei Central 33 Atlantic 0
Leonard 17 Twin Laktl 7
Boca Raton 10 Foreil Hill**
Clew Iaton 1 Pahokee o
Card Newman I* Santalucai 3
Gladea Day 3* King AcadO
Dunedin 3 Hllltborough 0 (lo t)
Lakeland 31 Lakt Gibson JO
Largo If Seminole*
SI Pete 10 Buca Ciega 7
Glbbt f Baythgrt 0
SI PeteS E. I* Lakeland 0
Tarpon Spga 7Land O'Laket 0
Dunnelton 11Groveland 7
Bradenton 13 Sara Rlverview It
Venlca U Seminole 0

umm
‘*-1,v

Donald Grayson (above), Lake M ary wide receiver, makes a spectacular
lunging catch on a pass from quarterback Ray Hartsfield. This play went for
34 yards. Later, Hartsfield hit Grayson (or the Ram s' lone score, a 72-yarder,
as Lake M ary was sheared by Lake Howell, 32-6. Below, Lake Howell
quarterback Darin Slack follows a block by Tim m Weber for a 15-yard gain.
Slack threw a 27-yard TD toss to Jeff Solomon and ran the Hawks' offense to
perfection Frid ay night at Lake M ary.

310
at
00

Flr»IDo»n»

Ri/that Yard*
Pattat
Patting Yard*
Fumble* toll

By Chris Plater •
Herald Sports Writer
ORLANDO — The Oviedo Lions are continuing In
Improve, the problem Is. they are doing It against some
of the moat powerful teams in the state. Friday night at
the Tangerine Bowl. Oviedo tan Into the overpowering
Jones Tigers and dropped a close 13-10 decision.
"W e played better than we did last week (against
Rocklcdgc)." Oviedo coach Jack Blanton said. "The
trouble Is. the competition keeps getting better loo."
The loss drops the Lions to 1-5 for thr season and they
get a much-needed w e e k off neerf Friday before going u ij
in

V w

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Q )pedoV »

Homecoming. Jones Improved to 5-1, with Its only loss a
7-6 setback to Orlando Evans.
"They (Jones) are huge." Blanton said. 'T h e y looked
like a small college team when they came out on the
field. Wc did a good Job to hold them to 13 points.
Hopefully wc can work out some things In the off week
and let the injuries heal so wc can try to finish with a 5-5
record."
After recovering a Jones fumble. Oviedo took an early
3-0 lead In the first quarter as Rob Moody booted a
32-yard field goal. That was the closest the Lions came
to scoring a touchdown until midway through the fourth
quarter. The Jones defense shut Oviedo down most of
the night,
Jones took a 7-3 lead at the end of the first quarter
when Leon Perry broke loose for 60 yards and a TD.
Perry led all rushers with 149 yards In 11 carries.
Donald Moore added the PAT and Jones took a 7-3 lead
Into halftime and.
The Tigers increased their lead to 13-3 In the third
quarter when Darryl Evans powered across from the
one-yard line. Moore's point after was no good, but
Jones had enough to hold off the Lions.
Oviedo's offense, though, couldn't get anything going.

L*kr Mary - Crayton 73 pan
from Harttlkald (patt (tiled)
LAKE HOWELL
LAKE MARY
|J

J o n e s T rip s O v ie d o

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fromHack Uk* *M*I

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Flsrid* Prep Football U tiH
r-* United Praia lnt*rn*tlen«l
Brandon to Winter H*y»n S
P oko 1 Tpo JetuU 0
Plnolloi P»rli 41 Ewt 6*y 0
Hudion I t Tpa Bay Teen II
Hernando II Cryttal River JO
Cllrva TlZaptiyrtiltlal
Ocala St John* 17Lk Holland la
EvatiatrMi Oorol
Buatwell t) Clermont tJ
Klaalmmee JJ leeiburg 7
Palm BayJIT-vllle Aai'cv&gt;aulO
TUiravlUe 43 Cocoa 0
Orl Jonea 13Oviedo 10
St. Cloud I* fllahop Moere 0
Ocala Poraat 37 N Marion0
Merritt Ialand 3J Satellites
Winter Park It Winter Carden la 1
Orl Edgewaler Ji Boone 3
OrlOakrldge33Ft.PlerceCen t
Lake City j i J n Sandalwood!
Jaa Rlbault Jt Orange Park 33
Jaa Wolfaon 17Fletcher*
Jaa Lee*0 Kenny 7
Jaa EnglewoodaOPaaont
G'vlle Buchholt 37 Jaa While I
Mlddleburg II St.Auguatlna I
Palatka It N Smyrna Beach 0
Mecelenny 1* Interlechen 7
Canarian 17Alachua Santa Ft tj .
N. Miami 14Hialeah 7
MU Central 14Carol City*
Miami Beach II Miami High t
Southridge Jt Coral Gablet a
Wettmlnlaler JI PlneCretl II
Palmer i t American (4
Gulliver II Boca Raton Acad I*
Weatwood Chr 1J Mla Chrlallan t
Helen it Dade Chr 0
Cooper City 10Coral Springe*
S Plantation WChamlnade 7
Dillard It Coconut Creek 0
Ft Lauderdale 17Miramar*
Andtrton 13 Piper 0
Si Thomee 7 S Browa'd*
Like Worth 30 P m Bch Gardena

Prep Football
Hlme for eight yards on the first drive
und Hurtsflcld slipped down for a
22-yard loss on the second effort.
“ Ray’s the trigger mnn on the run and
shool (offense)." pointed out Nelson. "It’s
a tough burden to carry. Sometimes he
looks great, other times he doesn't."
Lake Howell used a 17-yard punt
return by Util Lang to Ignite Its second
drive. Hobey muscled for 14 yards to
midfield, then added five more before
breaking loose for a six- and 13-yardcr to
the Lake Mary 10.
Slack rolled for four, but a procedure
penalty cost laikc Howell five. Slack hit
widcoul Jlin Daniel In the numbers, but
a good hit by Todd Beauchamp broke up
the near TD. On third down from the 11.
Slack faded and unloaded a screen pass
to Robey In the left fiat. He scrambled to
the one-foot line before Curtin knocked
him out of bounds.
On fourth and a foot. Robey went over
the powerful left side ugaln for the TD. A
pass for the extra point failed and Howell
led, 12-0. with Just 1:49 left to play.
Any thoughts the Hams had of getting
back In the game were erased In 12
seconds o f the third quarter. Lang, billed
as the county's best athlete, made it look
easy. He grubbed the ensuing klckoll at
the eight and picked bis way to midfield,
then outraerd the remaining Hams to
complete a 92-yard TD romp.
Afler Kerr booled the PAT, Lake
Howell held a 19-0 bulge with 11:48 to
play In the third quarter.
And the Hawks weren’t done yet. Ten
minutes later. Robey capped a 37-yard
march which was set up by a poor punt
wllh a five-yard TD burst. Kerr again
kicked the PAT and the Hawks were
rolling. 26-0.
An Underwood fumble after an 11yard gain set up the final score.
Defensive back Mike Palowltch covered
the ball at the Lake Mary 43 and Slack
wasted no time In finding the end zone.
Sophomore Mike Kelly zipped for six
yards and Slaek follow ed with n
picture-perfect pass to Solomon for 37
yards and the touchdown. Kerr was wide
again on the extra point, but Lake
Howell was firmly In control with a 32-0
lead with &amp;G to play in th e third.p e r io d . _
T h e H am s f in a lly d e n ie d th e
score board two plays later. Wcllon re­
turned the kickoff 22 yards to the Lake
Mary 28. On the first play of the fourth
quarter. Hurtsflcld unloaded a bomb to
Grayson, who corralled It on the Lake
Howell 40 and outraccd safety Troy
Quackcnbu&amp;h to the end zone.
The play covered 72 yards. A pass for
the extra point failed and Luke Howell
led. 32-6. wllh 11:49 to play.
Lake Howell takes on Lyman In two
weeks at home while Lake Mary. 2-3 and
1-3. tried to regroup for a homecoming
game next week agalnsl Mainland.

♦V -'! •
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See JONES. Page I I A.

...S p e n ce r, Lake Join County Hall O f Fam e
Continued from page 1A
Hallies to bring the Hall of Fame's
membership to five after two years of
existence.
" W c th in k w e ’ ve m ade tw o
excellent selections." said William P.
"Bud" Layer, chairman of the Sports
Hall of Fame Selection Committee. "It
seems fitting that these two would go
In the Hall al the same time,"
That It does. In the Sanford area,
both arc legends In their respective
sports. Spencer played basketball and
tennis before launching an outstand­
ing coaching career which made the
complete cycle when she returned to
Sanford to begin the
Seminole
Community College hoys' program
and. at 67. finished second In the state
uud third In 1974-75.
"Pin overjoyed 1 assure you. and I
have butterflies, too." said Spencer
about her selection and upcoming
Induction. " I t ’s definitely a great
honor for Buddy and myself. I’ve
known him a long time. Buddy's a
great guy and I'm very proud of him."
Uikr. too. was overwhelmed ut his
selection for Hall Induction. "I consid­
er ll a great honor to be chosen." said

Utlfl',
H«f *M Photo by lam Cook

Raines A M arked Man
Tim Raines will be a m arked man
Saturday night when the Seminole High
faculty football team headed by Mike
F e rr e ll• ( left) and Assistant Prinlcpal
La M a rr Richardson (right) takes on the
alumni at Seminole High Stadium at
7:30. Tickets are $1.50 for the eight man
flag football game and fhe money will be
donated to the Seminole sports teams.
Several former N F L p layers will be
participating. Richardson played for the
Baltim ore Colts while alumni defensive

tackle John Riggins tried out with the
Greer, Bay P ackers and John Anderson
w as with the Washington Redskins.
Other former Semlnoles In action will be
quarterback Tom my B arks, cornerback
Bernle Barbour, wldeout Mike G ra y and
Ned and Levi Raines. The little guy
hanging onto Tim 's leg is Tim "Little
Rock" Raines J r . He's not old enough to
quality for either team, yet. T : j r tickets
w ere pre sold and F e r r e ll said he
expects over 1,000 people.

Silencer was ahead of her lime as u
female alhlcie. excelling In everything
she attempted. "1 guess I was sort of a
tomboy," she said. "1 played all the
s|K&gt;ris. 1loved to play football wllh the
boys, and baseball, too."
She attended Sanford High School
where she played on tlu* first girls'
basketball team until graduation In
1924 Then, she headed for Florida
State College For Women (now Florida
State) where she participated in
basketball, field hocky. baseball,
sw imming and modern dance.
After graduating til 1928. Spencer

went to Teachers College. Columbia
University In New York where she
earned her masters degree in physical
education, specializing In tennis and
swimming.
Teaching and coaching slops were
made In Stephen College (Mo.). Sant
Houston State ITcx.) teachers Col­
lege. University of
Washington,
Stanford (Palo Alto. Calif.). Portland.
Ore. and the University of California
before she returned io Sanford In
1963.
S|&gt;cnccr. who lists coaching the
great team at SCC and teaching
modern dance and tennis among her
grealest accomplishments, has had a
hand In the development of Just about
every tennis player to come through
the county. On her backyard courts
which she opened in April 1964, she
has nurtured the growth of some of
the best players Seminole had to offer.
"1 take great satisfaction In the fact
that I have been able to help so many
of the youngsters In the area." she
said. "The thrill I get out of tennis is
wutching thr youngsters I’ve taught
from 6-ycurvold grow up and become
good tennis players. I'm proud of
them every time I see them play."
Awards, us may be expected, have
been many. She lettered In basketball,
field hockey and modem dance all
four years at FSU. Thr spunky
septuagenarian bus received gold,
silver and bronze medals In the
Golden Age Tennis Tournament. She
was the Division II Tennis Coach ol
ltie Year In 1974-75 at SCC. In 1973.
she was named Woman of the Year by
the Florida Tennis Association.
Lake, meanwhile, figured out his
life’s love — baseball — very early. He
moved from Louisville. Ky. to Cres­
cent City 119161 to Luke Monroe
119191 and finally to Stanford (1926)

when he began high school. "That’s
when ! cut my teeth in baseball." he
remembered. "I was out there In the
old bleachers watching the Sanford
team In the old Florida State League
in the early ’20s."
It was an omen of things to come.
After a distinguished athletic career in
football and baseball at Sanford High.
Lake met Ben Cantwell, a pitcher for
thr Boston Braves.
"Ben kinda took me under his
wing." said Lake.
Lake spent three years In the
minors before he was sidetracked by
arm trouble. Then, he played In the
Florida State League In St. Augustine
for three years before baseball was
Interrupted by the war. When the
league resumed play in 1946, Lake
returned to Sanford to play. "I had my
most satisfying lime playing in San­
ford amongst my family and friends."
I,akr said "Thut’s what 1 rrally got a
kick out of. playing before the
hometown fans."
And they got a kick out of Luke. In
one game. Lake stole home to score
the winning run in a championship
playoff. On another occasion, hr
pitched the first perfect game In the
Florida State League on July 24. '
1948. In 1940. Lake turned hitter and
led the FSL with a .352 batting
average.
His most remarkable feat, although 1
Lake downplays it. was probably a
game he pitched on July 19, 1947,
The stylish righthander threw goose
eggs al DcLand for 19 Innings and
powered a home run for a 1-0 victory.
" A lot of people seem to consider
that a superhuman effort." said the
modest Lake. "But it was Just an
ordinary ball game. Thai's Just (he
way it turned out You Just keep going
and going until Us o v e r "

�Aft—Evening Herald, Sanlord, Ft.

Sunday, Oct. 11 , m i

Rams Break Lyman Stranglehold On County Title
"

w^r

____________ ___

_____

l),

By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports W riter
All logcthcrnow'— "Oh Vcah!"
t
11 That was the reaction of ihc Lake Mary boys cross
country team after It ended perhaps the longest winning
streak in county history. Since J975, the Lyman cross
County Crop* Country Ctium p loaih lpt
BOVS VARSITY
country team had won the Seminole Coimty Champion*
1. L*ka Mary (LAW 51, 1. Lyman |Ly) W. 1. Saminol* (St B); 4 LaVo Uo**H
ships and the Greyhounds had won it eight out of the
(LHII4;5. Lake Brantley (LB) 101; 4 Oviedo (0) 111.
Iasi JOycam.
TOP 30 INDIVIDUALS*
I. Ken Cheeteman (LH) I 5 :» . 1 Doug MtBroom (Ly) 1J;44; 1. Mike
• Friday night, ih r Rams turned in theii best
Garrlque* (LBI 15.51; 4 Derek Tangeman (LM) 10.1); 5 Brad Dyke* (LHI
perform ance o f the year and knocked o ff ihc
K ill; 4 Marty Phillip* (0 ) 14:47; 7. Marc Overbay (Ly) 14:50. I Mark
.Greyhounds. 52-50, al Lyman High. Seminole finished
Blythe (LM) 14:51. f. Billy Penltk (S); 10 Steve Grundort (Lyl 17:01. II.
third with 83 (mints.
Dominic Rwndie (LM) 17:01; II. Wade Jacobton (Lyl 17:01; 13 Matt Palumbo
(17:0)1; 14 Kent Troutman (S) 17:05; t). Ricky Scott (0 ) 17:01; 14 Ken Rohr
"Coming In. I thought wc had to get all of our top five
(LM ) 17:11. 17. John Amrheln (LM) 17-14; 10. Kelly Fitnl (S) 17:14; If. Larry
to finish In the lop 20 to win it.” Lake Mary coach Mark
Cotby(S) 17:17:10 ChrltRo** (LB) 17.45
McGee said. "W c did It. and that’s what mode the
OIRLB VARSITY
I. Lake Howell )7; 1. Lake Brantley If; 1 Lake Mary 70 4 Lyman 111; 5.
difference. The guys really wanted this one, and they
Seminole 1)1; 4. Oviedo 141.
ran a perfect race."
TOP 30 INDIVIDUALS
I. Kalhryn Haywerd (LBI 11.00 1. Sue Klngibury (LM) 13:30: ) Angle Smith
&gt; Lyman’s top four actually beat Lake Mary's top four,
(LH) 11:1); 4 Tracy Blakely (LM) II )4; 5 Lila Samockl (LH) 12:17; 4
hut the Rams’ fifth man finished tn 16th place while
Joanne Hayward (LB) 114); 7. Trad Rowland (LB) 11:50; I. Mirtha Foniaca
Lyman’S finished 25lh. and that was the difference,
(LH) 11:51; f. Cindy Gatkall (L y) 11:53; 10 Mery Fonieca (LH) 11:54; 11.
Lyn Luca* (LH) 11:55; 12. Barbara Holme* (LBI U 00. I). Kim Lubenow
ijirek Tangeman led the way for Lake Mary as lie
(LB) 1) 01. 14 Amy Ertel ILH) 1) 04; IS Julie Greenburg (Ly) 1) 04; 14.
finished fourth nt 16:12. Mark Blythe finished eighth at
Jenny Barrow* (O) 1) 07; 17. Debbie Coleman (S) 13 04; II. Kin. ‘ ..4lel!l
16:52: Dominic Bundle was 11th at 17:01: Matt
(LB) I): 14; If Nancy Nyttrom (LH) 1)10.10 Fran Gordon (LM) 1) 34
•Top IOrurally (baya and flrla) neither*, lat Team All-County,
Palumbo was 13th at 17.03 and Ken Rohr was 16th al
aecend 10. 2nd Team All-County. Top 10 JV (boya and (Id a ) All-County.
17:12.
BOTSJV
h In the battle for the top Individual spot. Lake Howell’s
1. Lake Howell 31; 1 Lak* Brantley 51; ) Lyman 75; t Lake Mary 'Of; 5.
Oviedo 211; 4. Seminole NTS
Ken Chccscman came out on top with a time of 15:39
$
TOP 10
while Lyman’s Doug McBroom was second at 15:44.
1. John Davit ILHI 17:5); 2. Barry Forretl (L y ) t l: l); I Bob Stuctlmkl (LB)
l*akc Brantley’s Mike Garrlqucs was third at 15:52.
If 14; 4. Rick Wendell (LH) It IS; 5 Bob Howard (LM) II 71. 4 Frlc Hliam
(LM) II:)* ; 7. Paul Carney (LH) II 40, I ChrH Well* (LB) 11:41; f Jett
••■Billy Penlck was Seminole’s top finishci as he came in
Poind*« ter (LH) )S:4l. 10 Scott Knudten (LH) If e&gt;
ninth at 16.54. Penlck had been fighting the flu for the
G IR L S J V
past week. Kent Troutman was the Tribe’s second
1. Lake Howell 20; 2 Lake Brantley NTS; ) Lake Mary NTS; 4. Lyman NTS:
5 Seminole NTS. 4 Oviedo NTS
finfsher as he came In 14lh at 17:05. Kelly Faint was
TOP 10
18th al 17:14 while Larry Cosby was 19th at 17:17.
1. Melitta Meghdadl (LB) 13:17; 1. Debbie Van Orden (LH) 13:44, ] Kim
,'T‘m very pleased with our third place finish."
McCollum ILHI 13 S3; 4 Angie Rector (LH) 14:00; 5 MoniC4 Otgood ILHI
14:44; 4 Mlckl Blackerby (LH) )4 4); 7. Chrlaline Gringer (LH) 14:44; I
Seminole coach Ted Tombros said. "With Penlck under
Kathy Mathll (LH) 14.a.- f. Alllton Hardy ILH) 14 SI. 10 Kim Wager (LM)
Ihc weather. I wasn’t sure if we could do It. But he
15:11
turned In a gutty performance and the other guys ran
Herald Photo*byTommy Vincent
T racy B lak ely
M ike G arrlqu ea
very well too.”
Other Seminole times Included, Kelvin Abney |23rd
"I died 1.000 deaths when 1 lhoughl wc lost," Lake Hayward, who was sixth at 12:43. Lake Howell's Angle
with n personal best of 18:05) and Rav Hardy (36lh at
Howell coach Tom Hammontrcc said. "Bui. wc put the Smith was third at 12:33 and (lie Hawks' Lisa Samockl
19:25).
was fifth at 12:37. After the first six finishers. Lake
wrong tag in the wrong place and my wife correclcd It.’'’
^Behind McBroom. Lyman's lop finisher was Marc
The Lady Silver Hawks, the state’s fourth ranked 4A Brantley had a 7-8 lead.
Overbay, who was seventh at 16:50. Steve Grundorf was team, has yet to lose to a county team In ’83 and
Lake Brantley's Traci Rowland was seventh at 12:50.
lOlhat 17:01 and Wade Jacobson was 12th at 17:02.
Friday's county meet was the closest anybody has come followed by Lake Howell's Martha Fonseca (eighth at
Lake Howell's Brad D )kcs turned in his best
to beating them. Lake Howell's fourth and fifth runners 12:52). At that point. Lake Brantley had a 14-15 lend.
performance of the year as he finished fifth with a time
finished ahead of Lake Brantley's fourth and fifth and But. Lake Howell's Mary Fonseca and Lyn Lucas
of 16:32. Oviedo’s Marty Phillips was sixth at 16:47. The
that was the difference. Lake Mary finished third and finished 10th and 11th and that's what clinched the title
ipp 10 finishers made 1st Team All-County while the Seminole was fifth.
for the Lady Hawks. Fonseca came In at 12:54 while
second 10 made 2nd Team All-County.
"I knew it was going to be close," Hammontrcc said. Lucas recorded a lime of 12:55;.
"This Is a very special team," Hammontrcc said of hts
Some confusion in the team scores of the girls meet, "In a meet with fewer teams, the team with the number
caused some premature celbratlng. Lake Howell figured one finisher Is hard to beat. It's like four running against Lady Hawks. "Th ey have a lot of heart and desire and
they showed a lot of class Wc like to run in a pack and
Its team score wrong and. at first. Lake Brantley seemed five."
Lake Brantley’s Kathryn Hayward easily wen the we're hard to beat if our top five girls alt finish within 30
to have pulled off an upset. However, when the scores
were rc-flgurcd. Lake Howell came out on top by two girls' two mile with a time of 12:08. However. Iht next seconds of each other."
Lakr Brantley's Barbara Holmes was 12th al 13:00
highest finisher for the Lady Patriots- was Joanne
points. 37-39.

Cross Country

P a lm e r, A y a la
Lift B ird s, 3-2

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ment required

• PHILADELPHIA (UP!) — In poker, the winners laugh
and tell Jokes and the losers say. "shut up and deal."
[Thai la why Jim Palmer made all the wisecracks as
R ose looked solemnly to today after Game 3 of the
spotlight In a contrast of triumph and disappointicnt.
"This Is a monologue," cracked Palmer In opening his
st game remarks. *Tve always wanted to do the
might Show but never got a chance.
I "It was my biggest ilirili since Hagerstown," added
timer. In a reference lo his conditioning stint earlier
tis year In the Orioles' minor league system.
When the Baltimore Oriol-s needed an aee Friday
tlilghl it turned out to be Palmer, who pitched two
ijnnlngQ in a 3-2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies
JI hat gave the Orioles a 2-1 lead in the series.
(I Rose, shockingly benched by manager Paul Owens in
I Uvor of Tony Perez, could do no more than look forward
Ip rejoining the lineup In Game 4. when John Denny
;|yics to even the scries against Baltimore's rookie
(ftght-handrr Storm Davis.
v "He told nie I was playing tomorrow." Rose said
^tersely while dressing for a hurried exit from the
vflubhousc. " I hope I am. I come lo the ballpark every
(flay ready to play. He makes the lineup card oThat's
jivhy he's the boss.
JJ "I don't argue with the manager."
Rose, who grounded out as a pinch hitter leading off
(Jie ninth, was asked if he had been provided an
Jjxplanaticn.
J» "W hy don't you ask him? 1Just told you It's Owens'
Job to make up the lineup. All you guys who think the
payers make out the lineup card are wrong."
The best that can be said of Owens Is (hat it took
Jouragc to leave himself open lo the huge second-guess
Tvolvcd In beg a player whose reputation is built on
silvering In pressure games.
Rose said In a pre-game interview on ABC (elevislon
jiat he was hurt and embarassed by not starting,
j "Pete never said that to m e." said Owens. "W e talked
tjcfarc the game and In the first inning and it didn't
ta*em that way to me."
J For a while, it appeared thr Phillies would not even
ijeed Rose's bat. Gary Matthews led off the first inning
4'ith a home run and Joe Morgan led off the third with
another homer off starter Mike Flanagan for a 2-0
IJhllllcs lead. And when loser Steve Carlton escaped a
me-out. bascs-loadcd Jam in the fourth. It appeared the
illlies would prevail.

t .i .i.
.
rr,... iLubenow
..I . . hi u.
ia 1'Lrtinl
,rt■111
while
the i,.
Patriots'Kim
was
13th al 1
13:01.
White U k c Mary's freshman Btandout Sue Kingsbury
finished in her usual spot (second! another Lady Ranis
freshman. Tracy Blakely, mrned lit perhaps the most
Impressive performance of the meet. Blakely has been
Lake Mary’s second runner nil season long, but she
doesn't usually finish In Ihe top 10. Blakely had her best
meet of the year Friday, us she finished fourth with a
time o f 12-37
Kingsbury got held up a little In ihc beginning, and
she finished second nt 12:30. After Blakely. Lake Mary's
next finisher was Fran Gordon, who wnk 20th at 13:38.
Niki Hays was 21st nt 13:49. Andrea Bcnrdslre was 23rd
nt 14:10 and Liz Stone was 24th at 14:22.
Seminole's top finisher was sophomore Debbie
Coleman, who continues to improve cad i week.
Coleman finished 17th Friday with a personal best time
of 13:08.
"She's running super." Seminole coach Ted Tombros
said. "I don't think there's any doubt she’ ll he under 13
minutes before the season ends."
Other Seminole limes Included. Sarah Ellmore (25th
nt 14:25). Sheila Crawford (28th at 15:15). Glenda Bass
(30lhat 15:201 and Katrina Walker (31st al 15:24).
The only Oviedo runner in ihc top 20 was Jenny
Barrows, who was 16th al 13:07.
Lak- Howell swept both Junior varsity titles as the
hoys outfaced Lak- Brantley, 31*51. and Ihc girls
dominated with 20 points and were die only team to
score.
John Davis led the way lor the boys JV as he finished
first at 17:53. Rick Wendell was fourth at 18:18. Paul
Carney was seventh at 18:40, Jeff Polndcxtcf was ninth
at 18:48 and Scott Knudsen was 10th at 18:49.
Lake Mary had two In the top 10 as Boh Howard was
fifth at 18:28 and Eric Hlsam was sixth nt 18:39.
Seminole's top JV runner was David Siple, who was
26th at 19:42. James Hcrscy was 27th nt 19:45 and Rick
Martin was 38th ut 20:32.
In Ihc girls JV. Lake Howell had eight of the top 10
finishers, but Lake Brantley's Melissa Meghdadl prevented the JV Hawks from sweeping the top 10 as she
finished first with a time of 13:37 (11 seconds ahead of
the second place flnlshn.
For Lake Howell. Debbie Van Orden was second at
13:48 followed by. Kim McCollum (third at 13:53). Angle
Rector (fourth at 14:00). Monica Osgood (fifth at 14:44),
Mlckl Blackerby (sixth at 14:45). Christine Gringer
(seventh at 14:46). Kathy Matlds (eighth at 14:4H| and
Allison Hardy (ninth at 14:58).
Lake Mary's Kim Wager made the All-County (top 10)
(cam us she finished 10th at 15:13. Seminole's Andrea
Sessions was 16th at 17:15.
The county's lop girls' runner. Adrienne Polltowlcz,
didn't compete because she ran In a meet at Clcwiston
Thursday. The Trinity Prep sophomore also ran In the
Postal Run Monday at Lyman where she set two
national records.

Jim Palm er

Benny Ayala

Gam*)
BALTIMORE
PHILADELPHIA
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walk and struck out one. He faced Matthews once and
got him to ground into an inning-ending forccout.
"I was tempted to take him downtown," said
Matthews. "But that’s not the way to hit against him."
Palmer now owns a 4-2 career record In the World
Scries. Sammy Stewart pitched two Innings of sparkling
relief and Tippy Martinez sealed the game with a 1-2-3
ninth.
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) - Shortly after Tony Perez
closed the Philadelphia Phillies' clubhouse door behind
him Friday afternoon, some of the fun went out of his
fifth career World Scries.

_____

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For there was Pete Rose, his old teammate on the
famed “ Big Red Machine” of the Cincinnati Reds and
one of his ties! friends in baseball. Informing him that he
— Perez — would be at first base for Game 3.
The move broke a streak that had seen Rose start all
previous 31 World Series games In which he bad been
involved.

“ I guess lie was hurt and upset: I know he was." Perez
said Friday night after the Phillies dropped a 3-2
Suddenly, however, things changed. Ken Singleton hit decision to the Baltimore Orioles and fell behind 2-1 In
ipr Flanagan In the fifth, bringing Palmer into the game, Ihc series. "I know he fell a little embarrassed. But there
(hen In the sixth. Dan Ford, rebounding from Ihcwas nothing I could do. If they ask me to play. I play."
Rose. 42. who avoided reporters before the game, told
ranlng he took in Game 2. reached Carbon for a home
jn. Then In the seventh. Carlton unravelled even ABC-TV's Howard Coscll In a taped pre-game Interview
jrthcr. With two out. Rick Dempsey stroked his second that he was "embarrassed" and "dumbfounded" by
msecutlve double off the 300-game winning left- manager Paul Owens’ decision lo bench him.
under. He t^en moved to third on a wild pilch.
"f don't know why he’d be embarrassed." Owens said.
Benny Ayala, batting for Palmer, then singled in the "I've taken him out before. You guys (reporters) upsel
J-lng run, knocking out Carlton. Al Holland relieved Pete. I explained It (the move) to film before the game
and he had no comment."
id. before gaming his effectiveness, gave the Orioles
jjbst enough to win. John Shelby hit hts first pitch for a Rose got Into the game &lt;n the ninth inning as a pinch
ingle, moving Ayala to second. Shortslop Ivan DcJesus hllter and grounded out. Hr rushed to the shower but
len booted Ford's groundrr. allowing Ayala to score the found a large media gathering prepared to pepper him
with questions upon his return to his locker.
[inning run.
|"It's one of the few times I got some runs but then
Rose dressed quickly and uncharacteristically an­
gain. It was one of the few times I pitched." quipped swered most questions In a terse mauiier.
imer. a 37-year-old right-hander, who has won 268
Did he discus?) the move with Owens?
*mes but who had not won in the World Series since "I don't argue with the manager,” Rose replied.
11. 1971.
Was there any explanation as to why he was not in the
j Dejesus attempted to absorb Ihe blame and to deflect lineup?
(trillion from Owens' controversial decision.
"W hy don't you ask him (Owens)?" Rose said sharply.
"The right moves were made." said Dejesus. "When 1 "I Jusl told you that man's Job Is tu make out the lineup.
Jade the error, we losi the game. The ball lilt my glove, All you guys who think the players make up thr lineup
cards are wrong."
don't know where. It came too fast."
: l Holland, previously invincible In this post season, also Owens said his lineup card for Game 4 today would
lid the seventh inning was tiie key.
have Rose back al first base against Baltimore
‘He hit it on the ground and we dluu l make the
rlgblhandcr Slonn Davis, who will face first-game
ia y ." said Holland. “ Shelby hit a good fast ball, not a winner John Denny.
*'l hope I am ." Hose said. “ I come to thr ballpark every
Teat one He beat tne that at-bai. but If we make the
day ready lo play."
play we are out of the Inning."
In Ills twu innings. Palmer allowed two hits and one

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Anglers Eye $50,000 Prize; Hunters HeadlFor

I,,'

Live release Is one of the main concerns for bass
caught during the Red Man Tournament Trail
competition. Above, a tournament official checks
out two of the bass. Of fhe 14,789 bass caught, 92
percent were returned alive to local waters.

The qualifying bass tournaments of ihe prestigious
R ed Man Tournam ent T rail ended Sept. 18 for the
Florida Gator Division. The final qualifying tournament
at Lake Okeechobee was won by Billy Sutton, 47. of
Clewlston who bested 203 other competitors with a limit
ol seven bass weighing 20 pounds five ounces and good
for a first place pay-off of $2,550.
However, the overall Gator Division winner was Jlay
Tester of Satellite Beach, who was the hlgh-polnt leader
In the six qualifying tournaments. This honor was worth
$1,000 cash, contributed by Evlnrude and Johnson
outboards.
The R ed Man Tourn am ent T ra il, organized for
nonprofcsslonal bass anglers through Its low entry fees,
features 10 divisions of competition In 11 states. The top
24 fishermen in each division qualify for the Red Man
All American Tournament, scheduled for Oct. 18-22 at
Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley In western Kentucky.
This event Is the grand finale of the competition which
started last spring.
The top prize In this event Is $50,000 cash, with lesser
cash awards to other top finishers. Other prizes Include
10 Ranger bass boats, and a 150 hp Mercury Black Max
outboard motor.
The 240 qualifying fishermen will have two days of
practice In Kentucky after which the 24 qualifiers In
each division will fish against each other for two days.
The top three finishers In each division qualify for the
final, one-day round on Saturday. October 2". The
angler who comes tn with the largest total catch that day
takes home the top awerr*-/ ?5D,C00.
Sponsors of this tournament have taken elaborate
precautions to avoid any possibility of cheating during
this final competition. Both Kentucky Lake and Lake
Barkley will be ofT limits to all competitors from
midnight October 3 until official practice begins Oct. 18.
In addition, each fisherman will be paired with an
official tournament observer throughout the competition
who will report any rule Infraction.

Nicklous Not Worried; Palmer On Top: Dupree To USM ?
p
a i . m HF.Artt
_
PALM
BEACH r.Atmt-'Nmrmn
GARDENS (UP1) —
A surprising European team held
the open lug-day Ryder Cup lead but
Jack Nlcklaus. the United States*
non-playlug captain, wasn't doing
any apologizing.
‘ T h ey (the U.S. team) played their
hearts out and we are behind by one
point. I expect they will play Just as
hard tom orrow ," Nlcklaus said
Thursday after the Americans fell
behind 4l/i-3l6.
"W e have been In this position
before, trailing after the first day. I
have no problem with the ways the
guys are playing or with their
attitude. I said all along this was a
strong European team." Nlcklaus
said.
The last rime the II S irnllrd was
in 1971 at Old Warson In St. Louis.
Thut ycur. the British took a 4Mf3W
lead after two rounds of foursomes
but the U.S. swept the four-ball the
following morning cn route to an
18VS-13VS victor)-. ’
Tony Jucklin. (his year's Euro­
pean captain hopes it will be

■*9 diiRBBrtu

Sunday, Oct. U, IM J-llA

1, 1,0— n
1.. said,
return to nt.
Oklahoma.
Carmody

■
■
■
..................

Roundup
dlfTcrcnt this time around.
In other g o lf action. Arnold
Palmer used a red-hot putter to post
a second-round 65 and take the lead
by one stroke over Don January at
the Suntrce Senior Classic In
Melbourne.
Palmer added his 65 to a firstround 69 to hold the edge. January
carded a 66 Friday after a firstround 69. Miller Barber was third
with a pair of 70s.
HATTIESBURG. Miss. (UPI) Running back Marcus Dupree, sus­
p e n d e d fro m th e O k la h o m a
Sooncrs, apparently Is considering
becoming a Southern Mississippi
Golden Eagle.
USM coach Jim Carmody said late
Friday Dupree and hts mother. Celia
Connor of Philadelphia. Miss., vis­
ited him briefly Friday afternoon,
Dupree said he did not plan to

■

1« * 1 »

ti

.

and was Interested In transferring to
Southern Mississippi.
Although he said further talks
probably will occur next week.
Carmody said his first concern was
today's game between the Eagles
and Memphis State tn Memphis.
Tenn.
"This Is the only thing on my
mind right now." Carmody said of
the game. "There Is a possibility we
could be talking with Marcus again
next week, but I Indicated to Marcus
and hts mother that my first
obligation concerns the game In
Memphis."
" I f there arc any further talks
c o n c ern in g D u p ree's possible
enrollment at USM. they will not
come until after this football game."
After the visit, Carmody said he
telephoned Sooner coach Barry
Switzer to tell him he had met with
Dupree. The Eagles coach said
Switzer appreciated the call and
gave hts permission for Carmody to
continue talks with Dupree.
. :

**g *

-W
*“■,fI-• * ••

9 M o n th s L a te r,

SPO R TS
IN BRIEF
Cook Leads Uncle Nick's;
Bears Rip Sanford Landing
Alan Cook rapped three hits, scored a pair of
runs and drove In u run as Uncle Nick's Oyster
Bar upended Session Time, 7-3 in Sanford Men's
Softball League action.
Uncle Nick s took a 3-0 lead In the first Inning
as Mike Laubcrt and Joe Ervin led off with
singles und Laubcrt scored on Cook's RBI single.
David Prim added an RBI single and David
Lively knocked in the third run with a sacrifice
fiy.
Unde Nick's pul Ihe game on ice with three
runs in the sixth. Cook led oil with a single and.
with one out. Pries singled. Don Cannon then
singled to loud the bases and Wayne Russel
followed with a clutch two-run single. The third
run scored on Marty Cereosoll's sacrifice fly.
Session Time munaged only three hits, all
coming In the two-nm fourth Inning. Sam Van
Ness. Kerry Myers and slumping Wayne Crocker
picked up the hits.
In other action. Gary Muse was 3 for 4 with a
triple and three runs scored as the Pookle Bears
crushed Sanford Landing. 10-3.
I'he Pookle Bears broke the game open with
live runs In the third inning and they added two
more In the fifth to Ice Ihe game. Don Marple's
two-run double and Muse's run-scoring triple
were the big blows In the five-run third.
William Harrison led Sanford Landing with a
double and a triple and one RBI.

Cliff
Nelson
Fishing And
Hunting W riter

In all Red Man tournaments, fishermen receive extra
points for keeping their bass alive during the wctgh-lu.
More than 90 percent of all fish caught on the 1983
circuit were returned live to the water.
The 1983 R ed Man Tournam ent Trail competition has
had a total of 9.396 fishermen competing In 60 local
tournaments.' They caught a total of 14.789 bass,
weighing a combined 29.964 pounds, an average of
slightly over two pounds per fish. The largest bass was
10 pounds six ounces, caught by Edwin Parslow at
Kissimmee In the Gator Division.
The Gator division also caught the most fish, with a
welgh-in total of 2.442 fish totaling 4.982.41 pounds,
but the Georgia division caught the biggest, with 2,167
fish that weighed 5.152.71 pounds.
The success and popularity of this year’s tournament
Insures that any 1984 tournament by the same sponsors
will be equally successful. The low entry fee of $50 per
contest Is 100 percent returned to the competitors
through prizes and special prizes are contributed by
Individual apsnocra. Moat pwpuidi. however, is tnc tact
that the Initial qualifying rounds of competition arc local
events In each division, making It easy for the working
fisherman to enter.
There Is no doubt that the winner of the final
competition In Kentucky will not only be loaded with
cash, but he will also be the center of national attention
as a champion bass fisherman.
Several events mark the hunting calendar for the next

T o R e m a in A liv e
United Press International
Whenever the New' York Jets and the Miami Dolphins
hook up. first place Is usually at stake. But when they
meet Sunday, the loser will receive first-degree burns
that could cause Jhclr season to go up In smoke.
The Jets and the Dolphins both arc 3-3. a game
behind co-leaders Baltimore and.BufTalo. Both clubs
were expected to duel for the AFC division title and both
are experiencing early season difficulties.
Neither teams look like the ones which met In the AFC
championship game nine months ago. The Jets have
shown signs of explosiveness like their opening game
victory against Ban Diego and their demolition of the
Bills In nationally televised Monday night game two
weeks ago. But they've also given lacklustre perfor­
mances as cveldenced by losses to perennial league
doormat Seattle and lowly New England.
New York coach Joe Walton is concerned about ihe
Jets’ emotional state for the game. When the Jets have
played with emotion they have been awesome. At other
times, they have been listless and unproductive.
"I guess we'll find out Sunday whether we'll be
emotional or not." Walton said. "I don't know. I really
don't. You try to impress on them all week long that you
have to play with emotion on Sunday and sometimes
they do and sometimes they don't.
"W e've got to get the train rolling. We're playing the
Super Bowl team this Sunday, the champion o f our
conference."
The Dolphins have struggled offensively, and last
week Coach Don Shula replaced starving quarterback
David Woodley with rookie Dan Marino. The No. 1 draft
pick from the University of Pittsburgh sparked Miami by
completing 19-of-29 passes for 322 yards and three
touchdowns against the Bills. But the defense let up and
the Dolphins lost 38-35 In overtime.

Fishing In the local area has been slow during the past
week despite mostly cloudy skies and reasonable
temperatures. Speckled perch fishing In the river
continues fair In the deeper holes, but the specs have not
moved to the lakes In any great numbers. Spec fishing
In Lake Jessup Is picking up. however, and several nice
stringers have been reported there In the past scvcrdl
days.
Bass fishing right now Is mostly a hit or miss
proposition. A few nice bass arc being caught, but not by
me, Thi9 fall fishing was very unproductive for me on
my only trip out last week. Maybe November will liven
thr fish up and get things back to the usual outstanding
fall I—!. l..g »L u &gt; id u uniumiu iu utdgsilljl unoui.
The surf fishing from New Smyrna Beach northward
should be excellent. There arc good reports of bluefish
being caught all along the beach areas, but the red tide
has put a crimp In surf fishing a few miles south of the
New Smyrna area.
Spotted sea trout are (King caught alt along the Inland
waterways on llvr shrimp. Drifting with top water plugs
is slower now than earlier In the year, but Is still
reasonably successful.

c rn P F T A P n
v V a V / liC v M IU /

Jai-alai

Miaul

AtOrtandoSamlnolv
Friday night m u lti
First gam*
7 Nagul Zarraga
t&gt; 00 *00 7 *9
SBlibaoEtoria
7 40 5 00
1Lagoa Echava
4 70
0 (J-7) M M ; P 17-5) 154.11; T
(14 1)114 40
lacand gam*

4 Ran* Echava
3 Gabiol* Eloria

It.aO

131
400

100
1 40

1 ao

* Pinion Rty*»

0 (IF ) 44.00; P 143) m .N i t
(4-3-4) 111 40; DOt7-4l33t.lt
Third gimc
10l**
I 30 0 40 1 00
1 Legu*
300 400

100

J Ricardo
O (1-3) JJ.Mt P (l-II
(1-3 4)311.40
Fourth a* mt
I Bilbao Kosca
1100
1hiegul Forturi#
JGabion Mont.(la
0 (4 4) 11 00; P ( I D
(1 4 4) 144.00
Filth ga m#
3 01*4 Zarraga

1 J
3 4

;*ti

nv

111.40; T

500 4 40
I 40 140

100
117.10; T

140

4 00 7 00
7.00 4 (0

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110
t RanrForurla
O (1-1) II.M; P 11 1) K I M ; T
( l i t) M OO

N*w England
CIt vt land
Pdtlburgh
OneInnaII
Huston
LA Raidtri
1*4111*
San Otago

Onvv
Kwui

D*l!*t
Washington
Philadatphio
NY Gltntl
SI. Louli
Minnesota
Grain Bay
Chicago
Detroit
Tamp* Bay

I Charola Kosca
to 00 a ao a 10
IGaryaZarrt
(00 *ao
ITallo Farah
440
0 (1-1) 14.40; P 111) 110.10; T
(1-1-1) 141.40
11th gam*

lAramayb AA*ndi 7.40 5*0 400
5Charola Farah
7.40 a00
1Ourrngo Zarra
100
O (4-7) 17JO; P (74) 11710; T
&lt;7-51)100.40
A — 1,417; Handll 1111.04!

Pro Football
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Amaricaa Ctaleranci
East
W L T Pci. PF PA
Baltimore
4 7 0 *47 IM IZS
Buttolo
4 1 0 447 114 to

114
111
171
114

H I 141 14

300 114 in
400 tn in
.400 M 100
ID 101 104

4

4

4

1
1
Canlril
4

)
1
1
«

S a le r d iy ’ i Games
(All Timet (DT)

Buhaloti Bctton. 1.04pm
Philadelphia at N Y. Islanders. y cs
Hartford 4t Piiliburgh, I 04pm
Vancouver *1 Montreal I 05p m
Chicago at Toronto. I 01pm
Edmonton at Calgary. I 05p m.
N Y Range's4l Si louil.l 15pm

*•(ftsrmoti.tTtprr.

Detroit at Lot Angeles, 101) p m
Sundar'lGamtl
N Y Islanderi it Buffalo, mghl
Quebec al Washington night
Philadelphia at N Y Rangers, night
Toronto at New Jersey, night
Musnesoti at Chicago. n,giti
Calgary at Edmonton, night

Baseball
W trld S e r it i
(BaltimerebadiMrtrvl II
Oct II - Fn.tade*r-a 1. Baltimore I
Oct IJ - Baltimore 4 Ph.iadelpMal
Oct U - Baltimore). Phllade’phl* I
0s! 14
tdtMmar* at PKUitlpKa,
I 00pm
Oct 14 - BiUimore *1 Philadelphia.
4:Hpm
&gt;Oct II - Philadelphia 4l Batllmere
I 30pm
...
• Oct 11 - Philadelphia *1 Baltimore
I 30 p m

Deals
Friday's Sports Tranactmni
By United Press InternaImnil
Basketball
N3A — Seduced mipensson or Atlanta
center Wayne Rollins from live la two
games, effective at tho start *1 th* regular
season
Oollos - Wiivrd guard Foots Walker arid
rook* Terrell Schliasdt
«
Gotetn Slot* - Waived Ire* «gtnl guard
Lamar Han It
Philadetphti - RttMted rookie guard
M-ke Milligan

l

(ASThanIDT]

pm
Butlileal Baltimore. 1 00 p m
Ptiiladr-phia al Dallas. 4 00 p m
N Y Giants at Kansas City, a OOp m
Cincinnati*!Dtnvtr.4 00pm
L A Raiders at Seattle.) Up m
Atlanta at L A. Rams. 4 U p m.
Monday s Game
Washington ol Green Bay. 1 U p m
IgNfcy, Oct. II
Atlanta at N Y Jets. I 00pm
Chicago ol PtuUditphl*. I 00p m
Cleveland al CtecMsoti. I U p m
Detroit at Washington 1 U p m
Kama! City at Houston. I Up m
Minnesota at Grain Bay. I U p m
Naw England at Buffalo. I Upm
Miami it Baltimore. 1 Upm.

NewOrleansatTamp*Bay. 400pm

ttth gam*

llthgFitt*

111
111
11
Id

Smyth* OivtiMB
Edmonton
4 0
01
V*nreuv*r
1 1 0
4
Winnipeg
1 1 1 4
Calgary
1
I
11
Lot Anpfitt
0 4 1 1
(Tog hvr In «ath d-vtimn duality h r
Hanley Cup ptayetts I
Friday’s Results
Quebec*. New Jersey 4
Pittsburgh 4. Washwgton 0

CNcagenl Oftrwl, 1 00pm.
Cleveland ai Pittsburgh. 1 OOpm
Houston at MlnnrsatA 1 00pm
MiamlotN Y Jett. I Up m
SI Louis el Temp* Say. ! 0Cg m
San Diegoal New England: I 00p m
San Francisco at N«w Orleans. I 00

Eighth gam*

llrarabal
440 410
5Echava
500
Q (1-1) *410; P (I t) 111.(0; T
(1)4141*4*

447
447
147
000

Wnt
I
San Francisco
LA Rami
4
New Or ham
4
Atlanta
1
Sundry! Gamas

3 Gorottola Atano
1140 7 10 140
1 Arra Mtrtdl
7.10 1 40
440
IT tllo Zubl
a 134) 17.40; P 111) « 10; T
(4-4-1) 314M
Ninth gamt
3Oita Zarra
I* 40 4 40 4 00
1 Echava Montllla
10 30 1 S3
I Aramayo Eterra
3 ao
Q 13-11 40.40; P (I II 101.10; T
(1-4-0) 140.40; Pit 4 (41+3 41) 4
urinntri 4 at 4 pays 113.10; carryavar
471414.00
4 Charola Area
14 40 10.00 1 40
ITallo Echava
a ao 100
IMIkal M*ndl
4 00
a 1141 41 1*1 P (4-1) tn.JJ; T
(4-1-1)410.40
11th gamt
3Charola
1
10
0 *0
40 400 an

I
t
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1
1
1
1
1

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With gamt
* Aramay*- Area
II Ot 11U 440
J Ecbfva Echeva
740 1.40
I Charola Zarraga
3 41
Q (I d ) 41.at; P (4 1) 104.40; T
(4-1-1) 144.44
101*4 Via
14 00 140 4 40
J Echava Echava
7 40 4 40
140
l Charola Ztrraga
O (14) JI.M; P (1-1) 115.00; T
(1-4-7) 301.40

City

1 4
Crotril
4 1
4

4ui 111 II)
400 114 m

HatwiseI C4af*r«K*

Savtnth gam#

J e t s , A A ia m i T r y

«■
few weeks. The archery season closes statewide on Oct.
16. except for (he Northwest Region. Muzzlelondlng gun
season opens statewide (except for the Northwest
Region) Oct. 21 through Oct. 23. The first phase of the
mourning dove and white-winged dove season closes on
Oct 30
A surprisingly large number ol local hunters will be
traveling up to Georgia for the opening of the deer
season on Oct. 22. The Georgia deer harvest this year Is
expected to lx- normal In the southern half of the state
and slightly below normal In the northern sections. Doe
days have been eliminated this year In an effort to bring
the herds back Into balance. For some reason, there IS a
real gap In the population figures for two to three year
old deer.

Pittsburgh at Seim*, a OOpm
SanDtegoatDen.fr, a Up m
San Francisco at L A Rams. 4 Upm.
L A Raiders at Dallas t'U p m
MgAdlf, (Vt, 14
N Y Giants *1 St. Louis. 1 U pm

NHL

n « » it

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
W * lll C a a li.'ia c *
Plirtck Dtvntoa
W L T Pts. GF GA
NY Rangers
Philadelphia
NY Istancars
New Jersey
Pittsburgh
Washington
Adams Dr.tswn
Quebec

15,000
Mile
I Warranty

Belted

iDura Tuff

PMjBMBf

RETREADS

Buffalo
Montreal

St Laud
Chicago
Minnesota
Toronto
Detroit

ci«»t*
CYO it*

net 141* nurreni

PAWs N EXT G E N E R A L BVUJMKG. BEMUENTt^l.

C O N TR A C TO R 'S E X A M
Ahead a I H U .. (ari-HM INTRODUCTORY CLAWs II JO l« M O gas)

Women D ecide Final 4
The four final spots In the Mayfair Women's
Golf Association's Flagship Bank President's
Cup were decided this past Wednesday In the
third round of the tourney at the Mayfair
Country Club.
Marge Horne defeated Zclla Etsselc for the first
s)K)l while MtCh! Otsukl beat Stella Brooks. Irene
Harris beat Gloria Prosser and Miriam Andrews
upended Diddle Weber. Horne, Otsukl. Harris
and Andrews will meet In the final round on
Wednesday. Oct. 19.
In ihe weekly tournament (even holes,
one-half handlcup) Margaret Boris won the
championship flight with a 37 while Mury Ann
Williams recorded a 44Vi. Grace Spriggs carded
a 38Vi In the first flight and Kathryn Parks had a
46. In the second flight. Jonnle Elam recorded a
35Vi. Kay Elder had a 37 and Ben Taylor posted
a 40. In the tiilrd lllghl. Pinky Mioduckf carded a
40 and Verne Smith had a 40Vi.
This past Tuesday, some Mayfair Women’s
Golf Association players competed In the Inter
City Tournament at New Smyrna Beach, Stella
Brooks hud the low gross score while Zclla
Elssele hud the low net und Alice Daniels had
the low putts.

.. . J o n e s T r ip s O v ie d o

*llewlegwulf.uuli,t*. ■Mliymuiwe wMw
IIN LAN D O ........................Than., Nu«. 4-Howird le S w o t s
laleraaUuaal lie., M A SR UBA

Continued from 9A.
The Lions' only touchdown ot the night came with 5:30
left in the game as quarterback Kevin Thompson hooked
up with sophomore Andrew Smith on a 12-yard scoring
pass. Moody added the extra point to cut -Jones’ lead to
13-10.
The Lions got the ball back one more time after
recovering a Jones' fumble, but Oviedo gave it right
back on a fumble and the Tigers ran out the clock.
Jones' defense held Oviedo to Just 61 yards rushing
and 30 yards passing. The Lions had been averaging
abcut 200 yards rushing per game. Barry Williams led
the way with 65 yards on 15 carries. J.W. Yarborough Is
not fully recovered from a head Injury and he saw
limited action Friday.
Charles "P o p " Bowers led the receivers as he nahbed
three passes for 23 yards and Smith grabbed two passes
for 27 yards.
"W e mostly played 18 people last year, and 15 of
those graduated." Blanton said. "W e have a lot of
young. Inexperienced kids playing and we're paying for
It. Wc played as good us possible against Jones, but they
have one of the best 3A teams In the state and probably
the best defense in Central Florida (3A and 4A teams).*’
Ovltd* - F G Mood, 31

Janas—Parry 40runIMoorakick)

Jan** — Euan* I ru n ttlc li t*lt#d)

&lt;M*B# - Smith II p*tt from
Thompson I Moody lic k )

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�I 1 A—Evening Htnld, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Pel. U, 1W

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E r a B e g in s

W it h L a b T h a t C a n
C o m e H o m e A g a in
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Instrument malfunctions to keep
By A1 Rosslter Jr.
lost experiment time to a minimum.
UPI Science Editor
T h e S pacclab 1 m ission Is
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (UPI) Europe's Spacclab. soon to be lifted primarily a test flight to demon­
Into orbit by the shuttle Columbia, strate that the lab and all Its
will become the first relrlevcable complicated systems work In space
space laboratory and herald a new and that six people from varied
backgrounds can conduct research
era of In-space experimentation.
Developed for $800 million by 10 around the clock In close harmony
countries within the European with scientists on the ground.
"Th e mission Is exceedingly Im­
Space Agency.
Spacclab Is a
pressurized laboratory Inside a 23- portant In demonstrating to the
foot long. 13-fcct In diameter cyl- •
Inder anchored In Columbia's cargo
'I personally believe
bay and linked to the flight cabin by
this mission will
an 18-foot tunnel.
The 13.584-pound lab will remain
demonstrate that we
In the shuttle's cargo compurtmcnl
have
a system which is
for the entire flight — with the
ship’s payload bay doors open In
versatile enough
orbit — and will be brought back to
to
accommodate
almost
earth with Its 38 Instruments
expected to be used to conduct 72 anyone who wants to fly.'
experiments.
-J a m e s Beggs
The old skylab space station of a
N A SA director
decade ago was larger but Its
Instruments could not be brought
back to earth and the station
e v e n t u a l l y b u rn e d up o v e r world that we can Integrate and
Australia.
work with a !srge number of
Spacclab will be returned, after experiments at the same time."
performing Investigations In the life NASA head James Beggs said In an
sciences, atmospheric physics. Interview at NASA headquarters In
Earth observations, astronomy, Washington.
s o la r p h y s ic s and m a te ria ls
"1 personally believe that this
sciences.
mission will demonstrate that wc
Never before has a laboratory like have a system which Is versatile
Spacclab flown In space.
enough to accommodate almost any­
It Is actually a short-stay scientific one who wants toflv.” he said."
space station designed to go back
and forth to orbit with different
"That has enormous significance
experiments to take advantage of for the future because In the future
four things not available on Earth — we hope to fly scientists, engineers
weightlessness, a near vacuum, a and maybe even folks who have not
global view, and exposure to radia­ been trained to the degree that we
tion particles srrrrned out by the have trained this crew," Beggs said.
planet's atmosphere.
"W e also will learn for the first
Scientists can work In the lab time how well the Spacclab works
without cumbersome spaccsults. and whether we have considered all
They have a work bench not unlike the multitudinous things we must
those found In their labs on the consider In conducting a vrry
ground, except for the clastic cords sophisticated scientific laboratory In
to a n c h o r a n d ho ld d o w n p a p e r*

space.

and equipment. There arc filing
cabinets, drawers, high Intensity
lights and other gear necessary for
carrying out scientific Investiga­
tions.
The scientist astronauts have two
computer terminals with keyboards
not unlike those In home computers
to operate the Instruments.
The Spacclab researchers also
have an airlock large enough to
place instruments the size of a
garbage can In space. They have a
large high-quality observation
window for outside photography.
And there arc handrails on the
Inside for moving about and on the
outside for spacewalking.
What they will not have In orbit,
said Ulf Mcrbold, the first foreigner
and one of the first two people not
trained as astronauts to be assigned
to a space mission. Is the luxury of
time as they would have on Earth.
That means he and his colleagues
had to prepare for all kinds of

"On that will depend how many of
these flights we make, how often wr
fly, whether wc can. for example,
put experiments In on a very low
cost basis and do It on a short time
frame."
Four additional Spacclab missions
arc now planned — Including ones
for West Germany and Japan — and
more are expected.
The Spacclab now In Columbia
was given to the United States by
the European Space Agency as.
Europe's contribution to the Ameri­
can shuttle program. In return, half
of the experiment weight aboard
Spacelab Is being flown for Europe
without charge by NASA and the
American agency agreed to buy a
second Spacclab. along with an
Instrument pointing system and five
experiment pallets for $250 million.
This will be the fifth flight for the
Columbia, which made the maiden
shuttle space flight nearly two years

ago. and the first since last Nov­
ember. The ship since then has
been updated, equipped with three
more powerful main engines. Im­
proved fuel cell generators nnd two
extra sets of hydrogen and oxygen
tanks to supply the gases the fuel
cells will convert Into electricity.
Originally scheduled for a Sept.
30 launch, the mission was delayed
a month because of problems with
readying NASA's new tracking and
data relay satellite for the mission. It
was rescheduled for Oct. 28 but la
now on hold due to u problem with
the shuttle's twin solid rocket
boosters.
Because of the special orbit for
this mission, the ship will skirt the
U.S. East Coast as It gains ultltudc
over the North Atlantic.
Due to the needs of several of the
s c ie n tific e xp erim en ts. N A SA
Associate Administrator James
Abruhamson said the flight likely
would be delayed to next March If It
could not get under way by Nov. 5.
The nine days planned for the
mission will be the longest yet for a
shuttle flight. Abruhamson. an Air
Force general who heads the shuttle
program, said Columbia could stay
up two additional days it necessary,
but most of Its power-consuming
experiments would have to be shut
down to save oxygen and hydrogen.
Because Columbia does not have
the advanerd Instrument display
system that Is Installed on the
newer Challenger, the Spacelab
mission will end with a landing for
Columbia on the broad dry lakrbcd
runway at Edwards Air Force Base
In California's Mojave Desert.
Shuttles are scheduled In start

returning to landings at the Ken­
n ed y S p a ce C e n te r at C ape
Canaveral on the next shuttle
mission, scheduled for Januury.
Young and Shaw will fly back to
their home base In Houston shortly
after landing, but Garrlott. Parker.
Llchtenbcrg and Mcrbold will re­
main at Edwards for a week of
medical tests. One of the many
scientific objectives of the mission Is
to measure In detail for the first
time how the body rcadapls to the
pull of gravity after adjusting to the
lack of It In orbit.
That $100 million satellite Is the
key to Spacelab's scientific success.
I t Is p o s i t i o n e d
In a
22.236-mllc-hlgh stationary- orbit
over the equator Just cast of Brazil
and will close the communications
gaps that previously existed be­
tween ground stations ranging from
Hawaii to Africa.
The satellite Is needed to relay
large volumes of scientific data from
Spacelab to the mission control
center In Houston. The lab does not
have enough on board recording
capability to store that all Informa­
tion between ground stations so
without the satellite, a lot of scientif­
ic Information would be lost.

Spacelab mission specialist Robert P arker w ears Investigations to determine h° w
^
a d e v ic e that m easures eye movements during reacts to space. The chair and sensor. Pack a9e
subtle body .notions under weightlessness. The Installed In the center floor area of the spacelab
experiment w ill be part of spacelab's series of habitable module.
The extra communications capa­
bility also allows dozens of scientists
In Houston to talk directly with the
scientists In orbit. That Is Important
because It permits an Interaction
never before possible between men
tn space and the scientists on the
ground who designed the space
experiments.

• A stronom y and So la r P h ysics
The lab carries a group of tele­
scopes. cameras and radiation de­
tectors for studies developed by
scientists In Belgium. France, the
Netherlands and the United States
io observe ultraviolet light and
X-rays from stars and galaxies and
to measure the sun’s energy output.

A second relay satellite also was
to have been In orbit to support the
spacelab flight but trouble with the
first forced NASA to delay launch of
the second. The first satellite was
left In the wrong orbit last April by
rocket failure and NASA did not get
It In the proper orbit until late June.

• Sp a ce Plasma P h ysics
In addition to heat and light, the
sun emits an electrified gas called a
plasma that flows out like a milllon-mph wind through space. Sci­
en tists from Austria. France.
Germany. Japan and the United
States have experiments aboard
Spacclab to exam ine how the
plasma affects, and Is affected by.
Earth.

That cut more than two months
off the lime NASA had planned to
use testing the satellite nnd learning
how tn use It for the Spacelab
mission. Tests with the shuttle
Challenger In enrly September re­
vealed numerous problems but
demonstrated that the system ran
work.
Abrahamson said he anticipated
more problems during the Spacelab
mission "because this Is the most
complex communications satellite
that has ever been put In orbit." But
he said he Is confident communica­
tions will be sufficient for Spacclab
scientific reporting.
Here air five classes of scientific
studies planned for the mission:

• A tm ospheric P h ysics and Earth
O bscr\'atlons
Scientists from Belgium. France,
the United States and ESA will use
Spacelab Instruments to examine
the composition, temperature and
motion of gases In the upper
utmosphere. A large-film telescopic
camera will be used to take map­
ping pictures expected to be far
better than those available from
civil Earth-watching satellites.
• Life S cien ces
Biomedical researchers from Brltu ln . W e s t G e r m a n y . I t a ly .
Switzerland and the United States
planned a variety of experiments to
leurn more ubout the effects of

weightlessness on the human body.
Other experiments will concentrate
on the effects of weightlessness and
radiation on sunflower seeds, fungi
and bacteria.
• M aterials Scien ce
The unique lack of grnvlty In orbit
offers great potential for scientists
who constantly have to worry- about
gravity on Earth when they arc
mixing, separating, heating cooling
and w e ld in g m aterials. SedI;
mentation, buoyancy urid heat- '
caused circulation do not occur
nnturally In space. Researchers
from 10 European nations will use
s p e c ia l fu rn a n c cs und o th e r
equipment aboard Spacelab to
make higher quality crystals, alloys,
chemicals and biological materials
in space.
"W c now have a laboratory that Is
going Into a different environment."
Llchtenbcrg said. "It's going to
allow scientists from many dllicrcnl
disciplines to do science research In
spacr In a fairly comfortable, fairly
easily accessible manner.
"For science In general. Spacclab
I Is a true demonstration mission.
Wc are demonstrating all aspects of
space science. We're demonstrating
not only to the engineers that It
works, but to the scientists that wc
can get good duta and to the public
that we rrally have a viable new
system, a new way of going Into
space.”

LaroGst Spoc©ship C re w Hos N e w B reed O f Sp o ce T ra v e le r
®

By O live T alley
SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - A “ new breed" of
sirace traveler — scientists more comfortable In lab coats
than spaccsults — debuts on the next flight of the space
shuttle
Ulf Mcrbold. 42. a West German physicist, and Byron
Llchtenbcrg, 35. a biomedical engineer from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will be the first
two career scientists to fly on the ahuHle as payload
specialists.
They have spent less than two months studying
shuttle systems, but both have hopscotched among
laboratories around the world for the past five years
learning about scores of experiments aboard the
European-built Spacclab to be carried by the shuttle
Columbia starting Oct. 28.
"I feel particularly fortunate In being the first of this
new breed of space traveler." Llchtenbcrg said.
"1 think the fact that Ulf and I arc flying sort of breaks
the barrier. NASA already Is getting the list together of
people they're going to fly in the future. They're going to
lly cducaiors. communicators, people in the news
n&lt;dla."hcsald.
Along with Mcrbold and Llchtenbcrg. the crew of the
ninth shuttle mission Includes commander John Young.
53. pilot Brewster Shaw. 38. and mission specialists
Robert Parker. 46. and Owen Garrtolt. 52.
Although the payload specialists lack the training to
fly the shuttle, both are pilots who developed an early
Interest In space.
As a teenager living behind the Iron curtain in Grelz.
East Germany. Merbold's imagination about space was
sparked by the Soviet launch of Sputnik In 1957.
"I was really fusclnatcd that human beings suddenly
put a little artlflcal moon In orbit." Mcrbold said.
As u young adult. Mcrbold inovrd to West Germany,
where he rrcclvcd undergraduate and doctorate degrees
in physics from Stuttgart University. He worked with
the rrnowned Max-Planck Institute for a decade before
considering a spare career.
"It happened by coincidence that in all major German
newspapers there was an ud that offered Spacelab for
young and qualified scientists. I Bald 'Gee. that sounds
Interesting' and I applied for that." Mcrbold said.

B

___________________________________________ 1.1 a mmhnl
In Vlrlnam
AB ail Air
143 combat missions
In Vietnam
as ForCC
an Air Force fighter

pilot.
He returned to school at MIT. where he earned
master's and doctorate degrees tn engineering while
maintaining his flying skills through the Massachusetts
Air National Guard.
A chat with astronaut Story Musgrave prompted
Llchtenbcrg to use research on vestibular systems as an
entry to the space program. His astronaut applications
were rejected, but his research proved to lie the key 111
landing the Job as payload specialist.
"NASA came out wlih the announcement of opportu­
nity and said. 'We're looking for good experiments to fly
In the spare shuttle and the big area we want to
concentrate on Is vestibular physiology. Bells went off. "
he recalled.
Llchtenbcrg. like Mcrbold. said his training hus cost
him a lot of time with his wife und two young daughter
who know nothing but "daddy going away."
Commander Young brags nbout how smoothly the
payload specialists and the astronauts have meshed
together as the largest-evcr spaceship crew.
"They're crackcrjack." said Young, the first person to
fly in space five times. Including the first shuttle flight.
Shaw, a native or Cass City. Mich.. Joined the
astronaut corps In 1978 following a U.S. Air Force career
which earned him more than 20 academic und flying
awards. After serving as a fighter pilot In Vietnam, he
became u test pilot and later a test pilot Instructor at
Edwards Air Force Base In Calif.
Garrtot. brings weighty space and scientific ciVdrndais to the Spacelab mission. The Enid. Okla., ratlvc
spent 59 days in space as pilot of the third manned
Skylab mission In 1973 and later was appointed
Front row, from left: Owen K. G arrlott, Brew ster H. Shaw, J r ., John W, Young, and Robert
Assistant Director for Space Science at the Johnson
A .R . P arke r. Standing, Byron K. Llchtenberg, left, and UlfM erbold.
Space Center in Houston.
Spacelab’s fourth scientist-crewmember Is Parker.
The Shrewsbury. Mass, native holds a doctorate of
photo
of
the
shuttle
blast
lug
off.
The German scientist moved Ills wife and two young
astronomy end taught at the University of Wisconsin
children to NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center In
Llchtenbcrg. of Wellesley. Mass., built model airplane*
before becoming an astronaut In 1967.
Huntsville. Ala. to begin extensive training.
and read books about flying as a child and tried
Although he has waited 16 yean, to fly In space.
Mcrbold holds a private pilot s license, but prefers unsuccessfully to pursue a career as a NASA astronaut.
Parker hails the flight of non-NASA astronuut payload
flying g lid es — which he considers the "most exciting
After earning u bachelor's degree In aerospace specialists as a step toward flying "people off the
thing you can do In life." One wall of his olflce In
Huntsville Is covered with pictures of gliders — plus a engineering from Brown University. Llchtenbcrg flew streets" into space.

�Sunday, Oct. H, W I-1 B

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI

United Way

A

G ir l

Scout

Who's
there? G irls Scouts Heather Webster, left
Knock, knock------ - ------Brownie Troop 504, and Vanessa M artinez, Junior Troop 441, knock on
doors for a county wide service project with the Salvation A rm y.
Special To The Herald
To millions of former Girl
Scouts. Girl Scouting Is a mem­
ory that covers a few short
years, a c c o rd in g to D oris
Bacon-Elsea. public relations
director of the Cttrul Council of
Girl Scouts. Winter Park.
But no matter how long that
experience lasts, the memories

that were gained Unger for u
lifetime." When we find a girl
who has progressed through the
ranks and literally grown up In
Girl Scouting, how rich her
memories must lx*." Mrs. Elsca
says.
The following account was
written by one such girl whose
G irl S cou tin g e x p e rien c es
started with the excitement of
her first Brownie ring, and have
continued through to the re­
sponsibilities of Senior Scout­
ing:
"M y name Is Gina. I am a
10th grade student at Seminole
High School. When 1 became a
Brownie I remember making
friends, sitting In Brownie rings,
le a n in g new games, crafts,
ai d. fin a lly , e a rn in g my
Erownle Wings.
'When I was a Junior Giil
Scout I moved from Iowa to

Florida and. again. 1 made
friends In Girl Scouting. 1
earned the Ambassador badge
by inking Information from my
Iowa Junior troop to the Florida
Junior troop. It was exciting to
share old friends with new.
"A s a Cadettc I felt very
grown-up because wc got to
make.our «w u dccl»to»s&lt;,lt was

leering. and sailing: but most of
all. I formed strong Ideals and
values about myself and the
friends I've made. I've also
helped with many service pro­
jects In my community, such ns
helping senior citizens In the
nursing home and participating
In Salvation Arm y 'Helping
H an ds D a y.'

time. Cadettc Scouting was ex­
citing In several ways because I
was asked to l&gt;e part of the staff
at the Sanford Day Camp. This
h e l p e d me r e a l i z e my
approaching maturity In Girl
Scouts.

** “ The way I sec ii. my future Is
my own. and I look forward to
exploring the many careers
available today. Thanks to the
Career Exploration part of Olrl
Scouting. 1 can try out any
career of iny choosing before
making my final decision.

"I am presently a Senior Girl
Scout, which Is the highest level
Iwforc becoming an adult vol­
unteer. This summer I was part
of the staff of the traveling
Communlly Day Camp. 1 went
to different communities each
week. One week at Midway,
then Apopka. St. Cloud, and
Eatonvllle. We worked with
minority communities, and I
learned u lot about the Black
culture and established a lot of
good friendships. Throughout
my Girl Scouting years I learned
many skills such ns primitive
c a m p in g, c o o k in g , cra fts,
backpacking, canoeing, orlcn-

"Girl Scouting has played a
vital part In my growth and
development, and I hope to pass
this on to my children."
Mrs. Elsca says. "Girl Scout­
ing can change lives In dramatic
ways, but for most of ua. as In
Glnu's Case. Girl Scouting
enhances and broadens the
foundation thut was built at
home by parents. The rewards
of this adventure appear In
s u b tle an d u n t o ld w a y s
throughout the lives of those
who have worn the Girl Scout
trefoil. The support of the entire
community through the United
Way helps make this possible."

a different

and challenging

G ir l Scouts Debbie S tlckn ey. from left,
Lertrln a Scott and Jennifer Stevens, Junior
Troop 442, take time to entertain residents of

93 Dresses
Fo r Charity
Josephine Longo, left,
of the Seminole County
Retired Senior Volun*
teer P ro g ram , shows
one of the dresses she
made to Lois Jackson,
s o c i a l w o r k e r for
Sem inole County
Sch o o ls. M rs . Longo
made 93 dresses from
fabric donated to the
R S V P by Minnie and
John Kane of Sanford,
M rs. Jackson was presented 48 of the dresses
for deserving fam ilies
In the county. The other
dresses will help stock
the Christm as Store for
deserving children to
shop for their fam ilies
(held annually by R S V P
at the G reater Sanford
Cham ber of Com m erce,
Sanford.
tferattf P*o‘ t ty Tammy Vine ant

Better Late,
Than Never
/

s*

It took Cynthia G alley more than a year to officially retire from Southern
Bell In Sanford, but she finally made i f . After 37 years service, M rs. Ga ley,
an adm inistrative reports clerk In the assignment office, retired Oct. 7, l i,
when her unit moved to Orlando. One thing led to another and she was
honored at the traditional retirem ent fete this week at G ranny s Kitchen,
Sanford. M rs. Galley was presented a gold watch and a telephone service
pin. Sharing the festivities are, from left, Pat Spivey, P a * M iller, supervisor,
M n n*iii*w anH hpr husband. Sanford F ire Chief W illiam C . 'Sid G alley.

A

I
|
|

^

.
‘v
r?

\
n
4
A

fj
*

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the Good Sam aritan Home In Sanford, a United
Way agency. Community service has alw ays
been a part of the G irl Scout program .

�IB —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Oct. H, 1983

Huskey And
Heathrow
R e a lto r E . E v e r e t t e
H u s k e y , from left,
Carol Hoffman, presi­
dent of the Lake M ary
Cham ber of Com m erce,
a n d D e l.o r e s L a s h ,
cham ber program
ch a irm a n , look at a
drawing of the proposed
Heathrow development
In Lake M ary. Huskey
was guest speaker at
the cham ber meeting
w h e n he t a l k e d on
Heathrow to a "stand­
ing room o n ly " a u ­
dience.
Mtrtld Pt»to by (t»r*n W»rn*r

In And Around Lake Mary

Area Residents Invited Tg
Htrald Photoi Dr Tommy Vinctnt

National Presidents Visit Fleet Reserve
N a t io n a l p r e s id e n t , F le e t R e s e r v e
Association, Danalel L. Spalding, from
Oceanside, Calif., made his official visit to
the B. Duke Woody Branch 147 on Oct. 10 at
the branch home on West Highway 46,
Sanford. National president G all Johnson

of DeLand, also made her official visit to
the Unit 147 during the sam e assem bly.
Photo shows, from left, Andrew Wolf, F R A
Branch 147 vice president; Arthur Plcanso,
p re s id e n t; S p a ld in g , and Del B la c k
Southeast Region president, Wintee Park.

D in n e r To H e lp
The United Presbyterian
Church of Lake Mary has
announced two future
events of community In­
terest. On Oct. 22, the
deacons of the church arc
th ro w in g a ’ ’ ch ick en
dinner.” complete with
various side dishes that
they plan to prepare themselves. The ladles of the
church will be preparing an array of their favorite
chicken dishes, plus rolls, salad and refreshments.
The dinner will be served from 5:30-7:30 p.m. In the
fellowship hall of the church located on Wilbur Avenue,
Lake Mary'. According to Kay Sassman, transportation
ran be provided to anyone wishing to attend the dinner
and needs a ride.
Although there Is no cost for the dinner, a freewill
offering will be taken to benefit Sue and Junior
McIntosh. Junior has recently undergone douhlr
by-pass heart surgery, and the church Is raising money
to help meet the high cost of the couple’s medical bills.
The dinner Is opened to all residents, friends and
guests. Church membership Is not required.

Karen
Warner

On Nov.5, the church will sponsor Its annual "Fall
Bazaar' according to ways and means chairman Mis.
Decker. Church women will be baking assorted goodies
to sell at the bazaar and there will also be a craft sale.
Crafts have been made and collected all year long for
this event bv the church members.
Lunch will be cooked and served by Pal Fox and
Jenny Nelson, starting at 11:00 a m. The bazaar will be
held from 10-5 p.m.

Welcoming the national L A F R A president
to their Sanford unit are, members of the
L A F R A Unit 147, from left, M arie Sundvall, treasurer; Betty Bartlett, national
executive Secretary of L A F R A , Orlando;
Lee Luter, local L A F R A president; Gall

I

Johnson; Jackie Picanso, local L A F R A
secretary; and Betty Tuepker, first vice
president. National L A F R A president
Johnson made a special presentation to
Maxine Fehr honoring her tor 15 years of
continuous mmbershlp in the L A F R A .

I would very much like
to meet this man. but the
only conversation between
us has been the usual
waiter-customer dialogue.
I’ve noticed him glanc­
ing at me occasionally,
and I also glance at him.
but I try not to be obvious.

€loth World
F A L L F A B R IC
F E S T IV A L

Do you think -he’s also
Interested In me? Once 1
was tempted to ask him If
we had met before. It
sounds like such a line,
but I really do feel as
though we’ve met before.
I would really like to
meet him to put my curi­
osity to rest. But how?
Any suggestions? It’s 2:30
a.m.. Abby. Help!
SLEEPLESS
DREAMER
DEAR DREAMER: Go
to the restaurant alone
during Its least busy time.
a.id If possible, sit where
’he" will serve you.
No harm In telling him
you think you’ve "seen"
him somewhere before.
(It’s true — you have seen
him in your dreams.) If he
has any Interest In you. he
will welcome the friendly

overture and take It from
there. If not. at least you’ll
know.
DEAR ABBY: How do
you know If a boy likes
you as a friend, or wants a
more serious relationship?
Sec. this boy at school
seems to like me as a
friend, but 1 am slowly
realizing that 1 like him
more than Just a friend.
He treats me like "one of
the guys." always asking
me for advice on other
girls. On top of that, he’s
got about 80 girls after
him.
If lie doesn't like me as a
girlfriend, how can 1 let
him' know I like him as a
boyfriend without embar­
rassing him or me? I am
11 and he is 12.
IN LOVE

FALL
SUITINGS
54" Wide
Reg. 2.88

CLEANING
SPECIAL

$ 4 9 7
Yard

Refresh Your
Draperies F o r
The H olidays,
W ith O ur F inest
D ry C leaning A t
A S pecial Low
Price. O ffe r
Lim ited.

F LE E C E
GO" Wide, Washable
Reg. 3.88

$ 4

8 8
Yard

FIBER FILL
12 Oz.

Reg. 1.79

B L S I S m m
“ n i l i p S

Decorating Den
&amp; C le a n e rs

In Business Since 1951

urns , CLO TH W ORLD H“ " — £ SJ

321 2061

San lord P l u s

DEAR ABBY: The letter
from "Thelma and Frank”
said, "W e can't find a
m in ister to m arry us
because neither one of us
belongs to a church."
There are ministers who
will flatly refuse lo marry
non-membets. but a great
many will agree lo do so If
other conditions arc pres­
ent.
I'm sure you realize that
m a n y c o u p l e s go
"church-shopping.”
They simply wunt to
’ Tent" the facilities (pre­
sumably Including the
minister) for a social event
with religious overtones.
They went a religious cer­
emony. but plainly have
no Intention of doing any­
thing to strengthen their
faith alter the wedding.
Thelma and Frank say.
"W e ’re both Christians.

JOHNSON’S
COSTUME
SHOP
ADULT COSTUMES
FOR RENT

ro d

99°
m o

DEAR IN: There Is no
way you can ask him
without embarrassing him
and you. You say he asks
for advice on other girls
and treats you like “ one of
the g u y s " This Is evi
deuce that he considers
you a very good friend —
but not a girlfriend. Keep
his friendship. The worm
could turn.

Large lilM t le a
i Children's Costumes

D IS C O U N T

Bun 12 30440

3 2 2 - 3 3 1 5 or 3 2 2 - 7 6 4 2
319 West 13th Street

Sanford

In the future. Huskey says that all power lines feeding
Heathrow will be underground, a 75 fool long medium
will Am down Lake Mary Boulevard In front, a clover
leaf exit will run off 1-4, nnd Heathrow will be a
self-contained city, complete with shops, hotels, busi­
ness complexes. golfrourscs, club houses and villas.
The sale of lefts, beginning at $80,000. will start In
November with construction following. The homes arc
priced from $250.0000 up.
Other chamber of commerce news: the chamber of
commerce and the Lake Mary CIA now have a phone to
call their own. Anyone needing Information about future
chamber or CIA meetings can call 322-1213.
Happy birthday to Lou Murphy. Linda Teeter. Liz
Faust. Howard Pall, Dan Cannon, Hazel Stokes. John
Nordcn. Carol Hoffman. Erika Mills. Grace Quatarct.
Marguerite McBrayer. Evelyn Proctor, and Ralphle
Johnson.
Happy Anniversary to Phil and Ruth Ann Kulbes. Don
and Gail Cook, and belated wishes to Jim and DcLores
Lash.

All parents and concerned citizens are Invited to
attend the Oct. 18 meeting of LSAC (local school
It was "standing room ordy" H the chamber of advisory committer). Special guest speakers scheduled
commerce meeting held at city hall on Oct. 3. Area arc Karen Coleman, co-ordlnator of community relations
residents turned out In droves to hear chamber guest and public Information for the Seminole County School
speaker E. Everette Huskey, who will be handling the Board, and also Jane Clay. Seminole County school
sales of new homes being built In the Heathrow advisory council representative.
subdivision.
Speakers will be explaining the "W h at’s " and
Huskey reviewed how he got his start In the real "W h y’s" of having an LSAC at the school, as well as the
estate business with only $700 and a dream. With only difference between I.SAC and the PTA. The meeting will
that to start on. he purchased a small five acre lot. and start promptly at 7:30 p.m., with cofTee served at 7:15
had a tiny 20x20 house built on It.
p.m. in the schools media center.

R estaurant Fa n ta sie s Eat A w a y at D ream er
D E A R A B B Y :
Whenever I see an at­
tractive'man. I look, fan­
tasize. and that’s It. How­
ever. In this case. I look,
fantasize — and now I’m
losing sleep. I think of him
constantly — night and
day. 1 actually drg^qy
about him!
I first noticed him while
dining with friends a few
months ago. He’s a waiter
In a popular restaurant. I
go there often because my
friends and I enjoy it —
and lately I go Just to sec
him.

In talking about the future growth of Lake Mary, he
slated that "Lake Mary Is the crossroads of Florida,
located with easy access to all of Central Florida." The
200 acres that Heathrow will be built on Is such a "hot
piece of real estate" that recently Heathrow builder Jcno
Paulucci turned down an offer of $12 million for the
property located off Lake Mary Boulevard and west of
1-4. according to Huskey.

but can't afioid to Join a
church Just yet.” Abby.
the church Is not a club for
the rich. If It were. Jesus of
Nazareth couldn’ t get In!
In every church l know,
the membership criteria
are not financial, but
spiritual. And when finan­
cial support Is expected. It
Is nearly always private,
voluntary and commensu­
rate with one's Income.
Since they profess to be
Christians, they should
plan their wedding not as
a one-shot religious cere­
mony, but as a celebration
of love before God. with a
sequel every week.
THE REV.
RICHARD H. CRAFT
SAN PEDRO. CALIF.

SEMINOLE TRINITY
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
A Gnat Place
To Start

James E, Quinn, M.D.
itt pleuHed to announce the
opening of his office for

FAM ILY PRACTICE
Mt
2209 French Avenue

Sanford
By appointment; 3 2 1 -4 2 3 0

CARD OF THANKS
The family of the late J.C . Teston
who resided at 240 Gabriella
Lane, Goidenrod, wish to thank
the many friends and neighbors
who responded to us through
various acts of kindness during
our hour of grievance. May God's
richest blessings be yours, both
now and forever I
7 U H tdfat 'Tom tlty

322-3942

u

«AL»

Good Quality

V liA M A iU B C A R D
O p«n 12 Noon t il 9 PM
tongw ood

834-2930

%
I

Ease, movement and compatibili­
ty to lifestyle — from softest, fullbodied silhouettes to slimmest,
spure shapings — these are the
best of the season's fashion hmks.

toil* I J

A/
▼

Lldff
InLC

p

i! l \\\\
r
- i i
i l

i

*,

116 W. First St.

3234132

Downtown Sanford

Sanford’*, Moat Unique Ihiutlquc - Lots Dycut, . Owner

f

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

2 SHS
Reunions
Slated
It's beer, nearly 20
ycar» since members
o f the 1964 graduating
class of Seminole High
School received their
diplomas and struck
out on their own.
A reunion Is In or­
der.
According to Linda
K e e lin g , th e fir s t
planning and sociat
get-together will be
held at her home in
Wilson Place on Sat­
urday. Oct. 22. at 11
a.m.
For Information, call
Ann A ik en H ayes.
322-1479: San ford
attorney Jack Bridges.
322-1314: or Mrs.
Keeling. 322-9374.
Those planning to
attend are asked to
bring their yearbooks.

Concert Association Reception
D r. and M rs. Kenneth Wing, couple at left, welcome M r. and M rs. Joseph
Bancroft of Longwood to the Annual Member Reception of Seminole
Cofnmunlty Concert Association. The Wings were host and hostess at their
M ayfair home for the event that attracted a full house of concert supporters.
The concert season will get underway Oct. 27 with the performance of the
Norman Luboff Choir. Although the membership has reached its peak,
subscriptions to the series are still available. For Information call Julie
W illiam s, 323 1776.

..

; %

p*a

’M

'•

■

i

vr.y

,■

The 1974 class of
Seminole High School
Is planning Its 10th
reunion, according to
Sally Moore. She asks
that all 1974 grads
contact the reunion
committee, P.O. Box
1 0 0 1 . L a k e M a ry
32746.

Sunday, Oct. U. IW l-Tfl

w
.

y»

.

■ .wiUlBMDI s'

/■v

lUrttd Ptef: br T

*****

Sanford Woman's Club Membership Coffee Orientation
Pat Foster, from left, president of fhe Woman's
Club of Sanford, welcomes six new club members,
Peggy M cK elvy, Tess Morgan, Pat Kadcr, Sylvia
Huhn, Jan West and Val Colbert at the club's
m em bership coffee orientation Wednesday at the
clubhouse. During the Indoctrination period fol-

lowing the candle lighting cerem ony, M yra
Stapleton reviewed the history of the Florida
Federation of Women's Clubs. The theme for the
club year Is "Women of Action," according to
M rs. Foster. Coffee hostesses were m em bers of
the club's Board of M anagers.

AMERICAS FAMILYDRUG STORE

The Eckerd Choice
At Eckerd, you save on
brand name drugs. You
save even more with generic
drugs.

y

A IM NM
Drugs

ADORN
HAIR
SPRAY

Limit 2

COLGATE

BAYER
ASPIRIN
M T TU tM N
m vicm w in am*

TOOTHPASTE

1.59

"| 893

■ 1 .0 0

Sal* P(&lt; •

PEANUTS

•M.IMfl A .B in

5 9 ° tH fw c n

11

Price reflects 1 00 ort libel L mit 2

89* £
A

L

U

mc

1.99

r s ic u

B EV EL ED

SPONGE MOP

2

1 Qt) 9

29
limn 2

(Behind Central Florida Regional Hospital)

T ele p h o n e (24 H o u rs A Day)...3 2 3 - 7 7 7 2

4 4 0 w ik i

AA
3
4O
9 h.
- «a
OMNI MIN'S A LADIES'

QUARTZ WATCHES
VALIANT METAL
HOT POT

DOOR MIRROR

RIOPAN or
RIOPAN PLUS
ANTACID

AVANTI AUDIO
CASSETTE TAPES
BO-MIN. BUNKS

to*. i M

ECOTHIN
TABLETS

KODAK

vr. 1000 C O LO R

D*ucn.b«* co&lt;d

PRINT F ILM

B1K44

OLD HARBOR FORMAL
DINNED CANDLES

PLAYING CAP.DS
ta»rr«nm

D U R A C ELL

V "O' or 9-VOLT
BATTERIES

KJI DHL MT OKI

22 ..--// 1 T*
” 2
m? S ...

1 1

f r

e e

v

IPACS
*T *T

BOIL'N SOAK

SALINE SOLUTION

or FLEX-CARE
STORAGE SOLUTION

*IQ U4J.
4 0

Limn t

N du

■ c iils is E n s

PEANUT
BUTTER
KISSES

MENTHOLATUM
DEEP HEATING RUB

1 « “* 4 j

1403 Medical Plaza Drive
Suite 105
Sanford, Florida

•uto teuton

M K M IW

limn 1

ANNOUNCE THE RELOCATION
OF THEIR OFFICE

imiki

99* tvlMCM

77 STS
HUI

Adult And Pediatric Urology

t-touch nco'd'ng1

■1.00 •AAai ^

I

2

SANYO A M /FM STIREl
PORTABLE CASSETTE 1

t M c w a iK U i
■it* r n o M L iu in m

HEFTY STEEL-SAK
TRASH BAGS
on
4 0 net M il

Pedro B achrach, M.D., P.A.
M ich a e l D. Friedm an, M.D.

Up-tront •.•CIO'

STP OIL FILTER

funion ihidtl

hours will be from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Exhibitors will be asked to donate 15
percent of their profits from sales at the
show to the center. Among the things to
be displayed will be gift Hems, baked
goods and holiday decorations. For
further Information call 323-4981.

N0M I

Limn 6

20%OFF

The Pre-School Center of the First
Presbyterian Church. Sanford. Is looking
for persons Interested In selling their
crafts at a "Christmas in October" craft
show to benefit the center. The show is
scheduled for Oct. 21 at the Sanford
Woman's Club on Oak Avenue and the

A

QUAKER STATE
SUPER BUND 10W30
MOTOR OIL

REVLON
LIPSTICK

'Christmas In O ctober N eeds Crafts Vendors'

A

Limit 2 pfct

ROBITUSSIN DM
COUGH STBUP
| 9 7 ^ t?

M rs. Meade Cooper, center, presides over the punch bowl at the SCCA
Annual Member Reception while the Rev. and M rs. Robert Anderson help
themselves to a variety of party fare prepared and served by the SCCA
Board of Directors In an elegant setting at the home of Dr. and M rs. Wing.

SUNBEAM 3-SPEEO

SCRIPTO
DISPOSABLE
LIGHTERS

Among the throngs attending the SCCA Annual Member Reception were M r.
and M rs. Woodrow C lark , left, form erly of Sanford who now live In North
Carolina, and M r. and M rs. W illiam P. "B u d " Layer, hosts to the C larks
during their Sanford visit. C lark Is a former president of the SCCA.

m

iu

te -o i

12-ot

&gt;

1it

79*5;

tUAII

HAUOWEEH

NEW FREEDOM

INCH

CHAIACTER

THIN
M AXI PADS

P L A S T IC
P U M rK IH

COSTUM ES

329!% S“
Unit 1

WE MEETSH0PANY0NESADATECKER0
,ne mosl comPei,,ive
IIL l LOCALLY drugstore in town! -We meet
b !I

A u V t n

locally advertised prices
I I v f c U on identical merchandise.

D D IP C C
r lH u C O

Bnn9 m anY current ads from
other local stores and soel

OPEN DAILY 9 to B, SUNDAY 9 to 8. Sals Prices good thru W ad., Oct. 10th.

W i R E S ER V E THE RIGHT TO UNIT QUANTITIES.
SANFORD

Samord Plaza
950 Slat* Si

&gt;Plat*
1433 3*m o,*n BNd

I ALTAMONTE

SPRING!

LONOWOOO

484 E Aiumonl* Di

492U S Hwy 17-92*1 S R 434
434 Cant*, 949 S R 434
C A tS IL B tR H V
5045 Rad Bug Lak*

974 W SR 436
ORANOE CITY

Fou, t Owrtal Shopping C*nt«t

Min to,

�4B—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Oct. 14, 1t»l

Lutheran

Adventist

lUTHIRAN CHURCH Of
THE REDEEMER
"TV* u r k tr ti Htwt" (ito
TV “ TWi It Tk* Utt"
2S2S Otk A&gt;«.
It). thM) A. Itiruktr
Tutor
tutor) Sehttl
0.11 I P
Wtrtklp Stralct
10.30 t.B. '
Nktotrprlm ttol Ntrttry

TKI SfVtMTH DAY
A0VTHTIS7 CHURCH
C a u a tf 7lk 1 [In

b M i) Smkn
libkitk kiwi
WinMp S tn K i

ww-ti*) Nijtit
Prpftf Imki

filler
*30 i d
11:00 i d
7 00 pm.

cowswm ro

Assembly Of God
rm r Assam y or
C tom 4fth a I
Dark Rtkicigg
Sen**) Stkttl
For AR Agtt
ChBOrtn'l Chunk
Wtrthlp Strakt
Strakl* k Etptuto
Ittnkig Wtrtklp
Wt*. ria l,) light
Wt* UgktfcPtaM Ytartt
Rtytl Rtugt o A
Militant lira Wt*.

LUTHERAN CHURCH
2417 OrUftot Dr. 17-42
iUlktrt* Chirtk to A atrktl
Rtf. Rilpk I. Ltmin
Tttlto
Wtrthlp
10:00 UP.
Sotot) Sckttl
B:4S i n
Hurttry Trtitotd

coo
Ptlltr
10:00 i j l
I lf lO h d .
11:00 i a
1100 I J L
(DO p m .
pja.
7 00 pjB.

1:00

7:00 p.a.
PlHECMSI BAPTIST CHUICH
114 M
r. Airptrl I M . (tufa*
322-3737
Mirk P. N u i h
Tutor
BiMt Stadf
4 45 m l
Mautag Wtnklp
11:00 i.a .
Etruing Wathip
7:30p a .

RHCMA ASSEMBLY Of COO
Cpnatr tf Cnatry Ctak Rat*
an* W A tr Attmrt
Lakt Miry
3234MH
R*U* Btutn
Ptlltr
Marutarg Strakt
11D0 t.a.
Irtatag Strakt
7 00 p a

Church Of Christ
CHUICH Of CHItST
1512 Park Atttoto
Fr»4 Btktr
E.angeliit
Mkl« StWy
1400u p .
Mirrlng MTtrtMp
11:00 ■ ■
taming Strakt
( V 0 p ■.
U * i« liklp Clrai
Wt*ttt*ty
10 00 i m.
Wt*utt*iy RIMp CUn
7:30 p.ta.
Wathip Strait* lit
tkpDtif
11:00I d
4:00 m l

Wtomli)
Ttltauthip Sapptr
4:30 p a .
Nattry ProaM** f a
Al M e n

rtUDCM ASSEMBLY 0T COD
1515 W. Stk SL
Jt——it L lakuiaa
T u la
Sarlay Stkttl
B:(S m l
Wtrtklp Strakt
11:00 t.B.
(rtniug Wtrtklp
( 00 g d.
T it tl*) ftdily Nigtt
7:00 y a .

Baptist
BAVINKA PARK
BAPTIST CHUICH
2743 C m lr) C M Rta*
I n . Cir» OrBuU
P itta
S a 4 i) Srkal
445 i a .
Mautag Wathip
11:00 a n.
Chunk Tritataf
4:30p a .
[ftatoi Wathip
7:30p a .
Wt*. P n ya S m k i
7:30 p a .

Baptist
CCNTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
1311 Otk A n . StPfor*
322-2114
f o ld * Sartk
Pitta S tall) SdMtt
MS ML
Mtfiing Wtrthlp
11:00 t.a.
Ctarth Traintag
(0 0 p a
Ittnkig Wtratap
7.00 p j l
Wt*. Triytr Strakt
7:00 p jL

Church Of God
CHUICH Of COO
101 Mr. 22*4 Stm t
Ttitor
Rtr. Bil T k tip m
445 i d
10:50 ML
Mautag Wtrthlp
4 00 ) * .
[tia g tlitk Strak*
fpitoty Enrich— t
7:00 | d
Stole* Wtdntt**)

HtW MOUNT CAIVAIY
MISSION*!! BAPTIST CHUICH
111$ Wttl 12th St.
B n. C tagt MT. Warm
Sunil) Sehttl
4.30i a .
Batons Strak*
1140m l
Irttonp S a ik *
5:30p a .

C0UHTRYSUX BAPTIST CHURCH
Carnlry Ctah Btt*. Lai t Mtry
Arary IL L— g
Praia
Saul*, Sthml
0:45 pja.
Prttchtag A WtrtUping 10.45 u u
Mhk S M y
3J O p.a.
Shtriag A PrKUIdlug
7JO p a .
Wt*. Praytr Mttl
7:30 p d .
Nattry 7 m &lt; M

PRIMIRA ICUSIA HISTANA
ASSEMUEAS Df 0105
104 MT. 27 ttm t
lipfw *
let. Itdttft A. Ortoto
Ttttor
Of top
44$ !J*.
Strakit tipnfttiitWt
10:30 i p .
Strakl* PaWktctau
4 4*.
I— ft Strakl*
7:30 m l
Mitrttlti Strakl* fttoilitr 7:30 P-to.
■tytl Itnptf Mititntrlltt

SIMINOU KEIJHTS
BAPTIST CHUICH
Dr. U ) 7. C itm iti
Pit Ia
Sa i l ) SirtKrt in Un
Li*• Miry Hifk Sehttl

|
4.45 i a .
Wathip
11.-00u
Ynntfc Cktor
5:00 p a
Ckatk Trtotons
t 00 p a .
n a s i fcA m si church
MTatkip
7.00p a .
SIS P»rt t i o M , U i l r t
MTilnitl i ) Strata* t l l
i n . Pa* L Murpby, Jr.
Ctanutl PrnbyttriM Ckatk
Praia
700 p a
M u S tM
M S M L Prtya 4 Riki* Stoly
7:45 p a
Mautag W alk*
11:00i d
Chunk Traiutag
4.00pJL
Enutag H n t lp
7.-00 p a.
WW Prijtr Sm it*
( J O i-UL
A U SCULS CATHOUC CHUICH
402 Oik Arp., Santa*. Tl*
loeoAN baptist ch uich
f t . W M tm AutWnrwtk
Pittor
420 UpuU H
Sit. Yisl H i m
500 p a
llgt* h n i t )
Paila
t m . Mitt
BOO, 10:30, 1200
M i ) Sckttl
10 00 M L
Ctnlrtltaa, Sit.
3:30 to 4:30 p a
Mautag Strakt
11:00pa.
laming Strakt
7:30p a .
out u o r o r m u n i s
WWuttAty Strata*
7:30p a .
CATHOLIC CHIUCS
0U Tnrtha h n l e t P i )
1310 Mi i M B m St., Opltnci

Congregational
COHCMCATtONAl
CHIISTIAN CHUICH
2401 S. Ttrk At*
322-4544
It*. frt* Httl
Ttttoc
It). Ik w to L MTtktr Ait* P itta
S«to*y StkMl
4.30 M L
rtotovttop
10.3011 tjp.
Mwtoaf Mftftkip
ll.-B0t.tk
MT*4. Trtypr Mptttop
4 BM t StWy
7:30 p.m.

Catholic

fltk a M W ia I B M
P itta
Satoi) M ntrt 4, 10 i a 12 Np m
LAUYMW BAPTIST CHUICH
Si t a il) Visit Maura* p a (tngtth)
124 l i M n . Uht Mtry 3214214
7:30 p a [Spitotkl
S a il) l i t n l
4:4$I J L Watt**, M itt
BOO m l WtU-frL
lo V ip S m k i
11 DO l u l
Cartitttont
S it a iiy in i Irtt to .
(raatag Wathip
7.30 p a
Hit) Diyt
300-3:45 p a
W*4. Prtya Sara.
740 p a .
Hattfy Pn il*a&lt;

Christian

n asi

aaptist ch uich

Of LOSCWOOO
I 14. Wttl el 17 42 m Mwy. 434
(5mtfcau|
Bn. Jtatt W. H .a a irt. 0. Ma P itta
I n . lick Outfit Natalia tl Etaacattau.
Tartfc
5— 4*) Stfcgtl
n o id .
Mantag Wathip
1045 t d.
ChM m 't Ctarth
1045 t a
tiiH ag Wtrtklp
7DO p.a.
Wt* (rtniug
Prtya Strak*
7.D0 p d .

PAUETT0 AVtHUI
IAPTIST CHURCH
2(2C Pi tat tta An.
Btt. Rjyatn* Crocka
Praia
S a d , Sthml
M S La.
Maulng Wathip
11 00 1 m
(&gt;iug*4ittk Stratatt
t oo i d.
Wt4. Praya A AM* StWy 7:30 p n.
|a4«fM4ict ih i im r y

rtlST CHIISTIAN
1407 S. Sarfa* Art.
A I4.tr* tokntai
M-miter
Satoi) SchMt
4.45 l a
Batons MTatkip
11 00 i a

Episcopal
HOLT MOSS
401 Tnk Atp.
Tkp Btt. l*r*y D. I ty *

1-'

IBM PPL

Mmm
&lt;
? m§ p i
______

SANfOlO CHIISTIAN CHUICH
137 Airptrl Bit*.
PhaM 322 0080
■raiitr*
Im M m m #
ScImoI
5:30 t d
Wathip Strak*
1030 L d
Erataag Strakt
7D0 p a
Prtya Mtttlug Wr*
7DO p d .

Sunday
1 Corinthians
15 12-34

Christian Science

Monday
Philippians
1 12-30

Tuesday
Romans
8 31-39

Wednesday
John
14 1-14

ScrpLrat H PCi a by Thp Anpncm Beta Sootoy

CHttSTIAH SCTtHCt SOCIETY
CD S a t t U ila Ac***—,
lott U l t Brntky Orta*
LargutW
5— 4*) Strakt
I0D0 i d
5ta4*y Stkttl
1000 i d
Wt* Tralidt*)
Matting
7:30 p d

Rtettr
I N up.
1000 I M.

Thursday
2 Corinthians
4 16 5 10

Friday
Revelation
4 6-13

How come in a world that operates largely by machine and
computer there is so much PRESSURE on the individual?
Ntoybe the answer is that few individuals are as well adjusted as
our machines, as soundly programmed as our computers. Human
beings are always encountering the unexpected for which we are
unprepared.
Religion in every age has helped men meet end overcome the
pressures that beset them. The simple realisation that God cares
about us is the beginning of a new sense of our mission in the world.
We are not alone. Life is partnership with Our Lord. His power
empowers us. His peace calms our turmoil.
There's much more to successful Irving than enduring pres­
sure. Discover that in regular worship.

Saturday
Psalm
116 1-19

Copy
IIP] » W » Aavprtn-ng S w o
WP«m Nanpapa F t i u n Sunken* Inc
P 0 Bat 1024 C M U W t o V l 2240P

im C O fA L CHURCH Of
TM HtW COVINANT
■74 Tm U p W* Bud
WtotK Spring!
PfcMM (71-0771
Btt. Sttgtry 0. Brtvtf
Vkti
M l ) Ipcktrtot
B 4 10 i p
M i ) Icfct to
4 00 M i

ST. lUtU'S IMTHCIAH CHURCH
51 424 4 lt d Bug Bd.
Oiltdt (ttottol
ld*to 1. Rttttv
Tiitw
Sand*) Sck**l
4:45 • *
Wtrthlp Stnlctt 430 A I1O0 u* .
MTp autotito t Ckrlttto* Sehttl
Nindtrgerltn Ikrttgk Elgkth Crtdt

M ethodist
CBACt UHIIED
METHODIST CHURCH
Airptrl Bhd. 4 WtttfUnd Dr.
WHSia 1. It)tf
Tiller
Ckurtk Sehttl
0.30 ( p i .
Wtrtklp Stralct
11:00 i p .
Ttortk EtN*«tMp
4.00 pja &gt;
Tuttdt) l.klt Stud)
1000 Mi.
Nurttf) pettidtd I n i l Itraktl.

nisi

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METHOOIST CHURCH
414 Ttrk At*.
Ottog* A Bolt III
Mtohltr
I r w i A. Tk**m Mtohtw *1 V n lc
Mtoptog Wtrtklp
1.30 t 11 *pp
Sundi) Sek**l
0.4Si p
UMTT
S00p«.
Mm 'i Tr»)«r krtthlitl
2nd A 4th Ttorrid*)
(:30u p
COMMUNITY UHITIO
METHODIST CHURCH
H*y. 17 47 tl Tint) RMgt Id
Ctutlktrry
Rti. H. Wlgkl Nlrtto)
Ttitor
Itt. Onto H. Htdgti
Ai k . Ttitto
Mtruing Wtrtklp
0.3011*p l
Chunk Sehttl
0.30-11ppi.
Itraktl altk cU ittt l*r t l agra
f ■'**. tklp Ctflp* ktlutt* itra k tl
fir t r t
5.00 p p
UMTT
5-30 p n
Erttong Wtrtklp
700 p jp
Wtd Biklt Stud)
7 00 p.B.

Nazarene
FIRST CHUICH
Of TM NA2ARINE
2501 Stilted Att.
M m I. Hint**
Tutor
Sandl) Sehttl
0 4 1 ppl
Hprtong Wtrthlp
10.45 M i.
Tputk Htur
( 00 pj*
[ iw g tltl f t n k t
4.-00 p p l
Mid UNk Strak* (Wid.l
7.-00 | P
Haritry Trcildtd Itr *4 Itra k n

Pentecostal
rrasr Torn costal
CHURCH Of 10MW000
S41 O w n Strtft. U i l t M d
I n . C. Balk Grpat
f*ttor
Sarto!) SekMl
1000 tar
M*rnmg Wtettop
11:00 p * .
( — dtp I n t o !
7:3d pop
Wtd. BM t Stody
7:30 pop
t u y tn n Mttltog Satot)(:30 p p .

74

Presbyterian

Non•
Denominational
MrNrTU SntlHCS COMMUNITY
IVAHCtUCAl C0MCBICAT10HAI
21B WWt Stm t
Btt. Ratari B am
Praia
5uu4t) Sckttl
lO D O t d
Wtrtklp
19.00 i d
COBHUSTORI CHRISTIAN

HIST T H U m B U N CHURCH
Otk A&gt;p 4 3rd Stm t
Rtr. VtrgH L Brypat, Tutor
i 322 2442
Maitag Wankip
A. 30 L d
Ckatk Sckttl
94S t d
Mautag Wankip
11DO L d
R a ta y

295 Ortflwm* VUUgt
W. Lda May I M
fa*l Crapto - IrttrihHfc
Mautag Wtritap
19.34 i d
Errata] Wathip
7D0 p d
U*hag Sctati. Thai
7:34 p d

m L A U RUBY UHfTU
PRESBYTTRIAN CHURCH
N ik a Am , L d t May
Bra. U T . Slratui
Mtatita
CWrtli
MS id
Mautag Wathip
1D0 L d
Yarth C m p
7:34 p d
Wa4. Char P r a U t
ADO p d .

SAhfORO COMMUNITY MINISTRY
3424 4 Bttrdtl Ann**
Vinttod. TUr tot
Btt. Makto Mtrrnaa 4 Ira. fritl Mack
Saadt) Wtrtklp
11:00 PPL
Iiaatog Wtrtklp
7.-00 p.m.

COVTMANT PRISIYTIRIAN CHURCH
17 42 4 Ltht Mary Bhd.
■at. Ito* lackita, Ttitor
Sand*) Sckttl
4:30I P .
Wtrtklp
10.30i p
Trtytr Mtittop Tkart.
4:30 p*L

cu m

•The Following Sponsors Make This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
FLAGSH IP BANK
OF SEMINOLE and Staff

ATLANT'C NATIONAL BANK
Sanford, Fla.

Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Staff

200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

Howard H. Hodges and Staff

2599 Sanford Ave.

PANTRY PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS

L.D. PLAN TE, INC.

GREGO RY LUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE

C E LE R Y CITY
PRINTINO CO., INC.

OSBORN’S BOOK
AND BIBLE STO R E

KNIGHT’S SHOE STO RE

Oviedo, Florida

and Employees

500 Maple Ave., Sanford

HARRELL &amp; BEV ER LY
TRANSMISSION

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT

TH E McKIBBIN AQENCY

PUBLIX M ARKETS

Insurance

and Employees

M EL’a
QULF S E R V IC E

SEN KARIK G LA SS
A PAINT CO ., INC.

Mel Dekle and Employees

Jerry &amp; Ed Senkarik
and Employees

David Beverly and Staff

Downtown Sanlord
115 East First St.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter

JCPenney
Sanford Plaza
Ed Hemann and Staff

STENSTROM R EA LTY
Herb Stanstrcm and Stall

W ILSO N EIC H ELB ER Q ER
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Stall

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE CO.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson
)

WINN-DIXIE STO R ES
and Employees

•SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
( i u i u l v or coo

rni *■■■to), .itto jiatita
t t .u i Im toh to (to. Carat) to t i—h) Ctokl

r It. . U lt

In to u Iiuto h to U P ISIS W to t l . t o t o i
u n til
CtoMT) Uptnt Ctont Crytlto toM ( M . tot* Mtry
Cmtton) l i pUil Ctoth 710 Im m U OM
Utoral Uttot OratP t i l l Oto U*.
Ctotol IVtl ftrpP.'.
ClHruae*. Ihuiur) Uptol CWiP Utohunl U
C t o r t o (**ial ChutP Ci t r y CM Otto. Lto* Mtr,
Vktora Itplkl Chuck. 0M 0Wto» U to Utit) (n.
fhl! Up«Mt Ctortp III Put *..
IVto Uttol Ctorih to UtM tof 1*0*1. 01 4M. Ututto* too*!
thto ItpliM H u rt to ftrml CP,
rv&lt;« 0**ahl Chant to Uant
nrto Uttal Chant to Uh* Mtr)
futl BtpPto Chank to Ut* Mara*
lu ll ItpPto Ctoutk to l u p u l. I 04 Hcct to 17 07 m Huy &lt;M
nrto U*a*&lt; Ctonh to Onto*
firal ktpktl Chunk to IttotaPt l*wpi
nrto Into I Cha w to Walt) Wrap. 2M (thaw 0*
fV»&lt; Itokh Mktonay OtotM Chant. 1101 M. I M R
Iu h I I atoll Chant to Otoatu
fuatai Mat t*t&lt;al Chalk. (Sato
trie* Mto Chad. 2U4 V Utoaf la .
la t a H u la u ) t*ptht Chad. 020 Uptto* 14
y toutal n a n .
l u a a u h u a . Oatnl
toartai Chuy Oatol Chad, (a n * 4 )
ptotL 11011

toa Tntaa
•rain. L a (a«to Chad. 172* Tta «»
to. UN ftokn tot. INI I lit* M m . Cwntur,. 11 127M
Rnaw Tat 0**toto Chat*. 2142 I T H R
Tntto t Oatnl Chad 1201 to Drat (tow!. Ratal
Ttoarnt *a«to Chant. I ll, to. (upal 044
Trtoto Id* latoit t o p U . l a . fa t
Trapm* Mataar, Uptoto Chad. M . i )
Ucato U4d 4 u to u ) (a ta l Chant tonl Iala4
•Badat Uptoto CNud. ta .u a toLd« toa,
total
* toll P a d . 250 h a h M to. Cin d a r)
I latoto Chad. 2(21 Pdatt*
I* toan Mtotoaay UpUl Chad. R I* 411. t o l a
H Id* Mawaa, Oatott Chad to C ta aa Cto). Ik .
R Ttto latoto Chad 111 Tta. t n
W Htotarai Uptoto Chard C a ta Hptoton*fWM t u t o r , latoto. 12d « Ca«a
R h to l toauaat latoto Chad. 121 Crynt R
Ttato) Oatott C had Ttto k t a p U U n to . 1*0 * ,
Hdtoto Chato Mtoitan ry latoto C had 4*0 I l h a R

D m 4a* latoto C had 112 0&gt;&gt;a*a I m
C4TH0UC
Chad to IM Utorpy, Id* tov,
M Ud&gt; CtohtU Chad 110 Od i a . Utot.4
4a U t, « a to T a n U tah. Chad 121 V •*»**. 4m . Ittoat
R tm , CttoaOr C had Otfuat Tot. M u i
14 t*MtoM UthaOr C had la w l Or. a a Ito,a It Caitto.rr,
14. May 4*«*ttoai Ctohakr Chad. MtoHat I m . IIIa Ml, **rtaft
U r I d , to IM L d n Catd r C had t i l l
Otola*
c a u r it t
OtatatoM R a n Udto). CO Uttoitoa lutou). (a l Id* Brailt| Or,

, 1(00 tary I m
i (atoto. ta n ( m
•m Stokto Ohilau) Chad. Mh U ( ftday «h .

I n i ChrnfcM C had l(0t I Mtoa* 4m
U toat ChrubM Chad. I l l 4. U y a t II.&lt;
hadtott Chrtoltaa C had ItanU I m hr, Matoa*
Idm ra b n .u a Chad (tor Id* I t . to 1

lip* LaOto Chad, law ! Ctof CiuaiuD) Cata. fatto CHy
toa ML Ctoia, O u a u ) UpUL 1101 ■ I M R
, I M M llto R

l to Chnd 1112 I Ttrk I n .
Chad to Outot to Ut* (1ml 01 1712.1 Cw n4ao

iBraawt

l a d l a d Chad to CMM. M il Id* Orad It.
Chad to ChrW. M l Tda tprtapi Or, U n t o , Ippt.
Chad to ChrW. C a n .
Chad to ChrW la p u a t
Chad to ChrW M l i d R
■adttot Chad to ChrW Ik. h w Or. KmcIm *
O M caor m o
Chad to U t. M l fctu)
b a d t o W M I O 22d R
b a d to Cat. Btodt
Chad to U t M m u , Id* Barit
Chad to U t d a . IdayriM
Chad to U t. 1*01 ■ lt d R
Chad to U t It ChrW Otodt
Chad to U t to To jilt). 2t*t 1. tta ( m .
b a d to U t to T a ta n . 170* I. Tina* m t m
I n . b a d to M L I7M ■ l i d t l. iatoa*
tru Chad to U t. 27M Itopraato ( n , Utoat
M i n n MTMoei
UtteriOrddn Chad. tta. Titar ( T n U I I I M d a U I m . I atoa*fta.
( d ia l Brddti Chad, R ( ta p . IM U a u a t Ct, Ikiaitoi lartapi
tM la i P rd d n Chad, R Mnw i to I CJL, III t a d W. la* Park
Utoai OrdtUi b a d e R Ida Ckryinlta Onto. Ul Buy. 1142, la*
Pat
Capr&gt;(*«ato Ctaklia Ckad. 1401 t Tat 4m . Utoat
imC0T41
IplKtpto Chad to d* Ora CaataL 111 T
Tta Chad to dt (a* l l a t a t MtoOat. I ll Id* 4m
41I M I IdMtpto b a d . I. M a y I n . (dayrla
Chrlil Ijkiiad Chatk Uuputt*
hto) Co m (pnupto. Tat 4m . to 4d R . ta la *
K U u l ■ b a d . t i l l Id* kraiS I*. V M a Pat
■ 41M
Itot tm l yatipu

I to talatltta I

um uu
I i u m h Uttarti b a d e OMftrat Or. Ciin4ary
(a* Itiptir* IMta* Uttar a 2111 L d tn ti hr

UttarM Chad to Trnl*an, hrUin
I to dt l i l i raa. I ll W. lt d run
a d . U U d Uyt Or. 1 Puy 1142. Cllllh a r)
R l d n U d a a Chad, *1 420. tank
R ttapha U d a a Chad. CM M *•»! to 1-4, la*ua*
T — MT
l im l l Otota* H a r d Chad, L Oiliry 4m . (j Iu u m
•r*to 4 111 b a d . C u ra l(ta
Cm m T xt ) Cl iu ii H) Otota* M id ib l Chad. h*). 1142. Tta*) U p
C4, f n n h iii)
Chr ll Otota* Mrd id il Chad. l a t a Or. ta la * Ittatat
M a y C m iO| MtdiMI Chad. « K p t a t i I
nm Otota* Mtoti U I Chad. 411 Tat 4m .
nrto Mrtlidil b a d to M i l l
fkil l a d a i l* a k « l Chad. 24M litoa* 4m .
Im Midttoil Chad. I H I W R
fkil Otota* H id ib l Chad to (amt. ( a n t
nt M iltidil I
(rat b a d 4 UJ I
0d(rtM Mittatoil Chad. Oitatt
U taa Hid total Chad
Puta H td n a Mtohidit 0V 4* 1. to Tata
R l a u 4 H I Id to Cipow
l l Id* H I b a d to C a m &lt;Xy. tat . t a r k l tol IJl *4 L
R 0tary-| 4JU . Chad. R »l 411. Otota
R T to l M id iU I Chad, Otota I t, bltoata*
lltoltr* KtaaW Chad. ( talar
I b a d . M 431 a* 14 Lapatto
I b a d Ca to Catatat 4 Marty R , Oilta
full Chad to d* h iia in . 25(1 ittoa* 4m
Ca n t Chad to dt Ultra*. 14 44. (am t
Uh* da) Chad to d t Otiata. III L Crytlto Id* 4m . Id* May
■attaa Vttot Chad to dt Otoaat. U 44. IH HMn M. to 14 to d*
H d h tB ta
l iapuiiJ Chad to d t U u rta . t r i m 4 hum 4m . liupiit*
n H u rn o u *
tta* 4 4*tota 4m . Orta*

Id* May Otota* Tmhrtartat Chart
nrto Ttadrlata b a d Od 4m 4 Sr* R
Hrto Praditarta Chad to U U r) I »,« m *
C m t o Truhytarta* C had 2771 i Ortatot Or.
R tatrral Tmhftarla C had M i l Ita Ida M
R B a li Tmhilataa Chad. 1(21 Pita Iprtaft U . I lt - a lt
Onto* C iuu.it , TiMhTtatau C had Unto* *4
Htotatatata Tmhftarla C had It* U* 04. CtMtohary
UVM70 I4T 40«»mi
latto U lt ta ia d 0*y Mraltal Chad It). *M. fatto Ch)
t n a d hr, U w h l C had U M 4n . 4U*ata tan
(a la * l o a d la, U ra ta l C h a d Id t (hi
Htatar l a tag) taatd i*| U muOH C had H I I m II
■ a t m Itaud 0*y 1*1atari C h a d M l E ta* 14. Ittoa*
o n u CBUtcMi
U a i (.MX. Chad 00m ( 12d
M lath Chapto. bap ta-Mtot. Wdtat Tat U
•ratal I r a a Ithau Chapto. R a ta l 4m
ChtontaCiuiilly Chad
Chad to Imm Chmi to Ultat It) taati. 2111 Tat 4m
Ld* B a ru O r*to. Oraug* Oh*. Ida B a ra
I tag*— 0(1 to M m d 'i Witami. Ida B a ra ItaM, 1142 N. Ita* llrtto
Ihto Ur* Chad to d t LtaU« U*. Mto*n
Ihto • a d to ChrW l i atait l L a i IN*, a* I m R . Otota**
Tatar auto 0a* OBta 1dait.lt Otagaura* 4m . OH l i d ttprtolt
Thai Tataruti Chud to Uagum*
Orto TautaMtoto Chad to Ittoa*
1*0 Utpto Chad to U* ta Chut. 1124 tan, 4m . Ittoa*
111 Uapto I d a m la. 2124 Caa tr) Ctrl
Mr. 00m haUata C h a d Od M 11. Ortaa
Ittoa* Ihauu b a d 1401 » Tat I m
Ittoa* OBta O a d 2444 tala* Oat.
la ta * CagraitoMuto to tataad &gt;OrM aun 11(4 ■ I d R
Tta btaataa 4rd|. IM M 24B R
I MaarM C h a d t l *34. Ia*uat4
I to ChrW l l f iult Cruual , Chapto. lUaato* l*rtapa
•to) liM ) C ta d to U* ta ChrW III* Bagatota* I n
Tta I d InotoChad to la Ur* had ChrW. Bttoagla VI. laaaa Cl)
I Imgalato CtutodtoM* Wktat I d t w Ita w

�RELIG IO N
Evinlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly
St. Paul To Honor
Pastor Am os C. Jones
St. I’aul Missionary Baptist Church. 813 Pine
Ave.. Sanford, will observe Appreciation Day for lls
pastor, the Rev. Amos C. Jones at 11 a.m. and 3
p.m. Sunday. Helping observe the event will be
representatives from many sectors of Central
Florida, along with greetings from various conimunlty leaders.
The speaker for the 11 a.m. service will be the
president of the Florida State Congress or the
NAACP Chapters, Charles Cherry. The Rev. Andrew
Evans. pastor of the Morning Glory Missionary
Baptist Church and his congregation will be In
charge of the 3 p.m. service. Both services arc open
to the public.

St. Luke Chapter To M eet
The Interdenominational Greater Orlando Chapter
of St. Luke the Physician will hold n special meeting
on.Tucsday at 7:30 p.m. to celebrate St. Luke's Day.
It will be al the Episcopal Church of the Good
Shepherd. 331 Lake Ave., Maitland. The speaker
will be James A. Shortess. rector of the church, who
will have as his topic, "Living, Healing Mysteries."
He began Ills ministry al Good Shepherd on Jan.
1. 1981. after serving churches In Louisiana.
Virginia and Florida. He has had the healing
ministry In the churches where he served as priest.
At Good Shepherd, he conducls services with the
Laying on of the Hands and anointing. He himself
has experienced dramatic and unusual healings.
Following the address, there will be prayers ol
Intercession and Laying on of the Hands for those
who wish. Refreshments will be served. The meeting
is open to the public.

Religious Aw ards
The Diocese of Orlando will hold Its first Catholic
Religious Awards Ceremony for Girl Scouts at St.
James Catholic Cathedral, 215 N. Orange Ave.,
Orlando, at 3 p.m. tills Sunday.
Bishop Thomas Grady will present the Family of
God and I Live for my Faith religious awards to 40
Brownies and Junior Girl Scouts from the Central
Florida area. A reception after the ceremony will be
open to the public.

Program On Africa
The Rev. John Brockman, pastor of the Alotna
United Methodist Church. Winter Park, will present
a slide program at 7 p.m. this Sunday at
Community United Methodist Church. Cnsselberrv
and icpon on nts recent trip to the mission field In
The prjgristt&lt;&amp;iiy&gt;ai to the public.
Mike Koliclnmlnen. assistant to the pastor, will
preach at the 9:30 and 11 n.m. worship services In
the absence of the pastor, the Rev. Wight Klrtley.
who is recuperating from surgery.

Fall Festival Bazaar
The Episcopal Church Women of Holy Cross
Episcopal Church, Sanford, will hold a Fall Festival
Bazaar Thursday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the
church parish hall at 400 S. Magnolia Ave.
A sit-down luncheon complete with dessert will be
served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tickets are available
at the church office. Brum Towers, or Sweeney's
Office Supply.
There will be handmade Items for sale such as
Christmas decorations. Jewelry, gift items and
children's clothing. Other Items Include "Trash and
Treasures", potted plants, home baked goods,
jellies, and Jams.

In Is r a e l

U.S. Jews Vs. New Religious Law
By David E. Anderson
UPI Religion W riter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S.
Jewish leaders arc putting pre­
ssure on the new Israeli gov­
ernment to shelve proposed
religious teglnlallon they believe
discriminates against the U.S.
R eform and C o n s e rv a tiv e
movements.
At slake Is Israel's Law of
Return and the Increasingly
volatile Issue of Jewish Identity
and the validity of the Reform
and Conservative rabbinate.
Israel's Orthodox rabbinate,
who also lead that nation's
religious political parties —
crucial lo the government of
new Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Shamir — are deman­

The change sought by the
Orthodox rabbis would hold
Invalid all conversions to the
Jewish faith performed by
non-Orthodox rabbis.
The present Law of Return,
which gives every Jew the right
to enter Israel and receive
autom atic citizenship, was
adopted shortly after Israeli
In d ep en d en ce In 1948. It
applies lo born Jews and con­
verted Jews, but does not
establish criteria for such con­
versions.
"The self-serving demand of a
t i ny grou p o f O rth o d o x

When anyone dies at 54. we arc shocked. When a faith
healer dies at 54. t he shock Is even greater.
Explaining why she refused medical treatment when
It was discovered she had a terminal Illness, evangelist
and faith healer Ruth Carter Stapleton said last spring.
"I have been working In the healing ministry for 20
years and 1 have seen many miracles, I want to pul nil
my trust In God."
in September. Mrs. Stapleton, the 'sister of former
President Jimmy Carter, died. She was only 54.
"W hy did she (or he) die?" Is the question that has
always perplexed the disciples of spiritual healers
whenever the leaders pass away. To some of the—
followers, the death is a blow to their faith.
If the one they looked to for guidance on the path of
spiritual healing has been overtaken by death, how (they
ask themselves) can they whose faith and understand­
ing Is so much weaker expect to be healed?

spokesmen In Israel that they
be recognized as the sole In­
terpreters of Jewish religion,
and sp ecifically that their
authority lo determine the legit­
imacy of conversions performed
outside Israel be spelled out In
the secular law of Israel. Is
m orally and religiously of­
fensive to us." a group of
Reform and Conservative lead­
ers said.
"In deciding whether a con­
vers io n p erfo rm e d In the
Diaspora (Jewish communities
outside of Israel) Is or Is not
authentic — basing their opi­
nion not on how the conversion
was performed, but on who
performed It — the Israeli rab­
binate and. If they achieve

purpose, the stale would arro­
gate to themselves authority
over the religious lives of Jews
throughout the world."
The Reform and Conservative
movements In the United States
and Canada have a combined
membership of more than 3
million people — half the North
American Jewish population.
"Passage of this law would
lead to the reading out of the
Jewish fold of a substantial part
of American Jewry." according
to Reform Rabbi Alexander
Schindler, president of the Un­
ion o f American Hebrew Con­
gregations.
"W e will not accept secondclass citizenship within the
Jewish people and we will not

accept a denigration o f our
role," he said.
"W hy should we be deemed
good enough to provide (eco­
nomic) support, but not good
enough for allynh (automatic
Israeli citizenship for Jews who
'return' to Israel).” Schindler
said.
He said that despite the fact
that Conservative and Reform
rabbinates arc "already dis­
advantaged" in Israel, "as a
leadership we have put our
finger In the dike" to contain
protests from lay people.
"Th e consequences (of chang­
ing the Law of Return) would
arouse such anger and bitter­
ness that there would not be
enough fingers to put Into the
dike." Schindler said.

Marshall has been featured
In concerts throughout
Florida.
Ms. McFeely was a voice
major at Stetson Universi­
ty. DeLand. and has been
a soloist with the Messiah
choral Society and has
appeared in The Springs
Concert with the Florida
Symphony Orchestra. She
Is presently cantor at St.
Margaret Mary Catholic
Church. Winter Park.

Organist In Recital

Karen M arshall

Christian Women's Brunch
Altamonle-Mattland Christian Women's Club will
have Its monthly brunch from 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Thursday at Maitland Civic Center on the theme.
^-Country Fair." Special music will be provided by
Kathy Drick. flutist, of Orlando. Lib Harris of Stuart
will be the speaker. For brunch and nursery
reservations call Marilyn Grccnmore at 862-8687,

Fortes Is a Stetson grad­
uate and Is soloist in the
St. John Lutheran Church
choir. He has sung tenor
solos In the M essiah at
Stetson and starred as the
caliph In K ism et. He will
be making his professional
operatic debut as Spoletta
In the Orlando Opeya
Company production of
Tosca on Nov. 4.
Russell studied voice at
Syracuse University and
performed as soloist with
the Oratorio Society there.

Groundbreaking Slated
Dale Morehouse
The Music Ministry of
the First United Methodist
church will launch Its
1983-84 concert scries at 7
p.m. this Sunday with
"It's a Grand Night for
S in g in g . ” featuring
musical selections front
opera to Broadway.

Women's Day

It will feature Karen
Mar s hal l and S h aron
McFeely. sopranos: Robert
Russell and Scott Fortes,
t e n o r s : and Dal e
Morehouse at the piano.

Zion Hope Missionary Baptist Church. Sanford,
will observe Woman's Day. Oct. 16. at II a.m.
Bertha Dailey of ST Mark AME Church. Orlando,
will be the guest speaker. There will be music by the
Women's Chorus.

Mrs. Marshall Is u soloist
with the Orlando 0|iera
Company 1‘crfnrmlng Stu­
dio. The Greene Consort,
chamber ensemble and

He performed locally with
the Winter Park Repertory
Company and sings with
the Camcrata Choi us. He
appeared last year with
the Orlando Opera Com­
pany In La Boherne.

G lory, by Vincent Lubcck,
accom panied by Ellen
Hinkle and Susan MeQuinn, flutes, and Barbara
Muller, harpsichord. Other
music will consist of solos
an d d u c t s by K a r e n
M a r s h a ll and Dale
M orehouse wi th flute
numbers by Ellen Hinkle
and Susan McQuinn.
Future programs Include
the Contemporary Dance

Ensemble from Seminole
Community College,
March 25; the Bel Canto
Singers, Daytona Beach
presenting the P u le n c
Gloria and B ru ckn e r Mass.
In April: and the Central
Florida Chorale on May

20.
All programs are free
and open to the public. A
free will offering Is taken
and nursery care is avail­
able.

Revival Set
D r . C h a r l e s H o rto n
(right above), pastor of
College P a rk Baptist
Church, Orlando, will
be doing the preaching
for revival services at
P inecrest Baptist
Church O ct. 16-19 at
7:30 p.m. A graduate of
Stetson U n i v e r s i t y ,
Southw estern B ap tist
Sem inary and New O r­
leans Baptist Sem inary,
he h a s p a s t o r e d a
number of churches In
Florida. Danny Whipple
(below), associate
pastor-music at College
P ark Baptist Church,
w ill lead the singing
during the revival. A
g ra d u a te of F lo r id a
State U n iv e rsity and
the New Orleans Bap­
tist Sem inary, he has
served as minister of
music In a number of
churches In the South.

The Priesthood Of All Believers
All of us will be hearing a lot these weeks about
"Lutheranism" and "Luther." October, of course. Is the
month when we annually observe "Reformation Day"
(which Is Oct. 31). In November this year, there will be
world-wide celebrations (as well as local observances) of
the 500th Anniversary of Martin Luther's birth. (He was
bom Nov. 10. 1483).
One of the most Important Bible truths to be
rediscovered by Luther and the reformers was the Bible
teaching on the "priesthood of all believers." In
emphasizing this Bible truth. Luther was going up
against the Church at that time which Insisted that
clergyman were some special class far above "common
Christians." Not so. said Martin Luther. Basing his
teachings on Scriptures such as 1 Peter 2:9-10, he
wrote, "w e are all priests before God If we are
Christians."
This teaching of God's Written Word expresses
concisely the nature and function o f Christ's church.
Jesus came to serve as God's High Priest. Once and for
all He sacrificed Himself for the sins of all people so that
they may have direct access to God's forgiveness. All
who believe this wonderful message and are baptized
Into Christ have Him and everything He has — Including
the name He bears, a priest of God.

Morehouse Is musical
director at St. John Lu­
In other words, we are all "called" to be priests of God.
theran Church. Winter
Park, and the Camcrata Each one o f us! We are not all called to the "public
Chorus. He Is adjunct In­ ministry" but we are all called by God to live In service
s t r u c t o r of mu s i c ut to all fellow believers. Like Christ, we are to present
Valencia Community Col­ ourselves as a "living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to
lege. While In Vienna, he God." This offering is worship of God and takes the form
was assistant conductor of o f loving service and care within the Christian
the Vienna Bach Choir and community. At the same time, as a church we have a
an opera coach.
service to render to those who do not belong to the
The second program In Ivord's Church — to proclaim the message of Christ's
the series will be held at 7 forgiveness to them and to pray for them.
p.m. Dec. 18. The Adult
Choir will sing the cantata.
UV/romr, Thou K in g o f

The F irs t Baptist
C h u r c h of O v i e d o
honored M in is te r of
M usic Terry Rabun on
Oct. 9 with a dinner on
th e g r o u n d s in o b ­
serv an ce of his 15th
a n n i v e r s a r y In that
position. Rabun, who
cam e to the church in
1968 while a student at
Stetson U n i v e r s i t y ,
went on to graduate and
to earn a M aster's de­
gree from Rollins Col­
lege. He was presented
with a love offering. His
full-time profession Is
that of p rin c ip a l of
Wilson E l e m e n t a r y
School, Paola.

George P lag rnz

First Methodist Opens Concert Series
the Cathedral Church of
St. Luke Choir. She Is also
a composer and plays the
flute, recorder and guitar.
Mrs.

Honored

Saints
And
Sinners

the most popular of all writers on spiritual healing and
pastor of the Church of the Healing Christ hi New York
which had one o f the largest congregations In the United
States, stunned his followers.
His biographer. Harry Gaze, who succeeded Fox at the
Church of the Healing Christ, says In the last chapter of
his book on Fox's life:
"T o those who knew him through his books and
"It’s like having your doctor die of the disease he has sermons and heard him proclaim week after week that
been treating you for,” as one person expressed It one had only to ask In faith to be healed, there Is still a
following the death of the faith healer whose patient she lingering question. 'Why did Emmet Fox die? If It is true
that prayer can heal, why did It not heal Emmet Fox?"'
had been.
Gaze has an Interesting comment on this question. He
The followers of Kathryn Kuhlman were said to be In
the millions. They looked to her not only for miracles of refers to Fox's belief In life after death and to the great
healing but as the channel by which the Holy Spirit attraction the next world had for him.
"I am going to live forever." Fox wrote In one of his
came Into their lives.
best-selling books.
So why. people asked when Miss Kuhlman died In
"In a thousand years from now I shall be gone from
1976 at age 66. was she taken from the human scene at fh r
pVtrte hui ! ntu.il Uc alive and aukve
etrch i tcuttvcty * ally age and wlnic site was suu m the somewhere — In a hundred thousand years, still active,
prime of her power?
and alive somewhere else. And so the events of todayJoel Goldsmith, whose spiritual healing movement have only the Importance that belongs to this day.
attracted hundreds of thousands, died unexpectedly at Always the best Is yet to be."
age 72 while on n lecture tourtn England.-- "
With this philosophy implanted In Fox's subconscious
Ernest Holmes, founder of Religious Science, another mind, says Gaze, "the chemistry of his body worked In
that direction. His body was sensitive to the secret
metaphysical healing movement, died In his early 70s.
While both had passed the biblical "threescore years prayer of his soul to be free of the physical body."
Whatever the truth of this In the case of Emmet Fox.
and ten." Goldsmith and Holmes taught that the
lifespan of the "natural man" does not apply to those the death of faith healers — especially untimely deaths
who believe that "outer conditions arc merely reficctlons as In the case of Ruth Stapleton — will always raise the
of b e lie f and who banish the thought of sickness and question In the minds of many sincere seekers after the
truth. "If they healed others, why couldn't they heal
limitation from their consciousness.
The sudden death In 1951 of Emmett Fox. perhaps themselves?"

"A Distant Thunder." the first of two fast-paced
sequels to the award-winning movie. "A Thief In the
Night." will be presented at 6 p.m.. Oct. 23 at the
Metropolitan Baptist Church. 4400 N Pnwrr* Drive.
Orlando. Events foretold In the Bible as part of the
Great Tribulation arc vividly portrayed.

Groundbreaking ceremonies will be held this
Sunday at 1:30 p.m. for the new 101 unit Cathedral
Cloisters lower Income elderly housing project In
downtown Orlando. The development Is a coopera­
tive between the Roman Catholic Cathedral Parish
and the Cathedral Parish of the Episcopal Church of
Central Florida and the Office of Housing and Urban
Development. Bishop Thomas Grady of the Catholic
Diocese and Bishop William Folwcll of the Episcopal
Diocese will be on hand for the groundbreaking. The
11-story building will be located on South Orange
Avenue across from the Lucerne Hospital. The two
parishes have been raising money to purchase the
land for the Joint effort for the past five years and the
project Is scheduled for completion within a year’s
time from the start of construction.

ding changes In the Law of
Return as the price for their
participation In Shamir's gov­
ernment.

Faith Healer's Death A Shock

Film To Be Shown

Bruce Lindquist, newly appointed organist at
Community United Methodist Church. Casselberry,
will present a recital Sunday. Oct. 23, at 7 p.m. In
the church sanctuary. An accomplished keyboard
artist with an Impressive background In the study
and performance of sacred music, he will present a
program, which will Include music of the great
organ masters. A reception will be held for him
following the recital.

Sunday, Oct. It , 1 H J - 5 B

For carrying out this "first and foremost duty." we
priests also have the power to choose some in our midst
to preach In the congregation and administer the

Pastor's
Corner
The Rev. E.A. Reuscher,
Pastor, Redeemer
L u l h , f inChnreh —
Sacraments In our behalf. Therefore, we call pastors to
occupy the Office of Public Ministry. As Luther put It, all
pastors are priests, but not all priests are pastors. Tne
Public Ministry Is God's idea. God Intended that pastors
and people work together, side by side. In their priestly
service to each other and others in the community.
As we celebrate the Reformation and Luther's
Birthday, let's recommit ourselves to our partnership In
proclaiming to each other and to others the wonderful
deeds of Christ who called us out of darkness into His
marvelous light!

FCC Elects Officers
Four new officers were elected to serve two-year
terms beginning In January. 1984. by the Florida
Council of Churches at Its September meeting. Dr.
Dale L. Heaton, pastor of First Presbyterian Church.
Titusville was elected president: the Rev. Charles A.
Burkey. Lutheran Aging Services (Lutheran Church
In America), DeLand. president-elect; the Rev.
Richard K. Walker 111. pastor of North Shore United
Methodist Church, Jacksonville, mcmber-at-largc;
and Mrs. Bernice Mazcau. active leader In the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) In Florida,
membcr-at-lwgc.
The Catholic Church of the Antiochian Rite was
received as a new member of the Florida Council
bringing memberathip lo 19 communions.

�tB—Evening Herald, Sanford, ‘f l.

B L O N D IE

Sunday, Oct. 14, 19*3

by Chic Young
NO,

B E E T L E BAILEY

by Mort W alker

ACROSS

57 It human

Antwti to Prtviout Punlt

HOROSCOPE

DOWN

\ Telit

5 Collage
Aitrige
degree jabbr)
(comp, wd |
8 Out of danger
Semite
12 tiling tpaach
Sweet
13 Long tima
potatoes
14 Concerning
Corel
the ear
Feeling ol
15 Alike
resentment
16 Environment
Wish
agency (ebbr)
Gsnetic
mitenil
17 Ctnoa
(tbbr)
Id Wetch
2B Barrels
8 Becomes
20 Slow (mm |
27 Populir songs
serious
21 Author of
28 Doesn't eiiit
0
Egyptian
deity
"The Raven"
(cont)
10 Official decree
22 Thick black
29 Cooking
11
Outer
(prelii)
liquid
utensils
23 Actrait Rainer IB Fish eggs
3 ! King of It r ill
20
Country
26 Relationship
34 Evening (Fr.)
22 Cent
30 Doctrine
23 llilian resort 37 Ovarjoys
3 1 Coniign
38 Stripling
24 Information
32 Same (prtfn)
agency (abbr) 3B Keep current
33 Short twim
41 Tin
25 Osmons
34 Btndi under
1
4
4
•
1 f
J
weight
35 E«plonvt
1)
11
(abbr)
36 Ratambling
11
11
bona
l»
11
38 Wants
40 Mae Watt
21
role
"
41 Spigot
2
1
2
1
2)
"
42 Pertaining to
10
the moon
45 Prayer
))
49 Ntwtpaptr
notice (abbr) i*
it
It
50 Flaying
40
marble
_
5 1 Malarial (ever II «1 44
52 Well (Lei )
53 Public houie «•
10
54 8tllerini't
1)
strong points •1
55 Epochs
II
II
56 Porcint home

What The Day Will Bring. . .

42
43
44
45

Ear part
Over (Gar |
Actress Foch
German
philosopher
46 Opera prince
47 Pleadar
48 Nan Rudolf
50 Poetic
contraction
•

♦

10

11

2t

21

21

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44

14
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by Larry Wright

K I T ‘N ’ C A R L Y L E

fttYr^rCAN i AW e HIM ?
VTeAbef AV/
FiMliNtt

A R C H IE

AH-Cep.

by Bob Montana

HOW IS YX IR c a p
PCXNG W T ' '*\S CHAIN
OF VIPFC . AME
ARCADES ?

BUSINESS IS POWN.'
LAST SPRING HE WAS
HIT WITH A SERIES OF
UNEXPECTED
D i s a s t e r s .*1

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E E K &amp; M EEK

by Howie Schneider
CW3NNIA HC tUA^UlPH HUOO

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CLOSED

WIN AT BRIDGE

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by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

M R. M EN AND L I T T L E M ISS
W H O DO W E K N O W
T H A T C O U L D FIX T H IS
D R IPPING F A U C E T f

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

teammate in the Splngold.
had great mi s g i v i n g s
about Bill us a business­
man. but found him his
first Job with IBM and BUI
has never looked bark.
He Is now one of the
businessmen players in
thut Cavendish guttic, but
still plays his cards like
the Bill Grieve of the ’ 50s.
♦ A K Q JI
Wc can't say the same
♦ A K 42
about his bidding. Had lie
♦3
Just bid three spudes.
♦ 10 9 8
North might have bid the
Vulnerable: North-Soulh
easy three no-trump, but
Dealer: South
Bill was in four spades.
The deuce of clubs was
South
North E a ii
Writ
opened and the jack fi­
!♦
Pass
2?
l NT
fa t*
nessed. [Cast took his king
(♦
Pais
Pats
24
and led the suit back.
Pass
Pats
Pass
Now BUI showed his
expe r t t echni que He
cashed one (rump and led
a low heart. He was i d y ­
ing on a 4-3 club break as
Opening lead: 42
evidenced by the dcucc
lead. He won the third
By Oawald Jacoby
club In dummy, cashed
and Jamea Jacoby
one more spade, played
William P. "B ill" Grieve the A-K of hearts, rufled
Is about lo retire as one ol tils last heart and claimed.
IBM's top mathematicians.
Of course, he had been
Time really passes. In the lucky. The man with three
late ‘50s Bill was an expert spades held four hearts,
bridge bum. but after hut Bill could not have
w i n n i n g t h e 1 9 5 9 made the hand against a
Splngold. he decided to 4-2 heart break if trumps
put his other knowledge lo had been Ihe olher way.
work.
The extra chance hud paid
Os wal d J a c o by , his off.
iO-ll-13
NORTH
♦ 10 8 5
♦ 153
♦ Q 109 4
♦ A QJ
WEST
EAST
♦ 432
♦ 97
♦ J 1076
¥Q 9
♦K J 1
♦A765J
♦ K 53
♦ 76 42
SOUTH

GARFIELD
F R A N K AND E R N E S T

YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 16, 1983
In the year ahead It may
prove advantageous to try
your hand In artistic or
political areas. Your Ini
cuts In both these arcus
wi l l be e x c e p t i o n a l l y
sharp.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct.
23) A great deal of em­
phasis is likely to be
placed upon your personal
Interests loday. You’ll gain
your ends without being
selfish or offensive. Order
now: The NEW Match­
maker wheel and t&gt;onklrt,
which reveals romantic
compat i bi l i t i es Tor all
signs, tells how to get
along with others, finds
r i si ng si gns, hidden
qualilies. plus more. Send
$2 to Astro-Graph, Box
489. Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Be sure lo
give your zodiac sign. Mail
an nddillonal SI Tor your
Libra Astro Graph predie.
[Ions for the year head.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
221 You're still in a cycle
where you tend to reap
benefits because of others
working on your behalf.
Something advantageous
Is in the mill again today.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov.
23-Dcc. 21) Beginning as
of today, conditions will be
stirring lo bring something
you've hoped for closer to
reality. The signals will be
evident.
C A P R I C O R N ( De c .
22-Jan. 19) Dealings today
with individuals in the
position to enhance your
status in life should work
out even belter than you
hoped.
AQ U AR IU S (Jan. 20Pcb. 19) Independence is
an admlrahle trait, but

today you’re likely to be
able lo do more good for
yourself by serving ns the
backup In a Joint venture.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Tnklng thoughtful ac­
tions on behalf of a closcfriend wilt do much today
to s t r e ngt he n a rel a­
tionship which has been
loitering a trifle lately.
ARIES (March 2 1-April
19) If you tap your source
of power, you can easily
sway others lo your way of
thinking today. You can lie
especially effective dealing
with large groups.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Someone you have
been helpful lo Is now
seeking ways lo even ac­
counts. This person has
something larger in mind
than you did for him or
her.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) Your greatest assets
today are your ability to
spot opportunities and
being able to make them
count. Your actions will be
Instinctive.
CANCER (June 2 1-July
22) The results you're
hoping for loday should
work out as you antici­
pate. provided you leave
nothing to chance. Main­
tain constant control.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Even though you will be
the one largely responsible
for the success of a col­
l ecti ve venture today,
you'll make sure your
cohorts share the bows.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22) It behooves you to go
to flea markets or garage
sales loday. You could find
something which may be
of little use to the seller
but of great value to you.

someone else might not
necessarily work for you.
This will be especially true
in financial arras today.
Don't chase another' s
rainbow.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Before you explode
today, consider the source
o f the unpl easant In­
formation or situation.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. Logic will reveal it's Just
23) There is only one sure nonsense.
path to success today, and
ARIES (March 21-April
this Is to roll up your 19) Lack of patience could
sleeves nnd do a ll impor­ get you into trouble. Be
tant work yourself. De­ extra careful and safetypending upon others could c o n s c i o u s t o d a y ,
be a mistake. Libra pre­ especially when perform­
dictions for the year ahead ing any distasteful tasks.
arc now ready. Romance,
TAURUS (April 20-May
career, luck earnings, 20) If you run Into some­
travel and much more arc one who arouses your Ire
discussed. Send $1 to today, play it smart: Hold
Astr-Graph, Box 489. your tongue or walk away.
Radio City Station. N.Y. Sounding off will harm
10019. Send an nddillonal your Image.
82 for the NEA AstroGEMINI (May 2 1-June
Graph Matchmaker wheel 20) Usually your sense ol
and boo kl et . Re v e a l s humor is In good taste, but
romantic compatibilities today you might pull a
for all signs. Be sure lo stunt which will not be
give your zodiac sign.
appreciated. You'll be told
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. bo in no uncertain terms,
22) You’re a bit too easily
CANCER (June 21-July
Influenced today by out­ 22) There's a strong possi­
s i d e c i r c u m s t a n c e s , bility a number of small
especially where money is ann o y a nc e s coul d In­
Involved. You could be terfere with your plans
lead down the garden today.-Guard your temper,
path.
or innocent parties may
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. suffer.
23-Dec. 21) Trying to bluff
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
your way through a situa­ Under no circumstances
tion which you're unsure should you Jump Into any
of could backfire today. financial situation today
Piny It straight all the way.
wi t hout t hor oug h I n­
C A P R I C O R N ( De c . vestigation. no matter how
22-Jan. 19) Sidestep any rosy the picture Is painted.
type of philosophical or
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt.
political debates today. In 22) You cannot expect
trying to make your points others to act reasonably if
you could unintentionally you don't do so yourself.
create an ugly scene.
Keep your thinking logi­
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- cal. not emotional, and
Feb. 19) What works for they'll follow suit.

YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 17. 1983
If you adopt the motto,
"T o waste not Is to want
not." by the time your
next year's birthday rolls
ar ound you will find
y o u rse lf In an e x c e p ­
tionally strong financial
position.

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thaves

Y&lt;x/ HEAPP WHAT V\
HP

••••‘ 6 0

GET HiM A
B IG

C R A c/cep.

fA

TU M BLEW EED 5

A N N IE
by T. K. Ryan
ANNIE?,’
hAYE YOU

SHE RAN OFF INTO THE
FIELDS, ANGELA/
SEEN MARIA?! WHEN J HEARP TH'
B0RPER PATROL
ASKIN' YOU ABOUT
I WANED HER/

by Leonard Starr

�N e w Hope
F o r O v a ria n
C an cer
V ictim s

Evnlnq he.xtd, Sanford, FI.____ Sunday* Oct. II, IWJ—7B

TONIGHT'S TV
— SATURDAY—
AFTERNOON

BO STO N (U P 11 - A
simple blood test that
measures tumor growth
should greatly aid In the
t r e a t me n t o f o v a r i a n
rnnrrr by allowing doctors
to quickly monitor the
e f f e c t i v e n e s s of
chemotherapy, re­
searchers report.
Currently, doctors must
wall several months to
determine If a drug or
radiation therapy is ef­
fective and often must use
surgery to monitor tumor
growth.
But doctors rc|&gt;ortcd In
the New En g la n d Jo u rn a l
o f M edicine that the new
blood test measures the
level of a substance pro­
duced by tumors In cancer
of the ovarian surface and
may "provide an early
warning signal that the
cu/rcni therapy 1s not
working."
Some blood tests have
previously been developed
to monitor malignancy
growth Inolhercancers.
Cancer of the ovarian
surface acrounts for more
than 90 percent of the
18,200 rases of ovarian
cancer nationwide each
year.
By determining If the
levels of the substance go
up or down in the blood,
doctors may be able to
gauge on a "month-by­
month b asis" whether
therapy Is effective or
whether "to alter It to
assure best treatment for
the p a tie n t." said Dr.
Bober Bast Jr. of Boston's
Dana-Farber Cancer In­
stitute.
With a combination of
surgrry and therapy, less
than half of ovary cancer
patients survive free of the
disease beyond five years
and tw o thirds o f all
victims eventually die of
the disease.
"W e think this new
method is significant."
said Bast, who co-authored
the report with Dr. Robert
Knapp and a team o f
researchers. “ Monitoring
t u m o r r e g r e s s i o n or
g r o w t h

d u r i n g

chemotherapy has always
been difficult since the
tumor grows on the ovary
and can spread on the
Inner surface of the ab­
domen — sometimes In
tiny nodules not picked up
by scans.
"Very often doctors will
have to check on progress
either by using a scope or
opening the woman’s ab­
domen — both Invasive
procedures.
"T h is test provides a
non-lnvaslve means that
may give an eariy warning
that the current therapy is
n o t w o r k i n g or t hat
tumors arc recurring so
therapy can be changed."
Bast cautioned that the
test was not foolproof and
because of different levels
In Individual patients It
woul d be " u n w i s e to
assume that If levels ore
normal , chemot herapy
should be stopped."
In studies of 38 women
with cancer of the ovurian
surface, doctors d e ­
termined that In 93 per­
cent of the cases rising or
falling levels of an antigen
In the patients' blood cor­
rel ated wi t h the p ro ­
gression or regression of
the disease.
Bast said kits for testing
blood for the antigen will
soon be generally available,
for research use. but Its
routine use must await
approval by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.

_

2:00

O
f f i MOVJB "KHar Fore#"
11975) Pete* Food#. Tally Savslaa.
A sccuri;, uifrter and hi* sidekick
attick a detert mining camp lor a
baauliful woman and $20 minion In
diamond*
5X (35) MOVIE "E*c*pe"(No Data)
Tlmcthy Bottom*. Kay Last
® O 0 ) r r s EVERYBODY’S BU8I0 )(B ) MOVIE "Oettrnition, Moon
Bit# Alpha” (No Oita) Martin Lan­
dau.

2:30
fD (10) r r s EVERYBODY'S BustNESS

(CD

2:50

MOVIE "Tha Black Whip"
BBSS) Hugh Mailowa. Colaan Gray
A pali ot brelhat* com* lo th# rateu* ot lour danc#-h*H qurenj.
encountering troubl* In th* form ot
a gangttar.

3:00
fD (10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
"Gaorga Kirby Pratant* King
Haroin" Comedian Gaorga Kirby
talk* about hi* billla with drug*
and prlton lit#

CD O

3:30

NCAA FOOTBAU. {Not* It
l_A. Dodger* art NL champion*.
NCAA Football wtH b* ***n at 12.00
EDT, and Gam* 4 c( tha World
Sari** will b# ***n at 4:00 EOT).
CD (10) INSIDE STORY SPECIAL
EDITION "A Houa# Divided" Th*
raalJK* *tory of a powerful Nicara­
guan publlihlng family, who**
diametrically oppoiing new* ot the
CandmUU regime mirror Ihe dM•Ion In that Central American coun­
try. la presented.

4:00
f f i O HORSE RACING The Joc­
key Club Gold Cup race for threoyaar-old thoroughbred* and th*
Champagne Stake* lor two-yaarold Iborough brad* (live from Bel­
mont Park In EJnont, N.Y.)
(35) INCREDIBLE HULK
(«) POPt GOES THE COUNTRY
CLUB

S

4:30
CD(10) INTERNATIONAL EDITION
(12 HIGH CHAPARRAL
CD (8) AUSTIN CITY
ENCORE

wtf* (Charlotte Raa, Lout* Nye) tee
a friend (Jamie Farr) with a much
younger woman, a retired police­
man (Comal Wilde) la wrongly
accused of a )*w*l theft, and
Gopher I* trapped by a man-hungry
WAC captain (Beth Howland) r t
flJ(W )9 A lU T E
^

9:30

SPORTS LEG­
ENDS OF FOOTBALL

10:30
) (35) BOB NEWHART
1(10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
CD(8) NFL WEEK IN REVIEW

11:30
Q ® SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Hotli: Rhea Perlman (‘ Cheart")
and Danny DeVito. Quatl Eddy
Grant
O STAR SEARCH
O MOVIE "For Whom Th*
Bad To**" (1943) Ingrid Bergman.
Oar/ Coopof.
OX (39) MOVIE "The Swim Con­
spiracy" (1977) David Janstan. Elk*
Sommer
CD(8) LATE IS GREAT

11:50
®

n ig h t

TRACKS

CD(8) MOVIE

12:00

"Dr. Jekytl And Mr.
Hyde" (1941) Sponcer Tracy, Ingrid
Bergman

12:05
OX NIGHT TRACKS

12:30

f f l O MOVIE “ Magnum Fore#"
(1973) Clint Eaiiwood, Hal Hol­
brook.

1:05
(JJ NIGHT TRACKS

2:05
O NIGHT TRACKS

3:05
&lt;H NIGHT TRACKS

4:05
CD o
MOVIE
"Countdown"
(1968) Robert Duv*8. James Caen

4:20

EVENING

SUNDAY,
MORNING

I f f i HARMONY AHO GRACE
i n LAW AND YOU
) 0 AGRICULTURE U.S A.
(35) IMPACT
) NEWS

6:10

6:10
02 WEEK IN REVIEW

O ® NBC NEWS
(1) O CBS NEWS
CD (10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Heal
Gabiar and Jeffrey Lyon* boat an
informative look al what'* new at
the mover*

6:30
I ® r S COMPANY
i O SPECTRUM
IO VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION
l (38) WV. GRANT
) NEWS

7:00

7:30
CALL YOUR CONGRESS­

7:55
OX RED MAN FOOTBALL REPORT

0

8:00

®
DIFF RENT 8TR0KE8
Arnold'* hr*t day at )unlor high
•chnot finds him btL-g anJimly
compared to WiW*. Q
3 ) O CUTTER TO HOUSTON
Beth mutt go through a tribal rite
before aha it slowed to treat th*
indton ot an Indian haaier
) O TJ. HOOKER A Eurasian
beauty (Patricia Thomson) due*
Hooker Inlo a gang ol criminal*
traniporting illegal weapon*
through Chin* Iown r j
OJ (34) FAME
^
CD (10) MOVIE "Ha Walked By
Night" (1948) Richard Bateharl.
Scolt Brady Th* work involved by
Lo* Angela* poke* In tracking down
a kMar i* traced
CD ( 8) HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
Marrttl I(land v* Salekfte

S

8:05
a z NCAA FOOTBALL Baylor v»
Toiat AaM

8:30

/

0

7:00

f f l HEALTHBEAT
( ! ) O ROBERT SCHULLER
0 PICTURE OF HEALTH
(35) BEN HADEN
THE WORLO TOMORROW
(8) JIM BARKER

8
O

7:30

® WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE
The human need for friendship it
discussed by Dr. Ralph Bohtmann
and writer* Or Jean Oart on. Alan
Loy McGuinnets and Richard
B M r,
CD O EBONY / JET CELEBRITY
SHOWCASE
(1Ti {M}E.J DANIELS
dZ ri IS WRITTEN

0

8:00

® VOICE O f VICTORY
( ! ) O REX HUMBARO
( 7 ) 0 BOB JONES
d 1) (38) JONNY QUEST
(D (10) SESAME 8TRE£T (R) n
3Z CARTOONS
^
CD(8) JAMES ROBISON

8:30

0 ® SUNDAY MASS
( ! ) O DAY OF DISCOVERY
O ORAL ROBERTS
) (39) JOSIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS
CD(8) W.V. GRANT

S

9.00
O f f l THE WORLO TOMORROW
) O SUNDAY MORNING
O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
OX (39) MIGHTY MOUSE

w

Q ® SILVER SPOONS (Season
Pramtara) Ricky and Darak bypatt
a scout convention to have a fling
with two "otdar” girt*.

0:00
O ® THE ROOSTERS Wyatt and
hit clan try to slop a hit man (Tarry
Kiser| while bt tiling a rival carnival
tor tarrilortal right*
® O MOVIE "Trackdown. Find­
ing Tha Goodbar Killer" (Premier*)
George Segal. Shade/ Hack While
probing the brutal murder ol a
young achoottaachar, a New York
City del active It aided by on* of th*
victim'* former cede ague*
( 7 ) 0 LOVE BOAT A husband and

BARBS
Phil Pastoret
They call the season
"fall," to remind us of what
happens when raln-illcked
leaves are stepped on by the
unwary.

SCHOOL MENU
SCHOOLS
MONDAY.
CTOBER 17
ENTREE
Plcxa
Cole Slaw
ireen Beans
Milk
EXPRESS
Plata
Tater Tots
Fresh Fruit
Milk
OJ
Becondsryirange Juice
TUESDAY.
ICTOBER 18

ENTREE
Burrlto
Scalloped Potatoes
Vegetable Medley
(Country Mix)
Milk
EXPRESS
Burrivo
Tater Tots
Fresh Fruit
OJ
Milk
SecondaryFruit
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER IB
MANAGER'S CHOICE
THURSDAY,

OCTOBER an
ENTREE
Beefaroni
Corn
Applesauce
Rolls
Ice Cream
Milk
EXPRESS
Cblx Filet
Tater Tote
Freah Fruit
Milk
OJ
FRIDAY,
OCTOBER 21
MANAGER'S CHOICE

O

f f i FIRST CAMERA Rebecca
8obet reports on religion m Ameri­
ca s heartland a* experienced In
Muncte. Ind. and the changing Ieat­
ing* that have accompanied II dur­
ing the past several decade*
i ! ' 0 6 0 MINUTES
f f i O RIPLEY'S BEUEVE IT OR
NOT1 Strange death met; futuristic
robot*: e teen-ager * Shakespeare
forgeries: agg-rattled wonder*,
lam out eccentrics
ail (35) THE HARDY BOYS / NAN­
CY DREW MYSTERIE8
f f i (10) BAJA MARIMBA BAND IS
BACK
CD (8) ANGLERS IN ACTION

7:30
8:00

11:0 0

10:30
(X) O FACE THE NATION
(7) O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
ff i (10) WOODWRKJHT8 8HOP

O ® TAKING ADVANTAGE
I J ' O THIRTY MINUTES
f f i (10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

AFTERNOON

12:00
0 f*l MEET THE PRESS
(T)0 JOHN MCKAY
OX (39) MOVIE "Zigzag" (1970)
George Kennedy. Anne Jackson. A
man suffering horn a brain tumor
ham** himtalf lor a murder In
order in prove)* h‘i famffy wfth the
reward money.
f f i (10) WORLD OF COOKING
"Franc#: An Alpin# Manu" (R)

12:30

O®

NFL’63
f f l ( 1 NFL TOOAY E.J. Holub I*
profiled on this afternoon'* seg­
ment ol 'Legend* Ot Th* Game.”
(7) 0 EYEWITNESS SUNDAY
f f i ( 10) CRIME ON OUR MINDS

1:00

® NFL FOOTBAU. Miami Dol­
phin* al New York Jets
( ! ) O NFL FOOTBAU Stn Francisco 49ert al New Orleans Sami*
( 7 ) 0 TENNIS "Florida Federal"
f f i (10) THE SHAKE8PEARE
PLAYS "Tlm on Ol Athan*"
Jonathan Pryc# portray* a wealthy
Athenian nobleman who squanders
hit fortune on hJ* fickle friend* In
Jonathan Milter s television produc­
tion ol Wtlham Shakespeare’* play.
CD(I) WRESTLING

1:20

dZ

MOVIE "A8 Thai Haavan
Allow*" (1956) Jana Wyman. Rock
Hudion Criticism from other*
almost lore#* a woman lo give up
th* gardener *h* truly love*

2:00

OX

(39) MOVIE "Kansas City
Burnt(1972) Raquel Welch.
Kevin McCarthy. A woman lace*
problem* with her teammate* and
her manager* while dlmblng lo the
top m the roller-derby circuit
CD(8) ABBOTT AND COSTELLO

2:30
QD O GOLF "Ryder Cup Match,
as" (bv* from Palm Batch Garden*.
FI*.).

CD(8) MOVIE

3:00

"TUI Th* Cloud* Roll
By" (1947) Robert Walker, Van MatIm Jerome Kern make* hi* m*rk
upon the musical world a* a com*

OZ AMERICA’S MUSIC TRACKS

0:30
f f i a ONE DAY AT A TIME Sam's
attention lo hi* ex-wtte (Claudette
Nevtnt) makes Ann highly uncom­
fortable

9:00

O

f f i MOVIE "High School
U S X " (Premiere) Michael J. Fox.
Nancy MeKaon A Midwestern high
school senior tile* lo win th* statu*
end the girlfriend ol th* most popu­
lar student
f f i O THE JEFFERSONS Mtyha.i
results when George volunteer* lo
oversee a Hwp Center seminar for
newlywed*
ffi O
MOVIE
' Nighthawkt"
(1981) Sylvester Stallone. BUty Dee
William* Two New York City poke*
detective* Join an elite unit being
trained !u uauluxe ■ dangerous
international terrorist (Viewer Dis­
cretion AdvisedJQ
(3S| JIMMY 6WAGQART
(10) EVENING AT POPS "Rich
Ltttla" Impressionist Rich UtBa
)oin» John William* and tha Boston
Pop* Orchestra In an evening that
Includes a salute to tha MGM musi­
cal* and the world premier* ol
"Ragomanla" by WHItam Bottom
(R)

a

9:05

dZ MOVIE "Magnificent Obses­
sion" (1994) Jan* Wyman. Rock
Hudson. A rich playboy itudie*
medicine lo add meaning to hi*
empty HI# and taler rettor#* tight to
the woman h# love*

0

4:00

® MOVIE
Last Ot The Red
Hot Lovers" (19721 Alan Arkln. Sally
Kellermar. The balding, middleaged owner ot a seafood restaurant
make* three awkward attempt* al
extra-mantel romance. ‘PC'
(9 O
NR- FOOTBALL Dallas
Cowboy* at Philadelphia Eagle*
OX (39) INCREDIBLE HULK
f f i 110) THE OIL KINGDOMS
Kings And Pirate*" A historical
view is presented on Ihe discovery
ot oM In Ihe Persian Gull and how
th* raauttlng wealth ol that area
Influence* trade between East and
Waal, th* paartnq industry and Ihe
gold Irad* Q

4:29

MOVIE "TtiO Connection''
( 1973) Chartaa Duntlng, Ronrty Cox.
OZ MOVIE "Long Da/i Journey
Into Night" (1962) Katharina Mapbum. Jason Robards

f f i O MOVIE "One* Upon A Hon­
eymoon" (1942) Cary Grant, Ginger
Roger*

2:35
4:00
4:20

ffi o
MOVIE "C hiM " (1973)
Mitches Ryan, Reid Smith.

iMONDAYi

9:30

10:00
f f i O TRAPPER JOHN. M.0. A
doctor (Robert Alandan) exploits a
hotpilalued young woman (Patricia
Davis) at part ot hi* campaign lo
get Trapper * job.
OX (35) KENNETH COPELAND
f f i (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Pictures" Inspired by Ruby,
scrtptwrlitr Bill Trench spend* a
greal dart ct hi* lime studying her
life "m depth." much to tha chagrin
ol hi* society girlfriend. Q

10:05
02 NEWS

10:30
CD (8) CARTER

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
OZ rrs your business &lt;mon)
01 CHRISTIAN CHILDREN'S FUND
(FflJ)
f f i CALL YOUR CONGRESS­
MAN (MON)
f f i O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
O SUNRISE
(35) 20 MINUTE WORKOUT
NEWS

S

6:30

0

f f i NBC NEWS AT 8 UNRISE
y a CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS (TUE-FRI)
f f i O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
(H (35) INSPECTOR GADGET
CD(9) MORNING STRETCH

7:15
CD(tO)A-M. WEATHER
7:30

OX (15) BUGS BUNNY
FNENM
(D (8) JIM BARKER

6:05
OZ BEWITCHED
8'30

3:35
(Q THE FUNTSTONES

4:00

AFTERNOON

12:00
0 f f i MIDDAY
(3) O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
m o NEWS
OL’ (35) BEWITCHED
ED (10) NEVER TURN BACK: THE
LIFE OF FANNIE LOU HAMER
(MON)
ED (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(D(10) EVENING AT POPS (WED)
ED (»0) NOVA (THU)
ED (W ) NATURE (FRO
QD (I) MOVIE

O ff i SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
f f i O THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
0 RYAN'S HOPE
(35) BEVERLY HHLB4LUES

8

0 ff i FANTASY ISLAND
f f i 0 BREAKAWAY
O iQ M E R V GRIFFIN
(U(3S) 6UPERFRJENOS
f f l ( 10) SESAME STREET (R) Q
f f l (8) MOVIE
^

4:05
02 THE MUNSTER3

4:30
01 (35) PINK PANTHER
4:35
02 THE BRADY BUNCH

5:00
0 ( 1 ) LOVE BOAT
0 THREE'S COMPANY
ONEWSCOPE
(38) CHIPS PATROL
fD (10) OCEANUS (MON)
ff l ( 10) UNOCRSTANOINQ HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
f f l (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY
(WED)
f f l (10) EARTH. SEA ANO SKY
(THU)
f f l (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)

8

5:05

1:00

Q f f i DAYS OF OUR LIVES
f f i O ALL MY CHILDREN
iVi, (3b| KNtrr GRIFFITH
CD (10) MOVIE (MON. TUE. THU)
ED (101 MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
f f l (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN

(FRO

OZ BTARCADE I

5:30
ffiO M * A * S ’ H
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
f f l (10) OCEANUS (MON)
f f l (10) UNOCRSTANOINQ HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)

fD (10) FOCUB ON SOCIETY

(WED)

1:30
AND

0 f f i MORK ANO MINDY
■1p (35) SCOOBY DOO
f f l (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

11:35
OZ TEXAS

OZ MOVIE

OZ I DREAM OF JEANNIE
6:00

f f i O AS THE WORLD TURNS
(fp (36) OfCK VAN DYKE
ED (10) ALL NEW THIS OLD
HOUSE (FRO

f f l (10) EARTH, SEA AND SKY
(THU)
f f l (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)

5:35
02 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

OJ »B5) POPEYE
CD(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
0 2 1LOVE LUCY

0:00

0

f f i DIFF RENT STROKES (R)
f f i O DONAHUE
f f i O MOVIE
(f J (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(D ( 10) SESAME STREET (R) Q
CD (8) BODY BUCXXE3
^

10:35
02 SPORTS PAGE

11:00
0 f f i f f i O f f i O NEW8
Of (35)BOB NEWHART
f f i (13/ SNEAK PREVIEWS Neel
Gabiar and Jeffrey Lyon* host an
Inlormatlv* look al whal't new al
the movie*
CD (8) THE JOKE'S ON US

H i) . •»** m r m

A U SHOWS y y
L71AZAI 1
N A T IO N A L

02 JERRY FALWELL

I.AM PB4N-8

11:30

0

&gt; C lA Z A _ T W J N jk -

f f i ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK Featured Gen* Barry * role
In a hii Broadway musical, Mika
Ftriads upcoming TV movta. a visit
to movte-.nakmg titaa ail over the
country.
f f i O SiSKEL A EBERT AT THE
MOVIES
OX (38) THE ROCKFORO FILES

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Vflcflnon

CHEVY CHASE
fLAZA i 1 ,J*
in

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in

A M O V u La N d I L

11:35
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12:00
f f i O THE SAINT

12:05

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12:30

CLASS

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f f i FACE TO FACE

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12:35
f f i O MOVIE "Thuradey's Gama"
(1971) Bob Nawhart. Gena Wilder

MO

FIRST BLOOD

1:00

B

SPECIALI
(With This Ad)

SANDWICH OF YOUR
CHOICE PLUS
1 SMALL DRINK PLUS
1 DIP OF ICE CREAM

5:35

M onday, Tuesday, W ednesday N oon

dZ PORTRAIT OF AMERICA A
profile ot Texas it presented

JUST *2.75

EVENING

3:30

1:05

7:35

5:00

5:30

3:05
02 FUNTIME

12:30

8

S * ( 10) MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINTINO(FRl)

^

12:05

f f i TODAY
f f i O CBS MORNING NEWS
0 GOOO MORNING AMERICA
(35) TOM ANO JERRY
CD (tO)TO LIFEI
a z FUNTIME
CD(•) NEW ZOO REVUE

2:30
f f i O CAPITOL
M (38) I DREAM OF JEANNIE
ED (10) BRIDGE BASICS (WED)
f f l (10) INStOC THE WHITE HOUSE

3:00

02 PERRY MASON

7:00

0

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I f f i OftJJOAN'8 ISLAND
) O GUIDING LIGHT
0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
THE FLINT8TONES
POSTSCRIPTS
ffl(8 ) IRONSIDE

8

6:45
f f i O NEWS
CD (tO)XM. WEATHER

magic

PAINTING (FRI)
f f l (S) BONANZA

01 WOMAN WATCH (FRI)

WHEEL O* FORTUNE
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
) 0 BENSON (R)
) (35) GOOO DAY
) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
) (8) HUM CHAPARRAL

6:00

0

ffl (io)

2:35

O f f i SALE OF THE CENTURY
CD (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT
CF (8) CLASSIC CCU7.TRY

) DREAM HOUSE
I LOVING
I (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ED (10) POSTSCRIPTS

5:30

4:30

NEWSCOPE

LOVE CONNECTION
HOUR MAGAZINE
) FAMILY
) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
1(8)000 COUPLE

S
R

11:30

5:00

f f i O AN AMERICAN IN TAHITI

ffi a

10:00

OZTHECATUNS

f f i 2‘8 COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
NICE PEOPLE (MON)
AGRICULTURE U S X (FflJ)

f f l O WORLO SERIES Gam* 5 (It
necessary. Irom th* NL champion *
city)

OX (35) DANIEL BOONE
f f i (10) FIRING UNE 'Should W*
Get On With Capital PinWafimant?"
An affirmative view la aspraaaad by
Ernest van da Haag, John M. 0*n
Professor ot pirtspnidanca and
public pokey at Fordham University,
and expressing a negative view I*
John P Conrad from th* National
Institute ot Justice
O ) (&lt;) MOVIE "Beware My love­
ly" (1952) Ida Lupino, Robert Ryan
A widow's Ula It threatened whan
th* discover* that tha handyman
th* head Is mamaBy unstable

8

11:05

MORNING

0 ffi

0 f f i LAVERNE S SHIRLEY S
COMPANY
(35) I LOVE LUCY
(8) HEALTH FIELD

11.00

OZ THE AMERICANS

8

a z MOVIE

10:30

CBt HEWS NIQHTWATCH
(Joined In Progress)

0

0 f f i ANOTHER WORLD
f f i 0 ONE UFE TO UVfc
01 (35)GOMEH PILE

9:30

1:05

ffl O

2:00

0:05

ffi O

(35) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
( 10) SESAME STREET ( R ) a
Q ) (•) SPIDER-MAN
^

f f i o GOODNIGHT. BEANTOWN
Jenny'* on-air opinion about tha
Irealmenl ol an alleged bank
robber (Larry Hank in) place* her toi
leoperdy

Orlando Public
Broadcasting Systen

no) ©

In addition lo the channel* luted, cablevition subscriber* may tune in to independent channel 44,
SI Peter iburg, by tuning la channel I : tuning to channel II, which carriei sport* and Ihe Chrutian
Broadcatting Network (CBN).

8

02 WEEK IN REVIEW

11:05
3:15

,NBC&gt; ; r7 ;n
8^ B" ch

2:20

CD (8) LOU 8ABAN

0

ffi 0

O ffiU O V IE ' Rider* O! Destiny"
(1933) John Wayno, Gabby Htya*.

8:05

02 BEST OF GOOO NEWS

(CBS) Orlando

1:30

7:05
aZ WRESTUNG

dZ MOVIE
"Th* Andromeda
Strain" (t971) Arthur Hal. David
Wayne Three adentlsls work to
identity a deadly tiialn of bactaria
In time to tav* everyone from
extinction

10:05

Independent

(Vi)(35) Orlando
Independxnl
(8)CD Melbourne

(ABCI Orlando

7:00

f f i KNIGHT RIDER K in I* pill«*d against a sophisticated attack
helicopter at Michael taarnha* tor
tlolan. top-secret mail ary weapon*,
f f i O ALICE Joiane passe* a
stewardess lest and start* to
moonlight a* a flight attendant,
f f i O HARDCA8TLF A MCCOR­
MICK Mark become* Involved with
a beautiful woman (Marta OuBoit)
connected lo the death* ol tevaral
lop mobster*.
(11 (35) JERRY FALWELL
f f i (10) NATURE ' Fungi: Tha Rottan World About Ut” At an agent ol
decay, fungi perform* a function
•Manual to kt* on this planet, n
CD (8) MOVIE
Man Of A Thou­
sand Facet" (1957) Jame* Cagney.
Dorothy Malone Aclor Lon Cheney
become* known for hit remarkable
talent ot using make-up to estume
different appearance*

O

6:00

(J1 WRESTLING

O ®
MAN

S

5:05
(Q NIGHT TRACKS

ffl (I) CLASSIC COUNTRY

O f f i DANCE FEVER
( i ) O HEEHAW
( I ) O MEMORIES WITH LAW­
RENCE WELK
It (35)BUCK ROGERS
CD (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

HOW THE WEST WAS WON
The Sioux m l ion read!** tor hattte
after Chlat Satangkal Is assaulted
by a young Russian count: Iha
migrant Morman Jeremiah Taylor
propose* marriage to J***M.
O AMERICA WORKS
(35) MOVIE "Wheru ".'are You
When The Ugh!* Wan) Oul?'
(1966) Oort* Day, Patrick O'Neal
Attar finding her husband In bad
with another woman, an actress
run* away to Iheir country home.
ED (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING
CD (8) MOVIE "Thirty Second*
Over Tokyo” (1944) Spencer Tracy.
Van Johnson General Jimmy Doolittta prepare* lor and command* B29* In bombing missions over
Japan

2:30

® O MOVIE "My Blood Runt
Cold" (1965) Troy Donahue. Joey
Heathen on.
CD(•) MOVIE "Bluebeard "(1944)
John Carradlna, Jean Parker.

6:00

10:00

O
®
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
HIGHLIGHTS
I O BLACK AWARENE33
O THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
f f i (10) GOURMET COOKING

ROCK TV

02 UOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED

6:30

9:35
(Ql ANDY GRIFFITH

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CD (8) GREATEST

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O ffiffiQ N E W S
iU (38) GRIZZLY ADAMS
CD(10) DIAGNOSIS: AIDS Thelalatt medical Information and
reeeerch about IN* (Tightening dt»e**a I* presented from Seattle.
Washington where th* tilth annual
meeting ot mambar* ot a gi oup that
•tudie* MiuaUy tranimlttad dtt-

6'“35
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cable Ch

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PRESS
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CD( 10) MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINT|J|d

0 ®

te b it Ch

6:30
0 f f i NBC NEWS
f f i O ABC NEWS n

Investigate* t murder ot which
Strongheart (Will Sampaor) ha*
been accutnd by Jeb Mounter
(Chuck Connor*)
ffl O FANTASY ISLAND A housewife (Katherine Hetmond) atlempi*
to demonstrate Ihe difficulty ot her
duties to her hutband, and a prosti­
tute (Melinda Culaa) teak* a genu­
ine relationship n
01 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD(10) FAWLTY TOWERS

CD(10) WALL ITREET WEEK
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5:35

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CD(8) PETER POPOFF
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CD(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
10:00
0 f f i THE YELLOW ROSE Roy

5:00

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ING

(S O

LIMITS

O ® UTTLE HOUSE ON THE
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f f i O STAR TREK
It) (38| DANIEL BOONE
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CD(10) MAGIC OF ANIMAL PAINT-

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S AN FO R D P L A Z A

6:00
O ffiffiO N E W S
ijTi (3(1) SWITCH
f f i (10) NOVA Sign* Ot The Ape*.
Song* Of Tha Y.ltales" The moat
recent developments m the study ot
communicating with arum*:* are
examined Q

321-4621

COUPON

CALL ffi
322-2611 or 831-9993
E V E N IN G H E R A L D
__________________________

�(ID—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday, Oct. H. 1913

REALTY TRANSFERS

Calendar
SU N D A Y, OCT. 10

^Seminole AA, halfway hou«c on Highway 17*92 off
linkc Minnie Hoad. Sanford. 5 p.m,
:: United Ostomy Association meeting to organize new
,'ihapler. 2 p.m.. Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce,
itlrst Street ai Sanford Avenue. For Ostot^jr patients and
ffcmily members.
Narcotics Anonymous. 7 p.m.. 1201 W. First St..
Sanford.
Florida OIT Road Drivers Association benefit race for
the Edgcwood Boys Ranch. 12:30 p.m.. Central Florida
Fairgrounds. West Highway 50. Orlando. Admission $5;
children under 12 free with adult.

Cl!b*t W. King. Jr., S wt Carol* S
to Marion Cameron A Paul w.
Gruenlngrr. tgl . Lot 11 4 (lets N 30'
el 3) blk 10 Tier 7. Traffordt Map of
Sant.SSl.ttO
Patricia Holteppla. igl to Carlo*
G Araui A wt Ana I . lo t 7. Blk C.
Sweetwater Oak*. Sac. Thraa.
S41.S00
CMEI. Inc to Alai I Jack A wf
Janlna D Lot 17, Blk I. Hanover
Wood* .M9,900
CMEI Inc to William Ball Bldr
Inc . Lit 9, Blk I, Hanovar Wood*.
$14,900
Ryland Group Inc to Bruca C
Slurgt* A *1 Joanna, Lot 71. Dacr
Run. Un.lA, 173.100
Tha Ryland Group lot. to William
W Bavant A wt Itreta A , Lot 91,
Deer Run Un 7B.S44.100
Area Bldg Corp. to Bruce 0
Summer* A wt Margaret G.. Lot 41,
Sabal B«nd at Sabal Point. SU3.100
iCCO) Htldricl. Prop Inc to
Patrick L Harklnt A wt Kathleen.
Lot 30Howell Harbor Eitate*. HOO
Norman Harrl*. Tr. A Ind. to
Creak'* Eland Partner*. Lot 33.
Creak'* Bend. S7S.OOO
Creak'* Bend Ptr. to WAR Ova Co
Inc . Lot 33/Creek's Bend. S3I.100
Cent** Home* of FI. Inc . lo
County ol Sam.. N 13' ot Lot* I U,
Howell ESI* . 7nd Addn. &lt;100
Robert A. Grunow A wt Dorothy lo
Johnn# Gt*a*on Jr. A wt Oayle H ,
Lot* 1 A a, Blk B. Sanlando Spring*
Tr.A. 1113.000
Char let Nicked A wf Margaret to
Thetbert A Wade A wt Johnnie M ,
03 » . Blk 0 Lynwood Rev . 133.000
Alai Greentpoon Tr. to Mayer O
Fluke A Simona A . Un 10. Ultra
Vista. Ph I.
Canada. Ltd to Mayer O Fluke A
Simone" Un. 101.174,000
Booker T. Carter Jr A wt Malnla
to Roy J. Dultkl A wl Karen L , Lol
11, Cyprai* Landing, *114,000
Henry Groom*, at a l . Providence
Ml** Dapl Chu. to Providence
Mltilonary Baptlit Church, Lot 344.
Booker town - A Lot 347.1100
Irph, Ptr. to Eric M. Bloch A wt
Vivian C., Indian RIdga. 144.000
Arthur H Hillman A wt Sally to
Cynthia L. Baiter t g l , Un 91. Sandy
CoveCond S43.300
Po'yak Corp to John C. Bower,
tgl. A Donald J. Bowr (marr.l Un 3
Bldg G, Goidenrod Villa* Cond,
*34.900
Crowbow Conitr. Corp to Frank
W. V atM o tf. Rolllngwood. 417.00.
(OCDI Vlr*'nl* G. Ward A hb
William to Oliver Glovr A wf PAaa
Bella, (corrective) Bg. 00' W A 1*4'
Sof NE cor. Lot 30 Wallet S/D, 1100
(QCO) Peter Bromberg to Bonnie
S. Bromberg. Un I13 A Bldg 10
Wekiva Villa*, lioo
Greater Contlr. Corp lo Paul Men
A wl A*na M . Lot 11 Mandarin Sac.
Four. 1113.700
Joteph Jenklnt A wf Mary L lo
Joteph R. Jtnkln*. Lol* 13 A 13. let*
N 33' A Rd Weil Side Garden*, el at

MONDAY. OCT. 17
Sanford Rotary Club. noon. Sanford Civic Center.
Free dating service for ma’ urc adults. 1 p.m.. Deltona
Public Library. 1691 Providence Boulevard. Deltona.
Ovcrcalcrs Anonymous. 10 a.m
Deltona Public
Library’.
Seminole County Association of Children with Learn*
Ing Disabilities. 7:30 p.m.. Winter Springs Elementary
School, State Road 434. Speakers: Rose Alcorn. SLD
coordinator for Seminole County Schools, and Laura
Williams. SLD teacher at Lake Howell High School,
discussing RAISE bill requirements and learning
disabled children.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First St.
Alanon Step and Study, 8 p.m.. Senior Citizen Center.
N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Fellowship AA Group. 8 p.m., closed. Senior Citizens
Center. N. Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
TUESDAY. OCT. 18
Optimist Club of Sanford. 11:45 a.in.. Western Slzzlln
Steak. Highway 17*92.
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on lakcfront.
Historic Longwood Rotary Club. 7:30 a.m.. Longw’ood
Hotel, County Road 426.
Winter Springs Sertoma. 7:30a.m.. Dig Cypress.
Sanford Toastmaster. 7:15 a.m.. Holiday Inn on Lake
Monroe.
Rotary Club of Longwood. 7:30 a.m., Cassidy’s
Restaurant. SR 434.
Sanford Senior Citizen Club. noon. Sanford Civic
Center. Speaker— Alina Ortiz. Social Security Branch
Manager. Mary Schuencmann will sing.
Seminole County Historical Museum will be open to
receive materials and displays from organizations and
Individuals from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
South Semln-lc AARP. 1 p.m., Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Luke Triplet Drive. Speaker. Dr. S.
Levine.
American Association of Retired Persons South
Seminole Chapter. 1 p.m.. Senior Citizen Multipurpose
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Speaker— Dr. Steven Llvine, chiropractor. Open to
anyone over 55.
17*92 Group A A. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church. 1100.
Kenneth R. Brook well to Kenneth
Highway 17*92 south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
R. Brookwell A wf Pamela B.. Lot 34,
Overeaters Anonymous. 7:30 p.m., Florida Power &amp; Blk A. Greenwood Lake* Un. 11,1100.
(OCDI Hector Roman A Greta to
Light building. Sanford.
Hecter Roman. Lot 14 Blk 1, Cedar
Ridge Un. One, 1100.
WEDNESDAY. OCT. 19
Mertr Roman A Greta to Mary
Sanford Klwanls Club, noon, Civic Center.
Avelarei, t g l . Lot 14. Blk I. Cedi*
Free legal services by Legal Aid Sorjnty of .Seminole Ridge Un. One. 179.25!
Rodger O. Hensley. tgl. to David S
County for those who qualify. 9 a.m. to noon. Salvation
Catlln (marr) Lot 331 Windward Sq .
Army Center, 700 W. 24th St.. Sanford.
Sec Three. 133.000
Casselberry Rotary. 7 a.m. Casselberry Senior Center.
Wlntton B Miller. Jr. A Oulda to
Dickie W. Rowell A wf Janet S . Lot
Secret Lake Park. North Triplet Drive.
440 Forttt Brook Fifth Sec . 171.000
Sanford Breakfast Rotary. 7 a.m.. Skyport Restaurant.
Robert D. Frittch A Linda lo Oar!
Sanford Airport.
C. Llppt, Lot 30. Blk B. Lake
League of Women Voters Seminole-Orange Legislative .Brantley Itlet. 3nd Addn ■*40.300
Edward P Battone A wf Marla to
Reception. 5:30 p.m.. John Young Museum. Loch Haven John
F. Ell* A wt Jacyna P . Lot 3
Park. Orlando.
Blk F, Howell Cove Itt Sec *47. WO
Orlando Land Co tnc. to H. Lewi*
United Way o f Seminole County Golf Tournament, 1
A wf Ann* C.. Lot 3. Bear
p.m. shotgun start. Sabal Point Country Club. Htnderihot
Lake Forett. 130.000
Longwood.
CMEI. Inc. to Leland Conttr. Inc .
Golden Age Games Executive Committee. 8 a.m.. Lol 4. Blk I, Hanover Wood*. STV.900
Spring* Landing Vent, to Ltland
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Conitr. Inc.. Lot 31. Spring* Landing
Rcbos and Live Oak Rebos Club, noon and 8 p.m.. Un. Two. 134.000.
Willow Creek Home* Inc to Rich
closed, 130 Normandy Rd.. Casselberry.
L. Pllhorn A wl Joan E . Lol 131
Altamonte Springs AA . 8 p.m., closed. Altamonte ard
Spring* Landing Un. Four, 1143.000
Springs Community Church. State Road 436 and
OAK Dev. to Peltier Conitr. Inc..
Lot* 34 A 41 Cardinal Oak* Ph II,
Hermit's Trail. Alanon meets same time and place.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
SCMINOU C ounty R.AMMWS AhO ZONING COMMISSION
NOVEMBER 2 ,B03 7 0 0 P M
R oom 2 0 0
SeuWOLt CoiKTT Col*TMCVS£
S anford , F lorida

Amended Plat Lk Mary, 141.400.
Anna Dudra. tgl lo Lombertk
Family Tru*t Lot 53. Jamen S'O,
143.300
Richard L. Learn Haul Norten to
Chart** W. Flnnigan (marr.l Lot 19.
Blk A. North Orl Terr . Sec 3. Un I,
143.900
(OCE) Dtnnlt Holt A Corr In* to
■Brian L. Shultety A wf Debra. Lot V
Wlndtree Weil. 19,300

legal Notice

______________ StN C »*L location
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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN AND
FO R S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA

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wo AT T X PVRUC NEARING WSJ. BE X A « 0 C*ALUr.
XAMNGS MAI SC CONTINUED f*0 H TIMt TO O u t
POUHO NlCESSAAr
PjH O.tS DETAILS * r A.ABLi &gt;T CALI INS
Publish O rtoUr 14 ' *

«

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given that I am
engaged In butlnet* at P O Boi 344
(SR 434 A SR 44). Geneva. Seminole
County, Florida under the I let It lout
name ol QUICK MOTORS, end that I
Intend to rtgiiler laid name with the
Clerk ol the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida in accordance with
the provident ol the Fictillou* Nam*
Statute*, to Wit: Section 143 09
Florida Slatute* 1937.
/*/ Emmett Water*. Owner
Pub'ith October 14. 33. X A Nov
ember 4. 1913.
OEM 103

AS

. __________________ _____

CASE NO. 13 1344-CA-09 E
UNITED COMPANIES FINANCIAL
CORPORATION.
Plainlill
v*
PAUL E WAGNER, and VIRGINIA
H WAGNER.
Defendant*
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE
NOTICE it hereby given thal the
undertigned. Arthur H Beckwith.
Jr.. Clerk of the Circuit Court of
Seminole County. Florida, will on the
31*1 day of October. 19(3. between II
a m and 3 p m. al the Weil From
door ol the Seminole County Court
houie. Sanlord. Florida, otter lor
vale end Mil a I public outcry to me
high**! and te ll bidder lor each, the
lol lowing dttcribed property tltuel*
In Seminal* County. F lorid*.
EXHIBIT A
Beginning at the Southeail corner
ot Lot I. Block 17, SANFORD
FARMS, according to the plat
thereof a* recorded In Plat Book 1,
Paget IIF through in t i, of the
Public Record* ot Seminole County,
Florida, run Northerly along the
Eetl line of *ald Lot I. e ditlence of
700 feet, thence run Southwetterly
parallel with the South line of tent
Let 3. a dittanca of I to feet, thence
run Southerly parallel with t*td Eait
l i n e 30C 1 * * 1 , I h e n r * ru n
Northeasterly 110 leet lc the Point ot
Beginning
purtwant lo the Final Judgment
entered in e cat* pending In ta&gt;d
Court, the »&gt;yle ot which It indicated
above.
WITNESS my hand and otlicta!
teal ot taid Court thi* elh day ol
October, I9IJ
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
CLFRK
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
By CatherineM Evan*
Deputy Clerk
Publlrh October 9.14, )MJ
DEM 37

Hlldrtd H*rt*li*ld A wl Bobble lo
Martha!) Flther A wf Shelley A.. Lol
14 A S 3' ol 13 Blk Q. Longwood Park.
134.000
(OCO)
Victoria
McVay
to
Lawrence J. Strom, t g l , Lol 44.
Unrtc Plat Slone Itlend Etlt Un
Four. HOO
Ve*ta Ann Middleton to Jamet R
Bale* Jr. A wl Rebecca. Lol 7, Nk 13.
Tier J. E R. Traftord* Map of Sari.
133.000
Hugh wtbiter A wt Kaye to Elinor
M Pedrlck. Loti 1 A 3. B.'k 10, Bel
Air S/D. 133.400
Freedom Sav. A Ln. t Bradley J,
Dav I*. Tr. Portion pi Sec 31 7I X
detc l.44acreim/l 1737.300
Commonwealth
Homo*
Corp.
Trustee to Joble R Walton J r , A wl
Lauren D , Lot 134. Spring Landing,
Un Four, 1100
Robert S. Rabllt A wf Llta to Fred
Caulder A wt Beverly, loti 13 A 14.
Blk H, Sanlando spring* Tr. 77,
194.000
Wlnlel SVC Corp to Wlnpar Fin
corp. SE'k ot SW’e (last N 479 93'
ate) Seel) 70X. 11.300.
Wlntel SVC Corp to Wlnpar Fin
Corp . W 303 34' ol SEW of SWW Sac
31 » X S ol LW Palm tpgt RdA N of
SR434.1X.300
Th* Anden Group of FI. to
Marshall J Shaul Jr., tgl. A
Marshall J. Sr. A wl Wlnllred M . Lot
. Ill Sunrise Village Un. 1)1.19.300.
The Anden Group to Patricia L.
Cochran, tgl.. Lot 107 SunrlM VIII.
Un 3.143.700
Anden Group to Guy M Motion A
wl Jill, Lot 114, SunrlM VIII. Un 3,
147.100.
Robert L. Pence A wl Herrlel to
Kalhy
Lange. tgl*
Lot
19.
Ramblewood. 141 000
Ingeborg Morris lo Lillie J. Catey
A Paul D. Sllvyak. Lot* 4 A 7. Blk C.
Brantley Shore*, lit Addn, 131,100.
Carmen Thibodeau. Rrpr. ett
Raymond J lo Jerry Slhle A John
Will lam ton. Int: Lott II 17 13 VS A
14. Hayne* S/D 177,000
B.G Adklnt Conttr. to Leo A
Morelia A wl Elvah. Lot 77,
Tutcawllla. Un. 9,1101,300.
(OCDI Nick Mcolau to Helen M
very, Lot 7, Blk C, Sweelwaler Oekt.
Sec. Two. 1100
T.R Prop WP to Sami Kandarlan
(marr.l, Abu Dhabi. U AE. Lol M
Spring* Landing Un. 3. *114.400
RCA to James R. Fleet A wf
Norma J., Lot 4. Blk E. Hidden Leke
Un. I 8 141.900
Geilimore Home* Inc. lo Conttr.
Entr. ot Central FI. Inc.. Lot* I. 9A.
9B. 10B. etal. Meadow Ridge.
1)40.000
Winter Spgt Dev lo Edward L
Lombardi
C o.
Inc.
Lot
92.
Tutcawllia. Un.9B. 171.700
George D Vanglnhoven A wf
Martha R . to Oennl* | Donahue A
wf Leslie M , Lot *4. North Cove.
1123.000.
Geltlmoe Home* Inc. to Charles L.
Park. Jr. A wf Kathryn — Lot I. Tha
Country Place. 1121.000
Mark Walltchlaegerto John W.
Hauck A wl Helen J Lot 11*. the
Forett. Ph Two. Sec. Two. 149.300
Ardell Willi* A wt Julie E lo
Patrick L. Delllore A wt Linda. W
110' ol E IX ' ol S 191' ol N 7X’ ol
NEWOlSec 17 30X133 100
Federal Horn* Loan Mtg Corp to
Joseph F Corto, tgl . Un t 3A
TutcanyPl.Cond Ph One. 144.000
Fovwood Dave . Ltd to Deaconco
International Inc . Lol 10 Foiwood
PhOne. 11*000

legal Notice
INTHECIRCUIT COURT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CASE NO : 11 404 CA-09-P
HALLMARK BUILDERS. INC .
Plainlill.
v*.
GERMAN PAREJA and
ELVIRA P.* RE JA. hi* wile
Delmdant*
AMENDED NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: GERMAN PAREJA
10*33 CollonSIretl
Falrfai. Virginia 770X
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Complaint hat been filed against you
Meklng to foreclose a lien on the
following property:
L o t 14. B lo c k 130. P O R T
MALABAR UNIT 5, a tUxf'vHion
according to tha plat thereof, re­
corded in Piet Book M, Page 109,
Public Record* of Brevard County,
Florida
and you art required to Mfva e copy
Ol your written defense*. II any. to It
on D A N IE L P R O O N E Y , of
ORAGE. deOEAUBIEN.
MILBRATH A SIMMONS. P A , 114
South Orange Averuv. Pot! Office
Boi *7. Orlando. Florida 37*03. on or
before the 2nd day of November,
i*93. e~d fife the sriglsa! srlfh tha
Clerk ol this Court either before
Mrvlc* on Plalntllt't attorney or
Immediately thereafter; otherwlM a
default will ba entered against you
lor th* rellel demanded in th*
Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and th* m *I ol
this Court, this 21th day of Sep
timber, till.
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
Clerk ot Circuit Court
By: Patricia Roblnton
Deputy Clerk
Publish October 7.9. I*. 23.19*3
OEM 13
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. EIGH
TEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTT,
FLORIDA
CA1ENO *7 3*9139 P
ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK OF
FLORIDA, formerly ATLANTIC
NATIONAL BANK OF SEMINOLE,
a national banking association.
Plaintiff,

V*.
WILLIAM J LEACH and RUBY C.
LEACH, hi* wile. ROY A JEF
FRIES, individually and a* statutory
Null** ol Longwood Greenhouses
Inc . a dissolved Florida corporation,
and WILLIAM F. BEEMER. a*
trustee lor Roy A Jeflrle* and
Longwood Greenhouse* Inc .
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
Nolle* U hereby given that,
pursuant to an order or final (udg
menI ol foreclosure entered in th*
above captioned action. I will Mil th*
property *H u*l*d In Seminole
County, F lor id*, deter ibed ei
Lol 2, Block E. HENSON'S
ACRES, according to th* plat Ihereof
at recorded In Plat Book 9. page 97.
Public Record* ol Semtnoi* County,
Florida
at public tale, to the highest and best
bidder lor cash, at th* Iron! step* of
the Seminole County Courthouse In
Sanlord. Florid*, between 11:09 A M
and 3 00 P M . on th* 1st day of
November. 19*3
WITNESS my hand and the Mat ot
thi* Court on th* 3rd day ol October.
)W3
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
Clark
ol th* Circuit Court
By Catharine M Evan*
Deputy Clerk
Thom** O Scanlon, Eiqulr*
CARLTON. FIELDS. WARD.
EMMANUEL, SMITH*.
CUTLER. P A
P O Boi m i
Orlando. Florida33*03
Attorney* tor Plainlill
Publish October 9. 14.19*3
DEM 3* *

Legal Notice

63-Mortgagps Bought

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
IITH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
FLORIDA
CASCNO.H377 CAOI L
ALLIAN CE MORTGAGE COM
P A N Y l/k/a C H A R T E R
MORTGAGE COMPANY.
Plaintiff.
v»
HARRY HOWARD DREGGORS and
NANCY DREGGORS. hi* wlta; *1 at
Defendant*
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TOCHAPTER43
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
purluant to an Order or Final
Judgment ol Foreclosure dated
September 31, &gt;913. and entered In
C*M No *3 377 CA 01 L ot th* Circuit
Court ot tn* Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit In and lor Semlnol* County.
F lo r id a w h erein A L L IA N C E
M ORTGAGE CO M PANY 1/k/a
CHARTER MORTGAGE COMPANY
Plainlill, and HARRY HOWARD
DREGGORS and NANCY DREG
GORS. hit wile; *1 al are defen
dant*. I will Mil to th* highest and
best bidder tor ceth In th* lobby ol
th* Semlnol* County CourthouM In
Sanlord. Semlnol* County. Florida.
*1 11:00 o'clock A M. on tha 7th day
ol November 19*1. Ihe following
described property a* **1 forth In
said Order or Final Judgmant. to
wit:
Lol 10. Block V. SUNLAND
ESTATES AMENOED PLAT, *c
cording to th* Plat thereof, at
recorded In Plat Book 12. Page* l
and 3. ol the Public Record* ol
Semlnol*County. Florid*
Together with *11 tlruclur* and
Improvtmant* .*/« and
on
taid land, and IHturei attached
thereto, and all rent*. Issue*, pro
cred* and profit* accruing and lo
accrue Irom taid habendum Ihereof,
alto all gas. steam, electric, water
and other heating cooking, re
Irigerallng. lighting, plumbing, vtn
mating. Irrigating, and powtr
system*, machines, appliance*, tlx
lure*, and appurtenance*, which now
*r* or may herealler pertain to or be
used with In or on said premlus.
even though lh*v be detached or
detachable
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR
A* Clerk. Circuit Court
BY Catherine M Evan*
OEPUTYCLERK
Publish October U.23.19*3
OEM 103
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, EIOM
TEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. U 7313 CA 09 E
CITY FEDERAL SAVINGS A LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Plainlill.
vt
GERALD A DINGFELDER AND
.MARGARET A OINGFELOER. his
&gt;*!(*: EQUITY FINDERS. INC . a
Florida Corporation and FINANCE
ONE OF FLORIDA. INC . a Florid*
Corporation,
Defend* nit
NOTICEOF ACTION
TO
Gerald A Dinglelder and
Margaret A. Dinglelder
YOU ARE NOTIFIED lhal an
action to foreclose a mortgage on the
following property in Seminole
County, Florida:
Lot 4 and th* South I.X feet ol Lot
3. Block O CO U NTR Y CLUB
HEIGHTS. UNIT ONE. according to
the plat thereof a* recorded In Piet
Book 13. Page 9*. Public Rtcord* of
Semlnol* County. Florid*: LESS
Begin at th* Souttweil comer ot taid
Lol 4. Block D. thence West along
Ihe south line ot Mid Lot 4. Block D.
1X00 feel; thence North 3.11 leet.
thence South tt*3l'00"E 130 04 tael to
th* Point ol Beginning:
has been tiled against you and you
are required to Mrve a copy Ol your
written dalenMt.il any. to It on M S
Dunay. Schneider, Dunay, Ryan A
Mark*. P A , whose address it 917
American Heritage Lit* Building.
Jacksonville, Florida 33707. on or
before November 10, 19*3, and III*
th* original with th* clerk ol this
court either before Mrvlc* on plain
lift's attorney or immediately there
alter: otherwlM a default will be
entered against you lor ih* relief
demanded In th* complaint or pell
Hon
WITNESS my hand and the seal ol
this court on October a. 19(3
ISEAL)
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
At Clerk
ot Ihe Court
BY: Eve Crabtree
At Deputy Clerk
Publish Oclober 9.14.11. A X, 1913
DEM 34
IN Fh e T i RCUIT COURT." IN ANO
FOR S E M I N O I F C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 13 1944 CA-49
F ED ERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
Plaintlll.
v»
G ARTHUR LORING. MARLENA
R O YC E L O R IN G , D E S T IN Y
SPRINGS CONDOMINIUM. ASSOC .
INC and TONY BARRIOS.
Defendant*
NOTICEOF SUIT
TO
G ARTHURLORING
ADDRESSUNKNOWN
MARLENA ROYCE LORING
ADDRESS UNKNOWN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that an action to foreclose mutgag*
covering ihe following real and
personal property In Semlnol*
County Florid*, to wll
Tiiat certain Condominium parcel
«nown a* Unit 14* C. DESTINY
SPRINGS a condominium and an
undivided 003974 Inlerttf In th* land
A common elements, expenses *p
purtenant to laid unit, all In ac
cor dance with and tub |eel to th*
covenant*, condition*, restriction*,
term* and other provision* ol th*
Declaretlo-s of Condominium ol
O E S T IN Y S P R IN G S , o Con
dominium at rtcordtd In O R Book
1317. Pag* 1(90. and a* amended In
O R Book 1340. Page 1447. all ot tha
Public Record* ol Semlnol* County.
Florida.
iu t been tiled against you and you
art required lo serve a copy ol your
errltten dtlenMt. If any, to It on C.
VICTOR BUTLER. j R . ESQ. 1211
East Robinson Slrool, Orlando.
Florida 32*01, and tile the original
with the Clark ol the above sly led
Court on or belore Ihe 14th doy of
Novem ber. 1*13, e th trw lie . o
Judgment may ba entered against
you for the rellel demanded In th*
complaint.
WITNESS my hand and Mat ol
said Court on the lilts day ot October,
19*3
(SEAL)
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
CLERK
OF THECIRCUITCOURT
By EveCrabtra*
Deputy Clerk
Publish
October 14, 1). 30 A
November 4.19(3
OEM 104

TAKE

A

rilORlOA

OfflWJIIICE
B R E A M

A Sold

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:00 A.M. - 5:19 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY f • Noon

RATES

liim e
1 consecutive lim es
7 consecutive times

71 — Help Wanted
54ca line
Me e line
44c a line

io consecutive time* 42c s fine
47.00 Minimum
) Lines Minimum

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

31—Private
Instructions

12— L e g a l S e rv ic e s
Benkrupcy S7X. and Chapter 11
S4I0. Free conferwsct Attorney
M. Price. For Appt, 433 7997.
CURLEY R.DOLTIE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
101 B W ist Street
Sanlord Fie. 37771 333 eOOO

21— P e rs o n a ls
•ABORTION* '
1*1 Trlmetlfr abortion 7 13 wks,
1140 Modlcoid 4IX; IJ 14 Wkt
1330. M edicaid SI70( Gyn
Services *33 Pregnancy te*t;
fret counseling Professional
car* supportive atmosphere,
confidential.
CENTRAL FLORIDA
WOMEN'S HEALTH
ORGANIZATION
NEW LOCATION
1700W. Colonial Dr. Orlando
K lM O tll
__________ I *00 731 334*__________
TAXPAYERS RIGHTS
Opposed lo "Fox” hunter*. Pro
blemt? Let me know P O Box
493 Late Mary. Fla 33747

23— L o st &amp; Fo u n d
LOST
AMAZON PARROT
_________ CALL 331 4194_________
SMALL WHITE MALE OOO Part
poodlt- part cocker with long
whit* hair. Loti In area ot
Vinewood and 3Stn 333 9137.

25— S p e c ia l N o tice s
CREDIT PROBLEMS
Reclavf a Mastercard or Visa,
nobody reluMd. oven If you have
bad credit or no credit For tree
brochure call Credll help Toll
Free 1 *00 433 3133 Anytime
GARAGE/FLEA
MARKET/PLANT SALE. Sanford
Civic Center 10 00 A M until
A u c tio n *:3 0 P . M . -u n til.
Spag.settl Dinner All you can eat.
Parent* *3.00. Children 13 00
Proceed* go to the ROTARY
CLUBOF SANFORD
BREAKFAST.
Thi* l»e charity event______
New Office now opening
VORWERK
1130W 1st St

27— Nursery &amp;

C h ild C e re
BABYSITTING In my home Ex
perlenced mother, tree meals
Rtl. give.!. 373 *393_____________
MOTHERS. In home child car*
Large play are*, nutritious
snack*, and loving coro. Mon
Frl Sentard 333 1443___________

Legal Notice

.

Fictitious Tiomt
Nolle* I* hereby given thal I am
engaged In bus met* *1 993 SI . Rd 434
N . Suite 309. Altamonte Springs.
Semlnol* County. Florid* under the
I Id it lout name ot SOCCER KICK,
and that I intend lo register taid
n»m* with th* Clark ol the Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Florida in
accordance with th* provision* ol Ih*
Ficllliout Nam* Statute*, to Wit:
Section *43 09 Florid*Slatute* 1937.
/*/ Paul Hardy
Publish September 33 A October 3. 9,
14, 19*3
DEL 143

Pleno Ltttont In my Sanlord
home. All Itvtlt, theory Inc. Alto
theory classes offered Ph 331
0403

33—Real Estate
Courses
BOB BALL JR SCHOOL OF
REAL ESTATE.
LOCAL REBATES.373 411*
MASTER CHARGE OR VISA

45—Arts &amp; Crafts
A Utile 'Homework 'Witching
th* Want Ads Can Bring
'Top Grad*' Results.

55—Business
Opportunities

BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Join Inl'l Sarvlct Co. Full trelnlng
w/monegement assistance High
earning potential. Exclusive ter­
ritory. Unlimited opportunity
avail. Ambitious Individuals
only. Cell John Williams collect
person to person. 11171734 3133.
N E W , b 0 a u I I I u I Ice
cream/sandwich shop Excellent
Sanford location. Call today
131 4431 9 A M to 13 00_________
T SHIRT Printing Equipment, Like
new condition with supplies.
Training availab le. S3,930.
1 4*3 7033 ___________________
s e e e URO-TILE * e e *
Men needed t* learn new tradel
High prolif margin. »9 3131.

&amp;3—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
.CASH FOR MOPTGAOE3.
Wt buy first and second mortgages
on
homes. Irom Individuals,
builders, brokers, and real estate

FICriTIOUINAME
TO WHOM IT AAAY CONCERN:
NOTICE ll hereby given thal Ih*
undertigned. puriuan' to Ih*
"Flelltlout Name Statula” , Section
*43 09ol th* Florid* Statute*, intend*
to rogltler with Ih* Clerk of Ihe
Circuit Court of Semlnol* County,
Florid#, upon receipt ot proof ot th*
required public* IIon of thi* notice,
th* following I let Moot name;
BARNIESCOFFEE
AN O TEACOMPANY
under which the undersigned Intend*
to engage In b u sln tit at th*
Longwood Village Shopping Center,
1907 St Rd 434. Longwood. Florida.

327M

The parlies Interested in taid
business enterprise art j
Walei bridge Trading Company. Inc.
Two South Orange Plata
Orlando. FI 13*01
Dated Ihli »lh day efOcotwr, 19*1
By Maguire. Vaorhli
A Well*. P A
By: Ted R. Brown
Publ Itlt October 9. It 73. SO19*1
DEM 13

I

CARPENTERS HELPERS
Immtdlatly atilgnmenlt in San
ford are*
NEvrnaytE

A b le s t
Tamponry tarvrcaa
Tuesday A Yt^nasday
911 A I M3 X
700 Ww f m Si Iflagthp Bans Bu4d&gt;ng|
Semen) JJVJWO
CARFENTERSHELPER
wanted. Mult hive •xperlenc*.
Call after 4 P.N. 377 SIX________
CARVER
To serve meet to our customers at
bullet table Must be neat and
#n|oy meeting people Apply 3 to
4 P M al Holiday Hous* Rrttau
rant 4300 Orlando Av* Mwy
13 91 South of Lake Mary cutolf
CASHIERS A CLERKS Full A
part tlma openings. Good pay
scales No exp nec 439 4094
COOK/SALAO
New head cook looking lor
breakfast cook/salad person.
F/T. Exp only. Fin* dining
Apply In person M F, 9 lo 3 P.M
Deltona Inn.___________________
COUPLE lo work at Manag
i r / O p i n l o r In I c e
Cream/Sandwich Shop Call tor
appointment.
331 4*31 9AM . to 13
Dental Assistants Full and part
lime. Exparltnc* required.
Expanded Duty Certificate nec
ettary . Sanford office. 373 *t»S
DISHWASHER
Mature Apply In person M F. 9 to S
P M Deltona Inn______________
Earn Extra Money. Part,Time
Full/TIm o. Prep aid Legal
Services Call Don. 47*14*7
Excellent Income tor part lima
homo assembly work. For In
formation call 3U 441 (001
_______Ext 7940 Open Sun_______
FACTORY WORKERS Immediate
opening* High wages Some will
train. Call 479 4094

companies We alto matt home

FIN AN CE M AN AGEM EN T

CAREERS

legal Notice
Flcllfiewt Name
Nolle* It hereby given thal I am
engaged In business at 7317 Orange
Av . Sanford. FL. Semlnol* County.
Florid* under Ihe ficllliout name ot
HANSON SIGN CO, ond that I
Inlend to register said/same wllh Ihe
Clerk of the Circuit Court, Semlnol*
Cosmty. Florid* In accordance with
th* provisions of the Flc-lllosis Nam*
Statutes. foW It: Section (4109
Florida Sleiultt 1937
/*/ Stephen Hanson
Publish September 23 A October }. 9.
14.19*3
DEL 144
Ficllliout Ntmt
Nolle* It hereby given lhal w* art
engaged in business al 1117 Hunt S t.
Longwood. Flo. 3I7SO. Samlnol*
County. Florid* under th# Hrfllious
nam e ol RAC J A N IT O R IA L
SERVICE, and that w* Intend to
register said name wllh th* Clerk ot
Ih* Circuit Court, Semlnol# County.
Florida In accordance with Ih* pro
vltloot ol th* Fictillou* Nam* Slel
ufet. foWIt SociIon *43 09 Florida
Slatuttt 19*7 .
/*/ Chris Ovority
/*/ Rick Sly
Publish October 3.9. I*. 21.19*3
UEM (

PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICEOF

ASSEMBLY WORKERS
lighl assembly work from your
home Excellent Income ocoor
tunlty tor housowlv**. etc Start
immediately. Call Maggl# at
1 - 3 11 9*9 *414
A lio open
evenings._________ ___________
Aula Peris/Counter Person, Exp#
rl*n c* prefered. start lm
med'4 'ety. Good pay A benlllt*
Apply In Person
Parts City. 603 W.lllh
AVON CHRISTMAS WOWi I
START SELLING NOWII
__ 313 0419or 131 » » _______
Avon Lodi** Ful', perl Time over
11. Sanlord. Washington Oak*
Midway A Geneva. 373 4195

owner loans for home Improv
men! and bill consol IdaIion. Coll
us and let us mako you an offer!
Berbara Crawlord 333 3410..

IN THE CIRCUII COURT 11th
J U D I C I A L C I R C U I T F OR
SEMINOLE COUNTT, FLORIDA
Fictitious Stem*
CIRCUIT CIVIL NO. *11314 CA44-0
Nolle* It hereby given thal I am
IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF
engaged In business at 1970 Park
•KATHLEEN P LoRUSSO
Av* . Sanford. FL 37771. Semlnol*
Petitioner/Wile,
County. Florida under Ih* lldlriout
end
n am e o l I N T E R N A T I O N A L
GERARD LoRUSSO.
PARTNERSHIP, and that I Intend to
Reipondent /Hutband
rtgltltr said name wllh the Clerk of
NOTICEOF ACTION
th* Circuit Court, Semlnol* County.
TO:
Florida In accordance with th* pro
GERARD LoRUSSO
visions ol tho Fictitious Name Slat
Addren Unknown
Ufa*. to-WH: Section &amp;U09 Florida
Residence Unknown
Statu!** 1917
YOU ARE NOTIFIED Ih4l 0
/4/C.J. Minor
Petition lor Dltsolullon ot Marriage
Publish OdoUr 3.9.14,73. t9*l
hat been Hied and you or* required
OEM 11
to serve a copy ol your written
defense*. II any, lo It on C CALVIN
FICTITIOUS NAME
HORVATH. Attorney tor th* Wife,
Nolle* is hereby given that I am
3*99 Lee Road. Suit* 330, Winter
angaged In business at 9*9 Stele
Paik. Florida. 33/19. on or bolort Ihe I Road 434, Longwood. Stmlnolo
34th day ot October, 19(1. and III* th*
County, Florid* under Ih* fldillovt
original wllh the Clerk o' Ih* Court
name of GOLD NUGGET JEWEL
enter belore service on Petitioner'ERS. eno thal I Intend to rogltler
Attorney or immediately thereafter,
said name with Ih# Clerk of Ih*
otherwise a default will be entered
Circuit Court, Samlnol* County.
against you lor Ih* rellel demanded
Florid* In accordance with Ih* pro
In th* petition
visions of th* Fictitious Name Slat
WITNESS my hand and th* teal ot
ufet. to Wit: Section *43 09 Florida
thi* Court on 71*1 day ol September,
Statute* I9S7.
19*3.
By III Attorney
(SEAL)
/*/ Carmine M Bravo
ArlhurH Beckwith. Jr.
1430 Slat* Road 434
ASCLERK
Longwood. Florid* JJ730
OF THE COURT
Publish OdoUr la. 73. X A Nov
BY Polrkla Roblnion
amber 4 .19(3
a sd epu tyc lerk
OEM 101
Publish September 33 A October 3. 9,
14.19*3
DEL 143
“

If you colled payments from a first
or second mortgage on properly
you sold, w* will buy the
mortgage you art now holding
7** 3399.
________

A l a result of the 19*0 Federal
Census and Esllmat* ol Inccease In
Population, th* Division of Alcoholic
Beverages and Tobacco. Department
ol Business Regulation. State ol
Florid*, will U accepting appllc*
lions for Ih* lnuonce* of quota liquor
licenses In th* following county and
amount
SEMINOLE 11
Applications will be accepted
beginning OttuUr 19. 19*1 and con
tinulng through January 14. 19*4 All
Initrosltd persons mould make In
qglry and/or fila their application by
contacting th* District Supervisor,
Jock 6 Wallace. District Office.
Division of Alcoholic Bavoragtt and
Tobacco. $400 Diplomat Clrd*. Sull*
III,Orlando. Florida
Howard M Rasmussen.
Director Division of
Alcoholic B *v *r*g*t a no
Tobacco
Department of Business
Regulation T allahau**,
Florida 13X1
By: J B. Wallace
Publish: OdoUr I A 17. IA 1911
OEM 73

Are you looking tor 0 career which
will tttltfy your needs end
goals’ W* are Interested In
career minded ambitious peopia
Train for management positions
In our branch office GFC'i
branch manager training pro
gram otters - a secure future,
outstanding employee bene Ms.
and competitive salary EOE
GENERAL FINANCE
CORPORATION
_______ 347* Orlando Drive_______
Food Concessions Managers end
workers. Mature, axperienced
preferred Apply Flteworld,
Hwy 17 93. Thurs . Frl . Sat. 9 S
P M 111 1793__________________
Front Desk Clerk willing lo work 1
fo It shift ard torn* weekends
Apply In person Holiday Inn of
Sanford on tha lake front________

EMPLOYER
OUR JOB IS TO
GET YOU ONE
FOR THE
LOWEST FEE
* ★

* *

GENERAL OFFICE.._ _ _ S736 Mo.
Lots ot variety, accural* typing
some 10 key. Terrific Unltllit

RECEPTIONEST........ 5750 Mo.
Bring your bright imll* Handle
phone. CRT a plus Insurance
knowledge wins her#I

GAL FRI_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 5600 Mo.
Ideal lor a sharp outgoing person
lo meet people and improve your
skills.

DATA OPERATOR............. 5SS
Seme tiperienc* helps or will train
good typist. Part-time, great
Ussl

BOOKKEEPER FULL
CHARGE....................... 173* Mo.
Most unusual |eb. Tap company,
tom* traveling possible Whal a
pet IttenI

CALL 323-5176
EMPLOYEE RELATIONS...... 20K
Industrial background and lava at
people will gel you this lop spot.
Thiscompany carait Doyouf

ASSISTANT MANAGER
TRAINEE.
...... .....1719 Mo
Very versttll* posltien, sens* col
itefion oaporlonc* helps Looking
•or opportunity, her* II ill

T.V. SERVICE MAN..T0 MOO Mo.
Part timi or lull limo position
open. High quollty company
noedi your skills Tun* Inti this
lobnowl

DRIVER............. „..S5$0 Mo.
Management tpporlufttty with
local emilpyw. Career oriantafod parson ntoood hero.

SALES REP- - - - - - - - - - - - - - J J J
The ladder la Sue‘ ass begins with
your salts oaporlonc*. Top notch
company has lop notch spot
★

★

★

★

MANY. MANY MORE
ASSEMBLY WORKERS
LANDSCAPERS
PAINTER TRAINEE

DISCOUNT FE E TERMS
1WEEKS SALARY
FRANCHISES AVAILABLE
lit* r’ RENCH AVE

�lev:
M
71-Help Wanted

Si

HOLIDAY HOUSK
4#itaur*nf h*s positions •villebl*
lo r C a i h l o r i , H o i l l l l t l .
W*'tr*t**t. Kitchen Help Good
opportunity to work with p*o
pit Experience prstored Apply 2
to 4 P M. 4200 Orlando Avt. Hwy
It-H. $ d LtktM try cutoff,
Hom*m*k*r* lull llmt to provide
cleaning services to tldtrly
?*rtom Mi.-i* h jv t rtlUbi* u i
k valid Flo arivtri license.
U00/ hour .20/ milt M thru F.
tW ? m Mr» Osborn*. COE.
LAND SCAPER
Person with
background In design. sale*. |ob
supervision. Irrigation, good
driving r*ro»d and experience
required. t » 2271.______________
Librarian III Starting talary U2I
wutkly. Mattar'a d tg r tt In
■Ibrary acltnca and 5 ytart
profession*! library experience
In public library. Apply Stmlnolt
County Personnel. CourthouM.
North Park Ava., Sanlord by
Nov 4th. l*t) Appllctlloni glvtn
and acctpltd Monday thru Frl
day,l:30AM tolINocn EOE,
Minimal day cart htlp nttdtd tor
tldtrly gtnfltmtn. semi mobllt,
excellent mind, requires tom*
light cooking. Pli 22)2110 be
twttn I and 5.04) 344) attar 5 30
Pltata Contact Mr, Roth._______
★

★

★

★

NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
10 r«al appearing, aggrttilvt pto
pit. No tiptrltnct nttdtd. Will
train for above average Income
FV interview call 22t 3022______
Now Interviewing for reception**!
and dental militant lor our
current and new location al The
Maitland Center. 33) 1110. Only
' qualified need apply.___________
NURSES AIDS. Experience pro
Itrtd Apply Laktvltw Nurtlng
Canter
t it E. 2nd Street
OFFICE HELP Full A part llmt
opening* available now Will
fully train Phone 020 4004.
PACKERS. Immediate start lor lit
and 2nd ihlfl. Heavy lilting
Involved Altamonte area Ablett
Temporary Service 331 1*40
Phytclan't office Medical te a *
trry. to do trantcrlpflon and
Inturance Send reiume to P O.
Boi 4040. Sanford. Fla 32222
4040__________________________

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Male over 40. there with torn*.
New fumlihtd homo with pool.
*340 a month plu* a deposit..
Include* utllltlet. In Sanford.
2310)14

93—Room* for Rent
SANFORD Furfflthcd room* by tha

week Reasonable rate*. Maid
Mrylce catering to working peo
pie 32) 4302.300 Palmetto Avt
SANFORD. Rea* weekly k Mon
thly rate*. Util. Inc. elf. 300 Oak
Adult* 1041 2M3

n

Furn. Apt*, ter Senior Cltlient
311 Palmetto Ave
J. Cowan. No Phone Call*
Lovely I bdrm collage. Complete
privacy, newley decorated S2) a
week, plus 3300 tec dtp 323 224*
or 323 1401____________________
t Bdrm. efficiency, patio. A/C.
124*. Fee Ph 33* 2200
Sav On-Rental* Inc. Realter

117—Commercial
Rentals

99—Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

Sanlord Inoustrlel Perk
12.000 Sq Ft. building. 1.000 Sq Ft.
space , 4 restroom*. 400 AMP
service, lotted manufacturing or
warehousing New Building For
detail*, cell 223 2330____________
Warehousing lor Lease. 21.(01 Sq.
Ft., dock height, heavy power.
M l toning, (Industrial), Include*
elllct*. parking, end lanced
rtllroed tile an premise*. Alta,
11,110 Sq. F t. a v a ila b le .
Beautifully lendicaptd. Cell
312*213 atkfocMiilne.

Apt. for rent for elderly couple. I
Bdrm.. central ASM. Call be
tweenl A M. fotPAA 322 )?)3
BAMBOOCOVE APTS
300 E. Airport Blvd Ph. 323 4420.
Efficiency, from S23) Mo ) %
discount for Senior Cltlient.

GEORGIA ARMS APTS.
Limited Selection. I Bedrm. Apl.
available. C/H/A, W/W carpel
Ing. appliance*.
Call er Came by. )2)-4*04.
3400 Georgia Avenue
•
Rental Attlttance Available
Equal Housing Opportunity.
LUXURYAPARTMENTS
Family A Adult* taction Poultlde.
2 Bdrm*. Matter Cove Apt*
32) 2*00

_______ Open on weekend*________
Mariner'* Village on Lake Ada, I
bdrm from *3 2). 2 bdrm from
S3)) Located 12*3 |utl south of
Airport Blvd. In Sanford. All
Adult* 323 1420________________
a Mellenvllle Trace Apt*, a
Unfurnished 2 bdrm, Soeclout Apt.
Walk To Lake Front No Pet*.
132) Ph 321 3*0)_______________
NEW I k 2 Bedroom* Ad|ac*nt to
Lake Monroe Health Club.
Racquatball and Morel
Sanlord Landing* X 44 321 4220
RIDGE WOOD ARMS APTS
2)10 Ridgewood Ave. Ph323 4420
t.2 k 2 Bdrm*. from 1300.
I Bdrm Apt., near business
district, pool privilege*.
122) Call 323 0444
I Bdrm. appliance*, carport. *20 a
Wk. Fee Ph 33* 2200
Sjv On Rental* Inc. Realtor
t Bdrm. A/C. pool. 121) Mu Fee Ph
33* 2200
lev On Rental Inc. Realtor.
1/2 Bdrm Apartment
New, remodeled. Adult* only, not
pet* 1300 a mo. plus security.
43* 004) or 444 1412or 34*3424
1 Bdrm . upstairs Adult* only. 122)
plus 11)0 damage fee. I l l 1141
Mr. Barber or 131 442*.

PROCESS MAIL AT HOME 111)00
per hundred! No experience
Part or full time. Start Immedi
a le l y . O r i e n t len d s e lf
addretied ttamped envelope to
C H I M . P O Boi 4). Stuart.
FI 314*3______________________
S e c r e ta ry / N u rte r y p e rio n .
Landtcaplng firm teeki expert
once.plea tent phone perionallty.
accounting, valet, typing, tiling,
genera'ofllce 030 2)2«_________
SUPERVISOR for telling de
partmenl In new garment facto­
ry. Mull have eiperltnce In
telling, comtructlon of garment*
and be quAiilr corn.lout Salary
commenturate with eiperltnce
San Del Manufacturing. 2240 Old
Lake Mary Road, 321 )»I0
Trucking Company need I man
experienced In tire repair and
truck wethlng. Mutt have valad
Florida Chautfeut llcenta and be
able to drive tractor trailers Call
322 02)1, between 10and).
TRUCKS ORIVCRS Local A Lang
Haul potlHorn High waget Call
today. *20 40*4_________________
Wanted tip Dental Attlt Tempo
rary full time potl I Ian Call
321 3010 Tu. thru F .» to SPAA.
WAREHOUSE WORKERS Many
opening!, full time, good itartlng
pay Call Immediately. 42* 40Si

2 Bedroom, cleen. quiet turroudlngt No pett/no chlldern.
Retired couple preferred 1200
Cell 222 07i4

73—Employment
Wanted

103—Houses
Unfurnished/Rent

Eic. Sec. for tvtnlng/weektnd
work Call 322 4244 after 4 P M
or weekend*.

Lake Mary. Hidden Lake Villa.
New, 2 bdrm. 2 bath, garage, no
pet*. 142). Ph 12* 2413.

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent

344 W. Lake Mery Blvd
Sulto B
Lake Mery, Fla. 22741
ORJFTWOOO VILLAGE

THE PRICE IS WRONG"

HOME WITH INCOME
Large modern 3 bdrm. family
home wllh CH k A. eat In
kitchen, family room, ovtrtlied
g » '* 3 * Ptu* 2 lull, equipped
greenhouse*. Going business lor
family or retired couple. Owner
will train end llnanr* )1»a « aa.

CALL BART
INLAND
REALTY,
INC. [Q

REALTY W O RLD .

REDECORATEO 2 bdrm. It* bath
near downtown Sanlord Large
fenced corner lot. Florida room,
paddle lent Home prefect Ion
plan. 131,500

COOL COOL POOL 1 bdrm 2
bath home In Lake Mery School
District. 2 patios, laundry room.
Central heat and air. 141.400
CUSTOM BUILT 2 bdrm 2 bath
home In Idyllwilde So many
little extras In this home, we
cen't mention tD.OOO

PRESTIGIOUS MAYFAIR Extra
live Section! Walk to Lake
2Asnre« Item this comfortable
heme with It'* own private In
door |unglei U " I IS" screened
rear pellet Custom built Jecuul
off Mailer Bdrm I l peddle lenit
Kitchen equipped I Many custom
feature! throughout! 111)440.

BEAUTIFUL MOBILE HOME
LOT. U.000. I 5 Acres Lake
Jessup Oak k Frull trees.
» t\et*
mdlRftl - *4 IffF*’ » •.

305-323-3145
AHer Heurt 323 Mil
or)M 3JM2J)

323-5774
2404 HWY 12 41

Rtmoddifij Specialist
Wt handle The
Whole Bell of Wax

Health &amp; Beauty

B.LUnk Const.

TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook 31* E. 1st St. 333 1243

322-7029
______ Financing Available
Went ads tell bargain hunters
where to find fho Gemal
HEARLD Classified 323 Mil

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
*O IL HEATER*
CLFANING AND SERVICING
Cell Ralph. 321-4211.
&gt;4% Discount On All Repairs
Far Window Air Cmdltleners
One Day Service Ph 222 14)1.

Automotive
20% On All Fwijn Cars
Repairs. October Onlj.
Major and Minor Mod
277-1531
Bookkeeping
Cempuleriied Bookkeeping
We'll do your books on our com
puter tor at little et 130 a month
Receive monthly troll balance
and statements with profit cen'tr
It desired Ollier reports avail
able
Call Ga1! 323 42*4

Cleaning Service
A Money Back Oauranteel
Ken Holden Southern Maid Str.
Band/1near. Maid **A**2t
PAR MAID SERVICES
Have you had your home cleaned
la te ly ? Cleaning with the
personal touch 3374HI 47H3II.

\

Home Improvement
COLLIER'S HOME REPAIRS
carpentry, reeling, painting,
window repair. 331-4433_________

COMPUTE CONSTRUCTION
No |ob to small. Minor k ma|or
repair* Licensed k bonded

m a in

PARTNERS. Rooting repair, paint
Ing. remodeling end additions
Free Ell Cell Eves 323 0004

Home Repairs
Austin s Maintenance Carpentry,
plumbing, painting, masonry,
sprinklers, remodeling 331-1241.
Carpentry alte/Stlons. gutter work,
painting, tiding, porches, pallot.
etc. Ask tar Art Hubble
1*4* Pricer 11 t t) IIP .
Maintenance of *1' type*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing

ALL YOU NEED IS US
221 02*2
Crockett k Waters Lawn Service
KINO k SONS LAWN SERVICE
Early Fell Clean Up. 1)4 Sptcial
For Any Average Yard. 34)1*3*.
L B M Lawn Care Service
Mow. edge, film, end haul Contact
Lee or Mark. 331 53*2 or 3314144
WAOLAWN SERVICE
Mowing, odglng.fertillling,
Free estimate* Ph 313 024*

Masonry
BEAL Concrete I men quality
operation. Pallot. driveways.
Days 331-7333 Ev a 332-Hit.
SWIFT CONCRETE. Foolers,
driveways, pads, floors, pools.
Chatt Stone Free E*t/321210)

CRLENBRIAR: Levely well kept J
bedroom. 1 bath hem* near Gelt
Course. Pool, screened pat!*.
s*s.**e.
HIDOEN LAKE) ) bedroom. 1
bath. CB Stucco with wood trim.
Bright, cheery eat In kitchen.
Covered patio, fenced beck yard.
SSt.tO*.

SIROOFINGtl
Hll I'm Art Hubble
I do beautiful work. I do new roots,
rod leeks. I replace or repair
valleys, roots venlt. etc. I will
t * v you money! 322 1213._______
SEMINOLE ROOFINO
ReRoolt.New Roofs.Rod Repairs
Free Estimate! Ph 3331)41

STENSTROM
Sanford’s Salts Leader
WE LIST ANOSELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINIOLE COUNTY

Nursing Care
OUR RATESARE LOWER
Lekrvlew Nursing Center
f lf E . Second St .Sanlord
3334202

VACUUM CLEANER) Electrolux,
n e w , g u a r a n te e d 1 4 *.OO
Semlnol* Vac I 12*3 and Lake
Mary Blvd Winn Dlxlo Center.
323 *411

POOL HOME, 3 bdrm, 1 bath hem*
In DeBary with It all I Cathedral
celling* and living rm.. dining
ream, family room. oqpt. eat In
kllchen, FP. paddle Ians. C/H/A.
W/W carpet, newly painted end
your own pool end pell*. 1424*4.

CUSTOM BUILOERS HOME. 3
bdrm. 3 bath brick hem* an a
with ral-d* tec. In Mayfair Coll
Course areal Split bedroom plan,
pecan penewd lemily room with
FP, and built In bookcases Fully
equipped eat la dream kitchen,
dining roam end screened perch.
Much more III1 444*.
COLONIAL CHARM, t bdrm. 3
bath. ) story hem* in a beeutllul
eak shaded loti Custom Motor**
throughout En|oy peel with
whirlpool, petto area. Every
Mature ImeglnekM. 111*4*4.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
3)4) S. Park

322-2420
GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
• Adult A Family
Sections
• W /D Connections
• Cable TV. Pool
• Short Term le a s e s
A vailable

1, Z. J It. AptL. 2 BR T il
F t* * 2 8 0

Painting

ISOS W. 25th SL

Swimming Pool Service

________ B electric 334B34________

CENTRAL FLORIDA
Home Improvement
Painting. Carpentry.
Smell Repairs
33 Yaar* Experience 323 2*4*

No |ob too smell Home repairs and
remodeling 2) Years experience.
Can 33) 444)

e e FREE ESTIM ATE**
Rhodes Pa nting All Types
IlY rs Exp 34 Hr. Phone 333 4*31

Interior Decorating

Plastering/Dry Wall

Tree Service

Curium 0'4pe&lt;its Verticals
AFFORDABLE PRICES
Sharon's Creations 42IC3S3

A L L P h ases o l P la s te r in g
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
cot*. slmulatadUlck 231 )v*3

JOHN ALLEN LAWNATREE
Any kind d Tree Service
Wt do moil anything 331 )M0

L a n d c le a rin g

Roofing

Save I Crod.l on Oaad Wood!
JACKSONTREE SERVICE
3*Yrv Experience 21441II

LANOCLEARING. FILL DIRT.
CLAY A SHALE.
321 34)3

Does Vour Old Or New Root l eak ?
It It does, call David Lee
323 44)]

Trt County Tree Service
Trim, remove, trash hauling
firewood, tfv e s t 123*410.

3IO P R I VA T E BACKYARDI
PerMct Mr kidt mother and dad
will Mv* the spacious 3/3. C/M/A.
Slxll lermel living ream. 31x14
lamily ream. Only 1S3AM.
SPECIAL HOUSE. 3/3 In last
growing a ve. 3 tens. 1 yoav old.
•creened pen*, stone llvpUce.
large Mt. cathedral ceilings.
S'*,***

UNDER 12.044 DOWN
2 Bdrm Coll House. Affordable
monthly payments. Cell owner
broker selfsmen 331 1111.______

321-5005

* UN OCR PRICED •
147.400 3 Bdrm tM B*»h Mcvt L-I
condition . Cell lor appointment
Broker 33) 4441 or I 71) 4)13.

3 Bdrm.. I bath, completely re
stored, celling lent throughout,
oak Itaort. large lot, good ere*
142 300 3210444 alter S P M

Nice 3 Bdrm., 1 B . Co Club
Manor. Fenced corner lot. **.000
down. 13)4 a month assumable
mortgage 313 3f4i__________
Older 3 story, 4 bdrm. • pool.
OWNER MORE THAN EAGER
MAKE OFFER. Merrill Lynch
Realty. Inc. Realtor. 13*17*0.
Mary Mathlt Realtor/Astodal*.
444 *407.

•PRESTIGIOUS*
•SPANISH-2 STORY*
•P001 PLUS APARTMENT*
•WAS S129.500-N0W $125,900*
Vacant. Estate etmoipher* Large
older well maintained home.
Q u ality construction with
cyp ress beam s, cath edral
ceilings, fireplace. 3 Bdrm. 2
Belhs with 7200 Sq Ft. living
e v e . plus 420 Sq FI. apartment,
and 22X14 pool. 121X1)0 secluded
lot. Towering t w s end aiataat.

RIOHTON LAKE MONROE.
Fishing pier. Large screened pool
and patio, with 2 bdrm, IV* bath.
All overlooking the lake. Owner
financing. 1*3.000. Call Charlotte
Crotlyn. Wall St. Company. Re
altor* 321 5001or 3211072

AUCTION
SUN.-OCT. 23rd-2:00 PM
RIVER OAKS ON ST. JOHNS RIVER
MAYT0WN RD.-OSTEEN, F t
An auction to closo out tlso remaining 9 tracts in beautiful
Rlvtr Oaks on tko SL Johns Rim. This is your chance to buy
a 5 to 10 aero homeslta at AUCTION PRICES!
There is something for tforyono: waterfront, secluded,
wooded, or open land, and all hava access to tho SL Johns
Riser. Come on out and buy at yuir prices.
TERMS: 10S Down, 15S at closing, 7SS financed at 13%
for 5 years.
PfllVIBW TODAY)
fust. OCT 1* a PM 4 PM
m . a c a t . o c t . a i a aa 10 a m -s p m
DIRECTIONS: From M take Deltona exit and go oast on Dojrte
Rd. to Osteon. Follow signs to River 0*ks.
For more Information and a brochure cad:

HIGGINBOTHAM REALTY, INC.
Lie. Real Estate Brektr Aecttoorer
IS M Williamsburg Square

Lakeland, F I S3M3 la Florida
T 0 U FREE: 1 4 0 O 7 5 1 U 1 1 . In all ether state* M OO AM M I L

SA T.
OCT.

22nd

49

AUCTION

CONTEMPORARY

SUPER. 1 bdrm. 1 bath hem* with
paneled dining room wtlh built In
cek ln ets. M i l * glass tnd
screened perch, attractive land­
scaped yard and much morel
134.340.

Retime end Cover Letter
Preparation. General Typing and
Bookkeeping 331 Ml).

SEWINO MACHINE. Z&lt;g leg. all
m etal. Guaranteed 14*00
Semlnol* Sewing 17*3 Lake
Mery Blvd. Winn Dixie Center
____________'*23*411.____________

BCTTER THAN NEW ANO OHI
SO PRETTY. 3 bdrm, Mealed an
4 nicely treed tats It a mutt t*
see. New carpet, reel tnd C/H/A.
are lust a few *f the many extras
It hat M oiler. Call today. Yea'll
be glad yeu did. MI.I0C.

REALTY • REALTORS

Secretarial Service

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners

PAOLA. 7/7. C/M/A. 1 acre
lakefronl. I7VM00. Wallace Cress
Realty Inc. 223 )0*2

•SYSTEMS FOUR INC.

BEAUTIFUL. 1 bdrm. 11* bath
peel home with *11 the extretl
Spill bodroom plan, gam* roam,
brick F/P, lemily rm., mattor
suit*, earth ten* decar* *n a
le v ly landscaped let. Reduced
4ta S44.S44

Root Maintenance
Repair work New work
Troy or Georg* lor F r v E st
________ 30) 34) 4440

Markham Woods Rd Ravensbrook
4 Bdrm., 7 8. By owner with
owner financing 121-1111.
Mayfair Pool Home
60 s Attumebl* llV«%Mtg
22104)1 or 222 23)0.

REALTOR 1714*fl

1)41 Lee Rd. Wlntw Park. Florid*
4444244

JUST FOR YOU. 3 bdrm. 1 bath
hem* with * levely split plan,
peddle lens, dining room. C/H/A,
W/W carpet, oqpt. eat In kitchen
end fenced rear yard. 143,444.

Roofing

It's much too Mw, tut Out ol town
owner tan. "Sell III" I year
new, J bedroom. 2 bath. Immecu
let* Best buy in area
Open House Sunday, t |p4:14 P. M.
1*2 Momlngglcry Dr.
Jht Crossings
CRANK CONST./REAtTOR

-U U S 1 L

LAKE FRONT. 3 bdrm. I bath.
A-Frame hem* on Lake Butler in
Ostoenl Extras Include yew awn
sun deck, left, greet rm. effect,
eat in kitchen, fenced yard with
tats at eekt end pints! H U H .

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

A Little 'Homework 'Watching
the Want Ads Can Bring
'Tap Grade' Results.

MINT CONDITION: Beauty end
quality abound In this 3 bedroom.
3 bath homo. Wood B beam
ceilings, query tile B hardwood
floors, fireplace. Large, tavely
let. 1*3.140.

JUST LISTED. 3 bdrm. 1 bath
homo with let! *1 extretl Family
room, dining room, FP, screened
porch, fenced yard, new reel and
lust peintedl 14140*.

To List Your Business-

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

2523 S. F R E N C H A V E .

LOADED COUNTRY HOME on
WEKIVA RIVER. Fireplace,
tinted windows Acc. Building.
Eat In kitchen Large comer
lanced lot. Horses OK. 4 bdrm 2
bath. tt*. too

FHA-VA SPECIAL Comfortable
end eHordeble 3 bdrm. It* bath
home, w/lerge lanced yard end
screened per chi Coed lecetlenl
Cell us quick I *414*4.

Lawn Service

REALTOR

CLEAN AND COZY. 2 bdrm 2 bath
eat In kitchen Central heat end
elr. Garage end large fenced
rear yard. Only 4 year* young
ANQet 10%. 144.400

W E N E E D L IS T IN G S

____ ____

H E A L l- s f A X U :

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
12124*1

FIRE SALE IN SANORA. Owmr I*
detperettl Mutt tell this week I
Levely 1 bdrm, 1 bath, w/lamily
ro o m end la n c e d y a r d l
Tremendous pettnliell Submit
ell otter*. Atiumeble mortgage I
Asking *4*410. Mike after.

Qualify Electrical Service
Fens, timers, security Hies, addi­
tions. new services. Insured
Matter Electrician James Paul

141—Homes For Sale

141—Homes For Sale

AND LET AN EXPER T DO TH E JO B

Accounting end Tax Services. N*
business te large er smell.
Campulerlitd Ph 131 1444.

Newl/ incensed A exper tall time
real estate salesmen needed.

lake Mary »7».*00

NEW LISTINbl 2 bdrm t both on
S large lots. Trailer In rear I*
rented lor 12)0 00 per month
New root. Owner financing p
12%. Country living 142400.

Landscaping

Pride *1 Ownership shows In this 3
Br 7 B doMtwsr. rta r high
school end shopping. D-ellt
tlcally priced *113)000

323-3200

H I—Homes For Sale

A k J Landscaping
Complete Lawn Maintenance
321 4341

FIRST TIME OFFEREDI
Thev ' l loom to spved out in this 4
Br. 2 B home, located on quiet
cul d* sac. Majestic oaks give
country Moling You should tee
this! SS1.SO0

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

THE MERCANTILE BUILDING
BOBM BALL JR. PA
REALTOR 323 fill

Electrical

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

Z x Iia c M a io *

C O N SU LT OUR

Accounting &amp;
T ix Service

SANFORD R3ALTY
REALTOR
32) 3214
Aft Hr. 7*2-4*54, IT* Q j« _

keues

127—Office Rentals

HIDDEN LAKE ESTATES. At
traettvo 1 bdrm. 1 bath heme,
d b l/ c a r g a r a g e , k itc h e n
oqpt..C/H/A. fenced yard,
w /prlvlcy hedgel Sprinkler
system I Community peel, club
house end tennis I Lew % assume
mertpeget sal.Joo

Salt by Owntr Longwood 2
Bdrm.. 2 Bath, L/R. O/R. Faml
ly Room with fireplace, pool, and
much more *22 000 rn oeci

PHONE 322 M il,____________

Sanlord Duplex 3 Bdrm., I Bath,
carport, laundry room, centrol
A/C. kitchen equip., cirpet.
drape*. 2424 Lake Ave. 130M11
2bedroom t bath, spacious,
and new 13)0 month
Ph 323 IIIQ orl** 4212

141—Homes For Sale

141—Homes For Sale

hunt Herd There's 'N* Limit' an
the Bargains You'll 'Beg' ir i
Easy to pile* • WANT AD-

105—DuplexTriplex/ Rent

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

141—Homes For Sale
For rant with option to buy, er t*M
by owner ) Bedroom. I bath,
central air end heat carpet,
333 IIS). SOI B Tangerine A ve.
eft Rt. 427.
,______________

3 Bdrm. 1 B, CHA. carpeted.
Adult* No p«r*. 1120 oer mo.
333230*.______________________
1 Bdrm.. C/H/A, lni&gt;dc utll/rm.
Fenced yard, tat In kllchtn. no
pat* 13*) a mo 322 11*3________
3 Bdrm, houte with wathor and
dryer. Nice neighborhood 1410 a
month. Call 322 144*.___________
3 Bdrm, kid*, carport, lanced yard.
1410 Mo Fee Ph. 13* 2200
Sev-On-Rentell Inc. Realtor
4 Bdrm , II* Bath, living room k
family room, wall to wall carpet,
fenced yard, appliance* 1400 a
mo, plu*depotll. 331 3030

Sundiy, Oct. 1*« I H l —tB

Evening Hiralo, Sanlord, FI.

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

91—Apartment*/
House to Share

H M lt d

TIM E

11:00
AM

CONDOMINIUMS

W IN TER P A R K , F L O R ID A
Im agine tho g reatest p la ce you c a n live, and you'll think of
P L A C E 430. Im agine living in the popular W inter Park Sch o o l
D istrict and being m inutes from shopping, m ed ical fa cilitie s, se r­
vice sta tio n s, b a n k s and even the O rlando International Airport.
Top th is locatio n w ith lush la n d sca p in g and an o utstanding
am enity p a ck ag e featuring:
• California.trie Clubhoute with Fneoi.ce
• Men's and Women's
Siunii

•
•
•
•

Two Swimming Pools.
Jsguin
Guebo wiBBQ Grill
Exercise Boom.

• Two Lighted Tennis
Count.
• Playground

UN IT F E A T U R E S :
• Werrenteed Major
Kitchen Appliances
• InOmdueliy Controlled
Heat S Air

• Sosctaus Floor Plena
• Well to Well Carpeting
• WetneriOryer Hook up*
(most units)

•
•
•
•

Peito or Balcony
Large Closets
Outside Storage
Covered Parking Avail

'

1

T he develo pers have ch o se n the AU C TIO N m ethod to c lo s e
out their final inventory. A variety of lloor p la n s — are ava ila b le at
A U C TIO N S A V IN G S !!! E IG H T (8) T O B E S O L D A B S O L U T E !!!
Preview: C om e end se e why 200-families already live at Place 436.
S A T , O C T . 15; 1 0 * 0 * 0 0 PM
SUN., O CT. 16; 1 :0 0 * 0 0 PM
W ED . • F R I , O C T O B E R 16-21; 10:00 6:00 PM
T E R M S : 32500 d eposit on s a le d ey. B a la n c e — c a s h to c lo s e In 30d a y s. Several len ders are a vailab le to buyers.
D IR E C T IO N S : E a stb o u n d — take I 4 to East-W est E x p re ssw a y to
Sem oran Blvd. G o north past C o lo n ia l Blvd. to P L A C E 436. W astb o un d — take 1-4 to F a irb a n k s exit. G o e a st to Sem oran Blvd. G o
so uth to Site. A U C TIO N S IG N S AT E N T R A N C E .
i r r ? l Higgenbotham Realty. Inc.
bone of r T T T V * * ^

l y ‘ | | Llc "*•' E&gt;IM* BrokertAuclioneeri

M IMt
od by lo ci Ion MHO) FtorSde Metulee
......................W *

k &amp; a l 1S44 Williamsburg Square
lakeland. PL DAO)

For more Inlormelton A brochure ceK

(813) 644*661

IA U C T IO N
— SATURD AY—
NOV. 5th — 11 AM
73-Homesites in Cedar Creek Estates

from 1 to 5 a c r e s ____
T h is it a t;rrat place (or
your own country home on
the Si. Jo h n s River.
.'*) to b t t o l d a b s o lu t e '

All 30 absolute lots are
waterfront or waterview.
These beautifully-wood­
ed homesites offer country
living at its best with ail
the ameniliea of city life.
Two larger tracts— sued
10it acres and 40£ acrea
will also be sold along wit Is
a 3&lt;-ft. diesel powered
yacht.
Prtidtuv Sun.. O ct. 30. 1-5;

SUNSHINE POOLSERVICE
Will maintain your pool Inlop
condition, private or rammer
del Ph 333 1342. Sunthlnt Pod
Servlet. SU Melionvlll* Ave
SenlordF' 33721.

Mon., O ct. 31. 6-5: T h u n .,
A F r l . Nov 3 A 4.9-6; Sat..
Nov. 5. 9 til A U C T IO N .

SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE
' O Btdrtea hyki Apl^f
l &lt;C t v - * 3 1 0 ”
~
ft

ov

• IIN hit) UUfflUt
•0UH7K 7001
• rU tU O M
• cun must

323-2920

lh&gt; 4220 S OtLAKDO DIM

M am

Direction» North ol I'alatka on U .S. 17 approx 12mile* to comm unity ol llottwick. Tu ns north Irsghtl
on County ltd. 209 A pro­
ceed to entrance to Cedar

I

(&gt;rtk Cttatrt
ton Mom

IS* OHM* llOH
ANO A
BNOCHUnt
CALL

Higgenbotham Realty, Inc.
Ltcwnsad R eal E sta tu BrokmfAuctton— r*
itee wiuiAMsauno
la a u a n o f i

io u a a i
iaasaai

nao: • n s x

AMI M &gt;SorHM-SaaC*44 4i a i otfwi SUIes ; t l i

f

�Sunday, Qc). U, I f 1

)Jft—Evim nj H»raId,, Sanlord, Ft,
141—Homes For Sale

”

157—Mobile
Homes / Sale

*53—Lots-Acreage/Salc

KIT ’N’ CARLYLE m
m

B A TEM A N R E A L T Y
Lie. Real E t la l* Broker
2M0 Sanford Av*
L E A S E O P T I O N . 4/1 .
neighborhood 144.*00

n lc «

SEM IN O LE WOODS. S K m . high
*'
and dry, beautifully wooded
;■ corner, unbelievable IJ*.SOO

321-0759

Fve

322-7643

By O w ner Longwood A re a . 4
Bd rm , 1 fi. Pool, garden tpel

Rtdytsd WSJJ.JM su-iu;
By Owner, new Villa home In
Hidden Lakat 1 bdrm, J bath,
large lot, I car garage U 0.X0.
IU.S0C to attum* Payment U N
mo Ml a m

STENSTROM
I

CALLANYTIME
21*2 S. Park

322-2420
4 5 A crat. Lake Sylvan Area.
542.500 W Malictowtkl Realtor.
221 2*52

O E B A R Y B T OWNER
Xing lire bedroomt. 2/2, eet In
kitchen plut dining Double lott.
72X110. Will tell teperately Cell
*44 41*5

Sandlewood by owner 1 Bdr.
1 b lh , c a r p e l, lu l l k itc h e n ,
w ather/dryer, A /C. pool and
m a ln l. ile.SOC 222 1047
alter 5. 222 1442

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

157-Mobile
Homos/Sale

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

Hat Fall Kauteclaanfng
Turned Up terplut Thlngt
W in) Ad Will Turn Ta Cath*

t iiiiiiit m im i
Plan) a Want Ad
And Harvetl Oallartl

211—Antiques/
Collectables

P U B L IC A UCTIO N
MON. Oct. 17 7PM

COUNTRY LIVIN O wooded lerge
'ot on private road naar St. John*
River. 205 ***40)4

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
A P P L IA N C E S . R E P O S S E S S E D ,
reconditioned, freight damaged
From t*t Up Guaranteed
Nearly New 117 E It! St. 225 7*50

Kanmora part*, ter vice,
uted wathert 222 01*7
M OONEY A P P L IA N C ES
Large upright Ir e e w .
Good condition 150
5*2-4*4*
Retrigeralor. Frlgldeire 17 Cu. II
harvett gold. 7 yrt. old 5100
Saart Coldipot 12 cu. I t , whit*
Ire e m 5100 Call 222 7KJ. * to *
PM

CmihW*w

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo

S ID E BY S ID E K EN M O R E relrig
eralor. 2 yrt. old Ex. Condition
5400 or bett offer. Full Maltreat,
bnv «prfngi. headteard A frame,
neveruted (75 Call 222 1*17 '

1*" Curtit Malhet p o r W e , 2 year
warranty. 1200 or bett oiler. *
Pioneer tpeekert. Pioneer 710
r e c e iv e r. P lo n tar * q u * lii* r .
catietl* deck, M artnit lurnta
b*», (MOO or bail oiler 222 7755
between 1 A 1.122 **40_____________

W ILSO N M A IER FU R N IT U R E
111 215 E . F IR S T ST.
222 5*22
' Ytsr s!d 15.3 uprSghl lr « i. r .
5205 Gat grill uved 2 tlmei, 1150
E lh a n A llan d re ttln g table
1115 00 Stereo ISO 221 4717

1 place bedroom lull. Walnut
llnlth. bookcat*. headboard with
lull lilt. II** new malfrett tel.
5240 C*l l *tof P M 2H 52W.

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo
Good Uteo Televliloni 125 And Up
M IL L E R S
2*l*OrlandoDr
272 0152

mmm

n

U* H* 1 'uw

T E L E V IS IO N Z EN ITH 25" Color
TV In Walnut Con lot* Original
Prlca. over 5700. Balance due
52*5. Cath or tik e up payment*
ol UO 00 month No Money down
Still In warranty. Free Home
Trial ■no obligation 5*2 52**.

187—Sporting Goods
Walker hunting dogt
FREEH
Phone 222 1**0 aller * P M

7 piece Satlnwood bedroom tu&lt;l,
cedar ciwti. china cabinet, old
wood bo*, tt horsepower riding
lawnmower wl thtrailer.
O N E O F O U R BEST SA LES
OF TH E Y E A R II
CONSIGNM ENTS WE LCO.V.C

Auctioneer Blen Glbton

S A N F O R D A U CTIO N
1215 S. F R E N C H A V E .
Hwy 17*2

Ml 7240

193—Lawn &amp; Garden

215—Boats/Accessories

C V P R ES S M U LC H FOR SA LE
B A O Sawmill
Port ol Santord 111 «&gt;*t

14' boat. Irallar. and 70 H .P.
M trcu ry motor. All 71 year
modal, with lett than M heurt
uta 51500 Alto, Reeta hitch with
tway bar. Call alter 1 P.M
1710457.
72 Chrytler Outboard Motor. 120
HP. with power till and controls
1710 172 4415

F IL L D IR T A T O P SOIL
Y EL LO W SAND

Clark A Hlrt Ml 7510. Ml 7*12

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
Siberian Hutky Pup* Bl/Sllver.
w/white, blue eye* Wormed and
thoti, 550and up 2M 4u/5

SATELLITE TV
Ideal for playroom or office. Can be used
in freight or passenger rail service with
minor repairs. Must sell. *2,500 or best of­
fer. Call 202-822-8663 or write Auto-Train
Corporation 1430 K Street, NW # 6 0 0 ,
Washington, DC 2 0 0 0 5 .------

Pin* king til* water bed complete,
* home lull ot modern lurnlture.
tablet and chalrt. coffee tablet,
end tablet, chrome and gla;i
book thelvet, imalt tablet. J
piece Pin* bedroom tult. 5 piece
bedroom tult, teveral bedroom
lull*, ch*lit. drettert. Stanley
dining room tuil. 7 piece Sloppy
Jo* lull, to piece pll group,
bookcatet. Ilk* new king tit*
bedding, talat. chalrt. lampt.
Mltc. household llemt

Hava You: Contldored o tatoilito tytlo m for your homo
or b u iin o tt? Roioorchod the leg o lititei? Chocked pricot?
Boon unable to locate a reputable company to o ntw er ALL
your question*? If so. you owe it to yourself to see the best.

WE GUARANTEE YOUR COMPUTE SATISFACTION!
Nome brand components for less. (Models or. display In our
showroom). No hidden charges * I year warranty • elecironic* replacement policy • FREE service first 30 days • FREE
satellite-tv programming guide. Financing available. AH'
from the satellite-tv professionals ot N E W H O R IZ O N S .
Member, Orlando Area Chamber of Commerce. (References
available).

Call 30 5 .857*4730

- 9 AM to 5 PM Mon.-t-n. ond 9 AM to Moon Sot. a—

217—Garage Sales
Apartment comple* Rum m eg*
Sal*. Lo tto l Everything Sat and
Sun f to 4 25*0 Ridgewood Av*
Ridgewood Arm t Apartment!

GARAOESALE 11.
Friday! 15 P.M
FLEAWORLDHwy.17 *1

1*10 CHEVETTE. 4 cyl, air,

72 Ford LTD Good condition
11.000 or bail olfar.

Ph 171 7771
Oat tha "Cream Ol Ih# Crapl"
The ieew ti B*it Buyt Are
Inlha Want Adtl_____

71 V W. Supar Beall* 20.000 mllat

223—Miscellaneous

71 CHEVY IMPALA. 1500.
M l-H tt

AN TIO UE PIANO
GOOD CONDITION.

75 A U D IA 7 IL T D .
Owner hai loo many c a n t
MUST S E L L . Mt 002*.

222-Ml 7.______
CAMO PANTS. J A C K E T !. CAPS.
•AR M Y NAVY IU R P L U 5
210 Santord Av*.______________1M 57*1

Complete jewelry catling tqpl.
Everything torlhaprol
14* 5701._________
FENDER Stralicatler Gult*r and
tmall amplifier 5500 00
574 VH.___________
Hunt Here! There'* ‘No L lm lf on
the Bargain! You’ll 'Bag' I f t
E a iy to Placa a WANT ADPHONE 111 1*11.___________________
L ik e new, 1*11 A r le n i riding
lawnmower, 10 hp , M” btada.
elactric ite rl Under warranty.
Prlca 10*5 Call 222 4514

Toyota Pickup 4 c y l . ltd trane,
radio, topper. Ernie Jackten
Auto S»l»i 77171*4

239—Motorcydes/Bikes

OLOUPRIGHT
PIANO W/BEVEL GLASS

Honda CM400 Almotl new. tllll
under warranty. Only 7700 mlte^
51700 Include* helmet and rain
gear Call 272 5021 a lte r* P M

too 00

Realtor’* Attention- TomHopkln*
Lifting Tepet. Never uted.
ISO 14* 5701.
S E W IN G M A C H IN E
S IN G E R
F U T U R A . lik e new. on* ol
Slnger't Top Model! All Slltchet
built In. Sold new over 5700 Mutt
sacrifice lor 17M *0 or Atium *
SIS Monthly payment* Will lake
trade at part payment. Free
home Trial C a l l U l 51*4
______________Day or N ile______________
Uted Old! Trombone
Good condition
SIOO C allM iatlO A tklor Cindy
We buy furniture, anllquet or
accept comignmantt tor Aucfton
F la Trader Auction 12* 111*
I Queen Sir* Bed
550 1 New Security Light
570 171*072
2 girti blcydet. 20 Sidewalk with
training wheel* 24" High Raite
with banana Mat. 171 0*42

tf«0 Honda XR TOC. Street or d irt
• re e l Included U5C. Ph 145 SOW
Geneva
1*40 Yamaha XSS50CC Shaft drive:
Very clean. SISOOor bail oiler.
121 50*4

263—Junk Cars
BUY JUNK CARS B TRUCKS .
From 110to tSOcrrmore
Call 1M 1*741114111
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A Uted
car*, trucks A haavy equipment
M2 5*»0
W E P A Y TO P D O L LA R FO R
JUNK CARS AND TRU CKS
CBS AUTO TA RTS 2*1 *505

YAMAHA

231-Cars

OF SEMIN0U

Bad C re d it?
No Credit?
WE FIN A N CE
No Credit Check Easy Tarm*
NATIONAL AUTO S A L E S
l t » S Sanford Ave
Ml *075

“ DAYTONA'S B E S r

S E C A 550 J

L O O K IN G F O R A T R E A T IN
STEA D OF A T R IC K * USE OUR
C L A S S IF IE D !

Jeep CJ5 New top. mechanically
good. *omt rutl.
57100 57*2151,

219—Wanted to Buy

Mercury Grand Marquit 71, 2
door, lull power, air, tterao

*1 8 9 5 °°

S E C A 750 H
1 2 5 9 5 °°

MAXIM 650 J

_____

•2 3 9 9 °°

1*70 V.W. Van, tomt rutt. runt
great. 10.000 ml. on anglne
overhaul. 1 1.000 Ph 14* 500*
Geneva
1*71 CORDOBA
C th tu Law Milat, Whi brn.
All few er t].*00.
Call S lllt a a After 1.

(M ar Your YAMAHA
Ftlrlnjt and WMaMaUe
Haw Far S ir inn Calar*.
HWY. 17-91 LOMBINOOB
•1 4 -9 4 0 1

A *
v
81 BUICK REGAL

82 HONDA ACCORD

72 PONTIAC CATALINA

81 ARIES CUSTOM WGN

Hatchback 5 Speed, A/C Hard To Find
And This Is A New Car Trade.

4 Door Automatic, A/C.

Nice Old Dependable Transportation.

Automatic, A/C.
Very Nice.

2 Door, Power Windows, Stereo,
Beautiful Blue In Color And
Double Sharp. Great Deal.

•8 3 9 0

* 2 2 9 0

•6 1 9 0

* 7 6 9 0

•‘ 1 5 0 0

-•1 5 0 0

-•1 5 0 0

-•1 5 0 0

-*1 5 0 0

‘6 7 8 0

* 6 8 9 0

*7 9 0

* 4 6 9 0

•6 1 9 0

82 CAMARO Z&gt;28
81 DODGE COLT

80 PLYMOUTH VOLARE
2 Door, Automatic, P/S And P/B
Great Car For Teenager
Going To School.

80 CHEV MONTE CARLO

Hatchback
Stick With A/C.

Beautiful Black Car With T-Tops
Automatic, A/C, Power Windows
And Seats.

2 Door, Automatic, A/C. Nice
White Car With Red Interior.

White With Glass Tops
And Beautiful.

4 Door, 1 Owner Beautiful
Automobile, A/C. You Must See
To Appreciate.

Sunroof, Automatic, A/C. Really Nice.
High Miles But Oh What A Deal!

* 7 1 9 0

‘8 2 8 0

•’ l s e e
‘5 6 9 0

I Pick-Up, 6 Cylinder, Automatic, A/C.
Really Nice.

p/S, A/CP/B. AM/rMtltreo 71

H A R L E Y DAVIDSON.
1*72 1200 CC.
Police Special 51.000
574 25*5

O tb a ry Auto A M arina Sale*
acrott the river top ol hill 171
Hwy 17 (ID e b a ry * * * U * I

B*by Bad*. Strellert. C*r***1t.
■Maypant. Etc. Paperback
Boakt. Ml *277-271 *524
Paying CASH tor Aluminum. Cant.
Copper. Brat*, Lead, Newtpa
p*'\&lt;J'*u.G-v«.K:r*c
Kokomo Tool. (MW. Itl
* 4 20 Sot. *1 Ml-1100

30 Monta Carte. Loaded, buck*!
w a it blue with matching Interi
or E i t r a n lca l 7* M ercury
Marquit 2 d r , tmall V I. A / f ,

Modei 1*00. Cod* a Fhona. 20
M enage cap Remote Command
550 00 22? 7117

tisooMliiet.

81

CHEV CORVETTE

I

*7 6 9 0

* 5 6 9 0

* 1 3 ,4 9 0

•4 2 9 0

* 7 3 9 0

• 1 4 ,7 5 0

I

-‘ 1 5 0 0

-*1 5 0 0

-*1 5 0 0

•*1 5 0 0

-•1 5 0 0

•*1 5 0 0

‘6 1 9 0

* 4 1 9 0

• 1 0 ,9 9 0

•2 7 9 0

• 5 8 9 0

* 1 3 ,2 5 0

80 BMW 3201

78 CHEV CAMARO LT

78 RANGER F250 4x4

80 HONDA CIVIC

5 Speed, A/C, Local, 1 Owner.
Beautiful Car.

With T-Tops, Beautiful, Automatic.
Just Uke It Rolled Off Showroom.

Glass T-Tops, 5 Speed, A/C,
Beautiful Cranberry in Color.
Don't Miss This Deal.

81 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON

Tutone Paint.
Great For Hunting Season.

Hatchback 1300. With A/C. This Is A
Real Deal For A Honda.

4 Door, Automatic, A/C.
1 Owner And Double Sharp.

* 1 0 ,9 9 0

* 5 8 8 0

• 1 0 ,7 5 0

•6 7 9 0

•3 9 9 0

•5 6 9 0

-*1 5 0 0

•*1 5 0 0

•*1 5 0 0

•* 1 5 0 0

-•1 5 0 0

-*1 5 0 0

* 9 4 9 0

* 4 3 8 0

•9 2 5 0

•5 2 9 0

•2 4 9 0

•4 1 9 0

80 DATSUN 280ZX

]
*

75 Ford station Wagon. P/S. P / J l
air. auto Ira n i, radio and haataf.
5150 Good, clean running car. i
114 4*01 or 12* *100_______ '

HON'D

78 BMW 3201

81 GMC SIERRA 1500

C B. Runt good. Call 222 52T2 j
Alter 5 :2 0 ._________ ___

AFTER l:M.

We Sell Used Cars For Less And We'll Prove It. This Week We Will Offer
Guaranteed *1500 Trade In On Any Of The Used Vehicles Listed Below,
Just Bring This Ad With You And Receive An Extra *100°° Over And
Above The Advertised Special After You've Made Your Best Deal!!

81 HONDA CIVIC

en engine. A'M. P/M. » trset.

Barglnt L Fun Buying A Sailing
*45 17*2

OBMWO
,0 * '

luto/trint. mag whaelt, linled
window*. *0C wall ttarao lyttam.
Atklng 17 500 Ph MUST? or
1110150 Atklor Joa._________ »
1HO Pontiac Firebird
Aulo. Air. Stereo
Call Ml 5055

221—Good Things
to Eat

Furnllura and repair, tlrlpplng and
rellnlthlng, tlalnlng. antique! a
speciality. Mi 0**l

FOR E S T A T E or CO M M ER CIA L
AUCTIONS Call A t AUCTION
S E R V IC E M l *1*5
____________

231— C a r s

WE BUY AN TIQ UES
F U R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C ES
122 7240______________

FO R E S T A T E . Com m eretil or
Retldt.ilial Audlont A Appraii
a ll Call Dall’l Auction 272 5*20

Cath lor good ut/d lurnlture.
Le rry't New A Uted Furniture
Marl. 215 Sanford Av*. 22? 4117

G R E G O R Y M O B ILE HOV.ES INC
A R EA S LA 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 Beach Villa
Greenleal
Palm Spring*
Palm Manor
Sieila Key
V A F H A Financing 205 222 5200

2t9—Wanted to Buy

L\C W°tM F.N&amp; AH eHcYcu^{*.A
HAHty WHCN He
t/pf

161—Country
Property/Sale

All American 1*10 12X5*. 2 Bdrm .
Air, In family tec!Ion of Carriage
Cove ta w i Yy? 4*?v

207—Swap Corner

213—Auctions

FOR SALE...AUT0 TRAIN CABOOSE...
.........

Do V^u KW W

2 o r] BEDROOM HOUSE
Your P R IC E . M Y TER M S
122 4441.

By owner tale or leete J Bd- n .
It* B,Cn1/H/A. garage Low
down A m u m e m ortgage
SJt.WO Owner It Realtor Attoc
222 42*2
Claulled Reiultt Will Win
Yarn- Vote Every Tim*I

ST, JOHNS River 2't acre parcel!,
with river accctt . Only 4 left.
Starling ttl.tOO Public water. 20
min to Altamonte Mall 17% 20
yrt financing, no qualifying
Broker. *7» 4522

VC.TTeN?

PRIVATE INVESTOR
WANTING TO BUY
MULTI FAMILY UNITS
NO REALTORS
CALL 323-2269.

A CRE TRACTS O EN EVA
A R EA . Catt at Santord. Some an
hard t w la ia road. 2*% down.
Closing In IS dayi. I I Year
martgegt. 1 ! 1C\ In tern!. Call
ter delallt and Inipectlon.

221 am

AeouryooR

159—Roial Estate
Wanted

REALTY • REALTORS

B y ow ner. Hidden L a k e . 12*
Bared* Road ) bdrm, 2 bath,
wooded lot. Kreened room. 2 car
garage, large kl‘chen w : wo Ph

a SANFORD I 4 &amp;44e
2'J Acre ■+ country home tile
Oak pine tome cleared paved 10S
down 10 Y rt a l l I S
ITCM TR O .V , R E A L T Y
R EA LTO R S
* Call 2 » 1 4 » Anytime*

New Home* ttartmg at U t t l E a iy
credit and low down Uncle Roy*.
Leetburg US aal *04 712 0224___
R E S A L E S [Fam ily Park)
12X60 NIC*I SH.fOO
24X52 Spec lout! 115.500
G R E W " Y M O B .L E HOM ES INC.
205 122 5200

wmt

by l.arry W right

- J l - J SANFORD,
2913 ORLANDO DRIVE-RT. 17- 92• ORLANDO:831- 1660•SANFORD: 323-6100
OPEN MONDAY THRU F RI DA Y , 9 - 8 • SA TU R D A Y. 9 - 6 • SUNDAY. 12-5

I

�t

Si
8!

Evening Htrald, Sanford, FI.

PRESENTS

TEAM!
ALL-NEW CHEROKEE.
ALL-N EW ENCORE.
ALL-NEW WAGONEER.
N EW ALLIANCE
N EW GRAND WAGONEER. N EW FUEGO.
N EW JEEP CJ-7.
N EW EAGLE WAGON.
Leaner...with the b est g a s mileage
ever in a Je e p vehicle. M eaner...
with more ground clearance than
S* 10 Blazer and Bronco II. And
more horsepow er-per-pound than
S -10 Blazer, too.

HEAD IN FOR A LEANER,
MEANER TEST DRIVE.

E S I HWY

EPA EST MPG*

Uiu for comparison Your mileage may vary
with speed, trip length and weather. Actual
hwy figures will probably be lower.

ONE WORD SAYS IT A LL. JE E R

The room, com for : and mileage
of a station wagon. Plus Jeep
power, ruggedness and
ground clearance to get you
through when others c a n t

TREAT YOURSELF TO A
LEANERf MEANER TEST DRIVE.

m

m

EST HWY

m

a

m

EPA EST MPG*

Use (or comparison. Your mileage may vary
wilh speed, trip length and weather. Actual
hwy figures will probably be lower.

ONE WORD SAYS IT A LL. JE E R

Wagoneer Limited

L

J

W f

jH

1

SANFORD MOTOR COMPANY, INC
508 S. FRENCH AVE

SANFORD

322-43

Sunday, Pel. U, 1 W -H B

�*&lt;■

s

12B—Evening Horald, Sanlortl. FI.

Sunday. Oct. U. 11M

ASTOR SUPERBLEND
A ll GRINDS

SUPERBRAND GRADE 'A
EXTRA-LARGE

CLOROX
WITH

WITH M l TIllIO UMH IMUI CIRTITICITI
ION OCT. IM 1 IMl

COFFEE

M l T a u t IUPIR ROMS CMTIIIUTI
IMS OCT. II-ID. IM1

USDA GRADE ‘A’
FRESH WHOLE (2-3 LB. AVG

CHARMIN BATH ( A ll COLORS) t j f j f a

TISSUE
eu raxis sani i : c : uxuTiim
1000 NT. i* to. tMl

SAVE 30

l im i t tw o
w /f 5 .0 0 o r
m o ro p u rc h o io o a c l. clg».

S t 10 LB.
HANDI PACKS

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MARKET IRISH

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k e tc h u p

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DEED

HAM M

DEEP SOUTH HAMIUOOe*

GROUND BEEF . . » *1”

SAVE 90
SAVE 40

B O n O M ROUND
ROAST

PORK
CHOPS

PATTIES

FRYER
DRUMSTICKS

$ 09 7
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HICKOIY SWEET SllCEb

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R o a s t .............. .... *1”

Bacon ..........

Steaks

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SAVE 30

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CRACKERS

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DELICIOUS
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SUPfRIRAID IVOOE RAIS

Potatoes . . . ^

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CANEMARK (All IIAVORS) DANISH

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                    <text>Altamonte Expects New Hotel To Host 'Upper
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
An eight story Hilton Hotel may be under construction
In Altamonte Springs by the first of the year.
A Dallas-based development firm has received siteplan go ahead from the city, for the facility which will be
located behind Interstate Mall.
Woody Coley, In churge of office space leasing In
Altamonte Springs for the developer. Trammel Crow Co.
of Dallas, said although a management group to operate
the 325-room hotel has not been finally selected, the site
plan application was submitted under the names of
Northlakc llllton and Altamonte Hilton. It will be the
tallest building In the city.
Wanda Jackson-Guest. an Altamonte Springs city
plabnrr said the plnn was approved by the planning

McDougall
Trial
Begins
Testimony began at 8:30 this
morning In St. Petersburg In the
murder trial o f Donald Glenn
McDougall after u 12-member Jury
was selected yesterday.
The selection process was com­
pleted late Thursday night after
drfense uttomeys and prosecutors
agreed on a Jury composed of six
men and six women.
Seminole Circuit Judge C Vetnon
Mire Jr. moved the trial to Pinellas
County after it appeured that It
would be very difficult to pick an
impartial Jury In Seminole County
because of extensive news media
coverage of the crime.
McDougall. 27. Is charged with
first-degree murder and aggravated
child abuse In the September 1082
death of Ursuln Sunshine Asftalri.
The body. stufTcd Into a lumap sack
and weighted down, was recovered
from an Altamonte Springs pond In
December.
Utter, the child’s mother. Susan
Barrett Assald. 30. pleaded guilty to
mnnslaughtger In the case and is
expected to be the state's key
w itn e s s In the ca se a g a in s t
McDougall.
The state charges thnt McDougall
beat and tortured the child, sat her
naked In a sink filled with Ice.
forced her to rat soap and made her
constantly walk around a room.

board subject to corrections In the engineering plans
being made and resubmitted for approval by the city
staff. She said because an eight-story hotel was Included
In the Trammel Crow's Planned Unit Development
approved a couple of years ago by the city. It was only
necessary to take the hotel plans before the planning
board and they will not have to go before the city
commission as well.
"It was locked along with the business complex and a
restaurant (which has not yet been built.)
Coley said It will take 12-14 months from sturt of
construction to completion of the project which will be
built on a 7.5 acre site thut Is part of 64-acrc PUD owned
and developed by Trammel Crow.
"W e arc excited." he said. "It will do a lot for
Altamonte and for the economy In terms of the dollars

spent, taxes generated, and the availability of Jobs."
He said that the "upper-end" hotel will cater to
businessmen and will have meeting space for up to GOO
persons.
"More and more u mix of offices and hotels and retail
operations and hotels arc being used,” Coley said.
Trammel Crow already has 11 service center and
high-technology buildings on the property with a total of
250.000 squnre fret and will start const met Ion on
another 55.000-square-foot office service center next
month. Coley said.
He said hotel Is still In the design phase and the
company Is still involved In deciding how It will In*
packaged. "W e don’t Intend to manage It ourselves, but
wc don’t know yet whether It will be leased to a hotel

mmmm

Couple Get
$ 90,000 In
Arrest Suit

JD B A ^1

By Charles Cobb
Herald Staff Writer

Do-It-Yourselfers Digging In
U.S. Rep. Bill McCollum (R-Altamonte Springs)
congratulates participants In the Seminole
S e lf-R e lia n t Housing. Inc. pro g ram at a
groundbreaking ceremony Thursday In the
Washington Heights subdlvslon on State Road
476, east of Oviedo. Six families will be part of
the firs t group to w ork together on the
construction of their homes, to be financed by

the Farm ers Home Administration. From left,
A.A. McClanahan, housing developer for the
self-help project, James and Julia Rundell,
Awdra and W illie Montgomery, and Fay and
Wayne Futghum. The non profit corporation Is
designed to give low to moderate Income
fam ilies a chance to build their own home by
contributing "sweat equity."

$4 Million Sought For Road Work

County To Take Hat-In-Hand To Capital
By Mlchexl Beha
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County officials will
travel to Tallahassee Monday to ask
the state Department of Commerce
for $4 million to Improve and
expand Lake Mary Boulevard.
County Commissioners Robert
Sturm and Sandra Glenn will Join
Public Works Director Jack Schudrr
in usklng lor state funds to widen a
portion of the boulevard between
l-akc Emma and Rinehart roads and
to extend the highway from its
c u rre n t In te rs e c tio n at U .S.
Highway 17-92 to Sanford Avenue.
The Department of Commerce
will award $ 10 million to counties
and cities In the state for projects to
Improve highways which have been
affected by Industrial development.
Schudcr said Seminole’s proposal
Is unique because county officials

want to expand the roads before
extensive industrial development
occurs.
"it's the first time anyone has
done it. But we’re encouraged by
the Interest shown by Department
of Commerce officials."
The project links three areas In
which major Industrial development
is expected to occur.
"W e've put together a package
that fits well Into the Commerce
Department’s desire to encourage
economic growth." Schudcr said.
The proposal, which has the
endorsement of Lake Mary and
Sanford city commissions, calls for
making Lake Mary Boulevard a
four-lane road between Lake Emma
Road and Rinehart Road. The
4.700-foot section would make for
easier access between Industrial
areas on the two roads.

Lake Mnry Boulevard would be
extended about a mile, from Its
present terminus at U.S. 17-92 to
Sanford Avenue, near Cardinal In­
dustries.
"It would provide better access
and encourage other firms to locate
there. Rather thun having to get on
County Road 427 (Sanford Avenue)
and Jogging onto Airport Boulevard
or 17-92. trucks would be able to get
right on Lake Mary Boulevard."
Schudcr said the county’s pro­
posal should draw additional sup­
port from a state Department of
Transportation plan to Improve the
Interstate 4 Interchange with Lake
Mary Boulevard. The state plans to
spend $ 10 million to build two
additional lanes at the Interchange.
"T h at shows the tremendous
potential the DOT sees In this area
and the need to mnke Improve-

Shrlver testified that he suffers
from an Illness that can cut off the
flow* of oxygen to his brain and
cause him to become dizzy and
disoriented and that during one of
Ills attacks a security guard treated
him roughly und bruised him.
"W e ’re really pleased with the
outcome.” Hill said today. "Mrs.
Shrlver Is very 111 and her whole
countenance changed when I told
hrr. It's rrally heart warming She
told me the amount of money
(award) didn’t really matter. She
wanted the vindication."
Hill said he had offered to make a
$50,000 pretrial settlement with
Jefferson Ward but "the most Ward
offrred was $10 ,00 0 ."

While Mrs. Shrlver w as In the

store, a man wearing Jeans and a
T-shirt tried to pull her husband
Into the store. Not realizing that the
man was a security guard. Shrivcr
at first thought he was being
"mugged.” Hill said.
Mrs. Shrlver tried to explain to the
gunrd that her husband was HI and
asked for help. But the guard took
Shrlver Into a security room in the
store and held hlrn against the wall
and attempted to handcuff him.
Mrs. Shrivcr said.
She said when she tried to help
her husband, the guard pushed her
away. She said she forgot about the
drain opener when her husband
suffered the attack.
The guard. William Alicea, denied
that lie pushed the woman or
roughed up her husband. He said
the Interview was conducted In a
friendly manner.
Jefferson Ward officials pressed
shop lifting charges against
the
couple, claiming Mrs. Shrlver had
conspired with her husband to steal
the cleaner because she had handed
the bottles to him.

Schudcr said the county's pres­
entation will include aerial and
ground level videotapes of the areas
which would lx* affected by the
proposal. “ We hope they'll be Im­
pressed."
A decision by the state Is expected
In nbout 30 days, he said.

Future
Firefighters?
Wearing their flreman'a
bata, Roger "Mickey”
Rigga, left, and lan
Oliver,
watch a Fire
Prevention Week de­
m onstration by the
Sanford Fire Departmeat at Pine Crest
Cre Elementary School Banfo r d . B oth ex
In
five-year-olds are
«
Thorne’s
Mrs. Mary Jo Tt
class. The
from

TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (UPI)
4Uih in the country
year In uverage state govern­
ment taxes collected per resident,
but It Is rapidly moving up the
ladder.
Only eight states collected more
than the $5.6 billion received by
Florida stutc government last year,
although Floridians paid less tnx per
person than most of the rest of the
nation, the Citizens Council for
Budget Research reported Thurs­
day.

By IraR. Allen

'...a God-fearing
westerner,a fourth
generation rancher
and a person I trust.'
-R o n ald Reagan
Reagan’s trusted udviser during Ills
days as governor, serving as a
Justice on the state Supreme Court,
deputy secretary of stale and na­
tional security adviser. He had no
experience In any of the Jobs before
taking them.
But he always retained Reagan's
confidence.
Clark, who Is given to wearing
cowboy boots and a Stetson. Is
called ’ ’ Judge C la rk ’ ’ by his
associates In deference to his pre­
vious Judicial post.

mrnts." Schudcr said.
The proposal also fits In with a
study by a citizens' group stody
which recommends widening Lake
Mar)’ Boulevard to six tunes over the
next 20 years. The road is projected
as a major artery for residential and
Industrial developm ent In the
northern part of the county.
A total of 50 proposals have been
made to the Commerce Department.
Schuder said, although some of
them may have been weeded out
prior to the presentations.

An elderly Maitland couple wrre
awarded $90,000 In damages by a
Seminole County Jury Thursday In
a suit stemming from a shoplifting
arrest at an Altamonte Springs
department store.
The Jury agreed that Russell
Shrivcr. 83. and Ills wife. Emlllnc.
62. who developed a stutter und
became u recluse after their arrest,
were victims of false Imprisonment,
malicious prosecution, assault and
battery and had suffered Intentonal
inflictions of emotional distress.
On March 24. 1982. the Shrlvcrs
were detained and accused of
stealing two bottles of drain opener
from the Jefferson Ward store In the
Interstate Mall. The shoplifting
charges were eventually dropped by
the state attorney's office.
According to psychiatrists' testi­
mony during the trial. Mrs. Shrlvrr
developed a stutter due to the
psychological Iraumu. making her
speech very difficult tn understand.
Brian Hill, the couple's attorney,
.said Mrs. Shrlver has also developed
Into a recluse and has left her house
only once since the arrest.
"This has made her totally un­
functional." Hill said today.

In the suit Hill had sought
$400,000 In damages.
In their testimony, the Shrtvere
said:
They were shopping at the store
and Mrs. Shrivcr put two bottles of
drain opener, which cost $1.49
each, tn a shopping bag they found
In a cart and handed It to her
husband.
She said she was being careful
because some clothes had been
ruined when she placed them In a
Iwg with a leaky bottle of bleach
during a shopping trip several days
earlier.
A short time later. Mr. Shrlver
suffered an attack and Mrs. Shrlver
led him to a bench in the mall a few
feet outside the entrance to the
store.
Mrs. Shrivcr said she went back
Inside to pay for some other
merchandise site was carrying.

State Moving Up
Tax Bite Ladder

Reagan Shuffles Chairs
To Put Clark In Watt
WASHINGTON (URII - In a dra
matlc and unexpected shuffling of
top government staff. President
Reagnn Is putting Ills Jack-of-alltrades confidant. William Clark. Into
the In terior D epartm ent spot
vacated by James Watt.
The suddenness of Reagan's de­
cision and his Imm ediate an­
nouncement of It at an unlikely
forum late Thursday stunned of­
ficia l W ash ington House R e­
publican leader Robert Michel called
It "Incredible and balding.'’ One
conservation leader called It "an
Insult to the environment."
But Senate Republican leader
Howard Baker said. "I am confident
he (Clark) will be confirmed.”
Thr move of Clark from his White
House fumetum as national security
adviser to the Interior Department
raised questions about the Im­
portance of foreign policy und. for
the third time, questions about the
powerful Clark's qualincatlons for
such a high position.
Clark. 51. Is fourth-generation
California rancher who became

management group or what."
This would be Hilton Hotels Corporation's fcurlh hotel
In the Orlando area.
"W c are excited that Hilton wants to come here.” Mrs.
Jackson-Guest said. "One of our directors stopped by a
Hilton with a similar design that has Just been
completed In North Carolina, and he said It was first
class. 100 percent extra nice. It will be a place for the
many business executives coming to town to stay, there
are a lot of big league firms coming to the city."
With so many major companies and major money
(Inns wanting to conic to Altamonte, she said there is a
new surprise every week. "Hopefully we are getting
quality development." she added. "W e make It tough for
them to gel npproval. but when they do we have quality
ones.

were

especially Impressed
when their principal,
Carem Gager, and four
of the teachers went up
85 feet atop the tower
ladder.
H«rtM PtwU b, T im u r Vinttnl

TO DAY
William P. Clark

Clark. In a written statement, said
he was "pleased and honored" by
the nomination. "A s an American
who believes In our society, I pledge
that If confirmed I will do all thnt I
can to preserve and enhance our
natural heritage." he said.
No matter who got the Job. Watt's
Reagan said Clark Is "a God­
fearing westerner, fourth-generation controversial land-munagement
rancher, and u person I trust. And I policies would not have changed,
think he will be a great secretary of said deputy White House press
secretary Larry Spcakes
thr Interior."

Ever wondered what one of your family heirlooms Is worth? 8sturday the
Henry 8. Sanford Historical Preservation Society will host a one-day
antique appraisal session at the Sanford library-museum, 520 E. 1st
Street, from 1 to 3 p.m. A $5 donation will secure a written, certified
appraisal of three Items, excluding Jewelry, from a nationally prominent
authority on antiques.
Action Reports.............. 2A
Around The Clock.........4A
Bridge............................ 8A
Classifieds............... 10,DA
Comics.......................... 8A
Crossword..................... 8A

Dear Abby...................... 9A
Dr. Lamb....................... 8A
Editorial.........................4A
Florida............................ 3A
Horoscope...................... 8A
Hospital.......................... 2A

Nation...............
2A
People............................. 9A
Sports...........................6,7A
Television.............. Leisure
Weather..........................2A
World...*.........................3A

This week's T V movie
about the d is ap p e a r­
a n c e a n d d e a th of
yo u n g A d a m W a ls h
focused national atten
tio.i on the problem ot
missing children. But
what if it happens In
Seminole County?*
A
r e p o r t In S u n d a y ’ s

Herald.

�*• 1 A -E venl:.fl Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Oct. U, IflJ

NATSOISS
IN BRIEF
Street Gangs To Prey
On Olympics Tourists
LOS ANGELES (UP!) — Street gangs are
planning a cease fire between warring factions
during the 1984 Olympics so they can roam
rival territory to prey on tourists unfamiliar with
the city, police and youth gang counselors say.
ShertfTs Lt.-Chuck Bradley said the Olympics
mean one thing to gang members — "money,
and they're going to try to get what they can."
He said cooperating gangs would not showgang colors and signs, and would not challenge
rivals In their territory during the Olympic
period July 28 through Aug. 11.
Bradley said a heavy law enforcement pre­
sence In areas around Olympic sites and hotels
will discourage an organized gang operation,
particularly In the Coliseum area where opening
und closing ceremonies, track events and
swimming events will be held.

Helms Wants FBI Info
WASHINGTON lUPI) — Sen. Jesse Helms.
R-N.C.. the leading opponent of u national
holiday to honor Martin Luther King Jr.. Is nowarmed with thousands of pages of FBI docu­
ments on the alleged communist leanings of the
slain civil rights leader.
But despite the release Thursday of 65,000
pages of FBI Information through a Freedom of
information Act request, an attorney for the
Conservative Caucus said most of what the foes
want Is still being shielded by the government.
Attorney Larry Straw, who also represents
Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., was granted a
Monday hearing In U.S. District Court on Helms'
motion to remove a 1977 court order that kcc|&gt;s
most of the FBI's flics and tapes of five years of
surveillance ol King sealed In the National
Archives until 2027.
Helms said he needs the secret files so he can
cast "an informed vote" Wednesday when the
Senate Is scheduled to decide the issue. He plans
to lead Senate debate against the holiday,
beginning Tuesday.

Prices

| gjJ§ J j

Good News For Consumers: Wholesale Inflation Still Weak\
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Wholesale prices climbed a
scant 0.2 percent In September with declining new car
nnd gasoline costs canceling most of a sharp Increase In
food prices, the Labor Department said today.
The slight inrreasc. half August's rise, was Just
enough to move 1983's wholesale Inflation rate to the
plus side for the first time, making the yeaily rate for
Jnnuary through September only 0.2 percent.
Last year wholesale prices moved up 3.7 percent.
Discounts given auto dealers at the end of the model
year took auto prices 2.1 percent lower. Truck prices
were down 5.6 percent.
Gasoline edged down 0 .1 percent after going up the
previous two months.
Food prices Jumped 0.7 percent, the most since April,
despite a sharp 4.6 percent drop In pork costs.
Wholesale prices are those businesses charge each
other and have a big Influence on consumer costs at
retail In the weeks and months ahead.
A big Influence on the wholesale cost of foods wns a 21
percent Jump In the price of shortening and cooking oils
In September, the department said.
Private analysts say the damage from the pummer

drought raised the price of the soybeans and other
Ingredients of cooking oils.
The same weather benefitted meat buyers by forcing
heat-thrcatened hogs and cattle to slaughter early. But
that move virtually guarantees higher prices later on.
Beef and veal prices were down 3.9 percent In
September.
Factory-, construction and other capital equipment
dropped 0.3 percent In price after going up 0.7 percent
In August.
Accounting for 22.5 percent of the Producer Price
Index, capltnl equipment prices are a primary Influence
on the cost of doing business In the long run and a
decline is good news for companies trying to expand to
keep pace with the economic recovery.
Raw materials prices went up 0.5 percent, far less
than August's 2.1 percent climb. Among the raw
materials prices was good news for chocolate lovers, a
17.6 percent decline In the cost of cocoa beans.
Until the September report price changes at the
wholsalc level canceled each other so that through
August there was no business Inflation. The govern­
ment's wholesale Index In August was no higher tlmn it

I

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - A U.S.
Marine w-as shot and killed and another
wounded today by snipers firing at the
Marines around their south Beirut
headquarters, officials said. Gunmen
exchanged small arms fire with the
American troops.
A Marine spokesman. MaJ. Robert
Jordan, said the first Incident broke out
at 10:05 a.m. when a Jeep driver riding
nrnund the northeast uuaricr of the
airport was shot by a sniper In both legs.
"H r was transported to USS Iwo Jltna
for treatment." said Jordan of the ship
ofT the Lebanese coast. "His condition Is
guarded and the prognosis Is good."
The second Incident took place 37
minutes later, in the same area.
"A Marine was killed when his Jeep
overturned. He v.-ns hit In the chest."
said Jordan.
Neither man was Identified pending
notification of relatives.

There were no further details on the
violence that engaged the Marines,
members of a 1.200-strong Marine con­
tingent In (he multinational peacekeep­
ing force In Beirut.
In downtown west Beirut Thursday, an
American Marine guarding the U.S.
embassy was hurt when an unidentified
assailant hurled a grenade from a
passing car at his position — and Jordan
said It was part of "an emerging pattern"
of harassment o f the U.S. Marines.
The Marine shootings came as Druzc
Moslem gunners In the Shouf mountains
bombarded Lebanese army units with
rockets and mortars today, threatening
the shaky 18-day cease-fire anew despite
progress toward opening peucc talks.
The new shelling followed a split that
developed in the committee monitoring
the cease-fire, with two Moslem groups
suspending participation.
The Druzc rebels, who have been

fighting the Christian-dominated gov­
ernment of President Amin Gcmayel.
tired today from the Shouf mountains
southeast of Beirut at the strategic
v illa g e of Souk El Gharb. which
overlooks the capital.
A Lebanese army spokesman said the
dawn barrage was brief.
"The gunners opened a mortar and
rocket barrage against our positions In
Souk El Gharb." the spokesman said.
"The army did not return fire and no
casualties were taken."
State-run Beirut radio said that in the
northern port of Tripoli, "very high
tension remained after the bloody battles
that left scores of people killed and
wounded" Wednesday and Thursday, as
pro- and anti-Syrian factions fought.
Security reports said an "estimate"
wns that 87 people were killed In the two
days.
Representatives of Lebanon's warring

Into Training
From left, Sanford City
Com m issioner M ilto n
Smith, Am trak official
B e rn a rd F itz g e r a ld ,
and Flagship Bank Vice
President Wayne
Keeling discuss
A m tr a k 's new A uto
T rain service scheduled
to begin Oct. 30. Trains
w ill carry passengers
and their vehicles be­
tween Lorton, Va. and
Sanford. The scene was
a p arty Thursday at
Sanford Landing.

College Showcase '83 will be held at Seminole
Community College Wednesday at 7 p.m. Repre­
sentatives from 130 colleges and universities will be on
hand to supply Information about their Institutions, and
to meet with prospective students and their parents.
Show-case Is open to the public and is an excellent
opportunity to gain first-hand knowledge about many
educational programs and opportunities.

\ WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Tornadoes slashed their way
from Georgia to northern Virginia where the National
Weather Service reported one twister caused $1 million
In damage In a Washington. D.C. suburb. Snow fell In
the Rockies and upper Midwest. A storm front that
crackled northward across Virginia for five hours
Thursday nlghl swept the area with severe thun­
derstorms and occasional tornadoes. The National
Weather Sen-Ice said one tornado caused about SI
million damage to 70 homes In Falls Church. Va. and
another caused minor damage In Fairfax. Va. Snow fell
early today In the northern Rockies, where forecasters
said up to 6 Inches could accumulate In the higher
passes. Several Inches of new snow was forecast In the
higher mountains of Utah. Forecasters said there was a
chance of snow mixed with rain In the upper Great
Lakes. Freeze warnings covered southeast Iowa. Some of
the earliest snow In memory woke up parts of Iowa
Thursday morning, but soon melted on warm ground.
The 2 Inches that fell at Esthcrvlllc "Is a bit surprising.
It’s the earliest snow I can remember." said sheriffs
dispatcher Melissa Patrick. Light snow was scattered
over Minnesota and Iowa Thursday afternoon, and
mixed rain and snow fell In northern Minnesota.

was at the start of the year.
The September Index for all energy products moved
up a mild 0.3 percent despite the decline In gasoline |
prices. Home heating oil was up 2.5 percent at the start ■
of the home heating season In some parts of fhc country
nnd prices for natural gas were up after two months of
declines.
Economist Donald Ralajczak. a Georgia State Univer­
sity researcher who directs one of the most elaborate
non-governmental efforts to track wholesale prices, and
most other private analysts had cxpecteJ a larger
Increase In September.
They maintain that auto companies did not offer all of
their traditional auto dealer discounts this year to move
leftover 1983 cars because demand has been heavy
without them.
With the nation's wholesale Inflation rale Just
beginning to reappear w-lth only three months left In the
year. 1983 seems sure to end with a rate less than last
year, many analysts say. But continued repercussions of
the summer heat could send food prices up sharply.
"Inflation has not been licked but It has been lamed."
Ratajczak said.

Marine Killed, 1 Wounded In Lebanese Fighting

C o lle g e S h o w c a s e
A t SCC W e d n e s d a y
i

j |l

Sham ir Disowns Controversial Economic Plan
TEL AVIV. Israel (UPI) - Prime
Minister Yitzhak Shamir publicly
disowned a controversial treasuryplan aimed at boosting Israel's
embattled economy by Unking It to
the U.S. dollar.
Shamir's finance minister. Yoram
Artdor. resigned Thursday In the
aflermalh of a furor caused by a
leak of the proposal lo the mass
circu la tion Y c d lo th A h r o n o lh
newspaper.
The opposition Labor Party an­
nounced It would attempt to topplc
Shamlr's four-day government and
call early elections both over the
plan and Aridor's resignation.
Labor said It was calling for a
no-confidcnce vole In the Knesset.

or parliament. Monday.
"The time has come to change the
s y s te m .” Labor P arty lead er
Shimon Peres said In a television
Interview.
Ixrss than two hours after Arldor
resigned during an emergency cab­
inet meeting. Shamir said he was
told of the plan but never regarded
It as more than 'TooJ for thought
and possible research."
Interviewed on television. Shamir
assured Israelis the government had
no plans to hit saving accounts or
seize dollar holdings.

naming a successor to take his own
place as foreign minister. Shamir
has retained the foreign affairs
ministry post he had held under
outgoing Prime Minister Menachcm
Begin.
Ar*dor said his "Dollarization
Plan.” designed to cure some of
Israel's economic woes, took six
months to develop and was part of a
th ree-p h ase plan to put the
economy back on track by helping
to reduce the country's 125 percent
Inflation.

AREA READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 76:
Tuesday's 23 percent devaluation
The report said that In the process of the shekel was the first phase,
overnight low: 73; Thursday's high: 86 ; barometric
of replacing Arldor. Shamir also cutting government spending, the
pressure: 30.11: relative humidity: 87 percent: winds:
could reshuffle his cabinet, possibly second.
northeast at 9 mph: rain: .03 Inch: sunrise: 7:25 a.m..
sunset 6:57 pm .
SATURDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 3:52
a m.. 4:27 p.m.: lows. 9:55 a.m„ 10:43 p.m.: Port
Canaveral: highs. 3:44 a.m.. 4:19 p.m.: lows, 9:46 a.m..
10:34 p.m.: Bayport: highs. 8.48 a.m.. 11:30 p.m.:
A 42-year-old Sanford man was being held in the
lows. 3:35
p.m.
Seminole County Jail today accused of holding five
AREA FORECAST: Vuriublr cloudiness today with u
chance of showers and a few thunderstorms. Highs in persons at the point of u sholgun against their will.
Jamc3 Dclozlcr Hemphill was Jailed Thursday on a
the mid 80s. Wind variable mostly cast near 10 mph.
charge of false Imprisonment and Is being held under
★ Fires
Rain chance 30 percent. Tonight partly cloudy with a
88.000
bond.
chance of showers or thunderstorms. Lows in the low
★ Courts
The Incident began on Oct. 7 when Hemphill's
70s. Wind Fast 5 lo 10 mph. Saturday partly cloudy with
13-ycar-old daughte: Invited two youths to the Hemphill
ir Police
a slight chance of thunderstorms. Highs mid to upper
residence at 401 Pine Drive, according to a Seminole
80s. Rain chance 20 percent.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet County shertfT s report.
Hemphill arrived al the residence at about 8:45 p.m.
out 50 miles — Wind east to southeast around 10 knots
ARSON
and "made numerous threats to shoot the boys for being
today except becoming northeast 15 knots north of
A fire that destroyed a Sanford man's 1979 Mercury
In
his
home
unlawfully,"
the
report
said.
Ponce Inlet late today. Wind easterly 10 to 15 knots over
The youths were Identified as Roy Muy, 16. of 504' -Monarch Wednesday was set by an arsonist, according
area tonight and Saturday. Seas 3 to 5 feet late today
Tangclo Drive. Sanford, and Vincent Ball. 14. of Paola. to Ray Pippin, chief Investigator for the Seminole
north part. Otherwise 2 to 4 feet. Widely scattered
the report said. Hemphill allegedly struck May on the County fire department.
showers and a few thunderstorms.
The car was parked on the shoulder of Cameron
neck and back with the barrel of the shotgun, the report
Avenue south of Celery Avenue when some people In
said.
Hemphill made the youths telephone their parents the urea noticed that It was engufled In flames at about
and (ell them to come to the Hemphill residence, the 2:19 p.m. Wednesday, Pippin said.
The car's owner Is Keith Benton. 23. of 215 Terry
report said.
Lane.
Pippin said no charges have been filed in the case
Ball's mother. Betty Pearce, and May's father and
C » n lr» l Flo , id * J U g io ru l H o lp iU I
William E. Culler
and
the
Investigation* In continuing. He declined to
mother. Fred May and lx&gt;ls May. came to the residence
Laura Oellalieid
ThwrtdJr
ADMISSIONS
Char lei OUrer
later and Hemphill held all five at shotgun point for 45 comment further on the case.
Shirley M RooJnton
S*nl(Xd
minutes to an hour, the report said.
CAR STOLEN
Charlotte E Scudde.Cyr.ll Bu1n*r
Sheriffs investigator B.R. Lee Jr. declined to reveal
Someone took a Sanford man's 1977 Lincoln Town
Patricia A Taylor
Elba l Lilian
Ernestine Walert
why Hemphill was upset at the boys being In his home.
JOMpnJ Rubai
Car. valued at $4,500. between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m.
Willie Wllllamt
Dorottiy S Vough Ofllonj
Wednesday
Patricia A Hoover, OeIlona
Samuel R. KkL*. Orange Clip
Richard L. Hathaway, 42. of 3510 S. Park Ave., said
BIRTHS
DISCHARGES
Abie and Lynda DyLet. a baby
Sanlord
his car was stolen when he left It parked near the office
boy. LaLa Mary
Bridget D Brtiton and b*by girl
where he works at 400 Airport Blvd.
Hathaway said he left the keys In (hr car. went Insidr
E i m i n g H e r a ld
i« i «
the office und when he came out about 45 minutes later
MorhJ* Poner
That* quolahem prcth U d by
the car was gone.
A lig h t--------m&gt; Jt»»
m tm b t -1 o4 Ihe Nation*! A llocatio n
F rid a y , October M . W 3- V o l . 76. No «B
Ft* Progrtt* ...
&gt;i &gt;m
e l Sacurltie* Dealert ere repre

factions sat down together Thursday for
the first time in years to prepare an
agenda for overall "national reconcilia­
tion talks" lo cement the ccasc-flrc.
News reports today said the pre­
paratory com m ittee agreed to an
eight-point agenda but fell Bhort of
naming a site for the talks to begin Oct.
20. The site has been a major point of
dispute for Syria and the Moslem rebels
It backs.
The committee concluded Its business
In seven hours Thursday rather than the
expected seven days and reached what
G c m a y e l's re p r e s e n ta tiv e K h a lil
Mekknoul called 'Tull agreement on a
proposed agenda."
Under the protection o f Italian
pcacc-kccping troops, the gathering
brought together four Moslem delegates
and two Christian groups for the first
meeting of Its kind since the 1975-76
civil war.

Local Hams Will Drill
In Simulated Crisis
If you listen lo your Citizen's band radio Saturday
you may hear of a chemical-carrying ship burning
off Florida's central east coast and spreading toxic
fumes to coastal areas. Bui there's no cause for
alarm.
The situation Is only being simulated as part of a
national emergency preparedness drill designed to
test the ability of Amateur (ham) Radio operators to
provide communications during emergencies.
On October 15. members of the Seminole County
Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARESl. the
Seminole County Radio Amateur Civil Emergency
Service (RACES) and. for the first time. Metropolitan
REACT will participate In the 37th annual Simu­
lated Emergency Test, an exercise sponsored by the
American Radio Relay League, a membership
organization representing the over 400.000 radio
amateurs In the U.S. and Canada.
The Seminole County ARES In cooperation with
the local Red Cross, the Office of Disaster Pre­
paredness and the Sheriffs Office, through RACES.
will volunteer equipment and personnel In trstlng
the effectiveness of the disaster communications
system In Seminole County.
Directing this year's effort Is Gordon Fella.
W D4NIX. AR R L Emergency Coordinator for
Seminole County. When the Imaginary disaster
strikes, local amateurs will activate (heir stations,
many without commercial power to pass simulated
emergency messages to various officials who would.
In an actual emergency, supply the necessary relief.
These test messages will simulate Ihe opening of
shelters, their populations and their needs for caring
for the Imaginary evacuees from ihe dangerous
coastal ureas. Interstate messages will be handled
by ARRL'a National TrafTlc System, a country-wide
network for sending long-range radio messages.
If you have a programmable scanner you will be
able to hear the most of the activity by entering the
frequencies of 145.52. 145.29, 147.285 and 147.45
mhz.

Shotgun-Toting Sanford Man Jailed For Holding Families
Action Reports

HOSPITAL NOTES

I

/

/

STOCKS

Hubluhed Daily and Sunday, aicapl Saturday by Tha Sanlard
Herald, Inc.. }M N.Franc* Are., Santord. Fla J lffl.
;*•

iecond Clat

ttage

at Sanlard. Flarida SUM

4ema Dolivary: Woe*. SI M ; Manl*. M 111 t Menthi. SM.Ml
roar. S4J W By Mail: Wee* l l . l l j Month. tS.II/ 4 Manlht.
M .M j Vaar. U 1 M
_____ _________________________________

ten leh re Inter deH ar price* a t ol
approilm ately neon today Inter
dealer m a r le tt change throughout
the day Price* do not include ratalI
mark up m arkdoan
Bid AU
Atlantic Bant ............. 7JU 74'»
Barnett b*n*
*0'« unchanged
FMgthip B *nki............ M*» H i

j

FfMdotn io in g t .
HCA.......
Hughe* Supply.....
M urlian't..........
NCH Corp . . ....
Pletter ....„....
Scatty-1___ ______
Sun Bentt ...r _.
Sovtheett B en t....

........... M * If

____4*'-, «*'«

.... 7JV, 74V,
------ R'l
.... IXH. u m

J0&gt;J no tredet
..... 1JW I We
----- »** MU
----It* . TJ

GASTAKEN
Someone removed gasoline raps from several vehicles
parked at Truck World. 317 W. First St.. Sanford,
between 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 4:30 a.m. Wednesday
and stole an unknown quantity of gus from each vehicle.
Bob McGee, 49. ol 403 Terrace Court. Sanford,
reported the loss to police.

BULLET THROWN
Someone apparently threw u .38-callber bullet
through n Sanford woman's window ut about 10:30 p.m.
Monday.
Evelyn While, 22. of 801 E. Seventh St., told police the
bullet tore the screen In her bedroom window, broke the
window and landed between the drapes and the wall,
causing 840 damage.

CASH REMOVED
Someone cut the screen on the second floor porch of u
Sanford woman's residence. Jimmied a door with a
screwdriver and stole $10 0 In cash from the home
between 7 a.m. and 10:30 p.m. Monday.
Sally Carol Peeples. 26. of 509 W. Eleventh St., was
the victim.

8TATUE STOLEN
A decorative lion statue was stolen from the front
porch of an Altumontc Springs man's home between 3
p.m. Monday and 1:05 p.m. Wednesday.
Vernon D. Todd, 41. of 614 Orange St., estimated his
loss at $200 .

RADIO TAKEN
Someone removed an AM-FM cassette radio from the
dash of a 1983 AMC Fucgo parked on the lot of Royal
AMC Jeep. Inc., 555 E. Seinoran Blvd., Fern Park,
between 4:30 p.m. Wednesday and 9:30a.m. Thursday.
The radio was valued at $300, No damage was done to
the car. which was unlocked, according to a sheriffs
report.

FIRE CALLS
The Seminole County fire department responded to
the following calls:

Wcdnesdsy
—4:42 p.m.. Airport Boulevard at 25th Street, auto
accident.
—9:16p.m., 823 Valencia Court North, rescue.

Thursday
—7:52 a.m.. Seminole High School, rescue.
—8:20a.m., 1900 Patrick Place, dog bite.
—9:33 a.m., Broadmoor Street, auto accident.
—3:39 p.m.. Seminole County Jail, rescue.

i

�F rid a), Ocl. 14, I t U - l A

Evening Herald. Sanlcrd, FI.

Scandal
W ORLD Adulterous Affair Leads To British Trade Chief's Resignation
IN BRIEF

BLACKPOOL. England (UPI) — Trade and Industry
Secretary Cecil Parkinson, n close aide lo Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, resigned today after the disclosure of
his adulterous affair with a former secretary created a
major political scandal.
The announcement came as the ruling Conservative
Party concluded Its annual convention, which has been
overshadowed by fallout from the controversy over the
nffalr In which Parkinson made the former secretary
pregnant.

Protesters Demonstrate
A t U.S. A ir Force Base
KAISERSLAUTERN. Went Germany (UPI) —
Anti-nuclear campaigners, trying to halt de­
ployment of cruise and Pershlng-2 missiles In
Western Europe, extended their protests today
to the European headquarters of the U.S. Atr
Force.
They blocknded Up sprawling Rnnislcin atr
base near Kaiserslautern. In the southwest, but
the city's police chief — calling them "rowdies''
— warned they risked up to two days tn Jail If
tiicy persisted In lying In the mads.
Another blockade outside the U.S. army's sea
tlfl command In Brcmcrhavcn entered Us
second day. Riot police eu:ricd away about
1.000 people blacking roads Thursday, briefly
detained 250 demonstrators and used water
cannons to clear a path for a truck convoy.
The blockading of key U.S.
marked the
start of a 10 -day, country-wide campaign
against the missiles — scheduled to be deployed
from December unless there is an agreement at
the U.S.-Soviet amis talks In Geneva

But pressure built up all week at the gathering at the
"Th e Right Honorable Cedi Parkinson MP. has northwest coastal resort.
tendered his resignation as Secretary of State for Trade ■ The scandal had touched ofr angry debate In Britain
and Industry and the Prime Minister has accepted It with critics contrasting Mrs. Thatcher’s colls for
morality and higher regard for family life with her
with regret," Mrs. Thatcher's oftlcr announced.
Parkinson, wito admitted the affair last week, said at defense of Parkinson.
The announcement came shortly after the former
the time lie planned to stay with Ills family and remain
secretary. Sara Kcnys, who Is expecting his baby tn
Inofllcc.

January, disclosed In an Interview with The Times that
he twice proposed marriage and twice jllled her. the
second time after she was pregnant.
"M y baby was conceived In a long-standing loving
relationship which I had allowed to continue because I
believed In our eventual marriage." said Miss Keays.
Parkinson had come under sharp pressure In the press
and on Thursday, from a ranking Anglican bishop who
said Parkinson’s afTalr made him unsuitable for public
office.
In the church's first public comment on the scandal,
Bishop John Blckersleth o f Bath and Wells said Mrs.
Thatcher should have accepted Parkinson's offer to
resign when he confessed the affair had gone on for the
last eight years.
Blckcrstcth Is head of Queen Elizabeth's ecclesiastical
household. In effect her chief personal religious officer.

U n io n C a lls For H ig h e r T e a c h e r P a y , T o u g h e r Job R e q u ire m e n ts
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - A union
official has pro|»used a plan (u provldt$15,000 Iran uses for veteran teachers,
hut also stiffen the Job requirements to
include, nmong other things, a master's
degree.
Florida Education Associated-United
president Pal Tornlllo unveiled the $1.3
billion plan Thursday as an aiirratlvr to
the merit pay plan approved In concept
by the Legislature earlier this year and
being Implemented by a council headed
by Melbourne consultant B. Frank
Brown.
The plan will be presented to FEA*
United delegates during a convention In
Miami Beach this weekend and If
accepted. It will be forwarded to Brown's
Florida Quality instruction Incentives
Council.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Flight Attendants Urged
To Reject Eastern Contract
MIAMI (UPI) — One day after reaching a
last-ditch contract agreement that averted a
labor crisis, union leaders for Eastern Airlines’
flight attendants brought back the threat of a
strike by urging members to reject the proposal.
In a surprise move Thursday, the union's
1 1 -member executive board recommended that
the rank and file reject the tentative contract
readied Wednesday after a 22-hour bargaining
session.
If Eastern's 5.800 flight attendants follow that
recommendation, a new strike deadline would
be set and contract negotiations would he
reopened.
Members will vote on the contract next week,
with results expected In three weeks, said
Patricia Kink, head of the Eastern branch of the
Transport Workers Union and chief union
negotiator.
She said the board's recommendation was
based on opposition to Eastern's use of
non-union. Latin American flight nttrn on South
American routes. Eastern acquired the lucrative
4

It Is far more expensive than the
Legislature’s merit puy plan, which
would provide only $5,000 a year
bonuses tn the lop clnss of teacher.
The union's plan would require major
tax Increases. One possibility would be a
penny sales lax Increase, which would
generate about $ 1 billion.
The Legislature's conceptual plan
would provide for $2,500 a year bonuses
for teachers tdenttftd as associate master
after meeting certain requirements. In­
cluding. possibly, a written exam; and
$5,000 bonuses for those meeting
tougher requirements and becoming
master teachers.
T ornlllo Is proposing a four-tier
system, beginning with apprentice
teacher at the bottom and ending with
master teacher at the top.

A freshmen teacher would be an
apprentice, having a bachelor's degree
and passing the leachcr licensing lest.
He or site would complete a one-year
inlrrnshlp. teaching half and spending
the rest of the time observing other
classes and getting special training. The
salary would he whatever Is the school's
district starting teacher pay.
After the first year, the apprentice
Instructor would leach full-time.
After Ihrcc years, the apprentice
teacher would be able to move up to
senior teacher by earning a master's
degree In the field of Instruction and
being approved by a panel of evaluators.
After five years, an apprentice would
hnvc to move up to senior teacher or
would be kicked out of the profession.
Titc senior tcaehcr would gel a $5,000

a year bonus directly from the state tn
addition to his or her rcgulra salary from
the school board.
The third level would be associate
master. Requirements would Include
three years work as a senior teacher,
post-master's degree work and testing to
show that the work was completed
successfully and approval by an evalua­
tion panel.
The associate master would get a
$ 10,000 salary supplement from the
slate and be given an 1 1 -month contract.
The highest class of teacher would be
master. The requirements would be two
or more years as an associate master,
still more university training and testing,
and approval by an evaluation commit­
tee.

Saturday, October 15

.1

A t The All New
Sanford Location

Latins on those flights.

Honored
State Rep. Carl Selph,
R — C a s s e lb e rry , has
been named Legislator
o f the Y e a r by the
Florida Association of
Realtors. Also receiv­
ing the honor was state
Sen. Dempsey Barron
of Panama City. Pres­
entation of the awards,
given annually to the
member of the Florida
House and Senate who
have contributed the
most to the protection
of p r iv a te p r o p e rty
rig h ts and the p r e ­
servation of the tree
e n t e r p r is e s y s te m ,
came during the FAR
b o a r d of d i r e c t o r s
meeting at the associa­
tion's 67th annual con-

Mrs. Thatcher said there was no question of htm
resigning. Parkinson wus Mrs. Thatcher's campaign
chief In the June 9 general elections that gave a
landslide to the Conservatives and is widely credited
with the magnitude of the victor)'.
The convention Thursday gave Parkinson a warm
welcome — as his wife. Ann. sat with him on the
piaform — and he repeated he had no Intention of
stepping down

Bring The
Kiddies To
Meet

Carl Selph
v e n t lo n In T a m p a .
S elph, a C P A , Is a
fIrst-term repre­
s e n ta tiv e . H is w ife ,
Lilian, Is a member of
the Seminole County
Board of Realtors.

C alendar
FRIDAY. OCT. 14
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
Wekivn AA tno smoking). 8 p.m.. Wcktva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. at Wcktva Springs Ruad. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian Churrh.
SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time and place.
Tanglcwood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richards Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon, same time and
place.
Sanford AA. Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Closed.
Association of International Students award banquet.
International food and entertainment followed by dance.
7 p.m.. University of Central Florida dining room. Call
275-20G0 or 275-2653 for ticket Information.

¥ At 10 a.m. The Mayor \
O f Sanford Will Be Cutting
A Ribbon Consisting Of
100 One Dollar Bills Which
W ill Be Donated To The
Seminole High School Band
The Band W ill Be Playing
At The Hardee Location.

L
Jk

COME ON AND
HELP US TO
CELEBRATE!

A
Jr

REGISTER FOR

GRAND PRIZE
DINNER FOR 2
ONE (1) TIME PER WEEK FOR
ONE (1) YEAR
L

MAXIMUM $10 PER VISIT
NOT TRANSFERRABIE

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DRAWING 6 p.m.

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NAVE TO K
KM T
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SATURDAY OCT. 15
Great Day In the Country Arts h Crafts Festival. 10
a.m. to 4 p in., grounds of St. Luke's Lutheran Church.
Stale Road 426 at Red Bug Road. Slavla.
• Senior Citizens dinner thealre trip to Once Upon a
Stage. Orlando, to see "They're Playing Our Song."
Leave Sanford Civic Center. 11 a.m.; pick-up Seminole
Plaza, Casselberry, 11:30 run. Return 5 p.m. For
rrscrvallons call 322-9148.
f
Bazaar sponsored by Church o f God Ladles Auxiliary.
9a.m. lo 3 p.m.. 22nd Street and Holly,
Cabgrei Dance with Big Band music. 7:30 p.m.. Senior
Citizen Multipurpose Center. 200 N. Lake Triplrt Drive.
Casselberry. Featuring vaudcviUlah "Rita Ray. the
Naughty Nightingale."
Santord AA. open discussion. 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St
Sanford Women s AA. 2 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First
St.
Musical Extravaganza featuring the Trinity IntenlcnorntiutUonai Choir and the University or Central
Florida Chorus In concen. 7:30 p.m.. Providence
Missionary Baplisl Church. Lake Monroe.

SUNDAY,OCT. IB
Seminole AA. halfway house on Highway 17 92 oft
Lake Minnie Road. Sanford, 5 p.m.

2506 S. French Ave
(Hwy. 17-92)
Phone 323-1990
Sanford 9 1

Hardee Cups
With The
Purchase Of
A Medium
V Drink

r

H a r d e e 's ^

Fresh Baked

BIG COOKIE
With Any Meal Combination
Consisting Of Any
L
Sandwich • Fry
A
And Drink J P s

�»

Evening Herald

*

0 0 * ,

(USPS 411 IBO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611or 131-0933
Friday, October 14, 1983—4A

Wayne D. Doyle, Publliher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Edlto'
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Heme Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57,00.

TheProgress
O f The Arms Talks
W c have supported and continue to support
talks with the Soviet Union aimed at nuclear arms
control. But realism com pels us to say that h is
u n lik ely that these talks w ill produce an y
m eaningful result.
Recently President Reagan has presented new
proposals showing flexibility In the negotiations.
In Septem ber, he told the United nations o f new
concessions the United Stales would be w illing to
make to break the deadlock on medium-range
nuclear missiles In Europe.
Just recently, he announced a new package o f
p roposals for the new round o f long-range
(strategic) nuclear arms negotiations with the
Soviet Union. Several o f these proposals respond
to S oviet objections to Mr. R eagan's earlier
bargaining position.
All o f this appears to be forthcom ing on the
president's part, but many people believe his
purpose is to appear flexible, not really to reach an
agreement. The appearance o f reasonableness
would be helpful in persuading the Europeans not
tc change their minds about approving new
Am erican missile bases in their countries. It would
also be helpful in persuading Am erican voters to
reelect President Rcagnn next year.
The only w ay to convince everyone that Mr.
Reagan really wants an agreement Is for him to
make one. W hether he can depends, however, not
on ly on his own willingness but also on the
willingness o f the Soviet leaders to be reasonable.
T h ey arc pursuing their own propaganda track
and call everything Mr. Reagan suggests unfair to
them.
M oveover. any .agreement that is made and that
Is ratified by the U.S. Senate will have to be tested
in practice to sec if it really makes any difference
in the nuclear arms race.
The test ban treaty o f 1963 has made a real
difference. It has forced both the Soviet Union and
the United States to conduct their nuclear tests
underground. That hasn't slowed the arms race at
all. but It has cut down on radioactive fallout in
the atmosphere.
T h e hot line agreem ent o f 1963 has sym bolic
value, givin g official recognition to the nuclear
peril and the need for direct com munication
b e tw e e n h ea d s o f g o v e r n m e n t o f th e tw o
superpowers iiu tm cs of crisis.
But then there were the S A L T I agreem ent and
the anti-ballistic missile treaty, signed with fanfare
in Moscow on May 26. 1972. by President Nixon
and General Secretary Brezhnev.
The way in which the final negotiations were
conducted by Henry' Kissinger and Nixon is
described In devastating terms by Investigative
feporter Seym our Hersh in his new book on
Kissinger. If Hersh is to be believed, the U.S.
negotiators were sidelined while Kissinger nnd
Nixon carpentered up a scries o f agreem ents with
the S oviets which w ere m ainly Intended to
strengthen Nixon’s Image as a peacem aker In his
re-election campaign.
' It would be hard to say that either S A L T I or the
ABM treaty made much difference In the way the
Iw o superpowers conducted their arms race. Th e
S A L T I lim its on land-based and sea-based
jong-rangc missile launchers wre so broad that
neither side had to make any major changes in Its
plans for deploym ent and modernization. The
ABM treaty became meaningless when the United
States decided any ABM system was technically
Infeasible and abandoned the one system it built
before the system ever became operational.
President Carter cam e Into office proclaiming
that he would negotiate a com plete ban on nuclear
weapons, but failed even to obtain U.S. Senate
ratification for the terms o f the S A L T II agreement.
: A fram ework for S A L T II had been negotiated at
Vladivostok by President Ford and Brezhnev in
1974. That fram ework was retained and some
oth er constraints w ere negotiated before the
Agreement was signed by Carter and Brezhnev in
Vienna in 1979.
' In the never-never world o f the urms talks, both
sides have agreed to abide by the terms o f S A L T 11,
jfven though it was n ever ratified. Mr. Reagan has
Continued to observe the treaty terms, even
though he opposed the treaty and criticized It as a
presidential candidate.
S A L T II m ay have made a real difference, but
(he impact has not been obvious to the general
public. The nuclear arms race has continued and
accelerated.
Talking is better than fighting. It is better to
keep talking with the Soviets about nuclear arms
control than to give up the effort. Treaties have
Some value, even If they arc only window dressing,
because negotiating them keeps open the channels
o f com m unication. It is possible that at som e
futu re d ale a sign ifican t agreem en t w ill be
achieved. But not if we give up the effort to
r^gotiate.

BERRY'S WORLD

%

"A ren't you carrying this infatuation with
Brooke Shields a bit tar?"

r&gt; : • * . ' -

e iO c

By Charles Cobb

The problem of false Job credentials mid
"doctored" resumes is growing, according
to a recent survey published by Thorndike
Dcland Associates.
When they .apply for positions In . lay’s
very tight Job market, more out-of-work
executives are claiming they have held
positions In the past that they never held,
are claiming they were paid more than
they were and arc listing degrees from
colleges they never nttendrd.
More than 80 percent of personnel
officers polled Indicated that rclcrcncc
checking has become more difficult. In­

creased competition has made li harder to
select the best talent for management
positions. The survey indicates companies
arc most concerned with such key factors
as past Job performance and employment
history, wltli personality trails and Inter­
personal skills cited third.
The most difficult aspects to check arc
the Job performance and personality traits
followed by compensation history'. (I was
found that Job candidates were most likely
to conceal or falsify their Job performance
first of all followed next by compensation
history and then personality traits.

Some think reference checking Is simply
a matte* of confirming facts. But it’s a
much more sophisticated, qualitative
process. Involving a range of job-related
Issues such as the Individual s ability to
manage people.
Tnkc Your Choice: Anyone convicted of
drunken driving by Judge Phillip Schwarz
of Vashon Island. Wash., has his pick of
two sentences — either an alcohol treat­
ment program or driving Ills car with a big
bumper slicker reading: "This car owned
by a convicted drunk driver!"

JEFFREY HART

SCIENCE WORLD

Yuri
Votes
Early

3 Types
Of Flu
To Face?
By Charles 8. Taylor
ATLANTA (UPI) — Americans face
another Influenza season this winter
with a new vims on the scene capable of
causing widespread Illness.
Flu activity Is unpredictable but
specialists say there also Is a possibility,
based on observations or flu activity in
other countries this summer, that three
strains of Influenza may circulate when
the cold weather hits, an event one
physician at the national Centers for
Disease Control called "a rarity.”
But there Is good news too. A vaccine
formulated to give protection against all
three viruses Is available, said Dr. Karl
Kappus of the CDC’s Influenza sur­
veillance branch
"Our expedience has been that virtu­
ally every year Is going to be an active
flu year. Wc don't have any evidence of
how active," Kappus said.
The CDC keeps labs on the disease
through an extensive network of "senti­
nel" physlciuns and reports from hospi­
tals. So far this fall the flu situation has
been quiet.
The new vims that poses the possibili­
ty of causing much Illness this winter Is
called A-Phllipplnes, a name designat­
ing the place where it was first Iden­
tified. A-Phlllpplnes Is an offshoot of
another flu virus. A-Bangkok. which
caused much Illness across the world for
the past four years.
The vim s also is scientifically Iden­
tified as the H3N2 strain, thr same flu
agent responsible for the 1957-58 Aslan
flu epidemic nnd 1967-68 Hong Kong
outbreak, both of which took thousands
ofllYcs.

The other two flu viruses circulating
overseas this summer were the MINI
A-Braztl and B-SIngaporc flu viruses.
Kappus said these two viruses, along
with subtypes of the H3N2 agent,
caused "moderate" flu outbreaks in the
United States last winter, with the
Midwest having the most flu. the
Southeast and West Coast reporting
little, and the Northeast moderate actlvIty.
" I t was an unusual year." said
Kappus. "Instead of having one type of
flu wc had three types. That’s a rarity. It
was the first time we've had appreciable
activity of three different subtypes of
Influenza."
Last winter's flu season also was
marked by a longcr-than-usual period
when Influenza and pneumonia deaths,
which usually begin to decline when the
Incidence of*th e disease drops off.
remained higher than expected Into the
beginning of summer.
Kappus said the reason for the
extended mortality period, which In­
volved elderly people. Is still under
Investigation.
Because the flu vims changes Its
makeup every few years, vaccines to
protect against It must be adapted to the
new viruses.
This year, the CDC's Advlsoiy Com­
mittee on Immunization Practices, tak­
ing note of the new vims and the
continuing circulation of the other two
agents, recommended that the vaccine
for the 1983-84 influenza season be a
trivalent Injection designed to give
protection against all three vimses.
Influenza Is a respiratory ailment
marked by headache, cough, muscle
aches, high fever and upset stomach. In
healthy people It normally mns Its
course in a week to 10 days. But In
oldsters and those with chronic diseases
it can be a serious illness.
Kappus urged people at high risk of
having a serious bout with Influenza to
gel Immunized. "That Includes people
65 or over and people who have chronic,
severe health problems."

WILLIAM RUSHER

Answering Br'er Wicker
NEW YORK INEA) - In a recent
column published In The New York
Tim es and elsewhere around the
country. Tom Wicker fell to worrying
about Soviet-American relations, which
he described as being "at the lowest
point since the Cuban missile crisis of
1962."
Wicker attributes this alleged decline
to "the rising tensions, suspicions and
mudsllnglng between Washington and
Moscow (culminating In the two most
powerful leaders In the world spitting
epithets at each other!." He fears that
this phase will be followed by "u new
and chilling round of nuclear escala­
tion," which he felicitously describes as
a “ game of lethal leapfrog."
Conceding that responsibility for this
state o f affairs "can 't be charged
entirely to Ronald Reagan,” Wicker
insists that "It can't be laid completely
at the doors of the Kremlin cither — not
even when the destruction of Korean Air
Lines Flight 7 is taken Into account." He
then proceeds to ask four questions,
which he apparently thinks con­
servatives. and Reagan supporters gen­
erally. will find difficult to answer. Let
me disabuse him:
Wicker Question No. 1: "Is this |t.c.
the present state of Sovlct-American
relations) really what hawks and con­
servatives wanted, when they charged
every president from John Kennedy to
Jimmy Carter with being ‘soft’ on
communism and the Soviet Union?"
Answer: Putting words In yonr oppo­
nents' mouths Is an old trick. What
“ hawks and con serva tives" have
wanted, since the Kennedy administra­
tion and even caillcr. Is a cleareyrd
national recognition of the menace to
freedom posed by the Soviet Union, u
firm determination to resist Its direct
and indirect aggrrsslons. and a level of
military strength capable of such re­
sistance. What the "doves atid liberals ‘
have given us Instead Is an off-agaln.
on-agaln patchwork of twaddle about
"peaceful coexistence" and "detente,"
and a defense capability that has
skidded relentlessly from superiority to
equality, from cquullly to "sufficiency."
and from sufficiency to something
alarmingly like Insufficiency.
Wicker Question No. 2: "Has Ronald
Reagan's management of foreign affairs,
compared with that of his predecessors,
reduced or heightened Sovlet-Ameilcan

animosities? If the latter, for what
purpose? Arc wc more secure, for
example, for his having personally
labeled Moscow's an ‘evil empire*?"
Answer: Mr. Reagan s management ol
foreign affairs has very deliberately
Included candid and outspoken analy­
ses of the Soviet Union. This hus
undoubtedly angered the Kremlin, but It
has also served to remind many Ameri­
cans of Imths about the communists
that they are likely to forget amid the
soporific vnporlngs of The New York
Times. The president’s purpose has
been to uteri the American people to
serious dangers, thereby rendering us
belter able to cope with them. In calling
the Soviet Union an "evil empire." he
was making an Important point with
positively surgical precision,
Wicker Question No. 3: "Indefensible
as (he Flight 7 disaster was. has it been
wise to proclaim It so repeatedly to the
world as the Inevitable product of an
Inhuman system? Was that likely to
make Moscow more or less wilting to
deal with others more ojicnly, with less
hostility?"
Answer: Moscow would undoubtedly
have reacted with much less hostility if
Mr. Reagan had treated the tragedy as
simply a forgivable mistake of which the
less said the better. It would have
reacted with still less hostility If he had
hulled It us a splendid example of the
sturdy defense of the Soviet Union's
sacred borders, and accepted full U.S.
responsibility for the loss of 269 lives.
Wicker Question No. 4: "Even If the
Reagan administration's characteriza­
tion of the Soviet Union were taken at
face value. Is there no more effective
way to deal with It than confrontation
and armed force? If Mr. Reagan has
given the U.S. more raw military
strength, has he given us more security,
or made It less likely that that strength
will have to be used?"
Answer: "If you wish peace, prepare
for war" is a maxim so ancient that It
was first formulated In Latin. Mr.
Reagan is not deceived by Soviet
assurances that every step the free
world takes toward unilateral dis­
armament, and every Soviet Increase It
fails to counter, Is a step toward p:ace.
On the contrary, he understands that
every step wc take to increase our
stenglh makes It less likely that that
strength will ever have to be used.

"Even if someone had illusions as to
the possible evolution for the better in
the policy of the present American
administration." said Yuri Andropov,
"the latest developments have dispelled
them."
By latest developments he meant
President Reagan's condemnation of the
Soviet -hooting down of KAL 007 amt
President Reagan's latest offer on arms
control.
But what Andropov was really
signalling Is that he prefers thr Demo­
cratic nominee, whoever he Is. to
Reagan In 1984. Even as the Mondale
candidacy received the endorsement of
the AFL-CIO and the National Education
Association, It also received the un­
wanted endorsement of Andropov. The
Soviet premier was saying, as usual
rather brutally, thnt he cannot do
business with Reagan. And further, In a
world worried about nuclear warfare, he
was really rattling his rockets for the
benefit of the Democratic Party.
For all of Its obviousness And brutali­
ty. the Soviet style of nuclear bargaining
has not been all that unsuccessful. It
merely answers every Rcagun proposal
with a firm "n o. ' whereupon the
Reagan administration goes back Into
conference and returns with a proposal
that moves In substance toward the
Soviet position. The Soviets-themselves
have put forward no proposals at all as
regards the Intermediate range missiles.
The new proposals put forward by
Reagan in his speech before the U.N.
General Assembly arc In fact the fourth
formula the United States has put
forward regarding the Intermediaterange missiles In Europe.
The first proposal became known as
the zero-option plan. It would havr
elim in ated all Intermediate-range
weapons In Europe, and would have
effected the largest reduction In nuclcr
weapons In history. It should have
wowed the "peace" movement, but
didn't.
The Soviets rejected'the zero-option,
ns they have cursorily rejected each
subsequent proposal, and with each
rejection the United Slates has returned
to deep-think, and come back with new
Ideas that move toward the Soviet
position.
A dismal harbinger of the next
proposal was Vice President Bush's
remark that "something" would have to
be done In the negotiations about the
British and French missiles, which the
Soviets insist on counting us "theater"
weapon, but which arc not.
The British and French missiles are
mostly submarine-launched, and lack
the accuracy of the Soviet SS-20 or the
American Pershing II. They are strategic
weapons, which can hit Moscow but arc
not effective against a tank attack, and
cannot pin-point command posts or
communications targets. But Bush
thinks that "something" has to be done
about them In the Geneva negotiations
about entirely different weapons,
Reagan Is In the position of a man
dickering with a used car dealer who
names his price and says no to every
counter offer, the buyer meanwhile
moving closer to the set price with each
offer, while his wife stands at his elbow
urging him to negotiate, and warning
him that thr used rar dealer may be
"paranoid."
In 1960. as he revealed In his
memoirs, Nikita Khrushchev also voted
early. He wanted Kennedy to win rather
than Nixon, and to that end he refused
to release the ruptured U-2 pilot Francis
Gury Powers until alter the election.

JACK ANDERSON

Missing Precious Metals Mystery
WASHINGTON - Mystery of the
Week: Military- and civilian employees
arc stealing millions of dollars' worth of
precious metals from the government
each year. This Is acknowledged In
official documents; insiders discuss it In
whispers. Yet the Pentagon — which
oversees the precious metals recycling
centers that have become the thieves’
happy hunting grounds — refuses to
acknowledge a problem.
The recycling program reclaims gold,
silver and platinum from used film.
X-rays, medical equipment, batteries
and other Items. Sources on the Inside
say the program is losing as much as
810 million a year, maybe more, from
thefts.
The mystery is not orily who Is
stealing the precious metals but why
the Defense Department doesn't think
anything serious is going on. Here are
some examples of the depredations the
Pentagon claims aren't happening:
— The biggest losses at a slng'c

facility appear to have been at the
metals recovery center at Colls Neck.
N.J.. where un estimated $750,000 In
precious metals was lost In 1981-82. To
hush up the scandal, the center's
civilian overseers who might blow the
whistle were transferred to other bases.
Sources told my reporter Bill Barlmun
that the problems have not been
corrected and the stealing continues.
The former commanding officer at
Colts Neck. Air Force Lt. Col. Larty J.
Goar, wrote an article In an Air Force
Journal lamenting the loss of "millions
of dollars annually" through poor con­
tractin g procedures. This m erely
angered the program administrators
who considered launching an Investiga­
tion of Goar In retaliation. They dropped
the Idea, sources said, because (hey
realized such un Inquiry could cause
even more unfavorable publicity.
— In the Washington, D.C., area,
some $200,000 in precious melals
allegedly disappears every year. At Fort

Bclvolr, Va.. for example, about $37,000
worth of silver and gold disappeared
tw-lwecn July 1981 and February 1982,
according to Interna) Pentagon docu­
ments. In 1980-81. $30,000 to $40,000
In precious metals couid not be ac­
counted for at Bclvolr. which receives
more metal "flake" than any other
depository.
— Civilian and mllitury personnel
have allegedly taken 30 to 40 pounds of
flake at a time. At the Navy base in
Norfolk, Vu.. security sources report
thnt em ployees were lu ggin g off
silver-bearing submarine ball cries at a
cost of $40,000 last year.
— In 1981, un Army metals deposito­
ry In Molesworth. England, was simply
shut down, alter military Investigators
— nnd even Scotland Yard — fulled to
solve the disappearance o f up to
$60,000 worth of sliver, vehicles and
oilier properly.
Defense Department administrators of
the metals recycling program blame the

losses on bookkeeping problems and
possible stealing by employees of the
private contractors that reclaim the
precious melals.
Col. Alvin Hamblin, deputy com­
mander at program heudquarters. ad­
mitted that "the potential exists for
stealing.' but said employees can't gel
more than a handful or so of fluke. Such
small quantities wouldn't be worth the
risk, he said.
A former Colls Neck adinlnfstralor.
w ho dem an ded a n o n y m ity , said
workers there were warned not to talk to
a congressional In vestigator who
showed up two years ago. Once a
dummy shipment was arranged to trap
would-be thieves. But the warehouse
section was lipped off In advance, other
sources said.
The Pentagon turned its criminal
investigators and the FBI loose ut Fort
Bel voir. But no one was arrested, and
the Investigation cost about 8100,000 more than the precious melals losses.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Physicians Given Wider Powers
In Dealing With Terminal Cases

Friday. Oct. 14, IW J-SA

l.OS ANGELES (UP!) — An appeals court has heart attack less than an hour after undergoing elective '
dismissed murder charges against two physicians surgery and lapsed Into a coma.
He died six days after being removed from a life
an used of withholding food anti water from a comatose
patient, increasing the powers of doctors to stop support system, including inliavcnous food and water.
prolonging Hie in hopeless cases.
The family had given a written request to the hospital
stating that "nil machines (be) taken off that are
In the first case In the United Stales in which doctors
sustaining life."
were prosecuted for withholding nourishment from a
Murder charges were filed In August 1982 after a
patient, the state Court of Appeal ruled Wednesday that
Intravenous supplies of food and water arc no different nurse complained about Herbert’s case, but were
dismissed following a preliminary hearing by a Judge
than mechanical respirators or medication.
who ruled there was not enough evidence to try the
All are part of a life support system, the court said,
doctors.
that may be disconnected if relatives and doctors believe
The district attorney’s office appealed and Superior
they no longer help the patient - despite the "emotional
Court Judge Robert Wcnkc last May overturned the
symbolism" of "starving" a patient to death.
lower court's ruling and ordered the doctors to stand
"W e conclude that the cessation of ’ heroic’ life support trial. Defense attorneys appealed.
measures is not an affirmative act but rather a
Both doctors said they were elated by the decision.
withdrawal or omission of further treatment." the court
’’ We knew in our hearts we were Innocent, but there
ruled.
were times when we thought we were In a really
The court said withdrawal of such treatment was not a dangerous situation." Ncjdl said, adding he and Barber
criminal act under California law because It was "not had received deatli threats.
being used to directly cure or even address the (Illness)"
"The decision will reassure physicians that if they act
but wus merely buying lime.
with the request of the family, they won't be subject to
The three-judge panel also ordered the Superior Court this kind of criminal prosecution."
to vacate a previous ruling that had reinstated murder
The district attorney has 15 days to ask the appeals
charges against Drs. Robert Ncjdl and Nell Barber. wh,&gt;
court to reconsider its ruling and 40 days to take the
practice at Kaiser Pcrmancntc's Harbor City Hospital.
case to the state Supreme Court. A spokesman said no
Prosecutors claimed the doctors let Clarence Herbert decision would be made until officials had a chance to
die in 1981 to cover up malpractice. Herbert. 55. had a review the ruling.

Third Brake Light Could Save $434 Million
TAMPA (UPI) — Transportation
Secretary Elizabeth Dole says u
federal regulation requiring a brake
signal light at eye level on the rear
of new cars will prevent us many as
40.000 injuries a year.
Mrs. Dole announced the rcgulalion, which goes Into effect Sept. 1,
1985, in a speech Thursday, saying
It would cost as little as S4 to Install
the third brake light and that it
could save 8434 million annually.
Mrs. Dote said studies have shown
that a center high-mounted light
could reduce reur-end accidents by
more than 50 percent because the
trailing driver could not only can
sec the car Immediately ahead but
also the car in front of that one.
She said even when accidents still
occur, the added light should result
in slower closing speeds, which
would lessen properly damage und

severity of Injuries.

"W e expert to cut the number of
rear-end collisions significantly and
eliminate 40.000 Injuries as well as
save an estimated $434 million in
property damages annually." Mrs.
IV !» •;!().
She Bald the cost of the additional
light would be moderate, estimating
it at $4 per car If installed during
production or $7 If retrofitted.

She said the regulation will apply
only to passenger cars.
"W e will have tha cooperation of
the Industry." she said. "I can’t say
there won't be some disagreement
with tills.
"T h e re seems to be an un­
derstanding throughout, with con­
sumer groups, with industry and
with others who have been interest­
ed In this for some time." Mrs. Dole
said. "There really is an opportunity

to save a lot ol property damage and
a lot of injuries at very little cost.”
The light must have 4Vi Indies of
illuminated surface and can be
inside or outside the rear window.
She said It would be up to the
manufacturer to determine what
style to use. noting II could be a
long, thin bar-llkc strip under the
window if so desired.
Mrs. Dole said the National
Highway Transportation Safety
Administration estimates there
were 3,5 million accidents In 1980
In which passenger cars were struck
from behind, and 2.3 million of the
cars had brake lights on when
struck. It estimated there were more
than 600.000 injuries In those
accidents.
The NHTSA estimates 900.000
rear-end collisions will be avoided
by the use of the top-mounted brake
light. Mrs. Dole said.

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to CUrorvco W. Good ft wf Roionn C ,
Lot II Nwthwood. US 000
(QCD) Audrey Hogon lo Albort E
Martin ft Kathleen. Lot *1 Coll E
11 1 ft Lol 31 Con W IS') blk A.
Bronlloy Holl E U i. UOO
Loilio Locoy ol ol to Albert E
Mortln ft wf Kothloon O Lot 31 Con
E 13) ft Lol 33 Coil W 3*1 blft A.
Bronlloy Holl E lll .ttlO,000
Janel L. OccVlogroiio ft Ocnnlt lo
WWD Auc&lt; Inc.. Lott IS ft 14. Bit
G. Bueno Vilto E l i t . *30.400
Cynthlo Wright to Cher lot 0
Willlomi. ig L 1j Inf: Lot 17 Trlonglo
Torr .*14.000
(OCDI Cynthlo Wright to Chortoi
D Willlomi " Lol 17 Trlonglo Torr.,

(100
Sutton ft Son otc to John E
Homlol Jr , ft wf Lol 3. Blk B.
Swootwitorciub Un 111,(3*0.000
IQCDI Dodd W Gardner Sr . ft wf
Shoron lo DavliLW G Gerdner Sr ft
Sheron. Lot It, Blk A. Greenwood
Lokoi. Un One, *100
Alice Slone Wolot lo Roger B
Nof|lngor, Loll 3 ft 3. Blk 0.
Sltwort’iS'D . *47.100
JS. Dev lo Thomoi H Oulmel ft
Money P Doll. Lot 101 Wedgewood
Tonnlt Villa*. *70.300
Henry Horrli ft Patricio Harrlt
Merlin lo Henry S Htrrlt (life I Ihen
to Patricio H Mortln. Un IKB
Spring wood Village Cond . (100
Jomoi Grober ft wl Lynn to R J
Hole ft Donald L TAcCommon. Lot 3.
Blk C, Greenwood Lokoi. *77.500
US Homo Corp lo Thomoi H
Holier ft wl Am, M . Lot 41 Sutter'I
Mill Un One. t*4 *00
(QCO) Lawrence D Honokor ft
Suion h&gt; Richard X . Morki ft wl
Ruby. Lot 37 blk A. Laktwood
Shorn *100
Chariot Llaylon Jr ft W M
Clayton to Hope Hollow Dev Corp .
ftll of Dommerlch Woodi Un Two
(L o lil II Incl) *373.000
RCA lo Tracy Donnlngor ft
Patricia. Un 40 Etcondido. Cond.
tec Vi. US.*00
CMEI Inc to BftG Doc . Inc . Lol
IS. Blk 1. Hanover Woods. 114.(00
Moijndo llom*i Inc. lo Chlnh
Xhen Nguyen ft wt T»ul Yu Judy Hu.
Lot 4. Harbour Ridge. *4*. 100
SE Benkt Trull Co Tr. tn Omar
Schrock. Bog NW cor. Lol I. Blk F,
SunUndlilt .*41000
Linde W. Altaondor to William J
Petenon ft wt Patricia F„ *103.(00
Blanche G Llnoborry lo Roberl L
oily ft wt Mery Jo. Loti t &amp; 10. Blk
3nd Sec . Mar von I*. *44.300
BftG Dev. Inc. lo Loull branding
Jr ft wl Rotalle K , Lol 107 Sprlngi
Lending Un 3. (144.000
Timothy McCauley ft Anlli to
Judith Borgdio. Lol 4. Blk 3S.
Droamworld.t3.Kk)
Olln Amor Homo* to John D
Lerdner. Lot 37B Branch Tree,
*7* 000
Clin Amor Homo* to Robert R.
Slingtr ft wl Conitonc*. Lot 47A.
Branch Tree. U1.»W
Olln Amor Homo* lo Sandro E
Coper cl. Lot oftA. Branch Tree,
*47 *00
Olln Amor Homo* to Jorry M
Keitel ft wt Vivien E . Lot 47 U
Branch Tree. (44.400
Konneth A Huitoll Sr ft Barbara
lo f rad R Bohront ft wl Lynda A .
Lot *4 Blk C. St John* River E it t .
(140.000
Cento ■ Home* to Steven Weiner ft

wt Marin* M . Lot 4. Garden Laka
F ill Lfn 7*74.300
“
I OCDI Peter A Bromberg ft
Bonnla lo Peter A Bromberg ft wf
Bonnie, Un I3SA. Bldg 10. Weklva
Villa*. *100
Edgar E Martin ft wf Oil P lo
David W Watert ft wf Sue V.. Lot 4 ft
pert ol II. Meed Manor Un. 3.
*13.300
Wm W Wllklnt ft Jacqueline to
Mark W Schofield ft wt Deborah
Sue. Lot JS. La Floretla. Un. One,
*110.000
Roy G Word ft wt Anna to J
Michael Milligan ft wt Lite L . Lot
13. Blk 4. Felrlene E ttl. Sec. I.
repl., *14.500
G E Guthrie ft Eva to Benny A
Arnold ft wt France*. Lot 14. Blk I,
The Woodland!. 1*3.000
Seminole Inv. Plr. lo Marianne
Thurmond, tgl.. Un 31 Southport.
Cond Ph Five. (40.000
Bertram Gould ft Jenel to Wetley
L Salley ft wt Mary C.. Lot 31.
Wllllamton H it. trt.KiO
Lakewood Ventura Inc. to Roger
W. Scheriau. tg! Lot 3. Greenwood
Lokoi Un J. 143.(00
Coi Corp to Lull J Garcia ft wl
Joyce J.. Lot 104 Weklva Cove, Ph
One. (131,000.
Rut tell J Gill ft wt Fiorina ft Mery
G Hlckion to Billy Joe Mertindele ft
wf Dehor»h L . Le* 37 So Plnecretf.
Fourth Addn . (40.000
Itala Sllvenlrl Inv. Lid to William
F C o r * wl Eumorfle. Lol S. Howell
ettl lit Addr.. *71000
IUI* Sllvettrl Inv lo Marlin R.
Wllllamton III ft wl Anita. Lol 1.
Howell Ettl. til Add. 171.000
dftK Dev. Inc. lo Linde C Delaney,
Lol 5. Cardinal Oak*. Pit. II,
Amended Plat l k Mary. *30.000
Amerilirtt Fed lo Robert W. While
ft wf Melinda. Lo1 1. Blk P. Howell
Cove. 3rd Sec .(73.000
Jamel Farley Jr.. Repr t i l .
Jam** F. to Robert L. To Boult ft wf
Dorothy, Lol 107 Myrtle Lake Hill*
*14.000
H O North etc. co repr. to Michael
L McNabb ft wt Lauren E . Lol 4.
CrylMILk Park Sec. I, MS.000
FRC Inc., to Leo Pomeranlr ft wt
Loretta. Lol 14. Hunter* Point, Sec.
II. Ph ll.U7.000
Richard F Kulow ft wf Ettelle lo
Helton R Rodrlguei. tgl. ft Judy
ConJtkl. tgl . Lot 10 Wtklve Cove,
Ph One. (141000
Dove Brewer Hornet Inc to
Norman E. Weill ft wl Katherine,
Lot ID* Wrklva Cove. Ph One.

im.too

Murphy Builder* Inc. lo Chariot
M. Beiaih ft wf Nancy M . Lot II
Weklva Club Eitt., Sac. Nine
SISIOOO.
Norman E Brown ft wl Stella to
John N Amlck ft wt Marjlyn. Lol SS7
SpringOakiUn 5.(70.000
(OCDI Gloria C. Smith lo William
H Smith, tgl.. Loll 3* ft 30,
Wllllamton Htlghti.1100
Royal Arm* Cond Lid . to Aon J
Korhummel ft Fred C , Un 504-34
Royal Arm* Cond , (5*. 500
US Home Corp to Jonathan S
Sundhelm ft wf Shelley S . Lol 14.
Tamarak. **1.*00
US Home Corp. lo Denial J.
Buquol. t g l. lo l 1), Tamarak,
**0.300
l*S Home Corp. lo Sieve Faht, t g l .
Lol * Tamarak. 174.000.
George BUckmo-e ft Violet to
Gary S. Onytkln ft wf Lynn D . Lot 3.
let* W 3S‘, ft all of 1. Blk 3*. Sanlando
The Suburb Beaut.. Sanford Sec .
(133.000
US Home Corp to Larry J
Martha!I ft wl Olane J* Lol 3*
Tamarak. (* ) 300
Suda Inc . lo Jack L towlet ft
Linda M . Lot 147 Wyndham Woodi
Ph Two. *14.700
Sod Inc., to Mark C ttonon ft wl
Chritly L , From PI 13'SofNWcor.
ol Lot 40 Blk E Crystal Park S/0.
133.000.
Sweetwater/ Spgt Ventura to
Kirby C Leeper ft wt Peggy 0 . Lol
31. Blk C, Sweetwaiar Oaks Sec. I I
(333.000

So remember: A new Watt-Wise home can save you
up to 25% on your electric bill.
Wt* know there's a lot to think about
when jiku're looking for a new home.
Everything from its design and layout to
mortgage rates and school locations.
Hut don't forget to think about energy
usage. Because your home is really the big­
gest appliance you'll ever own. And if your
new home is Watt-Wise, it can save you
up to 25% on your electric hill. Because a

Watt-Wise home is constructed with a com ­
bination of energy-saving features that
meet FPUs conservation standards.
For more information, contact an FPL
participating builder displaying the WattWise Living symbol or call FPL's Watt-Wise
Line,"* 8-5 weekdays at 1-800-432-6563
for a list o f participating Watt-Wise Home
builders in your area;

(=PlAfi?rP

REALTY TRANSFERS
Oik E. North Or Undo Terr, Sot. 4
Un I. US 900
Sleven fleldmen. Tr to Soulhorn
Spring* Dor Corp Loti 04 ft 04.
Wyndhem Woodi, Ph II. *37.500
Somo M Lot til. Ph II. Mlg oil 1
loti to Grontor, *10 400
Eduard R Holding. Tr. ft Ihd ft
E d* R Holding. Jr, Un 17*.
Coplltrono. t i l 000

Thin!
home as
appliance you’ll ever own,

W e’re working hard at being the kind o f power company you want.
US Home Corp. to Hobart M Carr
ft wt Nancy. Loi *4. Sutler'! Mill Un
One, **3.300
Thomai O Drake ft wt Mery to
Rory a Event ft wt Olant m . Lo' 4;
From SE cor Lot 147 blk D Mllchellt
Survey. Motet E. Levy Grant.
(100.000
Steven J Grey ft wl Cheryl S lo
William R. HoutIon ft wf Dtborah,
Lot *. Blk C. Englllh Ettl Un One.
*7t.*00
Murphy Prop Inc, lo John A.
Kopke. tg l,
Lol 13. Blk I.
Dreemwold. Third Sec . Ut.tOO
(OCDI Joteph Frlpp. tgl. ft Brenda
Wetlon, tgl to Joteph Frlpp. tgl.. Lot
44. Fairway Oakt Un One, *100
Gerald R. Jonet ft wt Claudia to
Conitance G Fowler, Lot 31. Blk E.
leu pert. repl. Sanore Un I ft 3.
U7.T00
Marlon E. Sctiweickert. wid to
Suienno S Buonenng. lot* 3* ft 30.
Blk 33. Crytlal Lek*Winter Hornet
S/O grantor III* ell 3100
William Bell Bldrt. Inc . to John
R Chick ft wl Suien P . Lol 103.
Weklva Cove. Ph One. 1113.000
Pen Amer Bk Orl lo Norman A
Rouman s William J Goodman. Co
Truiltei. S L ol WW. etc. Sac
33 31-31 el al .(100.
RCh lo Mark A Cohen ft wt Rene*
S . Lot I* Hidden Lake. Ph lit, Un
RCA to Jam** A. Johnten ft wt
Debra. Lot I. Hidden Lake. Ph III.
Un I. *33.(00
(QCD) Sheron A. Morelon lo Oavld
H. Morjton. Lol 14, Markham PI ,
*100
Ervey Jay Baker. Wldr to Jay M
Baker, t g l. Lot 4(4. 04 ft 04 Town
ol Long wood grant III* etl. 1100
Michael M Morgen ft w1 Vicki lo
Ronald K. Engel ft wt Nancy, Lot 444
Weklva Hurl Club Fo&lt; Hunl Sec J.
t*3.«00
Carl r. Unity ft wf Emma to
Marlene Solomon, tgl., Lol 13 lieu N
10') Mirror Lake Minor *41000
Linda R. Johnson ft wt Barry *3
Gary E. Me Alter ft wl Mcleny, Lot
13 ft E 33' ot It. Blk O Longwood
Park. U3 000
Cynthia G. Landwer. tgl. lo Jamel
T Verkler &amp; wl Karen L , Lol I*. Blk
F. Sterling Park. Un 3. *70 400
Robert R Rytdyk ft wf Beth Ann
to Regina G M Elllt (form. McCoy)
wld S 100' of N 341.3' ot NWU ol
NWU ot NEU ol E ot Oviedo Rd .
Sec 33 30 13. *3.000
Merlin Detweller. Ind ft Tr. lo
Cecilia M Morro*. Lot 4. Blk A.
River Run Sec On*. *74.100
Jack Goodman ft wt Jo C. to Jo C.
Goodman. Oviedo. Beg SE cor. Lol
4. Slavla Farms *34.300
E. Rich ft wf Nick)* lo Gerald L.
Edwrdt ft wt Donna H., Lot 14. Blk
31. Towntll* ol North Chuluota,
140.000
Sunpoint, Tr. to Sun Valley A p lt.
Lid . Lot 3. Montgomery Rklgt. Sec
One, *100
(QCD)Lewrenc* Lucat to Noel L
Luca*. Sac 34 31 30. Lot 3*3.
Windward Sq Sec 31100
Gretien H Voyer ft wl Barbara to
David H Simmon*. 30V Lot 4. repl
blk C. Nob HIM Sec Meredith Manor.
(100
WM . Oorton ft Alice to Rudolph
Robert) ft wf yvonne, N 130' ol E 401'
ol N U ol SE U ot S#C 11 30 30. 335.400
Thermal Energy Corner Home
Syl. to Michael J Gordon ft wf Mary
J . Lo* 33. Timber Ridge at Sabel
Poinl, Un.). *340 OOC
Olln Amer Home* tc Allan An
derton ft wf Ann R . Lot 34B Branch
Tree. U3. *00
Olln Amer. Home* FI. to Harlan A
Bingham, Lol 4IB Branch Tree.
(71.100
Thome* J. Collyer ft wt Nancy to
Randy N Smltn ft wl Bridged*. Lol
4. Blk F, Summer tel No Sec. 3,
*54000
Georg* H. HoltappU. igl to Carlo*
G Araul ft wt Ana l„ Let 7, Blk C.
Sweetwater Oakt. Sec 3. *43.300

Patricia Van Action to G. Willard
Bunnell ft wt Florence G-. Lot II. Blk
E, The Forett, *37.300 “
Thornet P Murphy ft wt Lorraine
to Thomoi F. Doll ft wf Lorraine. Lot
44. Tlbcron Cove. (73.000
IQCOI Paul T. Hill. igl. lo Beverly
J Tor tor a, on* tilth Inr Lot 10 leu S
10' NealiBey Point. 4100
Beverly Tortor* ft hb Welter to
Curtll Shell.*Id tgl ft Letll* She!
field ft wt Imogen*. Lot 10 (leu S
10 1Neal't Bay Point. *100.000
John P Anlolak ft wf Virginia to
Matood Sebtll Imarr.) Lot 3. Blk A.
North Orl. Ranches. Sec 3.(13.000
Parker W Day*, tgl to Jonlc*
McCleery ft hb Roraid J.. Lul 3. Blk
11, Repl ot Pert ol North Chuluota.
143.000
t.L. Lingo Jr. ft Lacy to Louis M.
Landau ft wf Rtah, E 340 (O' of W
ion 40’ Of N 10173’ Ol SEU ol Sec
*31 II elC. *31.500
Jamei H Green* A wt Virginia to
Michael J Bayne A wt Sonia. Lot 13.
Blk a*, north Chuluota. HI Addn.
u.too
Bllll* Werren A wl Virginia to
Waller J Peumort. Lot I. Blk M.
Lake Mlllt Shore*. (7.100
Arthur H. Lucat A wf Virginia to
Sloven Antenucd tgl. A Bruce E.,
t g l. Lot 131. Woodcreit Un Four.
U7.000
Horny r Lucat. tg). A Ttofe/ivk
J. Colotlmo. tgl. to Roberl A
Sharptlein A wt Sarah P . Lol 13.
Florida Haven lit Addn, U t 000
Cltrui Central Inc toArthur G
Swart! A wl Jon an* G , Lol 41, The
Landing*. *40000
Peter Mariano A wl Kathleen to
David S Smith A wt Lynn M . Lol 31.
Markham PI .3143.000
Montgomery Wood*. Inc., lo Rich
erd G Abrtmowikl A wt Keren. Un
101 monlgomery Wood*. Ph I.
Ml,*00
Cherlei P. Cettel A wt limael* G
lo Joteph A NichoUi A wt Carolyn.
Lot 11. blk A. Winter Sprlngi. 1*4.000,
Roger A BUtlanberger. tgl to
Jama D Tumllnton 7 wt Font E.. Lot
37Otceole Acres. (37.300
Helen Rice lo Devid T. Collins,
t g l, E 37' ot Lot II A W 3*IV ol tl,
blk 47 Sanlando The Suburb
Baautllul.
Palm Spring* Sec.
*43.(00
Sabai Point Dev. to David B
tlarmelln. Stuart Frank*I A David
Holliman. Trusted. Part of Tr. R.
Sabel Point. 14*0.100
Sabai Center Corp. lo David B
Hermelln. S Frenkel A D B
Holliman. Trustees. Pert ot Tr. R.
Sabel Point. *434 *00
IQCDI Sabel Poinl Prop Inc to
Sabel Point Dev Co . Inc . portion ol
Tr R. Sabel Point, par 3 A 3
combined *100
Sabel Point Dev Co Inc lo
American
Hanover San
Marco
Partner*, Lid . tame at above, par. J
A 1 combined **01.300
Sabel Point Dev lo Philip B
Phillips, portin ol Tr. R. Sabel Point,
etc .per. 1, 135 70u
FRC. Inc. to Edwin Feuer A wt
Shelly, Lol 144 Westlake Manor un
1A. (74.400
FRC, Inc. 10 Jerome M Key A
Judith N A Morris Newman A
Merton. Longwood. Lot 74 Westlake
Man Un. On*. *71.300
Beatrice I. Wllllamton lo Grace B
Garbed*. Lott 3 ft 1. Dreemwold.
*73.100
Bruce £. Allken lo John Vtggianl.
tgl E 47‘ ol lot 17). Bik G. Longwood
Park. *4 500
Bruce Altken lu John Viggiani. tgl
" W II' ol It 30 ft E I f ol II. Blk G.
Longwood Park. (3 500
Eugene Halt II. tgl ft Betty A
Allen, igl lo John Cecil Cogburn. Lot
S4. leu W 4150 all Ol Lol U ft W » '
ol S3. Blk B. So Sanlord Height*
Addn , *33.500
(QCO I Farmer* Home Adm lo
Timothy L. Brumley ft wt Patti G .
Lol 11. Blk C . Towntll* ol North
Chuluota. *30,000

M L Nithoit ft Paulino to Eoghan
N Kelley ft wt Jeni.lter C . Let 3*.
Lake merkhem Ell* .113.300

Gunn Seawall to Johnny Welker,
Loll 33 ft II. Blk E Sanlando spring*
Tr. 74. md repl . * ) «

■............................

OUR CARRIERS!
We Salute You!
W e ’ d lik e to t h a n k e a c h a n d e v e r y o n e o f o u r
n e w s p a p e r c a rr ie r s

on

th e ir d a y , In te r n a ­

tio n a l N e w s p a p e r C a r r ie r D a y , O c to b e r

15t h .

T h e ir w o r k c a n m e a n th e success o r fa ilu r e
o f o u r n e w sp a p e r!

Evening H erald

The final link in our newspaper's chain of
responsibility to you is our carrier staff. It
is imperative that your paper is delivered to
you on time and at the right location. That's
where our carriers step in. They deliver your
paper regardless of obstacles. We'ro proud
of them and the outstanding job they do
throughout the yearl

Evening Herald
300 N . F R E N C H A V E .
S A N F O R D , FL A .

�a, ' r V

jl

Friday, Oct. 14, 1*M

ams Entertain
awks Tonight

r

la k e B rantley senior
■

■

Brian H am m an spends
his fo o tb all evenings in
th e pits, but you'll n ever]

By Chris F itte r
Herald Sports W riter
For Like Man- anti Lake Howell's football teams, tonight's gntm-j
it Lake Man- High could be the most Important one of the year.'
loth teams have two losses In the Five Star Conference and one
nore conference loss would probably take them out of contention.
Uthough the winner of tonight's game still has an outside chance
nthc conference. It lsn very slight outside chance.

h e ar him com plain.

Xj

Prep Football
£
"I think the Apopkn-Lakc Brantley game (next week) will decide
eho vhns the conference." Lake Mary coach Harry Nelson said.
But. If Lyman, Lake Brantley and Apopka start bumping each
ither ofT. you never know."
The Rams and Silver Hawks will take center stage tonight at B as
he two teams meet for the first time In the "only game In town."
icrnlnolc and Lyman are both Idle while Oviedo plays In Orlando
uriight and Lake Brantley plays In Daytona Bench Saturday
iftcmoon.

between
The
Goal
______
Posts iS B f

’ ’Lake Howell has a great quarterback and fullback and u good
lefense," Harry Nelson said, "W e're going to have to play otir
deeps off to beat them."
Lake Mary. 2-2 and 1-2 In the conference. Is coming off a 29-3
nbt of Bishop Moore In which the ofTcnsc amassed over 400 total
rtrds. Junior wide out Donald Grayson had one o f the top receiving
ames of the season as he grabbed four passes for 125 yards and
wo touchdowns. Grayson Is secorid In the county In receiving with
I catches for 233 yards (a 21.1 per catch average).
Rams' quarterback Ray Hartsfleld also had his best game of the
ear last Friday as he completed 6 o f 8 passes for 151 yards and
wo TD’s. Hartsfleld has completed 19 of 40 passes for 357 yards In
otir games. Lake Mary's first touchdown against Bishop Moore
ome on a flea-flicker play In which Hartsfleld threw a pass to
ijuyson, who then latcraied to running back Neal Wcllon who
vent 27 yards for the TD.

H*r«MHwloDy tommy Vlnctnt

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Brian Hamman's football life Is In
the pits — nod he wouldn't have it
any ether way
The 6-1, 215-pound Lake Brantley
offensive tackle spends his Friday
nights In the trenches, humping
heads with opponents on the other
side of the area called "No Man's
Land." Every inch Is a battle of
muscle and finesse. This Is the area
whrrc coaches find out who wants to
play. They also find out If they're
going to be a successful ball club. The
line of scrimmage must he controlled
for a team to win. Ask Don Shulu and
the Miami Dolphins or the Green Bay
Packers. These championship teams
thrived because of great offensive
lines.
Hamman is a throwback to the
Larry Littles und the Jerry Kramers.
He paves the way for running hacks,
sometimes a thankless job. hut a Job
which has to he done. Without the
holes of Hamman and the rest of the
Brantley line, there will be no first
downs and touchdowns.

Lake Mary's rushing attnek rolled up 267 yards as Junior Charlie
.ucarclli led the way with 90 yards on nine carries. Lucarclli now
iqs 190 yards on 37 carries for the season. Wcllon Is the Rams'
cadlng rusher with 199 yards on 34 carries while Scott Uhdcrwood
tas picked up 198 yards on 44 carries.
ff the Rams' offense can continue to move, the defense will be the
;ey. Lake Brantley managed to stifle Lake Howell's running game
it a 23-0 victory a week ago. But. you can't hold fullback Jay
totoy Lutk all the time. While Robey will probably get some good
•ardage tonight. Lake Mary would give up the five and six yard
..'ins If It could slop the htg play.
tl was the big play that enabled both Lake Brantley and Lyman
o' beat the Rams. Lake Mary actually outplayed Lyman for half of
he game, but three big plays enabled the Greyhounds to take
ontrol. It was a couple of long touchdowns that helped Lake
trantley take an early lead against the Rams, hut the Patriots'
efense was the key as Lake Mary couldn't gel anything going
'Ifrnstvcly. '
'

Patriot
Hamman
Loves Life
In The Pits
He receives no rave reviews. Not
much recognition. And until todny —
no headlines. That's the life of an
offensive linemen — the unsung
player of the gridiron. They don't
make the highlight films. They don’ t
attend the press conferences. They
just do their Job and earn the praise of
their offensive line coach, usually a
former unsung player himself.
"You want to do a story on me?" he
asked Incredulously when contacted
Thursday night. "I've never read a
story on an offensive lineman."
The fact that Hamman. a senior, is
even In a position to have a story
written about him astounds some
medical minds. Usually about this
time during the season. Brian spends
more time with doctors and nurses
than football players
For the past two years, injuries have
curtailed the playing time of the
mainstay on Brantley's offensive Inte­
rior. "M y freshman year went pretty
w ell." remembers Hamman. who
lived In Illinois until he moved to
Altnmnnte Springs prior to his
Bee PATRIO T, page 7A.

See RAMS, Page 7A.
an*

Oviedo Faces Powerful Jones
I

By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer
For the second week in a row.
the Oviedo Lions are going up
against one of the top 3A teams In
the state. Last week, Oviedo
played Its best football.of the year
In a 25-13 loss to powerful
Rockledge and the Lions have
another tough one tonight against
Orlando Jones at the Tangerine
Bowl.
"It's going to be another lough
game for us." Oviedo coach Jack
Blanton said. "Jones is a lot bigger
than we arc. They average 210
pounds on the offensive line and
220 on the defensive line and they
have three running hacks over 200
pounds. W r’rr going to have our
hands full."
Oviedo. 1-4. Is Just looking to
survive the rest of the season and
hope it can win a few more games
In the process. The Lions grt a
much-ncedcd rest next week when
they arc Idle.
Barry Williams :00k over the
rushing lead In the county last
week and he now has 469 yards on
68 carries tn five games Williams
had over 800 yards last year and
he would like to break the 1,000
yard barrier In ‘83. His running
mate. J.W. Yarborough, has had
his troubles this year. Yarborough

Prep Football
Is third in the county with 287
yards, but he Is well off the pace tic
set last year. Yarborough Is ques­
tionable for tonight's game as he
has been ill the past week.
Quarterback Kevin Thompson
has also had a pretty good year as
he has completed 22 of 67 passes
fo r 4 0 2 y a r d s and t wo
touchdowns. Thompson's main
target is wide receiver Howard
Llngard. the county's leading pass
receiver with 13 catches lor 250
yards (a 19.4 yards per catch
average). Charles "P op " Bowers Is
the second-leading pass receiver
with five for 107 yards (a 21.4
average).

Barry Williams

Jones stands at 4-1 for the
season after losing a hrarthreaker.
7-6, to Orlando Evans a week ago.
The three 200-pound running
backs include fullback Darryl
Perry (6-2. 210). halfback Leon
Perry (6-1. 2 1 0 ) and halfback
Marcus Washington (6-0 200).
Two of the Tigers' dclcnslvc
hacks are currently being re­
cruited by Nebraska. Comcrhack
Anwaar Suluk! and free safely
Avery McCrcr arc considered
among the best defensive hacks tn
the state.
"W e hope our quickness and
willingness to play will help us
out.” said Blanton, who hopes
defensive stalwarts Kevin Ycntz
and Ed Norton can help offset the
Jones' size advantage.

Ed Norton

Howard Llngard

Cheeseman, Yes
— Politowicz, No
With Just two football games to­
night and one Saturday, cross
country takes center stage today as
the Seminole County Meet gets un­
derway at Lyman High School.
The Junior varsity girls race will be
a 4 p.in.. following by the varsity girls
at 4:30 p.m. The varsity hoys hit the
track at 5 p.m. with the toys JV to
follow at 5:30 p.m.
Although this Is the county meet. It
has come atout at an Inopportune
tim e. The DcLand In vitation al
scheduled for Saturday, and It Is
considered a preview of the stale
meet since Its draws the top schools.
It Is also the site of the s t a le meet,
which allows the runners to familiar­
ize themselves with the course.
Lake Howell und Its state champion
mllcr Ken Cheeseman didn't decide
until Thursday whether they would
send a JV team or varsity team to the
county meet. "W e’re going to run
b o th ." said Cheesem an Friday
morning. "I've never done this be­
fore. but I've been staying home und
resting the past two nights."
Adding "10 the clouded situation.
Trinity Prep’s sophomore sensation
Adrienne Politowicz. who has the
best time in the county, will not be
run. She ran In a meet at Clewlston
on Thursday.

Apopka Snaps Tribe
VVin Streak; Beams,
Brantley Secures 6th
By Chris Fistcr
Herald Sports Writer
Tin Seminole Junior varsity's
three-game winning streak was
snapped Thursday night as
A p o p k a 's JV Blue Darters
rluimed a 20-18 overtime victo­
ry o v e r the JV T r ib e at
Seminole High.
Seinlnolc now stands at 3-1
for the season and Its next game
Is against DcLand next Wed­
nesday at Seminole High.
"W c got the earl&gt; lead, hut
our guys Just let up and Apopka
came hack strong." Seminole
c o a ch M ike F e r r e ll sa id .
"Apopka dominated both ends
in the second half. They held us
to minus three yards rushing
and 11 yards passing. Their
offensive line blew away our
defensive line."
Seminole took an early 6-0
lead as Alvin Jones returned the
opening kickoff 80 yards for a
touchdown. Melvin Brinson
then ran In the two-point con­
version, but an Illegal block
penalty nullified the play und
the 'Noles couldn't make It on
the second try. That turned out
to Ik* a key play In the outcome
of the game.
The JV Tribe Increased Its
lend lo 12-0 In the second
quarter as quarterback Daryl
Taylor unloaded a 45-yard
scoring pass to Robert Hill. The
eon version kick fulled.
Ajiopka came hack to score Its
first touchdown before the half
e n d e d . F u llb a c k C h a r le s
Dowdell, a workhorse for the
Blue Darters, scored the TD
from four yards out und the two
point conversion failed.
Things got worse lor Seminole
Just before the half ended as
Taylor was Injured and side­
lined for Ihe rest of the game.
Seminole’s 12-6 lead held up
until the fourth quarter. Apopka
tied It at 12-12 as Dowdell
plowed tn from five yards out.
But. the two-point run fulled
and the score ended up 12 -12 at
the end of regulation.
In overtime, each team gets
four plays from the 10 -yard line.
Apopka got the hall first and
they scored on third down as
Dowdell went In from three
yards out. Danny Daniels then
ran In the two |&gt;olnt conversion
for u 20-12 Apopku lead.
Seminole scored on Its second
play In overtime as backup
quarterback Hal Posey hit David
Rape for a four-yard TD. Posey’s
two-point pass was just off the
fingertips of Hill and Apopka
came out the victor.

Lake Brantley 22, Lyman 21
Mike Beams rail for 227 yards
on 20 carries and scored two
touchdowns us Lake Brantley
won Its sixth straight game
while Lyman lost Its second
straight. Beams, a 01 150pound tailback, now bus a total
of 845 yards rushing In six
games.
Beams got the JV Patriots on
the board In the first quarter
with a nine-yard TD run and
Dave Dclfiacco's kick made It
7-0. Lyman came bock to tie It
at 7-7 by the end of the quarter.
Lake Brantley's took a 9-7
lead as linebacker John Polak
and Peter Phelps tackled runn­
ing hack Peter Phelps in the end
zone for a safety. Lyman came
buck to take a 14-9 lead and
held 11 until haltllme.
Lake Brantley took a 15-14
lead early in the third quarter as

J.V. Football

Alvin Jones

Mel Brinson

Beams broke off an 86 -yard
touchdown run. Dclfiacco's kirk
n e v e r got o ff the grou nd
because of a fumbled snap, but
he came buck later to more than
make up for it.
Lyman came back to take a
21-15 lead In the third quarter
and It had the ball one more
time In the quarter with a
chance to add to the lead. The •
turning point came at that
moment as Lyman fumbled and
Mike Morris picked It up and
returned It 10 yards. With 4:33
left In the th ird q u arter,
q u a rte rb a c k Joh n G o w e n
hooked up with fullback Will
Freeman on a 16-yard scoring
strike to tie the game at 2 1 -2 ).
Dcltlucco then added the extra
point for a 22-21 Lake Brantley
lead and what turned out to be
the winning point.
Behind Beam's outstanding
performance. Derrick Gulnyard
picked up 33 yards on four
carries and Gowan completed 5
of 14 passes for 94 yards. Aaron
Klndcl caught two passes for 59
yards while Joel Miller caught
two for 19yurds.
Polak led the defense with 11
solo tackles and one assist while
safety Ed Garrison added eight
solos and three assists and
corncrback Chris Derdan added
seven solos and three assists.

Lake Howell 7, Lake Mary O
Lake Howell scored on. Its first
possession of the game and
went on to defeat the errorplagued Lake Mary JV Thurs­
day night at Lake Howell High.
The loss dropped the Rams to
22 for the season.
Tony Gatnes led the offensive
attack with 50 yards rushing on
10 carries. Quarterback Mike
Schmlt com pleted 8 o f 19
passes for 57 yards and he
threw two Interceptions. Willie
Meadows caught five of those
passes for 35 yards.
Tony Palumbo led the defense
with 13 solo tackles and one
assist.
Lake Mary Is hack In action
next Thursday at Ovtcdo.

Oviedo 8, Jones 8
Oviedo Improved its record to
3-2 for the season with a victory
over Jones In an afternoon
game played In a downpour at
Jones High.
Oviedo broke a 0-0 tie wllh a
65-yard scoring drive early In
the third quarter. Quarterback
C o r y H a to o n s c o r e d th e
touchdown from one yard out
and Steve Turner ran In the
extra point for a 8-0 Oviedo
lead.
Cornell Green led the Lions
rushing attack with 91 yards on
18 curries.
Wright led the defense wlth_
six solo tackles and 12 assists
and he also recovered a fumble
and blocke Ihe extra point.
Craig Duncan und Mike Bass
added stx solos and five assists
apiece.

Issac's Starting Spot Is Something To Write Home About; UCF Ploys 0-15 Richmond
When you arc a member of the Florida
State defensive unit. It's not something you
write home to mother about. This muchmaligned 11 was held personally responsi­
ble for two of the three Florida Slate losses.
When a defensive gives up 46 points and
wins. It doesn't celebrate — It goes into
seclusion.
Nevertheless. Sanford's Issue Williams has
probably been writing a few letters to
mother this week. The sophomore defensive
tackle showed enough In last week s narrow
17-16 loss to Pittsburgh to earn himself a
starting spot on the FSU defense this
Saturday against Cincinnati.
And as porous as it had been the first four
weeks of the season (giving up 142 points), a
starting position Is a starting position,
whether it be Florida State or the Lakevlew
Junior Midget Dolpnlns.
Williams, a strong 6-1 und 250 pounds,
has made great strides In Just two years ut
Tallahassee Afler playing otlcnslvc tuekle
during his prep career at Seminole High, the
former first-team all-stater has moved ahead
of senior David Ponder at the right tackle
slot for the Semlnoles. He had been playing
behind talented Alphonsn Carreker at the
left tackle spot.
A strong effort against PtU. though,
turned coach Bobby Bowden's head. "Issar
really got after some people," said Bowden
about Ms no. 45. "H e's going to be some

kind of football player before he’s through."
Bowden would like him to be "some kind
of football player" Saturday when the
Semlnoles try lo snap a three-game losing
streak. It's homecoming for FSU and
Bowden has lost three straight heartbreakers (Tulanc. Auburn and Pitt). He has
never lost four In a row at Florida State and
has lost Just four In a row Jusl twice In his
21 years of coaching.
And a loss would severely hamper FSU's
"This Is beginning to look like one of chances for a post-season bowl hid —
those years, * said the colorful coach. "I something which has become ulmost part of
think maybe winning all those games on the the schedule since Bowden look over.
road (the past few years) is finally catching
"Right now we've Just got to re-establtsh
up with us. Boy, when yuu gel In those close some goals for ourselves. We arc very
games It really helps to to at home. Ever)* disappointed — all of us are." said Bowden.
one of our gatnes (losses! has been right “ This is one of those years you can't put
down to the wire und that home crowd just your finger on the exact problem."
give 'em tha' little push at the end."
The defense was definitely a problem
Saturday, Bowden hopes the push will during the first four hall games, hut after the
come from /ns home crowd. Cincinnati used Improved showing against Pitt. Bowden said
to to looked upon as a breather, hut after he hopes It Is coming around.
what the Bearcats did to Penn State 114-3
And wouldn't It to something If a Sanford
victory}. Bowden is not taking anything for switch at tackle may to the lift a sagging
defense nerded?
granted.
"Cincinnati Is a very well-coached football
Keep those cards and letters coming.
team." he said. "You could sec the kind of Issac. And those tackles, too.
team they are by the way they manhandled
Penn Stulc. Everybody thought that was a
SPIDERS OPEN WEB FOR UCF — It's
Joke until they saw what Penn State did to doubtful that thr University o f Central
Alabama Iasi week (34 -28 win).
Florida Knights are looking forward lo
"Yeah. Cincinnati ain'i had, lei me trll playing Richmond us the Spiders arc
looking forward lo playing UCF.
you."

At last count. Richmond hadn't won a
football game In a year and one-half. The
Spiders were 0-10 last year and have
managed to lose all five (Ills year. Some of
the UCF returnees are famllar with 0-10
records, having lost all of their games last
fall.
Richmond Is looking at Saturday's 1:30
p.m. game at home as possibly Its only
chance to win a game this season. UCF is
the only Division II school on the Spiders’
schedule, so tt might to Saturday or never
for them to end the long losing skein.
Thr offense has produced no touchdowns
for the Spiders on the ground. Quarterback
Bobby Blrlcr. a cuusin to Rocky, has
completed 46 of 97 passes for 489 yards and
three TDs. But, he has also thrown stx
Interceptions. Jarvis Jennings Is Ihe leading
rusher with 313 yards on 61 carries.
Brendan Tolton is a quality place kicker
with seven field gouls fit eight tries,
including a 52-yardrr against Southern
Mississippi.
UCF. meanwhile, will to looking for its
first victory over u Division I-AA opponent.
The Knights are 0-7 against the upper crust.
Saturday's game, however, could change all
that, considering the quality of the opposi­
tion. There can't to too many 1-AA tram
sporting 15-game losing streaks, so you
better beat them when you have the

opportunity.

"They're struggling, no doubt about ltt"
said UCF coach tou Saban. "They're not as ,
bud as their record. When you're struggling
like they are. tt seems every break goes
against you."
One break the Spiders did make was away
from their wishbone attack. "They broke
the tone. When I saw them (on film), they
were using an 1-formation.” continued
Saban. .
Saban and his Knights will to looking for
those holes Saturday. "W c Just want to
play." suld tou alluding to last Saturday's
washout at the Tangerine Bowl against
Bcthunc-Cookman C ollege. T orren tial
downpours and lightning moved Into the
T-Howl a half an hour before the kickoff und
after waiting 15 minutes, the athletic
directors and the presidents cancelled the
game.
_____
GUE 8 BE8 — With Seminole und Lyman
Idle this week, the attention turns toward
the tok r Mury-toke Howell and OviedoJones matchups tonight along with Ihe
Lake Hranlley-Mulnland game Saturday.
This weekend: Lake Howell by 9 over Luke
Mary. Jone* by 13 over Oviedo. Lake
Brantley by 8 over Mainland. Richmond
3 over UCF. FSU by 20 over Cincinnati,
Miami by 14 over Mississippi State.
Nebraska by 21 over Missouri. Buca by 4
over Cardinals. Jett by 8 over Dolphins
and Redsklna by 7 over Packers.

�*

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Pel. U , 1H3-7A

...Patriot

...Rams

Continued from 8 A.
Linebackers Dill Caughcll and JcfT Hopkins, defensive
end Don Meyer and defensive back Tim Curtin have
been the Rams’ leaders In the first four games. Caughcll
leads with 26 solo tackles and 14 assists and lie also has
two Interceptions, both against Bishop Moore. Curtin Is
second In tackles with 20 solos and 11 assists and he
also has a pair or interceptions, both ngalnst DcLand.
David Homynk Is next with 12 solos and 18 assists.
Meyer has 20 solos and seven assists and is second In
the county In quarterback sacks with five. Hopkins, the
only senior of the group, has 16 solos and 11 assists.
Hopkins is nlso the Rams’ punter while Curtin handles
the placc-klcklng.
‘ Lake Mary has a fine team,’ ’ Uikc Howell coach Mike
Blsccglla said. "I was Impressed with the way they
played against Lyman. Except for three big plays. Lake
Mary outplayed Lyman."
This Is could turn out to be an Important game for
Lake Howell’s Silver Hawks ns they were one of the
preseason favorites In the Five Star Conference, because
they still have an outside chance. The Hawks now stand
at 3-2 overall and 2-2 In the conference after being
blanked by Lake Brantley a week ngn. Lake Howell’s can
keep Its chances at the title alive with a victory tonight.
The Hawks have yet to play conference leudcts Lyman
and Apopka.
Dtsccgha, however, is not optimistic about his chances
In the conference. ’’The conference title In not In our
picture." he said. "W ith two lossr* t don’t think it’s
within our rcacn. We're playing for pride tonight.”
Although Robey was held to Just 18 yards rushing last
week, he still has 440 yards for the season and Is second
In the county. Lake Howell’s second-leading rusher Is
Jeff Solomon who has picked up 172 yards on 29
carries.
Lake Howell also has the most potent passing game In
the county. Quarterback Darin Slack has completed 26
of 71 passes for 573 yards and four touchdowns and he
has been Intercepted five times. Slark’s main targcl is
wide out Jeron Evans who has caught nine passes for
294 yards and two touchdowns. His 32.6 yards per
catch average Is tops In the county. Jim Daniel has
caught five passes for 56 yards while John "N o
Relation" McKay, who returned to action after missing
two games last week, has four catches for 92 yards in
three games.
The defensive leaders Include defensive backs Util
Lang and Troy Quarkenhosh. linebacker Steve Ctna and
lineman Rick Pughc. Lang has 29 solo tackles and 13
assists with three Interceptions. Clna has 29 solos and
10 assists while Pughe has 23 solos, nine assists and
four sacks. Quackcnbush. who made the switch from
quarterback (6 defensive luck, has performed well In Ids
new position with 23 solos and 11 assists.
"W e didn't get our rhythm down on offense last week
(against Lake Brantley)," Blsccglla said. "W e had some
major breakdowns on our offensive line and didn't
perform well at all. I hope we can regain our |&gt;olsc and
ronfldenrr and piny the wav we are capable o f

Continued from 6A.

,

Dupree Disgusts Switzer
JACKSON. Miss. |UP1) — Oklahoma running hack
Marcus Dupree remained In hiding Thursday and a
"disgusted" Sooner coach Barry Switzer said he would
have the-fln.il-word on whether Dupree will remain on
th©
j (*■■&gt;i
, i ■■I -* -. ■
... , , ■, , * . ■
Dupree, reportedly spotted Thursday afternoon on the
University o f Southern Mississippi campus In Hat­
tiesburg.

Oldtimers,
Faculty
Play Saturday
Sanford'sTom m y Barks
hauls In a pass while
w arm ing up for Satur­
day's “ O ld tim ers vs.
F acu lty" football game
a t S e m in o le H i g h
School. C a r ll, along
w ith so m e fo r m e r
Sem inole g reats like
Tim Raines, M ike Good
and F ran k Whlgham,
w ill return to the g rid ­
iron for a touch football
gam e w ith the Tribe
faculty, which includes
J e r r y P o s e y , M ik e
F e rre ll, Bobby Lundqulst and Em ory Blake.
T i c k e t s a r e $1 I n
advance and $1.50 at
the gate. Kickoff Is set
for 7:30 p.m . Saturday.
Herald Photo br Boom* Wtobeldt

Wilson, Aikens Plead Guilty
To M isdem eanor Drug Charge

Pete Rose

Steve Carlton

Mike Flanagan

freshman year. "Then, the problems
began during my sophomore year, f
was brought up to the varsity and,
started one game. I was going to start ’
the next one, too. but I dislocated my
left elbow In a scrimmage That was It
for that year."
The dislocation came during the
Patriots' preparation for Spruce
Creek. Coincidentally, when Spruce
Creek came around again his Junior
year — so did the disabled list. This
time, Hnmman attempted to block a
linebacker, and "something popped In
my knee."
"It was the same week as the
previous year and against the same
team." said Hamman. "A t least we
play Spruce Creek later In the year
this year."
Hamman came up as a guard, a
position he played the first three years
for the Patriots, along with a little bit
of linebacker. This year, coach Dave
Tullls moved his talented senior to left
tackle.
” R&gt; more head-cn head blocking."
the Lake Brantley senior who Is a B-C
studcnl. "I think lhat has helped me
slay healthy."
And a healthy Hamman has meant
at healthy year Tor the Patriots In the
win column. Lake Brantley has won
three of Its four games and stands 2-1
In the Five Star Conference, quite a
turnaround from last season’s 2-8
record.
"Last year, we were really inexperi­
enced." said Hamman. "Now. most of
those guys are back. We have a lot of
closeness cn this team. We have team
meetings and everybody says what
they think. The closeness Is one of the
big reasons that we’ re winning."
Hamman and his teammates would
also like to close In on the Five Star
and district titles. To do so. they will
probably have to win their remaining
district games. "W e can do it." said
Hamman. " I f we keep our mental
attitude at the right level and get up
for the Apopka game (Oct. 21). there’s
no reason we can’t win It."
Today and tomorrow. Hamman and
the Patriots will be "getting up" for
the Mainland Bucs. Lake Brantley
hopes to stay on the heels of Apopka
(3-0) and Lyman (3-0) with a victory
Saturday at Daytona Beach. Kickoff is
2 p.m. at Welch Memorial Stadium.
And after this year, what does the
future hold for the 17-year-old Patriot?
"I'd like to play college football." said
Hamman who has received feelers
from Memphis State. Eastern Ken­
tucky. Southeastern Louslana and the
University of Central Florida. "And,
I'd like to stay In the trenches."

John Lowenstein

Hitters Hope To Clear Fog
As Carlton Duels Flanagan
PHILADELPHIA |UPI| - Though the
skies will clear for Game 3 o f the World
Series, it remains to be seen whether the
hitters emerge from their fog.
Unless someone solves Flanagan or
T h e P h ila d e lp h ia P h illie s and
Carlton, no one will he talking about
Baltimore Orioles forged their current
1-1 Me with the expected strong pitching hitters, except to put out a Missing
Persons Report, Flanagan went 12-4 In
and good dr-rrnsc. so the ouU-ome ol the
the regular season despite suffering
80th Fall Classic inny hinge on which
severe knee damage in May. He is 1-1 In
team begins scoring runs.
World Scries competition and won Ills
Problem Is. Baltimore’s Mike Flanagan
only start of this year's playoffs, allowing
and the Phils’ Sieve Carlton oppose each
one run in five Innings.
other tonight (8:20 p.m. EDT) In clear
" I havcn'l fared Flanagan except
and cool weather and veteran left­
maybe a couple of limes In spring
handers of their calibre make every day
training and you can't really count
a rainy one lor hitters.
th at," said Phils’ left fielder Gary
"Good pitching stops good hitting but
Matthews, hatting .333 In Ihc Series
good hilling stops good pitching Just as
after winning MVP honors In ihc Na­
well." said Balllmorc right fielder Dan
tional League playoffs. "The reports are
Ford, who shows no III effects from ihc
that he throws harder than the other two
lllihinning licanlng he look from Willie
Hernandez In Game 2 and who hopes to (Scott McGregor and Mike Boddlcker).’’
Carllon appears to have licked the
help supply the necessary hitting to turn
back spasms that troubled him as he
around the pitching.
nailed down the NL flag against Los
" I think there wjll I k - games where we
Angeles. A 300-game winner. Carlton Is
score some runs," added Philadelphia
2-1 in World Scries play. He will become
second baseman Joe Morgan.
They may stop serving cheese steaks’ Ihc first 300-game winner to pitch a
World Series game since Grover Cleve­
in Philadelphia someday, too. Until then,
land Alexander did It for St. Louis In
here’s n glance at some of the offensive
1928.
siallstlcsrompllrdsofar in the Series.
Though Carlton doesn’t say anything
The lop five spols In the Philadelphia
order have a combined 6-for-36. includ­ for public consumption, the Orioles
understand thebaslca.
ing O for-8 from Mike Schmldl. l-for-8
“ Carlton doesn't like to give tip many
from Pete Rose and only one RBI from
runs," said Dempsey.
the cleanup spot. Philadelphia Is hitting
“ He lakes cate of lib body." added
.133 and has collected only two extraBaltimore left tlcldcr Gary Roenlckc.
base hits, both homers that helped win
"H e’s had a great career."
Game 1.
Besides Carlton, the Orioles must also
Baltimore's average is .219, with
confront the artificial turf at Veterans
cleanup hitter Eddie Murray l-for-8 and
Rich Daucr. Todd Cruz and Rick De­ Stadium, where the Phillies wean Daucr.
"It might even help us. We’re a line drive
mpsey combining for a 3-for-19. All three
hitting team with a great defense. We'll
hits, though, cainc in the fifth Inning of
gel to a lot ol balls that other teams
Game 2 and helped the Urloles square
won’t."
the series with a 4-1 victory behind Mike
If nothing else. It may help get the
Boddlcker.
f'l’m -getting blue In the face- talking - oI tenses going.
"I don’ t know If It’s better for the
about Boddlcker." said Schmidt. "Hope­
game, hut those who do sec a lot of it.
fully, come Monday morning he’ll be
like our fans, really enjoy It." said
talking about m e."

World Series

Philadelphia manager Paul Owens. "The
extra-base hits, especially the triples and
the Insidc-the-park home run add to the
overall excitement."
Right now (he biggest exi Ilenient Is lot
members of the pitching fraternity
&lt;vrrywherc. A continuation of the lowscoring games that have been played so
far would have the clubs threatening Ihc
World Series record for fewest runs
scored In a five, six or seven-game scl of
18. 19 and 29 runs, respectively.
And no relief Is In sight. John Denny Is
scheduled to return from his stellar
performance In Game 1 to oppose
21-year-old right-hander Storm Davis In
Game 4 on Saturday. Davis, referred to
as Jim Palmer’s clone, went six scoreless
Innings In the playoffs.
The relentless succession of Cy Young
performances has the attention o f the
hitters as well as the rest of the audience.
John Lau'cnsteln. despite batting .571 In
the Series, will sit tonight In favor of
platoon partner Roenlckc. He doesn’ t
seem a bit upset.
"Arc you kidding?" he said. "I don’ t
wanl to bat against Steve Carlton."
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Philadelphia
Phillies’ reliever A1 Holland Just smiles
and shakes his head when he hears other
pitchers talking ahotil the pre-game
butterflies the World Series has been
giving them.
The left-handed fas but I Just don’t feel
pressured," Holland said Thursday, an
off day before the Phlllcs and Baltimore
Orioles resume play tonight in Game 3 of
thr 1-1 series. " I ’ve been more nervous
In regular season games lhan 1 have
been now. I’ve been more relaxed In
these games than I’ve ever been."
Holland. 31. made his first scries
appearance In Game 1 Tuesday night.
retiring the last four Oriole hatters on
three fly outs and a strikeout to save the
2-1 victory for John Denny.

Spoken like a true ottenstve. ttnc:

man. a player who loves "Life In The
Pits.”

SCORECARD
Jai-alai
Jalelet
At Orlando Seminal*
Flrit gem*
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too
1.00 140
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O N SN
I Rene Forurl*
140
0 [111 )4 40rP ( I I I 140.101 T
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Second gemt
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11*0 IN 100
tPInton Aron*
4 OU 5 40
I Negul Forurl*
140
O (1-4) It 10. P (1-41 141 tOr T
(1-4 1)40) Mr DD 1111110,10
Third gem*
4 Ren*
to M 10 00 4 N
2*0
lO lt*
I Gabion
IN
0 0-4) 41.1
17.Mr T
(411) 14046
Fourth game
t Rlctrdo Forurl*
11 00 1 00 4 40
1BllbeoMonl.il*
5 00 I 40
OLtgu* Aren*
1000
O IW ) 52 40r P It I) I4M0r T
(M 4)411.4*
Filth g*m*
tMIhtl Elor-t
UtO t oo soo
) Bilbao Reyei
1.00 4 00
400
5Ole* Ateno
O (I t) 24 00; P (2 2) 141.Mr T
&lt;1 2 5) 444.40
Slilh geme
2 Goroi'ol* F«r»h
1) *0 110 410
* Arr* Tolorlct
4 40 HO
I Gall* Zerr eg*
10 to
0 (2 4) M ill P (14) 1M.Ni T
(10 D IH M
Seventh g*m*
I Ttllo Ateno
14 40
4 40
t Mlkel Zerreg*
5 40
1 Durengo Kid Monllll*
500
0 (1 FI 47.Mr (1 11 Itt.ffi T (171)
471 M
Eighth gem*
I Tello Irejebel
tj 00 4 40 SOT)
5 40 J40
ICherol* Fereh
4 Arr* II Cheno
440
O (1 11 It.Mr P IM ) tl.M ; T
(1 )4 ) 504 00
Nlnlh g* me
7 Eduerdo Zerreg* 12 00 4 40 1 00
lOlea Irejebel
5 40 2 40
110
1 Ourengo Kid Aleno
Q (17) 4J.Hr P (71) 100 44, T
(7 1 1) 704.Nr Pic 4 (7-7-1-11-7) 1
wtnneri 4 cl 4 pert 117.M carryover
44.144 00
Itlhgem*
2G*r*r Z irn n g t
12 00 4 40 1 40
1Durango Kid Arc*
S40 440
I Tello Kouc*
4N
O (1 II 24-Mi P (2 5) m .M » T
(11-1) 211.40
11th gem*
IG elU
14*0 1*0 7 00
4 Arr*
I 40 12 00
440
I Totorkd
O 1)4) 44.10; P 0 4) m .M j t
(1-4 1)422.44
17th gem*
iGorottol* Irerebel 010 SOO 400
IGerey Fereh
500 440
400
I Ttllo Aleno
O (M l I I 4*r P 141) 74.tlj T
(41 D IM M
U1hg*m*
IGelle Aleno
I N It 40 I N
4C7tero&lt;e Totorlce
SOO 4 00
lOuroitolo Tolar k *
2M
0 (M l 41.Hr P (1-4) 141-Mr T
(14 :i)4 * M
A —1,114; Hindi* 1117.444

KANSAS CITY. Kan. |UPJ| - Two members of the
Kansas City Royals pleaded guilty to federal drug
charges four days before a grand Jury was scheduled to
convene to Investigate additional cocaine dealings.
Willie Wilson, the American League’s batting champi­
on In 1982, and Willie Aikens. a hero In a losing cause
during the 1980 World Series, both pleaded guilty
Thursday to misdemeanor drug rharges.
Both men were released on $5,000 personal re­
cognizance bonds pcndlnd prc-scntenclng Investiga­
tions. Sentencing was set for Nov. 17. The charges carry
a maximum sentence of one year In Jail and u $5,000
fine.
The guilty pleas before U.S. Magistrate J. Milton
Sullivant came four days before a federal grand Jury was
scheduled to convene In Kansas City, Kan.
In a
prepared statement from his office. U.S. Attorney for
iyinsaa James Marquez "declined further comment on
these cases In view of the on going Investigation Into
related matters and (he convening of the federal grand
Jury of the district of Kansas on Oct. 17 In Kansas City.
Kan."
The charges stem from an Investigation by the FBI.
Kansas Bureau o f Investigation, the Kansas Attorney
General’s Office and the Johnson County District
Attorney’s office In connection with a June raid ol a
Johnson County home.
The Dally News of Johnson County (Kan. tiled on Aug.
9 that Wilson and Aikens were among "less than 10"
baseball players being Interviewed for alleged cocaine
abuse In Johnson County.
According to Ihc plea agreement, no other rhurges will
be filed against Wilson and Alkrns In the. Assistant U.S.
KATIOOiAL HOCKEY HAGUE
Attorney Amunda Meers said.
W eill C o ilir iK l
Ms. Meere said the plea agreements "were the result of
Petrie) Otnuee
lengthy discussions with counsel for these defendants,"
W L T PS. OF CA
NY Rangen
1 D 0 I* H I
She said that the charges filed Thursday were the first
Ph.iedeWU
i I I I n I
stemmrom the Investigation.

NHL

NY Ivlenden
I I I
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1 2 0 2
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0 4 0 0
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Piltihurgh
0 4 0 0
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1 1 0
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2 2 1 5
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W L T Pit OF CA
4 I 0
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N Y Rengeri 4, Wellington 1
Phrledeiphle . Winnipeg 1
51 Leuit 7. Let Ang*&gt;&gt; 4
F r ld iy 'l Cem tt
(All Timet EDT)
Quebec *t New Jeney, 1:15pm
p.ttiDurghet Wethington. 7 IS pm

Motorcraft
Motorcraft FL-1A Oil
Filters Trap More Dirt
And Last Longer Than
Any Other Leading
Oil Filters. See us
Today!
j

lo n g LIFE
OIL FILTER

Offer Expires October 3 1, 1983
(Maximum 1 Oil Filter)

Pro Football
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Anterlcee Ceiltrtnce
Eetl
W L T Pci. PF PA
Bel timer*
4 1 4 447 IB 12)
Bulleto
4 1 0 4)7 114 m
NY Jot!
1 1 0 500 in id
Mieml
1 2 0 500 1)4 102
New Engiend
I 4 0 111 HI 144
Central
4 2 0 447 III II)
Cleveiend
Pittsburgh
4 1 0 447 lit II)
1 5 0 147 ri n
Clnclrmeh
Hornton
* 1 1 000 190 174
Wetl
LA Relden
1 I 0 111 It) ot
5*4111*
1 1 0 500 IM 172
Sen Diego
2 1 4 500 170 124
Dennr
2 1 1 500 M 100
Keniet City
1 4 0 111 107 w
Netienel Cento; ente
Eetl
W L T Pel PF PA
Dei tot
4 * 0 1000 1 lit
Wathlngton
5 1 4 11) ill in
Phitedttphle
4 1 0 447 M m
NY Gienft
1 4 0 400 4 i *
4
4
7 1 1
1
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1 1 * 500 U1 141
Chicago
2 4 t&gt; U] w m
Or1r0.1
2 4 1 ID HI 117
Temp* Bey
0 4 * OM 1! 152
Wetl
Sen Frenetic*
4 2 0 447 171 104
LA Remi
4 1 4 447 Hf m
New Or toent
4 1 0 447 14) in
A. lento
1 4 * -W 124 m
y. oci.it
(AH Timet EOT)
Chicago 4t Detroit. 1pm
Cto.*lend *i Pitittmrgh. I ,t m
Houston*! Mrnnetde 1pm
MomlAlN V. Jett I p m
St L*utl4tT*mp*6*y I pm
SenDiego *t New Engiend, I p m
Sen Frent*tenet New 0&gt;Hem. ipm
Buffalo il Bell. mere. 1pm
Phiiedetpru* *1 Dell*!. 4p m
N YGrenHtt Kent*) City. 4p »
Onckmih ilOtmrer.lp.m
L A .Retoon *t ieettto. 1p m
Alien!* el L A Reno. 4pm
Meadiy.Oct.ll
Withmgkm *1 Green Bey. »pm

Do It Yourself
And Save!

*3.50 r
*

1

*

filter

Meterersft

e llv

refund

*2.50

Year cast
per VKisr
•ftor
rotund

Come In Today. . .
Ask Us For Details!
OPEN SATURDAY 8-12

'

Dr- r
1•

- kg

�•A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

QLONDIE

Answer to Previous Puul*
39 Vary (Fr |
40 Found
41 On* ol a
1 C w la m ifr i
B U T AS LONG AS I'M
of diiguit
(arrow
IN TH IS M OOD, L E T 'S
4 Imitated
42 Anant
START
8 Conquet
45 Laying
12 Author of
46 Scooted along
"Th* Ravan" 51 Buddhism
13 Sola
type
14 Again*!
52 Tribe
18 Cricket
53 Rif*
1
IMd
H i f O
54 Mrs. Paron
O i i V
parts
55 Fin# soil
N c A A
10 Not havino tar 56 Force unit
minatlon
« i H D
57 Cods dot
(comp wd)
30 Spread nut
17 Coals
18 Not either
DOWN
battle line
19 Dogma
20 Middle (law)
40 Destroyed by
23 Melodies
21 Light maal
Atop
fir*
24 Depressed
On its way
22 Gonipi
41 Priest
25 Deserve
Paused
24 Hsad
by M ort W alker 20 City ol
Hawaiian
42 Alphabet
26 Novices
salutation
Phoanicia
43 Indonesian is­
27 Powarad
27 Environmant
Piua
BUT M A T ME R EA LLY \ c J £ T UM
land
28 Indian
Oomph
agency (abbr)
, .k'er; ic. c w i k / c TM P
I
44 Faith healer
currency
Lair
30 In racant
Roberts
29 New
Rums
timei
Tenement
46 Not 1st
Companion of
32 Sarcaitic
book
47 Biithmarks
34 Urins duct
odds
31
Papal envoy 46 Small fly
10 Egyptiin sun
35 Guiaa
33 Relating to
50 Lysergic acid
36 Stop
disk
the aye
diethylamide
37 Ositiaa
11 Rise and fall

Friday, Oct. 14, m j

OAG W O O D, IM S TILL
M AO ASO UT TH ATj
ARGUM ENT
W E MAO
V ;
L A S T N IG H T

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

O T T O 'S
D R lN K IN / O

A MARTINI I
t.

by Chic Young

across

1

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13

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16

18
TH E BORN LOSER

WE HAV6 A MD0E5T,CCM65T1£
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21

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34

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17

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27 28 29

31

32

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40

42 43 44

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A R C H IE

by Bob Montana

PAP. THE PAINTING JOB
I'M POING FOR MR. WEBER
IS BIGGER THAN I
THOUGHT." ___
_ ^ jj

I WAS
THINKING
OF RAISING
MV PRICE/

PUT. ARCHE,
YOU AlREAPV
AGREEPON A
PRICE." THAT’S
NO MAY TO
PO BUSINESS.1

SUPPOSE MX) WERE THE
GOVERNMENT ANP A
CONTRACTOR AGREEP TO
PO A JOB FOR $ 7 5 M IlllO N ANP THEN-

45 46

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57

47 45

J±

HOROSCOPE
What The D ay W ill Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 15. 1983

EEK &amp; M E E K

by Howie Schneider

P££HAR5...1UH£(U ARE.
THE VISITIUG, M D U R ^?

WjAUTTD GO
MY P L A C E ?

M R. M E N AND L IT T L E MISS
---------------------------------

\ 7

&lt;r'»cmo...‘T0U TAKE ALL THE
F(A) OUT OF BEIk)G SIfUGIG!

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

____

HELLO/ LO N D O N?
HAVE YOU GOT R^cM
FOR, ONE MORE ?

M AKE A

oRESERVATION
c
FOR
^ M E , WILL TOO

/VMSS scatterbrain i
[ HAVE TO FLY
TO LONDON
IMMEDIATELY/

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

S A Y I M DETERM INED T&amp; D 3 0 P 5 0

A S FAT A S YO U A R E
A N D T H E W A V V tX J
E A T /VO W A Y /

(2SHT N0M£ SO N /I M
A B O U T TO P R O P 3 0
USLYP0UNDSINA5KDNR

nhout something outside
of your sphere of Influence
may present Itself today.
Keep the faith.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Your powers of ob­
servation and your ability
to probe beneath surface
facades arc your greatest
assets today. You'll know
how to use them advuntugcously.
ARIES (March 21-AptII
1 9 ) Helpful Information
can be g a in e d to d a y
through discussions with
associates who don't limit
their thinking to tradi­
tional concepts. Seek them
out.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) Act In harmony with
your ambitious Impulses
today. You can advance
your position In life If you
utilize your Ideas.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June
20) Mind, not muscle, will
g iv e you the edge In
ath letic events today.
Conceive a good game
p la n , th e n fo llo w It
through to the letter.

Tills coming year you
will develop n far more
optimistic and positive at­
titude than you’ve ever
had In the past. The words
“ I can't” won’t be In your
vocabulary.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Try to enlarge your
social schedule today.
You'll be In a warm, gre­
garious mood and will find
II enjoyable lo mix with
many groups. Libra pre­
dictions for the year ahead
are now ready. Romance,
career, luck, earnings,
travel and much more arc
discussed. Send $1 to
Astro-Graph. Box 489.
Radio City Station. N.Y.
10019. Send an additional
$2 for the NEW AstroGraph Matchmaker wheel
and b o o k le t. R cvcn ls
romantic compatibilities
for all signs. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Although you will Ik*
tempted to do otherwise. It
will prove wise today not
CANCER (June 21-July
to discuss confidential
family matters with out­ 22) You have the ability
today to ncc merit In
siders.
c h a n g in g c o n d it io n s
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. which may confuse others.
23-Dec. 21) Seek compa­ You'll succeed bccnusc
nions today whose Inter­ you'll know how to adapt.
ests closely parallel yours
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
and who mentally operate
Your
cooperative spirit is
on your wavelength. Each
can trigger the other's Contagious today. Because
you'll show a Willingness
thinking.
(o be helpful, this will
C A P R I C O R N (D e e . encourage your compa­
22-Jan. 19) As today's nions to act similarly.
events unfold you may be
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept.
exposed to a number o f
small opportunities for 22) Although you may not
material gains. They're reap large gains today, you
should atlll be able lo b I io w
not apt to be related.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- a tidy profit by figuring
Feb. 19) Good news for o u t l i t t l e w a y s t o
which you've been hoping economize.

Heart Flutters May
Not Be Too Serious
DEAR DR. LAMB Do you have any Health
Letter explaining atrial
fibrillation or flutter? ! am
a very healthy 48-ycar-old
man. 6 -foot- 1 and weigh
170 pounds. 1 have had no
previous Illnesses of any
kind other than the usunl
childhood diseases.
Six months ago I noted
that my heartbeat was
Irregular. A fter tryin g
drugs (Dlgoxln and others
through my veins). I began
electro-conversion treat­
ment.
I was back to a normal
rhythm for less than a
month and then I started
to have erratic beats again.
I've been on Dlgoxln since
conversion. But for the
past :overal weeks my
heartbeat has again been
almost constantly erratic.
] sutler no noticeable
effects. For the past three
weeks I have been on
Dlgoxln. Oulnnglutc and
Coumadin. An echogram
showed nothing nnd there
w’ere no chem ical Im­
balances.
H ow m a n y e le c tr o conversions arc prudent?
What about long term
usage of the medicines I'm
on? Docs this make me a
candidate for other cardiac
ailments?
DEAR READER - There
arc people who have atrial
fibrillation and do not
have any underlying heart
disease. In other Instances
ntrinl fibrillation can be
from a number of different
heart diseases.
Atrial fibrillation means
the top of the heart (the
atria) Is beating at a rate of
around 500 tim es per
minute. Only a few of
these Impulses trigger the
bottom part of the heart
(ven tricles) that pump
blood to your body. When
the ventricle rate remains
slow you may not notice
that you are flbrtllattng.
Recurrent attacks of
atrial fibrillation can occur
an d a re s o m e tim e s
associated with specific
(mbits. I would recom­
m end that you avoid
alcohol, coffee or other
drinks containing caffeine
and do not smoke.

W IN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
♦ KQJ7

Ifr-M It

V li

♦ J75
♦ QJ97
WEST
EAST
♦ 945
♦ IJI
VK96
YQ74S
9 Q 10
♦ A IM J
♦ 10154
♦ AS
SOUTH
♦ A 104
V A J I0S
♦ KOI
♦ K62

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West North East
Pass
Pau
Pass

:♦
J NT

Pau
Pau

Sootk
1NT
2Y
Pau

Opening lead: ♦&lt;

Dy Oswald Jacoby
and Jatnea Jacoby
The standard no-trump
opener In the Cavendish
game Is 15-17 and there
are those who cheat a
point and go down to 14
when the spirit moves
them. South had Ills 15,
but 4-3-3-S distribution Is
not as p ro d u c tiv e as

G A R F IE L D
FR A N K AND E R N E S T

The medicines you arc
now on are some of (hose
commonly used lo control
th e p r o b l e m . T h e
electro-conversions arc
fine but I would prefer for
you lo be permanently
controlled with medication
lo prevent recurrences If
that Is possible.
Atrial fibrillation Is dis­
cussed In more detail In
The Health Letter 6-12.
H e a rt I r r e g u l a r i t i e s .
Sk i p p e d Beats.
Tachycardia, which 1 am
sending you.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
a 28-year-old woman and
h a v e r e c e n tly b een
d ia g n o s e d as h a v in g
pctcchlac. I'm currently
waiting for the results on
blood work that was done.
I would like to know
more about the condition,
the causes and treatment.
DEAR READER P c t c c h la c a rc s m a ll
hemorrhages. They cause
purplish-red spots In the
skin or In the mouth. They
are commonly within the
skin or subcutaneous aren.
They occur because of
some abnormality In blood
clotting mechanism, un­
less they are associated
with mechanical factors.
There arc many things
that can affect the blood
clotting mechanism or
prom ote hem orrhages.
That Includes liver disease
or any disease that affects
th e b lo o d p l a t e l e t s .
Platelets are the tlnv rrlls
In your blood that are
Involved In starting the
clottin g process. Your
doctors will have to know
the results of your tests to
know what you have be­
fore deciding what should
be d o n e a b o u t t he
pctcchlac.
Send y o u r questions to
Dr. U m b . P.O. Box 1551.
Radio C ity Station, New
York. N.Y. 10019.

4-4-3-2 or S-3-3-2 and
since North took him lo
game with only 10 highcard points, things were
no! loo promising.
Still, there was hope,
and with the help of a
blocked diamond suit and
c a re fu l, c o rrec t p lay.
South brought the game
safely home. Of course,
things might have been
better. If East had had to
play the diamond queen at
trick one there would have
been two diamond tricks,
but E a s t's 10 fo rce d
South's king.
South led his deuce of
clubs at trick two. West
played low and dummy’s
Jack held the trick. Many
players would have led a
club back toward the king
next, but South wanted to
guard ugalnBt the actual
club situation so he came
back to his hand with the
10 of spades In order to
lead hts six clubs.
West had to use his acc
to capture that card In-«*cad of the king and now
South was sure of three
clubs, four spades, the
diamond taken at trick
one, his acc of hearts and
ap p ro b a tio n from his
partner.

by Jim

by Bob Thaves

f

L ik e

ir ?

MAPK I

IT '/

a

New

Pu n c t u a t io n

IN V E N TFP .

jCyQ

A N N IE

by Leonard Star

TUM BLEW EEDS

HI,CL/IU5*(HOMi GOT AMY JUICY f W
FOR M Y
---------------------GOSSIP
COLUMN?

NO! ONE 0* THEM!
sees SOMETHIN'
THROUGH HIS

J F ITS
LOOM THEY/tB
AMR//} HE
JUMPIN' INTO THEfl
SEES, SHE5 CAM! THEY'RE &lt;50IN

�Friday, Oct. I I , 1 M J -IA

Evaning Herald, Sanford, FI

G ard en i

P r o t e c t iv e
At a time when summer weather
seems reluctant to leave it may be
somewhat difficult to start thinking
about protecting outdoor plants
from cold Injury. However with fall
already here and winter lurking in
the wings it Is not too early to stall
getting prepared. Garden hobbyists
should anticipate the Increasing
hazard of cold damugc to tender
ornnmrnlals and lake necessary
precautions, Cold damage Is a
pcrcnnlnl. but not necessarily disas­
trous problem If you arc prepared to
tukc protective nctlon whenever
frost or freeze warnings arc Issued.
You may have heard about many
ways to protect ornamentals from

A c t io n

County Extension
Director
323-2500

cold. Of course, commercial pro­
ducers of landscape plants use
"heatlug more than any other
method. However, heating can
p r e s e n t s om e p r o b le m s fo r
gardeners trying to protect large
plants growing in the open. Still,
wherever practical, the best way to

A v o id s

protect home plantings from freez­
ing temperatures Is to hent them
with an ordinary light bulh, under a
sheet, plastic or some similar cov­
ering.
Even If you don't use a light bulb
or other heat source, you can reduce
the amount of cold injury your
plants will suffer by covering them.
Coverings will help keep plants
from cooling ofT as fast as they
would otherwise. And. If the cov­
erings reach the ground they can
help make belter use of ground
heat. Surprising as It may seem,
covering a plant may also help
prevent cold damage by providing
shade during Hie day. If a plan! has

C o ld

D a m a g e

frozen. It will thaw out more slowly
If it is under shade. This results in
teas cold Injury.
H o w ever. In s p ile o f these
benefits, covering a plant without
additional heat Is primarily a
method of providing protection
against frost, rather than hard
freezes. Also, It is Important to
remove the coverings when the
weather warms up. even If it Is only
a day or two. otherwise the plants
may suiter burning.
The use of mulch Is one cold
protection measure which causes a
lot of confusion. If the temperature
drops below freezing for Just a few
hours n good layer of mulch often

To

will lead to Increased cold damage
to the tops of your plants. This top
Injury results from the mulch
keeping ground heat In the ground,
away from leaves and branches. So,
If a brief overnight freeze Is forecast,
you may want to pull back the
mulch from your plants. Out longrr
periods of very cold weather arc a
different matter. If you expect It to
get so cold the tops of the plants
may lx- killed regardless of what
you do. leave the mulch In place. It
may hold enough ground heat to
keep the base of the plant and Its
roots from being frnzrn. A plant
may come back from considerable

P la n t s

cold damage lb foliage and bran'
ches. but If the roots oi trunk at
ground levrl arc frozen, you fliajp
lose the entire plant.
Proper cultural practices can go a
long way toward protecting plants
from cold. It Is Important to havfc
plants In good condition but not
pushed for vegetative growth. Early
October should be the cut-off date
for fertilizing all hut most hardy
plants. Adequate moisture during
cold weather will also help plants
survive the lower temperatures.

All Extension Programs arc open
to anyone regardless of race, colon
sex or nntlonal origin.

Camp Souvenirs Startle
Precocious Teen's Mom
talk) and ultimately confusing sex with love. And doiCt
blame yourself for telling your daughter "too muchj"
what our children don't know can hurt them.
DEAR ADBY: Please find room for this in your
column and a million people will bless you. I am one of
many people over 60 who have a hearing loss. I am not
deaf, and 1 hear most everything that's said, but 1 wish
people would not speak with their heads turned Irj
another direction from the person they are speaking t&lt;£
This Is so Important. It Just drives me up a wall when!
someone talks to me and keeps turning his head every',
which way exrcpt where I ami

DEAR ABDY: While my

12 -year-old daughter was

W illia m a n d A d e le P ir ig y i s t a r in 'M u s ic a l W o rld

In A n d A ro u n d G e n e v a

Free Concert To Feature
Variety Music Program
"The Musical World of Sir William und Lady
Adele" will be the theme of a community concert
to be presented on Saturday. Oct. 22. at 7 p in., in
the Geneva Cummunlty Hall.
William and Adele Plrtgyl of Casselberry will
direct the musical variety show which will include
a choral group. The Mclodians. Highlights of the
evening will be a scene from "The Merry Widow."
choral selections from "Oklahoma" and "It’s a
Grand Night for Singing." as well as Vocal and
piano solos. "And This Is My Beloved." "Love Me
Tonight." "Autumn Leaves." und "Deep Purple."
The Pirtgyls have traveled on the European
o jhtu
circuit, directed a musical company In
California, and currrnty teach voice and piano at
the Allegro Music Store In Orlando. For the past 10
years they have been traveling throughout Florida
providing community concerts appearing at the

College Prep Course
The Jewish Community Center In Maitland will
offer a college board prep course to help students
prepare for fall exams. The course Is designed to
help students Improve thrir college boards by
developing skills In the verbal areas o f antonyms,
analogies, vocabulary and reading comprehension,
as well as math areas, problem solving, graph
reading, quanlltative skills. Relaxation therapy will
be Included In the course to reduce test anxiety.
Instructor Is Jayne Druckcr. M.Ed.
Classes will be held on Tuesdays, beginning Oct.
25 from 7*10 p.m. for right, three-hour sessions to
be held at the Jewish Community Center at 851 N.
Maitland Avenue In Maitland.
For further Information call: Robin Caine, youth
director. 645-5933.

Lou
Childers

Euslmonte Civic Center In Altamonte Springs, the
St. Augustine's Days In Spain Festival, and many
others.
Gcncvians will surely be glad the Plrigyis
brought their concert to our community. This
musical program promises to be entertainment for
the entire family to enjoy. Admission will be free to
the public with a free will offering.

visitin g her cousin In
another slate. 1 cleaned
U 6Q T
out the gear she brought
^
jJ f
back from camp. In her
*
A u b v
backpack I found 24 large
•
color photos of teen-aged
boys, naked and in a state
of arousal. I also found a box of a dozen condoms; one
had been removed from its Inner foil wrap. H er father
and 1 have always talked openly with her about sex ever
since she was old enough to ask questions. When she
was 4. she expressed curiosity about the male anatomy,
so I showed her a picture of Michelangelo's David.
We've had long talks about menstruation, dating, they hear me and act on this valuable suggestion
petting. Intercourse, birth control, morals, etc., with no
embarrassment on either side.
FREE □
SEMINOLE TRINITY
I have concluded that she was probably given or sold
S P IN A L EXAM IN ATIO N
the pornography by a college-age girl camp counselor
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
who was discharged mid-season with ho explanation. I
don't know where she got the condoms.
She's u well-adjusted, normal 12-year-old girl who
uppeara to be no more boy-crazy than any of her
girlfriends. I don't know whether I should t&gt;r outraged,
amused or even proud of her precocious Interest In
erections. I've heard of girls 12 and even younger having
utatmtq
sex, but she Is such a baby. I can't Imagine her In such a
S A V E EN E R G Y
HOMO!!
situation.
A L L YEA R ‘ROUND
ucarno
1 haven't the foggiest idea of what to say when she
returns, but 1 know 1 must talk to her about this.
Perhaps I've told her too much already, or somehow
failed In preparing her for this phase of her life. What do
C«w &gt;i tketok's Wm IWt1do now, Abby?
SANFORD PAIN
TrM S ot PimuM * C**ih
TROUBLES IN
tkMf
csnutt
CONTROL CLINIC

PARADISE
DEAR TROUBLED: When she returns, tell her what

you found In her backpack, but not In an angry or
accusatory way. If she is Into sex at this early age. be
grateful that she is taking no chances on becoming
pregnant or contracting a venereal disease.
Don't punish, berate or put her down. Do assure her
that you love her and will be there for her no matter
what. Then stress the importance of respecting herself
und her body. Also stress the high price of promiscuity,
which includes a low self-esteem, a bad reputation (boys

A ppraisal Correction
Harriett Cordell A.S,A. will be at the Henry S. Sanford
Library/Museum . 520 E. First St .Sanford, from 1-3
p.m., Saturday. Oct. 15 to appraise heirlooms and
antiques, and not 3-5 p.m. as reported. Donation is $5
for three Items to be appraised. Donation for observers is
$1. The event is sponsored by the Henry S. Sanford
Hlstrolcal Preservation Society.
The Herald regrets the error.
FOR THE BEST

C»nlr»l far I I Stti*nt.

DR. THOMAS YANDELL
Chiropr.icltc Physician
20I7.FRENCH AVE
- SANFORD

• 3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

James E. Quinn, M.D,
is pleased to announce the
opening o f his office for

FAM ILY PRACTICE
2209 French Avenue
S an ford

B y appointm ent: 3 2 1 &gt; 4 2 3 0

Pedro Bachrach, M.D., P.A
Michael D. Friedman, M,D.

T V S E R V IC E
C A LL M IL L E R S
PH, 121-03J3 .
HftOrUndaOr (1M2)
Sjnford

NEW ARRIVALS

Adult And Pediatric Urology

ANNOUNCE THE RELOCATION
OF THEIR OFFICE TO..

Mr. and Mrs. John (Tlrresa) Ferllsl of Jacksonville,
announce the birth of their son. Matthew Allen, at St.
Vincent's Hospital. Jacksonville, on Oct. 4. He weighed
Olbs,, 8 ozs.

1403 Medical Plaza Drive
Suite 105
Sanford, Florida

Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rogcro.
Rosalia Drive, Sanford. Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Fcrlisi. Jacksonville.

(Behind Central Florida Regional Hospital)
Mr. and Mrs. Barry (Nettle) Pedigo of Sanford,
announce the birth of a son. Justin Lane . who weighed
In at 7 lbs., V*oz..onOct. 1.
Maternal grandparents are Joanne Beasley, Sanford,
and Buford Shepard. Orlando. Paternal grandparents are
Art and Jean Pedigo, Sanford.

Preservation
Society $$
Stanley W. Lewis, right,
presents Sanford City
C o m m is s io n e r N e d
Y a n c e y w ith a $150
check tor membership
In the n e w ly -fo rm e d
H e n r y S. S a n f o r d
M u s e u m /L lb ra ry H is­
to r ic a l P re s e rv a tio n
S o c i e t y . T h e s o c letymembershlp
categories rangefrom
s t u d e n t s ( $ 1 ) to
patrons, $1,000.
H t r j l d P ftc tt k y T a m m y V tw tn *

UnitedWby

Telephone (24 Hours A Day)...323-7772

ock
Convenience

A g r e a t place to b u y
sandwiches, groceries
sodas, Ice, picnic supplies
- beer, a n d liquor

£hoppe
Package Store

7 daft a wook from
T O.m. unfit | p.m. am

It p.m. on wookondt
VUo t Moitorcord
clrooffutty octaptad.

530 N. Pol motto Avo, Adjacent To The Holiday Inn Sanford

U lM e d J u lU

�•A —Evening Herald, Sanford

B L O N D IE

DAG W O O D, 1&gt;A S T ILL
M AO ABO UT TH AT r
ARO UM ENT
W E HAO
L A S T N IG H T

Friday, Oct. U, m j

by Chic Young

I C A N T EVEN
REM EM BER

W H AT T H E
ARG UM ENT
WAS
^
ABO UT

by M ort W alker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

Answer to Prsviout Punts
30 Very (Fr |
40 Found
I Exclamation 41 One of a
(arrow
ol disgust
4 Imitated
42 Antnt
6 Conquar
45 Llying
12 Author of
40 Scooted (long
”Tha Rivtn" 51 Buddhism
13 Sols
type
14 Agiintt
52 Tribe
15 Cncket
53 Rite
field
54 Mn. Peron
parts
56 Fine toil
16 Not hiving tsr 56 Force unit
minition
57 Code dot
(comp wd)
38 Spread out
17 Coils
18 Not sithir
DOWN
10 Dogma
battle line
20 Middls (law)
40 Destroyed by
23 Melodies
Atop
21 Light mill
lire
24 Depressed
On its wsy
22 Gouips
41 Priest
25 Deserve
24 Hud
Piuted
Hiwtiitn
42 Alphebet
20 City ol
26 Novices
salutation
Phosnicn
43 Indonesian is­
27 Powered
27 Environment
Pius
land
28 Indiin
Oomph
tgsney (abbr.)
44 Faith heeler
currency
Lair
30 In recent
Roberts
20 New
Ruins
timei
Testament
46 Not fit
Companion of
32 Ssrcsttic
47 Birthmarks
book
odds
34 Urine duct
48 Small fly
3
1
Pipil
envoy
10 Egyptisn tun
35 Guilt
33 Relating to
SO Lysergic icid
disk
36 Stoo
diethylamide
the eye
11 Rite end (ill
37 Oeitiei
across

1

2

12

13

15

16

18

T H E BORN LOSER

I'D LIFE
MICE TO COWPlIMGHT'
OUR /NEAL THAT
I6WT TOO'

32
”

38

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57

44

by Bob Montana

PAP. THE PAINTING JOB
I'M POfNG FOR MR WEKR
IS BIGGER THAN I
THOUGHT."
^4?

r WAS
Y BUT, ARCHE.
THINKING iNOUAlREAPy
OF RAISING AGREEP ON A
MY PRICE.' / PRICE.'THAT'S

SUPPOSE MX) WERE THE
GOVERNMENT ANP A
CONTRACTOR AGREEP TO
PO A JOB FOR $ 7 5 -

NO-- WAIT-- THAT'S A
3 A P EXAM PLE'

47

48

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49

43

29

33

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42

28

39

”

40

A R C H IE

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34

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020

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R 5 R # 9 .5 0 W ^ a — ^

9

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22

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8

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14

21
24

£HABU£INAKAIF-BOTTLE^ * 7 * *

6

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by A rt Sansom
VJEHAVE; A M O C € 5 r,c m 5 £ \

4

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45

46

J±

HOROSCOPE
W hat The D ay W ill Bring...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
OCTOBER 15. 1083

by Howie Schneider

EEK &amp; M EEK

WJAUTTDGO
MS' R A C E ?

tr/ m X O ...S O U TAKE AU. THE
FUD OUT OF BEIk)G SltOGLE!

PERHAPS... IUHEA) ARE.
THE- VISmidG, HOURLY
■--------------- y ~

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

M R . M E N AND L IT T L E MISS

H E LLO / L O N P O N ?
H A V E Y O O G O T ROCYA
FO R .O N E M O R E ?

W IL L D O ,

MAKE A
RESERVATION FOR

M R . BUSY,

M iE , W IL L YOU ?
/W S S SCATTERBRAIN.1
I HAVE TO FLY
T O LO K JP O N
^ IM M E D IA T E L Y /

X (T7Dby Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl

BUGS B U N N Y

71 SAY. I M DETERMINED TO D30P 5 0
5LYROUNDS THIS WEEK- *

AS

fat a s

YO J

are

and th e w a y yo u

EAT /VO

tfG H T NOW, S O N / I M
A B O l T TO P R O P 3 0
USlY POUNDS IN A SBDNP

about something outside
of your sphere of Influence
This coming ycai you may present llscll today.
will develop a far more Keep the faith.
optimistic und positive at­
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
titude than you’ve ever 20) Your powers of ob­
had in the past. The words servation and your ability
“ I can’t” won’ t be in your to probe beneath surface
vocabulary.
lacadcs arc your greatest
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. assets today. You'll know
23) Try to enlarge your how to use them advan­
soclul schedule today. tageously.
You’ll be In a warn), gre­
ARIES (March 21-April
garious mood and will find 19) Helpful Information
It enjoyable to mix with can be g a in e d to d a y
many groups. Libra pre­ through discussions with
dictions for the year ahead associates who don’t limit
are now ready. Romance, their thinking to tradi­
career, luck, earnings, tional concepts. Seek them
travel and much more arc out.
discussed. Send $1 to
TAURUS (April 20-Mav
Astro-Graph. Box 489. 20) Act in harmony with
Radio City Station. N.Y. your ambitious Impulses
10019. Send an additional today. You can advance
$2 for the NEW Astro- your position In life If you
Graph Matchmaker wheel utilize your Ideas.
and b o o k le t. R e v e a ls
GEMINI (May 21-June
romantic compatibilities 20) Mind, not muscle, will
for all signs. Be sure to g iv e you the edge in
state your zodiac sign.
a th letic even ts today.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. Conceive a good game
22) Although you will be p la n , th e n f o llo w It
tempted to do otherwise It through to the letter.
will prove wise today not
CANCER (June 21-July
to discuss confidential
family mutters with out­ 22) You have the ability
today to sec merit In
siders.
c h a n g in g c o n d it io n s
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. which may confuse others.
23-Dec. 21) Seek compa­ You'll succeed because
nions today whose Inter­ you'll know how to adapt.
ests closely parallel yours
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
and who mentally operate
on your wavelength. Each Your cooperative spirit Is
can trigger the other’s Contagious today. Ok-causc
you'll show a willingness
thinking.
to be helpful, this will
C A P R I C O R N (D e c . encourage your compa­
2 2.Jan. 19) As today's nions to act similarly.
events unfold you may be
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
exposed to a number of
small opportunities for 22) Although you may not
material gains. They're reap large gains today, you
shotdd still be able to show
not apt to be related.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- a tidy profit by figuring
Feb. 19) Good news for o u t l i t t l e w a y s t o
which you’ve been hoping economize.

Heart Flutters M ay
Not Be Too Serious
DEAR DR. LAMB Do you have any Health
Letter explaining atrial
fibrillation or flutter? ! am
a very healthy 48-ycnr-old
man. 6 -foot- 1 and weigh
170 pounds. I have had no
previous Illnesses of any
kind other than the usual
childhood diseases.
Six months ago 1 noted
that my heartbeat was
Irregular. A fter trying
drugs (Dlgoxln and others
through my veins). I began
electro-conversion treat­
ment.
I was back to a normal
rhythm for less than a
month and then I started
to have erratic bents again.
I’ve been on Dlgoxln since
conversion. But for the
past several weeks my
heartbeat has ngalti been
almost constantly erratic.
I suffer no noticeable
effects. For the past three
weeks I have been on
Dlgoxln. Qulnaglute and
Coumadin An echogram
showed nothing and there
were no chem ical Im ­
balances.
H ow m a n y e le c tr o conversions arc prudent?
What about long term
usage of the medicines I'm
on? Docs this make me a
candidate for other cardiac
ailments?
DEAR READER - There
arc people who have atrial
fibrillation and do not
have any underlying heart
disease. In other Instances
atrial fibrillation can be
from a number of different
heart diseases.
Atrial fibrillation means
the top of the heart (the
atria) Is beating at a rate of
around 500 tim es per
minute. Only a few of
these Impulses trigger the
bottom part of the h*art
(ven tricles) that pump
blood to your body. When
the ventricle rate remains
alow you may not notice
that you are flbrtllating.
Recurrent attacks of
atrial fibrillation can occur
an d a re s o m e t im e s
associated with specific
habits. I would recom­
m end that you avoid
alcohol. colTee or other
drinks containing caffeine
and do not smoke.

The medicines you are
now on arc some of those
commonly used to control
th e p r o b l e m . T h e
electro-conversions arc
fine but I would prefer for
you to be permanently
controlled with medication
to prevent recurrences If
that Is possible.
Atrial fibrillation Is dis­
cussed In more detail In
The Health Letter 6-12.
H e a rt I r r e g u l a r i t i e s .
Sk i p p e d Bents.
Tachycardia, which I ain
sending you.
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1am
a 28-ycar-old woman and
h a v e r e c e n t ly b een
d ia g n o s e d ns h n v ln g
petcchlnc. I’m currently
waiting for the results on
blood work that was done.
I would like to know
more about the condition,
the causes and treatment.
DEAR READER P e t e c h la c a re s m a ll
hemorrhages. They cause
purplish-red spots In the
skin or In the mouth. They
are commonly within the
skin or subcutaneous area.
They occur because of
some abnormality In blood
clotting mechanism, un­
less they arc associated
with mechanical factors.
There nrr many things
that can afTect the blood
clottin g mechanism or
prom ote hem orrhages.
That Includes liver disease
or any disease that affects
th e b lo o d p l a t e l e t s .
Platelets are the tiny cells
In your blood that are
involved In starting the
clo ttin g process. Your
doctors will have to know
the results o f your tests to
know what you have be­
fore deciding what should
be d o n e a b o u t t he
petechlac.
Send y o u r questions to
Ur. Lamb. P.O. Box 1551.
Radio C ity Station, New
York. N.Y. 10010.

W IN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

I* 14 U

♦ KQJ7
V 85

♦ J75
♦ QJ» 7
WEST
♦ 83 2
V K II
♦ A I8 4 3
♦ A3

EAST
♦lit

VQ743
♦ Q 10
♦ 10134
SOUTH
♦ A 104
♦ AJ 103
♦ KOI

♦ K 62
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
Wr»t North East
Pass
Pass
Pass

:♦
3 NT

Pass
Pass

Soolk
1NT
3V
Pass

Opening lead: 84

By Oswald Jacoby
and JamesJacoby
The standard no-trump
opener In the Cavendish
game is 15-17 and there
are those who cheat a
point and go down to 14
when the spirit moves
them. South had his 15.
but 4-3-3-3 distribution Is
not as p ro d u c tiv e as

4-4*3-2 or 5-3*3-2 and
since North took him to
game with only 10 highcard points, things were
not too promising.
Still, there was hope,
and with the help of a
blocked diamond suit and
c a re fu l, c o rre c t p la y.
South brought the game
safely home. Of course,
things might have been
better. If East had had to
play the diamond queen at
trick one there would have
been two diamond tricks,
but E a s t’ s 10 fo rce d
South’s king.
South led his deuce of
clubs at trick two. West
played low and dummy's
Jack held the trick. Many
players would have led a
club back toward the king
next, but South wanted to
guard against the actual
club situation so he came
back to his hand with the
10 of spades In order to
lead his six clubs.
West had to use his ace
to rapture that card In­
stead of the king and now
South was sure of three
clubs, four spades, the
diamond taken at trick
one. his ace of hearts and
a p p ro b a tio n from his
partner.

G A R F IE L D
F R A NK AND E R N E S T

by Bob Thaves

LifcF IT ? IT '/ A NFW Pu NCTUATio N
MARK I IN VEN T^.

by Jim Davis

ARLENE, I'M SICK OF THE W IT­
MATCHING MOOP YOU’RE IN

0
1
«

I

1
2
/

T r ib e s

m

-H

A N N IE
TUM BLEW EEDS

HI.CL/UiPB, HONi GOT ANY JUICY (7/FTT
FOR M Y

GOSSIP
CO
LU
M
N
?

by LeonardStarr

by T. K. Ryan

L’ LOOKSLIRE N O ! 0HE O' THEM
TH'RORPER SEES SOMETHIN'
THROUGH HIS
PATROL 16
BINOCULARS!
LEAVIN',
COYOTE

-IF ITS
N ifim hE

sees, sues
HAP IT/

LOOM! THEYRE
JUMPIN'INTO THEIR
CAR! THEY'RE OOlIf
T AFTER HER!!

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Oct. M, 1W1—»A

G ard en in g

P r o t e c t iv e
Al n lime when summer weather
seems reluctant to leave It may be
somewhat dlfTinilt to start thinking
about protecting outdoor plants
from cold Injury. However with fall
already here and winter lurking In
the wings It Is not too early to start
getting prepared. Gulden hobbyists
should anticipate the Increasing
hazard of cold damage to lender
ornamentals and take necessary
precautions^ Cold damage Is u
perennial, but not necessarily disas­
trous problem If you are prepared to
take protective action whenever
frost or freeze warnings arc Issued.
You may have heard about many
ways to protect ornamentals from

A c t io n

Frank
J. Jasa
County Extension
Director
123-Z500

cold. Of course, commercial pro­
ducers of landscape plants use
"heating more than any other
method. However, heating can
p r e s e n t s om e p r o b le m s fo r
gardeners trying to protect large
plants growing In the open. Still,
wherever practical, the best way to

A v o id s

protect home plantings from freez­
ing temperatures is to heat them
with an ordinary light bulb, under a
sheet, plastic or some similar coverlng.
Even If you don't use a light bulb
or other heat source, you can reduce
the amount of cold Injury your
plants will sulTer by covering them.
Coverings will help keep plants
from cooling off as fast as they
would otherwise. And. If the cov­
erings reach the ground they can
help make better use o f ground
heat. Surprising as It may seem,
covering u plant may also help
prevent cold damage by providing
shade during the day. If a plant has

Tol P la n t s

C o ld

will lead to Increased cold damage
to the tops of your plants. This top
injury results from the mulch
keeping ground brat In the ground,
away from leaves and branches. So.
If a brief overnight freeze Is forecast,
you may want to pull bark the
mulch from your plants. But longer

frozen. It will thaw' nut more slowly
If It is under shade. This results In
less cold Injury.
H o w ever, In spite o f these
benefits, covering a plant without
additional heat Is prim arily a
method of providing protection
against frost, rather than hard
freezes. Also, it Is Important to
remove the coverings when the
weather warms up. even If It Is only
a day or two. otherwise the plants
may suffer burning.
The use of mulch Is one cold
protection measure which causes a
lot of confusion. If the temperature
drops below freezing for Just a few
hours, a good layer of mulch often

periods of very cold weather arc a
different matter. If you expect It to
get so cold the tops of the plants
may be killed regardless of what
you do, leave the mulch In place. It
may hold enough ground heat to
keep the base of the plant and Its
roots from being frozen. A plant
may come back from considerable

cold damage tb foliage and bran*
chcs. but If the roots or trunk at
ground level are frozen, you maV
lose the entire plant.
Proper cultural practices can go a
long way toward protecting plants
from cold. It is Important to havfc
plants in good condition but nol
pushed for vegetative growth. Early
October should Ire the cut-ofT date
for fertilizing all but most hardy
plants. Adequate moisture during
cold weather will also help plants
survive the lower temperatures.
All Extension Programs arc open
to anyone regardless of race, colorj
sex or national origin.

Camp Souvenirs Startle
Precocious Teen's Mom
DEAR ABBY: While my

12 -year-old daughter w’as

visitin g her cousin in
nnolher stale. I cleaned
out the gear she brought
back from camp. In her
backpack I found 24 large
color photos of teen-aged
boys, naked and In a state
of arousal. I also round a box of a dozen condoms: one
had been removed from 119 Inner foil wrap. Her father
and I have always talked openly with her about sex ever
since she was old enough to ask questions. When she
EXASPERATED
IN ST, AUGUSTINE;
wus 4. she expressed curiosity about the male anatomy,
DEAR EXASPERATED: I hear you. Now let's hopej
so I showed her a picture of Michelangelo’s David.
We’ve had long talks about menstruation, dating, they hear me and act on this valuable suggestion.
petting. Intercourse, birth control, morals, etc., with no
embarrassment on cither side.
FREE a
SEMINOLE TRINITY
I have concluded that she was probably given or sold
S P IN A L E X A M IN A TIO N
the pornography by a college-age girl camp counselor
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
who was discharged mid-season with no explanation. I
O a rq * S q r &amp; t of
A Crest Pises
PINCHED NERVE5
don't know where she got the condoms.
To
Stsrt
1 Ffflowvrj HAAftAC*♦*
She’s a well-adjusted, normal 12-ycar-old girl who
I LOWfluke*OfHip
3 2 2 -3 9 4 2
appears to be no more boy-cruzy than any of her
3
Gt LOM0*
girlfriends. I don’ t know whether I should be outraged,
amused or even proud of her precocious Interest In
erections. I’ve heard of girls 12 and even younger having
Ml
mniUHa t *-*kP**df
sex, but she is such u baby. I can't imagine her in such a
S A V E ENERCY
Asawom
situation.
A L L YEAR ROUND
ACCEPTED
I haven't the foggiest Idea of what to say when she
returns, but l know I must talk to her atxiui this.
Cmwa
llwtric
'55
Perhaps I've told her too much already, or somehow
* Al MuU. INI Mrrlc* »• lr*«
failed In preparing her for this phase of her life. What do
Ctitnl [Uctric'l WutWr
I do now, Abby?
SANFORD PAIN
Trta Hot P i«p Air Cm *

Dear

W

W illia m a n d A d e le P ir ig y i s t a r in 'M u s ic a l W o r ld '
l

ST^

I ' a

’

-

mn#ntm«i

In A n d A ro u n d G e n e v a

Free Concert To Feature
Variety Music Program
"The Musical World of Sir William and Lady
Adele" will be the theme of a community concert
to Ik- presented on Saturday. Oct. 22. at 7 p.m.. In
the Geneva Community Hall.
William and Adele Pirigyi of Casselberry will
direct the musical variety show which will include
a choral group. The Mclodians Highlights of the
evening will be a scene from "The Merry Widow."
choral selections from "Oklahomu" and "It's a
Grand Night for Singing." us well as vocal and
piano &amp;olos. "And This Is Mv Beloved." "Love Me
Tonight." "Autumn Leaves," and "Deep Purple."
The Plrlgyis have traveled on the European
opera circuit, directed a musical company In
California, and currenty teach voice und piano at
the Allegro Music Store In Orlando. For the past 10
years they have been traveling throughout Florida
providing community concerts appearing at the

Lou
Childers

Eastmontc Civic Center In Altamonte Springs, the
St. Augustine's Days in Spain Festival, and many
others.
Gencvians will surely be glad the Pirtgyls
brought their concert to our community. This
musical program promises to be entertainment for
the entire family to enjoy. Admission will be free to
the public with u free will offering.

TROUBLES IN
PARADISE

DEAR TROUBLED: When she returns, tell her what
you found In her backpack, but not In an angry or
accusatory way. If she is Into sex ut this early age, be
grateful that she is taking no chances on becoming
pregnant or contracting a vcnercul disease.
Don't punish, berate or pul her down. Do assure htr
that you love her and will be there for her no matter
what. Then stress the importance of respecting herself
and her body. Also stress the high price of promiscuity,
which Includes a low self-esteem, a bad reputation (boys

A ppraisal Correction
Harriett Cordell A.S.A. will be at the Henry S. Sanford
Llbrary/Museum . 520 E. First St..Sanford, from 1-3
p.m.. Saturday. Oct. 15 to appraise heirlooms and
antiques, and not 3-5 p.m. as reported. Donation Is $5
for three Items to be appraised. Donation for observers is
§1. The event Is sponsored by the Henry S. Sanford
Hlstrolcal Preservation Society.
The Herald regrets the error.
FOR THE BEST

The Jewish Community Center In Maitland will
offer a college Immk I prep course to help students
prepare for fall exams. The course is designed to
help students Improve their college boards by
developing skills In the verbal areas of autonyms,
analogies, vocabulary and reading comprehension,
as well as math areas, problem solving, graph
reading, quantitative skills. Relaxation therapy will
be Included In the course to reduce test anxiety.
Instructor Is Jayne Drucker. M.Ed.
Classes will be held on Tuesdays, beginning Oct.
25 from 7-10 p.m. for eight, three-hour sessions to
be held at the Jewish Community Center at 851 N.
Maitland Avenue In Maitland.
For further Information call: Robin Caine, youth
director. 645-5933.

Vanlord

NEW ARRIVALS

tttMT t itr» lffKi««t Obut*
C*Btr#l f t AK k o w i

CONTROL CLINIC
DR. THOMAS YANDELt

WALL

Chiropractic Physician

•7017 F R E N C H AVE
SANFORD

Tel. 322-63*2
1007 SwftrA A»«..

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

James E. Quinn, M.D.
i* pletuied to unnounce the
opening o f his office fo r

FAM ILY PRACTICE
2209 French Avenue
S an fo rd
B j appointm ent: 3 2 1 &gt; 4 2 3 0

Pedro Bachrach, M.D., P.A.
Michael D. Friedman, M.D.

T V S E R V IC E
C A L L M IL L E R S
' P H . m OJS!
1* l» Or U nd o O f 117 *31

College Prep Course

talk) and ultimately confusing sex with love. And donjt
blame yourself for telling your daughter "too much?*
what our children don't know can hurt them.
DEAR ABBY: Please find m i for this in your
column and a million people will bless you. I am one of
many people over GO who have a hearing loss. I am nut
deaf, and I hear most everything that’s said, but I wish
people would not speak with their heads turned In
another direction from the person they are speaking tpf
This Is so Important. It Just drives mr up a wall when
someone talks to me and keeps turning his head cvcijy!
which way except where I am!

..

Adult And Pediatric Urology

ANNOUNCE THE RELOCATION
OF THEIR OFFICE TO..

Mr. and Mrs. John (Th'resu) Ferllsl of Jacksonville,
announce the birth of their son. Matthew Allen, at St.
Vincent's Hospital. Jacksonville, on Oct. 4. He weighed
9lbs.,8ozs.

1403 Medical Plaza Drive
Suite 105
Sanford, Florida

Maternal grandparents urc Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rogero.
Rosalia Drive, Sanford. Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Ferllsl. Jacksonville.

(Behind Central Florida Regional Hospital)
Mr. and Mrs. Barry (Nettle) Pedigo of Sanford,
announce the birth of a son. Justin Lane , who weighed
In at 7 lbs., VSoz.. on Oct. 1.
Maternal grandparents are Joanne Beasley, Sanford,
and Buford Shepard, Orlando. Paternal grandparents are
Art and Jean Pedigo. Sanford.

Telephone (24 Hours A Day)...3 2 3 -7 7 7 2

Unlbed Way

Preservation
Society $$

o c k

Stanley W. Lewis, right,
presents Sanford City
C o m m is s io n e r N e d
Y a n c e y w ith a S I50
check for membership
In the n e w ly -fo rm e d
Henry S Sanford
M u s e u m /L lb re ry His
to rlc a l P re s e rv a tio n
S o c i e t y . T h e s ocl etym em bership
categories rangefrom
s t u d e n t s ( $ 1 ) to
patrons, S1.C0C.

^

£ h o p p e

Convenience

Package Store

NOW

OPEN

A great piece to buy
sandwlchei, groceriei

7 day* a *.»*w tr*m
7 ® m- unl1* 1 r-m- «"d

“ *&gt;•/

Her«ld P V U by Tammy VlfKtfll

* *

beer, and liquor

11

fn i

".l y ;™ ""'
,h.*dwll, occpiad.

530 N. Palmetto Ave, Adjacent To The Holiday Inn Sanford

�tQA— E ven in g H tra M , SanFord, FI.

Legol Notice
----

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
THE S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS will
Hold • public hxaring i« Room n o ot
. the Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida on NOVEMBER *.
I t t ) AT 7 00 P M . O' at toon
thereafter at possible to consider the
‘&lt;61lowing
PUBLIC HEARINO FOR CHANGE
OF ZONING RFOULATIONS
I TEXACO. INC. - RE20NE
FROM C 1 RCTAIL COMMERCIAL
TO C l RETAIL COMMERCIAL f’ ZI* 7 4&gt;) 44 begin af the NE cornar
"o f Lof I. Block A. Trim Acrat. PB 10.
s Hg X. run S along E llna 140 fl. than
N orST' W parallel with N llna ol Lol
I TOO ft than N parallel wltn E llna
~no ft to fha N llna of Lot 1. man S
l*-$* * E along North llna TOO ft to
F O B . Sac 15)17* (At the SW
comar ol SR 4)4 and Bear Lake
RoadllDIST «)|
“ I . JETTIE SLATE - RETONE
' FROM R IA SINGLE FAM ILY
DWELLINO DISTRICT TC RP RES
.J .D E N T IA L P R O F E S S IO N A L
• P Z (IM U ) 45 - The South
ol Lot
-&gt;J and all ol Lot I. Block 0. Tract 30.
■ Sanlando Sprlngt. Section T 11 7*.
-*On the W tide ot Harwood. North of
• Hobtonl (OIST *))
). KEEWIN COMPANY - RE­
TONE FROM A I AGRICULTURE
TO R IA SINGLE FAMILY DWELL
INO DISTRICT - P N lM U U a E
*■&gt; of NE &gt;4 ot NE '* ol Sec 1411 X.
and the E '« of SE N of NE &lt;4 of tald
taction and the N )00 It. of the W *. of
. me SE '&lt; el the NE '• of tald taction,
lett road R W (On Ihe NE corner ot
SR 474 and Tutkawllla Roadl IDIST
-41»
•
Further, a public hearing will be
held by the SFM'NOLE COUNTY
PLANNING AND ZONING COM
MISSION ON OCTOBER S. IIU AT
—l 00 P M . or at toon thereafter at
• pottiblt. In Room TOOot the Seminole
County C ourthouie. Sanlord.
Florida. In order to review, hear
commentt and make recommenda
tiont to the Board of County Com
mlttionert ot Seminole Cfmty on the
—Above application!!!.
Thota in attendance will be heard
and written comment! may be filed
with the Land Management Maneg
,-dr. Hearing! may be continued trom
time to time at found mcettary
Further delallt available by calling
.22) a m Eat 140
. Pertoni are advlted that It they
decide to appeal any dec It ion made
e' fheie maetingt. they will need a
record ot fha proceeding!, and tor
'*tuch purpose. they may need to
enture that a verbatim record of the
proceedings It made, which record
r include! the tettlmony and evidence
* upon which the appeal It to be made
a Board ol County
( w Commissioners
a ‘ Seminole County.
1 ,, F lor “da
«
BY: Sandra Glenn.
J Chairman
« Attetl. Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
J Publlth October la. leg)
a OEM 1

J

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CIVIL ACTION NO I ) TltS CA** E
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, a corporation
organlred and existing under the
Lawt ot The United Statet of
America.
,
Plemtitl.
vt
BENNETT B BUSH and wile.
OAARTHAPERRY BUSH.atai.

I

‘ N O TIclV S A l ' T * * " *
“ -NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
etuanf to Final Judgment ol
Forecloture rendered on the tlth day
ot October, let). In that certain cause
pending in the Circuit Court In and
lor Seminole County. Florida,
w h e r e in F IR S T F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIA
TION OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, a
corporation organlred and editing
under the Lawt ol The United Statet
’ of America. It Plain!ill. and BEN
NETT B BUSH and wile. MARTHA
PERRY BUSH. FLAGSHIP BANK
OF ORLANDO MIKE CROWLEY
and KEVIN D MURPHY are Defen
d a n lt . C iv il A c tio n N o.
( ) 7715 CA Ot E. I. ARTHUR H
BECKWITH. JR . Clerk of the
a loreta id Circuit Court, will at II 00
a m . on the 7th day of November,
Iff), otter lor tale and tell In the
highett bidder lor cash at the Wrtt
front door ot the Courthouse In
Seminote County. Florida. In San
'-Yord. Florida, the following described
property, tltuated and being In
Seminole County. Florida, to wit
The West 40 leet ol Lott 1 and ).
B lo c k G. C A S S E L B E R R Y
HEIGHTS, according to the plat
thereof at recorded In Plat Book *.
Page 17, ol the Public Records ol

Uwtlewvty

t»y|f

Said tale will be maoe pursuant to
and In order to tatitfy the termi ol
tald Final Judgment
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR.
CLERK
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
By CatherineM Evans
Clerk
N
Deputy C
J Phillip H .lLmin of
&gt;*-% H I N H IO I S E R . L O G A N .
MONCRIEF AND BARKS
Pott Office Bor T77T
Sanlord. Florida 27T7I
Attorneys lor Plaintitl
1)051)71 1440
Publlth October la. 21. IN )
DEM *4

F rid a y , O ctf 1 4 .1H3

Legal Notice
CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
NOTICEOF PUBLIC HEARING
TO WHOM IT MA Y CONC ER N :
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ly
the City Commission ot the City ol
Lake Mary, Florida, that tald
Commission will hold a °ubllc
Hearing sr October TO. IN ), at 1:00
P M . to contider an Ordinance
entitled at tnHryw*______________
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF LAKE MARY. FLORIDA, RE
ZONING CERTAIN LANDS WITHIN
THE CITY OF LAKE MARY. AS
HEREIN DEFINEO FROM OC TO
C 7. PURSUAhl TO THE TERMS
OF CHAPTER 1st 041 OF THE
FLORIDA STATUTES. PROVID
ING FOR A CHANGE TO THE
OFFICIAL ZONING MAP. PRO
VIOING CONFLICTS.
SEVERABILITY AND EFFECTIVE
DATE
changing the toning on the following
described property situate In the City
of Lake Mary. Florida
The Eat! 1)2 leet ol the West '* ot
the fforth &gt;» of the Northeast 'a ol
the Northwest U of Section 14.
Townthip 20 South. Range X East,
lett right ol way lor Lake Mary
Boulevard; more commonly de
scribed at South tide ol Lake Mary
Boulevard, adjacent to Lake Mary
Elementary School.
The Public Hearing will be held at
the City Hall. City of Lake Mary,
Florida, on the 70th day r* ucteber.
1*1), at 1.00 P .M . or at toon
thereafter at pottlble at which lime
Interested parties tor and against the
request stated above will be heard
Sa'd hearing mgy be continued from
time to time until final action Is
taken hy *h* City Commission.
THIS NOTICE thall be potted In
three ()) public placet within the
City ot Lake Mary. Florida, at the
City Hall, and published In the
Evening Herald, a newspaper of
general circulation In the City of
Lake Mary, prior to the date ol the
Public Hearing, and the owners ol
the real property which It affected
hereby shall be mailed by the City
Clerk, a copy ot this notice at their
addrett may appear on the latest ad
valorem tai records
A taped record ol this meeting Is
made by the City tor Its convenience
This record may not constitute an
adequate record for the purposes ol
appeal from a decision made by the
City Commission with respect to the
foregoing m ailer. Any person
wishing to enture that an adequate
record ol the proceed-ngs Is main
lamed for appellate purposes It
advlted to make the necessary ar
rangements at hit or her own
ixpcnu.
DATEO: September 21. IN )
CITY OF
LAKE AAARY. FLORIDA
l \ l Connie M Wor
City Clerk
Pubiith October a. 14. IN )
OEMS
NOTICEOF PUBLIC
HEARINO
THE BOARD OF COUNTY CCV.
M ISSIONERS OF SEM INOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room TOO of the Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida, on
NOVEMBER A IN ) at 7 00 P M . or
at too" thereafter at Oottible. to
contider a SPECIFIC LAND USE
AMENDMENT to the Seminole
County Comprehentlve Plan and
REZONING ot the described pro
** a*n o r o in a n c e a m e n d i n g
O R D IN A N C E 7 7 21 W H IC H
AMENDS THE DFTAILEO LAND
USE E L E M E N T OF T H E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
INTENSITY URBAN TO PLANNEO
UNIT DEVELOPMENT FOR THE
PURPOSE OF REZONING FROM
A I AGRICULTURE A UC UNI
V E R S IT Y C O M M U N IT Y TO
PLANNEO UNIT DEVELOPMENT.
the following described property.
The E 1s ol the W t&gt; ol the NW U of
the SW U of Sec la 2IS TIE, and the
E ‘s of the NW ** ol the SW 'a ol the
.Sec 14 2IS HE (Lett the S M It and
the E 50 It lor road R'W ). and the E
a« of the SW U ot the Sw U ol Sec
)4 -2 l$ -)tE . Seminole County.
Florida I Further described at on the
N tide ot McCulloch Road and W ol
Alataya Trail I SR 5X1 (OlST.all
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS BEEN
SUBMITTED BY J L MASON OF
FLORIDA. INC
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 12) a)X.
E&gt;t 140
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who with to comment on the
proposed actions may submit written
statement! to the Land Management
Division prior to the scheduled public
hearing Persons appearing at the
hearings may submit written state
menls or be heard orally
Persons are advlted that. It they
decide to appeal any decision made
at these meetlngt. they will need a
record ol the proceedings, and. lor
such purpose, they may need to
enture that a verbatim record of the
proceedings It made, which record
Includes the tettlmony and evidence
upon which the appeal it to be bated
Board ot County
Commissioners
Seminole County.
Florida
Bv Sandra Glenn.
Chairman
Attest: Arthur H Beckwith, Jr.
Publlth October la. 71 IW
DEM X

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
Notice It hereby given that a
CASE NO I ) &lt;5*1 CA 17 K
Public Hearing will be held by the
JUDGE;ROBERT B. McGREGOR
Planning and Zoning Commlttton in
IN REi FORFEITURE OF TEN
the City Commission Room. City
THOUSAND DOLLARS (119.000 001
Hall. Sanlord. Florida at 7 00 P M
U S CURRENCY
on Thursday. October 70. lit), to
NOTICEOF FORFEITURE
consider the following change and
PROCEEDINGS
nt to the Zoning Ordinance
TO
and amending the Future Land Ute
Ste-an Friend
Element of the Comprehensive Plan
RI7 Box a*a B
of the City ot Sanlord. Seminole
Apopka.
FL
County, Florida
and
all others who claim an Interest
Reionlng from SR I. Single
In the following property
Family Residential Dwelling District
a I Ten thousand O o lla r t
To that ot GC 1. General Commar
&lt;510 00* 001 United Statet Currency
clal District
JOHN E P O LK . Sherllt ol
That property described at Lott I
Seminole County. Florida through
to 5 A N 15 T» ft of Lot 4 A all of Lott
hit duly sworn Deputy Sherllft.
I) to 17 t N ) ) 14 tt ot Lot II A
salted the described property on the
Vac'd alley between &gt;i Vac'd tt
Itl day of July. It*) at or near Stale
Adi onE . Bonaventure.PBS.PgU
Road &lt;J4 and Weklv* Springs Road.
1Being more generally drscribed at
Longwood It presently holding tald
located SE corner ot Holly Ave. A
property, and will appear before the
TJndSt
Honorable Robert B McGregor
• The planned ute ot me property it
Judge of the Circuit Court. Eigh
rupleies
tcenth Judicial Circuit. Ruom 240.
(The Planning A Zoning Com
Seminole County Courthouse. San
mission will submit a recommenda
lord. Florida, on the lilts day of
lion to the City Commission In favor
November. 11*1 at 1:2* A M lor the
of. or against, the requested change
purpose of requesting and tiling a
or amendment The City Commission
Rule to Show Cause why the de
w.it hold a Public Hearing In the City
tcrlbed proparty should not be
Commission Room In the City Half,
forfeited to the ute ol. |&gt;r told by the
Sanlord Florida at 7 00 P M on
Sheriff upon producing due proof
November la. IN ), to contider said
that tame was being used in vto
recommendation
let tan ot Florida Laws dealing with
All parties m Interest and citi/ent
contraband, ail pursuant to Sections
shall have an opportunity to be heard
*12 701 70a. Fler.de Statutes (IN I)
at said hearings
It no claimants appear, a request
By order of the Planning and
will be made for an immediate
Zoning Commission ot 'he City of
h e a rin g and F in a l O rder of
Sanlord. Florida, this 74th day of
Forfeiture
September. IN )
LINDA R MCCANN
J.9 Galloway.
Attitlenl State Attorney
Chairman
Semuiot* County Courthouse
City of Sanford
Sanlord Florida 12771
Planning and Zoning
(X5I X7 7Ua
Commission
Publ.thOctoberl4.2l, INJ
With October l la. !N )
DCU N
Je m io

I

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

O H a n d o - W in te r P ark

3 2 2-26 11
C L A S S IF IE D DEPT.
HOURS
A.tv!. — 5:20 P.M .

MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY * - Noon

8 3 1 *9 9 9 3
R A T ES

H im c
S4c a line
2 consecutive tim et sac a line
1consecutive times 4tc a line
10 consecutive times 47c a line
S2.00 Minimum
2 Lines Minimum

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

12—Legal Services

71-H elp Wanted

Bankrupcy SIX and Chapter 12
5410 Free conference. Attorney
M Price For Appl 477 7**7
CURLEY R.DOLTIE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
101 B W itt Street
Sanlord Fla, 12771 17) MOO

Auto Parts/Ceunter Person. Eipe
rlanca p re ftr td . start Im
medialely. Good pay A benlflts
Apply In Person.
Parts City. 405 W.)5th

23—Lost &amp; Found
LOST
AMAZON PARROT
CALL 17) 41*0
LOST OR STOLEN St Barnard
and GVrmgn Shephard mixed
lema'at. talooed. 449 4014

25—Special Notices

CARPENTERS HELPERS
Immedlatly assignments In San
ford area

NCVERkriE

Ablest
Temporary ten vet

Iunder A Wednesday
♦ II A t X ) X
TOOWMFrnSl (Flagshf BinkBuldngi
Sanford371-2*40

CAREER
G A R A G E / F L E A
MARKET/PLAMT SALE. San
lord Civic Center. 10 00 A M
until. Auction a X P M until.
SpaghtltlOInner All you can aat
Parents 1)00 Children 17 00
Proceeds go to tne ROTARY
C L U B OF S A N F O R D *
BREAKFAST.
This It e charity event._____
IIMAIDS TOORDERIt
Get Results A Save 55
DON'T DELAY 071 MAID
New Olflct now opening.
VORWERK
__________ II20W lit St__________

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
BABYSITTING In my home Ex
perlenced mother, free meals.
Ret, given 122 *2*1____________
MOTHERS. In home child care
Lerge play area, nutritious
snacks, and loving care. Mon
Fn. Sanlord 121 044)

31—Private
Instructions
Plano Lessons In my Sanlord
home. All levels, theory Inc. Also
theory classes ullvred Ph XI0405

33-R eal Estate
Courses
BOB BALL JR SCHOOcOF
REAL ESTATE
LOCAL REBATES X ) 4110
MASTER CHARGE OR VISA

45-A rts A Crafts
A Lillie 'Homework -Welching
the Went Ads Can Bring
'Tee Grade* Results.

55—Business
Opportunities
NEW. b e a u t i f u l lea
craam/sandwlch shop Escallant
Sanford location Call today
Ml 4471 0 A M t o ll 00_________
e e e oU RO TILEe e e e
Men needed to learivaew tradel
High prelll margin. 11*55)5.

63—Mortgages Bought
A Sold
e CA5H FOR MORTGAGES e
We buy first and second mortgages
on
homes, trom Individuals,
builders, brokers, and real estate
companies We alto makt home
owner loans tor horn# Improv
men! and bill consolidation Call
us and let us makt you an otter I
Berbera Crawlord 1)1)410
If you collect payments from a tint
or second mortgage on property
you told, we will buy the
mortgage you are now holding
____________ 744 75**

71—Help Wanted
AAA EMPLOYMENT
OISCOUNT FEE
TERMS
770C FRENCH AVE.
77) 5174
A Uttle ’ Hvmtwork -Watching
the Want Ads Can Bring
'Tap
TOD (H
Grade' Result!

—

r a m r YwoBKiift—

Light assembly work trom your
home Excellent Income oppor
tunlty lor housewives, etc Start
Immedlettly. Call Maggie at
1 )1 1 *4*1104 A lto open
evenings
AVON CHRISTMAS WOW 11
START SELLING NOWII
_______ 177-045* or 7115155_______
Avon Ladies Full, part Time over
II Sanlord. Washington Oaks
Midway A Geneva 70 41*5

Legal Notice
Fklitleus Nam*
Notice It hereby given that we are
engaged In business at X I Fairmont
Dr . Sanlord. Seminole County.
Florida under the fictitious name ot
MAJ FACETING AND GEMS, and
that we Intend to register said name
with the Clark of the Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florida In ac
cordance with the provisions of the
Fictitious Name Statutes. toWH.
Section 045 0* Florida Statutes 1*57
/*/ Mick Immkh
ft/Joan E Immlch
Publlth September X A October 7.
14.71.1*0
DEL 171
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* Is hereby given mat we are
engaged In business el 214 E. 1st
Street. Sanlord. Fl 12771. Seminole
County. Florida under the lictltlout
name ot T J‘» CERAMICS A SILKS,
and that we Inland Is register said
name with Clark cl the Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florida In ac
cor dance with the provisions of the
F kill tout Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section *45 0* Florida Statutes 1*57
Tracy Schneider
Judy Coe
Publish October Ik 21, 7* A Nov
ember 4. I**)
OEM *4

To serve meat to our customers at
bullet table Musi be neat and
en|oy meeting people Apply 7 to
4 P.M. at Holiday House Retlau
rant 4200 Orlando Ave Hwy
17*2 South ol Lake Mary cutoff
CASHIERS A CLERKS. Full A
pari time openings Good pay
scales Noo«p. nee. 42* 40*4
Chrlillan woman to do light
housekeeping and Ironing. Must
like smalichlldern 17)01)7

CONSTRUCTION
W ORKERS
Should have Horn* Building tape
rlanca.

MVtIUfH

Ablest
Tuesday A Wednesday
*11 A l : X ) X
700AW fry &amp; (Flagship Bank BirtSng)
SantM 171 2*40
COOK/IALAD
New heed cook looking for
breakfast cook-sslad person.
F/T. Exp only. Fine dining
Apply In person M F. * to 5 P M
Deltona Inn.
Cooks Utilities Day/Night
Full/part lime positions.
Apply In person
Days Inn I 4 A St Rd 44
COUPLE to work at Manag
e r / O p i r a l o r In l e a
Cream/siandwlch Shop. Call for
appointment
X I 4471 * A M to ll
CRUISE SHIP JOBSI
Great Income potential. All oc
cup* I tons For Inlormellon call:
1)111 70 S47QEat l*«__________
Dental Assistants Full and part
time. Eeperlence required.
Expended Duty Certificate net
ettary Sentordolflce X ) t i l l
OISHWASHER
Mature Apply In pf rson M F, * to 5
P M Deltona Inn/_____________
Earn Eitra Money. Part/TIme
Full/Tlm e Prep aid Legal
Services Call Den. 47*7X7
FACTORY WORKERS Immediate
openings. High wages Soma will
train Call 47* 40*4_____________
Food Concessions Managers and
workers Mature, experienced
preferred. Apply Fleaworld.
Hwy. 17 *1. Thurs . Frl., Sal, * J
P M X I 17*2__________________
Front Desk Clark willing lo work )
to 11 shift and tome weekends
Apply In person Holiday Inn o'
Sanford on the lake tront._______
HOLIDAY HOUSE
Restaurant hat positions available
lo r C e t h le r s , H o s tesses,
Waitresses. Kl'chen Help Good
opportunity to work with peo
pie Eaperience pretered Apply 2
to 4 P M 4X0 Orlando Ave Hwy
l7*l.S.otLakeMarycutofl.
Homemakers lull time to provide
cleaning services to elderly
persons Must have reliable car
A valid Fla. d ri.trt license
i ) 40' hour X/ mile. M thru F.
4X 2114 Mrs Osborne EOE
LANDSCAPE R Person with
background In design, sales, |ob
supervision. Irrigation, good
driving record and experience
required. 0X7)71______________
Minimal day care help needed lor
elderly gentlemen, semi mobile,
excellent mind, requires tome
light cooking Ph X ) 7140 be
tween * and 5 445 54k) after 5 X
I
Please Contact AM. Roth.________
Now Interviewing lor receptlonesl
end denial assistant tor our
current and now location at The
Maitland Center X1I1M Only
qualltied need apply.___________
NURSES AIDS Experience pre
fared Apply Lekevlew Nursing
Center
*|*E 7nd Street
OFFICE HELP Full A perl time
openings available now. Will
fully train Phone 47* a0»4_______
PACKERS. Immediate start lor 1st
and 7nd shllt. Heavy lilting
Involved Altamonte area Ablest
Temporary Service X I XX.
Phytclan's ottka Medical seer#
lary. lo do transcription and
Insurance Send resume lo P O.
Box 40X. Sanlord. Fla X77)
40X__________________________
PROCESS MAIL AT HOME I 575 00
per hundredl No experience.
Part or full time Start Immedl
a ta ly
D e ta ils sand t e l l
addressed stamped envelope to
C.R I X0. P O Box 45. Stuart.

Floats_________________

SALESLADY Part lime expert
enced In ladies ready to wear
Apply in parson only, no phone
calls. Ro Jay 711E 1st Street.
S e c re ta ry / N u rs e ry parson
Landscaping firm seeks expert
ence pleasant phone personality,
accounting, sales, typing, tiling.
general office 1X7)71._________
Trucking Company needs men
experienced In lire reisa'r and
truck washing Must have valed
Florida Cheutfeut license and be
able to drive tractor trailers Call
X2 02H. between 10and).
TRUCKS DRIVERS Local A Long
Haul positions High wages Cell
today 42*40*4________________
Wanted exp Dental Assis Tempo
rery lull time position Call
X I XIOTu thruF t l o l P M
WAREHOUSE WORKERS (Many
openings lull time, good starting
pay Call linmaikately 42*40*4

91—Apartments/
House to Share
M jle over X. there with same
New furnished home with pool
5740 a month plus * deposit,.
Includes utilities. In Sanford.

XI 05*4

_______

93—Rooms for Rent
SANFORD Furmtnea rooms by the
week Reasonable rates. Maid
tarvlca catering hi working peo
pie. X ) 4102.500 Palmetto Aye
SANFORD. Reas weekly A Mon
thly rales Util Inc eft. SWOsk
Adults I *41 7*4]

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Furn. Apts, ter Senior Clllltnt
111 Palmetto Ave
J. Cowan No Phone Cells
Lovely I bdrm. college Complete
privacy, newley decorated 175 a
week, plus 5200 sac. dep. X ) 224*
or X U 401_________________
I Bdrm, efficiency, patio. A/C.
524* Fee Ph X * 7200
Say-On Rental* Inc. Realtor

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
Apr. lor rent tor elderly couple. I
Bdrm . central A/H Call be
tween! A M lo e P M X I 5751
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E Airport Blvd Ph )?J 4420
Efficiency, from 12)5 Mo 5 \
discount for Senior Clllrent
LUXURY APARTMENTS
Family A Adults taction. Poolside.
2 Bdrmt. Matter Cove Apts
X ) 7*00
_______ open on weekends________
Mariner’s Village on Lake Ada. !
bdrm from 5271. 2 bdrm trom
5)75 Located 17 n just south ol
Airport Blvd In Sanlord. All
Adults X ) *470_______________
e Mellonvllle Trace Apts *
Unfurnished 2 bdrm. Spacious Apt
Walk To Lake Front. No Pets
5X5 P hX I 1*05_______________
NEW 1 A 2 Bedrooms Adjacent to
Lake Monroe. Health Club.
Recquetbellend More!
Sanford Landing I. C
RIDGEWOOO ARMS APTS
25*0 Ridgewood Ave Ph X144X
1.1 A ) Bdrmt tromtXO
Unfurnlth I Bdrm., I B . all
appliances 5X0 a month X7
*7)7 in A M or *47 1*10_________
I Bdrm A p t. near business
district, pool privileges
5X5 Call X ) *444
I Bdrm. appliances, carport. 570 a
Wk Fee PhD* 7200
Sav On Rentals lac Realtor
I Bdrm, A/C. pool. 5215 Mo Fee Ph
11* 7200
Sav-Oo-Renta I Inc. Raalter.
1/2 Bdrm. Apartment
New, remodeled. Adults only, not
pets 5)00 a mo plus security
47* 00*5or 444 1417 or 14* 5474
) Bdrm . upstairs. Adults only. 5275
plus | t » damage fee B21-11*!
Mr. Barber or 4)1 447*

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent
7 Bedroom, clean, quiet tur
roudingt No pett/no chlldern
Retired couple preferred 5)00
__________Call IX 0774___________
Want ads tell bargain hunters
where lo find the Gomel
HEARLO Clasxllled X7 7411

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Lake Mary. Hidden lake Villa
New. ) bdrm. ) bath, garage, no
pets 5475 PhD* 741)__________
THE DAYS MAY BE GETTING
cooler, but the Classified Ads art
Still Ho*!.

141—Homes For Sale

141—Homes For Sale

103-Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
2 Bdrm. I B. CHA. carpeted.
Adults No pals 5)70 per mo
17) 7X7_______________________
) Bdrm . C/H/A, InslJe ulll/rm
Fenced yard, eal In kitchen, no
pet! t)*Samo. X 7 11*1_________
) Bdrm house with washer and
dryer. Nice neighborhood
month. Call X7 I44* '__________
2 Bdrm. kids, carport, fenced yard
5410 Mo Fee Ph D * 7200
SavOnRenlalt Inc, Realtor
4 Bdrm , 11* Bath, living room A
tkmlly room, wall lo wall carpal,
fenced yard, appliances. 5400 a
mo. plus deposil. X ) X50

Assumable 7*eN Mortgage. 4
Bdrm 7 Bath. Cent HA , 55.1*0
down ISI.WO.Appt. X I 0414.

By owner sale or lease. 1 Bdrm.
I ') B.Cnl/M/A, garage Low
down A assume mortgage
1)7.500 Owner Is Realtor Assoc
____________ X ) 4742-____________
CUsslleu'Rtsulls Will Win
■ Yaur Vole Every Tlmtl
•*4 4 4 4 4 4 *4 4 4 5 4
OEBARY BY OWNER

A Lltft* -Homework ‘Watching
(UWant Ads Can Bring
’ Top Grade’ Results^
Lake Mary 57* WO

THE PRICE IS WRONG"

Y'-y »';/ Ul/Sirr.i. Z.1 . *&lt;rf-rr

kitchen plus dining OoiXile lots.
75X140 Will sell separately Call
MO 44*5___________ _____ _____
EXTRA large 2 story Colonial on I
acre el Oak frees. All the amenl
ties plus guest apt best locale
5200.0(7' WM MALICZOWSKI
REALTOR )77-m).__________

Markham Woods Rd Rtvensbrook
4 Bdrm . 2 B By owner with
owner financing X I till.
Mayfair Pool Home
44’l Assumable 1111 \ Mlg
_______ X I 0*51 or X I 7)50_______
Older 7 (lory. 4 bdrm, ♦ pool,
OWNER MORE THAN EAGER
MAKE OFFER Merrill Lynch
Realty. Inc Realtor, all 17*0
Mary Mathis Rraltor/Assoclett
444 *007_______________________
PAOLA. 7/7. C/H/A. 5 acre
lekefront S7t.*00 Wallace Cress
Realty Inc X ) 50*7__________

INLAND
REALTY,

105—DuplexT rip lex / Rent

INC.C3 R E A LT Y W O R L D .

Sanlord Duplex 2 Bdrm . I Bath,
carport, laundry room, central
A/C. kitchen equip. carpel.
drapes. 7424 Laka Ave 5X0545
2bedroom I bath, spacious,
and new t ) 50 month
Ph 22)11*0 or 4** 4712

WE HAVE BUYERSII
WE NEEOLISTINOSH

323-3145
Alter Hours))) 5*21
111 47))or X ) 7407

127-Office Rentals
THE MERCANTILE BUILDING
BOB M BALL JR PA.
REALTOR X ) 4115

REDUCED 15.400
Neat ) 2 split plan, carpet plus air,
double garage plus shade trees
Welk to M eylelr Colt and
Idyllwilde Elementary 172.500

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

323-3200
141—Homes For Sale

CALL BART

54* W Lake Mery Blvd
Sultf B
Lake Mary. Fla X744
DR IF TWOOD VILLAGE

BATEM AN R E A L T Y
Lie. Real Estiie Broktr
74X Sanlord Ave
LE ASE O P T IO N . 4/), nice
neighborhood 544 *00

REALESTATE
REALTOR______________ 121-24**
RIGHT ON LAKE MONROE
Fishing pier. Large screened pool
and patio, wllti ] bdrm, I's bath.
All overtooki.sg the taka Owner
financing. 5*5.000 Call Charlotte
Crotlyn. Wall SI. Company. Re
allors X I 5005or 17) 4077

I\KAL KST VTF

SEMINOLE WOODS. 5 acres, high
and dry, beautifully wooded
corner, unbelievable S)*.S00

SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
1X5X4
Alt Hri. 327 0*54. X ) 4)45
Sanlord/Sanere. Private communl
ty. pool, tennli tic. 7 year old
home ) bdrm, living room. D/R.
tarn room. F/P. screened porch,
large private back yard Atiuma
mortgage or own preference
54*400 Principles only.
PhXI-MOS.__________

I!

REALTOR
321-0759

Eve 322-7643

2523 S. FR E N C H AV E .

By Owner Longwood Area 4
Bdrm . 2 B. Pool, garden spot
Reduced to IM 500 1X5747

MINT CONDITION! Beauty and
quality abound In this ) bedroom.
2 balh homo. Wood B beam
catlings, query tile 1 hardwood
lloors. Ilrcplece Largo, lovtly
lot. 5*5.540.

By Owner, new Villa home In
Hidden Lakes. 2 bdrm. 2 bath,
large lot. I car garage ISO.X)0.
114.500 to assume P a ym e n t 1)V«
mo X I 4X7________
By ownar. Midden Lake. 12*
Dor adx Road. ) bdrm, 7 bath,
wooded lot. screened room. 7 car
garage, large kitchen 147.*00 Ph
X I 4X7

OREENBRIAR; Lovtly veil kept )
bedroom. 7 both home near Colt
Course. Pool, tcreonod patio.
&gt;*s,*o«.
HIDDEN LAKE: ) bedroom. )
balh. CB Stucco with wood trim.
Bright, cheery eal In kitchen.
Covered petro. fenced back yard.
ISV,**4.

DREAM HOME IN COUNTRVI
Just Ilk* new, ) story. 4 bdrm, 7
b a lls , w / c e s t o m c e d a r
ttireughauti Plush carpetl
sparkling pool I J paddle lansl
Large shade tiees end citrusl 2
garages and Fla. rm. teal
S45.MC.

XI 0041

SOUTHERN CHARM. Large 2
story, 4 bdrm 2Vi bath horn*.
W/country kltchtnl Family
room I Brick (replace in master
bdrmt Formal dining room!
Commercial laningl Extensively
remedledl 545.104.

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
• Adult A Family
Sections
• W/D Connections
• Coble TV. Pool
• Short Tetm Leases
Available

COUNTRY LIVING, at Its best In
town! ) large bdrmst Sparkling
pool I 17 Iruil freest on approx *j
acre earner toll Cedar and citrus
th ro u g h o u t!

V e ry

p riv a te

and

l A J&gt; - *«“»• * ■* ™

tented I Only SU.S04.

From * 3 8 0

HIDDEN LAKE ESTATES. At
tractive 1 bdrm. 7 bath home,
d b l/ c a r g a r a g a . k itc h e n
agpl.,C/H/A, tented yard,
w/prlvecy btdgal Sprinkler
tystaml Community goal, club
house and tennis I Law S. assume
mortgage! 542.500.

ISOS W. 25th SI.
3 1 1 - 3 0 *0

€

W E N E E D LISTING S

m o n o
K IU

l^

manor u j

a
Loam by

CALL TOLL TREE
i -atelit till

323-5774

doing H4-H

1444 HWY 17 *1

CO NSULT OUR

A N D LET AN E X P E R T D O T H E JO B
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

Electrical

Landscaping

Roofing

Accounting and Tax Services. No
business te large ar small.
Cemputerlied. PhDI-Moo.

Ouellty Electrical Service
Fans. Ilmars. security llles. add!
•Ions, new services, Insured
Matter Electrician Jamas Paul
XJ 755*

A B J Landscaping
Complete Lawn Maintenance
X I 4241

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

O d a b t r Turns E v e ry th in g
Golden.... E von Opportunities
lor Want Ad Readers

Does Your Old Or New Root Leak 7
It It does, call OavidLee
____________X ) 4455____________
kool Mainlenanca
Repair work New work
Troy or George lor Fre* Est.
105 145 *440___________
tlAOOF INGti
Hit I'm Art Hubble.
I do beautiful work I do new roots,
root leaks I replace or repair
valleys, roots vents, etc I will
save you money IX7 I7X
SEMINOlt MOOt ING
ReRooft.New Roots.Root Repairs
Free Estimates Ph X I 1549

Accounting &amp;
Tex Service

Rtmodtlini Specialist
We handle The
Whole Ball ot Wax

Health &amp; Beauty

B E.Link Const
322-7029

TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook SltE.IttSt 1X 5742

F inane Ing Available

Home Improvement
Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
• OIL HEATER a
CLEANING ANDSERVICING
Call Ralph. Ml *717,
TON, Discount On All Repairs
Far Window Air Conditioners
One Day Service. P hIX 14)1.

Automotive
20% On All Fwi(n Cara
Repairs. October Only.
Majoe and Minor Wo/fc.
277-1631

Bookkeeping
Cemputerlied iiuvxkcrp.ng
We'lt do your books on our com
puter tor at little as I X a month
Receive monthly trail balance
and statements with profit canter
'I desired Other reports avell
able
Cell Gall X ) 074*

Cleaning Service
A Money Bock Oaurtnttel
Ken Holden Southern Mold Ser
BondUntur Mold 440 »*74
P4R MAID SERVICES
Have you had you. home cleaned
la te ly ? C leaning with the
personal touch M7 0115 47*4)11.

COLLIER'S HOME REPAIRS
carpentry, fooling, painting,
wtodaer ropelr. K144X_________

COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
No |ob to small Minor i ma|or
repairs Licensed B bonded
____________ 7X-5DI____________
PARTNERS. Roofing repair, paint
Ing. remodeling and additions
Free Ell Call Eve* m 04C.I

Home Repairs
Austin's Mainlenanca. Carpentry,
plumbing, painting, masonry,
sprinklers, remodeling 1)1-178)
Carpentry alterations, gutter work,
painting, siding, porches, patios,
ate Ask for Art Hubble
I*** Prkaell X2-I7*).
Maintenance ol all types
Carpentry, painting. |'umblng
________1 electric )7)4QM_______
No |ob too small. Hama repairs and
remodeling 25 Yeeri experience
■ ■ ■ -____________________

Lawn Service
ALL YOU NEEO IS US
22107*7
Crockttt L Waters Lawn Service
KINO B SONS LAWN SERVICE
Early Fall Clean Up. 559 Special
Far Any Average Yard. 145 7*74
L B M Lawn Cart Service
Mow. edge. trim, and haul Contact
La# or Mark X I 11*7 or X ) 9141
W 1,0 LAWN SERVICE
Mowing, adging.tertllliing
Free estimates Ph 1X 074*

Masonry
BEAL Concrete I man quality
operation Patios, driveways
Days X I 7)3) Eves X7 IXI
e e . GUVS CONCRETE • a e
FREE ESTIMATEI ANYTIME I
11 Yrs. Exp 14* 54)4
SWIFT CONCRETE. Footari,
driveways, pads, floors, pools.
Chaff Stone Fre* Ett/17) 710)

Nursing Care
OUR RATESARE LOWER
Lekavlew Nursing Center
*1* E Second S t. Sanlord
XJ 4707

Painting
CENTRAL FLORIDA
Hemt Improvement
Painting. Carpentry,
Small Repairs

Interior Decorating

I) Years Experience. W) )54«.

Custom Draper lei-Verticals
AFFORDABLE PRICES

» .F R E E ESTIMATE* •
Rhodes Pstnllng All Types
IS Yrs. Exp 24 Hr Phone X )4 * )l

5h^rnn'tC.oetlont47l 0 5 )

•

_It's mirrhjms tr&gt;w_tyi' n, * t&gt;* '-n-n owner sail. "Sail III" 1 year
new. ) bedroom. 7 balh. Immacu
lale Best buy In area
Open House Sunday. I to4:X P M
IMMomlrvgglo/y Dr
TheCrossmos
CRANK CONST./REALTOR
4)0 4041.___________

Secretarial Service
Resume and Cover letter
Preparation GeneralTypingend

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
SEWING MACHINE. Zlg lag. all
m etal G uaran lted 54* 00
Seminole Sewing 17 *2 Lake
Mary Blvd Wmn Dixie Canter
____________3X9411____________
VACUUM CLEANER; Electrolux,
n ew . g u a r a n te e d 5 4 *.OO
Seminole Vacl 17 X and Lake
Mary Blvd. Wmn Dixie Center
X7»4n

Swimming Pool Service
SUNSHINE POiuL SERVICE
Will maintain your pool Inlop
condition, private or commer
Clet Ph X2 1)4). Sunshine Pool
Service. I l l Mellonvllle Ave
Sanlord FI X77I

Tree Service
~ JOHN ALIEN LAWN BT REE
Any kind of Tree Service
__ We do most anyth mg X I 5)90

Landclearing

Plastering/Dry Wall

Savel Credit on Good Woodl
JACKSON TREE SERVICE
* V r t Experiencef*»4H5

LANDCLEARING. FILIO IR T,
C IAYB SH AIE
X) M l

A L L P h a s e s *1 P l a i i r r l n g
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
cote, simulated brick X I 5V*5

Tri County Tree Service
Tiim, remove, fresh hauling
firewood. Ireeett JX *410

�141-Homes For Sale

141—Hornet For Sale

Sal* by Owner. Longwood I
Bdrm.. 2 Batb. U R , D/R. Ftml
ly Room with llrrplat*. pool, and
muth mpr*. 577.000 1)4 OtO)

STEMPER AGENCY INC.
FIRST TIME OFFEREDI
Thera'i room lo ipread out In thlt 4
~ . +K jSt J on quiet
cul de vac. Maleitlc oakt give
country feeling You ihould tee
thill U3.S00
Prlda at Owntrvhlp vhowi In this )
Br.. 2 A dnilhecne. near high
ichool and thopplng Realli
llcally priced at I5J.000

REALTOR 271 4991

0UILOING LOT. New hom* ar«i.
Lake Mary Kheeli. convrnltnt to
ihapping. OWNERS ANXIOUS
TO SELL. Only III.S04.
FANTASTIC OWNER FINANC­
ING. Huge icreened pool A ipa. t
bedroom p'ut gam* room ter
kidv. 2I&gt;IT family room, wtlk lo
Idyllwlld* Elm. Min te 14. Yeu
mutt ***. call today Itl.SM.
SPACIOUS CUSTOM HOME In
detlrabl* Lake Mary area an &lt;i
acre let. )/2 with all utrai.
Many Ireei. You mull lae te
apprecia'e.lltt.tot.
IN V E S T O R ) D E LIO H T I. OR
OREAT STARTER HOME. 1/H,
in nlca neighborhood. Priced
below market te COME ON BY.
Motivated Seller. 329.944.

REALTY

REALTORS

Sanford's Sales Leader

LAKE M AR Y BRAND NEW
ENEROY EFFICIENT 1/2 split
plen Convenient location! Great
school dltlrlctl Convenient to 1-4.
HURRY BEFORE YOU MISS
OUT.On,‘ ;UI.SM.

WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINIOLE COUHTY

OPEN SATUROAY) 3.

FAMILY LIVINO. 4 bdrm, 3 bath
hem* in Wlnnwoud with * split
plan, D/R, F/R, patio, new reel
and |u*t painted. Beat port tool
1)3.900.

FANTASTIC. 2 bdrm, 2 bath hem*
In Immaculate condition. Newly
painted end decorated. C/H/A,
W/W/C. D/R. paddle Ians,
fenced yard end mere. 133.349.

1)4 MAIN ROAD. LAKE MARY
(CAROINALOAK3)
Baautltul. spacious, ipllt. ) Bdrm
home with "bonus" room that
makt* a great alllce/hebby
room. Lovely spa with prlvalt
screened perch Lr‘ l *1 ether
eitras. Must see te appreciate.
Cam* by Set.

3 Bdrm . I bath, completely re
stored, celling tens throughout,
oak Hoots Urge lot. good area
547.100 321 0544alter ) P M

UNDER 13.0*1 DOWN
Doll H o u m Affordable
monthly payments Call owner
broker Mletmen 311 1*11
•. UNDER PRICED *
17.900 ] Bdrm. H&gt; Beth Move In
condinerr caff tor appointment
Broker 27J tail or 1 771 4)1)

•

REALTORS

3 ACRE TR AC TS G E N E VA
AREA. East at Santo-d. Same on
hard surface read. 29% down
dating In 19 days. I ) Year
mortgage, at l*% Hiterest. Call
tor dataits and Inspect too.

3 Bdrm

C A L L A N Y T IM E
2M3 5. Park

I t T O N Id H i; BUT 1

THClkSHt SHE WAS \ TO ORPERI
ONLY YCLKIN’/ KYUK* N H M P H /
KYUH! NO APPLAUSE
PLEASE. You'Ll.
fcOCr /y\£ ON l

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

the ^
ONLY
&lt;
TH\N&lt;5 w orse
th an

h is

JO K E S IS
HIS TIM IN G

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale

'EE HER COlA\H&lt;S
All American I NO I2XM. 2 Bdrm .
Air, In lamlly taction ol Carriage
Cove 55.300 277 4477___________

GREGORYMOBILE HOMI SINI
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
SKYLINE DEALER
FEATURING
Palm Baach Villa
Graenleal
Palm Springs
Palm Manor
Siesta Key
VAFHA Financing .10)122 )200
New Home* starting at lifts Easy
credit and low down Uncle Roy*.
Leesburg US 441 *04 7)7 0774
RESALES (Family Park)
11X40 Nicel 511.900
- 'V i! Spacious! 513.300
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC
303-322 5TOO

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

207—Swap Corner
Hat Fall Heutadeanlng
Turned Up Surplus Things
Went Ad Will Turn To CeshT

SIDE BY SIOE KENMORE refrlg
ere tor. 2 yrv old Es. Condition
WOO or b*H oiler. Full Mallreti
boi iprlngi. headboard 1 (ram*,
never used IT] Cell 22) HIT.
WILSONMAIER FURNITURE
111 I f)E FIRSTST.
322 3477
7 Year old 1)3 upright frecrer.
3)00 Gas grill used 3 timet. 3150
Ethan Allan dressing table.
112)00 Stereo 1M 371 4721.

211—Antiques/
Collectables
Furniture and repair, stripping and
rellnlthlng, itelning, antique* a
speciality. I l l 0593._____________
Nortak* China Rosamor Pattern
*1 piece* 14 Avon plattt.'T) to 'll
Christmas and other* 321 4437.

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo

159—Real Estate
Wanted

213—Auctions

Good Used Televisions 12) And Up
MILLERS
2*ITOrlando Dr
____________327 0337____________
TELEVISION • ZENITH 2 )" Color
TV in Walnut Console. Original
Prlca. ever )700 Balance due
)293 Cash or taka up payments
of S20 00 month. No Money down
Still In warranty. Free Home
Trial - no obligation 547 3394
19" Curtis Ma'htt portable. 3 year
warranty, *200 or best otter. 4
Pionre- speakers. Pioneer 150
receiver. Pioneer equallier,
cassette deck. Marantr turnta
bl*. 51.400 or best otter. 322 72)3
b e tw een )*) 377 44*0

PRIVATE INVESTOR
WANTING TO BUY
MULTI FAMILY UNITS
NO REALTORS
CALL 323 2269.
lorJBEDROOM HOUSE
Your PRICE. MY TE»MS
271 4441.

161—Country
Property/Sale

APPLIANCES. REPOSSESSED,
recondltUned. freight damaged
From seellp Ov*',*"*eed
Nearly New 717 E. 1st St. 323 74U
Cash lor good uMd lurnltura.
Larry's New * Used Furniture
Mart 2l3SanlordAv*.322 4132
Ken more peril, service,
used washers 17)0497

Auction Every other Sal. night,
tlarling Oct 22. Florida Trader
Auction. Longwood 339-31If.

Auction Sale
Friday Nite 7 PM

187—Sporting Goods
Walker hunting dogs.
FREEH
Phone 222 24SOafter I P M.
2 hunting permits lor Bull Creek.
U«h. Ilth, * 14th Both 5110 Cell
between5 * 1P.M 222 27*9

FOR ESTATE Commercial or
Residential Auctions * Apprai*
alt Call Dell's Am lion 2 2 1 3*70
FOR ESTATE or COMMERCIAL
AUCTIONS Call A I AUCTION
SFRVICF 32) 4*99

Relrlgeralor Frigidelr* 17 Cu tl
harvest gold 7 yrt old. (100
Sears Coldspot 12 cu. It., whit*
treeier SI90. Cell m t l » . a to t
PM

Paying CASH lor Aluminum, Cans.
Copper. Brasa. Lead. Newtpa
per. Glati. Gold. Silver.
Kokomo Tool. 91) W. lit
B 4:10 Sel. 9-1323-1100

WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE* APPLIANCES

'’ Hunting" For Rttultsf
You’ll Gel Good‘ Shots'
In Herald Went Ads

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
CYPRESS MULCH FOR SALE
B * O Sawmill
Pori at Senlord 11) 4791

215—Boats/Accessories

FILL D IR T* TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clark * Hlrt 121 7350.321 2(2)

MOONEY APPLIANCES
Large upright Ireerer
Good condition 150

HUOE OARAOE SALE. Lets and
loti of nlca Itamt. Clothing,
bedroom furniture, sporting
goods etc. Saturday I). 30)
Hidden Hollow Court. Com*
early. Lot* of nice buy*_________
Large Yard Sale Mltc Item*.
Salurdey I till 102 E 20th.
Sanford
LOOKINOFOR A TREAT IN
STEADOF A TRICKT USE OUR
CLASSIFIEDS.
Multi Tamlly Garage Sal* In
elude* many Fliher Price toy)
Sat. OCt t). I to ) P M 424
CardlnalOakt C t. LakaAAary,
Near SCC
S A N F O R D . 2*1 ) Elm A y r.
Craftsman radial taw 3140 Disc
belt l i r ^ n It*) Router, drill,
tool*, adult and child mltc. Sat
I 'l l . , only
377 3029
Sat. Oct l)lh. 5 A M lo 4 P M 4
Family carport aalt 4002 Old
Orlando Rd Sanford
3 Family Yard Sal*
Sat only I 10III 3 PM.
104 Rosalia Or.
3 Family Sale.
21511* Park Ava.
Saturday.
( Family Yard Sal* Frl. A Sal. 9 to
) All kinds ol mltc. Itamt: wind
chimes, ceramics, mecrem*.
cloth ing, bosks, pictures,
glassware and old larm Item*. E.
44 to Beardell Ave turn right
follow signs

Couches and chair*, beds, chast ol
drawers, stereos. TV*, soft**
and end table set. bar. ,»lut the
content* e! an estate.

CASH DOOR PRIZES
Dells's Auction

14’ boat, trailer, and 20 H P.
Marcury motor. Alt 7) year
modal, with less than X hours
um *1500 Also. Re*M hitch with
sway btr. Call alter 2 P M
121 0457
__________
71 Chrysler Ou’boeriJ Motor. IX
HP wilfi power tin end control*
UM 223 4415.

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
Siberian Husky Pups Bl/Sllver.
w/whlto. blue eyes Wormed end
Shots. *U and up 322 4375

223—Miscellaneous

Apartment comolts Rummage
Sel*. Loti of Everything. Set and
Sun f to 4 2M0 Riogewood Ave
R d)r..ood Arm» AnaHmantt
Clothing, dining table. TV, link,
and load! of mltc. Oct. t)th A
14th IA M MIT 2M4 Cantral Dr .

Garage Sal* 5)1 E Ridgewood St.
Altamont* Spgt Frl. and Sat., I
tit) PM .
Garage Sal*. Sat 9-1 only. Twin
b a d / l r a m * 111. T wi n
Irama/haadbocrd *20 Dining
tabla A chain 530. Drettar 12). 2
Strolleri )20U. Mile ItO) S.

Sr

Friday. Oct. 14.1 W - H A

217—Garage Sales

OARAOESALC 52.
Frldayi IJ P M
FLEAWORLD Hwy. If T2
Barglm A Fun Buying A Sailing
♦4JI2T2.

)

Sandlewoodbyowner. I Bdr.
1 blh, carpal, lull kltchtn,
washer/dryer, A'C, pool and
malnl .t2A.U0 221 *047
alter ). 222 4*42.

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

REALTY

M I 6 - T I R PIKE! IF yO\i PtfN'T
LIKE THE FOCV HERE JUSTMARCH
&gt; T fltH E HAKI0UP6EK PALACE!
( THEY LL COCK THEIR iA W P U *T

CHICKEN A 6 M N *
MR*. HOOPlZ fh V
SHE W'Ab WINtflNcS

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

with Major Hoopla

155—Condominiums
Co Op / Sale

COUNTRY LIVINO wooded Urge
tot on private road near St Johns
River. X ) 44* 4014.

JUST LISTED. 3 bdrm. 7 bath
hem* an a level* let. with C/H/A.
W/W/C. split plan, eqpt with
mlcrawava. paddle Ians and
lanced yard. U2.5M.

234S S. Park

• SANFORD I 4A M *
H i Acr* + •country homa ill*
Oak pin* iom* cl**r«d paved I0\
down 10Yrt it 17V
STENSTROM REALTY
REALTORS
____ • Call )22 2420 Any time*
ST. JOHNS River. 31* acr* P4trr«u
•*•8? &gt;&lt;v*r K C m . Gray * t*(&gt;
Starting 519.900 Public wal*r. 20
mb. lo Altamont* Mall |)\ 20
yrt financing, no qualifying.
Broktr. 42( 45)2

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

JUST FOR YOU. 4 bdrm. I bath
hem* with large lamlly room,
breakfast bar. split plan, paddle
Ians, lanced rear yard and lets
mere. U9.3M.

C A L L A N Y T IM E

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale

imall amplltier 1500 00
S24 U N

Lika now, I t l ) Arlan* riding
Iawnmower. 10 tip. 22" blade,
electric ilert. Under warranty.
Plica I f f ) Call 222 AM*
Model 1400. Code e Phone.} »
Menage cap. Remola Command
130 00 777 7X7

SEWING MACHINE. SlMOER
FUTURA. Ilka new. on* ol
singer'* Top Model! All SHtchet
built In Sold new over 1700. Mutt
tacrlflc* lor ITU A) or Attum*
St) Monthly payment* Will take
trade at part payment Fie*
home Trial. Call *42 014
Used Otdt Trombone
Good condition
) 100 Call 311*110 Aik for Cindy.

Wt buy turn Hurt, antique* or
accept consignment* lor Auction.
Fie Tractor Auction 339-3114.
1Quern Sire Bed
530 t New Security Light
5)0 12)5071.
2 girl* bicycle* 70" Sidewalk with
training wtwels. 74" High Ralta
with banana Mat 1730*43

7 ) AUOIA "21 LTD
Owner hailoo many cart I
MUST SELL. Ml 0D2t
7 * Ford Station Wanon P/%, P/A
aw. t u n »rant, radio and hooter
5530 Coed, clean running car.
*34 4403o ' 3)9 9100.____ ‘
I t Grand Torino, f paitenger
Station Wagon, run* good It .100
or bet! otter J2t U N
M Monto Carle. Loaded, bucket
•eat*, blue with matching Interl
or E itra nice! 21 Marcury
Marqvll 2 dr . imall V I. A/T.
P/S. A/C P'B. AM/FM Uereo. 21
Tayata Pickup 4 cyl., ltd. tram ,
radio, topper Ernie Jachten
Aide M itt J2l m a

235—Trucks/
Buses/Vans
1*72 Blarar
4 &gt; 4 Reconditioned
32J 420) C *» *tt*r ):00

239—Motorcycles/Bikes
HAFLEY DAVIDSON
ITT) 1200CC
Police Special 11.000
174 3SW
Honda CVj X Almost new, etiii
under warranty Only 2TOC mile*.
51200 Include* helmet end r*tn
gear Call 122 )011 attar 4 P M

2*11—Recreational
Vehicles/Campers
Country Air* travel trailer,
24'. M il contained. Can. A/H
l * f *41* alter 3 PM.

Bad Credit!
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Eery Term*
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1120 S Sanford Ave.
221 407)
Dtbary Auto A Marina Salat
across Ih* river top o* hill 174
Hwy 17 92 Debary 44* 1)44
Jeep CJ) New loo. mechanically
good, some rust.
52)00 374 7331.
Mercury Grand Marquis 2). 7
door, full power, air, stereo.
12500 12) 1249
1970 V.W Van. some rust, runs
great. 30,000 ml. on angina
overhaul. 51.000. Ph 349 1007.
Geneva.

191* CHEVETTE. 4 cyl. air.
auto/lrans, mag wheals, tinted
windows. 400 watt stereo system
Asking 53.300 Ph 327 U77 or
B3I4130 Ask lor Jo*
1*90Pontiac Firebird
Auto. Air, Stereo
CallSISOtt
&gt;

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
Fr «m 1 10 to iw or morg
Call 322 1424 223 0 12
TOP Dollar Paid Tor Junk A Used
cart, trucks A heavy equipment
227 )990
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 293 430S

SECA 750 H
* 2595 ”

Oet the "Cream Ol the Crept
The Seasons Best Buys Are
In the Want Ads!

MAXIM 650 J

'72 Ford LTD Good condition
* 1.000or best offer.
'
Ph 223 777*.

9 2 3 9 9

fWM'

H

O

A

M f

We Sell Used Cars For Less And We'll Prove It. This Week We Will Offer
Guaranteed *1500 Trade In On Any Of The Used Vehicles Listed Below,
Just Bring This Ad With You And Receive An Extra MOO00 Over And
Above The Advertised Special After You've Made Your Best Dealll
81 H O N D A CIVIC

81 BUICK REGAL

—

8 2 H O N D A ACCORD

7 2 PONTIAC CATALINA

81 ARIES CUSTOM W GN

Hatchback 5 Speed, A/C Hard To Find
And This Is A New Car Trade.

4 Door Automatic, A/C.
Nice Old Dependatls Transportation.

Automatic, A/C.
Vary Nice.

2 Door, Power Windows, Staroo,
Beautiful Blua In Color And
Double Sharp. Groat Deal.

*8280
•*1500
*6780

*8390
•*1500
*6890

*2290
•*1500
*790

*6190
•*1500
*4690

*7690
•*1500
*6190

82 CA M ARO Z -2 8

8 0 PLYMOUTH VOLARE

81 CM C SIERRA 15 00

81 DODGE COLT

81 CHEV CORVETTE

Pick-Up, 6 Cylinder, Automatic, A/C.
Really Nice.

2 Door, Automatic, P/S And P/B
Great Car For Teenager
Going To School.

8 0 CHEV T.ONTE CARLO

Hatchback
Stick With A/C.

Beautiful Black Car With T-Tops
Automatic, A/C, Power Windows
And Seats.

2 Door, Automatic, A/C. Kict
White Car With Red interior.

Wt.‘ * With Glass Tops
And Beautiful.

*7690
•*1500
*6190

*5690
•*1500
*4190

* 12,490

•4290
•*1500
•2790

•7390
•*1500
*5890

* 14,750

4 Door, 1 Owner Beautiful
Automobile, A/C. You Must See
To Appreciate.

7 8 BMW 3201
Sunroof, Automatic, A/C. Really Nice.
High Miles But Oh What A Deal!

*7190
-*1500
*5090

•*1500
* 10,990

-*1500
* 13,250
%

Glass T-Tops, 5 Spaed, A/C,
Beautiful Cranberry In Color.
Don’ t Miss This Oeal.

7 8 RANGER F250 4 x 4

8 0 H O N D A CIVIC

81 PLYMOUTH
H O R IZ O N

Tutone Paint.
Great For Hunting Season.

Hatchback 1300. With A/C. This Is A
Real Deal For A Honda.

4 Door, Automatic, A/C.
1 Owner And Double Sharp.

• 10,750

*6790
•*1500
•5290

*3990
-•1500
*2490

•*1500
•4190

8 0 DATSUN 2 8 0 Z X
8 0 BMW 3201

7 8 CHEV CA M ARO LT

5 Speed, A/C, Local, 1 Owner.
Beautiful Car.

With T 'To p t, Beautiful, Automatic.
Just Lika It Rolled O ff Showroom.

* 10,990

*5880
•*1500
*4380

•*1500
*9490

-*1500
•9250

m ■ m m

h b b ib h

S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A
2913 ORLANDO DRIVE-RT. 17-92• ORLANDO: 831-1660 SANFORD: 323-6100
O P EN M O N D A Y T H R U F R ID A Y . 9 - 8

•

SATURDAY. 9 - 5

• SU NDAY. 1 2 -5

�%

U A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

Friday, Ocl. M, I90J

C a m p a i g n '8 4
Reagan Re-Election Committee Opens
WASHINGTON (Ul*l) — President Reagan's reflection Committee, said the .pmuflent__is__"Jjv'dwj wVmWU
comuifTiee opens lor ousincss next week, but Reagan la running room" by putting ofTa form al announcement.
While the press may speculate that certain actions or
still delaying his formal announcement because he does
statements
are politically motivated. Reagan becomes
not want to hurt his credibility, the head of the
vulnerable to this contention with regard to everything
committee said.
Armed with long-awaited consent from Reagan. Sen. he says and docs once he declares. Laxalt said.
"I don't think It’s a subterfuge nt all." he said. "It’s a
Paul I.avail. R-Nev.. announced to reporters Thursday
that the panel will begin work next week under the perfectly honest approach."
Laxalt. a Reagan confldnnt who will Berve as chulrman
banner of "Reagan-Bush ’84."
"I have no doubt In my mind that Ronald Reagan Is of the campaign committee, said the president will wait
going to be a candidate to re-election." Laxalt said with for a number of weeks — probably until after Congress
a new sense of confidence. "In football terms." he wraps up Its work — to declare his candidacy for a
second term.
mused, "thiscampaign Ison the six-inch line."
Laxalt said Reagan would sign a letter authorizing the
The announcement followed a 20-mlnute Oval OfTIcc
meeting In which Reagan, who hns taken delight In formation of a campaign committee In papars to Ik * filed
keeping alive the guessing game concerning his political with the Federal Election Commission.
The committee will operate from ofTlces In a building
future, agreed to become a legal candidate for re-election
near the Capitol that houses the National Association of
ns of Monday.
But Reagnn still Intends to differentiate between his Counties nnd could be In operation Monday or Tuesday,
status as a legal candidate and that of a formal, with Laxnlt as chnlrman and White House political
announced candidate. Despite his nod of approval to adviser Edward Rollins ns campaign director.
The date for creation of the committee had been In
Iraxalt. he still may not declare his candidacy until
place
for some time. Laxnlt. however, was reluctant to
mltj-Dcccmber.
"He feels that the formal announcement — a final press ahead without a tangible sign of consent from
hlrsslng of candidacy — would Impair Ills credibility," Reagan.
Laxalt said he walked Into the Oval Office and told
Iraxall said. "I tend to agree with him. It's a subtle
Reagan, "the time has come" for a positive sign that the
thlOg."
Laxalt. a conservative chosen by Reagan last year to campaign should move forward. He said he told Reagan
became general chairman of the Republican National he wanted the authorization “ In writing."

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIOHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 7*1*4 CP
IN RE: THE INTERESTSOF
LORA LFA DAFFRON ond
JEFFREY SCOTTDAFFRON.
Words
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
HOMER C. DAFFRON. whour Hot
known address and residence It:
Routt 7. Boi 4J0B
'*
Shelby, North Carolina
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that a Ptllllon lor Guardianship Km
bttn Iliad In the Circuit Court ol
Seminole Count,. Flcrlda, Ca»a No.
7* 104 CP, and you art required to
serve a copy ol your written do
lenses. II any, to II on MICHAEL E.
GRAY. ESQUIRE, ol CLEVELAND
l BRIDGES. Potl Otllco Drawer Z.
Sanford. Florida. 331130771. on or
before lha 11th day of November,
m j. and Ilia the original with the
Clark ol Ihlt Court elthar bafora
service on Petitioner's Attomay or
Immediately thereafter, other*lie a
delault and ultimata judgment will
he entered lor lha relief demanded In
the Petition.
Witness my hand and teal ol the
Court on Ihlt Itth day ot October.
IMJ
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, JR.
Clerk
ot the Circuit Court
BY: Betty M Capps
Deputy Clerk
MICHAEL E. GRAY. ESQUIRE ol
CLEVELANOABRIDGES
Pot! Of lice Drawer Z
Senior d. Florida a m 0771
Telephone. ( K l i m I II l
Attr-nwy lor Petitioner
PubllthOcloberU.il. INS
DEM W

Male Bias Removed From Bible
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Na­
tional Council of Churches today
made public Its controversial "In ­
clusive langungc" lectionary — the
Bible readings used In public
worship — recast In non-sexist
language.
And two of the council's 31
members, the Lutheran Church In
America and the Eastern O.lhodox
Church. Immediately disassociated
themselves from the project.
Dr. Claire Randall, general secre­
tary of the church council, said the
new lectionary “ Is not an official
Icetlonary” but "a result of requests
from many local churches who were
struggling with the question of
gender bias In the language of
worship, and who had neither the
cx^jcrtlse or the time to recast the
Scripture In Inclusive language."
The new lectionary, using the
readings from the Bible put together

by the 10-church Consultation on
Church Union, recasts the "male
bias" of the Bible In Its major
English translation, the Revised
Standard Version. In Its references
to people and changes some lan­
guage about God nnd Jesus Christ.
It argues, for example, thut many
Biblical passages that use the Greek
word "anthropos." which can be
translated either as "human being"
or. sometimes, "mule human be­
in g ." Is rcgulurly rendered as
"m ale." "m an." or "m en."
For example, the RSV version. In
a familiar passage, translates the
words of Jesus as "Let your light so
shine before 'men’ that they may
see your good works and glorify
your Father who Is In heaven."
In this Instance. It Is argued, the
use of the Greek "anthropos ’ dors
not mean "males but not females"
and said It could be translated ns

well to read "Let your light so shine
among'others.'"
In another example, the commit­
tee rendered Ezek. 33.2. which
speaks of "watchmen." as "w at­
cher." It said, "even though the
Hebrew word clearly refers to a
male sentry who protected the city
or town from surplsc attack.”
"In this lertlonary." the commit­
tee s a id , •'w o m e n can henr
themselves as those who are called
to watch for the deeds of God."
Three years In the making, the
Icetlonary project has been bitterly
attacked by conservative und Re­
ligious Right groups as an effort to
pervert the Bible.
In re c e n t y e a rs . C h ris tia n
feminists have complained that the
male bias In both the original
Biblical texts and In their English
translations tend to exclude them
from the life of the church.

Study Says No Nerve Gas Weapons
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congress should reject a
Pentagon request for $151.6 million to produce two new
nerve gas weapons because production plans arc
uncertuln. a congressional study concludes.
A 46-page report by the General Accounting Office
analyzed the Pentagon's $4.6 billion request for
ammunition procurement In 1984 and recommended
reducing the amount by $433.6 million.
The report by Congress’s Investigative arm was
prepared for the House Appropriations Committee.
The committee Is expected to consider legislation next
week that would fund more than $200 billion worth of
weapons programs and other defense-related activities.
The study Is expected to bolster arguments of those
who oppose the administration's plans to resume of
nerve gas for the first lime since 1969. The House
rejected the program earlier this year and the Senate
approved it only when Vice President George Bush
broke a 49-49 lie: the program then survived a
House-Senate conference to reconcile the two mllltury
bills.
The study recommends that Congress reject $18.1
million for production of 155-mllllmctcr binary nerve
gas shells and $43.2 million for production of the
troubled "B lgeye" nerve gas bomb. It also suggests

eliminating $90.3 million for the production nnd
assembly facilities that would be used for making the
bomb.
In binary chemical ammunition, two non-lcthnl
chemicals nrc separated until they are mixed In an
artillery shell or bomb, producing a lethal gas. They are.
considered safer than older single-chambered weapons
which may leak.
An appropriations subcommittee already has cut the
administration request by more than half, to $61.6
million. In addition, the Defense Department, citing
development delays, withdrew Its request for Blgeye
production funds earlier this year.
"Until the Army chooses the locutions of these
projects, funding them In fiscal year 1984 Is premature
since the costs will vary according to location. ' said the
report, dated Sept. 28. "Further, the developmental
Blgeye bomb has-teehnlcnl problems nnd has undergone
only limited testing."
Test evaluations last spring by the Defense Depart­
ment found the bomb reached unacceptably high
temperature levels when the .nixing process was begun
uboard the aircraft. The Pentagon ordered the mixing
process to lx* delayed until after the bomb Is released,
and said It Is satisfied with the results.

School To Perform Dyslexia Screening
What do Olympian Bruce Jenner.
atomic scientist Albert Einstein,
artist Pablo Picasso, and politician
Nelson Rockefeller have In com­
mon? The disability qf dyslexia ..an
inability to read...that neurological
s c r a m b lin g th a t a f f l i c t s an
estimated 25 million Americans.
The DePaul School of Central
Florida will offer a screening pft&gt;"
gram Wednesday and Thursday to
help parents determine If this
common disability Is the reason
behind their child's school pro­
blems. Very often, dyslexia Is the
root cause of behavioral problems.

slowness In completing tasks or
organizational and communication
problems.
Reversal of letter perception and
difficulty In reading are not the only
problems the dyslexic child has.
And. the dyslexic child grows up to
be a dyslexic adult. Thrre Is not n
cure...but there Is a way to teach the
dyslexic Individual (at any age) to
cope In a world that very often
appears backward to them.
The DePaul School Is a non profit,
non-drnomlnatlonal school that Is
run by the parents of Its students.
Located at 4710 Adanson St.. Or­

lando. In the St. Paul's Methodist
Church education building, the
school has programs for people aged
6 to 80.
The screening process Itself Is a
personalized, one-on-one process
that takes 2 Mi hours.
The cost of the testing Is $100 and
the results will lx* available almost
Immediately, with an explanatory
workshop for parents following on
October 22 and 23.
For more Information, contact
Meg Parker nt 628-9888 or Ida
Christopher at 629-4542.

FBI S e ize s C o m p u te r E q u ip m e n t
United Preaa International
FBI Ggenls on a nationwide hunt for
equipment used to crack military and
business computer systems raided the
homes of teenage electronics whizzes In
six states, reported ly turning up
software gangs led by youths known os
"Th e Cracker" and "The Wizard."
FBI agents launched raids from New
York to California this week und seized
thousands of dollars o f equipment.
Sources said the Investigation focuses on
qffen scs In clu d in g Ille g a l use o f
electronic message services, tapping o(
defense information and destruction of
stored data.
The Detroit Free Press quoted a source
cft.se to the Investigation who said
damage caused by a Detroit group of
computer enthusiasts was estimated
"between $500,000 and $1 million" and
"dozens and dozens of systems were
litVolved. Systems were damaged every­
where. coast to coast."
•2 'It's a matter o f deliberate, calculated
sabotage." the source said. 'T h e main
slant of the Investigation Is anything
defense-related."
jn Irvine. Calif., agents seized equip­
ment Tuesday at the homes of David
ItHI. 17: Wayne Correia. 17: Gary*

Knutson. 15: and his brother. Gregg. 14.
"W e never would or never did try to
harm any kind of system or steal any
kind of Information." a shaken Hill said
ut a Thursday news conference. "W e
were Just playing uround in there."
T h e I r v i n e y o u t h s b l a me d a
mysterious teen whiz called "T h e
Cracker" for teaching them how to tap a
commercial network thut churgcs users.
Correia said seven agents raided his
home, with one FBI man breaking
through his second-story bedroom
window, flashing his badge and saying.
"Hold it right there, that computer is
mine.”
Detroit newspapers and TV iicwb
stations reported the FBI raided at leust
12 homes in six slates. The raids were
reportedly conducted In Irvine. Detroit.
Tuscott, A r lz , Oklahoma City. Okla..
New York and Virginia.
In Alexandria. Vu.. the FBI released u
statement that said General Telephone
and Electronics Telenet Communica­
tions Corp. of Vienna. Va.. "became
aware that unidentified Intruders had
gained access to Its Tclrmall electronic
mall system."
None of the youths was charged.

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that w* *r*
cng«g*d In butlnttl *t 701 E*tt
Altamonte Dr . St* ,10*. Altamonte
Spring*. Seminole Count,. Florid*
under th* llctitlout name of FLYING
CARPET TRAVEL CLUB. *nd th«l
•ut intend to r*gltt*r M id n«m* with
th* Clork of th* Circuit Court,
Seminole County. Florid* In #c
cord«nc* with th* provision* of th*
Fictitious Nam* Slalut*. to Wit:
Section MJ Ot Florid* Statute* 1*17
AlUmont* Travel Inc
Martha G Anderson

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
E I OHT E E N T H JUDI CI AL
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CASE NO : I ) IMACA-tf-P
DIVISION: " P "
DUVAL FEOERAL SAVINGS ANO
L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N OF
JACKSONVILLE, a corporation.
Plaintiff.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. 1»TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
CASE NO. t ) 7*7* CA *4 0
IN RE: THE MARRIAGE OF
ALPHANSO ANDERSON.
Petitioner/Husbjnd,
JEANETTEE ANDERSON.
Respondenl/WIt*.
NOTICE OF ACTiCtt
THE STATE OF FLORIDA TO
J E A N E T T E E. A N D E R S O N .
WHOSE RESIDENCE AND TAAIL
INU AOrjireSS IS P.0 Be*.
Appleton, Now York
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that a sworn Petition lor Dissolution
ot Marrleg* by ALPHANSO AN
OERSON. has been tiled In the
Circuit Court In end lor Seminole
County, Florid*, th* short title ot
which 1s IN RE: THE MARRIAGE
OF ALPHANSO ANDERSON, Poll
llonor/Husbond ond JEANETTE E
ANDERSON. Respondonl/Wllo. and
by those present* you oro com­
manded lo appear ond III# your
answer or other defensive plead rgi
with the Clerk ol Iho Circuit Court In
ond for Seminole County, Florid*
end serve a copy thereof on Poll
H o n o r 's a tt o r n e y . JAC K T
BRIDGES, o ' C LEVELAND *
BRIDGES. Post Otllco Drawer Z.
Sentord. FL J7777«77l. on or before
th# IJth day ot November. IMJ. or
otherwise a default will be entered
against you
WITNESS my hand end oltlcial
seal ol the Court on this 17th day ot
October, IMJ
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR.
Clerk
ol IheCiicuit Court
By: Jeon Brltlanl
JACK T. BRIDGES. ESQUIRE, ol
CLEVELAND* BRIDGES
Post Otllco Drawer Z
Sentord. Florida 311114771
Telephone: J0VJ77 1)14
Publish October 14. 71. 71 * Nov
ember 4. IMJ
DEM f7_________________________

w
B F M&lt;C*LL ond PATRICIA A
McCALL. hit wile, and COTTON
STATES MUTUAL INSURANCE
C O M P A N Y and SOU TH EAST
BANK. N A . and FLAGSHIP BANK
OF SEMINOLE.
Defendenti
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
B E . McCall and
Patricia A McCall,
hit wile
Residence: Unknown
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that an action to foreclose a
mortgage on the following property
In Samlnote County, Florida.
Lot 1. Block A. THE SPRINGS.
DEERWOOO ESTATES, according
to the plat thereof ot recorded In Plat
Book It. pages IS and 74. of tne
public records ol Seminole County.
Florida.
hat been filed against you: and you
are required tu serve a copy ot your
written defenses. If any. to It on
E d w a rd

$

J0 « « *.

p t f 'l Y 'l f t

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

•!

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Nolle* I* hereby given Ihel *
Public Hearing will be held #1 lh#
Commission Room In Iho City Hall In
the City of Sanlord. Florida, at 7:00
o'clock P M on October 74, IMJ. to
consider th* adoption ol an ordl
mO.JC* t r •••* wily 0* 5a*tfsh'b»
Florida, till* ot which It at fallows:
ORDINANCE NO ISA!
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
Or SANFORD. FLORID*. AMEN
DING ORDINANCE NO I0f7 OF
SAID CITY; SAID ORDINANCE
BEING A ZONING PLAN SAID
AMENDMENT CHANGING THE
ZONING OF A PORTION OF THAT
C ER TAIN PR O PE R TY LYIN G
NORTH OF PAOLA ROAD (C44AI
AND WEST OF OREGON AVENUE
FROM AD (A G R IC U L T U R A L )
D I S T R I C T T O SR 1 A A
(S IN G L E - F A M IL Y RESIDEN
T I A L ) D IS T R IC T AND SR I
‘ (SINGLE FAMILY RESIDENTIAL
D W ELLING ) DISTRICT. PRO
VIDING FOR SEVERABILITY.
CONFLICTS AND EFFECTIVE
DATE
A copy shall be available at the
Oltleo ot the City Clerk lor all
persons desiring lo osm lne the

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Nolle* I* hereby given that et
Public Hearing will b* hold at th*
Commission Room In th* City Hotl In
the City of Sanford. Flo. Ida. at 7:00
o'clock P.M. on October 74. IMJ, to
tonslder the adoption of on ordl
none* by th* City ol Sentord.
c lor Id*, till* ol which Is as follow*:
ORDINANCE NO. t**4
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. AMEN
DING C H APTE R 71 OF THE
SANFORD C IT Y CODE CON­
CERNING WATER ANO SEWER
SERVICE CHARGES TO ELIMI­
NATE SECTIONS M 71. 70 41. 71 44.
71 4j, 71 44 ANO 7i 47 AND TO
PROVIDE A NEW SECTION 7* 4J
R E G A R D IN G C O N N E C T IO N
FEES: NEW SECTION 70 4J PRO
V ID IN G FOR A D D IT IO N A L
CHARGES WHEN USE OF PRO
PERTY CHANGES: PROVIDING
FOR SEVERABILITY. CONFLICTS
ANO EFFECTIVE DATE.
A copy shall be available at the
Office ol the City Clerk lor all
pertnne desiring to e«#mlne the

Iornay. whose address It JI4 Duval
Federal Building. Jacksonville.
Florida, m m . before October J*.
IN ), and file the original with the
Clerk of this Court either before
service on plaintiffs attomay or
Immediately thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against you
for the relief demanded In the
complaint or petition.
WITNESS my hand and the teal ot
this Court on this 70th day of
September. A 0 1*41
tSEALI
A* 1. UR H. BECKWITH. JR .
C.ERK
By: EleenorF. Puretto
Deputy Clerk
Publish September 71. JO A October
7. U let)
OEL 1M
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEArT n O
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at the
Commission Room in the City Hall In
the City ol Sanford. Florida, a' 7.00
o'clock P M on October J4. I ML to
consider the adoption ol an ordl
nance by the City of Sanford.
Florida, title ot which Is as follows:
ORDINANCE NO. 14J,
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. AMEN
DING ORDINANCE NO 10*7. SAID
ORDINANCE BEING THE ZONING
O R D IN A N C E . A P P E N D IX A.
ARTICLE VI. SEC. 1. TO ADD A
P A R A G R A P H P R O V ID IN G A
SUBSTITUTE TO THE PAVING
REQUIREMENTS FOR RESIDEN
TIAL FACILITIES REQUIRING
TEN 110) SPACES OR LESS:
PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY.
CONFLICTS. AND EFFECTIVE
OATE.
A copy shall be available at the
Office of the City Clerk lor all
persons desiring to eiamlne the
same.
All parties In Interest and citliens
shall have an opportunity lobe heard
at Mid hearing
By order ol the City Commission of
the City of Sanford. Florida
RosaM Rotundo
Deputy City Clerk
Publish October 14. IWJ
OEM 04
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that we are
engaged In business at 701 East
Altamonte Dr.. Ste 710*. Altamonte
Springs. Seminole County, Florida
under the fictitious name el EXEC­
UTIVE EXTRA TRAVEL CLUB,
and that we Intend to register M id
name with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida in
accordance with the provisions of th*
Fictitious Nam* Statute, to Wit:
Section |*J Of Florida Statutes IH7.
Altamonte Travel Inc.
Martha G Anderson
President
by EdwardC Anderson
Sect /Tree*
Dale October * IMJ
Publish October 7. t * 71.7«. IMJ
DEM 47

INVITATION TO BID
Th* Semlnoto County Shtrllf't Of
tic* It Initiating th# development ol a
Computer Assisted Ditpelch System
Seminole County Shorlirt Otllco now
requ esting proposals lur (ho
President
hardwire, software, and training oq
by Edward C Andtrton
lh* Computer Astisled Dispatch
Sect /Treat
System. Complete description ol
Dal* October 4. IMJ
requirements may be obtained from
•Publish October 7,14.71.71. IMJ
Dick Telton *1 Room 70J ot lh*
DEM 41
Sheriffs Office. 1)4) Jtm Street.
Sentord Airport. Sanlord Florid*
NOTICE UNDER
77771 week days between th* hours ot
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
lUUO end I DO hours October 17 thru
N U llLb IS HEREBY GIVEN that
Octobwr 71. tM) Questions may be
th* undersigned, desiring lo engage
directed to Dick Telson at (J0)l
In business under the fictitious name
777 I I I ) *st 107 during hours shown
of LEONARD SHELL SERVICE at
number 7SQQ Perk Avenue, In th* •bovt
/i/ John E. Polk
City ot Sanford, Florida. Intends to
Sheriff
register the Mid name with th* Clerk
Publish October 4.11,1*. IMJ
ol th* Circuit Court of Seminole
DEM JO
County. Florid*
DATED at Seniord. Florida, this
Uthdayof September. IMJ
TAKE A F L P R I O A
LEONARD*. SONS
ENTERPRISES. INC
’ By: Catherine A Leonard.
President
Publish September 10 * October 7.
B R E A M
1*71. IMJ
DEL 170

All parties In Intorest and cltliont
shall havo an opportunity to be heard
atMldhaarlng
By order ol lh* City Commission of
th* City of Sentord. Florida
R o m M Rotundo
Deputy City Clork
Publish October 14. IMJ
DEM *4
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CASE NO. U 7J7S CA-M-0
IN REi THE MARRIAGE OF
JOHN RAY DEAN,
Petitioner.
end
BRENDAGAY DEAN.
Respondent
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:BRENDA GAY DEAN
)10t Marlow Road
Wilton, North Caroline JTOfJ
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action for Dissolution of Marriage
hat been filed egelnsl you and you
or* required lo serve a copy ol your
written defenses. II any, to It on SION
W. CARTER. JR . Petitioner's at­
torney. whose address It 401 East
Jackson Street. Suite 700. Orlando.
Florida 77*01. on or before Nevember
7, IMJ, end til* the original with th*
clerk ot this court either before
service cn Petitioner's attorney or
Immediately thereetter; otherwise a
default will be entered against you
lor th* relief demanded In th#
complaint or petition
DATED on September 77. IMJ.
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
At Clerk ol Its* Court
By: Catherine M Evans
At Deputy Clerk
Publish September JO L October 7.
14.71. IMJ
DEL 177

Mm*.

All parties In Interest and cltltens
shell have an opportunity to be hoard
at Mid hearing.
By order ot the City Commission el
th# City ol Sentord. Florida.
RosaM Rotundo
Deputy City Clerk
Publish October 14. IMJ
OEM**
NOTICE OF PRO PO SED AC­
QUISITION OF BANK ASSET* AND
ASSUMPTION OF LIABILITIES
Notice I* hereby given that the
First Fidelity Savings and Loan
Association. Winter Park. Florid*,
hat mad* application to th* Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Washington. D C . 7047f. Ior Its
written consent to acquire th* auati
ot and assume llbillty to pay deposit*
In the Weklva Branch of Flagship
Q«nk ol Seminole. Sanford. Florida:
I V Tuscawltla Branch ot Flogship
Bahk of Seminole. Sanlord. Florida;
and me Coralwood Mall branch of
Sun Bank/ Southwest. H A . Cap*
Coral. Florida It I* contemplated
that all ol the office* ot th* above
named bank* wilt continue to be
operated
This notice Is published pursuant to
Section IK cl ot the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act.
Any person wishing to comment on
this application may III* his/ her
comment* In writing with the Re
gional Director ot th* Federal Depot
it Insurance Corporation ot Its R#
gional Otllco. 7JJ Poechlre* St..
N E . suit* 7400. Alton!#. Georgia'
JC04V It any person dciius 10 protest
th* granting el this application, he/
she has a right to do so If he/ she tiles
* written notice ol his/ her Intent
with th* Regional Director by
October 7f. IMJ Th# nonconlldenl.el
portions ol the application ere on III*
In th* Regional Office as part ot th*
public III# maintained by th# Cor­
poration This III* Is available tor
public inspection during regular
business hours
October 14. IMJ
FIRSTFIOELITV SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
WJ South Orlando Avenue
Winter Park. Florid* JJ7W
FLAGSHIP BANKOF
SEM1NOLF
700 West First Street
Sanlord. Florida77771
SUN BANK/ SOUTHWEST. N.A.
1*17 Cap* Coral Parkway
Cap* Coral. Florid* JJM4
Publish September I*. 71. 7t A
October). 17.14. tM)
DEL *t

ORANGEJUICE

NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Notice I* hereby given that e
Public Hearing will be held by lh*
Planning and Zoning Commission In
th* City Commission Room, City
Hall. Sanlord. Florida at 7.00 PM .
on Thursday. October 70. IMJ. to
consider th* following change and
amendment to th* Zoning Ordinance
ol tie City ol Sanlord. Seminole
County. Florida
Reionlng from MR 7. Multiple
Family Residential Dwelling District
To that ol GC 7. General Commer
dal District
That property described as Lots t.
1 L I. Blk II. Tr 7. Town ol Sentord.
P B I.P g t l
Being more generally described as
located el *0) Laurel Ave.
Th* planned us* ol the property Is:
Funeral Home
Th* Planning i Zoning Com
mission will submil * recommend*
lion lo »h# City Commission In lavor
ol. or against, th* requested change
cr amendment Th# City Commission
will IwM o Futile Heel big in Hi* City
Commission Room In th* City Hall.
Sanlord. Florida *1 7:00 P M . on
November u IMJ. lo consider Mid
recommendation
All parties In Interest and cltltens
shall have an opportunity to be Hoard
*1 Mid hearings
By order el th* Planning end
Zoning Commission ol the City ot
Sentord. Florida, this 77th day ot
September. IMJ

J Q Galloway.
Chairman
City ot Sanlord
Planning and 7gnlng
Commission
Publish October J. 14. ISO)

OEM*

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THF ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Nolle* It hereby given Ihel a
Public Hearing will be held *1 lh*
Commission Room In th# City Hall In
the City ot Sentord. Florida, at 7 oo
o clock P.M. on October 74. IMJ. to
consider th* adoption ot on ordl
nance by th* City ol Sentord.
Ftorlde. title ot which It ot tot lows
O R D IN A N C E N O 1*4*

AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. AMEN
DIKG ORDINANCE NO 10*7. SAID
ORDINANCE BEING THE ZONING
O R D IN A N C E . A P P E N D IX A.
A R T IC L E V. SEC. J. SR I.
SINGLE FAM ILY RESIDENTIAL
DWELLING DISTRICT. PARA. B
CONDITIONAL USES. SUB PARA
(7) HOME OCCUPATION BY AD
DING (7) (a) PROVIDING FOR
AUTHORIZATION BY LICENSING
ANO BUILDING DIVISION PRO
VIDING FOR SEVERABILITY.
CONFLICTS. AND EFFECTIVE
OATE.
A copy thall be available at the
Oftlc* ol lh* City Clerk lor all
persons desiring to eaamtn* th*
All parties In Interest end cltltens
shell have an opportunity to be heard
al sold hearing
By order ot th* City Commission ol
th* City ol Sentord. Ftorlde.
RosaM Rotundo
Ocputy City Clerk
Publish October 14. tM)
DEMO)________________________

Legal Notice
CITY OF LAXEMARY
FLORIDA
NOTICEOF PUBLIC
HEARING
TO WHOM IT MA Y CONCE R N
NOTICE IS HFREBY GIVEN by
th* City Commission ol 'ho City ol
Lake Mary. D orld * that said
C g m m lf f ln n will liald a P u b lic
Hearing al I 00 P M . on November
J, M*k». h»

M

Consider a Petition to clot*,
vacate abandon discontinue, die
Claim, and to renounce any right ot
the City s! Lake Mary, a political
subdivision, and th* public In and to
th* following described rights ol
way. to wit
That portion ol the twenty (701 loot
alley lying between Lot* A • E and
lots K • O. Block 77. Amended Piet ot
Crystal Lake Shores, as recorded In
Plat Book «. Page 10 ol the Public
Records of S tm ln o lf County,
Florida; more commonly described
as lh* JO loot alley running from
Park Place to *th Street between
Lekevlew Avenue end Crystal Ltk*
Avenue
Th# Public Hearing will be held at
th* City Hall. City ol Lake Mary.
Florida, on lh# 3rd day ol November.
1* 0 . a I 1:00 P.M . or a* soon
thereafter as possible at which lime
Interested part;#* for and against the
recommended request wi l be heard
Said hearing may be continued trom
lime to time until final action Is
taken by th* City Commission
THIS NOTICE shall be posted In
three (3) public places within th*
City nt Lake Mary. Florida, at th*
City Hall within said City and
published n th* Evening Htreld. a
newspaper of general circulation In
th* Cltv ol Lake Mary. In two weekly
Issues at least lllteen (HI days prior
to the aforesaid hearing In addition,
notice shell be posted in th* are* to
be considered et least fifteen (1)1
days prior to the date ol the Public
Hoering.
A taped record ol this meeting Is
made by th# City lor It* convenience
This record may not constitute on
adequate record Ior th* purposes ol
appeal trom a decision mad# by th#
City Commission with respect to the
foregoing matter Any porson
wishing to ensure tirel an adequate
record ol th# proceeding* Is main
talned lor appellato purposes Is
advised to make the necessary ar
rangmenel* « t his or her own
opens*
DATEO: September 7*. IMJ
CITY OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIOA
/*/ Connie Maior
City Clerk
Publish October 7.14. IMJ
DEM II
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA
Nolle* It hersby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at the
Commission Room In th# City Hell In
th# City of Sanlord. Florida, at 7 00
o'clock P M on October )4. IMJ. to
consider the adoption ct an ordl
none* by the City ol Sanford.
Florida, title ol which It at follows
ORDINANCE NO 1*41
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. AMEN
DING ORDINANCE NO 10*7 OF
SAID CITY: SAID ORDINANCE
BEING A ZONING PLAN SAID
AMENDMENT CHANGING THE
ZONING OF A PORTION OF THAT
CERTAIN PROPERTY LYING BE
TWEEN FOURTH STREET AND
IJTH STREET .AND BETWEEN
LAUREL AVENUE AND SANFORD
A V E N U E FROM RMOI
(M ULTIPLE-FAM ILY RESIDEN
TIAL. OFFICE AND INSTITU
TIONAL) DISTRICT AND MR 7
(M ULTIPLE-FAM ILY RESIDEN
TIAL OWELLINGI DISTRICT TO
SR 1 (S IN G L E -F A M IL Y RESI
DENTIAL OWELLINGI DISTRICT;
PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY.
CONFLICTS '.NO EFFECTIVE
DATE
A copy shall be ava uble at the
Office ol the City Clerk lor *1'.
persons desiring to eiamlne th*
same
All parties In Interest end citliens
shall have an opportunity to be heard
at said hearing
By order ot th* City Commission ot
lh# City of Sanlord. Florida
RosaM Rotundo
Deputy City Clerk
Publish October 14. IMJ
DEM 17

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORO. FLORIDA
Nolle* Is Iwrtby given that a
Public Hearing will be held at the
Commission Room in th# City Hall tn
th* City ot Sentord. Florida, at 7.00
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
o'clock P M on October &gt;4. tM), to
EIOHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
cwislder th* adoption ol an ordl
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
nance by the City ol Sanford,
FLORIOA
F lor Id*, title of which Is as toltows
CASE NO U ltM CAM G
ORDINANCE NO. I*M
C EN TR AL FLORIOA IN V E ST­
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
MENTS. INC . A Ftorlde corpora
OF SANFORO. FLORIDA. AMEN
Hon.
DING CHAPTER 1U*7. SAID OROI
Plaintiff
NANCE BEING THE ZONING OR
y.
O INANCE. A P P E N D IX A. TO
STEVEN D HAAS and BARBARA J.
ELIMINATE ARTICLE V. SEC
HAAS, hi* wile, elal,
TION 1. PARA D. ITEM 3. SUB
Defendants
ITEM la): ARTICLE V. SECTION*.
AMENDED
PARA D. ITEM 7. SUB ITEM lb);
NOTICEOF SALE
ARTICLE V. SECTION 7. PARA O.
‘ NOTICE IS GIVEN that pursuant
ITEM J. SUB ITEM (al; AND TO
to an Amended Final Judgment ol
PROVIDE A NEW ARTICLE V.
Foreclosure dated th* 71st day of
SECTION I. PARA C (» ) DENSITY
September. 1*1). In Cast No
ARTICLE V. SECTION J. PARA C
t ) 7*74 CA 0* G in th* Circuit Court
(» l DENSITY; ARTICLE V. }EC
ol ttw Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
TION S. PARA D. ITEM ). SUB
and tor Seminole County, Florida. In
ITEM (al OENSITY; ARTICLE V.
which CENTRAL FLORIOA IN
SECTION *. PARA D. ITEM J.
VESTMENTS. INC. It lh* plaintill
SUBITEM (el DENSITY; ARTI
and S T E V E N O. H AAS and
CLE V. SECTION 7. PARA D. ITEM
BARBARA J HAAS, hi* wile, ar*
7, SUB ITEM (al DENS'TY; PRO
lh* defendant* I will sell to the
VIDING FOR SE VE R AB ILITY.
highest and best bidder tor cash In
CONFLICTS AND EFFECTIVE
lh* lobby al the West Iron! door ol
DATE.
lh* Seminole County Courthuus*.
All parlies In Interest end citliens
Sentord. Florid#, between 11:00 A M.
shell have an opportunity to be hoard
and 7 00 P M on th* 17th day ol
et said hearing
October. &gt;♦*). the following do
By order of the City Commission of
scribed property set forth In th*
tho City Ol Sentord. Florid*
order of F Inal Judgment:
RosaM Rotundo
L o t S . In B l o c k G o f
Deputy City Clork
SWEETWATER OAKS. Section S.
Publish October!*. IMJ
according to lh* plat thereof re
D E M I)
corded in Plot Book t*. Pages I. 7
end ) ol th* Public Records ot
Seminole County. Ftorlde
NOTICE “ o f A PUBLIC HEArT n G
Oeled: October S. IMJ
TO CONSIOER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR.
SANFORD. FLORIDA
CLERK
Nolle* I* hereby given that a
OF THE COURT
Public Hearing will be held al the
By: Petrtcl* Robinson
Commission Room In lh* Cily Hail in
Deputy Clerk
th* City ol Sanford. Florida, al 7.00
Publish October 7.14. IMJ
o'clock P M on October 14. IMS. to
DEM** _______________________
consider the adoption ol an ord&lt;
name by lh* City el Sanlord.
STATE OF FLORIOA
Florid*. IIH* ol which is as lot lows;
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
ORDINANCE NO 1S*J
I certify that COUNTRY SQUARE
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
APARTMENTS. LTD. * Limited
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. AMEN
Partnership formed under Chapter
DING SECTION n t * IIIIJI. ANO
*73. Ftwride
Statute*. having Its
SECTION 7717 lh) AS AMENDED
principal place ot butlnoss In San
BY ORDINANCE NO U5) OF THE
lord. Florida wet cancelled for
SANFORD CITY CODE PROVID
failure to III* II* IMJ Annuel Report
ING FOR SEVERABILITY. CON
Pursuant to th* provision* ot Sec1lon
FLICTS ANDEFFECTIVE DATE
*70)1. Florida Statute*. I hereby
A copy thell he aval let I* et the
give NOTICE In this newspaper,
Ottlc# ol lh* City Clerk lor *11
which It published In Semlnnle
persons desiring to « I amine th*
County. F lor toe that said limited
same.
partnership hat Hied all reports end
All parties In inleresl and citliens
paid all tees rtqutrid under tew
shall have an opportunity to be heard
Given under my hand end th#
at said hearing
Greet Seel ot th* State ol Florida, at
By order ot th* City Commission ot
Tallahassee, thy Capital, this th* 7th
th* Cily ol Sanlord. F Ion da
day ol June. IMJ
RosaM Rotundo
(SEAL)
Deputy City Clerk
George Firestone
Publish October 14. IMJ
secretary ol Siato
DEM**
Publish October 14 IMJ
D E M *)

J

i
i

!

�-({-

Evening llcnild

C om plete W eek's TV Listings

Peering Into
TV's
Future
' v J'T o •• Tj fj « ti

P rin t and video a re com bined w ith Increasing
treq u en cy In today's television m a rk e t. H e re a
young w o m an reads a te le tra m e ot p rin ted
In fo rm a tio n d e liv e re d to her hom e v ia s ate llite

and cable. T h is Is just one of th e m any
Innovations torseen for the fu tu re of T V .
D e ta ils about w h a t you can expect on page 2.

�? - Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

F rid a y. Oct. 14, 1»|J

T elevisio n

What Can Viewers Expect In The Years To Come
By M lch ra l Beha

Herald Staff W riter
A soon-to-comc innovation in the cable television
Industry will Ik * a boon to cable firms and may
threaten the very foundation o f commercial televi­
sion by drawing sports, movies and other pro­
gramming from the commercial networks.
That Innovation Is pay per view television which
allows cable T V subscribers to pick and choose from
offerings by all o f the available cable programming
companies.
The device that makes pay per view T V possible is
the addressable converter. With the addressable
converter, a cable company can give a subscribers
premium program m ing like Home Box Office.
Clncmax nr special events simply by pressing a few
buttons. It eliminates the need for the com pany to
send a technician to your home.
According to Steven McMahon o f Am erican
Television and Communication (A T C ) Corp. In
Orlando, the parent company o f Orangc-Semlnole
Cable vision, addressable converters will be In­
troduced to Central Florida within a few years.
Sports progiam m ing In cities like Philadelphia
and Chicago Is already on a pay per view basis.
McMahon said. Professional teams In those cities
have Joined togeher to form their own cable
channels, offering the games to subscribers. " I t ’s
less expensive than going to games and more people
arc watching It.'*
The cost o f pay-per-view T V may be relatively
high for the next few years. (McMahon said a fee o f
$5 to $10 would be charged for a big sporting event
like the recent Alexis Arguello-Anron Pryor boxing
match).
McMahon predicted, however, pay
per view
television will ultimately be successful despite early
Indications “ that It only makes money when it's a

blockbuster event.*'
Eventually, he said, major sporting events, like
the W orld Series, college basketball's playoff
tournament and the Super Bowl will be dislodged
from network television In favor o f the cable
channels.
Cable firms have already bought up the rights to
show many o f H ollywood's classic films, leaving
fans o f late night m ovies on commercial stations In
the lurch.
"A m erica has an appetite for movies. There arc
not enough m ovies to fill up all the pay services.
T h ey're grow ing dependent on old films and foreign
film s." McMahon said.
Many films which weren't successful com m er­
cially have become hits on cable, he said. "People
who won't go downtown to the movies will watch on
television."
Music television, or MTV. has also been a smash
success, com bining videos, live and taped concerts
and interviews with music stars.
W hile movies and music are big hits on the cable
networks, much o f the other program ming has not
been. Several cable program ming services, like CBS
Cable have already gone out o f business. CBS Cable
and the Entertainment Channel appealed to limited
view ing audiences, which In turn brought about
their demise.
McMahon believes the new technology will be a
gold mine for cable firms. "T h ere is very little pay
per view costs. The cost Is In the technology." The
addressable converter will give new dimension to
the cable Industry, he said.
Two-way cable, teletext, even home security arc
on the horizon.
Interactive cable has been tested In Columbus.
Ohio but the service, which allows the view er to
"talk back" to the television. Is not yet financially
feasible. McMahon said. When two-way T V becomes

economically possible, cable subscribers will be able
to bank and shop through their television. "But you
can't look forward to that real q u ick ly." he said.
Down the line, subscribers will be able to connect
their home security systems to cable, so If a home Is
burglarized an alarm will sound at the police station.
McMnhon said his firm Is already w orking to develop
that technology.
In the near future, local cable subscribers can
expect to see vldcotcxt, screens o f written, newspa­
per-type Information which run on a regular cycle
24 houTi a day. Passive system s like that are
available on many cable systems now.
Another, more active feature is currently betng
developed by ATC. McMahon said. About 200
Orange-Semlnole subscribers arc participating In a
system that allows them to retrieve the Information
they want to sec from a com pu ter. It uses
newspaper-style stories as well but the view er can
choose what he wants to watch rather than going
through the entire cycle.
Graphics arc also available through the two
systems, he said.
Television viewers won't have to depend totally on
cable for their kicks.
According to corporate spokesmen for Zenith and
General Electric, the two firms will likely begin
selling digital televisions early In 1984 even though
local dealers said they have no Idea o f when the sets
may be available.
The firms boast that the sets will provide clearer
pictures with richer color and truer sound.
The TVs. which operate on semiconductor chips,
will offer novelty features such as split-screen,
freeze-frame and zoom. The split-screen will even
allow viewers to watch more than one program.
A spokesman for Zenith said the sets should sell
for about the same price as the com pany's current
top-of thc-llne models.

Polish E x p o rt Enjoys L ife In U .S .
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) - The com ­
pany that Just returned from many
months In Helsinki and Stockholm
shooting G o rk y P ark Is full o f ecstatic
reports about Joanna Pacula. who
won the plum role o f Irina.
I am pleased to report the arrival o f
a new star. The plum role went to a
peach. Miss Pacula Is a slender reed,
and she muy be the first person from
Tom aszow Lubclskl to make It In
Hollywood.
"Y o u ’ve never heard o f Tom aszow
L u b c ls k l? " she asks. T h e n she
explains It is a rather famous resort
town In Poland "w h ere people go for
h ea lth y liv in g and e n jo y in g the
country.”
Her father works In construction
there and her mother Is a pharmacist.
She has two sisters and a brother, and
there came a time when she had
enough o f the healthy living and
enjoying the country so she decided to
be an actress.
That Isn't as easy In Poland os here.
You have to go to a drama school in
W arsaw before you can work In
m o v ie s o r In th e th e a te r , and
everybody wants to go to that school.
She says In hec year there were 400
applicants for 2 2 available spots.
"But I was lu cky," she says. "In my
first year, the Polish m ovie people
took me to make a film and from then
on I made more dims. So I was able to
pay m y bills, and to cat and to sleep."
By the lim e she finished her drama
school training, she was a star In
Polish cinema. But she Immediately

quit film for the stage, which Is more
prestigious In Poland. And she also
did well on the W arsaw stage.
In December. 1981. she. was on
vacation in Parts when the Polish
governm ent declared martial law.
That effectively closed down both the
Polish theater and film Industries, so
she sim ply stayed In Paris.
She did some m odeling and T V
com m ercia ls In Paris, and made
enough money so she decided to
travel. She went to Belgium and then
Spain and then came to the United
States.
"O n one o f m y first days in New
Y ork ." she says, "m y bag was stolen,
and m y passport wus In It. I could not
get another passport because o f the
political situation at home In Poland,
so I had to stay In the U .S."
She was In New York when pro­
ducers Gene Kirkwood and Howard
Koch Jr., and director Michael Aptcd
were looking for a star for G o rk y P ark.
They heard about the Polish actress
who. they were told, was In Paris.
T h ey went tc Paris to find her. only to
learn she was In New York.
Miss Pacula has decided to settle In
the United States, and has applied for
her green card. She and co-producer
Koch have become a romantic Item,
which naturally Influenced that de­
cision.
" I huve learned to s w im ." she sayB.
" a n d I h ave learned to drive a n d I
have learned to play tennis, so I think
that m akes m e practically an A m e ri­
c a n ."

W edding bells ring on the d a y tim e d ra m a Search for Tomorrow. But
when Steve (P h il B row n) and Stephanie (M a r ie C h e a th a m ) excham ge
vows w ill Suzl (E liz a b e th S w a c k h a m e r), left, and Lloyd (P e te r
H a s k e ll), rig h t, hold th e ir peace? Tune In the w eek of O ct. 17 and find
out if th e re re a ly is wedded bliss.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

F rid ay, Oct. H , m 3 —J

Travanti's Ring Has its Own Story
he grow up? Is he married? Does he have any
children? B.C.B., Cougar, Wash.

DEAR DICKi On my favorite program, Hill
Street Bluea, Daniel J. Travantl wears a ring
viih a large atone. It looks like a fiery opal. Is It
nla? A prop? W hat is his reason for wearing It?
— K.E., Mobile, Ala.
It's his. originally a gift from "an adm irer." as he
puts It. and he’s been wearing It for 11 years. He
says he believes It Is more than 100 years old. It's
hand-wrought gold with a stone — a chalcedony, not
a fiery opal — and he was told It came from Greece.
Uut Travantl had It appraised and was told that It’s
Russian. You can’ t see it at home, obviously, but It
has a design — a boat and two birds holding a rope
with the symbol o f Infinity — and the Inscription. In
French: "T h e further apart, the stronger the bond."

DEAR DICK: My friend and I have been
arguing about the name of the robot on the old
TV show Lost In Space. Could you please settle
this for us? — O. J., Indiana, Pa.
I called my friend, Jonathan Harris, who played
Dr. Smith, and the answer will probably disappoint
both o f you. The robot never had a name. Harris
says he wanted to call it Claude, but the producers
said no. and It was always called simply the robot.

DEAR DICK: The person who plays Shorofsky
on Fame looks familiar. I think I saw him,
without his beard, in the movie The CaJne
Mutiny. Am I right? — M.B.N., Roosevelt, N.J.
Sorry to burst your m em ory bubble but, no.
you're wrong. Albert Hague plays the part and Fam e
is his first acting Job. Previously he had been
Involved In the Broadway theater, but primarily as a
writer. He wrote F ln ln a n d F ancy, for example.

DEAR DICK: My husband'and I like Throe’s
Company. W e are curious as to why Mrs. Roper
always wears those long muumuu-llke gowns.
Io It because she feels she has a bad figure? Or

Dick
Kleiner
Is It Just a gimmick for the show? W e’d like to
know. — A.8., Joplin, Mo.
It’ s m ore gim m ick than cam ouflage. Audra
Llndley plays Mrs. Roper and she Teels that type of
outfit Is more In keeping with the ofT-the-wall
personality o f her character.

DEAR DICK: W hat W estern series did Doug
McClure star in? His character’s name was
Trampas. — B.B., Loralne, 111.
McClure played Tram pas on T he V irg in ia n .

DEAR DICK: W e recently heard Tristan
Rogers (Scorpio on General Hospital) give an
Interview In which he said General Hospital
was going off TV for good. Is this so? — I.K.,
Saginaw, Mich.
Not likely. It’s one o f the top-rated shows on the
air. und It makes millions for ABC. so It should be
around quite a time. You must have misunderstood
him.

DEAR DICK: Recently, I saw a rerun of an
ep iso d e o f the old Iron sid e se rie s w ith
Raymond Burr. This led to a discussion of what
year that series was originally run on TV. 1
believe it was ’68 or ’69. Can you tell me? —
L.A., Stevenson, Wash.
It was 1967 and It ran until 1975.

DEAR DICK: How old Is Steve Bond, alias
Jimmy Lee Holt of General Hospital? W here did

Bond Is 27 and red hot. He was bom In Haifa.
Israel and came to New* York at 11 and a year later
went to Los Angeles, which he considers home. He
married professional golfer Cindy Cox In December.
No children yet.

DEAR DICK: 1 remember watching a show
after school in the late ‘90s or early ‘60s called
Raznar of the Jungle. It starred a white hunter
with a native sidekick. Can you please tell me
who were the stars and what years it was
shown? — S.B., Republic, Mo.
R a m a r o f th e J u n g le starred Jon Hall as Dr.
Thom as Reynolds, but I cannot find the name o f Ills
"n ative sidekick." It originally ran from '52 to '54,
but It was syndicated In reruns for many years after
that.

DEAR DICK: I read In a magasine that Tom
Selleck was on The Young and the Restless
soap opera. I was wondering when that was and
what character he played? — D.S.W., Paw Paw,
Mich.

Tom was a semi-regular, playing a character
named Jed Andrews, In '72 and ’73. He says they
wanted him lo sign on as n regular, but he turned
them down.

DEAR DICK: A $1,000 bet Is riding on this
one: How old was Mary Tyler Moore when she
began playing Laura Petry on The Dick Van
Dyke Show? How old Is she now? How old was
Van Dyke? — T.L.S. and R.S.J., Kalamazoo,
Mich.
I don’ t believe those stakes for a minute, but.
nevertheless. Mary T yler Moore was 25 and Dick
Van Dyke was 36 when they started that show', back
In 1961. I'll let you get out the old com puter and
figure their current ages from that data.

Joan Not As Bitchy As
By Vernon Scott
UPI Hollywood Reporter
HOLLYW OOD (UIMJ - Poor Joan
Collins.
The flashy, srx y brunette star o f
D y n a s ty has a reputation for being as
bitchy offstage as Alexis Carrington,
her tempestuous T V role.
She plays the vindictive Alexis with
such verve and obvious relish It Is
assumed there must be a grrat deal o f
Collins in Carrington, the treacherous
cx-wjfc o f the show's patriarch, played
by John Forsythe In the ABC-TV
series.
It p robably docs not occu r to
millions o f Viewers and scandal sheet
writers that Joan's brittle, often ven ­
omous, portrayal Is purely and simply
a finely drawn portrait o f a classic
female stereotype.
Joan has been around too long, seen
too many ups und downs In her
career, lo be deeply rankled by the
transference o f A lexis’ asccrblc char­
acteristics to herself. All the same, she
isn't pleased about the manifestation.
Alexis, after all. has been something
o f a saving grace in Joan's career, not
exactly at Its height when she ac­
cepted the role and quickly made her
part Into the wom an everyone loves to
hate.
J o a n an d A l e x is a rc lu m p e d
together ns one und the same dark
presence. In stark contrast to Linda
Evans In the role o f Krystle Car­
rington. the Monde snow goddess who
replaced Alexis In Carrington’s heart.
Linda and Krystle are all goodness
and light.
Just as A le x is ’ bitch in ess has
rubbed ofT on Joan, so bus Krystlr's
sweetness and virtue been applied to
Linda.
"Peop le don’t say so to my face, but
they talk and write about me being as
big a bitch as A I cx Ib." Joan said, a

touch wearily. "Joh n (Forsythe) and
Linda have called some or the scandal
sheets defending me.
"A ctu ally. I think Linda is close In
character to Krystle. But then most
performers play people close lo what
they truly are. especially In situation
comedy.
” 1 find It easy to play m yself as a
means o f being as natural as possible
on camera, but that doesn't mean
Alexis and I arc the same person. In a
way I'm flattered people think I’ m like
Alexis. We do have some traits In
common.
"W e both have high energy und a
strong Interest In clothes and Jewels.
W e are sensuous and w e're good
b u sin essw o m en . But s h e 's m ore
concerned with business matters than

I am.
"I'm not very Introspective, b o In a
real sense I know’ Alexis better than !
Jo myself.
" I alw ays know how A lexis will
react to u given situation. She loves
conflict, rows and confrontations. I
hale them and will do anything I can
to avoid personal confrontation and
unpleasantness.
"A le x is is consumed by a vendetta
against Blake Carrington. I can forgive
and forget, but not Alexis.

"= 7 »:

"S h e Is great fun to play. Originally,
she was added to the cast for only
eight or nine episodes. ! was given the
p lrt only after Sophia Loren and
Raquel W elch turned It down. So I’ m
grateful to both o f th em ."
In person Joan is warm, voluble and
w itty. H er's Is a durk, haunting
beauty and obviously sexual. Men
look at her with undisguised lust, a
fact w h ich docs not escape the
actress.
It would be difficult. If not Impossi• b|c, for her to play the Innocent.

.;*&lt;!ii(i bsbttuw e\\fistn tnanfTTuiy

Trapped

P a tric ia D a v is guest stars as a c r itic a lly ill
p a tien t who is exploited by a doctor d e­
te rm in e d to oust T ra p p e r John M c In ty r e
(P e r n e ll R o b e rts ) fro m his post a t San
F ra n c is c o M e m o ria l H o s p ita l on Trapper
John, M.D. a t 10 p .m . Sunday on CBS.

.*ias

vtaiiaV jtum t site ju n

corvine •iiitij’i

�4—Evening H erald, Sanford. FI.

F rid ay, Oct. U . I f U

Blocks Upset Over New 'Webster' Series
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — Susan Clark and Alex
Karras might have never known about the con*
troversy. except that they have a black housekeeper
who reads all the black newspapers. She told them

now awful they woeurt TV.
Susan and Alex — who arc rcaMIfc husband und
wife — arc starring In ADC's, new Friday night
series, "W ebster.” The premise o f the series is that
Alex Is an ex-football star and Susan is his
brand-new wife and a couple o f weeks after their
sudden marriage they have a kid dumped in their
laps.
The kid Is Webster, whose father was a teammate
o f Alex's. The kid's father died and left no survivors.
Alex was the godfather. So here Is Webster.
There arc no problems with all that, but Webster
Just happens to be black.
"M y housekeeper says all the black newspapers
are upset about It." Karras nays. "E ven before the
show went on the air. they were writing about us ns
another exam ple o f whites patronizing blacks. They
say It is typical for Hollywood to visualize a white
couple helping out a black boy, rather than vice
versa."
The gist o f the black com m unity’s complaint Is
that it's always a white helping a black. W hy

couldn’ t It hnvc been a black couple taking In a
white kid?
Susan says that Lecausc o f the controversy their
housekeeper brought to their attention they are
doing mu episode sim ply to answer those charges.
"It will deal with the friendship between George,
the character Alex plays, and W ebster's father." she
says. "It will tell how they shared so much that
W ebster’s father felt he would rather have George
responsible for his son. If anything happens to him.
than anybody else. They arc similar In background
and similar In outlook, and It doesn’ t matter that
they arc dissimilar In the color o f their Bkin."

"O r ut i ast let’s say I've been n hit offbeat. It comes
from my childhood — my father was Greek and my
mother was Scotch-Irlsh — so I was on the periphery
o f both croups, hut r e a l l y nan o f n eith er.! would go
to the Greek Orthodox church, but not really belong.
I can speak Greek to get by. that's all. And the same
thing when I went to m y m other’s Episcopal
church."
But why a Beries now. when his producing career
and his w ife’s acting career arc doing pretty well by
themselves?

Both Susan and Alex arc sorry that the con ­
troversy has erupted. But. they feel it has a positive
side as well; ft lifts the show out o f the banal rut o f
most sitcoms. T h ey also like that It points up that
"W eb ster" can have its serious side.

" I wanted to do a series because I want to be
financially Independent." Karras says. "M y thing Is
that 1 want to do what I want to do when 1 want to
do It. I figure If the series goes. In three years or so I
will achieve that Independence. Then I w on’ t act
any more, I’ ll Jo some producing und a lot of
fishing."

Susan and A lex have their own production
company. They did a T V movie. "M aid In A m erica."
which was a com edy but dealt with the semi-serious
theme o f male-female role reversals. They both feel
that they got their point across better because It was
a comedy. Instead o f a heavy, pretentious drama.
" I ’ve always been a bit o f a rebel.” says Karras.

" I ’m primarily an actress." Susan explains, "bu t I
find I do enjoy working with A lex on producing, too.
It Is conceivable that If this show lasts three to five
years. I will have had m y fill o f acting, at least for a
while. Maybe I might then do a play on Broadway —
A lex teases me about that — and m aybe a m ovie
now and then, but do more producing than actin g."

Pat Benatar Is Rock's First Video Baby
By Vernon Scott
UFI Hollywood Reporter

Pat they’ve heard her new single or
album.
Instead they say. "H ey! I’ve SEEN
your new song."
Pat. whose music und appearance
sometimes arc inexplicably confused
with Linda Konstadt. is an exceed­
ingly bright young woman, hardedged and singularly motivated.
At 30 she Is 90 pounds o f dynam ic
soprano steeped In operatic training.
Her driving voice is matched by
ambition and a shrewd eye for the

HOLLY WOOD (UPI) - Singer Pal
Benatar is a product o f rock videos,
the v is u a l p a c k a g e s th a t k ee p
teenagers glued to MTV. the cable TV
music pipeline.
Pat’s glitzy illustrated songs have
made her one o f rock ’s current
queens.
So powerful Is M TV ’ s impact on the
recording Industry and teen con ­
sumerism. youngsters no longer tell

marketplace.*
On video tape In skin-tight outfits
and with her short-cropped, dark hair
tousled. Put is a seething bundle of
energy belting songs lo the driving
beat o f her own compositions.
Pat’s success Is best reflected In hqr
three Gram m y 9, 1980-1982. for Ixrst
rock vocul performance. Her hits
Include L ittle Too Lute, I 'l l D o It, I
W ant O ut. S ile n t P a rtn e r and F ig h t It
O u t.
A recent album. Gel Nervous, was a
triple platinum seller anil her newest,
L iv e From E a rth , recorded from her
U.S. and European tours, may well
follow suit.
Pat was a pioneer In rock .videos.
Her 10th and most recent Is a
six-minute rendition o f L o ve In A
/kif tie field.
It amounts to a ininl-movlc and. for
the first tim e. Includes dialogue
without music.
"It tells the story o f a runaway New
Jersey girl who ends up In the slums
o f New York C ity ." Pat said. "I had to
learn how to dance for tills on e."

N ow

Special Sunday
D inner .
. Chicken, D um plings
and Memories. ..$ 5 .6 9
T h e s m e l l o f c h ic k e n a n d d u m
fr a m - s c r a tc h s tr ip
te x tu r e . . .ju ic y

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te n d e r c h ic k e n . O h , y o u

S e rv e d e v e iy S u n d a y jr o m
o f th re e s id e d is h e s a n d a

ll th e m e m o rie s y o u

w a n t.

Su n.-Fri. M-i-ting fro m
Hnl. » m iii| [ fr o m
V IV V .

I 1:30 a.in .

1:30 p.m.

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ITALIAN RESTAURANT &gt;
2507 ENTERPRISE R O A D
O R A N G E CITY
O P E N 1 1 A .M .
* ? l°

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re m e m b e r.

1 1 . 3 0 a m , w i t h y o u r c h o ic e

T h r Applr \ nlI**%Hilt l!u.
1330 North WihmII uih I lilt il.
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O pen

p lin g . . . Ix n n e m a d e -

p lin g . . . w i t h th a t in d e s c rib a b le

The new video cost S 100.000 and
took two days to produce, following
two days o f rehearsal. Four years ago
her (list video cost only $25,000 and
ran 3 ’ i minutes.
Only her first album was released
without a video. Her second. Crimes
o f P a ssio n , was introduced on MTV
with l he single You lU 'ttc r N un.
” 1 was one o f the first artists to do
videos," she said. " I like whal they
accomplish with a song. The personal
interpretation with visual cfTecls adds
a whole new dimension to the songs I
write.
"Videos got me quicker exposure
than any other form o f promotion and
helped spread the w o rd on m y
nine-month tour. Kids knew who I
was and what I looked like In addition
to how I sang.
"R ig h t now M TV Is I he most
powerful medium for rock music,
even though radio Is holding Its own.
But other cable channels will be
o p e n in g up und s p e c ia liz in g In
country music, black artists and
maybe even classical m u sic."

10%
ANY

OFF

&amp;1

LUNCH— DINNER
PIZZA — SA N D W IC H

�F rid a y , Oct. 14, m a - S

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI

TELEVISION
O c t o b e r 14 th r u O c t o b e r 9 0
ta b le Ch

(D O
C£&gt;0

®o

Cable Ch
(A B C I Orlando

(Vl) (35)

Independent
Orlando

(CBS) Orlando

(8) ffl

Independent
Melbourne

(10)0)

Orlando Public
B road callin g Syitcm

(N B C ) Daytons Beach
O rla n ’*

In addition to the channel! lilted, cablevu ion lu b ic rib e rt may tune in to independent channel 44.
St. P etrrtb u rg. by tuning to channel I ; tuning to channtl 1), which c a r n e i tp o r fl and the C l.liltia n
B roadcatiing Network ( C BN ).

Specials O f She Week
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON

3.‘3 0
6D (to t IN3IDC BTOflY SPECIAL
EOmON “ A Ho u m Divided" The
reeMtte atory ot a powerful Nicara­
guan publishing lamlty. whoee
diametrically opposing views ot the
Sandlntsta regime mirror the divi­
sion m that Central American coun­
try, is presented.
EVENING

6.-00
CD (10) fXAOMOGUL A K A The lat­
est m edical Information and
research about lids frightening dis­
ease Is presented from Seattle.
Washington where the fifth annual
meeting ot members of a group that
studies sexually transmit led dlsI was field

11:20
( B A FINITE WORLD "China'- A
documentary which ai amines Chi­
na's "one couple, one child" policy
developed to item the tide of the
huge population explosion is pre­
sented (Pari 2)

The human need lor friendship is
discussed by Or. Ralph Bohimann
and wrttars Or. Jean Carton, Alan
Ley McQulnness and Richard
Binder.

10:00

O 3 ) BUNCO Two poftoe bunco
Investtgxlora (Tom Sattack. Robert
Urtch) endanger a tallow officer
(Donna Mills) whan they Investigate
a school tor con artists. (R)

5 :3 5

W EDNESDAY

(Q) PORTRAIT OP AMERICA A
profile of Texas Is presented.

EVENING

MONDAY

8:00

AFTERNOON

CD (10) HtTLER-8 NUMBER ONE

12:00
(D (10) NEVER TURN BACK: THE
LIFE OP FANNIE LOU HAMER The
struggles of Fannie Lou Hamer,
during the hot summer In the 1M0s
when the Mississippi civil rights
movement was tn full swing, are
dramatUed

ENEMY: BURIED ALIVE The true
Story Is told of Raoul Wallenberg,
who was personally responsibla tor
saving mors than 100,000 Hungari­
an Jaws from Nail extermination,
and who latar disappeared and Is
still believed to be living

9 :0 0

TUESDAY
EVENING

MOANINQ

7*30
FRIEND WE HAVE

10:00

O ® HOW THE WEST WAS WON
The Sioux nation readies for bathe
after Chief Satangkai is assaulted
by a young Russian count; tha
migrant Mormen Jeremiah Taylor
proposes marriage to Jessie
AFTERNOON

SUNDAY
O GDWHAT A

TO BE I f f PICTURES Top country
singer Jem# Fricks b Joined by Ala­
bama. Ronnie Mil sap. George
Jonas. Rosanna Cash. Gordon
MacRaa and Charity Pride In her
first television special.

CDO

9 :0 0
JANIE FRJCKt YOU OUGHT

CD (10) EDOiE BOYD • BANK
ROBBER The slory of the flamboy­
ant and notorious Canadian bandit.
Edwin Aloma Boyd. Is told through
tapad recollections which reveal a
Ida involving betrayal, love affairs

and a culurful group ot henchmen.

O GD I

10:00

LOVE MEN Donna Milts
boats a look at the qualities women
most admire In men; guests Include
Tom Wopet. Engelbert Humper­
dinck. Dr. Joyce Brothers, end
Waytand Flowers and Madcme.

1 0 :3 0
0D (10) INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE
A behind-the-scenes took at what
goes on inside me White House
during a campaign year Is present­
ed from the viewpoint of lour Wash­
ington prase correspondents who
were among tha first women to cov­
er such an event and whose experi­
ences dste back to the FDR admin­
istration

Sylvester Stallone stars as a toagb cop la parsnlt e l a
professional terrorist, who kills wltkont emotion la the
ABC Sanday Night Movie, “ Nlghtbawks," to air Oct. 1C.

MONDAY

THURSDAY
AFTERNOON

2 :3 0
03 (10) INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE
A behind-the-scenes look at what
goes-on Inside tha Whits House
during a campaign year Is present­
ed from the viewpoint ot lour Wash­
ington press correspondents who
were among tha first women to cov­
er such an event and whose experi­
ences dale beck to the FOR admin­
istration.

Sports On The A ir
SATURDAY
MORNING

11:00
0 0 (1 ) WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

Champagne Stakes lor two-yearold thoroughbreds (live from Bel­
mont Park k-. Elmoot, N.Y.)

5 :3 5
(Q) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
EVENINO

6:10

12:00
(EL WRESTUNG
0 ) 0 NCAA TOOAY
1
7 :5 5
CD Q WORLD SERIES UNSUNG
HEROES Exciting action highlights O RED MAN FOOTBALL REPORT
Of five ot the greatest World Series,
6:00
and Interviews with the unsung 0 ) (S) HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
herpes end ethers who played e
Merrill ieiem i vs. Selwviie
part In baseball history.
O

1 2 :3 0

NCAA FOOTBALL
O WORLD SERIES Gams 4
(from tha NL champion's city)
(Nots; If L.A. Dodgers are NL cham­
pions. this game will be seen et 4:00
EOT. and NCAA Football will be
at 12:00 EDT.)

6 :0 5

OX NCAA FOOTBALL Baylor vs
Texas ASM

3 :3 0

(£&gt; O

4 :0 0

HORSE RACINQ The Joc­
key Club Gold Cup race tor threeyeer-old thoroughbreds and the

2:30
CD O GOLF "Ryder Gup Match­
es " (live from Palm D-ach Gardens.
FIs.)

4 :0 0

JOHN MCKAY

A budding romance between police partners Nick
V dan o (Ed M arinaro) and Jennifer Oaks (M elody
Anderson) Is In Jeopardy when she poses for a national
picture magazine on “ Police Woman Centerfold," an
NBC Monday Night at the Movies presentation, Oct. 17.

TUESDAY

COUPON

EVENING

CDO

7 :£ 0

WORLD*SERIES Game fl (It
necessary, from the AL champion's
eft/)

WEDNESDAY
7 :5 9

( W i t h T h is A d )

QDO

EVENING

QDO

CD
O
NFL
FO O TBALL
Washington Redskins al Green
Bay Packers Q

4 :2 9

CD (• ) GREATEST SPORTS LEG­
ENDS OF FOOTBALL

12:00

9 :0 0

EVENING

WORLD SERIES Game S (If
necessary, from tha NL champion's
city)

1 1 :3 0
O
(3) COLLEGE FOOTBALL
HIOHLIOHT8
AFTERNOON

EVENING

(S
O
NFL FOOTBALL DSilas
Cowboys al Philadelphia Eagles

9 :3 0

MORNING

Q ® WRESTUNG
NCAA FOOTBALL (Note: It
L.A Oodgert are NL champions.
NCAA FootbsM wiu be seen at 12 00
EDT. and Game 4 of the World
Sene# win be seen kt 4 00 EDT).

0 a ) NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins si New York Jets
CD O NFL FOOTBALL San Fran­
cisco 4Oars at New Orleans Saints
O TENNIS "Florida Federal"
(• ) WRESTUNG

SUNDAY

1.00
(D O

1:00

1 0 :3 0
CD (S) NFL WEEK IN REVIEW

MONDAY

1 2 :3 0
O (D N F L 'S3
CD O NFL TOOAY EJ. Holub is
profiled on this atterncJn'S seg­
ment ot Legends Ot The Game."

7 :0 0

CDO

WORLD 8ERIE8 Game 7 (it
necessary, from tha AL champion's
city)

THURSDAY

CD (• ) ANGLERS IN ACTION

7 :0 5
OX WRESTUNG

1 0 :3 5
&lt;H&gt; SPORTS PAGE

EVENING

6 :0 5
OX NCAA FOOTBALL Florida
Siaia vs. Louisvilla

S A N D W IC H O F Y O U R
CHO ICE PLUS
1 SM ALL D R IN K PLUS
1 D IP OF ICE CREAM
M on d ay. Tu esday, W ed n esd ay Noon

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321-4621

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t

�4— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , Oct. 14, 1982

FRIDAY

'Scoundrel' Joan; G lenn And ‘Ladies'
By Cindy Adams
NEW YOnK - Belle Davis
was expected on the set o(
"Hotel,” her ABC scries, this
week, but she didn't make it.
Recouping from surgery In
Connecticut, there’s still no
Cuuitniiauun on her return.
The producers now hope Miss
Davis will check Into their
"Hotel" next month... It must
be serious between Mary

Tyler Moore and her Ml. Sinai
Hospital cardiologist, Dr.
Robert Levine. Levine, who's
Jewish, has attended services
recently at New York's Tem­
ple Emanuel. Miss Moore,
who’s not went vriih him...
After filming "Scoundrel”
erfume commercials at
aleigh Studios in Hollywood,
Joan Collins treated herself to
a weeks' vacation in London.

K

astronaut Glenn probably
tophi:
opened at the Warner Theatre found the menu in outer
in Duke Ellington's home­ space.
town, Washington, D.C. First-■ Steven Spielberg, who
nighters will be part of a John counts his millions by the
Glenn fund-raiser. Only 1200 dozen, locked onto another
gels them Glenn in person, 1200 million in bookings and
champagne with strawber­ merchandise deals for his new
ries, and theater scats. And movie "Indiana Jones." For­
what will they cat? Well, for get about Blackglama mink
one thing, fried mozzarella coats. What becomes a legend
with apricot horseradish. Ex- most Is big money.

O cto b e r 14

EVENING

HD P 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CE (8) KOJAK

6:00
Q ® 0 ) 0 ( D O NEWS
(It) (35) BJ/LOBO
( I ) (10) MACNE1L / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
CD (8) ONE DAY AT A TIME

6 :3 0
O ® NBC NEWS
f f i O CBS NEWS
CD O ABC NEWS Q
f t (38) ALICE
03 (8) GOOD TIMES

0 ® ® Q news
I D (3 5 )BENNY HILL
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE-

6 :0 5
O UTTLE H0U8E ON THE PRAI­
RIE

11:00
SENTTS
CE(8) TWILIGHT ZONE

0 ( 4 ) PEOPLE S COURT
(ii
P.M. MAGAZINE A barehand*! roe* clim b * who scale* the
cliffs ol Yosemils National Par*; a
new lypo ol Jaant lor women featur­
ing a bach-lo-lront zipper That
allow* inter changeable leg*.
( D O JOKER'S WILO
|}(3S)THEJEFFERSONS
S ' (10) EVENING AT POPS
Composer / arranger Leroy
Anderson )oin* Arthur Fiedler and
the Boston Pop* Or theatre (R)
CE (8) ROWAN 8 MARTIN'S
LAUGH-IN

o

Dining With Mexican Flair
Adds Zest To Film Viewing
A t The Showtime Cantina
Like a breath o f fresh air. a McxIcan-thcmcd
restaurant. Taco Uravo. has settled in Sanford's
recently restored R ilz Theatre, now known as
Showtime Cantina.
Munch hiirrilos or tortillas In the Taco Uravo
restaurant from I I n.m. until midnight, or sink Into
a plush scat and walrh a first run Dim while dining.
The film Is extra, o f course.
Many o f the architectural appointments reminis­
cent o f a [&gt;ast era have been retained m ixing well
with the Mexican pink tones for a charmingly
eclectic setting. Tiled floors, wooden benches,
greenery complete the picture.
In Taco Bravo, located In the enlarged lobby o f the
theatre, cpicsdalllas arc served piping hot to your
table. A quesadilla Is a soft flour tortilla stuffed with
a bled o f Monterey Jack and chcddar cheeses, sweet
onions and a choice o f mild, hot or extra hot sauce.
T h e bright, fun-filled menu olTcrs a selection of
salads, entrees and desserts with a unique twist.
Fresh spinach salad offers a wonderful con­
glomeration o f fresh sliced mushrooms, hard cooked
eggs and sweet onions on the bed o f crisp spinach

CAROL
FRIENDS

7 :3 0

►

SERVING HOT A COLD DELI SUBS
A MEXICAN FOOD

LUNCHEON SPECIAL 11 to 2

BURRITOS

..

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2 5E %
OFF
, , . 10. , M 3

('a .H tc H it

201 S. MJcnolii 1
Downtown Sanford

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I James Michael Evans
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1 1 :4 5
QD o

ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

g n O BATTLE8TAR QALACTICA
( I I NIGHT TRACKS
CE (8) MOVIE "Sleeper" (1973)
Woody Alien. Diana Keaton

1 2 :3 0
O
f f l FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS
Musical mmi-fealures highlight
tunes by Sty*. Lionel Richie. Cul­
ture Club. The Motels. Naked Eyes
and Spandau Battel, the group
KISS ts profiled m a "Private Reels"

©
®
THE CO NE H E AD S
Animated Dan Aykroyd. Jana
Curtin and Laralne Newman re-cre­
ate the voices nf ih ** "SalurSay
Nighl Live" charecler* m a lardaay
that bring* them to Earth on a spa-

CD O

1 2 :4 5
ALL IN THE FAMILY

1:00
( U (15) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

1:05
OS NIGHT TRACKS

1 :1 5

CD

O MOVIE "River Of No
Return" (1954) Robert Mltchum.
Marilyn Monroe.

2.-00

O ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
2 :0 5
OS NIGHT TRACKS

230
CD (8) MOVIE' "Phffflt" (1954)
Judy HoitkJay, Jack Lemmon

2 :5 0
( D O MOVIE "Murder In Mind"
(1975) RJcherd Johnson. Zens
Walker.

3 :0 0
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Mike Farreft plays a Vietnam veter­
an m an upcoming TV movie.

3 :0 5
OS NIGHT TRACKS

0

3 :3 0
®

NEWS

4 :0 0
O ®

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

4 :0 5
OS

CD

n ig h t t r a c k s

a

4 :2 0

MOVIE
"Fer-D e-lance '
(1974) David Janssen. Hope Lange

9 :0 0

ra w nut

NAtTUin
s m c* * h

8 :0 5

"Rescue From GUUgan 'l laJand" (1978) Bob Denver.
Alan Hale Jr. Seven shipwrecked
castaways encounter hilarious
problem* when they return to a
much-changed civilization alter
spending year* on an uncharted
We

ID (10) WALL STREET WEEK

5 1 00 S T E A M E D C R A B S
*l*l

8:00
O ® MR 8MrTH Mr Smith offer*
hi* a**i*tance during a delicate
brain operation on a renowned
•pace scientist (Arthur Malnt).
® O THE DUKES OF HAZZARO
Luke* younger brother (Randy
Hamilton). Uwevwd to hava perl»hed year* aartiar, (uddenly
appear* at the Iarm
CD O WORLD SERIES Game 3
(Irom A l champion * city)
SI) (38) MOVIE "Jungle Book"
(1942) Sabu. Joaeph Calleia Baaed
on the cl a*arc atory by Rudyard
Kipling A young boy I* reared by
woTvea In Ih* junglaa ot India.
GD (40) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
CD (8) MOVIE "Killer On Board"
(1977) Baatrtca Straight, Claud#
A *m i The crew and paaaangar*
aboard a (usury Oner begin dying
horn a mysterious vlrui

rial fTilkliOfi

OFF ONE DOZEN

®
TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guest rrftle Calvin Trillin
® O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
(U (35) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
Guests: Howie Mancel. Oingo
Botngo.
52) THE CATLIN8
CE(B) LATE IS GREAT

7 :3 5

6 :3 0

325

1 1 :3 0

O

(IS GOOD NEWS

OS MOVIE

in th« S &amp;atuttm t @4* U h 4

S k M A U m t

AND

O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Ore* Cavetl talk* about hi* new
booh
f j ) O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O FAMILY FEUD
81P S ) BARNEY MILLER
QD (8) TIC TAC DOUGH

i]lM i

Dtvttlon Ot

B U R NE TT

11:15
QD O NEWS

12:00

7 :0 5
02)

with iangy dressing.
Mcxlburgcrs. sanction, nacho ch rrsr dip and a
Mexican dinner plate are a few o f Ih r entrees and.
Iasi but hot least, tacos.
Hot and cold running subs may be slacked with
roast Ix c f. ham and cheese, turkey and cheese or
tuna with prices starting at S2.30.
Food Is served all day and evening at Taco Bravo
and take out orders arc welcomed.
Accent will be ou Margarilas during a grand
opening gala introducing full service. Performing in
concert for the mid-October opening will lx* "T h e
Snooks." a rock band from W inter Park.

1 0 :3 0
11) (35) BOB NEWHART
CD (10) THE PICNIC A silent come­
dy about an outing on a summer
day with a crusty old general and
his family stars Ronnie Corbett and
Ronnie Barker

7 :0 0

R e sta u ra n t cgu ide

10:20
OS NEWS

O
®
M ANIM AI Jonathan.
Brooks and Ty attempt to prove
that a Bengal tiger did not kill a
member ot a magic troupe during a
performance
® O DALLAS J.R. and Katherine
scheme against Bobby and Pam
while Sue EUen entrusts John Ross
to camp counselor Paler Richard*
(Christopher Alklns).
ID (IS ) MOVIE "M y Dear Secre­
tary" (1948) Laralne Dey. Kirk
Oougla* An eulhor'a secretary
finds that ha likes girls and plays
the held more often then he writes

10:00
O ® FOR LOVE ANO HONOR An
alert Is called during the unit's cele­
bration ot Its founding, and Allard
seeks comfort Irom Grace aflar
arguing with Carolyn
d ) O FALCON
I----------CREST Julia loins

ft '.V ji.w A t;\

3

WlMQam

IN OUR FIGHT
AGAINST

DEFECTS

�F rid a y , Oct. 1 4 ,1 M 3 -7

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

SATURDAY
MORNING

5:00
0

®

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

5:05
OX NIGHT TRACK8

6:00
Q (? ) GIUIGAN'S ISLAND
LAW AND YOU
( f t O CHILDREN S THEATER
(1® NEWS

6:30
a ®

th e m u p p e t s

1 j) o spectrum
(Z) O BULLWINKLE
&lt;&gt;1j (39) ITS YOUR BUSHNESS

7:00
O ® THUNDARR
(5) O BLACK AWARENE38
(D O BEST OF ON THE GO
ilt) (36) FFiJM THE EDITORS
DESK
® (8) PICTURE OF HEALTH

7:05
®

BETWEEN THE LINES

7:30
O G! &gt;GILUGAN'8 ISLAND
( i ) o t h ir t y m n u t e s
m o SCOOBY DOO / MENUDO
ill! (3b) VAL D E L \ 0
CD (6) WEEKEND GARDENER

7:35
ROMPER ROOM

6:00
O (? ) THE FUNT8TONE FUNNIES
(£ ) O THE BI8KITT8
m O KIOSWORLD
(IT) (35) IMPACT
ED (10) LAP QUILTING
CD ( I ) PANORAMA

8:05
OX STARCADE

6:30
O (? ) THE BHIRT TALES
(T ) O 8ATUROAY SUPERCADE
(Z ) O THE MONCHHICHIS / LIT­
TLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH
il 1' (35) HERAU) OF TRUTH
ED (10) BRIDGE BASICS
HD (8) COMMUNITY rOCUS

6:35
QX MOVIE "ThU Savage Land"
(1968) Barry Sullivan, Glenn Cor­
bel 1 , An outlaw band challenges a
homesteading Iamity.

-9:00
0 3 ) SMURFS □
tl I! (35) BIONIC WOMAN
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
CD(• ) FREY REPORT

O ctober 15
Of live ol the greatest World Series,
snd Interviews with the unsung
heroes end others who pleyed a
part In baaebaU history.
(0 ) (35) MOVIE "Mysteries From
Beyond Earlh'* (1977) Documenta­
ry. Scientists and researchers
explore the paranormal world ol
UFOs. Klrtitn photography, psy­
chokinesis, cloning. ESP snd the
Bermuda Triangle
CDCO) GROWING YEARS
CD(8) AMAZING SPIDER-MAN

10:00
O THE DUKES
(35) MOVIE "When The Leg­
end* Ore" (1972) Richard Wldmark.
Frederic Forrest. An orphaned Indi­
an boy disillusioned by the connhr^
log white man who Introduced him
to rodeo Me strikes out on hia own
to become a top rodeo Star.
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
CD(8) TARZAN

10:30
O
®
ALVIN AND THE CHIP­
MUNKS
®
O CHARUE BROWN AND
SNOOPY
O THE LITTLES
(10) THIS OLD HOUSE

10:35
OX MOVIE ' Tripoli ' (I960) Mau­
reen O'Hara, John Payne. The
Marines fight the Tripoli pirates lo
raise the American (lag on Tripod In
1C05

11:00
0 ® U R T
( 1 ) 0 SOLID GOLD
CD O PUPPY / SCOOBY DOO /
8CHOOLHOU5EROCK
CD(10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
CD(8) WRESTLING

11:30
O ® AMAZING 4 PIOCR-MAN /
INCREDIBLE HULK
(1 ) O BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
TOJNN F R
CD (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
AFTERNOON

12:00
ON CAATO O AY
$ O WORLD SERIES UNSUNG
HEROES EaclOgg actMO-blgMobte.

CD(d) CLASSIC COUNTRY
6:10
OX WRESTLING

6 :3 0
O ®

NBC NEWS
CBS NEWS
CD (10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neel
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons host an
Informative look at what’a new at
the movie*.

(!)a

1 2 :3 0
O ®

AMERICA-8 TOP TEN
(X) o NCAA FOOTBALL
&lt;D O WORLD 8ERIE8 Game 4
(from the NL champion'a city).
(Note: II L A . Dodgers are NL cham­
pions. this gems will be seen al 4:00
EOT. and NCAA Football wtH be
seen al 12:00 EOT.)
CD(10) OROWING YEARS

1 2 :3 5
OX MOVIE "Legend Ol The Lott"
( 1957) John Wayne. Sophia Loren.
Two men and a woman search the
Sahara lor a lost city containing a
large lieesur*

1:00
O 3 ) WRESTLING
CD (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

1:3 0
CD (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

200
8
®
MOVIE
"Killer Force'­
ll 976) Peter Fonda. Telly Sevalaa
A security officer and his sidekick
attack a desert mining camp lor a
beautiful woman and 520 million In
diamonds.
CLD(35) MOVIE "E*cape"(No Data)
Timothy Bottoms, Kay Laru.
CD (10) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
CD (8) MOVIE "Destination: Moon
Bate Alpha" (No Data) Martin Lan­
dau.

CD (K»)

2 :3 0
r r 3 EVERYBODY'S BUSI­

NESS
OX MOVIE
"The Black Whip"
(1966) Hugh Marlow*. Coleen Gray.
A pair of brothera coma to the res­
cue ol (our dsncs-hall queens,
encountering trouble In the form ol
a gangster.

3 :0 0

CD(10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
George Kirby Presenta King
Heroin" Comedian George Kirby
talk* about his battle with drugs
and prison lit*.

CD O

3 '3 0

NCAA FOOTBALL (Note: If
L A . Dodger* are NL champion*.
NCAA Football will be seen at 12:00
EDT, and Gama 4 ol the World
Series will be teen at 4 00 EOT)
3D (10) INSIDE STORY SPECIAL
EDITION "A House Divided" The
real-lif* story ol a powerful Nicara­
guan publishing (amity, who**
diamctncaSy opposing views of the
Sandinlsts regime mirror the divi­
sion In (hat Central American coun­
try, I* presented.

4 :0 0
CD O HORSE RACING The Joc­
key Club Ootd Cup race lor threeveer-old thorough L e d * end Ih*
Champagne Stakes tor two-yearold thoroughbreds (Wv* from Bel­
mont Peik In Elmont, N.Y.)
(58) INCREDIBLE HULK
(8) POP1 GOES THE COUNTRY
CLUB

4 :3 0

CD(10)INTERNATIONAL EDITION
OX HIGH CHAPARRAL
CD (8) AUSTIN CITY
ENCORE

7 :0 0
O ® DANCE FEVER
( 1 ) 0 HEEHAW
(7) O
MEMORIES WITH LAW­
RENCE WELK
(ID (35) BUCK ROGERS
CD (10) UNOERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

7:30
O ®
MAN

LIMITS

7:55
OX RED MAN FOOTBALL REPORT

6:00
O
®
DIFFERENT STROKES
Arnold's firel day al |un!or high
school finds him being endlessly
compered lo WUIIs. q
GD O CUTTER TO HOUSTON
Bath must go through a tribal rite
before she Is allowed to treat the
grandson ol an Indian healer.
( I ) O T.J. HOOKER A Eurasian
beauty (Patricia Thomson) dues
Hooker Into a gang of criminals
transporting Illegal weapons
through Chinatown, q
0® (38) FAME
^
CD (10) MOVIE "H e Walked By
Night" (1948) Richard Basehart.
Scott Brady. The work Involved by
Los Angeles police In tracking down
a killer Is (raced
CD (8) HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
Merrill Island vs Ssleflita
NCAA FOOTBALL Baylor vs
Texas A6M

12:00
CD (8) MOVIE "Dr. Jefcytl And Mr.
Hyde" (1941| Spencer Tracy. Ingrid
Bergman

12 :05
OX NIGHT TRACKS

12 :30
(D O MOVIE "Megnum Force"
(I973| Clml Eastwood. Hal Hol­
brook.

1:00
Q ®

ROCK TV

1:05

ax NIGHT TRACKS

2 :0 5
OX NIGHT TRACKS

(D O

2 :3 0

MOVIE "M&gt; Blood Runs
Cold" (1965) Troy Donahue. Joey
Heathen on
CD (8) MOVIE "Bluebeard" (1944)
John Cerradme. Jean Parker.

3 :0 5
OX

n ig h t

TRACKS

Chance (Sam

4 :0 5

Elliot) and Colleen (Cybill Shepherd)

attend a high society party in an effort lo uncover a

OX NIGHT TRACKS

killer in “ Chapter 111: When Honor Dies” on N B C * “ The
4 :2 0

Yellow Rote,” Saturday, Oct.

(D
O MOVIE "Countdown"
11968) Robert Duvall. James Caan.

It.

V W V VVVVN /V i

O ® SILVER SPOONS (Season
Pramtern) Ricky and Derek bypass
a scout convention to have a rung
with two "older" girl*.

9:00

O

V '/ '/ V V

® THE ROU8TERS Wyatt and
hit dan try to stop a hit man (Tarry
Kiser) wh I* balding a rival carnival
for territorial right*.
® O MOVIE "Trackdown: Find­
ing The Good bar KHtar" (Premtsral
Georg* Segal, Shefley Heck. While
probing the brutal murder ol a
young schoolteacher, a New York
City detective is aided by on* ol the
victim's former
(D
LOVE BOAT A husband and
wile (Charlotte Re*. Louis Nye) tee
a Irtend (Jamie Farr) with a much
younger woman, a retired police­
man (Comal Wilde) I* wrongly
accused cf a Jewel theft, and
Gopher it trapped by a man-hungry
WAC captain (Beth Howland), q
Ol ) (38) SAl UTE
^

o

9:30

CD(10) DAVE Al L

AT LARGE

n

10:00
a
® THE YELLOW ROSF P?y
inveetigatas a murder ol which
Slronghean (Win Sampson) has
been accutiid by Jab Hollister
Chock Connors)
© O FANTASY ISLAND A house­
wife (Katherine Hetmond) attempts
lo demonstrate the difficulty ol her
dudes to her husband, and a prosti­
tute (Melinda Cu'aa) teaks a genu­
ine i elationship. Q
I I ) (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD(10) FAWLTY TOWERS

(D) (35) BOB NEWHART

CD( 10) MONTY PYTHON S FLYING
CIRCUS
NFL WEEK IN REVIEW

CD( I )

11:00
Of

® ® Q CDO

,11 (35) BENNY HILL

WEEK
CD(10) WALL.STREET
t
U LC MUSIC
CD(8) NASHV1L

NEWS

ED (10) MONTS PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
CD(I) MUSIC MAGAZINE

OX UOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
6:00

1 1 :5 0
OX NIGHT TRACKS

v V W s
v v v N

THE
FAMILY PAK
FOR SIX.
•
•
•
•
•

Serves 6
12 Pieces Chicken
6 Hot Biskits
1 Pt. Rice and Gravy
1 Pt. Ham Beans

$

999

10:30

5 :3 0

EVENING

s

8:05

OX

5 :0 0
O ®
LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
On O STAR TREK
( f t (35) DANIEL BOONE
CD (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
CD(8) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD

5 :3 5

11 :30
O ®
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Hosts Rites Perlman ("Cheer* )
and Danny DeVito. Gueel: Eddy
Grant.
O S T A R SEARCH
Q MOVIE "For Whom The
Bad Tolls" (1943) Ingrid Berg men,
Gary Cooper.
Ol) (35) MOVIE "The Swiss Con­
spiracy" (1977) David Janssen, Elke
Sommer.
CD(8) LATE IS OREAT

CALL YOUR CONGRESS­

8:30

2 :5 0

9:30

(D O DUNGEONS AND DRA­
GONS
17 1 O PAC-MAN / RUBIK CUBE /
MENUDO
fZ) (10) DINNER AT JULIA'S
CD(81 REAL ESTATE ACTION UNE

esl m edical Information and
research about this frightening dis­
ease Is presented from Seattle.
Washington where the fifth annual
meeting u( numbers of a group that
studlas sexually transmitted dis-

OX

11:20

A FINITE WORLD "Chin*" A
documentary which examines Chlna'a "o n * couple, on* child" policy
developed to stem the tide ol the
. two* population eaptoeion la preThe rsr- - M M : (Part 2) m m V a '.i v . v . l v v

O p e n 6 a m to 9 p m

Drive thru service available

3021 O r lu n d o D riv e , S a n fo r d , F L

�• —Evening H erald, Santord, FI.

SUNDAY
MORNINO

5:05

ID NX3MT TRACKS

6:00
O a ) HARMONY AND GRACE
f f l O LAW AND YOU
f f l O AGRICULTURE U S A
( f j (35) IMPACT
ID NEWS

O c to b e r

CD(10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

G

O SPECTRUM
O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION
0 0 (35) W.V. GRANT
ID NEWS

S

7:00
I ® HEALTH BEAT
I O ROBERT SCHULLER
I O PICTURE OP HEALTH
) (35) BEN HADEN
) THE WORLD TOMORROW
I (8) JIM BAKKER

7:30
O ® WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE
The human need tor friend ship It
dltcutted by Or. Ralph Bohlmann
and writers Dr. Jean Garton. Alan
Loy McGuInnett and Richard
Bimier.
CD O EBONY / JET CELEBRITY
SHOWCASE
10 (35) EJ. DANIELS .
© I T «S WRITTEN

6:00
f f l VOICE OP VICTORY
O REXH U M BARO
O B O B JONES
(1lj (35) JONNY QUEST
QD ( 10) SESAME STREET (R) n
CARTOONS
I (B) JAMES ROBISON

r

8:30

O

f f l SUNDAY MASS
DAY OF DISCOVERY
ORAL ROBERTS
© (35) JOSIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS
GDIS)W.V. GRANT

ffl O
ffl O

9:00
0 f f l THE WORLD TOMORROW
1 O SUNDAY MORNING
O FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ID (35) MIGHTY MOUSE
CD (10) MAGIC OF ANIMAL PAINT­
ING
&lt;E (5) PETER POPOFF
•

S'

9:05

AFTERNOON

12:00
O f f l MEET THE PRESS
H O JOHN MCKAY
(J ) (35) MOVIE "Zigzag" (1070)
George Kennedy. Anne Jeckeon. A
man Muttering from e brain tumor
tramee himself lor a murder In
order lo provide his lamlly with the
reward money.
CD (10) WORLD OF COOKING
"France: An Alpine Menu" (R)

12:30
f f l NFL S3
O NFL TODAY E.J. Molub Is
profiled on this afternoon'* seg­
ment of "Legends Of The Game."
“ O EYEWITNESS SUNDAY
(10) CRIME ON OUR MINDS

S

1.-00
* 5 f f l NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phin* at New York Jets
f f l O NFL FOOTBALL San Fran­
cisco 40era al New Orleans Saints
O TENNIS "Florida Federal''
(10) THE SHAKESPEARE
P L A Y S "T lm o n O l A th e n s "
Jonathan Pryce portrays a wealthy
Athenian nobleman who squander*
his fortune on his fickle friends In
Jonathan MUIer'a television produc­
tion of William Shakespeare * play.
CD (&gt;) WRESTLING

S

ID

Q
f f l MONTAGE- THE BLACK
PRESS
O PRO AND CON
(35) THE JETBONS
tD (10) MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINT­
ING
£E (8) GREATEST 8 PORTS LEG­
ENDS OF FOOTBALL

S

9:35

ID ANOY GRIFFITH
10:00
O f f l HOW THE WEST WAS WON
The Sioux nation readtea for battle
after Chief Satangkal la aaaaulted
by a young Ruaaian count: the
migrant Mor man Jaremiah Taylor
propoaea marriage lo Jeaate.
ffl O AMERrCA WORKS
(ID (35) MOVIE "Where Were You'
When The Llghls Went Out7"
(1955) Porta Day. Patrick O'Neal.
A tier finding her hutband In bed
with another woman, an actrew
run* away to their country home.
GD (10) MAOIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING
CP (I) MOVIE "Thirty Seconda
Ovor Tokyo " (5044) Spencer Tracy,
Van Johnaon. General Jimmy Dool­
ittle prepa/ea lor and command* B29* In bombing mitalona over
Japan.

10:05

ID BEST OF GOOD NEWS

s

10:30

FACE THE NATION
O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
fD (10) WOODWRIGNT6 SHOP

ID

a

10:35

MOVIE
"The Andromeda
Strain" (1071) Arthur HUI, David
Wayne. Three adantlata work to
identify a deadly strain ol bacteria
In time lo save everyone from
extinction.

11:00

G

GD TAKING ADVANTAGE

1:20

MOVIE
"AH That Ha*yen
Allow i" (1056) Jana Wyman, Rock
Hudson. Criticism from others
almost lorcea a woman to give up
the gardener she truly loves.

2:00
&lt;n (35) MOVIE
"Kansas City
Bomber ' (10721 Raquel Welch.
Kevin McCarthy. A woman laces
problems with her teammate* and
her managers while dlmblng to the
lop in the roller-derby circuit.
09 (8) ABBOTT ANO COSTELLO

ffl O

2:30

GOLF "Ryder Cup Match­
es" (live from Palm Beach Gardena.
Fla.).

(CDLEAVE IT TO BEAVER
9:30

11:30

ffl COLLEGE FOOTBALL
HIGHLIGHTS
) □ BLACK AWARENESS
S ' O THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
CD&lt;10) GOURMET COOKING

6:10
6:30

16

CD O THIRTY MINUTE8

tin WEEK IN REVIEW

O GD 2'S COMPANY

» F rid a y, Oct. 1 4 ,19H

3:00
CD ( I ) MOVIE "Till The Clouds Ron
By" (1047) Robert Walker, Van Hef­
lin. Jerome Kern makes hla mark
upon the musical world as • com-

ty" (1952) Ida Lupino, Robert Ryan.
A widow's III* la threatened when
she discovers that (he handyman
she hired la mentally unstable.

ffl O
ID

5:30
NEW8COPE

5:35

PORTRAIT* OF AMERICA A
profile ol Texas I* presented
EVENING

(Q) MOVIE "Magnificent Obses­
sion" (1054) Jane Wyman. Rock
Hudson. A rich playboy studies
medicine to add meaning to hla
empty kfe and talar restores sight to
the woman he loves.

Q ffl

4:00

MOVIE "Last Of The Red
Hot Lovers" (1072) Alan Arkin. Salty
Keller man The balding, middleaged owner of a seafood restaurant
makes three awkward attempts at
extra-mar Del romance. 'PG'
ffl Q
NFL FOOTBALL Dalle*
Cowboys at Philadelphia Eagle*
I T (35) INCREDIBLE HULK
CD (10) THE OIL KINGDOMS
"King* And Pirate*" A historical
view is presented on the discovery
of oH In the Persian Gulf and how
the resulting wealth of that area
influence* trada between East and
West, the pearling Industry and th*
gold trad*, g

QD O

4:29

WORLD SERIES Gem* 5 (if
necessary, from the NL champion's
city)

4:30
f f l O AN AMERICAN IN TAHITI

5:00
(36) DANIEL BOONE
(10) FIRING UNE "Should We
Gel On With Capital Punishment?"
An affirmative view I* expressed by
Emeat van de Haag John M. Olin
Professor of Jurisprudence and
public policy at Forrtham University,
and expressing a negative view I*
John P. Conrad from th* National
Institute ol Justice
CD (■) MOVIE Beware My Love-.

10:05
ID NEWS

10:30

6:00

Q f f l GD Q n e w s
Oil 135) SWITCH
CD&lt;10} NOVA "Slgna Ol Th* Apes.
Songs Ol The Whales" The moat
recent developments In the study ol
communicating with animat* ar*
examined, g

6:30
0 f f l NBC NEWS
f f l O ABC NEWS g

CD(8) CARTER

10:35

ID SPORTS PAGE

11:00
O f f l f f l Q f f l O NEW8
) (38) BOB NEWHART
(10) 8NEAK PREVIEWS Neal
□abler and Jeffrey Lyons host an
informative look at whet's new at
the movie*.
CD(B) THE JOKE-BONUS

6:35
(GD NICE PEOPLE

G

11:05

ID JERRY FALWELL

7:00

f f l FIRST CAMERA Rebecca
Sober reports on religion In Ameri­
ca'* heartland as experienced In
Muncie, Ind. and the changing feel­
ing* that have accompanied It dur­
ing the past several decades.
(J ) O 60 MINUTES
f f l O RIPLEY-8 BELIEVE IT. OR
NOT1 Strange death rites; futuristic
robots; a taen-ager'a Shakespeare
1 or gar lea: egg-related wonder*;
famous eccentric*.
15 (35) THE HARDY BOYS / NAN­
CY DREW MYSTERIES
CD (10) B A M MARIMBA BAND IS
BACK
CD(•) ANGLERS IN ACTION

11:30

G

f f l ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK Featured: Gene Barry's role
In a hit Rroedwsy musical: Mike
Farr air* upcoming TV movie: a vtsit
to movte-meking sues all over the
country.
f f l Q 813KEL A EBERT AT THE
MOVIES
© (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES

11:35
f f l Q SOLID GOLD

12:00

f f l O THE SAINT

12:05
ID O F o tu p

7:05
ID WRESTLING

12:30
Q f f l FACE TO FACE

7:30
CD ( t ) LOU SABAH

8:00
O f f l r-TSSHT RIDER KITT to piti­
ed against a sophisticated attack
helicopter as Michael searches lor
aloton, lop-secret military weapon*.
( ! ) C J ALICE Joiene passes a
stewardess last and starts to
moonlight as a flight attendant,
f f l O HARDCASTLE A MCCOR­
MICK Mark becomes Involved with
e beautiful woman (Marla OuBotol
connected to the death* of several
top mobsters
(15 (35) JERRY FALWELL
CD (10) NATURE "Fungi Th* Rot­
ten World About Us" As an agent of
decay, furgl performs a function
essential to Hie ~n this planet. □
CD (S) MOVIE "Man Of A Thou­
sand Facet" (1057) Jama* Cagney.
Dorothy Melon*. Actor Lon Chaney
becomes known for hi* remarkable
talent of using make-up to assume
different appearance*

8:05
02) AMERICA'S MUSIC TRACKS

3:15

hospitalized young woman (Patricia
Davit) at part ol ht* campaign lo
get Trapper’s |ob.
15 (35) KENNETH COPELAND
CD (10) MA8TERPIECE THEATRE
"Picture*" Inspired by Ruby,
scriptwriter BUI Trench spend* a
great deal ol hla time studying her
lit* "in depth," much to th* cheQrin
ol hi* society girlfriend, g

12:35
f f l O MOVIE "Thurada/aGame"
(1071) Bob Neuhart, Gena Wilder.

1:00

f f l O MOVIE "The Connection"
(1073) Chariot Ourning. Ronny Cox.

1:05
ID MOVIE “ Long Day's Journey
Into Night" (1062) Katharine Hep­
burn, Jason Roberda.

1:30
O f f l MOVIE Rider* Ol Destiny(1033) John Wayne, Gabby Hayes

2:20
f f l O MOVIE "Once Upon A Hon­
eymoon" (1042) Cary Grant, Ginger
Roger*.

2:35
f f l O CBS NEWS NIOHTWATCH
(Joined In Progress)

4:00
ID THE AMERICANS

4:20

G O G U ID E
Senior Citizens Cabaret Dance. 7:30 p.m.. Senior
Citizen Center, 200 N, Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
"B ig Band” music.
General Sanford Museum and Library, Fort Mellon
Park. Sanford, 2-5 p.m., Sunday. Wednesday and
Thursday.
Florida OIT Road Drivers Association benefit race
for Edgcwood Boys Ranch, 12:30 p.m.. Sunday. Oct.
16. Central Florida Fairgrounds, West Highway 50,
Orlando.
10th Annual Pioneer Days Fcslival, Saturday. Oct.
22. 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.: Sunday. Oct. 23. 11 a.m. to
6 p.m. Begins with 10 a.m. parade on South Orange
Avenue. Free street dance Saturday. 6:30-9:30 p.m.
Entertainment, Bluegrass, and pioneer crafts.
Ninth Annual Sem inole County School Band
Festival. 7:30 p.m.. Oct. 29. Lake Brantley High
School Stadium. Sand Lake Road. Forest City.
An E xh ib ition :'T h e Ages o f Mexico” , through
Oct.31.
"T h re e Painters: Jellnas, Lotz. T olbert." through
Oct. 31 at Crealde Gallery. 600 St. Andrews Blvd.,
o ff Alom a Avenue, W inter Park. Monday through
Friday. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Free to the public.
Nature hike each Saturday. 10 a.m.. W eklwa
Springs State Park. Extended day hike, 12:30 p.m..
every third Saturday o f the month. Two-hour animal
and plant Identification trip, 12:30 p.m.. each first
Saturday. Call 889-3140 for Information.
Rally for the Arts, starting at Mead Gardena.
W inter Park, at 12:30 p.m. Oct. 16. Costume party
for participants at 1 p.m. After rally there will be a
barbecue dinner, entertainment and awards at
Cheyenne Saloon. Orlando, for participants. The
event will benefit Council o f Arts &amp; Sciences
outreach programs. Call 843-2787.
Benefit Pig Roast at UCF to raise funds for campus
Scholarship House sponsored by Fla. Federation o f
Business and Professional Women, Oct. 15. Call
275-2550 for tickets.
M aitlan d A rt C e n te r, 231 P a ck w oo d A v e ,
Maitland, exhibit o f paintings by Karen Albritton;
sculpture oy Cheryl Bogdanowitsch. and photo­
graphy by Anna Tomcznk. Oct. !5*N ov.l3. Gallery
hours. Tuesday through Friday. 10-4: weeks. 1-1:30
p.in.
Zlp-a-dee*zoo-dah Wild West Auction and Musical
Jamboree to bentflt Central Florida Zoo. 6 p.m..
Oct. 21, Orlando Expo Centre. Call 323-4-450 for
ticket Information.
Rogers and Hart musical."Babes in A rm s", Oct.
21-22. 26-29. Annie Russell Theatre. Rollins College
Winter Park. Call 646-2145 for ticket Information.

ffl Q
MOV it
"Chase" (1073)
Mitchell Ryan. Reid Smith.

T te o l y&amp;uwefi

8:30

f f l O ONE DAY AT A TIME Sam's
attention to hla ex-wife (Claudette
Nevtns) makes Ar.n highly uncom­
fortable

G

T

9:00

ffl MOVIE "High School
U.S.A." (Premiere) Michael J. Fox,
Nancy McKeon A Midwestern high
school senior trie* to win th* status
and th* girlfriend ol th* most popu­
lar student
f f l S3 THE JEf r-tHSONS Maytvjm
results whan Georg* volunteers to
a Help Center seminar for

VISION and FASHION
Need Not 5e Expensive
W H IT E O L A S IL E N S E S
INC LU D E S F R A M E

Hwy. ile a x n rtoz
ffl O
MOVIE
"Nlghthawks" I
(1051) Sylvester Stallone. Bitty Dee
ALL SEATS
Williams Two New York City poller
riA D A -U ]\l 5
detective* )otr an etft* unit being
trained to ceplure a dangerous
N A T IO N A L
International terrorist. (Viewer Dis­
IL A M P H N S
cretion AdviaedlQ
1 5 (38) JIMMY SWAGQART
CHEVY CHASE
CD (10) EVENING AT POPS "Rich |Q
Uttle” Impressionist Rich Little
T iA z jr in
J ;«»n
loins John Williams and the Boston
Pops Orchestra In an evening that
Include* a salute to the MOM musi­
m
r
. ^ o ^
cals and the world premiere of
W
SM
«*»
can
tw
f Eos lit mi
"Ragomama" by William Bottom

99*

M on
®

1'

(R|
9:05
© WEEK IN REVIEW

,([ m o v i e l a ^
M «, I M I S

9:30

ffl o COCONIQHT. BEANTOWN
Jenny’s on-air opinion about the
treatment c l an alleged bank
robber (Larry Minkin) place* her In
leopardy.

10:00
f f l O TRAPPER JOHN, M O. A
doctor (Robert Madden) exploit* a

To A Meat Oulbttkl

m

L

.

U IIIU

mud

QD

ii to

CLASS

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES
T IN T S * PHOTO O K R Y AVAICASLto

• Your Doctors Proscription Filled
0 P l a i n s D u p lica ted *F ree Ad|ustments A Repair*

YOUR EYEGLASSES
S A V IN G S CENTER

BUDGE
OPTICAL
S A N F O R D * 323-8080
2 5 4 4 S. FRENCH A V E . (1 7 -9 2 )
(NEXTTO AQQ1ES)

UNO

Men. Thru Frt.

fa.m.-lp.m.

1)0

FIRST BLOOD Q9
.'Vi

SI NGLE
VISIO N

*25°°

av.\

■ £ !

Closed Wed. a r t a r n e e n a lt p .m ^ ^ ^ ^

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t h ir d ly

J 9a.tn.-1 p.m

_______ Clostd Last Sat Of The Month ,, *■

^

�F rid a y, Oct. 14, I t U - 9

Evening H erald, Sanford, FI

Daytime Schedule
MORNINO

5:00

QD (10) A.M. WEATHER

7:30

5:30
0 ( I ) NBC NEWS OVERNKWT
(TUE-FRI)
12 ITS YOUR BUSINESS (MON)
12 CHRISTIAN CHILDREN'S FUND
(FRO

6:00
G ®

CALL YOUR CONQRESS-

u i u (UQMI

(J) O
NEWS

0 ® LOVE CONNECTION
® O HOUR MAGAZINE
ID (38) FAMILY
CD( 10) aECTRIC COMPANY (R)
CD(8 )0 0 0 COUPLE

7:15

0 QD 2"8 COUNTRY (TUE-FRf)
(ID NICE PEOPLE (MON)
12 AGRICULTURE U.8-A. (FBI)

CBS EARLY MORNING

© (38) WOOOY WOODPECKER
CD( 10) SESAME STREET (R) Q
CD(8) SPIDER-MAN
^

® SALE OF THE CENTURY
CD (10)3-1-1 CONTACT
CD(8) CLASSIC COUNTRY

© : DREAM OF JEANNIE
AND

8:05
© BEWITCHED

6:30
1 ® NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE
I a
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWSfTUC-fRq
) O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
or ) INSPECTOR GADGET
(B (»M
) MORNING STRETCH

5

6:45
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
S M 10) AJA WEATHER

11:30

8:35

DREAM HOU8E
LOVING
(33) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NCW8
ID (10) POSTSCRIPTS

S

© I LOVE LUCY

9:00
) ® 01FT RENT 8TROKES (R)
) Q DONAHUE
i O MOVIE
; (38) GREAT SPACE COASTER
)(10) 8ESAUE STREET (R) Q
CD(t) BODY BUOOIE8

11:35

0

9:30

® LAVERNE A SHIRLEY
COMPANY
(38) I LOVE LUCY
(3) HEALTH FIELD

A

O ctober *7
•at out lo explore a new We togeth­
er In • quaint racing town.

6:00

8:05

® ( D O C D O NEWS
(38) BJ / LOBO
(10) MACNtJL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
CD (8) ONE DAY AT A TIME

© M O VIE "Easy Coma. Easy Go"
(1087) EMi Presley. Dodle Mar­
shall A Navy frogman mistakenly
believe* ha has found a vast sunken
traaaura.

6:05

9:00

02 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI­ O
®
MOVIE “ Policewoman
RIE
Canlartold" (Pramlara) Melody
Anderson. Ed Martnaro. A temsla
6:30
police officer poses lor a magazine
0 ® NBC NEWS
cenlwluld, than must dad with the
(T )O C 8 3 N E W S
reactions of her boyfriend and other
O A bC N E W S p
members of the force
(38) ALICE
®
O
AFTERMASH D'Angelo
CD (8) OOOO TIMES
(John Chappell) puts the entire staff
7:00
on overtime In anticipation of a visit
0 (4] PEOPLE'S COURT
from Washington officials.
(1) O P M. MAGAZINE A restau­ CD
O
NFL
FOOTBALL
rant wh#rs patron* (Una whit* soak­
Washington Redskins at Groan
ing m a hot tub; an Interview with
Bay Packars n
lot mar Della* Cowboys star Roger 12 (38) QUINCY
Staubech.
Q9 (10) THE SHAKESPEARE
CD O JOKER'S WILD
PLAYS "Macbeth" Nlcoi William­
11! (38) THE JEFFER80N8
son and Jane Lapotoira star as the
CD (10) AMERICA
murderous, power-hungry couple In
CD (•) ROWAN 8 MARTIN S INs dramatization ol Shakespeare's
LAUGH-IN
classic play.

7:05
CAROL

BURNETT

FRIENDS

AND
1

7:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An mtwvtow with Snu ey Fabaraa.
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O FAMILY FEl'D
(38) BARNEY MILLER
(8) TIC TAC DOUGH

S

7:35
© G O O D NEWS

8:00

® MIOOAY
O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
O NEWS
(38) BEWITCHED

11:35

(D O

9:30

NEWHART (Season Prem­
iers) A seductive actress (Stalls
Stevens) with a notorious reputslion confers with Owe r » h-tptrg ts
writ* her memoir*. (Pert 1)

® O

10:00

EMERALD POINT N A B A
reception tor a Soviet dignitary also
sell the scene lor the arthral r.f
Rear Adm Mallory's slstsr-In-law,
Deanna Kincaid (JI8 St. John).
© (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS '
CD (8) KOJAK

O ® BOONE Boone Is seriously
injured whan ha attempts lo rescue
10:05
a country-western rrusic star bom
©NEWS
a Diana crash.
HI O SCARECROW AND MRS.
10:30
KINO A vengeful doctor (Michael © (3 5 ) BOS NEWHART
Fairman). whose mlnd-contror
axparlmants ware Stopped by "The
11:00
Agency." program* Lae to kl* his
O ® ® O NEWS
boas Bitty.
CD
THAT'S INCREDIBLE! A © (3 8 ) BENNY HIU
rider on a horse vs. another on a CD(8) TWILIGHT ZONE
moiorb*a tn a steeplechase race,
11:05
arght-year-old champion sprinter © ALL IN THK FAMILY
Karaam Pickering.
© (38) HAWAM FIVE-0
11:30
CD (10) THE OIL KINGDOMS "The
Petro Dollar Coast" Since the dis­ O ® THE BEST OF CARSON
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests:
covery ol oil and the Increasing
demand tor It. the Persian Quit srea Joan Rivers. George Segal. Conrad
hss become vary wealthy, causing Jems. The Beverly HIM Unlisted
changa* In social customs, educa­ Jazz Band. (R)
O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
tion. redgton and government. Q
(38) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
QJ (8) MOVIE "My CHd Man"
Scheduled George Kennedy, Ann
(IOTP) Kristy McNIchol. Wsrran
Ostes. A loan-soar and her father. Turksi, Jackie Mason
reunites adar a 14-year wspi/stwn,' tCD (8) MOUSE (MILS7,.|.4 , w f s r * , * t 4 , ^ t r ' ( s i M t i * ,s ia * w tx i&lt; si*i

12:05
©
MOVIE "Pal Joey" (1857)
Frank Slnstrn, Rita Hayworth.

12:30

® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guest: comedianactor Bitty Crystal
( S O ABC NEWS NK1HTUNE

2.-00
I ® ANOTHER WORLD
) 0 &lt;I ONE LIFE TO UVE
) (38) GOMER PYLE

© (38) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

1:30
© ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:20

©
MOVIF
S.range Intruder"
(1888) Edmund Purdom, Ida Lupi­
ne.

EVENING

6.-00
0 ® ® 0 ( 7 3 O NEWS
(111(38) BJ / LOBO
fcD (10) MACHE1L / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
CD (•) ONE GAY AT A TIME

6:05
© LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI­
RIE

BURKETT

AND

7:30
® O CBt» NEWS NIQHTWATCH
f f l O MOVIE "Women's World"
(1884) Clifton Webb, June AJtysor,.

3:00
O ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

4:00

® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
® O MOVIE "Tcpeze" (1833)
John Barrymoro, Myma Loy.

4:05
©
MOVIE "Government Girt"
(1843) Olivia da HavMa.vd. Sonny
Tufta.

O (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interviews with Richard Chamber­
lain end Rod Steiger on the eel of
their movie "Cook And Perry."
® O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
( 7 ) 0 FAMILY FEUD
© (33) BARNEY MILLER
CD (8) TX3 TAC DOUGH

7:35
© O O O O NEWS

7:59
CD O WORLD 8ERIES Game 6 (ft
necessary, from the AL champion's
city)

O

800

®
THE A-TEAM The team
goat lo Mexico lo rescue a dying
woman, who has been victimized ty
a savoge slave labor smuggling
ring
tW O THE Mississippi Ben is
hired to defend a women (Tyne
Daly) accused of lately shooting

a

her husband

iW

5:00

O

® LOVE BOAT
I THREE'S COMPANY
I NCW8COPE
CHIPS PATROL
OCEAMU8(MON)
09 (10) UNOERSTAND*NQ HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
60 (10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY
(WED)

B

CD (1
(10)

EARTH. 8EA AND SKY

(THU)

(10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
CD (ft
(FRI)

5:05

3:30
® MORK AND MINDY
(35)8COOBY DOO
09 (W ) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8

4:00
I ® FANTASY ISLAND
BREAKAWAY
MOW GRIFFIN
) 8UPERFRIEN03
( 10) SESAME STREET (R) p
CD(8) MOVIE

8

riled. Q
CD (8) MOVE "Hour Of The Gun"
(1867) James Garner, Jason
Robard*. Wyatt Esrp stalks the
man who kHed his brother.

8:05
© M O V IE "LoveS lory"(1870)AN
MacGraw, Ryan O'Neal. A young
widower recalls his wile, a victim of
leukemia.

O

O ® PEOPLE'S COURT
® O PM. MAGAZINE A visit with
members of the Australian rock
group Man at Work; a profile of the
new MHe America. Vansesa Wil­
liams
(T ) O JOKER'S WILD
© (38) THE JEFFERSONS
CD ( 10) NATURE OF 7HINC8
CD (8) ROWAN 8 MARTIN'S
LAUGH-IN
CAROL
FRfENOB

4:35
©THEBRADY BUNCH

©STARCADE

8:30

HAPPY DAYS Attar his
breakup with Ashley, Fonzle's bud­
dies take him away to a swinging
tingles resort.

CD (8) OOOO TIMES

12

4:30
© (3 8 ) PINK PANTHER

3:05
12FUNRME

CD O

0 ® NBC NEWS
( 3 ) 0 CBS NEWS
(7) f j ABC NEWS n
© (38) ALICE r.

7:05

2:30

® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Dick Cavail talks about his new

4:05
12 THE MUNSTEPS

5:30
H O M ’ A 'C N
( 7 ) 0 NEWS
f f l (10) OCEANUS (MON)
S&gt; (10) UN0ER8TAN0IH0 HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
(10) FOCUS ON SOCIETY
OJED)
CD (ft)*
(« EARTH, SEA AND PKY
(THU)
09 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)

5:35
© BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

CD(8) TWILIGHT ZONE
11:05
© A L L IN THE FAMILY

7M

1:10
®
O COLUMBO Lt. Coturnbo
stalks a television network execu­
tive (Trlth Van Devere) suspected ol
slaying her boss. (R)

O

I ® GHUGAN-SISLANO
) O aUKXNQ LIGHT
) O GENERAL HOSPITAL
I (35) THE FUNT8TONES
J (10) POSTSCRIPTS
CD(8) IRONSIOE

O cto b er IB

6:30

1:00

(7) O MOVIE "Call It A Day"
(1837) Okvla de HavtOand. Ian Hunt-

O

2:35
12 WOMAN WATCH (FRO
3:00

3:35

CJDo AS THE WORLD TURNS
I P (38) DICK VAN DYKE
OLD
CD (10) ALL NEW THIS
1
HOUSE (FRI)

® O HART TO HART Max's axwife returns attar a 10-year separa­
tion with trouble dose behind. (R)
( S O NEWS

O

rrH U )J

TUESDAY

© THE CATUN8

12:00

EVENING

©

s

S3

12 THF FUNTSTONCS

1:30

12:00

2:30

CAPITOL
I DREAM OF JEANNIE
10) BRIDGE BASICS (WED)
10) IN8I0E THE WHfTE HOU8E

12 MOVIE
AFTERNOON

it

MONDAY

1:05

12 TEXAS

9:05

I TODAY
I CBS MORNINO NEWS
I OOOO MORNINO AMERICA
) (38) TOM AND JERRY
) (W) TO UTEJ
12 FUNTIME

1:00

® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
I f ) U ALL MY CHK_DREN
12 (38) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD ( 10) MOVIE (MON. TUE. THU)
CD (10:
(10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
(10)
CD M
O] FLORKM HOME GROWN
(FRO

U THE CATUN8

© MOVIE

7:00

( 7 ) 0 RYANS MOPE
12 (38) BEVERLY HHJJMLLIES

0

O

ING (FRI)

RCH FOR TOMORROW
THE YOUNG AND THE

11:05

(36)POPEYE
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

1

*

12:30

) WHEEL OF FORTUNE
I THE PRICE IS RIGHT
) Q BENSON (R)
' (3 8 )0 0 0 0 DAY
(10) MAGIC OF Oft. PAINTING
CD(8) HIGH CHAPARPAL

8:30

ffC) JO MINUTE WORKOUT
NEWS

12:05

ED (W ) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)
CD(8) BONANZA

CD1(10)
(10] MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINT­

12 PERRY MASON

11:00

8:00

SCI SUNRISE

10:30

0

7:35

©
(38) BUGS BUNNY
FRIEN06
CD (t) JIM BANKER

CD (10) NEVER TURN BACK: THE
LIFE OF FANNE LOU HAMER
(MON)
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD ( 10) EVEMNQ AT POPS (WED)
S ) ( 10) NOVA (THU)
CD(10) NATURE (FRI)
CD(8) M O V*

10:00

CD(8) NEW ZOO REVUE

® 0 JUST OUR LUCK Keith parttdpatae in a six-male run and is eld­
ed by Shabu In upstaging a tallow
entrant who cheats
© (3 5 ) HAWAM FIVE-0
CD (10) NOVA “ Artificial Heart
The case of Barney Clerk, who
received an arttfldai heart implant
In 1883, is reviewed, and an invest!gallon of Jhq continuing pontrovar-,
sy over artificial heart research Is
A W i'O W

%too

®
REMINGTON STEELE
Laura tries to clear Remington,
who supposedly caused the death
of a pedestrian in a car accident.
® Q JANIE FRICKE: YOU OUGHT
TO BE IN PICTURES Top country
singer Janie Fricks la Joined by Ala­
bama. Ronnie Milsap. George
Jones. Rosanna Cash, Gordon
MacRaa and Charley Pride m her
that television irH&gt;ciai
® O THREE-8 COMPANY Jack
receives a fortune from a malfunc­
tioning automatic bank teller
machine Q
ni)(35)QUTMCY
SS (13) THE COMMANDER8

9:30
f f i O OH. MADELINE Madeline
befriends a young man In her pot­
tery class, unaware ot hit amorous
mttntlont.

10:00
O ® BUNCO Two police bunco
Investigators (Tom Seftsck. Robert
Urich) endanger a tallow officer
(Donna Mitts) whan they Inveellgate
a school lor con artists. (R)
(D O HART TO HART Jennifer
tears tor Jonathan s Uta whan Jewel
tlilevee lake him hostage during a
business trip lo Paris, r j
© (36) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD 00) VIETNAM. A TELEVISION
ORY “ LBJ Goes To War
HlSTOm
(1864-1885)" Although Ho Chi Mlnh
Is dels,mined to unite North and
South Vietnam, Lyndon Johnson's
vehement opposition results In
massive escalation of the unde­
clared Vietnam War. r j
CD (8) KOJAK

11:30

0

®
TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson. Guest: Ptacido Domingo.
® O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
® 0 ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
© (38) THICKE OF THE MIGHT
Scheduled: Rutty VsOea
CD (8) HOUSE CALLS

11:35
©TH ECATUNS

12:00
® o MAGNUM, P L Higgins vol­
unteers Magnum's services to find
out why a enter has been the
ob)ect ol several kidnapping
attempts. (R)

1

12:05
© MOVIE "The Bachelor Party"
(1857) Don Murray, E G Marshall

0 ®

12:30

LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests: musician
David Sanborn. New York Jets
quai
Livterback Richard Todd.
&amp; )(Q ALL IN THE FAMILY

CD O

1:00

MOVIE "Rebecca" (1840)
Joan For*rfne, Laurence Okvter.
© (31.) STREETS OF 8AN FRAN­
CISCO

1:10

ffl O
MCCLOUD McCloud IS
assigned to protect a corporate
president (Patrick O'Neal) whose
Me Is being threatened (R)

O

1:30
® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:05
© MOVIE "Strangers At Sunrtse"
(1871) George Montgomery, Deans
Martin

0

2:30

® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Interview with Shelley Fabate*
® O CBS NEWS NIQHTWATCH

3:00

0 ffl NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
3:20
(D O MOVIE "Mr. Sktlllngton"
(1844) Bette Devts. Claude Rains

0

4:00
® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

4:05
©
MOVIE "The Cool Ones"
(1887) Roddy McDowell. Debbie
Watson.

10:10
© NEWS

10:30
© (3 5 ) BOS NEWHART

11:00
O ® ® O ® O NEWS
02 (38) BENNY H IU
CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

ENJO Y

GRAPEFRUIT
P R O M FLO R ID A *

3 X W i^ V TiA ( a w I

, wv

�10—Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

F rid a y , Oct. 14, 1VU

Liv Ullmann Is A Feminist Sex Symbol
By Vernon Scott
UPI Hollywood Reporter
HOLLYW OOD (UPI) — N o m a y ’s Liv
Ullmann has accomplished an almost
Impossible Teat In becoming a feminist
sex symbol — a woman who exhorts
females to liberation and captivates
men In the process.
Liv is the actress, authoress, former
m is t r e s s o f S w e d e n ’ s b r illia n t
director. Ingcmar Bergman (by whom
she had a daughter), who has become
an International symbol o f the ’ Ibcroted woman.
Unlike mnny o f her sisters In the
struggle for female equality, she has
continued to enhance her desirability
and femininity.
Unlike them. too. Liv has not lost a
vulnerable tendency to blush, (llrt and
giggle.
On a recent visit to Hollywood,
where she has never quite attained
stardom, she was honored by the
International com m ittee o f W om en In
Film and the American Film Institute
for her contributions to movies.
Homage was paid the Norwegian
beauty, too. for her work with the
wom en’s movement. UNICEF and the
International Rescue Committee.
In addition to two recent movies.
T he W ild D u c k , made In Australia
with Jerem y Irons, and Fools G a m b it,
a French movie with Leslie Caron. Liv
has completed her second autobio­
graphical book. Tides.
Her customarily pensive face broke
into a soft smile when she explained
her busy schedule.
"Basically. I am la zy ." she said, her
Idiomatic English much Improved. ” 1
enjoy silting around doing nothing
and fee) guilty about it. So I keep
busy.

L iv U llm a n n
"A n yw a y. I don’t believe a woman
can Just be an actress. At least I
cannot. I would hate to come to the
end o f m y life and believe acting was
all t had ever done.
" I would like to say I knew more
things about life than acting. One
thing I have never done is leao the
quiet life. I’ve never allowed m yself to
tend the flowers. Maybe some day I
will do that too."
Until then. Liv is hell bent on
raising the consciousness o f other
women, especially In Europe and the

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United States, to fulfill themselves as
Individuals.
She asks women to break away
from traditional molds, from the
restrictions placed on them by men
and themselves.
Liv leads her own life by those
tenets without demeaning men and
refu sing to sum m on ancient ac­
cusative cudgels In the war between
the sexes. §h e sets an example and
suggests other women follow suit.
" I verbalize m y right to live the way
I do and recommend that to all
wom en." she said.
" I live as honestly as 1 can without
the pressures o f hnvlng to conform. It
Is only recently I have spoken out
because basically I am a polite and
well brought-up Scandinavian girl.
"M aybe It Is because I'm from a
small country and don't know any
better that some women arc willing to
listen to me.
"W om en have more equality in
Scandinavia, but there is still much
resentment by men, though It Is not
expressed aloud."
There is. however, little resentment
o f Liv. perhaps because she maintains

W EDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00

I (D CS a (D O NEWS
5)
ii BJ /1090
(10)
in MACNEIL / LEHRER
NFWSHOUR
CD(8) ONE DAY AT A TIME

r

O

6:30

® NBC NEWS
(J) O CBS NEWS
Gy O ABC NEWS □
&gt;I (35) AUCE
^
CD (8 )0 0 0 0 TIMES

9:00

S

O

7:50

WORLD SERIES dame 7 (If
necessary, from the AL champion *
city)

8:00

Am
erica
Experts)
273-8663 The Storage Experts

1135 Hwy. 17-92 N.
C»stlet,erry, Fla.

8112 £. Colonial Dr.
Orlando, Flo.
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A.j • r t i

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6:05
92 MOVIE
"The Sugarland
Express ' (1B74) Oddi* Hawn, Wil­
liam Atherton A young mother
becomes a fugitive and a folk hero
during a crime rampage designed
lo prevent her Infant ton's adop­
tion.

*1

(7) O

O R LA N D O

O ctober 19

O ® THE FACTS OF LIFE Just
before Tootle's boyfriend (Todd
O ® PEOPLE S COURT
Hortoweft) must lake a major exam,
(X O P M. MAGAZINE A look
*om* cl the mail-order catalogue* she learns that ha Is unisraia r t
CD O MOVIE "S O B ." (1981)
offering wore* this Chrlitmaa teeton. find out about the only paper WUHam Holden. Jutle Andrew*
Directed by Risk* Edwards. Nega­
lo h«»e four syndicated cartoon!*!*
tive reaction to a vary cottfy film
O JOKER'S W1L0
causa* a director to become suicid­
(W) THE JEFFERSON9
al until ho oacidas lo remake the
CD (10) 00YS8EY “ Lucy And Themovie
as e musical
First Family" The discovery of a 3
1/2-mMion-yaar-old skeleton and CD O DYNASTY The Identity of
tha arsonist who nearly killed Krystha fossilised remain* of 13 of her
contemporaries hove sparked a tte and Alexis Is revealed, and Ste­
major controversy over human evo­ ven rekindles Ms affair with Claudia.
lution. r —
(38) QUINCY
CD (8f AOWAN A MARTIN'S
(10) EDDIE BOYD - BANK
LAUQH-IN
ROBBER Tha story of tha flamboy7:05
an I and notorious Canadian bandit.
IQ) CAROL BURNETT AND
Edwin Atorus Boyd, is told through
FRIEMOE
taped recollections which reveal a
Ufa mvorvmg betrayal, tovs affair*
7:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT and a color tut group of henchman.
An Interview with Richard Wid9:30
marfc.
Q ® FAMILY TIES Alex * MaraGO O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
lure teacher (Edward Edwards)
m a FAMILY FEUD
refuses to give him a rvuch-nssdsd
(It (35) BARNEY MILLER
collage recommendation
CD(*)TTCTAC DOUGH
(0 )0 0 0 0 NEWS

LONGW OOD

course.
She likes men. Indeed, she has been
married und divorced and has lived
with several men. She believes in
love, romance and the traditional
roles o f courtship.
Much o f what she believes can be
fo u n d In he*r b o o k s. H e r firs t.
C h a n g in g , published eight years ago,
was printed in 24 languages and
b e c a m e a b e s t-s e lle r in s e v e ra l
countries.
My new book Is the story o f four
j . urs o f m y life.” Ltv said. “ It Is about
the same woman but very different
than C hangin g. It Is a love story,
abouf m y profession and what hap­
pens outsldc^ny movies.
” 1 hope It Is about compassion. Most
o f my ftlms have been about a lack of
compassion. 1 write about being a
parent, the conflict betw een two
women — mother and daughter .”

7:00

7:35

Puffy O arag a

C lcarlv. sh e do es not seek to erase
tlie differences betw een the Boxes but
only to brin g them into u parallel

CD (10) HITLER'S NUMBER ONE
ENEMY: BURIED AUVE The true
i ory la told of Raoul Wallenberg,
who was per tonally responsible lor
saving more than 100,000 Hungari­
an Jews from Nail sstormmailon.
and who later disappeared and la
ttn believed to be kvmg.
CD(8) MOVIE

6:05
92 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI­
RIE

a womanly dignity, a benign determ i­
nation for female liberation that loses
no effectiveness because o f her soft
sell.

Q ® REAL PEOPLE An update
on data concerning MIA’* from Ilia
Vietnamese government; male
dencer* from Crilppsr.diJe'* In Lo*
Angefee. obedience-trained pip*
CD O WHIZ KIDS Two criminal*
(Daryl Anderson. Jed Mid*) frame
Richie lor the emberriement of one
trillion dollars from a bank.
CD O THE FALL OUY Coil *
attempt to retrieve a ban lumper el
a dude ranch la complicated by a
former Green Beret colonel leading
e paramilitary operation

flfu

10:00

® I LOVE MEN Donna UUi*
hosts a look at the qualm** woman
moat admire In man: guasts Include
Tom Wopal, Engel ben Humper­
dinck. Dr. Joyce Brothers, and
Waytand Flowers and Madam#
1 Q HOTEL An assassin (Robert
Vaughn) plots to kW a dignitary at
the SI. Gregory, while a young
housewila (Cf.riitophar Norrla)
resorts to prostitution.
OS (3$) INOf PFN0FNT NETWORK
NEWS
CD(8) KOJAK
© NEWS

ad from the viewpoint of tour Wash­
ington pros* correspondsots who
wera among lha first woman to cov­
er such an event and whose sxpert- v m date back to tha FDR admin­
istration

11:00

O ® CD O NEWS

nj"? (35) BENNY HILL

CD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
(r, 7W1UOHT ZONE

a)

11:30
e
®
TONIGHT Host: Johnny
Carson. Guasts: Bari Convy ("It's
Not Easy"). P#t* Fountain
( D O NEWS
( 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS NfOHTUNE
&lt;D) (38) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
Scheduled: Michelle La*. Fred Wil­
lard
THECATUN8
(8) HOUSE CALLS

S
S

12:00

O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
MOVIE "Hailor Skalter" (Part
1| (1075) Stave Rail*back. Gaerg*
DtCeruo

12:30
O ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAV.0
LEHERMAN Quest*: comedian
Gary Muladaer, opera singer Branda Boorsc.
0D O POLICE STORY A veteran
officer's (Hugh O'Brian) bias
against lha salety of using police­
women in patrol cars Is tasted dura shootout with fugitive*. (R)
O ALL tN THE FAMILY

3

(D O

1:00

MOVIE "Soma Like It Hot"
(1059) Terry Curtis. Jack Lommcn.
OH (33) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

1:30
a ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

1:40
® O MOVIE "Curs* Of Thu
Black Widow" (1970) Tony Frandoaa. Donna Mills

2:00
©
MOVIE "Return From Tha
Past" (1987) Lon Chaney. John
Carradlna.

2:30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interviews with Richard Chamber­
lain and Rod Staigor on tha a*t of
lhair movie "Cook And Parry,"

3:00
O ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
( H O CBS NEWS NIOHTWATCH

CD O

3:10

10:20

MOVIE "The Slory Of Of.
Wassail" (1044) Qary Cooper.
Larain* Day.

10:30

3:45

© MOVIE "Look For Tha Silver
(38) BOB NCWHART
Lining" (1040) June Haver, Gordon
(10) INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE Mac Rea.
A behind, the-teens* look at what
on Inside lha Whit*
4:00
during a campaign ward* present, rtO OQ.NBC N^WJS OVERNIGHT

�Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

F rid a y, Oct. 14, H83— II

‘Just Our Luck' Up In Smoke

Put This Genie Back In His Bottle
By David Handler

old gu m ," sneers his curvy boss,
Megan (Ellen Maxtcd). "Y ou have no
personality, no style, no sex appeal,
no charisma — no offense."
Fear not. The decorative old bottle
Keith buys when he’ s out legging
contains a surprise — Shabu {T.K.
Carter). " I am your gen ie," Shabu.
who Is black. Informs a disbelieving
Keith. " I must serve you for 2,000
years or until your death, whichever
comes first."
" I 'm from W iscon sin ," answers
Keith. "People from Wisconsin don’ t
have gcnlcs." But Shabu Is not to be
denied. " I am ready to serve you,
m aster." he insists. (This is the sort o f
business that rankles the NAACP.)
Shabu m oves into K eith's closet,
which becomes a magical doorway to
a floating carpet piled with satin
pillows.
Shabu is everything Keith Isn't.
He's a dapper, loosey-goosey. Jlvctalking hipster, quick-witted and a hit
with the ladles.
He is everything that a roomful of
white network executives and sitcom

If you're a fan o f impossibly Inept
sitcoms. J u s t O u r L u c k is Just your
show. If you wax nostalgic over
legendary clunkers like Afv M o th e r the
C ar.. The H a th a w a ys and T he P ru itts
o f S o u th a m p to n . this dud's for you.
This new ABC ofTerlng is by no
means the worst sitcom ever made,
but I'd certainly nominate it for the
all-time lop 10. Not only is It incoher­
ent but it even manages to be so
racially offensive that the NAAGF has
blasted It as "an insult to the black
com m unity."
And this Is a show that's supposed
to appeal to blacks. ABC has. after all.
positioned it on Tuesdays up against
The A -T ca m and the lovable Mr. T.
Now are you getting an idea o f how
bad it is? B-A-D. Bad.
Keith Barrow (Richard Gilliland) I b a
nerdy. uptight weatherman for TV
station KPOX (the "fu n n y" call letters
should tip you o ff right away). Keith is
a dud with his forecasts and with the
ladies. Keith Is the white guy.
"Y o u Just stick on the screen like

THURSDAY

Eittott Gould, Trevor Howard. World
power* battle over the aecret
behind a man with a metal lace.

EVENING

6:00

8 ® CD O OD O

il 1; (35) BJ / LOBO

O ctober 20

NEWS

ED (10) MAC NEIL / LEHRER
NEWS HOUR
CD (&gt;) ONE DAY AT A TIME
6:05

92) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI­
RIE

6:30
13 ) NBC NEWS
) o CBS NEWS
) O ABC NEWS Q
&gt;(M)AUCE
^
I (8) GOOD TIMES

8:05
92&gt; NCAA FOOTBALL Florida
State v*. LouItvUle

8:30
O ®
MAMA'S FAMILY Mama
win* over the audience when *he
give* a humorous tpeach at a country-ciub ceremony honoring Ellen
(Betty White).
GD (10) ALL NEW THIS OLD
HOUSE The building tile I*
Inspected and an architect spatialIrtng In tolar home* I* con suited.

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7:00

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we got

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O O P PEOPLE’S COURT
CD O P.M. MAGAZINE A Iw m b*ck inp Into Wyoming'* rugged
O SIMON 8 SIMON A.J. and
Wind River mountain rang*; an Rick f t * hired by a young widow
interview with dancer-singer- who la convinced that her hus­
actraaa Cynthia Rhode* (' Flash- band's death whd* skydiving w u
danca," "Stayin' ANva").
actually • murder.
GD O
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O JOKER'S WILD
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Ian World About Ua" A* an aganl ol hit new tklUt on Linda.
decay, fungi perform* a function
(33) QUINCY
eeaential to life on tht* planet, q
(10) DINNER AT JULiA‘8 Julia
CD (8) ROWAN A MARTIN'S prapa/a* a main course ol braised
LAUGH-IN
•wealbread*, and guest chef Brad­
ley Ogden serve* a dessert of
7:05
sugarbush maple mousse, q j
ffTi CAROL BURNETT AND
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9:30
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7:30
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An Interview with NeU Carter.
O WHEEL OP FORTUNE
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O FAMILY FEUO
betrayed when he cool***** to
(38) BARNEY MILLER
Sharon that he's lost hit romantic
(8) TIC TAG DOUGH
drive, which eh* then tell* Neel.
ED (10) THE QOOO NEIGHBORS
7:35
(0 )0 0 0 0 NEWS
10:00

S

S

6

8.-00

O

8
®
GIMME a BREAK Katie
begin* dating a much older college
faculty member (Thomia Celloway)
CD O MAGNUM, P.L Magnum
agree* to eecort RicA’* enter (ABoe
CsJ^sn), a atudent al a convent
school during a night on the town.
GD 8 TRAUMA CENTER A akyacraper cumber suffer* tn)urtei, a
ga* enplowon rock* a tingle* bar,
and Buck (Jack Bannon) undergo**
emergency surgery. □
9J (38) HAWAU FIVE-®
ED (10) WHD AMERICA "Animal
Oddltt**" Marty taka aboul prehis­
toric animate, then take* a look al
tome unusual modern-day crea­
ture*. *uch a* the manatee and the
•V (1S7lj*’

®

HILL STREET BLUES A

rival for the position of mayor leop ­
ard u a* Cruel Daniel*' campaign.
Balkar'* )ob it threatened, and
Bobby win* a lottery.

(Tl O KNOTS L A N D IN G Chip It
taken into poke* custody and Diana
relum* home, while Abby become*
attracted lo paraonabte Slate San.
Gregory Sumner (William Devane).
20/80
D (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ED (10) OOY88EY "Soma Women
Ol Marrakech" Several Moroccan
women chare their feelings about
friendship, family and religion M
CD (■) XOJAK

*50

10:30

&lt;U)&lt;38tBOBNCWHART

t.'

11:00
8 S ) CD Q QD O n e w s
&lt;0&gt; (38) BENNY HILL
ED (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
0D (8) TWILIGHT ZONE

11:20
© NEWS
1 1 :3 0
8
®
TONIGHT Host: Johnny
Carton. Quests: Too** Thedeman*.
Elaine Strttchr Dorn DeLutea.
f j ) O WKRP IN CINCINNATI
m a ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
CD (38) THICKE OP THE NIGHT
Scheduled: Gene Francis. Robbte
Benson, Jackie Cotun*.
CD (8) HOUSE CALLS

CDO

writers think will pull young black
males away from Mr. T. He can even
make m oney appear out o f thin air
and bring centerfolds to life.
He turns Keith Into an off-the-wall,
successful weatherman, who becomes
u hit with Megan. She throws herself
at the former (and still) nerd — bad
news, since Megan Is engaged to
station m anager Nelson (Rod Mc­
Crary).
Shabu can handle that. too. It's the
genic’s code. "Y o u bring the elephant
into the house." he advises, "you hose
down the living room ." He promptly
turns him self into Megan’s teen idol —
Tab Hunter — and whisks her away.
It actually gets even more ridicu­
lous. In another episode. Shabu learns
that Don Cornelius o f Sou/ T ra in is
conducting a Great Soul Search talent
contest at KPOX. The winning singing
group gets a free trip to Monte Carlo.
Shabu decides he wants to win that
trip (even though he can transport
him self to Monte Carlo with a snap of
the fingers) and enlists the services of
his three oilier "s e ifs " to form a

J o h n n y C ash In ‘R eed A n d R ite'
Johnny Cash w ill host a
documentary on adult illit­
eracy, to air during the
beginning o f January, 1984.
Called "C a p ita l Cities
Special Report: Cant Reed,
Cant Rite,
the hour-long
syndicated program Is now
in the final stages o! produc­
tion.

b ilit y ,'
Keller,
general
C itie s

'* says C h a rles
vice president and
manager o( Capital
TV
P rod u ctio n s.

“ Adults can be taught to
read. But many m ore volun­
teers are needed. We hope
our documentary can be a
catalyst."

American Health &amp; Weight Control can help you
regain control of your weight with five excellent diet
programs designed to your needs. American Health
&amp; Weight Control offers the HCG (Human Choronlc
Gonadatropin) Plan used so successfully in Europe
but classified as a prescription drug not approved
by the FDA for weight reduction purposes.

12:10
•

12:30
8 GD LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests: comedian
Kenny Roger son. guitarist Andy
Summers ol The Police.
CDO ALL IN THE FAMILY

12:40

★

© MOVIE "Heller Skalter" (Fart
2) (1875) S l*«* Haltsback, Georg*
tXCeruo.

\
"\

1:00
f f i O MOVIE "LadybtTTteDkik"
(1844) Ginger Rygsrs. Ray Mutand.
© {38) 8TREET8 O f SAN FRAN­
CISCO

Although Cash is best
known as a country singer,
he gave an outstanding per­
formance as an illiterate in
the 1981 CBS m ovie "The
Pride of Jesse Hallam."
"What sets adult illiteracy
apart from so many of the
problems dealt with In TV
documentaries Is its 'solva­

“ I WON *63
B Y LOSING 63 P O U N D S !"

12:00

TRAPPER JOHN, M.D. Or.
Riverside I* so moved by the sud­
den appearance of hi* old nanny
and long-lost mother that he
doesn't realm ha's being conned.
(R)
©TH EC ATU N S

group, the Shabcllcs.
There's Zeus (Carter dressed up like
Mr. T). Sweet Tooth (Carter dressed
up like Michael Jackson) nnd Virgil
(Carter dressed up like a bookworm).
Megan convinces Cornelius into
putting the Shabcllcs on his show.
However, at the last minute, the
temperamental Sweet Tooth refuses
to go on because Shabu won't let him
sing lead. So Shabu — who. re­
member. can do anything — is forced
to enlist Keith, who he dresses up like
a '503 rocker. Tills allows the au­
dience to laugh at what a bad dancer
Keith is and how little soul he has.
The Shabcllcs don't win. But that's
OK because Shabu then creates a
casino In his magic closet. W hy did he
want to win In the first place? Don't
ask.
Just watch — if you prize such
genuinely awful shows. This kind o f
in coh eren cy, cou pled w ith racial
tastelc&amp;sness. doesn’t com e along very
often.
P.S.: T.K Carter is not another
Eddie Murphy.

V E R L IN D A W E L L S

SAFE ★

EFFECTIVE ★

ECONOMICAL

• P R O V E N SU C C E SSF U L e F R E E CO N SULTATIO N
• S U P E R V IS E D BY F L O R ID A P H Y SIC IA N .
• NO CO NTRACTS • NO P R E -P A C K A G E D FOODS

1:10
(X) o MOVIE "The Quality Of
Mercy" (1870) Scott Hytand*. Tony
Mutant*.

8®

1:30
NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

Certificate

2 :3 0
8 ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Interview with Richard Widmark.
® O CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH
(75 O MOVIE "The Glass Key”
(1842) Alan Ladd, Veronica Lake.

TOWARD PAYMENT OF LAB A PHYSICAL
One cefUticele per pet son

American Hea „
^%©o§)M
Clinics

2 :4 0
© M O V IE "R P .M ."( 1870)Antho­
ny Quinn, Arm-Margret.
3 :0 0
O ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

4:00
8 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIOHT
QD O MOVIE "Man Of The dra­
gon" (1874) Jared Martin. Katie
8aytor.

..... 4:20.,,. ..

© W O R LD AT LARGE

...

W here W e ig h t C o n tro l I b M o ro Than Juat A D lo tl
Two Locations O pen
W IM T U tP A R K
m m rn rrrm m
M onday
3 2 3 -6 5 0 5
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�12—Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

F rid ay, Oct. 14, 1983

Ann Jillian Outswims A Mid-Stream Crisis
across life's river.
"When I get all the way
across," she says, "maybe
then 1 can stop and rest and
maybe have kids and all
that. But until then, it's
swim, swim, swim.”

By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Ann Jillian is a silver-haired
blonde who is halfway
across the river.
At least, that’s how she
visualizes here career. She
compares her career to a
river that she has to cross to
reach the successful other
shore, and she figures she's
about halfway to that goal.

ROBERT S. WOODS has
discovered that being the
best isn't everything It's
cracked up to be. It has a
disadvantage, too.

Most of us would consider
that Miss Jillian has already
touched down on the other
side, because she's doing
pretty well right now.

Woods won an Emmy last
year as the top daytime
actor. He plays
on ABCs
"One Life to Live." He is
me. Lately, I've done things
with other hair styles and
other hair colors, but I fig­
ure that becoming blonde is
what really helped to get me
‘ " " 1Iin this town."
established

She has a hefty supporting
role in the current release
"Mr. Mom," and she is star­
ring in the upcoming TV
movie "Death Race to
Osaka."
And she Is one of the stars
of the new NBC scries "Jen­
nifer Slept Here." In that
series, she plays a ghost,
which is hardly typecasting,
because she is a pretty
earthy lady. Yet she doesn't
consider herself a sexpot,
even though her ultra-blondncss gives that distinct
impression.

One of her biggest
triumphs, so far, was when
she played Mac West for the
TV biography of that legend.
The assignment worried her,
rhe figured that no matter
what she did, Miss West's
fans would never be com­
pletely pleased.
"1 read everything I could
find about her," she says,
"and I learned that she was
interested in the psychic
world. So ! spoke to her. I
said, 'Mae, I'll do my best
not to disgrace you.’ I heard
no answer, but a few days
later Roddy McDowall
called me to say that Mae
had come to him in a dream
and told him to tell me that
everything was fine with
her.,f

"I like to think that I can
portray a woman with sex
appeal," she says, "without
being a sexpot. The differ­
ence, to me, is that a sexpot
has it all on the surface,
while the woman with sex
appeal has something under­
neath. too.”
Miss Jillian admits that
her blondness — like Lonl
Anderson’s and Suzanne
Somers' — is out of a bottle.
"For me,” she says, "as
soon as I went blonde, good
things began happening for

So that’s how it is with
Ann Jillian, as she nears the
half-way point in her swim

what the same position as a
baseball player who has
become a free agent. His
contract with ABC is up in
the fall, and he's not sure
what he's going to do.
"The network is sure to
make me a good offer," he
says. "Last time, they gave
me a fat raise. So I’m in the
catbird seat, but I'm really
not sure what I want to do ”
There arc pros and cons.
Pros: He's with a top-rated
show; he has security; he has
a leading part; he leads a
comforable life. Cons: He
finds his character is

"rather dreary," and there's
nowhere to go with It; he is a
Californian forced to live in
New York, and he'd rather
be here; and he thinks he
might like to do other
things.
So he's debating what to
do with his future. He came
back home, on a brief vaca­
tion, to visit his familv and
his manager and talk to
them and to others, seeking
advice and suggestions
about what he might do.
When you’re at the top,
you have these nagging deci­
sions.

NOW
O P E N ...

L0NGW00D LANES
G07 SAVAGE COURT, L0NGW000
Behind McDonalds®

Off Hwy. 434

3 3 9 -8 9 7 4
ty u r

7 *

'pacd&amp; U*
• 32 LANES
• SPENCER
LO U N G E'
• TRO SHOP

WEDNESDAY

probably the top star among
male soap opera figures.
But he says that being the
top can be a two-edged
sword.
"Sure," he says, "when I
have contract negotiations
with the network. I can go in
and plunk my Emmy on the
desk and say, ‘Pay me.' But
the network can come back
and say. 'What more do you
want? You can’t ask us to
beef up your part — it’s
already good enough to win
you an Emmy."
This talk of negotiations is
not idle. Woods is in some­

7

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Max Gall slan as Lew Farley, an investigative reporter
who helps four high school computer wizards solve mys­
teries on CBS’ “ Whii Kids," Wednesday, Oct If. - ‘ c
%
X i:

-• v

l

r

ri

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:aM agic
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PRIZES
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purchise

�</text>
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                    <text>Evening Hera!d-(USPS 481-280)—Prlco 20 Cents

76th Year, No. 47—Thursday, October 13, 1983—Santord, Florida 32771

'B u m - R a p ' F o r

T e e n s

Most Drunk Driving Arrests in Seminole Among 20- To 24-Year-Olds
The age group with the most drunk driving arrests In
Seminole County arc the 20- to 24-year-olds, according
to figures gathered over the past two years by the
sheriff s department.
But a year ago the number of arrests for DUI In that
age group was 155; this year the total fell to 109, leading
seme local law enforcement officials to wonder If the
state’s new tougher drunk driving law may tic having a
positive effect.

Meanwhile, one out of every 10 motorists on the
highways In Seminole County on Friday and Saturday
nights is drunk.
And one out of every two fatalities on the highways
here and statewide Involves alcohol, said Florldn
Highway Patrol Sgt. Chuck Williams.
Florida's new drunk driving law went Into effect on
July 1. 1982.
During the first nine months of 1982. 583 motorists

were arrested and charged with driving under Ihc that teenagers are getting a bum rap when blamed for
drunk driving, has separated out the numbers of arrests
Influence by all law enforcement agencies In Seminole.
During the same nine months In 1983. the number of teens charged with DUI.
This year so Tar. two 17-year-olti*; nine 18-year-olds
has fallen to 446.
'Yet. arrests for DUI are up by 81 percent statewide. and twenty-two 19-year-olds have been arrested.
Further totals by age group of those charged ■:-» far this
Williams said, nddlng that the higher number of drunk
driving arrests In Florida has translated Into a 12 year: fifteen 20-ycar-olds; 17 age 21: 28 age 22: 15 age
23: 24 age 24: 90 age25 to 29: 69 age 30 to 34: 56 age
percent drop In dcuths on the highways.
See BUM RAP, page 2A
Sheriff John Polk, who has contended for some time

Woman
'Certain'
Rapist
Man She
Helped Jai

Feds M ay Join
oting Rights Suit
A q ain st Sanford

A 34-ycar-old former Orlando prob;
tlon aide said she was rapod by a mn
she helped send back to prison, accon
Ing to a Seminole County sherlfTs report
The woman said the man grabbed h&lt;
In the parking lot of the Whispering Oal
apartment complex. 7120 Forest Cll
Rd.. Orlando, at 7 p.m. Oct. 5.
The man forced her Into the
of a gold Toyota, reports said, then g
the back scat with het and a second
In the front scat drove the car away.
The car was driven to a loatlon
southwest Seminole County ofT Fores
City Road between Hlllcrest Drive an&lt;
Oakland Drive where the man In th
back scat raped her. the report said.
The woman said she was ’'certain" the
man who assaulted her was a man ohe
had sent back to prison when she served
with the Florida Department of Correc­
tions.
The woman was employed
probation aide from 1982 to 1983.
No arrest had been made In the cose,
sheriff's spokesman said today.
—Charles Cobb

Acting Brave
Too busy for backstage litters, Layla Arnold, leit, helps Heather
Rossell fix her hair as they prepare to portray Narragansett Indians complete with w ar paint — In a school historical play. The theatrical
effort concerned the establishment of the New England colonies and
purchase of land from the Indians. Both 10 -year-olds are In Nancy
Boyers' fifth grade class at Lake M a ry E lem entary School.

R SIS

School Board Nixes Endorsements
The Seminole County Schpol Board
wantB the public to know it's noi
endorsing a family Forum at Valencia
Community College in February or a trip
to Europe by high school students next
summer.
The board haggled over endorsements
of the two activities for nearly an hour
Wednesday, ultimately deciding sepa­
rate Itself from both.
Board members voted unanimously
not to endorse the fam ily forum,
sponsored by the Central Florida Council
of the Boy Scouts of America. The forum,
scheduled for Feb. 4. Is endorsed by

Julian said parents who send their
children on the tour could be misled to
Board member Nancy Warren sug­ believe the school board Is sponsoring
gested the board support the forum, the trip and Is liable for Injuries or
rather than endorse It. since an en­ damages.
dorsement might be used to mislead
He urged the school board to take no
people. But when Mrs. Warren learned action on the request. JullAn also said he
that the forum sponsors were holding up was disturbed that brochures advertising
printing of programs to include the the lour say "Seminole County's Third
board In a list of "endorsers." board Annual” trip to Europe.
m em b ers v o te d u n a n im o u s ly to
"The brochure would give me as a
withhold their support.
parent the imprcslon this was an official
The board also voted unanimously, at function of the school board of Seminole
the request of their attorney Ned J. County." said Julian.
Board members agreed and voted to
Julian, to withhold support for a 22-day
table the request.
—Mlcheal Behs
European study tour.

Orange County schools.

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer
Federal authorities may seek
to Intervene In the voting rights
act lawsuit filed In the U.S.
D istrict Court at O rlando
against the city of Sanford by
five black residents Sept. 22.
The U.S. Justice Department
filed documents In the federal
district court In Jacksonville
Tuesday to Intervene In an
almost Identical suit filed by
black residents there against
the city of Leesburg.
Gerald Jones of the U.S.
J u s t i c e D e p a r t m e n t In
W a s h in g to n , who u su ally
handles legal actions ol this
sort, could not be reached today
to confirm or deny the possibili­
tyMeanwhile. Sanford City At­
torney Bill Colbert said l hat
Intervention by federal at­
torneys tn a lawsuit Is not
unusual when som eone Is
charging a violation with some
section of federal law Is con­
cerned.
"I had heard that the Justice
Department was entering the
Leesburg suit, but since I
haven't seen the lawsuit filed
against that city. I don't know
what Its basis Is." Colbert said.
In the legal action filed
against Sanford. Alfred DeLatllbreaudierc. one of the plain­
tiffs In the class action suit, said
earlier that It seeks a charter
rhnngr whrrcby voting districts
would be established In black
areas of Sanford to allow tnose
areas to elect black repre­
sentation to the Sanford City
Commission.

DcLattibcaudlcrr said as long
as a change In the city charter
permitting election of commis­
sioners within districts by
voters of those districts must be
placed before the entire elector­
ate the change will not be made.
He said this Is because the high
ratio of white voting strength to
black.
Currently Sanford city com­
missioners are elected at large.
The suit seeks to overturn this
method.
In three Sanford elections
h e ld iti 1980 and 1982.
amendments to the city charter
calling for residency districts for
city commissioners failed by
substantial margins.
The suit charges that San­
ford's at large elections are
discriminatory and designed to
prevent blacks horn being
elected to office.
Sanford tin* a population or
slightly more than 25.000 and
32.8 percent is black, according
to the 1 9 8 0 census. The city has
nearly 9.000 registered voters.
Of that number 6.747 arc white
and 2.214 arc black.
Although several blacks have
run for office in Sanford, none
have hern elected.
In Leesburg's case, three
blacks (lied suit against that
city In April also to overturn Its
at large elections of five city
commissioners. No black has
ever won election there either.
About 25.9 percent of that
city's total popjlallon of 13.191
arc black.
Leesburg Assistant City Clerk
Linda Davidson said today the
c ity com m ission there on
Monday nlgln discussed the

case with Its city attorney*
Dewey Burnsed.
She said Burnsed reported
that there seems to be no way of
settling the suit out of court
with
David M. Lipman of
Miami, attorney for the blacks.
She said Burnsed reported
that Lipman will accept nothing
less than the designation of
voting districts for the city
commission In black areas.
"W e have only two black
areas In the city and two of the
commissioners live In the pre­
dominantly black section of
Eastown. 1 don't know how we
would exclude whites from a
district If one were created
there." she said.
Mrs. Davidson said It lias been
reported In Leesburg that simi­
lar voting act lawsuits have
been filed In 28 different cities
In Florida.
Lipman la atao representing
the blacks In the lawsuit against
the city of Sar.ford. He told the
Evening Herald only two days
after the suit was filed that the
city of Sanford could offer a
settlement by changing the city
charier to create voting districts
for commission scats and the
federal court could order the
change without going to a
referendum.
Colbert said however that os
far as he knows upder Florida
law the city commission can
change the charter only with an
approving vote by the people.
Federal Ju d ge E lizab eth
Kovachevlch o f the Orlando
district federal court has been
assigned to hear the Sanford
suit.

County Sucked Into Middle Of Drainage-Paving Snafu
By Mlcheal Beha
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County commissioners
have taken a step to correct a
long-neglected drainage problem In
Rolling Hills but In so doing may
have tripped over their own ordi­
nance for paving some highmaintenance roads.
Landowners on Canada Avenue,
site of one of the county’s worst
drainage problems, have tentatively
agreed to a special tax assessment

by the county lor paving their road.
But Commlsloner Bill Klrchhoff
has questions about the legality of
the cou nty's ordinance which
penults the county to assess pro­
perty owners for paving the street If
of the owners who control V» of
the total property on the street
agree.
KirchholT said the county needs to
re-examine the ordinance that
allows the assessments to be made
after staff members who presented

the Issue ut Tuesday's commission
hearing said they have been giving
people with Joint ownership of
property one vole each. However,
married couples sharing ownership
o f property only get one vote
betw een them . C om m ission er
Sandra Glenn's administrative aide
Rita Curtis said County Attorney
Nikki Clayton Instructed her to
count the votes that way.
"I think we need to have a talk
with our county attorney." said

KlrchhofT.
C o m m is s io n e rs u n o ffic ia lly
pledged 824.000 this week to help
solve a drainage problem on Canada
Avenue In the Rolling Hills area
near Altamonte Springs. The funds
would pay for drainage work
associated with paving of the dirt
road, which costs the county about
$1.500 annually to maintain.
Paving the road is expected to
cost about $23,000. And Mrs. Glenn
said the county ahould also pay for

labor associated with the paving. No
official estimates hnvc been made
but that cost would probably be
slightly less than hulf the total
paving cost, leaving the homeown­
ers to pay about $12,000 for the
work.
Canada Avenue has been u
county drainage problem for more
than a decade. Water collects In a
pipe along North Street and flows
Into a dltrh along Cauadn. But when
the pipe Is clogged or the flow Is loo

heavy, water pours over the road.
T h e s t a t e D e p a r t m e n t ol
Environm ental Regulation has
asked the county for the pest six
years to remove tons of sand from
the lake and to set up a drainage
area to prevent more sand from
flowing Into the lake.
The county has purchased about
three acres of land along the road
and plans to build a wai.-r retention
area In conjunction with the road
paving.

Seriously III Mom Seeks
Long-Lost Daughter

TODAY
Pay per view. Teletext.
T a lk back.’ And split­
screen. These are some
of the innovations yon
can expect soon In the
w o rld o f te le v is io n .
S t a ff w rite r M lcheal
B e h a e x p l o r e s the
possibilities in Friday's
Leisure magazine.

An elderly woman awaiting major surgery In a
hospital In Detroit. Mich, would like to see or hear from
her* daughter one more time before her operation,
scheduled for early Friday morning.
Rosa M cKinley doesn't know her daughter's
whereabouts, but she was last known to lie In the
Sanford area.
The last time the family heard from Thelma Louise
McKinley Clark. 55. was by a letter some eight years
ago. At that time she and her companion. B O. Clark,
were picking fruit and vegetables on a Sanford area
farm.
Mrs. Clark's daughter. Mrs. Elolse Richardson, cf
Memphis. Tenn.. describes her mother as about 5-fcet
4-lnrh**«»tRll. weighing about 147 pounds
"She has been In Sanford for the past 16 years ob far,
as we know.” Mrs. Richardson said today, adding that
her mother has short black hair, brown skin and a "very
ringing voice."
_
"It’s been 20 years since we have seen her." she said _
said.
She said Mrs. McKinley. Is very seriously ill.
Mis. Cluik's granddaughter. Beverly Archer. 1237
Mississippi Ave.. Memphis, who Is Mrs. Richardson’s
daughter, placed a want add In the Evening Herald
Thursday urging anyone who knows the whereabouts of
Mrs. Clark to call her collect at |901) 774-2629.
Mrs. Richardson said Mtsa Archer has also contacted
the police lr, the search for Mr*. Clark.

H*rtM Mwt* Sr T*«m» Viiutnt

Creative
Cronies

A few of the 200 persons who attended the second
annual Hobbycraft Show at the Senior Citizen
M ultipurpose Center In Casselberry's Secret Lake
P ark Wednesday look over some of the many
Items on display. F ifty senior citizens, m any of
whom attend the weekly Hobbycraft classes at the

center, exhibited Ihelr handiwork at the show.
Evelyn Ray was chairm an of the show assisted by
Eleanor Deeb, Anne Richards, Hobbycraft In­
structor Pauline Stevens, and other RSVP (Re
tired Senior Volunteer P ro gram ) volunteers. The
center’s square dance group gave a demonstration
under the direction of John Hucko.

Action Reports......... .. ,.2A
Around The Clock.... ....4A
Bridge...................... ...4B
Calendar.................. ...8B
Classifieds.............. .
Comics..................... ....48
Crossword................ ....48
Dear Abby................ ...IB
Deaths.... ................ ...8A
Dr. Lamb................ ...4B
Editorial.................. ,...4A
Florida.........................3A
Horoscope................
Hospital...................
iidtion,,.......... •••*»**•&lt;
People.....................
Sports............ .........
T e'evlilon ......
..SB
Weather.................. . 3A
World......................

�Sintcrd, FI.

Huirtdav &lt;v« *• **—

NATION
IN BRIEF
C o n tin e n ta l Sues
S trikin g Pilots' Union
HOUSTON (UPI| — The dispute between
Continental Airlines and its striking pilots
moved from the picket line to the courtroom
where the bankrupt c w lc r filed a $50 million
suit against the Air Line Pilots Association.
The lawsuit filed Wednesday, against ALPA
charged the union refused to bargain In good
faith prior to the carrier’ s petition for
bankruptcy Sept. 24 and failed to present any
proposals for settling the pilots' and flight
attendants* strikes, which began Oct. 1.
The lawsuit claimed ALPA violated the
Hallway Labor Act by threatening to Implement
SiO.OOO fines against non striking pilots The
airline said It considered ALPA's actions to be
"Interference, Influence or coerclori" of nonst&gt; Iking pilots.
The lawsuit also charged ALPA President
'iRTrf i-'ui*/ w.Ui
using lui Miicgeuiy
stating the union would only cooperate with
airlines whose pricing It approved.

D e s p ite P a c t W ith F lig h t A t t e n d a n t s

Eastern's Troubles Not O ver Yet
By Valerie Strauss
MIAMI (UPI) — Eastern Airlines. $2 billion In debt and
losing nearly a half million dollars a day. has settled a
new contract for Its union flight attendants but now
must find a way to keep Us lenders happy.
The agreement with the 5.800 flight attendants,
reached early Wednesday after a 22-hour bargaining
session, cleared a major labor hurdle. Had no settlement
been reached, the flight attendants were prepared to
strike at 12:01 a.m. today.
A strike could have closed down the carrier, which
transports 100,000 passengers dally — more than any
other airline
and forced It lulu u bankruptcy
reorganization.
Eastern's managers and leaders of -Its three unions

ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. (UPI) - New Mexico
Health and Environment Secretary Robert
McNeill wants to replace methadone treatments
for heroin addicts with acupuncture.
The treatments with methadone, a synthetic
narcotic, cost the state some $2,500 a year for
each of the 240 patients at the state's five heroin
R elated story, page 3A

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Midwesterners shivered In
freezing temperatures, and rain that disrupted New York
City commuter traffic during the evening rush hour
continued today from New England to the mid-Atlantic
states. More rain spread from lower Michigan to the
central Gulf Coast. Up to 2 inches of snow fell west of the
Twin Cities tn Minnesota and traces were reported In
South Dakota. Freezing temperatures were reported
today In Nebraska. Minnesota. North and South Dakota.
Iowa and Wisconsin. Frost warnings were posted for
parts of Missouri. Kansas. Arkansas and Texas.
Thunderstorms blasted Ten Mile Community. Tenn.
early today, damaging mobile homes and Injuring
several people. Fierce winds were blamed for downed
power lines and damaged buildings In Habersham
County In north Georgia. Snows that hampered
searches for two men missing In the Rocky Mountains
ended Wednesday, allowing rescuers to reach William
Strlngfellow. an experienced hiker missing since
Monday on 14.267-foot Torreys Peak In Colorado. He
said he bqpame lost Monday and holed up for two nights
In a deserted miner's cabin until the weather cleared.
Then his calls for help were heard. There still was no
sign of Richard Kruse of Odessa. Texas, missing since he
took off Saturday on a flight from Buffalo. Wyo. He was
feared down In mountain territory In Wyoming. Nearly 3
Inches of rain swamped metropolitan New York during
the evening rush hour Wednesday, shattering a record
for the date set Oct. 12. 1870. when 1.91 Inches fell.
Streets and tunnels were flooded, halting some subway
service. Torrents of rain caused extensive airline delays,
major traffic jams and a raft of minor auto accidents. A
small airplane crashed on takeoff at the rain-swept
Ramapo Valley Airport about 50 miles north of New
York City. The pilot suffered facial cuts and his
passengers suffered broken bones.
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today. A
good chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs mid
to upper 80s. Wind southerly 10 tc 15 mph. Rain chance
50 percent. Tonight partly cloudy. Slight chance of
showers or thunderstorms. Lows mid 60s to around 70.
Wind becoming northerly 15 mph. Rain chance 20
percent. Friday partly cloudy and a little cooler. Highs
mostly low 80s.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — Wind southerly 10 to 15 knots today
becoming mostly southwest 10 knots by tonight then
northerly 15 knots late tonight and Friday. Seas 2 to 4
feet increasing Friday. Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms rndlng tonight.
A RE A READINGS (9 a.m.): temperature: 76;
overnight low: 68: Wednesday's high: 87: barometric
pressure: 30.03: relative humidity: 97 percent: winds:
south at 8 mph: rain: .96 inch: sunrise: 7:25 a.m..
sunset 6:58 p.m.
FRIDAY TIDES: Daytona Beach: highs. 2:53 a.m..
3:30 p.m.: lows. 8:55 a.m.. 9:51 p.m.; Port Canaveral:
highs. 2:45 a.m.. 3:22 p.m.: lows. 8:46 a.m.. 9:42 p.m.;
BaypDrt: highs. 6:34 a.m.. 10:44 p.m.; lows. 12:50
a.m., 3:10p.m.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central F M M

w a i I HatflUl

ADMISSIONS

Sarilord
Emma l. Kay
Sylvia 0 Sigmon
Wllile Wllliemt
Waller W Erlkien. Deltona
bonue L . WUmti. Deltona
Lynda C Dykat. lake Mary
DISCHARGES

Sanlord

E v r n i n g B lc r o J d

Margie F Brown
Tammy N Buckner
AmetoC Cleveland
Bill B Cottman
DonnaM Cotgravo
Horton* F. Hander ton
Margaret Paulk
Frank T. Loainleckl. Deltona
Nancy L S p r o /. Deltona
Paulette S. Beechman Orange
.City

io s p j

Published Daily and Sunday, aicapt Saturday by Tba laniard
Herald. Inc.. M i N. French Av».. laniard. Fla HIM.

&amp;

Am erican women are continuing to postpone
childbearing, according to a new government
study. The trend allows women tim e to become
more educated and to better establish themselves
in the work force.

Stcme ClMt Pottos* P»M *&lt; Skater! Ftertdk iV U

Hame Delivery: Weak. II.M; ManIk, MM: * ManiM. tU M i
Year. IU H By Mall: Weak li.tli Meat*. SS.JJ&gt; I Manffit.
IN Hi Year. SU M

Eastern President Frank Borman announced a month
ago a plan to requite all 37.500 Eastern rmployres to
accept a 15 percent cut In pay and fewer fringe benefits
on Nov. 1. At that time, he set Oct. 13 as a deadline for
Eastern's workers to accept It.
The alternatives would be either a complete shutdown
or reorganization under the bankruptcy laws, he said.
Borman's edict touched ofT bitter rejections by union
leaders. Charles Bryant, head of Eastern's 12.500 union
machinists, called for Borman’s ouster. Patricia Fink,
head ol the lllghl attendants, said no pay cuts would be
considered until after her union won a new contract.
Harmony was restored last week when Borman and

leaders or the pilots', machinists' and flight attendants'
unions jointly announced they would work together to
solve the airline's financial problems — aUer the flight
attendants' contract problem was solved.
"Ten dnys ngo. we were at an Impasse.” Borman said.
"Today we have settled a contract, and wc hnve all
agreed to do what it lakes to make certain that this
airline goes forward."
" I think." said Ms. Hnk. "It Is best that the unions get
together with the management and wc do what wc have
to do for the survival of Eastern Airlines."
Specific details of the flight attendants' contract
agreement were not disclosed, but union spokesman
Mark Hunzlker said It called for a 16.5 percent pay raise,
retroactive to Jan. l.and a 6 percent hike In 1984.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Women's
lifestyles have changed radically In
the past 30 years with more women

the past 30 years would be that
fertility is lower and labor force
participation l&amp; higher." the authors

having fewer children, but their
salaries have not caught up to
men’s, a government study shows.
Only one-third of ndult women
worked In 1950; more than half do
now. Three decades ago. women
represented only 27.9 percent of the
nation’s workers: now they are 44.2
percent.
Those figures emerged from an
analysis tracking changes since
1950. and published In a Census
Bureau report.
____
"Women have been at the vortex
^ sw eep in g changes" In American
society, the report said.
But while the number of women
plumbers and pilots has soared,

tant changes that have not been us
visible.”
Delayed inanlagc and childbear­
ing were cited as key factors In
allowing women to achieve more
education, and n trend toward
smaller families helped working
women better establish themselves
In the work place.
However, the report says, “ The
average earnings of women In
relation to men have not risen over
the past 30 years." It notes the
"earnings gup" between white men
and white women has widened
since 1955. when women earned 65
percent of what men earned.
Women now arc paid roughly 59
percent what men get.

"Working women do not cam as
much as working men” — averag­
ing only 62 percent of annual pay
for men In the category of ovcr-25.
college-educated workers.

"In the midst o f significant
change, tradition persists." the
analysts concludes. "The question
for the upcoming decades ts where
the balance will be struck between
the roles of women as wives and
mothers and women as workers and
economic providers for their fami­
lies."
Among the observations tn the
report:
—Between 1950 and 1980. the

The report. American Women:
Three Decades o f Change, was
written by Suzanne Blanchl and
Daphne Spain, research asoclates in
the bureau's Center for Demo­
graphic Studies.
"The most succinct summary of

A m ericans In Debt But Optim istic
NEW YORK (UPI) - Americans
arc preoccupied with money and
one out of 10 has no savings or
Investments, but most men and
women are satisfied with thetr
financial status and believe they are
better ofT than their parents, a
nationwide survey shows.
The financial profile of Americans
that emerged from Interviews with
2.553 adults tn a study sponsored
by Money Magazine revealed the
majority worry about money, arc tn
debt and have no wills — yet arc
confident about thetr economic
future.
"T h e overall findings show a
strong strain of optimism among
Americans with regard to thetr
financial situ ation s." said Dr.
Seym our Lleberm an. head o f
Lleberman Research Inc., which
conducted the '-‘ Americans and
theii Money" survey for the maga­
zine.
"Th is ts somewhat surprising
given the recent years of recession.
Inflation and layoffs." he said. "But
the figures also Indicate a signifi­
cant undercurrent of anxiety among
Americans.”
One out of 10 Americans has no

savings or Investments and 44 their financial fortunes to remain
percent have less than $5,000 put the same or Improve over the next
away, the survey said.
year. But the 65-and-over age group
The national average for savings Is far less confident, with 23 percent
and Investments ts *34.900. but anttcl(iatlng a decline In financial
this figure reflects the 22 pcrcerit'of ' circumstances.
Americans who have set aside
Indebtrcss may be a way of life
$25,000 or more.
for Americans since 74 percent have
In an Important finding. 28 per­ some form of loan obligation.
cent of U.S. men and women did not
The average amount of debt owed
save or Invest tn the past year.
by Individual Americans Is $32,000.
In general, the study revealed with mortages accounting for 77
Americans are preoccupied with percent of the dollar volume.
money.
Some 81 percent have credit
An overwhelming 81 percent cards. The most popular arc retail
often think about money, a trend cards (71 percent) and bank cards
most prevalent among low-income (58 percent).
groups and those under 35. Some
The average amount charged on
51 percent worry about money and cards during the past 12 months
16 percent admit to urgulng about was $1,800.
it.
Only 42 percent of Americans
But 56 percent indicate they arc
happy with their financial situation have drawn up wills, particularly
and 44 percent say they are dis­ those who earn at least $50,000 a
satisfied. The study said education* year and the 65-and-over group.
Americans arc spending more
al background ts not a factor In
money on necessities such as food,
financial contentment.
A substantial 77 percent think .transportation, Insurance, medical
they arc better ofT financially than bills and clothing and less on
thetr parents und 65 percent believe luxuries than a year ago. Significant
thetr children will fare better than numbers are cutting back on out­
lays for entertainment, sporting
they have.
Nine out of 10 Americans expect events and household help.

average age of first marriage rose
from 20.3 to 22.1 years. The
proportion of adult women that
m u inat.:cd declined from G7
percent In 1950 to 59 percent In
1980.
—In 1980. only about 6 percent of
evcr-mArrtcd women age 40 to 44
were childless. In the 1960s. how­
ever. there was a shift from having
children before 25 to having them
between 25 and 30: In the '70s. a
significant group of women delayed
childbearing until after age 30.
—The number of women enrolled
In college In 1980 exceeded the
number of men enrolled for the first
tlipc. However, they "are still ma­
joring In traditionally female fields."
And, while roughly half of all
bachelor's and master's degrees go
to women, they account for only 30
percent of doctorates.
—From 1950 to 1980. the number
of women In the work force rose
from 16.7 million to 45.6 million, a
rise from 34 percent to 52 percent of
all women, even though they are
still concentrated In relatively few
occupations. Over that time, the
number of men In the work force
rose from 44.2 million to 63.4
million, a drop from 87 percent to
78 percent.

L a s t S h u ttle 14 S e c o n d s
F r o m P o s s ib le D i s a s t e r
WASHINGTON (UPI) - One of the booster rockets
used for the last space shuttle launch came within
14 seconds of possible disaster, and NASA says the
shuttle Columbia will not fly this month unless
engineers determine what happened Aug. 30.
"Our chances of staying on schedule for an Oct.
28 launch arc diminishing rapidly." Lt. Gen. James
Abrahmason said Wednesday night.
If Columbia. Its $800 million Spacelab cargo and
Its six-man crew are not launched by Nov. 5. the
flight will have to be delayed until Nov. 27 at the
earliest. A delay to February or March ts possible
because some of Spacelab's experiments have
seasonal requirements.
Two test firings within the past week using nozzle
liner material from that same lot produced mixed
results. NASA said one liner was damaged but the
second performed flawlessly, leaving englners
puzzled.
NASA spokesman David Garrrtt said the lining oti
one of the nozzles In the Aug. 30 launch had eroded
to within two-tenths of an Inch of the metal skin.
Normally. 1.5 Inch of Insulation Is left.
Abrahamson said If the rocket had fired another
14 seconds. It would have burned through the
nozzle wall.
Abrahamson said a catastrophic explosion proba­
bly would not have occurred, but he said Challenger
probably would have been pushed off course, forcing
Ub five-man crew to attempt an emergency night
landing back at the Kennedy Center launch site.

S an fo rd W om an Bites G u n -T o tin g B urg lar; $11 Taken
A 33-ycar-old Sanford woman struggled with a burglar
who broke into her home early today und apparently put
u gun to her head.
Hazel Dawson Posley of Apt. 23. Seminole Gardens,
said she awoke at 2:17 a.m. to find a man In her
bedroom. a Seminole County sheriffs report said.
Ms. Posley said she struggled briefly with the man and
possibly bit him on the hand. He then placed an object
against her head and told her It wus a gun. the rejKirt
said.
After taking her wallet which contained about $11 In
cash, the man fled through a living room window, the
report said. Ms. Posley was not harmed.
JURY SELECTION
The process of choosing a Jury In the Donald Glenn
McDougal! murder case continued In Pinellas County
today.
Seminole Circuit Judge C. Vernon Mize Jr. ordered
the trial moved from Sanford last week because
extensive pretrial publicity made it difficult to choose an
impartial Jury In Seminole County.
Jury selection began In Clearwater Wednesday
afternoon with a pool of 59 potential jurors. Mize and
attorneys tn the case questioned them In private. The
selection process was expected to last through today.
McDougall. 27. Is charged with first degree BiUiuci
and aggravated child abuse In the death of his
girlfriend's 5-year-old daughter. Ursula Sunshine
Assald.
The girl's mother. Susan Barrett Assald. 30. told
authorities she and McDougal threw the girl's body Into
an Altamonte Springs pond uftcr McDougall brat the girl
to death Sept. 25 last year.

STOCKS

« mmi

Thursday. October 13, IVBJ-Vol. It, Ho. 47

payments

Women's Lives Change, But Pay Still Low

A cu p u n ctu re For A ddicts

addiction centers, officials said. Acupuncture
costs $5 a session.
McNeill said he will be phasing out methadone
treatments as soon as acupuncture can be
Introduced.
Methadone has been criticized as being
Ineffective.
Dr. Michael Smith, a psychiatrist and
acupuncturist In New York City who appealed
with McNeill at a news conference, said his
acupuncture program has been 90 percent
effective In treating acute withdrawal from
heroin addiction.

now must work out a way for the airline to meet Its loan

T h O t* q u o fitio n i p ro v id e d b y
m e m b e r t o l l t d N o U o n o l A l lo c u t io n
o l S e tu rlllo o O e o le r t o n re p re
k e n lo tlv e In te r d o o to f p r t e n o t o l
o p p m i m o t t l f noon todo r In le t
do o ltr m e r k t t l chonpo throughout

•t&gt;* d o r. P r i m dS n e t in c lu d e re te ll
mor% up m e r e down

IU

Aik

Atlantic Dank............... UN J4t.
berneti Bonk ........._____ rO'.JCH
Flaotfua Ban*, .... .......U»i Hto

Florida P o w e r
A Light____ ___
Fla P ro grm ......
F re e d o m Savings
HCA
- - ...... .
Hughas Sipplr.....
Munissn's. .......
NCR C o r y ______
Pl.ss.|r ...... ..... ..
Scotty's..-...........

Sun Banks..........
Sowthoosl Bank

JFto JS&gt;.
..... JOI* 71

. ..trv* in .
..U\% 4*H

.. »*• IJ'.
hn »vs
IJ'H IU

...» Jl

....ISN Mto
. JSto »to

14 ! 4H

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts
★ Police
DRUO ARRE8T MADE
A Winter Springs man has been released on $8,000
bond from the Seminole County Jail after being charged
with delivery of cocaine.
Troy Blackwell, 25. of 552 Laurel Court.was arrested
at 11:06 p.m. Friday by Semlnolr County Drug Tusk
force agents after he allegedly tried to sell ttv?m a bag of
cocaine for $250.
Agents said Blackwell met them at a Cumberland
Forme Store tn Winter Springs and made the deal which
led to his arrest.

■-3:12 p.m.. 2938 Orlando Drive, car fire.
-3:56 p.m.. 25th Street and Elm Avenue, car accident.
-4:28 p.m., 1409 Mara Court, trash fire.
-6:56 p.m., 110 W. Airport Blvd., rescue.
Wednesday
-4:10a.m . 701 W. 24thSt..rescue.
-1 1:50 a.m.. 12th Street and Pecan Avenue, gas odor.

...Bum Rap
Continued from page 1A

35 to 39; 45 age 40 to 49; 40 age 50 to 55; and 14 age 60
and older.
These statistics show the highest number of arrests for
DUI continued this year In the 20 to 24-year-old group
with 109 followed closely behind with 90 In the 25-to-29
year old group.
Sgt. Williams said 58 percent of all DUI arrests occur
CHECK GONE
Friday. Saturday and Sunday night. Some 88 prrrrni
An $80 check was taken from the purse of a Sanford nrrnr between S p.ni. to6 a m. the next morning.
woman’s home after the thief gained entry by unknown
Williams is a member of Troop B of the Highway
means between 7 and 7:30 a.m. Monday.
Patrol that covers seven Central Florida counties und
Lucy Cotton. 64, of 52 Castle Brewer Court, told police
which has been commcrded for Its work In getting
her purse was in the bedroom when the money was
drunks off the highways. He said his troop has made
stolen.
1.927 DUI urrests In the seven county area since Jan. 1,
1983.
PISTOL STOLEN
A .38-callber handgun was stolen from the cab of a
In Seminole County during the first nine months of
semi trailer truck parked at Atlantic Transport. 1300 S.
1982. DUI arrests by all law enforcement totaled 583.
French Ave., Sanford, between 6 and 8:30 p.m.
Fully 46 percent of the arrests tn 1982 Involved
Tuesday.
persons In the 20 to 29- year-old age group.
Malcolm Beal. 33, of Plant City owned the weapon.
Florida's 1982 drunk driving law calls for a six month
license suspension. $250 fine. 50 hours of community
BIKE VANISHES
A 12-spced bicycle was stolen from the patio of a service and attendance at a drunk driver education
Sanford woman's home between 10 p.m. Sunday and 9 program on first conviction. Upon a second conviction
within a three years period, the penalty Is mandatory
a.m. Monday.
Kelly L. Lambert. 25. of Apt. 26. 4220 S. Orlando five-year license suspension. $500 fine and 10 days In
Jail. Third conviction vlthln five years calls for a
Drive, estimated her loss at $75.
minimum license suspension o f 10 years. $1,000 fine
FIRE CALLS
and 30 days In Jail. A fourth conviction requires license
The Sanford fire department responded to the suspension for life and a $1,000 fine. Although the luw
following calls:
doesn't require Jail lime on a fourth conviction, judges
Tuesday
usually Impose a significant amount of jail time,
— 1:34 p.m., 1001 Glove Manor Drive, alarm sounded.
authorities say.
1 H |
— Donna Estes

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Teen P leads G u ilty
In A p p le d o rf M u rd e r Case
GAINESVILLE lUPlj — The state has dropped
murder charges against the youngest of the
three defendants In the torture slaying of
University o( Florida "Junk food'* professor
Howard Appledorf In return for his guilty pleas
to three lesser charges.
Shane Kennedy. 16. of Woodbury. Conn, had
been charged with Gary Bown. 19. of Long
Beach. Calif, and Paul Everson. 19. o f Rosllndale. Mass, with the September 1982 suffocation
of Applcdort, 41. at his lakeside condominium.
Appledorf. a nutrition expert, gained national
attention by writing a book In which he extolled
the nutritional value of so-called Junk food.
Kennedy, a tall, thin youth with shoulderlength. blond hair who appeared In court
wearing eye makeup and lipstick, pleaded guilty
to burglary, robbery and auto theft charges
stemming from the Appledorf case.
Circuit Court Judge Elzle Sanders Immediate­
ly sentenced him to four years In prison and two
years of "community control," a form of house
arrest.
Everson and Bown pleaded guilty to firstdegree murder last July 20 in return for a
promise from the state It would not seek the
death penalty. Each was sentenced to a
minimum of 25 years In prison.

O v e rd o s e D e a th s P ro m p t C alls F o r T ig h ter C ontrols
the Operation PAR methadone clinic In
St. Petersburg. Most clinic operators
hope stricter stnte standards will help
minimize abuse of the drug, Ms. Collettl
said.
Concerned officials of the state De­
partment of Health and Rehabilitative
S ervices along with m edical pro­
fessionals, arc planning to push for
tighter controls on the drug.
Last week, the Florida Medical
Association's substance abuse commit­
tee approved a resolution asking Gov.
Bob Graham to strengthen licensing

By United Press International
Florida health officials arc calling for a
crackdown on the drug methadone,
which has been used to wean heroin
addicts from their habit.
The narcotic liquid, which was
authorized by government agencies In
hopes ol cutting down the number of
heroin addicts, has been associated with
numerous drug overdoses In south
Florida.
“ Methadone can be lethal If misused,"
said Shirley Collettl. executive director of

requirements for new methadone clinics.
The resolution also recommended
stepped-up Inspections of existing
clinics, minimum hiring qualifications
and limits on the amount of methadone
clients can take home.

meihadone comers are in south Florida
where addicts are r.buslng the drug with
Increasing regularity, authorities say.
Reports by Dade and Broward county
medical examiners show at least 19
methadone-related deaths In 1982 and
1983.

"There will be a substantial tightening
up of the regulations on methadone."
said Frank Nelson, who Is In charge of
HRS drug abuse programs.

"T h eir is concern that these clinics arc
not well regulated,” said Clearwater
pediatrician Donald I. Macdonald
chairm an o f the Florida M edical
Association's committee on substance
abuse-

The HRS has authorized 15 clinic® In
the state to distribute methadone to
a*v&gt;ut 2.000 drug abusers. Nine of the

12 NOON-7 PM

12 NOON-7 PM

Tax Substitute P rop osed

Homestead Exemption
Reform Said Unlikely

heatHator

NOTICE!
STERCHI’S
FURNITURE
*
~"0P E N
FRI. 12 NOON-7 PM
■ SAT.. 9 -AM 6 PM

NOTICE!
' STERCHI'S .*
FURNITURE
OPEN'
FRI. 12 NOON-7 PM
SAT. 9 AM 6 PM *

A LL
•
M E R C H A N D IS E
-W ILL BF

A LL
M E R C H A N D IS E
W-iLL BE":* ■

REDUCED
SPECIALS

SPECIALS
Solid Oak Gyn Cabinet .10
Gun* ■ With Lock* . fire
599.95 -

N O W $2 9 9 ’ 5

i- — .L
1- f
2Preow ned Pine Student
Oc*k ■30" Wide, Rrg. 99 00

£reowncd 6 Pc. Den Croup
fttrculori Co*er. Sole, Chair,
? Table*, 2 lam p*. Reg,
449.95.
« ‘

*
Preowned late- Seat* 2 To
Match, Your Pick.

NOW

* 2 9 9 ”

n o w

Frxowned P o ilu (fte 3Ic*Ktng

rerZSraSHTCfriA'o; bont

Comb., Reg. 299.95. Sjue

ppnt Stereo Sy*tem. AM FM.
Stereo, 8 Track &amp; Record.

100,00
*tH

9 9 “

7

K.

3 Only Hi Back Spring Choir*.
Reg 129 95 ‘ Creefi Only. .

Plf N O W $ 1 6 9 ° °
Oak Or Pine -fi Pc. Dining
Room Suile*, RPg 849.00'

NOW * 6 9 9

NOW * 4 9 '
2 5 " Q u a ia 'r T V .
One Year-In Home
Service.

Reg. £ 9 9 .9 5

NOW

.Preown'ed Kroehltr Loveveat,
Reg. 299.00
. —
'

- n o w * 1 9 8 00

1 BF 36 W /G rtla ......................* 2 4 0 . 0 0
*2 AC 536 36" F lu es.................* 5 0 . 9 0
1 AC 540 48" F lu e s ..................

*36.38

1 RF 570 Lo Pitch Flashing

* 2 3 .2 5

t RT 574 Term Cap W/Collar

* 2 9 .9 5

Retail *398.48

O
PTIONAL0 Sale * 3 4 6 .9 8
Price* Good Til 10-2"-83
COME IN AND SION
UP FOR OUR F R E E
DAILY CASH DRAW ING

TraditionaT Or Tranvitional
Sol* S loveveat Quilted Cot
ton Or Chrniltr Huiculon, Reg.

‘ ^

“w * 5 9 9 “

Well Aw«y Beiklmr Reclmer*.
Muyhroom Or Comet. Your
.Choice.

299’

*7 4 9

Preowned Sola Steeper Hufcolon Cover. Reg 349.00. .

NOW

500 5 M o p lr

.- ■ ‘ I 9to&lt;k Witt
pp»n Mor thru frt 1

Sonlord

5 3flJcf. t TCI 4

1 9 8 *

IA 7 BOY Chair*
Price* 5 l*rt A* low A*

*229'
Colonial Or Tr*n\jtion4l
Sleeper*. Storting A* Low A*.

W a i t ‘til F R ID A Y 12 N O O N - 7 P M For
T h o B ig g e s t 16 H O U R F u r n i t u r e S a le
I n O u r H i s t o r y ! Storchl's- W ill M a r k
D o w n T h o E n t i r e S t o r e F o r This Big
S a le s E v e n t } C h o o s e F r o m O u r H u g e
S e l e c t i o n of F in e F u r n i t u r e T h e I t e m
O r I t e m s Y o u N o e d 7 E v e ry P io c o W ill
Bo G r e a t l y R e d u c e d F r i d a y *1 2
N O O N -7 P M , S a tu rd a y 9 A M -6 P M .
Til N 00/1 F r i d a y W e W ill Ue B r in g in g
In D o z e n s O f P ie c e s O f B e a u t if u l F u r ­
n i t u r e . O i i r D is p la y s W i l l Bo R u in e d
B u t . Tho. R e a c t i o n s W e A r e G i v i n g
W il l M o r e T h a n M a k e U p F o r T h o
M o s s . F in e S o fa s , C h a irs A n d
- l o v e s e a t s , B-odr~©om - A n d D i n i n g
R o o m F u r n it u r e ; B e a u tif u l O c c a s io n a l
T a b l e s , B e d d i n g A n d R e c lin e r s W ill
Bo O f f e r e d F o r A F r a c t i o n O f T h io r
N o r m a l W o r t h : 16 H o u rs O n l y . F rid a y
F r o m 12 N o o n - 7 P M , A n d S a t u r d a y
F r o m 9 A M - 6 Pftfl. Be E a r ly . D o n 't Be
D is a p p o in te d . - •

SPECIALS „

SPECIALS
Sejl&gt;

Hath* S a ver- CUitat
I Only Chair. Reg 299.00.

NOW
Prrowned-Sotjd Pme Bunji
Bed* With Bedding Starting

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449 95
.

NOW

1 4 9
Pitbwhe’d Croup Of Table*.
•Starting A* Low As

$9 9 95

Hutch Top Or Bookc**e..Startin t At

*29'
Preowned M icrowatt OvenHotpoint. Reg. 419.95. 60 . i
' Day Warranty.

NOW .

1991

NOW

Preowned Triple Dresier A
Mirror, Reg. 239.95
.j.

1 1 9 ’

NOW

Preowned Sola, Quilted Cot­
ton. Reg. 399 95.
4

NOW

*99&lt;

Elegant Mirror. Sconce Coi*
vole Set tn Sbimmewux Cold
Tone, Save 15.07. i f

Preowned Sot/, Lonticat
Chiir Now'All Thief

*49'
Buckaroo Bunkhcd Outfit..
Your Young Cowboy Will Love
Thi*. With 2 Mattrr**ev&lt;

*35 9“ i'«&gt;
Early - A m erican .4-i Pc.
Bedroom
Su ile.
Triple
Dre**er A Mirror. Chevl A
PanYI Bed

*499'

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Southerland* Caribben III
Quern Sir# Matt .A Found*,
tion Both For

*289'
Tub Chair. BlueOr Beige, Reg.
149.95.

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5 Piece

7 Piece

*3 9 9 ”

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ABOVE ARE ONLY A FEW OF THE FA N TA STIC SAVING S IN STORE FOR Y O U .
2 DAYS ONLY,!.
FRIDAY 12 NOON 7 PM
SATURDAY 9 AM' • 6 PM
FREE DELIVERY—FREE SET-UP

. P h o n e 3 2 2 ^ -0 5 0 0

DON’T BUY
ANY
FURNITURE

. While fur, U .i

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no

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7 0 %

Afhiir I h r y l a i l

FRI.-SAT..

N O PH O N E ORDERS PLEASEI

Special droop Ot tamp* —
*
Save Up To

|

Preowned Htorhler Sqla
Look* New, Reg.-349.95.

REDUCED

Floor Samples
Scratched
DanM

FRI.-SAT.

AM ERICA'S FIREPLACE SPECIALISTS

FIREPLACE

SATURDAY
. 9 AM-6 PM

9 AM 6 PM

TALLAHASSEE (UP1) — Secretary of State
George Firestone says the Legislature could
raise driver's license fees and other regulatory
charges to produce the money to enable It to
repeal the unitary tax.
F ir e s to n e p ro p o s e d W e d n e s d a y the
Legislature replace the $95 million currently
coming from the new lax on foreign corporate
Income by Increalng regulatory fees and re:
moving some sales tax exemptions.
Firestone did not say specifically which sales
tax exemptions should be removed, although he
listed several that could be reviewed. Including
tax breaks on newspaper, radio and television
advertising, lawyers, accountants, computer
software and beauty and barber shops.
Regulatory fees which could be Increased, he
said. Include charges for driver's licenses,
hunting and fishing licenses, marriage licenses,
death and birth certificates, and for professional
and occupational licenses.

TALLAHASSEE 1UPI) — Although lawmakers ure
considering at least 10 proposed reforms o f the
homestead exemption on property taxes, a House leader
says It Is unlikely the Legislature will pass any of them
next-year.- - '
•
'* t ;
Rep!‘ ‘ C*Y! Ogden. D-Jnek»oftvm*&gt; chairman df d
finance and tax subcommittee, said Wednesday the
odds are "slim to none" lawmakers will endorse any
change In the exemption during the coming session.
The homestead"exemption allows qualllled homeown­
ers to subtract $25,000 from the assessed value of his
home and pay taxes only on the remainder. Owners of
houses assessed at less than $25,000 have no tax bill.
The proposed reforms would:
—Tax the first $5,000 In assessed value and then
apply the exemption;
—Tax the first $10,000 In value before applying the
exemption;
—Apply the exemption only to structures a n a fully tax
the land;
—Repen! the exemption;
—Phase out the exemption;
—Totally exempt homestead property, shifting the
bulk of the tax burden to commercial real estate:
—Exempt 75 percent of the value up to a maximum of
$25,000;
—Exempt each homestead at a rate equal to half of the
value of the average home In each county;
—Eliminate property taxes for schools, leaving only
general property taxes.

Thursday, Oct. IJ, 1983—3A

W t FINANCE OUR OWN ACCOUNTS

IU R N IS H IN G

s O U .T M tn N H O M IS .S IM I I

1 tl««

'

.
2 DAYS ONLY! :
FRIDAY 12 jiOON-7 PM
SATURDAY 9 AM -.6 PM
,10 69 ' 9TM J»fS

1100 FRENCH AVENUE
SAN FO RD 322-7953.

W ITK O O I M A R #
-RGtS AWAILABlI TO .

•fOUAtlfrtO.CUSTOMiliS

�I

.

• •---••

&gt;•

i*»* .. * &gt; - . ■ v V f

y*- •&gt;, - - •

E v e n i n g H e r a ld

TrafTlc accident reports In central Florida
are making It abundantly clear that child
restraints save lives.
It’s been le*3 than four months since
Florida law mandated use of restraints for
children through age five being trans­
ported In a car. truck or van. Already
we've seen children survive serious wrecks
with little or no injury when they were
secured In child sents. And, unfortunately,
have continued to read about mangled,
dead children being pulled from wrecks
where no one had sense enough to strap
them In beforehand.
Why arr so many parents Ignoring their
moral obligation to protect their kids — as
well as breaking the law?

(USPS 411110)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 33771
Area Code 30M22-261 lor 331-5593
Thursday, October-13, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordarw, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director

Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month. $4.25; GMonths. 134.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, 85.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

D a n g e ro u s Plan
For Secrecy
Im agine a rule that declared nearly an entire
body o f scientific knowledge secret and provided
that no one could communicate these secrets
unless the governm ent gave Its permission. And
im agine that anyone who violated the rule could
face 20 years In prison nr a civil fine o f up to
SlOO.OOO. In the United States, such a rule would
be unthinkable: It would contradict the Am erican
com m itm ent to free speech, unfettered scientific
Inquiry and open governm ent.
But the U.S. Department o f Energy wants to do
the unthinkable: It proposes to restrict the
dissemination o f a wide range o f nuclear inform a­
tion now available to the public. The data to be
kept secret would include design information
about bombs, governm ent plans for ensuring safe
transit o f nuclear materials, reports o f unusual
occurrences at nuclear facilities and more. The
rule would prohibit Its release to all but those
specifically authorized to receive It.
DOE officials say the proposed rule merely
fulfills the intent o f the Atom ic Energy Act. which
em powers the agency to restrict access to nuclear
information that might be useful to terrorists. But
the draft rule goes well beyond that law: It would
allow restriction o f much nuclear information that
has long been declassified, and It would give the
secretary o f energy virtually unlimited power to
determ ine what should be kept secret. Using the
new rule, the federal governm ent could con­
ceivably suppress nuclear Information o f any kind
for any reason.
That prospect rightly alarms a broad array o f
organizations: Labor unions argue that the rule
could allow the governm ent to withhold health
information vital to those w ho work in atomic
plants. State governm ents and citizens' groups
worry that the rule could limit public access to
in fo rm a tio n ab o u t n u c le a r tests, ra d ia tio n
exposure and nuclear plant safety. And university
officials argue that the rule is so broad that It could
perm it the governm ent to withhold just about any
kind o f nuclear information — including material
already on library shelves and texts now used for
teaching. The rule m ight even affect political
science courses that include inform ation or arms
control.
.
&lt;Y.
v
.
Th ere's no question that the new rule would
com prom ise academ ic freedom and infringe on
citizens' ligh ts to know what the governm ent is
doing. It would do so for no good reason: The
governm ent can already keep sensitive Informa­
tion secret by using normal classification pro­
cedures. T h e Department o f Energy should heed
its critics and drop its proposal.

Man Of Peace
. Th e choice o f Lech \Vale3a for the Nobel Peace
Prize Is a good one, although the communists in
In lan d and the Soviet Union call him a trou­
blemaker rather than a peacemaker.
Walesa has been a troublemaker from their
standpoint. But he has done everything he could
to keep his protests peaceful. Blood has not run In
the streets o f W arsaw or Gdansk, if he could help

ui
His leadership o f the Solidarity Independent
labor m ovem ent has been responsible and realis­
tic. It Is easy to stir up the crowd. It is not so easy
to keep the crowd from taking rash and reckless
actions that sim ply Invite repressive reactions.
Walesa has told his com patriots to keep cool on
more than one occasion. And he has kept cool
himself. W e think o f the pictures o f him fishing
with his youn g son in the ponds near Gdansk.
Only a man o f strength can be a man o f peace.
The best path for Poland is the gradual path,
a v o id in g d e s tru ctive con fron tation w ith the
K rem lin, aim ing for an evolution to greater
freedom and Independence, which cannot be
achieved overnight.
W alesa is leading the Poles on that path. It is
well that he is given w orldwide recognition. W e
hope the Russians and Gen. Jaruzrlski let him
travel to Oslo Dee. 10 to receive the award.

\

c

l

O

Is the Tew seconds It takes to place a
child In u protective scat loo meat an
expense when it could prevent Injury and
death?

c *

Do they feel it could never happen to
them?
Do they object to the curtailment of the
child's freedom to jump up and down on
the scat?

By Diane Petryk

If their reasoning goes along any of these
lines, they don’t have their brains In gear
as often as their cars.

Surveys show many people avoid belts
because they think It is better to be
"thrown clear’ * of the car In case of an
accident, or because they think a fastened
belt would keep a crash victim from
getting out of n burning or submerged
vehicle. Sonic people believe back scat
passengers don't need belts or that It's
alright for a child to ride on an adult’s lap.
All n flh rsr hrllrfm nrr false
People who arc "thrown clear" arc 25
times more likely to die than they would
have been If they had stayed In the vehicle.
In those rare accidents where a car
catches fire or goes under water, people
wearing seat bells are more likely to
survive because, they have u better chance
o f remaining conclous and uninjured and
therefore capable of getting themselves out

ROBERT W A G M A N
oH.'ftSi.FffipIttNTRMfiJW-.

Suicide
In Youth
Common
By Sharon Rutenberg
UPI Science Writer
CHICAGO (UPI) - Pediatricians
should be mere sensitive to depression
in children because their potential fgr
suicide Is greatly underestimated, a
health expert says.
Dr. Derek Miller said It Is "rather
frightening" the number of children
who believe that when the chips arc
down, it is all right to get rid of oneself
— and kill others.
"The most vulnerable of all are tiic
children whose parent has commlted
suicide — because that Is permission.”
he said at a recent conference discuss­
ing the Impact of lifestyles on children
and adolescent health problems.
Miller, chief of the adoiescent program
at Northwestern Memorial Hospital's
Institute of Psychiatry, also said society
Is too tolerant of violent behavior,
" I f they (children) believe it is
perfectly acceptable to dispose of
themselves as they wish, then clearly
they arc more vulnerable to a suicide
attempt." he said.
Much depends upon the youngster's
family. Miller said.
"Families that exercise control with
non-violent means do not breed children
with violent behavior," he
If a child comes from a family that hits
each other, he also will hit people when
he becomes angry. However. Miller 6ald
when a child brought up in a non­
violent family gets angry, he will throw
objects or damage furniture but will not
hit people deliberately.
M iller told health professionals
gathered at the conference that suicide
In children is underestimated by about
three times.
He said children — not Just adults —
suffer depression as early as Infancy.
"T h e diagnosis of childhood de­
pression Is something pediatricians
should be much more sensitive about."
he said. "There clearly is a problem."
A significant number of children with
suicidal or violent behavior directed
toward other people can be treated, he
said.
Miller ulso suggested helping children
build relationships and feel more helpful
and wanted.
The potentially suicidal child should
be asked If he had thoughts of killing
himself. Miller said there is no evidence
that asking this question can trigger
such behavior.
The child then should be asked how
he was going to commit suicide, by
what means and why he did not do It.
The worst possible answer to the
reason stopping him from commlting
suicide Is: " I didn't want to hurt
myself." Miller said that Indicates "You
have a &gt;oungslcr at a severe risk."
And he said suicide can become
epidemic in schools because schools do
not know how to help students mourn
the loss of a friend who has committed
suicide.

Hit AH,Jills Ittv tW tti ft u

ROBERT WALTERS

Askew On Right Track?
DES MOINES. Iowa (NEA) - There’s a
new attraction in the crowded field of
contenders for next year's Democratic
presidential nomlntion — a conservative
candidate.
He's farmer Florida Gov. Rcubtn
Askew, who really Isn't a newcomer to
the race. He declared his candlcacy for
the nomination last February and has
waged an active campaign for the
presidency In the ensuing months.
Akcw's positions on a number of
sensitive Issues nlwnys have been
somewhat more conservative than the
views embraced by many of his oppo­
nents. but until recently he didn't seek
to stress those differences.
Instead, he concentrated on pres­
enting to potential supporters a com­
prehensive strategy for the long-term
restructuring and revival of the nation's
economy, with particular emphasis on
the Importance of international trade.
That approach, however, wusn't
especially fruitful In terms ol making
progress against the other half-dozen
men with whom Askew is vying for the
nomination. Indeed, he has placed
cither last or next to las' In most public
opinion polls conducted In recent
months.
Selected by Askew for the unveiling of
a new campaign theme was an occasion
that In recent years has been a major
event for the party's presidential con­
tenders — the Iowa Democrats' annual
Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner.
Much of the speech delivered at that
dinner early this month was composed
of questions propounded by Askew, but
all were rhetorical queries and his tone
of voice left little doubt about his
preferred answers. Some excerpts:
"I can understand and appreciate why
so many of you who have ix-cn so active

in our party for so long have begun to
describe yourselves as the real Demo­
crats... Even so. I must id i you frankly
that you and I are not the only real
Democrats...
"It Is one tiling to advocate a closed
shop. It is quite another to advocate a
closed party... We must decide: Is ours
an exclusive and exclusionary club, a
glorified debating society devoted
primarily to defining the dictates of
Ideological purity?
"Is there no room in our party for
those who don't necessarily believe that
a nuclear freeze is the surest path to
|&gt;cace?
"Is there no room In our party for
those who believe that we must strive to
fulfill the potential of life both before
and after birth... (and for those) Demo­
crats who don’t believe in virtually
unrestricted right to an abortion?
"Is there no room In our party for
those who don't necessarily agree with
many labor unions that protectionism
and compulsory unionism are the best
guarantee of jobs and justice... (and for
those) who support the right of the
states to have right-lo-work laws?
"W hat about alt the millions of
working peuple who don't belong to
labor unions? What about all the
women who don't belong to the National
Organization for Women?"
The speech reportedly was crafted to
gain attention by promoting views that
were unconventional. If not unpopular,
for many In the audience of 6.000. And
it succeeded in that goal by provoking
scattered Jeers, catcalls and boos.
For Askew, the new upproach appar­
ently is the product of frustration if not
desperation.

Why Philly
Not Like
Chicago
PHILADELPHIA (NEA) - Chicago
was racially tom last February as voters
decided whether to elect the city's first
black mayor. Philadelphia will face the
same decision on Nov. 8 — hut. In sharp
contrast to Chicago. It has been almost
entirely free of racial tension.
The reason is a basic difference In the
two men Involved, how they perceive
themselves and how their campaigns
have been run
To anyone witnessing the Chicago
election, it was evident that Harold
Washington campaigned as 0 black
running for mayor: He was first a black,
then a mayoral candidate, and finully —
and almost incidentally — a Democrat.
His campaign was geared entirely to
proving that a black could be elected.
W. Wilson Goode, the favorite to
become Philadelphia's mayor, has u
style and manner that are much
different from Washington's. Goode, the
son of sharecroppers, worked Ills way
through the Wharton School of Business
and has served for years as an ap­
pointed official in Philadelphia's city
government. He Isn't campaigning as a
black seeking election, but an the
Democratic candidate who also huppens
to be black.
Goode Isn't attempting to hide or
Ignore the racial factor. He recognizes
that, us a black, he will find It more
difficult to win — but race Isn't the
central theme of his campaign even
when he addresses minority audiences.
T h e sharp d lfle r c n c e b etw een
Washington and Goode can be seen In
the way they handled their victories In
the Democratic primaries. Washington
upset a field that Included incumbent
Mayor Jane Byrne and Richie Daley, son
of the late longtime Chicago mayor. In
somewhat less of an upset, Goode
d e fe a te d th e le g e n d a r y fo r m e r
Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo, who
was attempting a political comeback.
On th e n ig h t o f h is v ic t o r y .
Washington shared the platform with
the Rev. Jesse Jackson. That night and
throughout the campaign before the
general election. Washington had little
time — or many good words — for the
regular Democratic organization. The
result was a deep and still-extant split In
the party, the closest Chicago mayoral
election In this century, and an ongoing
racial polarization that tore the city to
pieces.
But on his nomination night and In
the weeks that followed. Goode reached
nut both to Rizzo and to regular party
elements that had supported the former
mayor. When Jackson said he was
coming to Philadelphia to campaign for
Goode, he was told politely, but firmly,
that he wasn't wanted or needed.
Goode's campaign slogan from the
beginning has been, "I want to be the
mayor of all the people," and he has
pledged to party professionals that he
wants to be the Democratic mayor.

1

Conflict Of Interest In The Senate?
WASHINGTON - Out of the fathom­
less mix of trade-offs and pressures that
move the Senate, a bill emerged last
summer that would enrich the big oil
companies.
A heroic attempt was made Inside the
Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee to block the bill from
reaching the Senate floor. The vote was
close, but the oil lobby won a narrow 11
to 9 victory.
Four of the senators who voted to
send the bill to the Senate floor have
financial interests In o!I companies that
would benefit from its passage. The
skids are now oiled for enacting legisla­
tion that would gradually lift price
controls on "o ld " natural gas — discov­
ered before 1977.

W H O is y o u r h a ir s ty lis t ? "

Here's whnt the American Council on
Science and Health says about adults who
refuse to wear seat belts:
Usually tln.y arc harboring erroneous
Idcns.

o f the vehicle.
Rear passengers need belts for their own
protection (back scat passengers have bten
thrown through front wlndjhlelds In
craaheal and to prevent them from being
thrown Into front seat riders. (Especially
children who could be crushed, even if
otherwise saved by their safety scat).
And. in the cuse o f the child on an adult
lap:
This Is Just about the worst thing you
can do. The child is raised, as if on a ready
colnpult, to be thrown through the
windshield or Into the dash and then
crushed by the weight of the adult's body.
"Some people think If a person decides
not to wear a scat belt, he hurts only
himself." writes Dr. Elizabeth Whelan of
the council. "But In fact, one person's bell
nlso protects other pconle.
“ A driver wearing n hell has a better
chance of being able to control the car after
the Initial Impact of the crash. A passenger
Is less likely to fly Into other riders. Also,
much of the financial cost of traffic deaths
and serious Injuries Is borne by society,
and people are much more likely to be
killed or seriously Injured In n collision If
they don't buckle up."
Get the picture?

SCIENCE W ORLD

JA C K ANDERSO N
BERRYS W ORLD

For those who dutifully strap their kids
In but Ignore their own seat belts, one can
only wonder if they have provided for their
offspring's care in the likely event the kids
become orphans.

What would this cost the consumers?
The oil companies have engaged In
some purposeful obfuscations to keep
this vague. But according to preliminary
Energy Department figures, the de­
regulation would transfer billions from

H

the pockets of the consumers to the
coffers of the oil companies.
The nation's 16 largest oil companies
would rake in $1 billion to $4 billion the
first year. By 1990. the estimated cost to
consumers would be $30 billion or
more.
After months of te s tim o n y In which
consumer groups und oil ’ interests
traded blows, the energy committee
approved the bill. A change of two votes
would have dellated this multlbllllondollar balloon.
Oil tycoons habitually arc quiet con­
tributors and distant financiers of
friendly politicians. So I assigned my
reporters Jock Hatfield and Laurie
Siegel to check into the finances of the
committee members. At least four had
financial reasons to vote the hill out of
committee.
The existence of these financial lies
doesn't necessarily meat: the four
senators have been bought by Big Oil.
But It raises serious questions about
possible conflicts o f Interest. Here arc

the financial connections ol the gang of
four:
— Chairman James McClure. R-Idaho.
the principal architect and advocate of
the deregulation bill, received $17,000
in speaking fees last yeur from oilrelated organizations. These Included
Amlnoil. Ashland Oil and the American
Petroleum institute, all staunch cham­
pions of deregulation.
Since the first of the year , McClure's
campaign committee has also accepted
more than $30,000 from oil and gas
interests to help finance his re-election
ruce next year. The senator denies that
the speaking fees and campaign con­
tributions have had any influence on his
Senate actions.
— Sen. Lowell Wcicker. R-Conn..
owns $30,900 to $100,000 worth of
stock In Mobil Gil. winch should make
anywhere from $259 million to $462
million during the first year of de­
regulation. ^ cording to the preliminary
Energy Department figures. As trustee
for his family. Wcickrr oyersees an

additional $540,000 to $1,320,000 in
stocks. The senator sees no conflict.
- Sen. Malcolm Wallop. R-Wy&gt;
owns $35,000 to $115,000 worth
slock In Exxon, Chevron and Amoco
th r e e o f th e b ig g e s t p o t e n t !
beneficiaries from deregulation. He h
also received almost $100,000
royalties from Getty Oil since 197
Getty stands to make $54 million
$ 170 million If deregulation Is passed.
Wallop also was given more tb
$25,000 in contributions by indcp
dent oil pioduccra last year for
successful re-election campaign. Cc
cidcntally. he was the author of
amendment bcnefltting Indepcndi
producer a. Wallop declined comment.
-- Sen. Frank Murkowskl. K-Alaska ,
said his support for gas deregulation
stems from a "deep-rooted free-market
inclination." But it also coincides hap­
pily with the best interests of his stock
portfolio, whlrh Includes $15,000 In
Stan .rd Oil and Gulf.

�6* tp*

Evinlng H tra ld , fa n lord. FI.

V ir u s e s
Designing A Home For The Deadliest Agents Known To Man
By Charles 8. Taylor
ATLANTA (UPIJ — All buildings at Ihe
national Centers for Disease Control arc
Identllled by numbers. Eventually there
will be Building 15. a number not likely
to be forgotten by those who rnme In
contact with It.
The world's deadliest viruses, some of
which were discovered only during the
last 20 years, will be housed In Building
Bulldlne
The four-story structure, now on the
sit olt by
Itself on a tract of land with a buffer
zone between It and all other human
activity.
Scientists and technicians entering
the structure will use a specially coded
key to gain entrance. And leaving the
facility will be Just as difficult, perhaps
more so. than getting In.
A federal appropriation of $15.56
million bus been set aside for construe,
tlon ol Building 15 with orders to make
it as biologically safe for Its workers and
the community as modern technology
allows.
"It will be the state of the urt for the
rontalnmcnt of these viruses." said Dr.
Gary Noble, the CDC’s assistant director
for science — the most advanced facility
In . the world for research on the
deadliest agents known to man nnd the
only facility in the U.S. with ihe
capability of working with such viruses.
Past e x p e rien c e In dicates that
laboratories housing virulent and exotic
agents poses the greatest danger to
those working In the facility, not to the

architect's diawing board, will

community.
A draft copy on "B io s a fe ty In
M ic r o b io lo g ic a l and B io m e d ic a l
Laboratories" to be published by the
Public Health Service quoted a 1976
survey that showed 3,921 eases of
labonuory-nequired Infections. It said
there had been 109 lab o rato ry*
associated Infections at the CDC from
1947-1973 but
no secondary cases
were reported In family members or
community contacts.”
Ground-breaking for Building 15 is
not expected for more than a year, said
Noble, with completion In 1987.
Since the early 70s. CDC scientists
have been probing the secrets of viruses
and bactcrias In a hlgh-security con­
tainment lab. known as Building 9. with
many of the safety features the new
building will have. The present facility
is a prefabricated structure moved to
the CDC from Fort Dctrlek. Md.*
“ A lot of good work was done there.”
said Noble, "but It was extremely
cumbersome and slow." He recalled
that CDC scientists, while working In
Building 9. diagnosed Lassa fever, a
virulent infection that kilted thousands
In Africa.
The new virology’ building with Its
21,000 square feet "w ill allow an
expansion of our activities. Wc will be
able to work with a large number of
specimens In n more efficient manner."
An additional feature of Building 15
will be facilities for holding and working
*. ..h small animals and some larger
primates. Noble said, something not

possible In the smaller, cramped
quiirtcrs of the present hlgh-securtty

currently working with
"But wc want to be prepared to work
with whatever comes along."
W hatever comes along could be
mind-boggling.
Some of the viral agents discovered
over the past two Jet adc» include
several types of hemorrhagic fevers
capable of killing within hours. The
Lassa. Machupo. Marburg and CongoCrimean hemorrhagic fever viruses
were dlccovercd In the 1960s. The
herpes-2 virus that eauses genital
herpes also was Identified In that
decade.
In the 1970s viruses that cause Ebola
and Korean hemorrhagic fevers were
discovered and the hepatitis A and B
viruses were Isolated and identified.
Since 1980. scientists have found a rare
agent known as human T-cell leukemia
virus (MTLVJ. They arc Investigating it
ns a possible cause o f acquired Immune
deficiency syndrome (AIDS).
The new structure and Its technology
"provides us the opportunity to train
foreign scientists. They cun bring their
materials nnd work with them here,"
said Noble.
"Ultimately, of course, we're looking
toward not only understanding what the
reservoir of these viruses ts but to
develop means of treatment and vacci­
nation."

Building 15 will have un outer phyalcal barrier with access by coded key. It
will be physically scpara’trd from other
CDC buildings and will have Its own air
handling system. There will be n normal
office environment In the outer shell.
said Noble. In the Inner core there will
water and air tight, providing "a
complete barrier for the Inner laborato­
ry." said Noble.
In the "hot Inb" the air will be double
filtered with each filter capable of
removing all particles from the nlr.
Scientists and technicians In the Inner
lab will work In "space suits” with their
own nlr supply.
"A ll products In the tab will be
Incinerated on site and then properly
disposed of." Noble said.
Upon leaving the lab. individuals will
be required to take a chemical shower In
their lab suits, followed by a regular
shower, then a normal personal shower.
Nothing will be allowed out of the lab
unless ft Is put through an autoclave
(sterilizer). Noble said.
"I'm talking In minimal terms." he
said of the facility. "I don't know what
Ihe ultimate design will be."
Noble said residents of the community
will be given a chance to sec plans for
the building. "There Is nothing really
new about tills building." he said. "It’s
simply. If anything, a better contain­
ment facility. It allows us to carry on our
experimental work in a better building.
If there was any concern our own people
wouldn’t be working there."

Could The South Have Won The Civil War?
By William Stracener
CHARLESTON. S.C. (UPI) Civil War historian Richard M.
McMurry says the South could
have won the War Between the
States If Its leaders had been
mor* cooperative.
"Most did not have the dlse t p i l n e to s u b o r d i n a t e
themselves.” says McMurry. "In
a slave society, they were not
accustomed to taking orders from
others.”
McMurry. adjunct professor of
history at North Carolina State
University, was one of the prin­
cipal speakers this weekend at
the ninth annual Congress of
Civil War Rountables.
The
four-day meeting of Civil War
bulls from across the nation was
held in the city where the first
shot of the ’tkmnict was fired by
cadets from The Citadel at Fort
Sumter In Charleston Harbor.

" T h e problem w ith C o n ­
federate leadership was to be
found in the eschelons between
the commander In chief and the
men who led the troops Into
battle." said McMurry. who has
written extensively on the con"There seems to have been
something that rendered South­
erners unwilling — perhaps In­
capable — to accept the discipline
and constraints that were neces­
sary for Confederate victory, even
the constraints that were neces­
sary (or living in a civilized
society."
The tendency toward excessive
contentiousness among South­
erners deprived Jefferson Davis
of the cooperation he should have
received as president and consuttied an Inordinate amount of
his lime and energy, he said.
Another fatal flaw In the Con-

fedcracy was the lack of en­
thusiasm among Southerners
toward secession as well as the
war. he said.
“ Only seven of the 15 slave
states felt threatened enough by
the results of the election of 1860
to secede," McMurry’ said. “ Even
after the war forced them to
chose four of the slave states
clung to the Union.
"In every state there was some
opposition to secession, and there
Is substantial evidence that the
(Ire eaters (sceesslunlsts) tam­
pered with or suppressed election
returns or gerrymandered the
voting In Florida. Georgia and
lamlslana to nullify or hide the
strong opposition to their course
of action In those stales.
"T h e Confederacy's birth was
Induced — you might even call it
the equivalent ol a Caesarean

s e c tio n : and m an y p eo p le
doubled the necessity for its
creation. It Is surprising that
many Southerners were willing
to accept Independence tf It came
to them, but they were not
willing to make undue sacrifices
for it."
The key to the Confederacy
was not the Civil War Itself but
the antebellum period, which
established the region's personal­
ity. political philosophy and view
of the world. McMurry said.
Battlefield commanders from
the division level downward
equalled or surpassed the South's
expectations, but upper level
Confederate leadership, with the
notable exception of Gen. Robert
E. Lee, "presents a sorry picture
o f petty, petulant bickering
among men who should have
known better. McMurry said.

Thursday. Oct. 1 1 ,1 I U - I A

UCF In te r n a tio n a l S tu d e n ts
A w a rd s D in n e r S e t For F rid ay
The Association of International Students at the
University o f Central Florida will hold an awards dinner
and dance at 7 p.m. Friday In the UCF diningroom .
Both the menu and entertainment will feature an
International flavor.
The program will consist of a Kung Fu demonstration.
Polynesian dancers, Arabic folk and belly dancing.
Greek folk dancing, and music by a steel drum band.
I'hc organization Includes local students as well as
those from all over the world The group will give
recognition to various Central Florida organizations and
ethnic associations that have helped the AIS In some,
way. Following the program there will be a dance.
The event is open to the public and admission Is $3
per person and $2.50 for students with ID card. To'
reserve tickets call 275-2060 or 275-2653.

WE HAVE
M OVED
After 25 Y e a n In The Same Location

KARNS INSURANCE AGENCY INC
HAS MOV KB TO A NK» LOCATION
I t ) SERVE YOU BETTER

7

ARE YOU
GETTING A DISCOUNT"^
ON YOUR AUTO AND HOME
OWNERS INSURANCE?
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0 -KARN S
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Thursday, Oct. II, m i_________________________________________

SE*•Jg£.‘?U*' S •*■'■tiffS • •■&lt;• 1. ■

-

_________________

1

: Boddicker's Three-Hitter Rescues Orioies, 4-1
BALTIMORE (UP!) - Oi. a watery field Wednesday
night. rookie Mike Boddlcker again became a llfcsaver
for the Baltimore Orioles.
The small town product of Norway. Iowa, continued
his remarkable pitching under Ihc postseason spotlight
by stopping the Philadelphia Phillies 4-1 on three hits to
• help the Orioles even the best-of-seven World Scries at
one game apiece.
After a travel day Thursday, the hes|-of.*even Series
resumes in Philadelphia Friday night with Mike
Flanagan pitching (or the Orioles and Steve Carlton
' going for the Phillies.
It was the scrond time In a week Boddlcker rescued
the Orioles In postseason competition. He blanked the
Chicago White Sox 4-0 with a flvc-hlt. 14-strlkcout
performance last Thursday to get the Orioles even at M
f In their best-of flvc American League playoff series. That
performance earned Boddlcker the Most Valuable Player
Award for the playoffs.

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"Boddlcker didn't gel as many strikeouts but It was as
good a performance us he had against Chicago," said
Orioles manager Joe AltobclU, "II was another must
game for us. a very Important ballgamc "
The Phillies knew Boddlcker was primarily a breaking
i,. ball pitcher. But lie kepi them olT balance all game by
tossing In an occasional fastball to complement his
breaking pitches.

Boddlcker became only the third rookie to throw a
threc-hltler In World Series competition, matching Hugh
Bedlcnt of the Boston Red Sox In 1912 and Dickie Ken
of the While Sox In 1919. Boddlcker has’ now allowed
Just one unearned run in his last 24 innings.
Only four of the 27 outs Boddlcker recorded were on
"Against Chicago. I had a belter breaking pitch but flies lo Ihc outfield, a good thing since the outfield turf
tonight I had a better fastball," Boddlcker said. "And was soggy from 20 hours of continual rain.
because they had more left-handers In the lineup I got to
"The outfield was very soggy." said the Orioles' Dan
use my changc-up a little more. I had better location on Ford. "The ground rrew did a terrific Job In gelling as
1 my pitches, especially with the fastball. 1 felt I had much wuter off It as possible."
Boddlcker. a 26-ycar-old right-hander who pasted n
_ complete control of Ihc game. All the way through It. 1
16-8 record with a 2.77 ERA during the season, struck
wasn't worried."

out six and did not walk a batter in beating rookie
Charles Hudson. The only bits ofT Boddlcker were an
Infield single by Joe Morgan In the fourth, a line single
to right by Gary Matthews In the seventh and a bloop
single to right by Bo Diaz In the eighth.
Boddlcker also drove In a run with a sacrifice fly —
only his third al-bat In professional baseball — when the
Orioles scored three runs In the fifth and knocked out
Hudson.
It appeared for a while Wednesday morning that the
game might not be played because of overnight rain that
left the Memorial Stadium field a soggy mess. However,
the Orioles' grounds crew, one of baseball's best, worked
diligently lo get the field in playing shape. And. except
for some unsure footing In the outfield, there were no
mishaps because of the condition of the Held.
John Lowensteln also wore a hero's mantle for the
Orioles by collecting three of Baltimore's nine hits.
Including a long home run In the fifth Inning thul lied
the score i-1 and triggered a three-run outburst.
Hudson began as If be would match Boddlcker pitch
for pilch. Over the first four Innings, the 24-ycar-old
right-hander allowed o n ly‘ one hit — a double-by
Lowensteln In the second — and faced only one baiter
over the minimum during that stretch.
But Hudson became unhinged In the fifth after
Lowensteln opened the Inning by blasting a 415-foot
homer to center field that tied It 1-1. Veteran first
baseman Pete Rose went to the mound to try and settle
the rookie. But Rich Dauer followed with a Uni single to
left and Todd Cruz beat out a bunt when second
baseman Morgan was late covering first base.
Rick Dempsey then drilled a double down the
right-field line, scoring Dauer. and Boddlcker knocked In
Cruz — and knocked out Hudson — with a sacrifice fly

MIKEBODDICKER

JOHN LOWEN8TEIN

to left.
The Orioles added a run off reliever Larry Andersen In
the seventh when John Shelby beat out an Infield hit
with two out. look third on Dan Ford's bloop single to
right and scored on a ground single lo rlghi by Cal
Ripken.
The Phillies did not get a ball oul of the Infield against
Boddlcker over the first three Innings and the only run
they got was unearned because of an error by first
baseman Eddie Murray. Morgan o|»cncd the fourth by
beating out an Infield hit and stole second. After Rose
failed to sacrifice. Mike Schmidt till a hit-and-run
grounder lo shortstop that Ripken fielded but his throw
to first was dropped by Murray. Morgan took third on
the play and scored on n sacrifice fly by Joe Lefcbvre.
Boddlcker. however, set the Phillies down In order In
three of the last five innings and finished the game by
throwing only 108 pilches — 73 for strikes.

If

Relay, Divers Key To
Lake Mary Boys' Win,
Lady Rams Take 2nd
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
The Lake Mary D oys swimming team
claimed first place and the Lady Rams
took home a second place finish In
quadrangular meet with Bishop Moore.
Seminole and Apopka Wednesday night
at the Sharldan Aquatic Club In
Lungwood.

Rams Ready To
Upset Hawks
*

Well. I am no longer wallowing In mediocrity. A
6-3 record last week gives me u 27-21-1 mark for the
season.
•
Here arc some quick cross country predictions for
Friday's county championships, team champions —
Lake Mary boys. Lake Howell girls (If they are In It
Instead of going to DcLand) If not. the Lake Brantley
girt*. Lyman's Doug Mcbroom the Individual winner
in the boys three-mile and Lake Brantley's Kathryn
Hayward first In the girls two-mllc with Lake Mary's
Sue Kingsbury a good bet as an upset threat.
LAKE HOWELL AT LAKE MART
This truly is the only game In town Friday night.
The Silver Hawks have to open up some holes for
Jay Robey If they are going to win. On the other
hand. Lake Mar)' Is ready to upset somebody and
the crowd will pull the Rams through the rough
spots. In the upset of the year, so far. Lake Mary by
2
OVIEDO AT JONES
Friday night's matchup between the Lions and
Tigers Is being played at the Tangerine Bowl.
Originally, the Plasmatics were scheduled to j.tay
the T-Bowl Friday, but the promoters figured a high
school football game would draw a lot more fans and
be a lot less destructive. This Is an off year for
Oviedo while Jones Is having a pretty good season
and will keep It going Friday. Jones by 0
LAKE BRANTLEY AT MAINLAND
You would figure that a town with four high
schools would have more than one football field. All
four. Daytona Beach Mainland. Seabreeze. Father
Lopez and Spruce Creek play l heir home games at
Daytona Beach Memorial Stadium. The BrantleyMainland game Is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Saturday.
If I lived In Daytona Beach, a football game Is the
last place I would be at 2 p.m. on a Saturday. I'm
sure Lake Brantley Isn't too enthused about playing
al that lime either, but they will tolerate It long
enough to rout Mainland. Lake Brantley by 17
UCF AT RICHMOND
If UCF wasn't playing Richmond Saturday, they
could probably make up their
gaqie with
Bcthune-Cookman and they could play the* game at
Daytona Beach Memorial Stadium right after the
Lake BrantlryMainland game. Richmond was O-IO
Iasi year and they arc 0-5 this year. The game In
Richmond Is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Maybe UCF
could fly home and play Bcthune after they dispose
of Richmond. UCF by 14
CINCINNATI AT FLORIDA STATE
Cincinnati already owns an upset over Penn State
this season and the Bearcats would like to add to the
list Saturday. Florida State has lost three straight
close games and the Semlnoles won't let this one get
out of hand. Florida State by 13
MIAMI AT MISSISSIPPI STATE
The Hurricanes arc on a roll and, they way they're
playing, they may not lose again In '83. The way
Mississippi State is playing, they may no. win again
In '83. Miami by 20
NEBRASKA AT MISSOURI
Since the Florida Gators are idle. I had to put this
game in its place. Nebraska by 10
CARDINALS AT BUC8
Is It really true? Are the Tampa Bay Bucs actually
playing the St. Louis Cardinals? If It rains too hard
in Tampa Sunday. I'm sure they could move the
game lo Daytona Beach Memorial Stadium. Any­
thing to see the Bucs win their first, and perhaps
only, game of the season. Bucs by 6
DOLPHINS AT JETS
Remember those styrofoam brick" that you
bought fw in row at Kuwaiti Cosell on Monday Sight
Football Well. I'd like to get a real brick and throw It
at Mark Gustincau. Somebody should do something
to slop him before he gels a little too carried away.
Maybe the Plasmatics could take him on as a roadie.
The Jets are not rapable of winning the Super Bowl,
bul they are capable of beating the Dolphins at Shea
Stadium. Jets by 9
REDSKINS AT PACKERS
If you turn down Ihe sound on the TV Monday
night, you might be able to enjoy this game because
it Isa good m airh up.- Packers by 17

The boys squad edged Bishop Moore.
151-146. with clutch performances by
the 400 freestyle relay team along with
divers Mark Klein and Mike Manlovant.
Seminole's Chuck Burgess had a pair of
second place finishes as the Tribe
finished third with 67 points and Apopka
was fourth with 62.
Bishop Moore's Lady Hornets won the
girls meet by a score of 139-132 over
Lake Mary. Amy Maher led the way for
Lake Mary with a pair of first place
finishes. Seminole finished third with 96
points while Apopka was fourth at 63.
"It was really an excited battle be­
tween us and Bishop Moore." Lake Mary
coach Walt Morgan said. “ It was a very
competitive meet and we need this kind
of meet and the Intensity that goes with
It to get ready for districts."
Fourteen of Lake Mary's swimmers
will travel to Gainesville on Saturday for
the Gator Invitational. The Rams get
back into dual meet action next Wed­
nesday at Kissimmee Osceola. Seminole
hosts DcLand next Tuesday at the
Sanford Bath flt Tennis Club. The Five
Star Conference swimming meet Is
scheduled for next Saturday at Lyman

High.
.

"W e had another positive outing and
continue lo Improve on our times."

Prep Swimming
Seminole coach Donalyn Knight said.
"The competition has been really tough
for us and IPs giving us a chance to see
what we’ ll be up against In districts."
For the Seminole boys team. Burgess
finished second In the 50 freestyle at
23.9 and he was second in the 100
breaststroke at 1:09.2. The 100 medley
relay team of Michael Butt, Tim Dycus.
Brian Sparrow and Burgess finished
third with a time of 2.08.8.
For Lake M ary's boys, the 400
freestyle relay team of Richard Kurtz.
Kyle Kllgcr. Scott Bowens and Trey
Slcbold came through with a key first
place with a time of 3:52.5. That plus the
diving o f Klein (first plare with 96 points)
and Mantovanl (second with 84 points)
provided a big boost in enabling ihe
Rams to win the meet.
"The 400 free relay and the diving
helped us out a lot." Morgan said. "W e
haven't had much In diving In the past,
but coach Clyde Hayes has done a good
Job with the divers."
Todd Stcbblns and Scott Wise had the
only other first places for Lake Mary, but
the Rams had numerous second and
third place finishes. Stcbblns won the
100 backstroke with a time of 1:04.55
while Wise won the 100 fly at 57.69.
Lake Mary also set five school records
in Wednesday night's meet. The 200
medley relay team of Wise. Brian Cook.
Stcbblns and Tim Orrange was second
with a new school record lime of 1:50.95.
Slcbold set a new record In the 200 free

Her4Id PS*I* Sr Ttmmy VliKtn*

Seminole's Chuck Burgess claim ed a
pair of second place finishes W ed­
nesday In a four-team m eet at the
Sharldan Aquatic Club In Longwood.
Burgess was second In both the 50

freestyle and the 100 breaststroke.
The Tribe boys team finished third
behind L a k e M a r y and Bishop
Moore w hile Ihe girls team also
finished third.

with a second place time of 2:01.85
while Stcbblns set a record In the 50 free
(third at 1:10.65) and Cook established a
new mark In the 100 breaststroke (third
at 1:10.65). Wise set a school record In
the 200 individual medley with a time of
2:07.71, hut he was Just out-touched ai
the finish by Bishop Moore's Dan Dltmcr
for first place.
O th er secon d p laces In clu d ed .
Slrbold's 5:36.4 In the 500 free and

Kurtz' 56.5 In the 100 free. Third places
limes Included. Orrange's 1:10.77 In Ihc
100 fly, Kllgcr's 57.9 In Ihc 100 free.
Ma.k Kramer's 6:07.17 In the 500 free
and Kramer's 2:42.8 In the 200 Individ­
ual medley. Cook took a fourth place In
the 50 free (26.3), Kllgcr was fourth In
Ihe 100 back al 1:08.95 and Orrange was
fourth In Ihc 100 breaststroke al
1:19.96.
See ‘Lady Rama’ Page 6A

Penick, Kingsbury Top Newcomers
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
Although Scmlnoie's Billy Pcnlck and Lake Mary's
Sue Kingsbury took different paths lo get lo where they
arc now, they have emerged as two of the brightest
young performers In Seminole County cross country
competition.
For Kingsbury, the question was not if she was going
to run cross country, but how quickly she would catch
on and realize her Immense potential. Like a lot of good,
young runners today, the flashy freshman started out
early. "I started running In sixth grade at elementary
school track meets." Kingsbury said.
While the school track meets were mostly for fun In
the sixth and seventh grades. Kingsbury began to get
noticed when she got Into the eighth grade at Rock Lake
Middle School In Longwood. In May of 1983. Kingsbury
put a smile on the face of her future coach. Lake Mary
High's Mike Gibson, when she won both the mile and
the 880 run at the Middle School Track Championships.
Kingsbury didn't Just win. she ran times that were
close to the best of any runner on the Lake Mary varsity
track team. She turned In a time of 5:47.4 In the mile
(only two seconds off the best Lake Mary time), and a
2:36.1 In Ihe 880 (only three seconds off Ihe Lake Mary
best). Another of Lake Mary's top runners this season.
Tracy Blakely, was a teammate of Kingsbury al Rock
Lake and bIic finished second In the middle school mile
with a time of 6:18.1. Blakely Is currently the second
runner for the Lady Rams cross country team;
Over the summer. Kingsbury ran in some road races
and she recorded a seventh place finish In the Seminole
Summertime Cross Country Jamboree In August. By
that time. Sue Kingsbury was no longer just a middle
school champion, she was ready to take on high school
competition.

SUE KINGSBURY
.12:13, two-mllc

"I didn't really know what I could do (In cross
country)," Kingsbury said. "But. the road races and the
Jamboree helped me get ready for the season."
Practicing In the sizzling latc-summcr heal also helped
gel Kingsbury ready for Hie ’83 season and she also
showed (he dedication 11 takes to be a top notch distance
runner. The week before the first meet, Lake Mary

Cross Country
scheduled a three-mile practice run. However, on the
day of the practice run. the temperatures peaked over
the 100 degrees mark and the heat took Its toll on the
runners as the coaches told them to slop after two miles.
Kingsbury was so far out In front, though, that she Just
kept on running and she completed the three miles, In
100-plus degree weather. In 21 minutes and 3 seconds.
Kingsbury started the season In fine fashion as
finished second In the Lyman Greyhound Opener, her
first varsity meet, at Seminole Community College. Her
time of 12:13 broke the school record by more than four
seconds and. at the time. It was the third best time In
the state. For her performance In the Greyhound opener,
Kingsbury was chosen the Athletic Attlc-Semlnole Track
Officials runner of the week. Although she has come
close. Kingsbury ha* not bettered that time, but don’t be
surprised If she betters It Friday in the county
championships.
This past Monday, al Lyman High. Kingsbury finished
third in the Seminole County Postal Run (two miles on
the track), behind Polltowlcz and Hayward. Kingsbury's
time of 11:57 shatterd the old school record of 12:29.2.
Her fine performance also ranks os the fourth best' time
in county postal run history.
"I d fixe to go under 12 minutes by the end of the
season and beat Kathryn Hayward," Kingsbury said of
her goals for the remainder of the year. 'T hope 1 can
keep getting better," she added, then paused and. with a
cute smile said. "Maybe I'll run with the boys (In
practice)."
While Kingsbury has been running competitively for
almost four years. Penick Is a virtual newcomer to
distance running. He Joined the Seminole High team las!
year as a freshman with no cross country experience,
but. through hard work and determination, he quickly
became a quality distance runner.
See ‘Penick* Page 7A

BILLY PENICK
...16:35, three-mile

�Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Every day someone will come by the
courts and ask for a little advice on a big
match they have coming up. It seems
they have this Important grudge match
with their boss, or girlfriend, or someone
they have boasted to about their tennis
and are starting to panic.
They want someone to tell them some
secret stuff that will allow them to blow
the 'ol boss off the court. The advice I
give to the beginning nnd Intermediate
player Is always the same. I tell them to
keep the ball Inplav.

enough to apply the first rule, you can
start thinking about other slihple rules ol
strategy. The next one that you should
use Is very elementary but docs require
some thought, some observation and
some control.

Castie
Former 8CC
Tennis Coach
this simple rule ts. On big points it
becomes even more important to keep

The second rule of singles strategy Is.
"hit the ball to your opponents weak­
ness.” fo r most beginning and Interme­
diate players, the wcukness is probably
their backhand. Maybe their backhand Is
fairly steady when you are rallying from
ihc baseline, but &lt;iu tint have a good
backhand passing shot.
. . . . . .
.
.
„
Maybe their weakness In the overhead
smash, or possibly their volleys.
Whatever the weakness Is. you will be
able to detect It even in the warmup If
you watch their shots closely and make
mental notes. Of course, oner you
determine what the weakness Is. you
make (hem hit that shot as often as you
can. especially on hlg point*

Johnson New
Mets Skipper

H*r»ld Phe'u by Tommy Vlrw.nl

Seminole sw im m er Liz Pryor has had a lot to
sm ile about In '03. The Lady Tribe has turned
In some outstanding performances. Wednes­
day night at the Sharidan Aquatic Club In
Longwood, Pryor and her team m ates ran Into
some tough competition in Lake M a ry and
Bishop Moore and finished third in a four-team
m eet.

Lady Rams
Continued from 6A
For the Lady Rams. Maher recorded first place
finishes tn Ihe 50 free (26.63) and. the 100 free
(59.34). Other first places IncludedrsTTerl Clayton's
5:28.43 In the 500 free. Teresa Prince's 1:12.35 tn
the 100 back and Sherry Purkerson's 1:18.5 In the
100 breaststroke. The 400 free relay team recorded
a first place time of 4:22.50 compared to second
place Bishop Moore's 4:22.57.
Second place finished Included. Clayton's 1:04.65
In the 100 fly and the 200 medley relay team
(Prince, Clayton. Purkcrson and Claire Pittman).
Third places Included. McKecl's 2:20.26 In the
200 free nnd Prince's 27.83 In the 50 free. Fourth
places Included. Pittman's 3:01.0 In the 200
Individual medley and her 1:31.1 In the 100
breaststroke and McKcel's 1:18.93 In the 100 back.
Shelly Orrangc was flflh In the 100 fly with a time of
1:32.4.
"W e ’re starting look a little classy and pro­
fessional." Morgan said. "W e hope to reach our peak
In four weeks (districts)."
Shawna Cole and Dana Ray each recorded third
places finishes for Ihe Lady Tribe. Cole was third In
the 200 Individual medley at 2:53 while Ray was
second In Ihe 100 backstroke at 1:16.9. The 200
medley relay team of Ray. Cole. Alison McCall and
Kristy Keeling was third at 2:21.
In other uctlon Wednesday. Lyman continued Its
Impressive ways wllh a pwcep of a dual meet with
Lake Brantley. The boys team won. 103-63. while
the girls came away with a 116-54 victory.

PHILADELPHIA (UP1)
Dave Johnson, who has
known only success as a minor league manager. Is being
counted on to continue his winning ways with the New
York Mels.
The Mels have called a noon EDT press conference
today, to announce the hiring of Johnson, a former
major league second baseman, as their manager.
He replaces Frank Howard, who was fired on the final
day of tcason.
Johnson, who managed the Mets* Tidewater farm
team to the "Little World Series" championship this
season, also managed Jackson to a Texas League
championship Is 1081 In his only other try as a
minor-league ger.
Johnson was the starting second baseman for the
Baltimore Orioles when they lost to the Mets In the 1969
World Series, and has known Mets' general manager
Frank Cashcn since the latter was a member of the
Ortolcont office.
Johnson, who set the major league record or 43 home
runs by a second baseman with Atlanta In 1973,
managed the Mets’ Triple A affiliate In th*- International
League and Is considered adept at coaching young
players.
Outfielder Darryl Strawberry, shortstop Jose Oquendo
and pitcher Walt Terrell, all of whom played well for the
Mets this year, were promoted to the big club from
Tidewater during the season.
Johnson, 40. played 10 seasons In the majors with
Baltimore and the Atlanta Braves, played briefly In
Japan and then returned to the United States for stints
with the Philadelphia Phillies and Chicago Cubs.
He had his record home run season with the Braves tn
1973.
Johnson had a .281 lifetime batting overage In the
majors with 136 homers and 609 RBI. Hr played In four
World Series, compiling a . 192 average In 21 games, and
three All-Star Games.
He entered the Mets' system tn 1981 when he led
Jackson to the Texas League championship. He spent
1982 as a roving Instructor In the Mets' farm system and
then was named manager of Tidewater.
The Tides finished fourth In the International League
this year but beat Columbus and Richmond tn the IL
playoffs to advance to the minor league scries.

llFGoodrich
Car Core Service

Swimming

Continued from 6A
"I always liked running distances |ln PE classes)
because I could outrun more people that way." Penick
said. “ Then, I heard over the school Intercom that they
needed more people for cross country. So. I went out Just
to see what It was like and It turned out pretty decent."
Last year, Pcntck got a chance to run on what was one
of the best Seminole High teams ever. With senior Mike
Woolen leading Ihc way. (he Tribe was unbeaten In dual
Friday’s County Championships get nnder way at
4 p.m. at Lyman High School.
meets. However. Seminole tost five of Its lop six from
last year's team.
So. with only one returning letterm&amp;n on the '03 team.
Seminole coach Ted Tombros looked to Penick to lead
the Tribe Ibis season. And he has done Just that.
In the Greyhound Opener. Penick turned In a 10th
place finish with a lime of 16:45. In the next meet, the
Edge water Invitational at Trinity Prep. Penick shaved
10 seconds off that time for a seventh place finish of
16:35, which Is currently his best time and a Seminole
sophomore record. Penick Is sixth In ihe county honor
roll behind seniors Ken Cheesman (Lake Howell). Doug
McBroom (Lyman). Mike Garriques (Lake Brantley).
Derek Tangeman (Lake Mary) and Junior Marty Phillips
(Oviedo).
But. while Kingsbury stayed consistent (and healthy).
Penick was hit by something that has affected many
county runners this season, the flu bug. Thus, his times
have no! been as good lately and. Monday In the Postal
Run. he had to drop out because of the illness! Penick
hopes to be back In top shape Friday for the county
championships and he should be at 100 percent for the
big meets down the road.
"I'd like to try and get In the top four or five in
districts," Penick said. "I want to do my best to help the
team make rcgtonals (the top six teams In the district

rcglonals).” I make regional*)

-Sty.-,
H*r«M piMt* by Bssni*wkbcitft

Seminole coach Ted Tombros discusses some
strategy with Billy Penick

• Deep m r a u n triad to.-n
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___

_________

The tlu will only hold Penick bark temporarily, but fhe
future Is bright for Penick and Kingsbury and the
Seminole and Lake Mary cross country programs should
blossom with the two talented runners leading the way.

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Singles strategy can get a lot more
complicated than Ihe tree Items that
have Just been mentioned. But. for most
players up to the highly advanced pro
level, the simple rules of keeping (he ball
in play, hit to your opponents weakness,
and hit to the open court are all you ever

Penick

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(Maximum 1 Oil Fitter)

GIRLS

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Unfortunately, a lot of us will look up
to sec where our opponent Is going and
not look and the ball. Or we will be too
cautious and not hit the ball firm enough
or deep enough. Junst try to concentrate
on thr hall, take your lime and stroke
the ball to the nice big green opening.

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LYMAN II. LAKE BRANTLEY SI
TOO m*dl*y relay — Lymen,
McLeod louder, Parker. Steven*.
1 Oil. IM tree - Hall, (LI. 1.07.S;
IM - Cage. (L I . I : H i : St Ire *Sr.ven*
(LI. 17 Ij Owing —
TKtnedcr, (LI, IX . IM tly — Gaga.
(LI. HUS; IM tree - Cook. (L).
1 00 4. SM fra* — Vanhllienhoven.
(L). l ll 7; IM back - Sleven*. (LV
I 1 0 IM bread - Hall (U . 1:14 4.
M free relay — Lyman. Hall. Gaga.
Cook. Vanhlltanhoren. 4 10 1.

The third rule o( singles strategy Is as
old as the game Itself. The rule Is simply.
"Hit to the open court." If your opponent
has had to run wide to his backhand side
and left the court open on his forehand
side — you simply watch the ball closely
and firmly stroke the ball to the open
court.

§

SCOKECARD
Af Orlande Seminole
Wednttday nigh) retold
Firit game
iNegul Eloria
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I Pinion Aguirre
7.00 4 00
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710
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(I 7 1I1U.M

Oct. I I , ?t&gt;l—7A

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ft

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Come In Today. . .
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�SPORTS
4A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

w,.

i

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,

• • 2

in

■

Thursday, Oct. 13.1ft3

- Hj

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Boddicker's Three-Hitter Rescues Orioles, 4-1
BALTIMORE (UPI) - On a watery field Wednesday
night, rookie Mike Boddlcker again became a llfesavcr
for the Baltimore Orioles.
The small-town product of Norway. Iowa, continued
his remarkable pitching under the postseason spotlight
by stopping the Philadelphia Phillies 4-1 on three hits to
■ help the Orioles even the best-of-seven World Series at
one game apiece.
After a travel day Thursday, the best-of-seven Scries
resumes In Philadelphia Friday r.*gh» rvlth Mike
Flanagan pitching for the Orioles and Steve Carlton
’ going for the Phillies.
It was the second time In a week Boddlcker rescued
the Orioles in postseason competition. He blanked the
Chicago White Sox 4-0 with a flvc-hlt. 14-strlkcout
performance last Thursday to get the Orioles even at 1-1
t In their besl-of-five American League playoff series. That
performance canted Boddlcker the Most Vnluablc Player
Award for the playoffs
Boddlcker didn’t get as many strikeouts but It was as
good u performance as he had against Chicago," said
Orioles manager Joe Allobclll. "It was another must
game for us. a very important ballgame."
The Phillies knew Boddlcker was primarily a breaking
ball pitcher. But he kept them off balance all game by
tossing In an occasional fastball to complement his
breaking pitches.
"Against Chicago. I had a belter breaking pitch but
tonight I had a better fastball." Boddlcker said. "And
because they had more left-handers in the lineup 1got to
use my chsng, -up a little more. I had better location on
my pilches, especially with the fastball. I felt I had
complete control of the game. All the w-ay through It, I
wasn't worried."

out six and did nat walk a batter in beating rookie
Charles Hudson. The only hits off Boddlcker were an
Infield single by Joe Morgan in the fourth, a line single
to right by Gary Matthews In the seventh and a bloop
C«m* ]
Toli!t
It I 11 Toll It
It 114 single to right by Bo Diaz In the eighth.
PHILADELPHIA BALTIMORE
PfcUfclyM*
tot 100 MO- I
Boddlcker also drove In a run with a sacrifice ily —
•br ti bi
ikrkU BiMimoro
IN IN III-4
only
his third at-bat In professional baseball — when the
Morfifl lb
41 I 9 Bumbfy cl 1 0 0 0
CimtutMngRBI-DtfflpMfll).
Orioles scored three runs In the fifth and knocked out
Rom lb
l 0 0 0 Shtfry d 1110
E-AUxrriy D P -M tlb m !. LOBScbmitf! Jb
10 0 0 ferd d
19 10 PWMeipMi ;
Bllllmori
I IB Hudson.
Ldifevr* rl 10 0 1 RlNn tl
10 11 UirtRlMa. 0*mp4*y. MR-l**tmt|in
It appeared for a while Wednesday morning that the
M im m ii m o
ny •* i s o s it).
uadrss :n. ! r
game might not be played because of overnight rain that
CGrni d
1 0 0 0 Lootnittn If I 11 I LfWrrrt. BoddiOtr
DUl t
1 0 t 0 Undrum II 0 0 0 0
IP H RERIB SO left the Memorial Stadium Held a soggy mess. However,
timu«l pr
00 0 0 Oli*r lb 4 110
Ptulld*l|Ml
the Orioles' grounds crew, one o f baseball's best, worked
Virtue
00 0 0 Crw lb
4 110 Hudton |L »1|
41) 1 1 1 0 1
DtJtwt u
10 0 0 DmpMy c 10 11 Mtrnindtt
1) 0 0 0 1 1 diligently to get the field In playing shape. And, except
Hudton p
10 0 0Boddicttr p 1 0 0 1 AmNfttn
1 ) 1 1 0
1 for some unsure footing In the outfield, there were no
Mtm*fldu p 0 0 0 0
Rttd
1 1 0 0 11
mishaps because of the condition of the field.
Mlytt
10 0 0
tlllliMn
John Lowcnstcln also wore a hero’s mantle for the
AM iftn p ( 0 0 0
Bodd.ckrr (W Id)
1 ) 1 0 0 1
Ptrtl ph 110 0
HBP-by Htmindll (Ford) T—1 If. A
Orioles by collecting three of Baltimore's nine hits.
Rttd p
00 00
-H ID
Including n long Imme run In the fifth Inning that tied
the score 1-1 and triggered a three nin outburst.
Hudson began as If he would match Boddlcker pitch
for pitch. Over the flint four Innings, the 24-ycar-old
Boddlcker became only the third rookie to throw a right-hander allowed only one hit — a double-by
Lowcnstcln In the second — and faced only one batter
thrcc-hlllcr in World Scries competition, matching Hugh
Bedtent of the Boston Red Sox In 1912 and Dickie Kerr over the minimum during that stretch.
But Hudson became unhinged In the fifth after
of the White Sox In 1919. Boddlcker hns now allowed
Lowcnstcln opened the Inning by blasting a 415-foot
Jusl one unearned run In his last 24 Innings.
Only four of the 27 outs Boddlckci recorded were on homer to center field that lied It 1-1. Veteran first
flics to the outfield, a good thing since the outfield turf baseman Pete Rose went to the mound to try and settle
the rookie. But Rich Daucr followed with a line single to
was roggy from 20 hours of continual rain.
"The outfield was very soggy." said the Orioles' Dan left and Todd Cruz beat out a bunt when second
Ford. "Th r ground rrew did a lerriflc Job in getting as baseman Morgan was late covering first base.
Rick Dempsey then drilled a double down the
much water off It as possible."
Boddlcker. a 26-year-old right-hander who posted a right-field line, scoring Daucr. and Boddlcker knocked in
16-8 record with a 2.77 ERA during the season, struck Cruz — anil knocked out Hudson — with a sacrifice fly

World Series

MIKEBODDICKER

JOHN LOWEN5TEIN

to left
The O r io le s added a run off reliever Lairy Andersen in
the seventh when John Shelby beat out an Infield hit
with two out. took third on Dan Ford's bloop single to
right and scored on a ground single to right by Cal
Ripken.
The Phillies did not gel a ball out of the Infield against
Boddlcker over the first three innings and the only run
they got was unearned because of an error by first
baseman Eddie Murray. Morgan opened the fourth by
beating oul an infield hit and stole second. After Rose
failed to sacrifice. Mike Schmidt hit a hit-and-run
grounder to shortstop that Ripken fielded but Ills throw
to first was dropped by Murray. Morgan took third on
the play and scored on a sacrifice fly by Joe Lefcbvrc.
Boddlcker. however, set the Phillies down In order In
three of the last five Innings and finished the game by
throwing only 108 pilches — 73 for strikes.

Relay, Divers Key To
Lake Mary Boys' Win,
Lady Rams Take 2nd
Rams Ready To
Upset Hawks
Well, I am no longer wallowing In mediocrity. A
6-3 record lost week gives me a 27-21-1 mark for the
season.
4
Here arc some quick cross country predictions for
Friday's county championships, team champions —
Lake Mary boys. Lake Howell girls (If they arc In it
Instead of going to DcLand) If not. the Lake Brantley
girts. L y m a n 's Doug McBroom the Individual winner
in the boys three-mile and Lake Brantley's Kathryn
Hayward first In the girls two-mlle with Lake Mary's
Sue Kingsbury a good bet as an upset threat.
LAKE HOWELL AT LAKE MARY
This truly is the only game in town Friday night.
The Silver Hawks have to open up some holes for
Jay Robey If they are going to win. On the other
hand. Lake Mary Is ready to upset somebody and
the crowd will pull the Rams through the rough
spots. In the upset of the year, so far. Lake Mary by
2
OVIEDO AT JONES
Friday night's matchup between the Lions and
Tigers Is being played at the Tangerine Bowl.
Originally, the Plasmatics were scheduled to play
the T-Bowl Friday, but the promoters figured a high
school football game would draw a lot more fans and
be a lot less destructive. This Is an off year for
Oviedo while Jones Is having $ pretty good season
and will keep it going Friday. Jones by 9
LAKE BRANTLEY AT MAINLAND
You would figure that a town with four high
schools would have more than one football field. All
four. Daytona Beach Mainland. Seabreeze. Father
Lopez and Spruce Creek play their home games at
Daytona Beach Memorial Stadium. The BranllcyMainland game Is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Saturday.
If I lived In Daytona Beach, a football game is the
last place I would be at 2 p.m. on a Saturday. I'm
sure Lake Brantley isn't too enthused about playing
al that time either, but they will tolerate It long
enough to rout Mainland. Lake Brantley by 17
UCF AT RICHMOND
If UCF wasn't playing Richmond SAIurday, they
could probably make up their
gaqie with
Bethune-Cookman and they could play the game at
Daytona Beach Memorial Stadium right after the
Lake Branlley-Malnland game. Richmond was 0-10
last year and they are 0-5 this year. The game In
Richmond Is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Maybe UCF
could fly home and play Bcthune after they dispose
of Richmond. UCF by 14
CINCINNATI AT FLORIDA BTATE
Cincinnati already owns an upset over Penn State
this season and the Bearcats would like to add to the
list Saturday. Florida State has lost three straight
close games and the Semlnotes won't let this one get
outofliand. Florida State by 13
MIAMI AT MISSISSIPPI STATE
The Hurricanes are on a roll and. they way they're
playing, they may not lose again In ‘83. The way
Mississippi State is playing, they may not win again
In '83. Miami by 20
NEBRASKA AT MISSOURI
Since the Florida Gators are Idle. I had to put this
game In its place. Nebraska by 10
CARDINALS AT BUCS
Is It really true? Arc the Tampa Bay Bucs
playing the Si. Louis Cardinals? If 11 rains loo
in Tampa Sunday. I'm sure they could move the
game to Daytona Beach Memorial Stadium. Anyihlng to see the Bucs win their first, and perhaps
only, game of the season. Hues by G
DOLPHINS AT JETS
Remember those styrofoam bricks that you
bought to throw al Howard Cosell on Monday Night
Football. Well, I'd like to get a real brick and throw it
al Mark Gasllucau. Somebody should do something
to stop him before he gets a little too carried away.
Maybe Ihc Plasmatics could take him on as a roadie.
The Jets are not capable of winning (tic Super Bowl,
but they arc capable of beating the Dolphins al Shea
Stadium. Jets by 9
REDSKINS AT PACKERS
if you turn down the sound on the TV Monday
night, you might be able to enjov this game because
it is a good matchup.— Packers by 17

By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
The Lake Mary boys swimming learn
claimed first place and the Lady Rams
took home a second place finish In
quadrangular meet with Bishop Moore.
Seminole and Apopka Wednesday nlghl
at the Sharidan Aquatic Club In
Longwood.
The boys squad edged Bishop Moore.
151-146. with clutch performances by
the 400 freestyle relay team along with
divers Mark Klein and Mike Mnntovant.
Seminole's Chuck Burgess had a pair of
■second place finishes as the Tribe
finished third with 67 points and Apopka
was fourth with 62.
Bishop Moore's Lady Horne Is won the
girls meet by a score of 139-132 over
Lake Mary*. Amy Maher led the way for
Lake Mary with a pair of first place
finishes. Seminole finished third with 96
points while Apopka was fourth at 63.
" ll was really an excited bailie be­
tween us and Bishop Moore." Lake Mary
coach Wall Morgan said. "It was a very
competitive meet and we need this kind
of meet and the Intensity that goes with
it to get ready for districts."
Fourteen of Lake Mary's swimmers
will travel to Gainesville on Saturday for
the Gator Invitational. The Hams gel
back Into dual meet action next Wed­
nesday at Kissimmee Osceola. Seminole
hosts DcLand next Tuesday at the
Sanford Bath &amp; Tennis Club. The Five
Star Conference swimming meet Is
scheduled for next Saturday at Lyman
High.
. "W e had another positive outing and
continue to Improve on our times."

Prep Swimming
Seminole coach Donalyn Knight said.
"The competition has been really tough
for us and It’s giving us a chance io see
what we’ll be up against In districts."
For the Seminole boys team. Burgess
finished second In the 50 freestyle at
23.9 and he was second In the 100
breaststroke at 1:09.2. The 100 medley
relay team of Michael Butt. Tim Dycus.
Brian Sparrow and Burgess finished
third with a time of 2:08.8.
For Lake M ary's boys, the
freestyle relay team of Richard Kurtz,
Kyle Kllger. Scott Bowens and Trey
Siebold came through with a key first
place with a time o f 3:52.5. That plus the
diving of Klein (first place with 96 points)
and Man tovan1 (second with 84 points)
provided a big boost In enabling the
Rama to win the meet.
“ The 400 free relay and the dlvtng
helped us out a lot." Morgan said. "W e
haven't had much In diving In the past,
but coach Clyde Hayes has done a good
job with the divers."
Todd Stehblns and Scott Wise had the
only other first places for Lake Mary, but
the Rams bad numerous second and
third place llntshes. Stebblns won the
100 backstroke with n time of 1:04.55
while Wise won the 100 fly at 57.69.
Lake Mary also set five school records
in Wednesday night's meet. The 200
medley relay team of Wise. Brian Cook.
Stebblns and Tim Orrange was second
with a new school record time of 1:50.95.
Slcbold set a new record in the 200 free

H*r«M Ptwla hr Tammy Vlnctnf

Seminole's Chuck Burgess claim ed a
p air of second place finishes Wed
nesday In a four-team m eet at the
Sharidan Aquatic Club in Longwood.
Burgess was second In both the 50

freestyle and the 100 breaststroke.
The Trib e boys team finished third
behind L a k e M a ry and Bishop
Moore while the girls team also
finished third.

with a second place time of 2:01.85
while Stebblns set a record in the 50 free
(third at 1:10.65) and Cook established a
new mark In the 100 breaststroke (third
at 1:10.65). Wise set a school record in
the 200 Individual medley with a lime of
2:07.71, but he was Just out-touched at
the finish by Bishop Moore's Dan Dltmer
for first place.
O th er second p laces in clu d e d .
Slebold's 5:36.4 In the 500 free and

Kurtz' 56.5 In the 100 free. Third places
times Included, Orrange's 1:10.77 In the
100 fly, Kllgcr'n 57.9 In Ihc 100 free.
Ma*k Kramer's 6:07.17 In Ihc 500 free
and Kramer's 2:42.8 In the 200 Individ­
ual medley. Cook look a fourth place in
Ihc 50 free (26.3), Kllger was fourth In
Ihc 100 back at 1:08.95 and Orrange was
fourth In the 100 breaststroke al
1:19.96.
See ‘Lady Rams' Page 6A

Penick, Kingsbury Top Newcomers
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
Although Seminole's Billy Penick and Lake Mary's
Sue Kingsbury took different paths to get to where they
arc now. they have emerged us two of the brightest
young performers in Seminole County cross country
competition.
For Kingsbury, the question was not If she was going
to run cross country, but how quickly she would catch
on and realize her Immense potential. Like a lot of good,
young runners today, the flashy freshman started out
early. "I started running in sixth grade at elementary
school track meets." Kingsbury said.
While the school track meets were mostly for fun In
the sixth and seventh grades, Kingsbury began to get
noticed when she got Into the eighth grade at Rock Lake
Middle School In Longwood. In May of 1983. Kingsbury
put a smile on the face of her future coach. Lake Mary
High's Mike Gibson, when she won both the mile and
the 680 run at the Middle School Track Championships.
Kingsbury didn't Jusl win. she ran times that were
close to the best of any runner on the Lake Mary varsity
track team. She turned in a time of 5:47.4 in the mile
(only two seconds off the best Lake Mary time), and a
2:36.1 in the 8BO (only three seconds off the Lake Mary
best). Another of Lake Mary's top runners this Beason.
Ttacy Blakely, was a teammate of Kingsbury at Rock
Lake and she finished second In the middle school mile
with a time of 6:18.1. Blakely 1s currently the second
runner for the Lady Rams cross country team.
Over the summer, Kingsbury ran In some road races
and she recorded a seventh place finish In the Seminole
Summertime Cross Country Jamboree In August. By
that time. Sue Kingsbury was no longer Just a middle
school champion, she was ready to take on high school
competition.

SUE KINGSBURY
...12:13, two-mlle

"1 didn't really know what I could do (in cross
country)," Kingsbury said. "But, Ihc road races and the
Jamboree helped n:e get ready for the season."
Practicing in the sizzling late-summcr heal also helped
get Kingsbury ready for the '83 season and she also
showed ihc dedication ll takes to be a top notch distance
runner. The week before the first meet. Lake Mary

Cross Country
scheduled a three-mile practice run. However, on the
day of the practice run, the temperatures peaked over
the 100 degrees mark and the heat took Its toll on the
runners as the coaches told them to slop after two miles.
Kingsbury was so far out in front, though, that she Just
kept on running and she completed the three miles, In
100-plus degree weather. In 21 minutes and 3 seconds.
Kingsbury started the season In fine fashion as she
finished second in the Lyman Greyhound Opener, her
first varsity meet, at Seminole Community College. Her
time of 12:13 broke the school record by more than four
seconds and, at the time, It was the third best time In
the slate. For her performance In the Greyhound opener,
Kingsbury was chosen the Athletic Attlc-Semlnole Track
Officials runner of the week. Although she has come
close, Kingsbury has not bettered that time, but don’ t be
surprised If she betters It Friday in the county
championships.
This past Monda’ *. at Lyman High, Kingsbury finished
third In the Seminole County Postul Run (two miles on
the track), behind Polltowlcz and Hayward. Kingsbury's
time of 11:57 shattrrd the old school record of 12:29.2.
Her fine performance also ranks us the fourth best'time
In county poalal run history.
'T d like to go under 12 minutes by the end of the
season and beat Kathryn Hayward." Kingsbury said of
her goals for the remainder of the year. "I hope 1 can
keep getting better." she added, then paused and, with a
cute smile said. "Maybe I'll run with the boys (In
practice)."
While Kingsbury' has been running competitively for
almost four years, Pcnlck Is u virtual newcomer to
distance running. He Joined the Seminole High team last
year as a freshman with no cross country experience,
but. through hard work and dcteunlnation, hr quickly
became a quality distance runner.
See 'Penick' Page 7A

BILLY PENICK
.16:35, three-mile

�Evening H «r*ld , Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Oct. 11, IW 3—7A

Nothing Fancy, Just Keep The Ball In Play
Every day someone w&amp;i^ajtnc by ihe
courts and ask Tor a little advice on a big
match they have coming up. It seems
they have this Important grudge mntch
with their boss, or girlfriend, or someone
they have boasted to about their tennis
and arc starting to panic.

enough to apply the first rule, you can
start thinking about other striiplr rules of
strategy. The next one that you should
use Is very elementary but does require
some thought, some observation and
some control

C astle
Form er 8CC
Tennis Coach

They want someone to tell them some
secret stuff that will allow them to blow
the 'ol l*oss off the court. The advice 1
give to the beginning and Intermediate
player Is always the same. I tell them to
keep the ball In play.
Oh. they say. "I want to know some
real strategy. Some secret sh o ts , or
something."

The second rule of singles strategy Is.
"hit the ball to your opponents weak­
ness." For most beginning and Interme­
diate players, the weakness is probably
their backhand. Maybe their backhand Is
fairly steady when you are rallying from
the baseline, but do not have a good
backhand passing shot.
Maybe their weakness In the overhead
Bmash. or possibly their volleys.
Whatever the weakness is. you will be
able to detect It even in the warmup If
you watch their shots closely and make
mental notes. Of course, once you

Sorry, but that's It. "Keep the ball In
play," Is the number one rule for any
level of play but it Is of utmost
Importance for the beginner or Interme­
diate. Over 80 percent of all points on
this level are the result of errors. Even
the pros talk about how very important

Johnson New
Mets Skipper

H«riM PT&gt;ot* hr Tammy Vincent

Seminole sw im m er Liz Pryor has had a lot to
sm ile aboul In '83. The Lady Tribe has turned
In some outstanding performances. Wednes­
day night at the Sharldan Aquatic Club In
Longwood, P ryor and her team m ates ran into
some tough competition In Lake M a ry and
Bishop Moore and finished third in a four-team
meet.

Lady Rams
Continued from 6A
For the Lady Rams. Maher recorded first place
finishes In the 50 free (26.63) und the 100 free
(59.34). Other first plnrrs lhcludrd.“ fjfreri n ayfo n V
5:28.43 In the 500 free. Teresa Prince’s 1:12.35 In
the 100 back and Sherry Purkcrson’s 1:18.5 In the
100 breaststroke. The 400 free relay team recorded
a first place time of 4:22.50 compared to iccond
place Bishop Moore's 4:22.57.
Sccc.id place finished Included, Clayton's 1:04.65
In the 100 By and the 200 medley relay team
(Prince. Clayton. Purkcrson and Claire Pittman).
Third places Included, McKccl's 2:20.26 In the
200 free and Prince's 27.83 In the 50 free. Fourth
places Included. Pittman’s 3:01.0 in the 200
Individual medley and her 1:31.1 In Ihe 100
breaststroke and McKeel's 1:16.93 In the 100 back.
Shelly Orrangc was fifth In the 100 fly with u time of
1:32.4.
"W e’re starting look a little classy and pro­
fessional." Morgan said. "W e hope to reach our peak
In four weeks (districts)."
Shawna Cole and Dana Ray each recorded third
places finishes for the Lady Tribe. Cole was third In
the 200 Individual medley at 2:53 while Ray was
second In the 100 backstroke at 1:16.9. The 200
medley relay team of Ray. Cole, Alison McCall and
Kristy Keeling u’as third at 2:21.
In other action Wednesday. Lyman continued Its
Impressive ways with a sweep of a dual meet with
Lake Brantley. The boys team won. 103-63. while
the girls came away with a 116-54 victory.

•

®[^Goodrich
Car Care Service

Slegue

Friday's County Championships get under w ay at
4 p.m. at Lyman High School.
meets. However. Seminole lost five of Its top six from
last year's team.
So, with only one returning ietterman on the *83 team,
Seminole coach Ted Tombros looked to Penick to lead
the Tribe this season. And he has done Just that.
In the Greyhound Opener, Pcnlck turned In a 10th
place finish with a time of 16:45. In the next meet. Ihe
Edgcwatcr Invitational at Trinity Prep. Pcnlck shaved
10 seconds oft that time for a seventh place finish of
16:35. which Is currently hls best time and a Seminole
sophomore record. Penick Is sixth In the county honor
roll behind seniors Ken Cheesman (Lake Howell), Doug
McBroom (Lyman). Mike Garriques (Lake Brantley},
Derek Tangeman (Lake Mary) and Junior Marty Phillips
(Oviedo).
But, while Kingsbury stayed consistent (and healthy).
Penick was hit by something that has affected many
county runners this season, the flu bug. Thus, hls times
have not been as good lalely and. Monday In the Postal
Run. he had to drop out because of the Illness. Pcnlck
hopes to be back In top shape Friday for the county
championships and he should be at 100 percent for the
big meets down the road.
" I ’d like to try and gel In the top four or five In
districts." Penick said. "I want to do my best to help the
team make reglonals (the top six teams In the district

mokercgkroala)."■,. »r . . .

H « f P h o t * b y Bonnie wkbowt

Seminole coach Ted Tombros discusses some
strategy with B illy Penick.

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LYMAN II). LAKE BRANTLEY 41
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IM 'M - Mooney. 'U . 1 14 J; SI tree
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The flu w III only hold Pcnlck back temporarily, biit the
future is bright for Penick and Kingsbury and the
Seminole and Lake Mary cross country programs should
blossom with the two talented runners leading the way.

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lOlee

Continued from 6A
"I always liked running distances (In PE classes)
because I could outrun more people that way." Penick
said. "Then, 1 heard over the school Intercom that they
needed more people for cross country. So. I went out Just
to sec what It was like and It turned out pretty decent."
Last year. Penick got a chance to run on what was one
of the best Seminole High teams ever. With senior Mike
Wooten leading Ihe way. She Tribe was unbeaten In dual

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Third geme

Singles strategy can get a lot more
complicated than the tree Items that
have Just been mentioned. But. for most
players lip In the highly a d v a n c e d pro
level, the simple rules of keeping the ball
in play, hit to your opponents weakness,
and hit to the open court are all you ever
need.

#

SCORECARD
LYMAN H. LAKE BRANTLEY 14
NO medley relay — Lyman,
M elcod Sordor, Parker. S'event.
? « 4 . we Nee - HelL ( l ) . 1 07$;
lee IM - Gage, IL). I N I . M tree Stevem. ' l l .
Ill;
Diving —
Ttchleder. 'L l. IN, IM tly - Gage,
ID . to il; IM tree - Cook. ID .
I 001; we tree — Vanhlttenhoven.
(L). * U J. IM beck - S'event. 'LI,
i io I t IM breatl -- Hell 'L l. l l u
444 free reley — Lymen. Hell. Gage.
Cook. Vkntilttenboven. 4 13 1.

Unfortunately, a lot of us will look up
to see where our opponent Is going and
not look and the boil. Gt wc will be (ou
cautious and not hit the ball firm enough
or deep enough. Junst try to concentrate
on the ball, take your time and stroke
the ball to the nice big green opening.

Penick

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
Dave Johnson, who has
known only success as a minor league manager. Is being
counted on to continue bis winning ways with the New
York Mels
The Mets have called a noon EDT press conterence
today, to announce the hiring of Johnson, a former
major league second baseman, as their manager.
Hr replaces Frank Howard, who was flred on the final
day of tea son.
Johnson, who managed the Mels* Tidewater farm
team to the "Little World Scries" championship this
season, also managed Jackson to a Texas League
championship Is 1081 In his only other try as a
minor-league gcr.
Johnson was the starting second baseman for the
Baltimore Orioles when they lost to the Mets In the 10S0
World Series, and has known Mets’ general manager
Frank Cashrn since the latter was a member of the
Orloleont ofTIce.
Johnson, who set the major league record of 43 home
runs by a second baseman with Atlanta in 1973.
managed the Mets' Triple A affiliate In the International
League and Is considered adept at coaching young
plnyers.
Outfielder Darryl Strawberry, shortstop Jose Oquendo
and pitcher Walt Terrell, all of whom played well for the
Mels this year, were promoted to Ihe bfg club from
Tidewater during the season.
Johnson, 40. played 10 seasons In the majors with
Baltimore and the Atlanta Braves, played briefly In
Japan and then returned to the United States for stints
with the Philadelphia Phillies and Chicago Cubs.
He had hls record home run season with the Braves In
Johnson had a .2.61 lifetime batting average tn the
majors with 136 homers and 609 RBI. He played In four
World Scries, compiling a .192 average In 21 games, and
three All-Star Games.
He entered the Mets' system In 1981 when he led
Jackson to the Texas League championship. He spent
1982 as a roving instructor in the Mets' farm system and
then was named manager of Tidewater.
The Tides finished fourth In the International League
this year but beat Columbus and Richmond In the IL
playoffs to advance to the minor league scries.

The third rule ol singles strategy Is as
old as the game Itself. The rule Is simply,
"Hit to the open court." If your opponent
has had to run wide to his backhand side
and left the court open on his forehand
side — you "Imply watch the ball closely
and firmly Btroke the ball to the open
court.

Come in Today. . .
Ask Us For Details!
OPEN SATURDAY 8 -1 2

�I
IA — Evening Herald, Sanlcrd, FI.

Thursday, Oct, » , l » l

WORLD
IN BRIEF
P re -P e a c e Talks Begin
A m id R e n e w e d Fighting
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - The country's
warring factions sat down In peace today to
draft an agenda for talks to cement their
cease-fire, but as they met'ncw fighting flared In
the northern city of Tripoli nnd south of Beirut.
More than 50 people were reported killed In
two days or fighting In Tripoli. 42 miles north of
Beirut, where a Syrian-backed communist
militia and an anti-Syrian Sunni Moslem faction
exchanged rocket and machincgun fire, staterun Beirut radio said.
The talks arc to prepare the agenda for the
main conference off national reconciliation that
President Amin r.emnyel says will begin on Oct.
20.
The peace talks are nimed at preventing a new
civil war between majority Moslems and the
ruling minority Christians. The 1975-76 civil
war killed 40.000 people.

Reagan Claims ‘Last Word'
In Battle Over War Powers

WASHINGTON (UPI) — President sional deadline for removal o f
Reagan turned a potential constitu­ troops," Matthews said.
tional clash Into a victory for his
While portraying the agreement
foreign policy, but not without a ns "Important support" for the U.S.
final ndmonltlon that he will not presence and his own policy In
allow Congress to restrict his power Lebanon. Reagan took Issue with
as commander In chief.
the fundamental premise of the
In sealing an agreement Wed­ resolution and the specific findings
nesday that authorizes U.S. Marines of Congress.
to remain In Lebanon for 18
In a written statement. Reagan
months. Reagan made good on his Insisted his signature on the resolu­
vow to have the last word In a tion In no way should lie "vlcwrd as
running bnttle with Congress over uny acknowledgement" that his
war powers.
.
constitutional power as president
"can be Impcrmlssably Infringed"
Chris Matthews, a spokesman for
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill. by congressional action.
"I do not cede and cannot cede
D-Mass.. similarly claimed victory
any of the authority vested In me
for Congress. He said Reagan. In
under the Constitution as president
signing the measure, "acknowl­
and as commander In chief."
edged the need to seek congressio­
When Reagan agreed to the lan
nal authorization for the use of
troops In areas In which they might gouge of the compromise resolution
last month, he said he was doing so
encounter hostilities."
"It establishes for the first time despite strong reservations that he
the president agreeing to a congres­ would describe In greater detail

Ira n ia n Ships Sunk
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - The Iraqi navy
attacked and sank two Iranian naval vessels.
Including a warship, in the latest outbreak of
fighting In the three-year Persian Gulf war. the
Iraqi military command said today.
Iraqi naval units "destroyed” two Irunian
naval vessels north of the major Iranian ell
terminal of Kharg Island. 20 miles off the
southwest coast of Iran. Wednesday morning,
the Iraqi News Agency said In a dispatch from
Baghdad.

when he signed the measure.
In Ills statement Wednesday.
Reagan said the resolution reflects
bipartisanship "that has been the
traditional hallmark of American
foreign p olicy." but articulated
philosophical and legul objections to
Its Implicit restrictions on his power
to deploy troops.
The resolution grew out of con­
gressional concern over whetherthe
continued presence of the 1.200
Mnrlnes In the m u ltin ation al
|&gt;cacc-Uccplng force In Lebanon was
In compliance with the 1973 War
Powers Resolution.
One section of the law requires
troops to be withdrawn within 90
days from an area of hostilities or
Imminent hostilities In the absence
of authorization from Congress.
Despite the deaths of four Marines
in sectarian fighting. Reagan re­
jected a finding by Congress that
the timetable was triggered by the
Aug. 29 deaths of two Marines.

maker and a Protestant.
Survivors Include her
husband. J oe Bartow
Sanders; daughter.
Catherine D. Pitt. Winter
Park: two grandchildren:
two great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs.
Is In chaigc of arrange­
ments.
EARL A.CANNAM
Mr. Earl A. Cannam. 62.
of 512 Bristol Drive, Alta­
m o n t e S p r in g s , d ied
Tursday at Orlundo Re­
gional Medical Center.
Bom Feb. 25. 192), In
Pittsburgh, he moved to
Altamonte Springs from
Atlanta In 1980. He was
an engineer and a Baptist.
He was a member of the
Ame r i c an So ci e t y of
Heating and Refrigeration
Engineers and Florida,
G e o rg ia and nat l oanl
engineering societies.
Survlvore Include his
wife. Dolores: son. Richard
T.. Altamonte Springs;
daughter. Cyntht?. L.. Or­
l ando : t wo b ro th e r s .
Donald. Cocoa. Wayne.
San Gabriel. Calif.: a sis­
ter. A l b e r t a W h i t e .
Massachusetts.
Semornn BaldwinFairchild Funeral Home.
Altamonte Springs. Is In
charge of arrangements.
MONTEREY A. TINSLEY
Monterey A. Tinsley. 71.
of 499 Clemson Drive.
Altumontc Springs, died
Tuesday at Americana
Nursing Home. W inter
Park. Bom July 11. 1912.
In Knoxville, Tcnn.. he
m o v e d to A l t a m o n t e
Springs from there In
1960. Hr wus a retired
engineer and was a Bap­
tist. He was a veteran of
W o r l d W A r II and a
member of Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 405.
Survivor* Include his
wife. Hazel; two sons.
Stephen and Mltchdl. both
of Altamonte Springs; two
daughters. Mrs. Monica
Sullivan. Fern Park. Mrs.
Mar l e ne Gal l Ko uwe .
Altamonte Springs;
brother. Miller, San Diego;
three grandsons.

National School Lunch Week, which continues
through Friday, may be the last opportunity for Sanford
residents to eat lunch at Sanford Grammnr School,
which originated the hot lunch program In Seminole
County.
The lunch program began In 1921 with a $1,500
donation from the Sanford Woman's Club for construc­
tion of a lunchroom and equipment to prepare food nt
the school.
Sanford Grammar. Hopper and Southsldc Elemcntnry
School are scheduled to be closed this year, to be
replaced by Hamilton Elementary School next year.

TO-OWN
TELEVISIONS

Carey Hand Chapel. Or­
lando, Is In charge of
arrangements.
EARL HOWARD
Mr. Earl Howard. 83. of
Nahunta. Ga.. died Wed­
nesday morning In the
Jesup Manor N ursing
Home. Nahunta. A native
of Charlton County. Ga..
he was a former resident of
the Sanford urea and had
liv ed In New Sm yrna
Beach before returning to
Nahunta six years ago. He
was a relied Installation
superintendent for the
Johns-Manvllle Co. He was
a m e m b e r of the
Philadelphia Methodist
Church. Folkston. Go.
Survivors Include two
sisters, Mrs. Lucille Johns
and Mrs. Mac Davidson,
both of Nahunta; a
brother. Lawrence. Ala­
baster. Ala.
Clough-Pcarson Funeral
Home. Blacksheare. Ga.. Is
In charge of arrangements.

h i .I u will bf « l 4 p m Frktay at
Otklfwn Mamorlal Park. Sanford
Clough Paarton Funaral Homo.
Blackthaara. Ga . Inctiarga
BLAKE. MS. CECILIA L.
-Funaral n rvlctt for M» Catalla
Lounatla Blakt. It. of 141} E.
Htnfro St . Plant City. wti&gt; di*d
Tuatday. will ba hold at noon
S a t u r d a y a t N ow B a th a l
Mlulenary Baptist Church. 41} E
IOth St.. Sanford, with tha Rav.
Robert Doctor, pattor. officiating
Burial to tallow In Rattlawn Coma
l»ry Calling hour* wilt ba noon to *
p m. F rid ay at tha chapal
Wilton Elchalbargtr Mortuary In
charga

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SANFORD

S e m in o le C o u n ty F o o tb a ll
W a tc h t o r i t in t h e H e r a ld

CECELIA L. BLAKE
Ms. Ccccllu Lounettn
Blake. 19. o f 1412 E.
Renfro St.. Apt. A. Plant
City, died Tuesday at
Tallahassee Regional Me­
m orial H ospital. Born
June 2. 1964. In Sanford,
she moved to Plant City In
1967 . She was a sopho­
more at Florida A&amp;M Uni­
versity and a member of
the House of Prayer Holi­
ness Church.
Survivors Include u son.
Raymond; father. Elder
Isra el Blake; mother.
Barbara J. Blake, both of
Plant City; sister, Anita
Blake. Ta lla ha ss ee ;
brother. Israel Denard
Blake, Plant City;
grandmother. Margaret
Blake. Sanford; devoted
friend. Raymond Bordlay.
Tallahassee.
Wl l s o n - E l c h e l b e r g e r
Mortuary. Sanford. Is In
charge of aiTangcmcnt*.

Follow Your Favorite
Team This Season

F u n e ra l N o tic e i
HOWARD. MR. EARL
—Funaral tarvictt lor Mr. Earl
Howard. U. ol Nahunta. Ga . who
dlad Wadnttday. will ba at IS a m.
Friday In tha chapal of CloughPaarton Funaral Momt. Committal

FO O T B A LL SP EC IA L
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY____

TELE

P le a s e s ta rt m y su b s c rip tio n
on

Football Specia! 3 Months *10°°
**

SANTIAGO. Chile (UPI| - Authorities prepared
today for continued protests demanding a return to
democracy, with nearly 200 people arrested and
about two dozen injured In the largest anti­
government dcmonstiatlon In a decade.
Interior Minister Sergio Onofrc Jarpa said Wed­
nesday that 10 people were injured in protests In
Santiago Tursday. where some 60.000 Chileans
marched and demanded an end to the military
government of President Augusto Pinochet.
At least another dozen people. Including six police
officers, were wounded In matches nnd protests In
seven other Chilean cities, police said. Almost 200
people were arrested throughout the country, they
said,
Those wounded In Santiago Included a 14-year old
girl and a 23-ycar-old woman shot by unidentified
gunmen who opened fire on protesters In a
shanty-town neighborhood. The wopiun Is in critical
condition.
.
Witnesses told reporter* that "police ana civil­
Ians" took part In the shooting.
Tuesday s rally In Santiago was the largest
demonstration against the regime since Pinochet
seized power in a Woody. CIA-backcu coup on Sept.
11. 1973. and overthrew the elected government of
Socialist Salvador Allende.

Want To Try School Food?

AREA DEATHS
LT.CO L.W . KENNETH
MILLER
Lt. Col. W. Kenneth
Miller, 74. of 495 Diane
Circle. Casselberry, died
Tuesday In Winter Park.
Bom April 16. 1909. tn
W llk ln s b u r g . P a., he
moved to Casselberry from
Washington. D.C. a week
ago. He was retired from
the U.S. Army and was an
E p isco p a lia n . He had
served as an Orlando city
c o m m is s io n e r tn the
1930s and was a member
of the American Institute
o f A r c h i t e c t u r e and
Florida Blue Key Club. He
was a World War II veter­
an.
S u rv iv o rs In clude a
daughter. Mrs. Vandiver
M. Vlllantts. Casselberry:
s o n . Dr. K e n n e t h
Radebaugh. Altam onte
Springs; two brothers. Roy
A. and Francis, both of
Orlando: two sisters, Mary
Spitz. Tallahassee, and
Ruth W lg g ln g t o n .
L o u is v ille . K y .; fou r
grandchildren.
C o x -P a rk e r F u n era l
Home. Winter Park. Is In
charge of arrangements.
CAROLJOY ROSS
Miss Carol Joy Ross. 47.
o f 1517 S parrow St..
Lcngwod. died Tuesday at
her home. Bom Feb. 15.
1936, In Brookline. Mass.,
she moved to Lor.gwood
from Miami In 1978. She
was a writer and a Chris­
tian Scientist. She was a
m em ber o f Women In
Communications and the
Audubon Society.
Survivors Include her fa­
th e r . H. J o h n R o s s .
Longwood; sister. Celia
Joy. Longwood.
Baldwln-Falrchlld
Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. Is In churge of
arrangements.
'
ORACE MARIE
SANDERS
Mrs. Grace Marie Sand­
er*. 71. of 619 Powell
Drive. Altamonte Springs,
died Wednesday at her
home. Born A p ril 28.
1912. In Savannah. Ga..
she moved to Altamonte
Springs from Biloxi. Miss.
In 1960. She was u home­

T h o u sa n d s P ro test
M ilit a r y R u le

MAIL COUPON k CHECK TO:
EVENING HERALD
P.0. BOX 1657
SANFORD, F U . 32771

There's a light week of activity on the prep football scene this
weekend as Seminole and Lym an take the Friday off before
meeting a week later. The big game this Friday is at Lake M a ry
where the Rams entertain Lake Howell. The Silver Hawks, 3-2,
are coming from a 23 0 licking adm inistered by the Lake
Brantley Patriots. The Rams, 2-2, polished oft Bishop Moore,
29-3, last week and are look'ng forw ard to their first varsRy
meeting with county riv a l Lake Howell. In the other gam e
Friday, the Oviedo Lions, 14, w ill have their paws full with 3A
powerhouse Orlando Jones. The gam e w ill be in Orlando. Lake
Brantley, 3 1, has a Saturday gam e at 2 p.m . In Daytona Beach
against M ainland. The Patriots are looking to rem ain In the Five
Star Conference race and need a victory over the Buccaneers to
do it. Catch sports w riter Lee Lerner's report ol the Oviedo Jones
gam e and sports editor S&amp;nt Cook's review of the Lake
Hcw eii-Lake M a ry game In Sunday's Evenlng Herald.

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E v e n in g H e ra ld
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

�PEOPLE
Part-Time Warrior Tears
At Decent Woman's Heart

Briefly
V o lu n te e rs N e e d e d For
F in g erp rin tin g P roject
Th e S em inole County Schools will offer
fingerprinting of elementary school students start­
ing the week of Nov. 1 for one day only at each
school.
: Under the supervision of the Dividends School
Volunteer Program, the Print 'Em Up Program Is a
project of the Nntonal Council of Jewish Women.
The Seminole County Sheriff's Department will
train volunteers to provide accurate fingerprints
that can be used for Identification purposes In case a
child Is missing or kidnapped.
A child will be fingerprinted only with parental
permission. The original fingerprint card will be sent
home with the child and no copies will be made.
A training session for all volunteers who would
like to help with the fingerprinting will be held at
the Altamonte Civic Center (EastmonteJ on Tues­
day. Oct. 25 at 9 a.m. Call the Dividends Office
(834-8211) If you would like to help with tills
project.

A B W A S eafo o d Festival
The Orange Heritage Chapter of the "American
Business Women Association" Is holding Its Annual
Seafood Festival. Saturday. Oct. 15. at the Ben
White Raceway. Orlando. All you can eat Seafood —
S 10.00 per person.
The proceeds will be used to provide scholarships
to help further educate working women.

V FW Bingo Bonanza
The Winter Springs VFW Auxiliary 5405 will hold
a Bingo Bonanza on Sunday. Oct. 16. at the (lost
home. 420 N. Edgemon.
Breakfast will be served until 12.30 p.m.. and a
spaghetti dinner will lie served, starting at 4 p.m.
Other fo*id will also be available during the day.
Bingo earlybird games begin at 1 p.m. Jackpots
will be featured and door prizes donated by area
businesses will be awarded.
Proceeds will benefit the Florida Sheriffs 1 outh
Rauches and the deaf according to Beverly Werner.

C low n W orkshop Set
Versatile Jugglers and clowns. Lenny and
La Banana from Atlanta. Ga.. will hold a C ^ 'i S h o p
Workshop on Saturday and Sunday. Oct. 22-2J at
The Maitland Art Center.
The workshop Is geared for children and the child
in everyone, and will Include the history of
clowning, fundamentals of tumbling, make up.
mime and Juggling.
, r *uA.aiRl
For Information, call the center. 645-2181.

C ollege P rep C ourse
A look at the effect of high technology on women
in the Job market ts among highlights of "Women at
Work Today and Tomorrow." a day long workshop
to lie held Oet. 22 nt the Orlando Expo Centre.
The program, sponsored by the Central Florida
Educational Consortium for Women, will explore Job
prospects for women in such areas as llnnncc.
tourism, travel, construction and health.
The Saturday workshop will highlight a longrange view of world and national trends that afTcct
the Job market. "W e will also look at specific trends
taking place here In Florida In such areas as tourism
and light Industry." said Dr. Tina Beer of Rollins
College, chairperson for the program.
The fee for the workshop Is $15 and Includes
lunch. Pre-registration ends on Oct. 14. For more
Information call Dr. Tina Beer at 646-2232.

consulted for all medical problems? How about a lamlly
physician? Thev arc still hanging In there, and yes.
making house calls, too. However, they arc seeing fewer
patients because It has become a status symlxil to see a
specialist." Abby. please don't perpetuate the myth that
a family physician Is less Ilian adequate to answer
questions about Johnny's Doostcr shots or Mrs. Smith •*
probable pregnancy.
A simple "See your physician ' Is honest, nnd fair to

DEAR ABBY: Very re­
cently som ething hap­
pened to me thnt seems to
be u very common occur­
rence.
E very sum m er, men

weeks of tesen-e training at military Installations In
various stales.
. . , ..
Recently I dated an Army reserve officer during his
stay here. He told me all about hlmsejf and said he was
dlvorcd. I Introduced him to all my friends.
Two days before he was to return home, he
disappeared, leaving no telephone number and no
forwarding address. I tried to find him in the city where
he said he lived, but couldn't.
•
Being a 38-year-old college graduate, a Linda Evans
look-alike and a decent, trusting person didn't stop me
from playing the fool I should have known better, but I
didn't. Abby. If men would level with gills at least before
they leave, we wouldn’t be left with our lives so tom
apart nnd feeling like Idiots.
*
BROKENHEARTED
DOWN SOUTH
DEAR BROKENHEARTED: So what else Is new?
There will always be men (nnd women) who make
pructlcc of doing romantic hlt-und-run numbers
whenever possible. Women should not rush Into
M r. and M rs. Robert David Robinson
relationships that become so heavy that at the end of a
two 'Week romance they are left "torn apart and feeling
like idiots."
DEAR ABBY: When n couple Is Invited to dinner, as
my husband und I were, and If the host is not well-off
but Insists on paying, what should one do when the
menu features steak (which you detest) nl $8.95 and
seafood (which you love) at $10 95?
I want to do what Is correct, but If I offer to pay the
difference, do you think It would offend the host?
lie Is a dear, sensitive fellow and I wouldn't hurt
for anything.
TRYING FOR
GOOD MANNERS
DEAR TRYING: Don't offer to pay the $2 difference. If
you "detest steak." order something else, but don't go
beyond what you perceive to be your host s budget, no
Becky Lynn Stenstrom and Robert David Robinson mntter how much you “ love" something.
DEAR ABBY: Whenever someone writes
were married Sept. 17 at the First Baptist Church.
a
medical problem, you always say.
Sanford. The Rev. Paid Murphy performed the 4 p.m..
pediatrician" or "See your allergist." etc. All specialists!
double ring ceremony.
•
Why give the Impression that a specialist must be
The bride Is the daughter of Mrs. Patricia J.
Stenstrom. Longwood. and Frunk C. Stenstrom. Lake
Mary. The bridegroom Is the son of Mrs. Johnnie Mac
Robinson. Lake Mary, and the late Wilson Robinson.
SEMINOLE TRINITY
TAKE A FLO R ID A
Given In marriage by her father, the bride chose for
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
her vows a white chifTon gown fashioned along the
&gt;1 Gnat Ftaca
Queen Anna silhou ette, em b ellish ed with re ­
Ta Start
embroidered Alcncon lac motifs and seed pearls. Her
.
B R E A M
'
|ace-trtn»mcd tiered veil of Importedillusion was secured
332-3942____
TBnliafoof flowers.' '
“
Julie Anne Stenstrom uttended her sister as maid1ot
honor. She wore an apricot colored gown and carried a
bouquet of apricot roses, carnations and baby's breath.
Glenn Allen Robinson served the bridegroom as best
man. Ushers were Tom Hollingsworth and Donnie
Williams.
.
r
The flower girl was Amber Robinson, niece of the
bridegroom. Ryan Stenstrom. nephew of the bride, was
the ring bearer.
Following the reception at Quality Inn. Longwood. the
newlyweds departed on a wedding trip to Daytona
Beach.
’
„
_ .
Th*-y are making their home at Carriage Love,
Sanford. The bride Is employed by Ellis Bank.
Altamonte Springs, and the bridegroom is employed by
Orlando Blade Tech.. Sanford Airport.

Sten stro m R obin son
W edding

onucuui

0l1'

M R 8 .8 .L .

DEAR MR9. S.L.: It was not njy Intention to
discriminate against the family physician, but when
someone has n mysterious rash. It would seem only
reasonable lo recommend n dermatologist. But thanks
for advising me that some doctors still make house calls.
11 nought thev were among the "endangered species.

G o t h W o r ld
F A L L F A B R IC
F E S T IV A L 3
W eekend

T-S H O T
P O P LIN
C U TTIN G BOARDS
THREAD

CLOTH WORLD
Sanlord Plata

Mon 12 ! n !

S la t* St.
3*1-7061

mo

Sun 1230-5 30

F R E E g ift w it h
a n y $5 0 0 o r m o r e
d ia m o n d p u r c h a s e

James E. Quinn, M.D.
ih pleuticd

(u announce the
opening of his office for

a t Z a le s !

FAM ILY PRACTICE
2209 French Avenue
Sunford
B y

a p p o in tm e n t:

321 *4230

Fall Festival Of Values
3 D a y s O n ly
Thursday. Friday &amp; Saturday

SAVE 20%-30%
On Many Of
Fall’s Newest
Styles From...

"pe-iitt Ljo

J'lmcs Kenrob. Tailored
In m ind.
Solid color long sleeve button
front cardigan sweater with
pockets and braid trim .
Solid color satin stripe
sleeve button front
bow blouse.
Solid color knit pull-on
sweater skirt with shir­
ring and separate
elastic waistband.

c o n n ie

Dexter

Everything you need to keep
your jewelry looking as new
as the day you bought it.
The kit includes: Zales elec­
trosonic jewelry cleaner,
6 oz. jewelry cleaner, 6 oz.
pearl cleaner, a
pol­
ishing cloth, a jew eler*
m agnifying glass and our
fine jewelry care booklet.
You can also purchase the
kit any tim e for only $29.95.
So come to Zales for yours
today!

Sanford
Plaza

ZALES

N A T U R A L IZ E R
And Muny Others

The Diamond Store
is all you need to know.”

yftjO M j-fcA ihsJti
■ W
yv

S H O E

S T O R E

210 E. First 8t.
Sanford

322-0204

I . o I uhmij f ulittont lu ll f u r N uu

(N M alltM IM rlM - MOM Mi IMI

•*NfO*o ruoaio*

MAJOR CREDIT CARD* ACCEPTED; fa lu

• M uUiO rS • VISA •Awwrfcss Cirivm • Cart.

BUwh. • D*w«r» C

M

�J B — Evening H e ra ld . Sanford. F I.

T hu rsday VQ&lt;‘,* &gt;1. 1**1

A N N IV E R S A R Y S A L E
FREE CAKE Served Saturday at 1 PM In Front Of Publix. Balloons For The Kiddies

TODAY THROUGH SATURDAY

" W h e re g o o d th in g s H a p p e n .”
M o n d a y - S a tu r d a y K) - 9 , S u n d a y s fr o m 12:30 - 5 :3 0
More Than Just A nother Pretty
Face, I t ’s Dakin's Garfield,
Pcokie and Odie...s5.50 AnduP

K IL L Y L IN h D

CORDUROY or
VELVETEEN

BLAZERS
0* 16. TO 'tO

ENTIRE STOCK

SMART SHOPPERS
LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
DIAMOND PENDANT
l AND EARRINGS
■

in 14KI. Gold

JsSRT YOUR
8p r CHOICE

SWEATERS
•10 Will UT-A-WAT ANY TWO
SWT»HRj Qf YCKj R CHOTCtf ^

Best Value
For Your
Dining Dollar

ENDtt STOCK

ur to 5 0 %
COATS AND JACKETS
ODYSSEY

DRESS PANTS 30%« f

YOUR PERSONAL CHARGE ACCOUNT INVITED

REGULAR PRICE

JEANS

30% OFF

Elaine's

JEWELERS
( hargr

Sanford Plaza
Sanford, Florida

LUNCH
SPECIALS

QARFiELD C haracters:
c 1978 U n ite d Feature Syndicate. Inc.

TAKE
OUTS

Hallmark Shop

1160 Sanford Plaza

323-7254

322-6982

B ro w sin g H o u rs 10 III 9
Sunday
‘III 5:30

•All tXAMOWC*t wxts ArnoIWAT!
*11ulfMINKS IIIAftGIO »0SKW*MTA»i

S a n fo r d P la z a

where shopping is o pleasure
■

IPs our
birthday, too!

■

H

7 days a week

TH U R S D A Y , FR ID AY t S A TU R D A Y

STORE-WIDE

Come help
Celebrate . . .
Bargains galore!

SPECIAL VALUE
REGULARLY PRICED SHOES ONLY

Publix
Orai&gt;««, Lake, te m ln a U ,
A O ic.o la Count!.. Only!

Skirts
Blouses
Selected Jeans
Cosmetics —
Selected Items
% PRICE

HOUDAY INCLUDES:

PLUS TAX A DSPOSIT,
DIET RITE, R IO . OR
SUGAR PRIK R C 100, OR RIG.

MEN'S SALE SHOES
*29.99 &amp; 20% OFF

IN 12-OX. CANS

!

LADIES' SALE SHOES
AS LOW AS
*13.99 &amp; *9.99

Iw a lv a - p a c k

The Place for tlie Oistom Face'

ORANGE, LAKE, SEMINOLE
OR OSCEOLA CO. ONLYI

323-2631

• Round Trip Air From Orlando
• 7 Nights Accommodations
• Fresh Flower Lei Greeting
• Round Trip Transfers
• Pleasant Continental Breakfast
• Full Color Memory Album
• Tourist Class Hotel
• Single Supplement Available At *60 Additional

PETSOS TRAVEL
SANFORD P LA Z A

323-2280

W H IL E T H E Y L A S T

T V e u tt ty d

SANFORD PLAZA
PLAZA SQUARE

y O f Sunford
s a ry S p ecia ls
VAN HEUSEN
FLANNEL SHIRTS

SCLECTEO SHORT
SLEEVE PRINTED
NYLON. KNIT &amp; TERRY

REG. S1S.00

PULL OVERS

SALE

PET AN IM AL SU P P LY
323-4635
DOG &amp; CAT

FLEA COLLARS

0 *5 %

&amp; FLEA P R O D U C TS

dm W

off

ALL HABITRAIL
PRODUCTS

ALL

BIRD CAGES

0*5%
W

ALL LEATHER &amp;
SUEDE JACKETS
&amp; SPORT COATS
*30 O FF Reg. Price
And '3 0 Lays
Away For
Christmas

A o m uj

FOTOM AT

*25 D E S IG N E R ^
CORDUROY
JEANS
&amp; PLEATEDSLACKS0

LARGE
SELECTION OF

C U S TO M

ALL \|

CASUAL
BELTS

YOUR s

Developing

FAVORITE

COLORS

40%.»

35m m , 110, 120
a n d D is c .

LAST OF SWIMWEAR &amp;
SHORTS. VALUES TO *2 4 .0 0

( l o u p o n ( i o i t i l f o r 8 2 .0 0 o f f o u r o r d e r o f
i ' iim I o m i

a e r ie * d e v e lo p in g .

off

FAMOUS BRANDS FOR LESS
O f Sanford

per ANIMAL SUPPLY

Sunford Plu/u

Sanford Phza

3 2 2 -9 0 9 1

OPEN 7 OAYI

(fa

$13”

REDUCED PRICES WITH THIS AD
T h u rs ., F rl. I S at. O n ly

7a

kUfi. • S et 10-9
Sm. 12 : 30- 5:30

HOURS:
M on-Sal. 9:30-9
Sun. 12:30-5:30

Uk &gt; Y o ui
M o tte ic a rd
« V ita

P LA Z A SQUARE
SANFORD PLAZA

C O U P O N N O T Y A IJ 1 ) W IT H A N Y O i l I K it O F F K H
I'r r .r n l r»ti|Kin when p i i li i i * ijji )n u r &lt;lr.rli»|»inf| tm lrr.

Good Only Al Participating

FO TO M A TS

�T h u rsd ay, O ct. 13. 1 W 3 -3 B

Evening H e ra ld . Sanford, F I

Indispensible wardrobe mixers
Sale 10.99 and 19.99

Men’s Plain Pockets* jeans
Sale 11.99

Sale 10.99 Reg $14 Button-down and round-collar shirts to tuck
in under sweaters or pop on over pants and skirts. Stripes, plaids
and solids. In cotton/polyester. Misses' and juniors' sizes.
Sale 19.99 Reg. $30. Chic* jeans of pro-washed cotton denim are
perfect with the shirts. Have the 5-pocket western look you love,
plus the great straight-leg lit you deserve! Juniors' sizes in
petite, average and tall.

Reg. $15. The man in the Plain Pockets* jeans He knows a good
buy whoii he sees one! Picks Plain Pockotsf With quality and good
looks And nothing on the back pockets. Western over-the-boot
styling in cotton/polyester Denim Extra* (or extra wear or
traditional 100% cotton denim.
Sale prices eltectlve through Saturday 10M5.

Sesame Street play wear.
Sale 3.75 to 11.02
Sesame Street playwear tor tots, exclusively at JCPenney. Funloving match-ups in comfortable easy care fabrics. All sporting
their favorite Sesame Street palsl These styles, and more, 25% off.
Sale 10.12 Fleg. 13.50. Screen print turtleneck top.
Sals 11.02 Reg. 13.60. Girls' elastic-cuff cord pants
Sale $6 Reg. $8 Boys' collar and placket top
Sale $9 Reg. $12. Boys' corduroy pants.

3 5 % o ff Jew el-Tex

5 0 % o ff
AinSIWSi’ O uterw ear
Poplin/C orduroy Jacket
Preschool.
^
■
Reg. $25
O d l&lt;
Poplin Sherpa Jacket
School Age
Reg. $33

Morning Glory Sheets

Morning Glory Bedspreads

F lo ra l D e s ig n .

F lo ra l D e s ig n .
T w in
O rig .
F u ll
O rig .
Q ueen
O rig .
K in g
O rig .

Standard Cases
Twin Sheets
Full Sheets
Queen Sheets

^
o 3 l&lt;

King Sheets

Sa
Sa
Sa
Sa
Sa

Orig. 8.99
Orig. 8.99
Orig. 10.99
Orig. 16.99
Orig. 19.99

MO

*50
*60
*70

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

1909
24"
29"
34"

s30 off Food Processor
All Girls’ Sweaters
C re w n e c k .
P re s c h o o l
Reg. *8 Sale 6°°
S chool Age
R eg. *9 Sale 675
O th e rs A is o O n S a le A t 2 0 % O ff

Columbia III Towels
B a th
H an d
W a sh

O rig . ‘ 8
O rig . *6
O rig . *3

S
S
£

• C h o p p in g - M ix in g B la d e s
• S h re d d in g * F re n c h F ry S lic in g
D isc • C o o k b o o k
_ _

Reg. 79” Sale 499

B ia d e h o ld e r

R eq. 9 "

Here's a small sample of what you'll find in
store. Every one, 25% oftl
Ssle $45 Reg $60 Zlp-sioeve ski jacket
doubles as a vest. Corduroy trimmed poplin
Nylon survival parka, Reg. $60 Sale $45
Sale price* (ItecUve through Saturday.

M e n ’s, W o m e n ’s, B o y s ’.
N y lo n /S u e d e J o g g e rs .
Reg. *18

,j

a q

Sale 1 O
O th e r S ty le s A ls o O n S ale

Sale Ends
Sat., Oct. 15th

35% off Steel Mini Blinds
27x64

R e g . ‘ 25

31x64

Reg.

‘ 30

36x64

R eg.

‘ 33

Sale 15”
Sale 1950
Sale 211,5

Save $4

USA O lym p ics
A ll m e n ’s o u te rw e a r.

Sale 5!

Drapes .Textured Dobby
W eave
50x63
Reg. '2 8 Sale t
50x84
R eg. '2 9 Sale 1
75x63
R eg. ‘ 47 Sale 3l
75x84
R eg. *57 Sale 3'
100x84
R eg. *75 Sale 4I

L a c y -lo o k sw e a te rin g
{

Rag. $11. Add an elegant touch with a
pomtelie stitch acrylic knit pullover So
versatile with a v-nock you can scart or not.
The colors are great, too. Misses' sizes S.M.L
Cardigan style. Reg. $18 Sale 13.99
Sale price* •tractive through Saturday.

Cotton flannel sleepwear.
Sale 8.99

each
Orig. $13. All your favorites are right here Pajamas, steepshirt or
long gown ir, cozy cotton llannet. All designed to keep you
toasty warm during the wintry nights ahead. In assorted colors
and prints lor sizes S.M.L

Open
Sunday
12 to 6 p.m.
Mon. Thru Sat.
9:30 To 9 p.m.

�&lt;&gt;— Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

BLONDIE
HEX I ORDERED P lO $
k n u c k l e s in s w e e t

SAUCE !

____ _

INSTEAD VOU GAVE
ME A PEANUT B U T T E R
AND J E L L Y
SANDWICHJftjj

Thurtdav, Oct. 13, |f U

by Chic Young
A0IO

WHAT DO Y O l)
c all

th at

FAVOR

?

by M ort W alker

RFFTI F RAI LFY

I HAVE
A TEN N IS
L E 5S O N
ON M Y
lu m ch

W HA T S E T S M E
IS, S H E PAYS
V
H IM
.

^

HO U R

/

Antwer to Preview* Puiila
43 Biblical
charactar
■ ^ U G C J U ia a C J E lK IE ]
1 Neuter
45 River in
n n n n n ra I □ c in n n n
5 Ensign (abbr)
Alaika '
n n ir a n n ln n n n n n
8 W W I plana 48 Kinky
□n oon
u ra tn B H M
12 Movie
52 American
n n n n c r a n n n io u
13 Fastidious
patriot
*■ *■ □ □ □ □ annnm
man
53 Compau
h u h
n c ir a n u n n n
14 Mention
r-iriw n n n n p n n n
point
15 Farm agency 54 Olaaginoua
F in n a n a n n c M M
(abbr.)
nan
ouuu
55 Chromoaoma n n n n
10 Cook bacon 50 Voodoo cult w n a n o
□ □ □ □ □
H U L in n n ■ □ n n n n n
17 Image
57 Collage
c in n n n n | n n n n n n
to Solarium
athletic group n u m n n n l n n n n n n i
20 Resources
58 Raqueiti
21 Over (prefit)
59
Pounde |ebbr | 1 1 Cub lcout
22 Booster
60 Diipatch
groups
23 Conclusion
20 Flight of steps
DOW N
20 Scratch
31 Vegetable
22 In good
ferment
t Go swiftly
condition
33 Green
2 City in Italia 23 Looks at
mountain
3 Singor
24 Bottls part
stats (abbr)
Williams
25 Chsllanga
34 Needle case
35 Natural color 4 365 days (pi) 27 With (Fr |
5 Work
28 Word with
36 Pronoun
6 Standard
"boyl"
37 Compound
7 Secret agent 29 Tallow
38 Doubtful
B Studies
30 Emerald Isl
41 Put away
9 Type site
32 Reckons
a meal
42 Oance step
ACROSS

1

2

3

4

12
15
18

by A rt Sansom

T H E BORN LOSER
WOULD
BELIEVE
THAT I AW 141

ITCLLMOU,
MY MAMS .

STT YEAR?apz

ELIXIR
1
&gt; W IL I &lt;

.I'VE ONLY WORKED
he r e a l ly ,

s is ?

z I
-

- FOR HIM FOR 83j

i

DOUBLE

YOUR LIFE
EXFKTAMLY
45

HJ&amp;C.

46

47

49

SO

51

54

52
55

56

57

59

59

60

A R C H IE
I HEAR THERE'S A NEW
DISTRICT P3UCV.r STUDENTS
WHO WISH TO FWTTICIRATE
IN SPORTS MUST MAINTAIN
A - C "A V E R A G E ' .------ -

I WONDER HOW
THE POLICY IS
WORKING OUT,
MR. LO DG E'

GUYS, WE'RE CANCELLING TOCWYS DEFENSIVE
T O IL.' INSTEAD, WE'LL TAKE UP IRREGULAR
------------ &gt; FRENCH VERBS AND QUADRATIC
D k
V
EQUATIONS.'
— .. _

by Howie Schneider

EEK &amp; M E E K

B O Y L Y tS TC R D A V WAS
ANOTHER REALLY DULL CAY

I MEAfU, ALL I &amp;JBR
K/AWTED WAS OOST A
MCE QUIET LIFE....

BUT THESE BSTRAOWUS
ARE MURDER

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

M R . M E N A N D L IT T L E MISS
M O N S IE U R L E C H E F
W IL L N O W S A M P L E
H IS S O U P S O U JO U R

by Stoffel &amp; Heimdah!

BUGS B U N N Y

ITS SO NICE HAVING
AN INDOOR POOL-

__ L

HOROSCOPE
YOUR BIRTHDAY
many Irons In the fire
OCTOBER 14, 1983
today none limy turn out
This coming year will be ns you anticipate. Be
a very busy one for you. purposeful in selecting
with numerous Involve­ targets.
ments with lots of different
PISCES (Frb. 20-March
people. H ow ever, you 20) Your chances for suc­
must be careful not to let cess are good today, pro­
your activities overlap.
vided you're prepared to
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. put forth the effort re­
23) Rather than stepping quired If you fall Initially,
tn and assuming control of regroup and start again.
matters today, keep a low
ARIES (March 21-April
profile. This ts one of those 19) If you have u dis­
tim es wher e p lea sin g agreement with a friend
others might be impossi­
ble. Order now: The NEW
Matchmaker wheel and
booklet whi ch reveals
romantic compatibilities
for all signs, tells how to
get along with others,
finds rising signs, hidden today
qualities, plus more. Send
$2 to Astro-Graph. Box
489. Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
give your zodiac sign. Mall
an additional SI for your
Libra Astro-Graph predic­
tions for the year ahead.
SCORPIO'(Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Seek your companions
wisely today. If they make
any mistakes, you may
have to share In the cost as
well as the blame.
S AGI TTARI US (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Be optimistic
regarding your Involve­
ments today. By the same
token, don't lose touch
wllh reality. Plans founded
upon false hopes will
fizzle.
C A P R I C O R N ( De c .
22-Jan. 19) Cost control
and abiding by a budget is
essential today tf you hope
to come out on the profit
stdc of the ledger. Care­
lessness leads to fosses.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 19) You're u capable
person, but if you have too

'Strange Periods'i
Is It Menopause?
M.D. DEAR DR. LAMH Do you have any pam­
phlets available on meno­
pause? All I’ve ever seen
mentioned are symptoms
o f headaches and hot
flashes.
Two or three years ago !
started having strange
periods. I had a fair flow
during periods, then drib­
bles In between, then later
a heavy flow.
I had a dilatation and
curettage ("D &amp; C ") two
years ago. At first It didn't
seem to help, then It did.
Recently 1 stopped periods
for three months, then had
a normal flow. The next
month I had one that
lasted 10 days, then I
started bleeding more,
quite heavily,
1 did start an exercise
program that Included
weight lifting, which could
possibly be a contributing
factor.
How much of this can be
expected as just part of
menopause?
I hate lo go to the doctor
again, because I don't like
the Idea of a hysterectomy
and I would like to get
through this on my own.
However. I will go If the
bleedin g doesn't stop.
DEAR READER - You
can expect some changes
tn m e n s t r u a l c y c l e s
around the menopause
phase of life. More com­
monly there ts a decrease
in f l o w a n d m i s s e d
periods.
I do not think that you
should try to go through
this on your own. While
horm one disturbances
around
menopause can
cause changes, there are
too many other Important
things that can cause the
heavy bleeding you de­
sert Ire.
You certainly don't want
to h a v e e n d o m e t r i a l
cancer and Ignore It until
you can't be cured. While
there are about 39.000
new cases of endometrial
cancer each year, there are
only 3.000 deaths. That is
because of early detection
which leads to curing most
cases. Or you could have
fibroids or some disorder

by Bob Thaves

♦ VIJ

V10
♦ A KQS 1
4 A9 5 4 3
Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: South
West

N orth

East

Opening lead: VK

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jamea Jacoby
The rubber bridge rule
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. o f J u m p i n g to g a m e
22) Unless you plan your whenever you like your
moves carefully today, hand wus followed by
there's a chance you'll North when he jumped to
have little to show for your five diamonds.
South looked at his Q-J
charts. Try to abide by u
of spades, singleton heart
productive schedule.

\$ A L IT T L E PRIVACY
T O O M U C H To

IT'S MV DINNERTIME,ARLENE.
BUT PONT PESRAIR, I'LL BE
—
n RIGHT BACK
THE MOMENTS
WILL SEEM UKE YEARS ) 0
TILL YOU RETURN

DEAR READER These are the while blood
cells and include lym ­
phocytes and leukocytes,
with a very small amount
of other specialized white
blood cells.
Their main function Is to
combat infection. And the
lymphocytes are Involved
In Immunity. When a
person has an attack of
acute appendicitis, his
"white count" goes up.
This Is one oi the Impor­
tant tests In deciding If a
pain In the right side Is
from appendicitis or some
other condition.
Almost all bacterial In­
fections can cause a signif­
icant Increase in the while
blood ceil count. Viral In­
fections may not. So If you
have a cold your white
count may be normal.
A really large Increase of
white cells that Is persis­
tent can be associated
with certain form s uf
leukemia. And a marked
deficiency of while blood
cells may result In being
very susceptible to Infec­
tions.
Send your questions lo
Dr. Lamb. P.O. Box 1551.
Radio City Station. New
York, N.Y. 10019.

and strong diamond suit
and bid the slam.
Hearts were opened and
continued. South ruffed
and laid down his ace of
trumps, preparing to claim
if both opponents followed.
West showed out and the
rocks of distribution ap­
peared r eady to sink
South's Blam. Undaunted
by appearances. South felt
that he was going to make
the slam by Borne means
or other.
Give East three clubs
and It would be easy, but
that seemed rather unlike­
ly. How about Just leading
to dummy's king of clubs,
picking up the trump suit
and hoping for a 3-3 spade

SOUTH

G A R F IE L D
FRANK AND ERNEST

w h ite e n rp u » e |e s ?

WIN AT BRIDGE

they fee! you're prying,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
You might not be up to par
In n e g o t i a t i n g sound
agreements today. Don't
be coerced Into accepting
terms not to your advan­
tage.

In hormones affecting your
endometrium.
There Is much more to
m e n o p a u s e t han hot
flashes, headaches and
menstrual disorders. With
the newer Information on
combined hormone thera­
py a lot can be done to
help prevent osteoporosis
and other disorders that
may follow the loss of the
normal p rod u ction o f
estrogen.
DEAR DR. LAMB Could you please tell me
what purpose white cor­
puscles have In our body?
Also is there a problem if
you have a high count of

Finally. South found the
best line of play. He
cashed his queen and Jack
of spades, entered dummy
with the king of clubs and
played more spades.
Any time East ruffed.
Sout h c oul d pi ck up
trumps and keep an extra
trump In dummy to rulT a
club and get to the rest of
the spades. If East refused
to trump, the three losing
clubs would be discarded
and trumps picked up.

by Jim Davis
\ HOW ONE WELL-TURNED
’ I P O N T KNOW
HOW SHE POES IT.

phr ase fr o m that w o m a n

s CAN SUCK ALL THE WIND ,
L OUT OF YOUR SA ILS )

V aV A
\n \
11
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m

A N N IE
TUM BLEW EEDS

by T. K. Ryan

-KWY IS TH' &amp;ORDER / WORE LIKELY
PATROL LOOMIN' FORI IT'S JUST A
m m COYOTE?
ROUTINE CHECJ
P IP SOMEONE i STILL..SINCE SHE
SNtTCN ON H E R /k HAS NO PAPERS..

by Leonard Starr
NO SIGN OF
HER, HANK/

HOLD ON A
MINUTE/1 THINK
El InEH WCS I SEE SOMETHINGSHIPP,

YEP/ SOMEONE'S RUNNING
m iY FROM THE HOUSE.
KEEPS LOOKING OVER f
HER SNOOPER- f—

�aB H E M M fite lM B B B r - a - - -

JB B B

B a-

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Evening Herald, Sfinford, PI.

TONIGHT'S TV

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FROM

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7:05
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FRIENDS

BURNETT

AND

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8:00

When you buy a
KitchenAid Superba
Built-In or
Convertible Portable
dishwasher.

0 ( I ) GIMME A BREAK Na« la
enchanted by a man (Jamas Wataon Jr.) at her diet workshop, but
the later apota him with a female
friend
® Q MAGNUM. Pi.
© O TRAUMa CENTER A young
boy ta badtv burned in a hotel Are.
and Cutter hghta to save the
unborn ch*d ot a teen ager killed in
an accident. Q

a High-Pressure MultiLevel Weth System,
e Flo-Thru Drying with
Energy Sever Option.
.e 10,5 and 1-year THple
Protection Warranty.

(35) HAW/Cl FIVE-0

8

(IDWHO AMERICA "Welching
WJdSte" NeUnafcst Merry bloufter
tafia whera. whan and how to look
lor America'* wild animah m thaw
natural aurroundmga. (R)
CD (D MOVIE "Sky Ridera"( 1976)
Jamaa Cobum, Susannah York. A
mercenary and a team ol hang
gSdera aaaaull a Greek mountain
fortress to rescue the lamNy ol a
wealthy mduatrlaliat horn terrorist
kidnappers

OFFER ENDS
DECEMBER 31.1983
K it c h e n A id .

For (he way It's made

8:05
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Gregory Peck, Richard Crervia.
Three aatroneuta And themserves
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SM ID THIS OLD HOUSE
0 ® WE QOT IT MADE David
becomes contused when Claudia
and Mickey's birthday cards to him
art accident ally switched.
® O SIMON B SIMON A bknd
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f f i (ID THE OOOO NEIGHBORS
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{Season Premiere) Bafiier, LaRue
*~ i
inve r t ; s!a a dta
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I STREETS OF SAN FRAN-

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In addition to the channels listed, cablr vision tubtcribart may tune in te independent channel 44.
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0 JOKER'S WILD
(SSI T5SC JETTERSONS
ED (10) NATURE "Forest In The
Sea" The vast v t u ol kelp grt
mg on the bottom ot the Pacific
Ocean provide a vital tood aource
lor countiesa criaturia n
CD (I) ROWAN A MARTIN S
LAUGH-IN

dX) (35)
(8) CD

Independent
Orlando

(AB C) Orlando

&lt;U)(M)1
) THE FUNT8TONES
( D d(10)
D IPOSTSCRIPTS
CL) (9)
(I) IRONSIDE
IB

I ©D REAM HOUSE
;O L 0 V IN a
I (3D INDCPEHOENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (1D POSTSCRIPTS

Cable Ch

© O
© O
(D O

6:30

(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER

Thursday, Oct. U J W J - J B

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DRESS FABRIC
Your Choice

2

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• TAPfSTIY • VELVETS
| e MATFLASSI • CUT VELVETS

UPHOLSTERY

FABRIC

Tremendous Selection

ALL 5 4 " WIDE

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ALL 5 4 " WIDE
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* Screen Prints • Thermol Feom
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Choot* fn m 10 D iffic u lt Stylet A Patterns

HALLOWEEN!

CUT-OUTSTBFFABLES
Super Price!

�IB — Evening Herald, Sanford, Ft.

Ttiurtday, Oct. 13, 1SU

Supreme Court
Considering
Juror Privacy
WASHINGTON |UP11 - The Supreme Court Is
considering whether the right of prospective Jurors to
privacy outweighs the tradition of a legal system open to
the public and press.
A lawyer for a Riverside, Calif, newspaper told the
Justices in oral arguments Wednesday that Ihe Con­
stitution's Sixth Amendment protection for defendants
guarantees “ a fair trial, not a specific Juror."
James Ward, arguing for the Riverside PressEnterprise, maintained Jury selection should be open to
reporters and the public, and jurors could be excused if
they think their privacy will be Invaded by questions
asked duringjury selection.
The newspaper is challenging a decision that kept
secret the questioning of potential Jurors for the 1981
trial of a man charged In the rape and murder of a
13-year-old girl.
But Glrnr Robert Salter, who argued the case on
behalf of the Riverside County court that closed the trial,
told the Justices Ihe "fundamental issue Is the extent of
the Juror's tight to privacy.”
Prospective Jurors, he said, should Ire protected from
the public knowing answers to such personal questions
as. "Have you or anyone In your family been sexually
abused?"
Salter said the superior court had acted correctly In
excluding the newspaper's reporters from the courtroom
during questioning of the prospective jurors and
denying reporters a transcript of the six-week Jury
selection proceedings.
He cited a 1980 California Supreme Court ruling that
requires that prospective Jurors in murder cases be
questioned "individually and in sequestration."
Ward said the Riverside County Superior Court
misinterpreted the ruling and could have protected
Jurors In other ways, such as excusing a Juror or
releasing the transcript.
"Would the First Amendment be satisfied If you were
excluded, but if the transcript were made available?"
asked Justice William Brennan.
Ward said it would not, because the court failed, to
show a compelling reason for excluding reporters.
The core question facing the court In the case Is
whether Jury selection Is part of a trial.
In 1979. the court held that a Judge could close
pretrial proceedings, particularly when there Is a chance
of prejudicial publicity. That ruling led to a spate of
courtroom closings, both of pretrial proceedings and
trials.
The following year, the high court ruled that reporters
and public have a right — although not absolute — to
attend criminal trials.
The Riverside case began In October 1981 when
Superior Court Judge J. William Mortland denied the
Press-Enterprise’s request to open Jury selection In the
trial of Albert Brown.
Brown later was convicted of the October 1980
murder and rape of Susan Jordan. 13. and was
sentenced to death.
The Judge later refused to provide the newspaper with
a 4,000-page transcript of the proceedings when defense
lawyers argued the court had made an implied promise
the questioning would be kept confidential.
The Judge agreed, saying the people Interviewed for
Jury duty had a right to privacy. Both an appeals court
and the stale CQlirt of appeals refused to overturn, that
order, relying on the earlier stale ruling conccring Jury
questioning.

Cigarette Manufacturers
Should Be Taxed To Pay
Smoking Medical Costs
BOSTON (DPI) - Ciga­
rette manufacturers
should be taxed to pay for
higher medical costs from
smoking rather than pass’ Ing costs along to everyone
In insurance premiums —
as is done now, two
doctors proposed today.
“ I n s ur a nc e , or Ihe
spreading of risk over a
large population to avoid
catastrophic economic loss
for the Individual, was
conceived us protection
from 'acts o f God' of
chance events," wrote Dr.
Blake Cady In a letter to
the New England Journal
o f Medicine.
"Insurance was not in
tended to spread the costs
of self-lnduccd economic
l osses a m o n g those
without that risk."
Cady of Boston's New
England Deaconess Hospl
tal had said In a previous
letter that almost 10 per
cent of all medical costs in
the nation arc directly
related to smoking. In the
latest letter, he said that
non-smokers should not
be p e n a l i z e d fo r ( he
personal habits of smok­
ers.
Dr. Richard Rosen of the
Woodhull Medical and
Menu! Health Center in
Brooklyn. N.Y. said highrisk drivers are given
hi gher Insurance p re­
mi ums and a si mi l ar
“ high risk" system could
be set up to provide funds
for paying for smokingrelated Illness.
"Since it would be naive
to expect smokers to turn
themselves In when they
(111 out Insurance forms,
the funding for such a
program would have to
come from another source
— most logically, from
direct taxation of cigarette
m anufacturers." Rosen
said.
Both doctors said the
system would lead lo an
increase in the cost of
cigarettes — and that
should lead to a cutback

on smoking such as higher
gas prices led to a slash in
driving.
"Tills will create power­
ful Incentives, encourag­
ing reasonable health
practices." Cady said.
both doctors said a simi­
lar system also might be
set up for alcohol.

Legal N o tic e
CITY OF LAX E MARY,
FLORIDA
NOTICEOF PUBLIC
HCARINO
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by
the City Commission ol ttw City ot
Lake Mary. Florid*I**. Itut uld
Comr-iiition will hold Public H«*rlng
on October 30. 1*0. at 100 P-M . to
consider *n Ordinance entitled:
AN ORDINANCE EMPOWERING
THE CITY COAAMISSION OF LAKE
MARY. FLORIDA. TO 0EC1 ARE
THAT A OPOUCHT SITUATION
EXISTS AND TO CONFER UPON
THE MAYOR POWER TO BAN THE
OUTSIDE USE OF WATER OUR
ING CERTAIN HOURS: GRANT
ING THE MAYOR POWER TO BAN
THE USE OF LAKE WATER.
AUTHORIZING THE DIRECTOR
OF THE MUNICIPAL WATER
SUPPLY OR THE AAAYOR TO
REDUCE
WATER
PRESSURE
(HIRING PEAK PERIOO! CF USE;
PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS.
SEVERABILITY.
EFFECTIVE
OATE AND TERMINATION DATE
Th* Public Hearing ihall ba held al
th* City Hall. City at Lett Mary.
Florida, al I 00 P M . on October » .
Itt). or ai toon thereafter at poitl
bl*. *1 which tim* Inttrtttad parties
tor and agalntl ttw request ttatad
abort win ba heard Said hearing
may ba continued from lima to time
until final action It taken by th* City
Committton
THIS NOTICE than ba potted In
three (II public placet within the
City ot Lake Mary, al ttw City Hall,
and publlthad In ttw Evening Herald,
a newspaper of gerwral circulation
within ttw City of Lak* Mary, one
lima at toatl taven (3) dayt prior to
ttw dal* ot ttw Public Hearing
A taped record ot itilt mealing It
mad* by the City tor lit convenience
Thlt record may not conttifuto an
adequate record lor ttw pwpoaet at
appeal irom *r - decidon made by
ttw City Commit ton with reepect to
the foregoing matter Any per ton
wlthlng to enture that an adequate
reoofd ot ttw proceeding* It mam
tamed tor appellate purpotet It
edvitod to max* ttw nacattary *r
rangemanti al hit or her own
DATED. October Id. Itt)
CITY OF LAKE MARV,
FLORIDA
BY: ConnieM*|or
City Clerk
Pubtlth October IX letI
OEM *3

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
,
File Number PR 63-306-CP
iN RE: ESTATE OF
MINNIE BENJAMIN.
.
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST
THE ABOVE ESTATE AND ALL
OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED
IN THE ESTATE:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
that me admlnltlrallon ol th* eitale
ot MINNIE BENJAMIN, deceated.
File Number 13 506 CP. It pending In
Ihe Circuit Court tor Seminole
County, Florida. Probale Dlvltlon.
ttw add-ett of which It Seminole
County Courthout*. Sanlord, Florida
32171. The per tonal representative ot
th* ettat* it Mildred J. Nelton.
whota addrett It Ml Lake Ruth
Drive. Longwood. Florid* J37JO Th*
name and addrett ot the pertonal
representative's attorney are tel
lorth below.
All pertont having clalmi or de
mandt ogalntt ttw ettaf* are re
qulred. W IT H IN TH R EE (1 )
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to tile with th* clerk
ot Ihe above court a written itato
ment ot any claim or demand they
may have. Each claim mutt be in
writing and mult Indicate th* belli
lor the claim, th* name and addrett
ol ttw creditor or hit agent or
attorney, and Ihe amount claimed. If
ttw claim It not yet due. th* date
when II will become due ihall be
Haled. II the claim It contingent or
unliquidated, ttw nature of the un
certainty than be Hated If ttw claim
It tacurtd. ttw tacurlly ihall be
deter Ibad. Th* claimant ihall deliver
tuflicient copwt of the claim to th*
Clerk to enable ttw clerk to mall onr
copy 10 aach pertonal rrpr*

tentative.
All pertont IntereHed In the etlate
to whom a copy of thlt Nolle* of
Admlnltlrallon hat been mailed are
r e q u ir e d . W IT H IN T H R E E
MONTHS FROM THE OATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, lo tile any objection!
they may have Ihat challang* th*
validity ol ttw dacadent't will, th*
qualification! ol ttw pertonal repre
tentative, or th* voru* or |uritd!c
tlon ot th* court
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVERBARREO
Oat* ol the first publication ol Ihe
Notice ot AdmlnlHrallon: October a.

Legal Notice
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged In business ai 1630 Robert
St.. Long wood. FL 33730, Seminole
County. Florida under ttw (ktlllout
name of THINK CLEAN OFFICE
JANITORIAL SERVICE, and that I
Intend to register tald name with ttw
Clerk ot ttw Circuit Court. Semlnolv
County, Florida In accordance with
ttw provisions ol th* Fictitious Name
Statutes, fo Wit: Section la SO*
Florida Statute* 1*57.
/t/K C. Daubretta
Publlth October 6. IX 30.37. IHJ.
D E M I)
INTHECIRCUIT COURT
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
CIRCUIT CIVIL NO. U 347* CA « P
IN RE THE.MARRIAGE OF
WILLIAM ANTHONY
Hutband /Pe IItlorwr
and
FRANCES P. ANTHONY
Wlle/Retpondenl
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:FRANCESP ANTHONY
1033 Llpplncott Street
North Woodbury. N.J. C60M
YOU ARE NOTIFIED lhal
Petition lor Dissolution of Marriage
hat been filed and you are required
lo serve a copy ot your written
defenses, it any. to It on C. CALVIN
HORVATH. ESQUIRE. 7*** Lea
Hoad. Suit* 320, Winter Park.
Florida J17t* on or before Ihe 74th
day ol October. ItU and file the
original with Itw Clerk ol th* Court
either before tervlct on Petitioner's
Attorney or Immediately thereafter;
otherwise a default will be entered
against you tor th* relief demanded
In th* pet 11Ion.
WITNESS my fund and the taal ol
Ihlt Court on Iht lflh day of
September, ISS3.
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
At Clerk ol the Court
By Patricia Roblnton
At Deputy Clerk
Publlth September 37. 3* and
October 6.11,1*U
DEL 116

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC licARING
TO CONSIDER THE ADOPTION OF
AN ORDINANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD. FLORIDA.
Nolle* Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing wvlll be held at Itw
Commission Room In tha City Hall in
the City ol Santord. Florida, at 7 00
o’clock P.M on November 14. Ito),
Itt)
to consider th* adoption of *n
, /H Mildred J. Nelton,
ordinance by ttw City ol Santord.
At Pertonal Reprrtentatlv*
Florida, atloltowt:
ot iiw fctitle of
ORDINANCE NO. lial
Minnie B*n|*mln, Deceated
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
OF SANFORD. FLO RID A. TO
REPRESENTATIVE:
A N N E X W IT H IN THE COR
i/ Michael L Marlow*
PORATE AREA OF THE CITY OF
Michael L Marlowe. Etqulrt
SANFORD. F L O R ID A . UPON
Graham, Marlow* 4 Applelon
ADOPTION OF SAID ORDINANCE.
Potl Office Drawer &lt;«*0
A PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN
Winter Park. Florida 137*0
PROPERTY LYING SOUTH OF
Telephone &lt;)OJI*47 4435
AND ABUTTING COLLINS 0RIVE
Publlth October *. IX Itt)
AND BETWEEN U S 17 *3 (SR 13 X
OEM 36
6001 AND PARK VIEW DRIVE
EXTENDED SOUTHERLY; SAID
PROPERTY BEING SITUATED IN
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
SEMINOLE. COUNTY. FLORIDA.
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
V
O L U N T A R Y A N N E X A T IO N
Civil Action No.: U UU-CA-**-P
PROVISIONS OF SECTION 171 044.
BOWEST CORPORATION,etc.
FLORIDA STATUTES; PROVID
Plaintiff,
ING FOR SEVERABILITY. CON
vt.
FLICTS ANO EFFECTIVE DATE.
CLAYTON TERRY WATSON. *1 u*.
WHEREAS, there hat been tiled
•tal.
Defender: ft
with tha City Clerk ot ttw City ol
Santord, Florida, pelilloni contain
NOTICE OF SALE
Ing th* namet ot th* property owners
N olle* it hereby given that
In ttw area described hereinafter
pursuant to th* Final Judgment ol
requesting annexation to ttw cor
Foreclosure and Sal* entered In ttw
porate area ot ttw City of Santord.
cause pending In ttw Circuit Court ol
Florida, and requettlrg to be In
ttw Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
eluded therein; and
and for Seminole County. Florida.
W H E R E A S , the P r o p e r t y
Civil Action Ho 6) 1311 CAP* P the
Appraiser of Seminole County,
undersigned Clerk will tell th* pro
Florida, having cartlfiad that ttwre It
perfy situated In taid County, d*
on* owner In ttw are* to be annexed,
scribed at:
and that said proparty owner hat
Lot 4 and th* East to of Lot X
signed ttw Petition for Annexation;
B lo c k A. L A K E W A Y M A N
and
HEIGHTS. LAKE ADDITION, *c
W HEREAS, It has been d*.
cording to th* plal 1hereof at re­
termlned lhal the property described
corded In Plat Book 4, Pag* 13, ol ttw
hereinafter
is reasonably compact
Public Records of Seminole County,
and contiguous to ttw corporate
Florida.
areas of ttw City ol Santord. Florida,
al public tale, to ttw highest and best
and It hat further been determined
bidder lor cash at 11:00 o'clock A.M.
mat ttw annexation ot taid property
on ttw tit day of November, 1*63. it
will not mutt In the creation ol an
ttw West Front door of ttw Seminole
enclave; and
County Courlhouta. Santord,
WHEREAS, ttw City of Sanford
Florida
Florida, It in a position to provide
(SEAL)
municipal services to ttw property
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR.
described herein, end Ihe City
CLERK
Commission of ttw City ol Santord.
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
Florida, daems It In ttw best Interest
By: Eve Crabtree
ol
ttw City to accept taid petition and
Deputy Clerk
lo
annex uld property.
SWAHN AND HADDOCK. P A .
NOW. TH E RE FO R E . BE IT
600Courtland Street
ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE OF
Orlando. Florida 33104
T H E C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
Attorney: for Plaintiff
FLORIDA;
Publlth October M X IW3
SECTION I: That ttw property
DEM 40
described below situated In Seminole
County, Florida, be and ttw tarn* It
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN AND
hereby annexed lo and made * perl
FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
of ttw City of Sanlord. Florida,
FLORIDA
pursuant lo ttw voluntary annexation
CIVIL ACTION NO. 6)l)*6CAte*-G
provisions ot Sactlon 171044. Florida
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO
Statutes:
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N OF
Begin at Itw northwesl corner ol
SEMINOLE COUNTY, a corporation
L o t I. B lo c k F. S U N L A N D
organlted and enisling under the
ESTATES,
at recorded In Plat Book
Laws ol Tht United Slates ot
II. page 30. Public Racords ol
America,
Samlnol* County. Florida; Itwnc*
Plaintiff,
run South 06* 16' 73” Well through
vt
Ihe South*#!) corner of takl Lot t,
RALPH E. JENSEN and JOLLY K
JENSEN, (tormerly hutoand and 3*3.54 leef; Ihence run Weil *4.76
toot; Itwnc* run North *0* 37‘ 33”
w lla ) and C IT Y CONSUMER
West 311.4 tael; thence run North V
SERVICESOF FLORIDA. INC..
77’ J f " East 373 *3 feel to a point on
Defendants
Itw arc of a curve lying concave
NOTICEOF SALE
Northeasterly having a radius ot
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
4ff ) teet. also being ttw Southerly
pursuant lo Final Judgment of
right otway line ol Cotllns Drive,
Foreclosure rendered on ttw 1lift day
thence run Southeasterly along Iht
ot October, m i, in lhal certain causa
pendtng In ttw Circuit Court In and arc ot said curve a distinct ol 3*0 63
I
tel to ttw point of beginning, being a
for Stmlnola County. Florida,
part ol Block G ol taid SUNLAND
w h o r a ln F IR S T F E D E R A L
ESTATES
SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIA
SECTION 3: Thai upon this Ordl
TION OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, a
nance becoming effective th* pro
corporation orpanned and enisling
ptrfy owners and any resident on th*
under ttw Laws of Th* Uni tod States
property described herein shall be
of America. It Plaintllf. and RALPH
entitled to all ttw rights and prlvl
E J E N S E N and J O L L Y K
leges and Immunities as ere Irom
JENSEN, (tormerly husband and
time to time granted to residents and
w lla ) and C IT Y CONSUMER
proparly owners ol th* City of
SERVICES OF FLORIDA. INC. are
Santord. Florida, and at are further
D efendant!. C ivil Action No
provldedln Chapter 171. Florida
13 736* CA’SfG. I. ARTHUR H
Statutes, and shall (urttwr be sublect
BECKWITH, JR., Clark ol tha
aforesaid Circuit Court, will al 11 00 to ttw responsibilities ol residence or
owrwrthlp at may from lima to time
a m . on the 7lh day ol November.
be determined by th* governing
IftX otter tor sal* and tall to Itw
authority ot ttw City ot Santord.
highest bidder lor cash at ttw West
Iron! door ot Itw Courthout* In .. Florida, and ttw provisions ot Laid
Chapter 171, Florida Statutes
Seminole County. Florida. In San
SECTION 3: II any tec I,on or
lord. F lor Ida. Itw following deter Ibed
portion
ol a sactlon ot this ordinance
property, situated and being In ,
proves to be Invalid, unlawful or
Seminole County, Florida, towtl:
unconstitutional. II shall not ba hald
Lot I f . SHADOW LAKE WOODS,
to Lnvaudale or impair ttw validity,
according to th* ptal thereat et
tore* or effect cl any other sactlon or
recorded in Plat Book 73. Pag* 31. ot
pari of tht i ordinance
th* Public Records ot Seminole
SECTION 4. Thai all ordinances ur
County. Florida
parts of ordlnancas In conllicl
Said tala will be mad* pgrsuanl to
harewllh. b* and th* same are
and In order to satisfy ttw termi ot
herety repealed
said Final Judgment
SECTION 5: That thlt ordinan-w
(SEAL)
shall become etlecllte Immediately
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
upon Us passage and adoption.
CLERK
A copy shll ba avallabto at ttw
OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
Office et the City Clerk lor all
By Susan E. Tabor
persons desiring to examine the
Deputy Clark
Phillip H Logan ol
All parties In Interest end cltitens
S H I N H O L S E R. L O G A N .
stwll have an opportunity to be heard
MONCHIEF
at said hearing
ANOBARKS
Br order ot ttw City Commission of
Pott CMlice Bo* 337*
ttw City ot Santord. Florida
Sartord. Florida 13771
RotaM Hofundo
Attorneys tor Plaintllf
Deputy City Clark
1)031 J7) iU O
Publish October tx 39. 37 4 Nov
Publlth October IX )0. 27 6 Nov
amber X tto)
ember ). l*U
DEM 10
DEM II

Legal Notice
INTHECIRCUIT COURT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CIVIL ACTION NO.

6X11*7 CA-eM
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, a corporation
organlted and existing under ttw
Laws ot Tha United States of
America.
Plaintllf.

■vt
ROY A JEFFRIES,#!*1.
Del end* nil
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal
pursuant to Final Judgment ot
Foreclosure rendered on ttw 11th day
ol October. I to). In that certain cause
pending In ttw Circuit Court In and
tor Seminole County, Florida,
w h e r e in F I R S T F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND lO AN ASSOCIA
TION OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, a
corporation organlted and existing
under the L ins ot ttw United States
ol America, Is Plaintllf. and ROY A.
JEFFRIES. SOUTHEAST FIRST
NATIONAL BANK OF MAITLAND.
CENTRAL FLORIDA PRODUC­
TION CREDIT ASSOCIATION,
BARNETT BANK OF CENTRAL
F L O R I D A . N A.. W A T L C E
BURPEE C O M PANY and V-J
GROWERS SUPPLY are Dtftn
d a n l t , C i v i l A c t i o n No
U -m r-C A Ot E. I. ARTHUR H.
BECKWITH. JR.. Clark of Ihe
aforesaid Circuit Court, will at 11:00
am., on th* 7lh day ot November.
Itt), otter tor sale and sail lo ttw
highest bidder lor cash al ttw West
Iron! door ol the Courthouse In
Seminole County. Florida. In San
lord. Florida, the FoUewIrs de
scribed property, situated and being
In Seminole County, Florid*, lo-wll
Lot 3, Block E, HENSON'S
ACRES, according to Ihe plal them !
as recorded H Plal Book *. Pag* tf,
ot ttw Public Record ot Samlnol*
County, Florida
Said tala will be made pursuant to
and In order to satisfy ttw terms ol
said Final Judgment
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk of ttw Circuit Court
By: Susan E.Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Phillip H. Logan ol
SH IN H OLSER. LOGAN.
MONCRIEF AND BARKS
Pott Ottlc* Box 337*
Santord. Florida 33771
Attorneys lor PlalntlH
(X II 37) 3660
Publish; October I). 30. 77 4 Nov
ember 3. IttJ
OEM 10

INVITATION TO BID
Sealed bid! will be received In the
City Manager'! ottlc*. City Hall.
Santord. Florida (or:
Watar Distribution Materials
Detailed specifications are avail
abl* In ttw City Manager's office.
City Hall. Santord. Florida
Th* sealed bids will be received in
Ihe City Manager's office, Room 30),
City Hall. Santord. Florida not later
than 1:30 F.1A. Friday. October 71.
Itt) The sealed bids will be opened
publicly later the* same date a* 7 PM
In ttw City Commission Chambers.
Room 117. City Hall. Sanlord.
Florida
The City ot Santord reserves th*
right to eccepl or reject any and all
bids or any part ot a bid In ttw bell
Interest ol Itw City.
/s7 W E. Knowles
City Manager
CITVOFSANFORO
Publish October 13. Itt)
DEM tl
LEOAL NOTICE TO
ARCHITECTS, PROFESSIONAL
ENGINEERS. REGISTERED
LANDSURVEYORS
Itobllc Announcement
Cciutrvctton Prefects
Ttw School Board of Samlnol*
County, In Compliance with Consul
lants C o m p tllllv t Negotiation
Act Chapter 73 311. does declare ttw
Intention to certify firms or Indlvldu
alt as Consultants or to perform
services tor projects beginning In ttw
itt) 64 school year.
Tobael-gible tor consideration. *11
Interested firms must be certified by
ttw School Board ol Semi not* County
as qualified, pursuant to Consultant!
Competitive Negotlallnns Act. and
regulation! ot ttw Board. (Form 334)
Any firm or Individual desiring to
provide professional servlets lor ttw
School Board ot Samlnol* County
shall apply In writing tor consld
•rallon with a letter ol l-itereil
describing the llrm 't:
• .Capabilities
b Adequacy ol Personnel
C. Pest Record
d Location
a Recent, current and protected
workload
I. Willingness to maat tlma and
budget requirement!
g Volume ol work previously
•warded to ttw llrm by the Board
TO BE ELIGIBLE FOR CONSID
E RAT ION A L L A P P L I C A N T S
MUST BE REGISTERED IN THE
S T A T E OF F L O R I D A TO
PRACTICE THEIR PROFESSION
AT THE TIME OR APPLICATION
APPLIC ATIO N WITHOUT THE
DATE DESCRIBED WILL BE CON
SI DEREO I MPROPER EACH
FIRM WILL SUBMIT A GENERAL
SERVICES APPLICATION FORM
3S4 AND A PERSONAL LETTER OF
I N T E R E S T TO P E R F O R M
SERVICES
Firms Inlarastsd In providing
services may apply directly to ttw
Superlnlendeni'i Office at 1711
MellonviHe Avenue. Sanford, Florida
13771 Applications will ba received
between ttw hours of I 00 A M and
4:00 P M , until 7 00 P.M . October
30. Itt3. Tha School Board will
consider only lirmt that apply and
•re certified by Itw Board lor ttw
1*6)44 school year. Tiw tallowing
proltcls are anticipated
New Middle School X and Various
Miscellaneous Projects Including a
New Maintenance and Transport*
lion Facility.
Dated thl: 30th day ol September.

Itt)
/t/Roland V. Williams.
Chairman
/t/ Robert W. Hughes.
Superintendent
Publish: September 71, 77 and
October*. I) Itt)
DEL 13*

NOTICE OF INTENTION
TO REGISTER
FICTITIOUS NAME
NOT.CE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal
Ihe undersigned Individuals,
pursuant to Itw flctlttoyt name Hal
ute. Section l a ) p*. Florida StpJules.
desire to mgege In buttons at Itaa
Duncan Drive, Casselberry. Florida
72701. with business being conducted
In Orange and Samlnol* Counties,
ucxkw ttw to! lowing fktttloua nanw:
SAA ADVERTISING AGENCY
Upon recalpl o t proof ol public*
lion ot toils nolle*, tha undersigned
will register such llcfltiout name
with ttw Clerk ol Itw Circuit Court ot
Seminole County. F lor Ida
Dated this tth day ot September.
Itt)
David B. Armstrong
Dorothy M Armstrong
Publish: September 33, 3* and
October X I). Itt)
OEL IU

71—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

322-26 M

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
R:00 A .M . — S.-30 P .M .
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 - Noon

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

831-9993

RATES

itim e
51c a line
J consecutive lim es 54c a line
7 consecutive lim es 44c a line
10 consecutive tim es 43c a line
S3.00 M in im u m
3 Lines M in im u m

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

12— Legal Services
Bankrupcy 43)0 and Chapter 13
S410. Free conference Attorney
M. Price. For Appt. 433 3*T7;
CURLEY R.OOLTIE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
191 B W ilt Street
San* wd Fla, 1377133) 4000

23— Lost &amp; Found
Famala Yorkie. gold and silver,
red collar answers to Mullen
Leif in Sunland Estates Oct *th.
Call 331 1344 Anytime. Reward
LOST
AMAZONPARROT
_________ CALL 333-41W.
LOST MALE SAMOYED. All
whit*, to ttw Chula Vista art*.
Reward.
IN 1*3*

23— Lost &amp; Found
LOST OR STOLEN St Bernard
and German Shepherd mixed
ter,&gt;4let, latooed 661 *014,______
Reward Lost-Tuesday. Black.
Cocker poo. female. Blind Needs
medication. Nama "S h ar,”
Please return lo 3406 Adams
Court (Wynnwood tec IIon) or
call 333 *63*.___________________
Small, light brown dog Mixed
breed Chain training collar no
lags ''Honey '. In old Idylewllde
area. 1310611 Rewardl

25— S pecial N otices
a F lines i FANTASTIC Fun a
a • Benefits Of Trampolines a •
a Sen Ughl Products 4110*63 a
FREELANCE WRITER

L e g a l N o tic e

EARN BIGMONEY FAST AND
EASY WRITING ARTICLES
Fictitious Name
ANO SHORT STORIES FROM
Node* Is hereby given that I am
YOUR OWN HOME.
engaged In business at *07 W. 33th
CALL 1 716 1416000.
SI.. Sanlord. Fla S377I, Samlnol*
INCLUDING EVENINGS
County. Florida under ttw llcfltiout
ANDWEEKENDS
name ot HAIR NOW. and that I
EXT. *471).
Inland to ragltter taid nanw with Itw
33MAIDS TOORDERtt
Clerk ot the Circuit Court. Seminole
Oet Results 4 Save to
County. Florid* In accordance with
DON'T DELAY 1)1 M AIO ___
ttw provisions ot ttw Fictitious Nam*
New Oltlc* now opening
Statutes, to w n Section 1*5.0*
VDRWERK
f lorld* Statute! 1*17.
_________ 1130W 1st St__________
Is/Merle B. R**t*
Publlth September 7* 4 October a.
13. X. IN I
27— N u rs e ry &amp;
DELI**
___________________
C h ild C a re
Fictitious Nam*
Notice li hereby given that I am
BABYSITTINO In my home Ex
engaged to business al 30)6 Susies
perienced mother. Ire* meals
R d . Winter Park 137*3. Samlnol*
r Rat. gtv*a m r m . ____________
County. Florida under ttw llctlttous
name ol HOME EXCHANGE
MOTHERS. In home child car*.
SERVICE, and that I Intend lo
Large play araa. nutritious
regliter said name with ttw Clerk ot
snacks, and loving car* Mon
ttw Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Frl. Sanford 333 166)
Florida In accordance with ttw pro
visions ot Itw Fklltlout Name Slat
31— P riv a te
utes. to Wit: Sactton MS 0* Florida
In stru ctio n s
Statutes 1*37.
/*/ Edllh EntwIUto
Publlth September 3* 4 October a,
Plano Lessons In my Sanlord
I). 30. IN )
home AM levels, ttwory Inc. Also
DEL ‘.67
theory classes ottered Ph 331
Flctlttous Mam*
CSOI____________________________
Notice It hereby given lhal I am
engaged to business at 20M Sutiei
33— R e a l E s ta te
Rd, Winter Park 337*2. Seminole
County. Florida under ttw llcfltiout
Courses
_____ i
name ol THE PHOTOWORKS, and
that I In'end to register Mid name
BOR
BALL
JR
SCHOOL
OF
with ttw Clark ot ttw Circuit Court,
REAL ESTATE
Semlnola County. Florida to ac
LOCAL REBATES 37)4111
cordance with ttw provision! ol ttw
MASTER CHARGE OR VISA
Fictitious Name Statutes. I*WH-.
Sactlon MS Of Florl s* Statutes 1*37.
/% / Edllh Entwltll*
4 5 - A rts A C ra fts
Publish September 3* 4 October *.
IX 30.1M3
A Little 'Hemewerk 'Watching
OEL 144 _____________________
the Want Ads Can Bring
FICTITIOUS NAME
'Te* Grade' B«*elts.
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged to business at P O Box *01,
55— Business
5717 Seminole Ave.. Goldtnrod,
Seminole County, Florida under Itw
O
p p o rtu n itie s
llctltlout nanw ol AFTER 3 GUIDE
TO CENTRAL FLORIDA, and that I
Intend to register Mid name with ttw
NEW. b e a u t i f u l Ice
Clerk of ttw. Circuit Court. Samlnoto
cream/sandwlch shop. Excellent
County. Florida l« accordance with
Sanlord location. Call today
the provisions ot ttw Fictitious Nama
331 4*31 * A h i to 13:00_________
Statutes, lo Wit: Sactlon MS.0*
a * • eURDTILE • • • a
Florid* Statutes 1*37.
Men needed tolearn new ttadaI
/t/ Robert S. Ballet
High prelll margin, 3IM33).. _
Publish October IX 30. 37 4 Nov
ember 3, IN I
OEM 74________________________
63— M o rtg a g e s Bought
FICTITIOUS NAME
A Sold
Notice It hereby given that we are
engaged to business at *03 N. SR.
• CASH FOR MORTGAGES •
Hwy. 17 *3. Casselberry. FL,
We buy first and second mortgages
Samlnoto County, Florida under Ihe
on
homes, Irom Individuals,
Flcllliout name of APPLIANCE
builders, brokers, and real astate
PARTS OF SEMINOLE, and lhal we
companies Ws alto make home
Intend to register Mid name with ttw
owner loeni tor home Improv
Clark ot ttw Circuit Court. Samlnoto
menl end bill consolidation Call
County, Florida, in accordance with
ot and let os make yoo an otter I
ttw pro» 'rtoi* ol llw nUlllcus Name
Barbara Crawlord 111 1610.
Statutes, To WH: Section 1*3 0*
II you coitoct payments from a llrsl
Florida Statutes 1137.
or second mortgage on property
Robert P Fulton
you sold, we will buy th*
Sam D Ray
mortgage you are now holding
Publish: October IX 30. 77, 4 Nov
7M33W____________
ember J. Itt)
OEM *3
AGENDA
71— H e lp W a n ted
SEMINOLE COUNTY
BOAR OOF
ADJUSTMENT NOTICE
JUUfHPLOTHENT
OF PUBLIC HEARINO
I Yeur torture It Our Carscara)
NOVEMBER 7, IN )
7:MP.M.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal
Itw Samlnoto County Board ol Ad
lustment will conduct a public hear
Ing to consider ttw following
I SEMINOLE COUNTY DE­ GENERAL OfTICE.____ .510,000
PARTMENT
OF
ENVIRON
Mature person with good typing 4
MENTAL
SERVICES
BA
figure applllude
(II 71)1 64E - R IA Residential
Zona Request lo t Special Exception
lor expansion ol ttw Lynwood SALES RECEPTIONEST____ $5$
Wastewater
Treatment Facility
Fantastic Company naads your
sparkling personality. Average
located on ttw followtoo described
typing, promotabf*
property Begin 1341* tl N ol Itw SE
corner ol ttw W te ol SE to of NE U,
ru n W 133 II S 71 Degs 33 minutes. W
' 30 *4 ft. W 310 tl, then run N 104* *7 Banllilt that can't ba beat Good
ft. then run C 4Ci3.1t tt. thence S lo
typing
bag tontog, to Sactlon &lt;131 i f
Further described •&gt; located Imme
dlately East ol Carbon* Way and EMPLOYER RELATION) .520,000
Greal opportunity. Industrial
Jeronw Way to Lynwood Sub
background • mull.
' division. North ot Curtis Drive, and
600 II West of B**r Lake Road
&lt;01 ST. 31
MANAGER TRAINEE513,000
This public hearing will ba held to Restaurant background will put
Room 300 ol ttw Samlnoto County k you Into this last growing com
Courlhouta. Santord. Florida, on
pany carter spot.
November 7. IttJ. at 7 00 P M . o r at
toon ttwrealter as possible
.$960
Written commanit tiled with Itw FAINTER..
Land Managemart Manager will be This li one ot Ihe best Spray
painting experience. Steady
considered Persons appearing al ttw
work, good benlfils
public hearing will ba heard
Htaxingi may be continued Irom
lime to lime at found nacetMry. SALES REP-------------- Salarj Plus
Furttwr details axallabto by calling Large llrm needs top quality. Don't
133 6330. Ext 13*
pats this up I Great benlllts.
Parsons are advised that. It Itwy
decide to appeal any decision made
DELIVERY________
.5535
*1 this hearing, Itwy will naed •
record ol ttw proceedings, and. tor Nice boss nerds mature Mtot per
lonelily. This could ba your
such purpose, they may need to
chance
Insure that a verbatim record ol ttw
proceedings Is made, whclh record
ROUTE SALES
Includes ttw testimony and evidence
DATA OPERATOR
upon which Itw appeal li to be bated,
O R OPERATOR
pec Sactlon TttOIOS. Florida Slat
ASSEMBLY
ctot
wxerunilXE
SEMINOLE COC'fTV
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
BY:
ROGER
PERRA.
t o o m a ;*v t o l i s t
CHAIRMAN
Discount lea 1weeks salary
Pubtsh October 13. Itt)
AAA Employment
O EM *)

CALL
323-5176

OFFICECURK_________S55

ASSEMBLY WORKERS
Light assembly work (rom your
home. Excellent Income oppor
(unity tor housewives, tot Start
immediately. Call Maggla at
I ) I 1 * * * - I 4 » 4 . A l t o open

evenlnQ t.__________________ .
AVON CHRISTMAS WOWII
START SELLINO NOWII

»7 6*3*or)ll-13SS________
Avon Ladlas. Full, pari Time over
14. Sanlord. Washington Oaks
Midway 4 Geneva. 31X41*3
CARVER
To serve meat to our cuttomers at
bullet labia Must be neat and
enjoy meeting people. Apply 7 to
4 P.M at Holiday House Reilavr
rant 4300 Orlando Ave Hwy
)7 * 1 . South ot Lake Mary cutoff
CASHIERS 4 CLERKS Full 4
part tlma openings. Good pay
scale*. No axp.net. *7*-*W4.____
Christian woman to do light
housekeeping and Ironing Mull
Ilka small chlldam. 773 *133

C O N STR U C TIO N
W O R K ER S
Should have Home Budding exp*
rlence

NCVfMAfff

A b le s t
Tiwpemr* Beryitu
Mon Thurs.f 114 1:30 3:30
TOOWn* f r o S |FI»athp Bant BuAkngi
S*«*3rd 3313940
Cooks Utilities Oay/NIpht.
Full/part lime potlttons
Apply In perten.
D »yslnn l44S t Rd 4*_____
COUPLE to work as Manag
e r / O p e r a t o r In I c e
Cream/Sandwich Shop. Call tor
appointment
331 4431. * A M to 17.
Delivery 4 Maintenance w/Chau.
Lite. Apply al Shads America.
1133 Hwy 17 *3. Longwood
Denial Assistants Full and parttime. Experience required San
lord ottlc* 33) 1133____________
Earn Extra Monay. Part/TIma
Full/TIm e. Prepai d Lagal
Services Call Don. *71 m r
FACTORY WORKERS Immediate
openings. High wages Some will
train. Call 43 *0*4.______________
Food Concessions Managers and
workers Mature, experienced
preferred Apply Fleaworld.
Hwy. 17 *3. Thurs , F rl. Sal * 5
P M 331 17*3
Front Desk Cterk willing to work J
to II shift and tome weekend!
Apply to person Holiday Inn ol
Sanford on ttw lakalronl._______
Colt Court* Mechanic Wanted
Reference* required Send P O
Drawer 3*11 Lake Mary. Florla
33766._________________________
HOLIDAY HOUSE
Restaurant has postttont avallabto
lo r Cas hi e r s , H ostesses.
Waitresses, Kitchen Help Good
opportunity to work with pro
pie Experience oretrrrd Apply 1
to 4 P M 4300 Orlando Ave Hwy
17*3. S ot Lake Mary cutoff __
Homemakers full time to provide
cleaning service* to elderly
persons Must have reliable car
4 valid Fla drivers llcensa
U 60-' hour 30/ mite M thru F,
*?* 7«*4 Mrs Osborne EOE.
LANDSCAP ER Person with
background In design, utes. job
supervision. Irrigation, good
driving record and experience
required. 6X37174. _____ __
Minimal daV chre'help heeded tor
elderly gentlemen, semi mobile,
excellent mind, requires soma
light cooking Ph 123 }IU be
tween I and 3 6x3 3463 after 5 X
Pteasa Contact Mr. Roth_______
Needed et Charles D. Hays Barber
Shop An experienced barber,
toll time or pari lima. 106 S Park
Ave . Santord. Call horn* alter *
P M 333 *604__________________
Now Interviewing lor reception**!
end dental assistant tor our
current and new location at Tha
Maitland Canter 13)1160 Only
quail fled naed apply.___________
OFFICE HELP Full 4 pari tlma
openings available now. Will
tolly train. Phone 6394B64L______
Phytclan's office Medical sarr#
tary, to do transcription and
Insurance Send resume to P O
Box 4040. Santord. Fla. 33773
4040____________________ __
PROCESS MAIL AT HOME 1173 00
per hundred! No experience
Part or lull tlma. Start immadl
a t a l y . D e l a l l s send sail,
addressed stamped envelop* to
C.R.I 300. P O Box 43. Stuart
FI 334*3______________________
Sales Person Pert tim# Retirees
welcomel Apply Shedl America.
1133 Why. 17 *3, Longwood
SALESLADY Part tlma axperi
•need to ladles ready to wear
Apply In parson only, no phone
calls Ro Jay 111 E. 1st Street
Se c r e t ar y /Nur s e r y parson.
Landscaping llrm seeks expert
•rce.pl* aunt phone personal Ity,
accounting, sates, typing, tiling,
general oft!;*, p o 7171._________
Telephone Solicitor. Part time
evenings, hourly wage plus
bonus, call 331 7613. Thursday a
P M 7:36PM___________ __
Trucking Company needs man
experienced in lire repair and
truck washing Must have valad
Florida Chautttus license and be
able to drive tractor traitors Call
333 0331. between lOandl
TRUCKS DRIVERS Local 4 Long
Haul positions High wages Call
today. 63* 40*4
___________
Wanted Dametlk Help l
Non smoker Christian lady, willing
to work two 7 hour day! 34 00 an
hour, lunch Included Trenspor
t*lion mandatory, toc * mite
References required Apply
333 6*63.____________________
WAREHOUSE WORKERS Man^
openings, lull lime, goed starting
p *y.Call Immediately 42* t o u .

73—Employment
Wanted
LOOK GOODASNEWII
Drywall Patch Repair Wark
REASONAILE RATES 131162)

F3—Rooms for Rent
SANFORD Furnished rooms by Itw
week Reasonable rates Maid
service catering lo working pao
pit 333 *307 300Palmetto A va,
SANFORO. Real weekly 4 Mon
Ihly i alei Util. Inc elf joo Oak
Aduimaal 2*6)

97— A p a rtm e n ts
F u rn is h e d / R ent
Fur*. Apli tor Stntor Cillient
311 Palmetto Aye.
). cowan, reu rrxvw Caitx
' bdrm’ cottage Complete
privacy, newley decorated 473 a
wee*, plus 6X0 mc dap 3 » na*
or 331 1*0)

�H I — Homes For Sale

103—Houses

97— A p artm en ts
Furn ish e d / Rent

U nfurnished / Rent

1Bdrm. Ell.. Patio, A/C. *3*9
Furniih*H
Fee Phl39 7700
Sav On Rental* Inr. Realter
Bdrm, living room, kitchen,
porch, air, carpeted, no peti 5745
mo with leaie. 177 Tea?

99— A p artm en ts
U n fu rn ish ed / Rent
Apt. tor rjnt lor elderly couple I
Bdrm., cantra! A/M, Call be
tween I AM . to*P.M. 13) 57)3

] Bdrm. ktoi. pett, garage, W3S
Unlurni!hed Fee Ph 17*7)00
lev On Rental! Inc. Realter
1 Bdrm t B. CMA. carpeted.
Adult! No pet! 1170 per mo.
I l l 7309
_______________
1 Bdrm , C/H/A, Inilde utll/rm
Fenced yard, eat In kitchen, no
pet* S39Sa mo u n i t ) ________
4 Bdrm , 1*5 Bath, living room A
family room, mall to wall carpet,
fenced yard, appliance* 1400 a
mo plut depot'! 331 30)0

10S—DuplexTriplex / Rent

LUXURY APARTMENTS
Faiplly A Adulli eeclion Pooltide,
1 Bdrm*. Matter Cove Apti.
1117900

Sanlord Duplex 1 Bdrm . 1 Bath,
carport, laundry room, central
A/C, kitchen equip., carpet.
drape* 343* Lake Art *300547
1bedroom I bath, ipeclout.
and new. *150 month
P h D ) 11*0or*99 4)11

Mariner'* Village on Lake Ada. I
bdrm from *175.'7 bdrm from
*175 Located 17 97 |u*t *oufh of
Airport Blvd. In Sanford. All
Adult* 171*470,
t_________
# Mellonvlll* Tract Apt*. •
Unfurnlihed 1 bdrm. Spaclout Apt
Walk To Lake Front. No Pet*
*315 Ph MI -1909_______________
NEW I A ) Bedroom* Ad|acenl to
Lake Monroe. Health Club.
Racquetballand Moral
Santord Landing S R 44111*170
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
ISM Ridgewood Ave. Ph. 171 *470
1.7 H Bdrm* from *300.

107-M obile
Homes / Rent
1 Bdrm, Ulllltle* paid 1300
Furnlthed
Fee Ph 3397100
Sav-On-Rental* Inc. Rea Her

121—Condominium
Rentals
Unfurnlihed
Fee Ph 139 7100
Sav On Rtnlalt Inc. Realtor

1Bdrm. Apt., near builrwii
diUriel, pool privilege*.
171S Cell 31) 144*
1/7 Bdrm Apartment
New. remodeled. Adult* only, not
pelt 1300 a mo plm lecurlly.
*79-00*5or *44 1*17 or 1491*7*
1 Bdrm . upttalr*. Adult* only. *175
plut SIM damage lee *11 1141
Mr. CtrberorUI 4479

323-3200
549 W Late Mary Blvd.
Suite B
Lake Mary. Fia.li/4*
OR IFTWOOO VILLAGE

127—Office Rentals
THE MERCANTILE BUILDING
BOB M BALL JR PA
REALTOR 111 4111

141—Homes For Sale

P H Z tc d ri PlKE'sXr^ FifOT frtNQ tRfcMEM&amp;EP THE
BACK WITH A J THE. STATION / T i ME HE L0&amp;T
FPE$H C9C? OY
5H0ULP l N - &lt; HI* RM?l£? J0B7
5 TALE U^KE$: &lt; ( V E 6TI6A TE \HE WAS BK&amp;AKlNd
BUT IT * Hi; J0B \ I * H i; J^KES!) chicken b o n e ;
THAT B£?&lt;?KE ME isP.'] THE CITY &lt; / T&lt;? DRAMATIZE
ME'$ HEAPING AN /&gt; MA$ LAW* \ THE A COPE NT
in v e s t ig a t iv e / /
a g a in s t / &gt; . R E F &amp; frrijd
TEAM _
GRUELT

WJAB-TV

321-0041

LAKE SYLVAN ESTATES. 3 new
home*. 1 bdrm, 7 bath. 7 car
garage Low *0‘l Margaret
Sarubbl Broker.Saieirr.an Eve
79) *739Kty«i, Fla. Inc.MMSM
Markham Wood* Rtf ftavembrook
4 Bdrm, 7 0 By owner with
owner financing. 171 llll._______
Mayfair Pool Home
*0't Anumable ItVX M lg.
H I 0*5t or 13? 3150
Open Haute, Saturday and Sunday
by owner. 1/1 split F/P, F/R.
large pool, lenced yard, heat
pump. 11i aiiumpllon 1*7 De
bary Drive. Oebory
___ ____
PAOLA. 1/1, C/H/A. 5 acre
lakelronl 179.900 Wallace Crtu
Realty Inc 133 509)
RIGHT ON LAKE MONROE.
FIthIng pier, Large tcreened pool
and palio. with 1 bdrm. Hi bath
All overlooking the lake Owner
financing. 595.000 Call Charlotte
Croityn Wall SI Company, Re
y owner. Hidden Lakt. 119
Bor ado Road. 3 bdrm. 7 balh.
wooded lot, icreened room, 7 car
garage, large kitchen. 1*1.900 Ph
171 4777_______________________
DRIVE BY l l l l GROVE DRIVE.
Freth paint In and out
new
carpet Perfect 1 Bdrm Starter
Home Only *17,000 Owner will
•n ltl with F HAi VA financing

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR

REALTY,

Lake Mary. Hidden Lake Villa
New. 2 bdrm. 1 bath, garage, no
pelt *475 Ph 119 7411__________
Nice neighborhood, very clean. 1
Bdrm , I B , dining room, living
room, A/C, wllh icperata t
Bdrm Apt. A/C. Rent at t, *150 a
month. *500 lecurlty depot it Call
between 51. 7 PM Ml ail*

ROBBIE'S
REALTY

REALTY WORLD
WE HAVE BUYERStl
WENEEDLISTINGSII

r ea l t o r m l *

77*1 S French
Suit* 4
Stnlerd. Fla.

323-3145

NEW S141—Homes For Sale

FIRST TIME OFFEREOI
Thera'i room to spread out In this 4
B r. 1 B home, located on quit!
cut de lac. Majeillc oaki give
country ieeling- Vsy itotrfd If?
thli! tai.soo

UNDER 11,000 DOWN
1 Bdrm. Doll Houte Affordable
monlhly payment* Call owner
broker taleimen. I l l Itl I.
• UNDER PRICEO a
S47.900 3 Bdrm H i Bath Move In
condition Call for appointment.
Broker 111 4441 or I 773 411)

Lie. Real Etlale Broker
3*40 Sanlord Ave
SEC Tills TODAY. Vacant, l/J,
dining room. Irothly painted,
nice etfabllthed neighborhood,
itium t morgage. t Move In
*44.900
LAKE MA R Y . 1/3, en d oted
garage. Inground pool, fenced
beck, tecludcd area *59.900
SEMINOLE WOODS 5 acre*, high1
and dry, beautifully wooded
corner, unbelievable. *39,500

By Owner Longwood Area. 4
Bdrm.. 1 B, Pool, garden tpol
Reduced to 15). 500 1)05 747
By Owner, new Villa home In
Hidden Lake* 1 bdrm. 1 balh.
large lot, t car garage. SS0.300
914.500 lo auume Payment 1)9*
mo 111 4777.__________________ _

2

B**im m Dugin Apt

i r - *310#0

3 2 3-3 7 74
FIRE SALE IN SAHORA. Owner I*
deiperate! Mutt tell thlt week!
Lovely 3 bdrm. 1 balh. w/lantlly
r o o m and f a n c a d y a r d )
Tremendovt potentialt Submit
all ollen. Anumable morigagel
Atklng *49.500. Make olfrr.
DREAM HOME IN COUNTRYI
Jut! tike new, 1 tlory, 4 bdrm, 1
bath, w/cuttom cedar
throughout! Pluth carpel)
t park ling pool I 3 paddle land
Large thade tree* and clfrvtt 3
g a ra g it and Fla. rm. tool
*45.904.
SOUTHERN CHARM. Large 1
(lory, 4 bdrm. l&gt;i balh home.
W/country kllchtnl Family
room I Brick lireplrct in matter
bdrm I Formal dining ream!
Commercial toning! Eiftntivaly
remodledl *45,004.
PRESTIGIOUS MA/FAIR Eeecu
liv* Section! Walk ta Lake
Monroe Irom thil comfortable
home with IF* own private In
doer lung lei 59" a 35" tcreened
rear palio I Cuttom built Jacuill
ell Mailer Bdrm I • paddle lam I
Kitchen equipped I Many cuttom
feelurti throughout! *141,404

Location: 610 Irene St., Orlando, Fla.
"R E A L ESTATE S E LLS A T 1 P M S H A R P "

REAL ESTATE 6,000 sq. It. C/B Bldg. • 160' x 150' Corner Lot • Zonod 03
suitors

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS

COUNTRY LIVING, el itl betl in
lewnt ) large bdrmtl Sparkling
pool I 17 trull treed on appro* V,
acre center tell Cedar and cltrut
throughout! Very private and
tented! Only IS3.SM.

LONG WOOD SPACIOUS A ELEOANT )/l&lt;i w/ttudy, fireplace,
w tl bar, laktilde community
w/llthlng, boating, tennl*. CALL
NOW. O O N 'T WAI T. Only
II5MM.
DELTONA OSTEEN AREA.Undar
conifruclien, 111 w/lemily room,
formal living room on beautiful
wooded corner let. Pick your
colon! Only U4.SM.
LONGWOOO-3/3 N E WL Y
PAINTED INSIDE AND OUT,
hug* family room, qulat dead
and ttreat behind new hotpilal.
Super price ol *74J00.
SMALL FAMILY DREAM HOME
You'll leva thi* Immaculate 1/1
w/famlly room on corner tel,
fenced rear yard. Will tell
VA/FHA appraital 541,000 and
LOW I DOWN.
BEAUTIFUL YOUNO EXECU
TIVfc HOME in nica taction
Sanf-d/L-La ?ner* *«Ce. « !
energy efficient, brick lirtplece
and too many titrat to mention.
All lor only 575,540.

Inspection: Friday, O ct. 14th — 10-6 P.M.

3 Bdrm t bath, completely re
llored. celling lent throughout,
oak floor*, large lot. good area
*47.500 371 0*44 after 5P M

From*180
1505 W. 25th SI.
3 2 2 *2 0 9 0

CONSULT OUR

A N D LET AN EXPERT DO TH E JOB
To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

Electrical

Landclearing

Quality Electrical Service
Fan*, timer*, tecurlty lltev eddi
lion*, ntw lervlce*, Iniured
Mailer Electrician Jamet Paul.
37) 7559

LANOCl EARING, FILL DIRT.
CLAY A SHALE
377 5453__________

LOOKING FOR A TREAT IN
STEADOF A TRICK? USE OUR
CLASSIFIED*.

A A J Land leaping
Complete lawn Maintenance
3314)41__________

Remodeling Specialist
Wa handle Th*
Whole Ball of Wee

Health &amp; Beauty

B.E.Unk Const.
322-7029

TOWER S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harriett ! Beauty
Nook 5)9 E. I»t SI. 171 5741

Financing Available

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
• OIL HEATER#
CLEANING AND SERVICING
Call Ralph 111*711
X X DiMount On All Rapalr*
Far Window Air Canditrenen
On* r*y Service. Ph 177-1*11.

Automotive
20% On A&gt;l Fori(n C in
Repairs- October Only.
Major and M inor W ofL
277-1(31

Bookkeeping
Campvteriied Bookkeeping
We'il do your book* on our com
putor lor a* mile at 510 a month
Call Gall 17107**

Cleaning Service
A Meney Back Oawrantaol
Ken Holden Southern Maid Sar.
Bead/Inter. Mate *4* 997*
PAR MAID SERVICES
Have yog hod your home cleaned
IdfatirP Cleaning with * t o
;£-:tnei !-•'*&gt; »V7 81U *7* J it

Home Improvement

COMPUTE CONSTRUCTION
No |ob to tmall Miner A m*|o'
repair* Ikem ed A bonded

mam_________
PARTNERS. Roofing repair, palnf
ing, remodeling and addition*
Free Eli. Call Eve* 373 0004

Home Repairs
Auttln't Maintenance Carpentry,
plumbing, painting, matonry.
iprlnkieri, remodeling.MM1BI,
Carpentry allerallont. gutter work,
painting, tiding, porch**, patio*
elc Aik lor Art Hubble
19*9 Priceill 37117*1.
Maintenance of o!l fypei
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
b electric 33) 9030
No job too tmall Home repair* and
remodeling ?S Year* eaperlenca
Call 32) 9*45

Interior Decorating

Landscaping

Lawn Service
ALL YOU NEED IS US
3770797
Crockett A Water? Lawn Service
KING A SONS LAWN SERVICE
Early Fall Clean Up. *50 Special
For Any Averag* Yard 345 1*14.
L A M Lawn Care Ser vice
Mow, edge. trim, and haul. Contact
Lae er Mark. P I *3*7 or 115 91«*
W AD LAWN SERVICE.
Mowing, edging, fertilizing

Fro* ettlmato*. Ph P I 07*9

Masonry

Secretarial Service
Return# and Cover Leller
Preparation. General Typing and
Jookkrepln^ P I l*tl.

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners

BEAL Concrete t man quality
operation Patio*, drlvawayt
Day* 111 7113 Eve* 111 -IPI.
e * * GUY'S CONCRETE e ■ e
FREE ESTIMATEI ANYTIMEI
15 Yr*. lap. 3475974
SWIFT CONCRETE Fooler*,
drivewayt. pad*. Hoor*, pool*
Chatt. Stone Free 6*1/m 7183

SEWING MACHINE. Zlg lag all
metal Guaranteed t49 00
Seminole Sewing 17 91 Lake
Mary Blvd Winn Dm* Center
____________P1-94H.___________
VACUUM CLEANER: Elecfrolui,
new, g u a r a n t e e d *4? OO
Seminole Vacl 1)97 and Lak*
Mary Blvd. Wlr.n Dili* Center.
P3 9411

Nursing Care

Sprinklers/Irrigation

OUR RATESARE LOWER
Lake view Nurilng Center
*19 E. Second S t. Sanford
m *707 _____ _

Painting
CENTRAL FLORIDA
Ham* Improvement
Painting. Carpentry.

Small Rapalr*

Cuttom Draoerlei/Vertical*
AFFORDABLE PRICES
Sharon* Creation**?* 8113

II Year* Eaparlanct. 333-3*4*
e . FREE ESTIMATE* e
Rhxte* Palming All Type*
15 Yr* Eap 1* Hr Phone S I 49)1

Domcbiic

Janitorial Services

Plasterfng/Dry Wall

« Billable* Eap*rWM#d#
Rea*, rite* I# clean ynur ham*.
DON'T OELAYfl Call 3)1 1131

*11Wt Save Yew Meney 111
HOMES35 Hr. Daily OFFICES
Sa vdy'* Janitorial Ser. 13* 37*4

A L L P h a i t i o t P ta k te rln g
Platfering repair, ilucco. hard
cole, timulafedbrick 111 59*3

Swimming Pool Service
SUNSHINE POOLSERVICE
Will maintain your pool Inlop
condition, prlval* or commor
cUI. Ph 377*3*7. Sunthin* Pool
Servlet. 511 Mellonvlll* Ave
Sanford FI. 1)771
_______

Tree Service
JOHN ALLEN LAWN ATREE
Any kind of Tree Service
We do mot* anyin log S I 53*0
Savel Credit en Good Wood!
JACKSONTREE SERVICE
&gt;* Yn . Eiperienct 71**115
Tri County Tree Service
Trim, remove. Irath hauling
firewood, tree etl 177*410

7 Year old 15.3 upright treeter,
*300 Ge* grill uted 3 time*. *150.
Elhan Allan drettlng table.
*135 00 Stereo 550 111 4717

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo

323-5774
1*0* HWY 17 91
5ANFORDREALTY
REALTOR
113
All Hr* 311 *954.11) 43*5
lanford/Sanpra. Private com muni
ty. pool, tennl* elc. 1 year old
hem*. 1 bdrr*. living room. D/R.
lam room, F/P, tcreened porch,
large private back yard Attume
mortgaga or own pralerence.
*49.400. Principle* Only
Ph 3)1-4305.
Cattleberry. 3/1, family room
tireplace. tcreened porch
fenced Jutl oil 17 97. *43,900
BOBM BALL JR PA
REALTOR ____________ 333 4)11

REALTORS

Sanford’s Sales Leader
WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINIOLE COUNTY
COZY AND NEAT, 1 bdrm, l&lt;i
bath heme near iheppmg. ichoel
aid C/H/A. W/W/C. paddle Ian*.
D/R and moral Law down.
*44.900.
SUPER. 3 Bdrm. \ balh home in
Ravenna Park, C/H/A. W/W/C
eat In kit, game room, lenced
rear yard and much morel Near
Maylair C. Club. 153.500.
CHECK THIS. 3 bdrm. 1 bath home
an • large let. with a lanced rear
yard! Paneled lam. reem.
w/brick FPL. Spill plan, pantry.
C/H/A. W/W/C and pall*.
*59^00.
LOVELY. ) bdrm. tty b4th hem*
an * acre* in Otleenl All the
• ■trail En|ey her*** and live
itockt 5acre* lenced MMf*.
LOTS OF CHARM, t bdrm. 3 bath.
3 tlory Victorian »tyla homa.
rettored fa itl ertginal beauty I I*
room*, * fireplace*, ipacieu*
bedroom* and ever i.ttt tq ft.
5*5*00.
CUSTOM BUILTI J tdrm, 3 balh
home on 5 t acre* I Matter tulle
large F/R with FPL. Country oat
In kitchen, ipacloui ter porch
with paddle tani and your own
tplath. pool and tpal Two tlory
ba, n wllh lull* upitairt. t ) 11.500

C A LL A N Y T IM E
JHi S. Park

Reautllul Wedding Gown and Vail
SUu ta. Originally *450 Will Mil
1171or bail offer IW OK

FENDER Stratacaiter Guitar and

For Sale Oil Drum 110 gal capacl
fy, partially filled No reeeoneble
oiler refuted 17} 1159
Hunt Herat There'i 'Na Limit' on
the Bargain* You'll 'Beg' IT*
Eety to Place a WANT ADPHONE m u t t .
Lika naw, I t l ) Arleni riding
lawnmowar. to hp . J1‘* blade,
electric *tert. Under warranty.
Price *995 Call 171 *544_________
OLDUPRIGHT
PIANO W'BEVEL GLASS
10000
FUTURA. like new, one of
Singer'* Top Model*. All Stlhhet
built In Sold new over 1700 Mull
tecrlficc for n i l *0 or Attum*
115 Monlhly payment* Will take
trade a* part payment. Free
home Trial Call *4113*4.
Wt buy furniture, antique* o '
accept conUgnmentt lor Auction
Fla Trader Auction 179 3119
* » . I New Security Light

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Eety Term*
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
II70S Sanlord Ave
371 4075
Dtbery Auto A Marine Sale*
acron the river fop ef hill 17a
Hwy 17 WOebary ***&gt;!*«
Jeep CJ5 New top. mechanically

187—Sporiirtg Goods
1 hunting permit* tor Bull Creek.
I4tn. 15th. A lath Both *110 Call
between* A SP.M .1» 1799.

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
FILL DIRT A TOP SOIL
YELLOW SANO
Clark A HIM 171 7510.3)3 1*11

Mercury Grand Marqui*. 71. 1
door, lull power, air, ttereo
*1500 31) 17*9
1970 V.W. Van. tome ru*l. run*
great, 19.000 ml. on engine
overhaul. 11.000 Ph 149 5009.
Geneva.
_______
1974 Plymouth Fury.
Good Condition Price 5450
Call 171 77*3

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
Call 111-144* Altar 5.
19*0 Portlsc Firebird
Auto. Air, Stereo
Call H I SOM

207—Swap Corner
Hat Fall Hsuucltanlsg
Turned Up Svrplut Thing*
Want Ad Will Turn TeCariiT

211—Antiques/
Collectables
Furniture and repair. d d p*ln* bhd
refinlihlng. ttalnlng. antique* a
ipoclallty. 371 Q«9?____________
Nortakt China Rotamor Pattern
91 piece* I* Avon plate* '73 to '*1
cn r 111mat and Ofhen. H 1 4*57. .

’7* Ford Station Wagon. P/S, P/B.
air. auto tram, radio and heater
US0 Good, clean running car.
*14 4*05 or 139 9100_______
7* Grand Torino 9 peiiertger
datieh */*4dn‘. runt good"*!.TOO
or bed otter 339(a9*

213—Auctions

REALTY • REALTORS
ACRE T R A C T S O E N E V A
AREA. Ead el tanlerd Some on
hard turlace read. 79% down.
Cietirg in 39 day*. )* Ytar
mortgage, ar :t% laterett. Call
for detail! and intpactlen.

CALL A N Y T IM E
15*5 S. Park

FOR ESTATE Commercial or
Prudential Atcflen- f, .V-P'alialt Call Dell * Auction 33) 5*10.
FOR ESTATE or COMMERCIAL
AUCTIONS Call A I AUCTION
SERVICE 37)419*

215—Boats/Accessories
71 Chrytler Outboard Motor 110
HP. with power tilt and control*
1*30 131 4415

* 5 Acre* Lake Sylvan Area
*43.500 W Maliciowikl Realtor.
37) 79*3

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale

157-M obile
Hom es/Sale
REALTY •

TELEVISION - ZENITH IS" Color
TV In Walnut Contole Original
Price, over *700 Balance due
*79) Ceth or take up payment*
ot *10 GOmonth No Money down.
Still In warranty. Free Home
Trial •no obligation. &gt;*? 5394.
19" Curtlt Methet portable. 3 year
warranty. *100 or belt otter a
Ptonee* tpeektrt. Pioneer 7M
receiver. Pioneer equallter.
cattelle deck. Maranti turnla
ble, *1.400 or beil oiler Ml 1155
between * A 1 173 4 0 0 ________
It" Curtlt Maihlt portable. 3 year
warranty, 1700 or bed otter 4
Pioneer tpeaker*. Pioneer 7*0
receiver. Pioneer equallter,
cattette dock. Merantt turnla
bl*. *1,400 or belt offer 173 7311
between* A 1. After Ph 1714*40

e e * e VERA'S ATTIC# • e a
Quality Comingmenl FatTilont
Men, Women. Children. 331 1)7*

W E N E E D L IS TIN G S

IIROOF INGtt
Hit I'm Art Hubble
do beaulltul work. I do new rooli,
rocl leak* I replace or repair
valley*, root* vent*, etc I will
tave you money 1117 17*7
SEMINOLE ROOFING
RtRooli.New Rool*.Root Repair*
Free Etlimale* Ph 117 9549

I l l 3!9 E. FIRST ST

ST JOHNS Rive* 3 'i acre parcel*,
with river ecceit Only * left
Starting *19,900. Public water, 10
min. to Altamonte Mall. 17% 70
y r, financing, no qualifying.
Broker *U M l)_____

FHA VA SPECIAL. Camfoiltbla
and altordable 3 bdrm, I5i bath
home, w/targe fenced yard and
icreened porch! Good localienl
Call ut quick I *43500.

Roofing
Doe* Your Old Or Ntw Roof Leek?
It it doe*, call David Lee
373 4435
Root Malntnanco
Repair work Ntw work
Troy or George for Free Ell
105-3*5 *440

Calh for good uied furniture.
Larry'* New 1 Uied Furn&gt;tur«
Mart. 115 Sanlord Ave 177 *117
Kenmore part*, lervica,
ua*dwath*r| 1710*97
MOONEY APPLIANCES
Refrigerator Frlgidelrt. 17 C.u. ft.
harve)t gold. 7 yr*. old 1100
le a n Cctorpm '7 ru 19 . white
treeter 5100 Call 777 7U7. 4 to 9
PM,
Two matching twin bad), gold
velvet Quilled heedboard*. boa
iprlng &amp; mattre*! In perlecl
i h a p e . O n l y m i d In
GueetroomSiSOOi) Call 131-0347

209—Wearing Apparel

Sendlewood by owner. I Bdr
I blh, carpel, lull kitchen,
wather/dryer, A/C. pool and
main!.. *74.500. 37) Mt?
________ alter 5. HIM*?.

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service

223—Miscellaneous

133—Lots-Acreage/Sale

A v a ila b le

I, 2, 3 Bi. Apt*., 7 BN. T.H.

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

Siberian Hutky Pup* Bl/Sllver.
w/whlle. blue eye* Warmed and
thOt*.tM and up 371 457*

• Adult &amp; Family

SdCtiorU
• W/D Connection*
• Coble TV. Pool
• Short Term leaie*

Thursday, Oct. H, 1941--7B

141—Homes For Sale

BATEM AN REALTY

SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE

TERMS: 325,000 00 down » Bal
12% Inletesl for 15 Years P I,
EQUIPMENT: Pexto Shears • Chicago Brakes • LaThcs * Tig Welders • Air Comprossors • Drill Presses • Grinders * Band Saws • Hoists * 2840 Ton Punch
Presses • 55 Ton Buffalo Iron Worker • 20 H P. Promo Cutoff Saw • Metal Folder •
Truco Core Drill • 1980 Chevy 1 Ton w/Welder • 1980 Jeep CJ-7 • *i Ton Chevy •
Lots of Like New Hand Tools • Inventory * 2 4 4 Ton Forkhlts • Ornamenial iron
Dies &amp; Jigs * 18th Century Flint A Percussion Pistols • W W ll Pistols, Rilles A
Swords • And Much Much More • TERMS: Cash. Cashiers’ Check or Company
Check w/Letler of Guarantee. EQUIPMENT SELLS ABSOLUTE

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

Aitumable 79k% Mortgage. *
Bdrm 1 Bath Cent. HA . *5.190
down 551.900 Appt 311 0434

Alter Hour* 31) 3*31
111-473) or 3311*47

Saturday • Oct. 15th • 10 A.M
Newell W. Clark, Inc.
Machine Shop &amp; Real Estate

S ilt by Owner Longwood. J
Bdrm , 3 Bath. L/R, D/R. Ft*nl
ly Room with tireplace. pool, and
much more 977 OCO *34090]

Newly liictnttd A eiper. full time
real ettata taleimen needed.

U IK E &amp;
1PEAC2F

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

141—Homes For Sale

Pride ol Ownerihlp *how* In thl! 1
B r, ? B. dolihoute. near high
tchool and ihopptng. R talli
tlcally priced at 155.000

T ill FRENCH AVE

CALL BART

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

with Major Hoople

KISH REAL ESTATE
R E A LTO R

BAMBOO COVE APTS
100 E. Alrprrl Blvd. Ph. 171 *470
Efficiency, from *715 Mo 5 \
dllcounf for Senior Cltlien*

_______ Open on weekend*._______

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEOS

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

All American 1940 11X5*. 1 Bdrm..
Air. In family ictllon of Carriaga
Cove *4.500 177*97)
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
SKYLINE DEALER
FEATURING
Palm Beach Villa
Graenleal
Palm Spring*
Palm Manor
Sint* Key
VAFHA Financing 305 31) 5300

Loetburg. US. 441 904-7*7-0114
RESALES I Family Parki
11**0 Nlcel *11,900
14X51 Spadouiltiisoo
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC
105 H I 5100

159— Real Estate
Wanted
PRIVATE INVESTOR
WANTING TO BUT
MULTI FAMILY UNITS
NO REALTORS
CALL 323-2269.
lo r 1 BEDROOM HOUSE
Your PRICE. MY TERMS
113 44*1

161—Country
Property / Saie
COUNTRY LIVING wooded large
lot on privet* rood near SI John*
River. )0S«U 4014

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
APP IANCES. REPOSSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged
From 199 Up Guaranteed
Nearly New 317 E 1*1St S3 7*50
BroyhHI Dining Room
TaUe with Sp iafn 1100
Call S3 5*9* be tor* 3 P M

tt Mont* Carle. Loaded, bucket
teeN, blue with matching Interl
or. Eatra nlcel 79 Marcury
Matqjit 1 dr. tmall V *. A/T.
P/S, A/C P/B. AAA/FM Herto 7*
Tiyrla TScbup t c y ! . dd tram .
radio, topper. Ernie Jackten
Aute Sale* ni-uta.

235—T ru cks/
Buses/ Vans
1977 Blater
4 1 4 Reconditioned
111*101 Call after 5 00

237—Tractors/Trailers

217—Garage Sales
Clothing, dining table, TV. link,
and toadt ol mltc Oct. ISIh A
14th 9 A M till }tO! Control Or
Friday ontyl 1 to a PM . hitcrten
ware, linen*, rug*, boy* and
ladle* clothing, toy*, jewelry,
and mile lltlMallonvIlla Ave
GARAGE SALE U.
Friday**I P.M.
FLEAWORLUHwy. 17-91
Barglnt * Fun Buying A Salting
*45 1791.

Large Yard Sale. Mltc. Item*
Saturday I llll 107 E 30th.
Sanford

Multi Family Oarage Sale In
elude* many FltTier Price tor*
Sal OCI IS. I to 1 PM . 41*
Cardinal Oak* C t. Lake Mary.
Near SCC
Highlawn Ave. Behind Geneva
Garden* Apt*
1 Family Yard Sal*
Sat ontyl 10III 5 PM.
#04 Retail* Dr.
I Family Sale.
379Hi Park Ave
Saturday
* Family Yard Sale Frl. A Sat. 9 to
5. All kind* of mltc Item*: wind
chime*, ceramic*, macrama.
clothing, book*, pi cture*,
glaliwar* and old farm Hem* E
a* to Beardali Ave. turn righl

Baby M l . Itrellerv Carieati.
Playpen*, Elc. Paperback
Book* 373*171 373 9544
Paying CASH for Aluminum, Can*.
Copper. Brett. Lead. Newipaper, Glen. Gold. Silver
Kokomo Toot. 911W 1*1
• 4 M it t *117) 1100

1 Wheel trailer, m ooted Attedied
motor bike carrier. 41414. greal
tor traveling or moving 1545
Perk Or Lot 54

239—Motorcycles/ Bikes
HARLEY DAVIDSON
1973 1700CC.
Police Special *3.000
57415**
Honda CMaOO A'met I new. *1111
under warranty Only 7709 mile*
tlMO Include* helmet end rain
gear Call337 5031 after* P M
19*3 Honda XR 700 Street or dirt,
occe*. Included *400 Ph 34* 5009
Geneva

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
Country Aire travel trailer,
la’, tel! contained. Cen A/H
1*9 *4)4 alter 5P M

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From 110lo ISOor more
Call m ^1*34 333 4)11
TOP Dollar Paid tor Jimk A Uted
cart, truck* A heevy equipment,
P I 5990
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS
CBS AUTO PARTS 1914)03

OF SEMINOLE
“DAYTONA’S BEST"

SECA 550 J
» I8 * S “
SECA 750 H
’ 2 5 9 5 -

WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE A APPLIANCES
S3 7148

MAXIM 650 J
* 2 3 9 9 10
Order Your YAMAHA
fa ir 1* 1 * and W W t W U t
New F *r Saving* Cater*.

Get the‘ Cream Ol flit Crop!
The See tent Beil Bey* Are
In me Want Adi I

N W T . IT-9 1 L 0 M 9 W 0 0 D

1 1 4 -9 4 1 1

�I
Evening H era ld , Sanford.
O cf. 13.
jcm
u
iu
, F
»L
i.____ Thursday,
•
• • • 1M3
*

IB —
— cvvn
id
m
yn
rim
u
i

World Bank Says Developing Nations Can Boost
Their Economic Status By Improving Education
_____
____ i
&lt;
W A S H I N G T O N ( UP! ) - De v e l o p i n g
countrlra can reap large economic gains by
I mp r o v i n g the qual i t y o f educat i on,
particularly In primary schools, according to
several new stud'es by the World Bank.
The hank tong has argued that Investment
In "humnn capital" through education can
nrhlrvr economic rates o f return for a
country that art considerably larger than
Investments In Industry.
More recent studies, disclosed to reporters
recently, have added refinements to this basic
conclusion.
One is that Improving the quality of
education often Is more Important than
Increasing the quantity.
One study Involved a rural region of Mall In
which Income per person Is less than $200 a
year, making It one of the poorest areas In the
world. Life expectancy at birth Is 32 years.
Only 8 percent of adults can read. Less than
20 percent o f children aged 6-14 arc
estimated to be In school.
^
The bank lound that the average number of
pupils per classroom was 34. The average
number of textbooks per classicom was 2.
Teachers were supposed to be paid every two
weeks, but the average time since they Iasi
were paid was 10 weeks.

education. 13
13ncrccnt.
percent.AH
Allthese
theseare
arcabove
above! the
—
„ schoolsin
Using survey
data. „on
In‘U
34viihiicn
villages riliirntion.
10 percent criterion the bank uses In
In this region, the bank found by statistical
analysis that the more books a school had approving Industrial projects.
"l.owcr levels of education have larger
and the mor'* Its teachers tended to be paid
returns than higher levels." said World Bank
on time the higher the enrollment.
Teachers who arc long unpaid, the hank economist George Psachnropoulos. "A ll levels
reasons, nre unlikely to enforce attendance arc neeoed. But If a choice has to be made,
primary schooling should receive llrst priori­
and may not show up fui class themselves.
ty."
The hank found that families of these
These benefits from education may take 50
children were paying parent association fees
years
to realize. But I’ sacharopoulos says
of $1.25 a year. It calculated that, as poor as
that. " I f we neglect Investment In education,
these people nre. fees could be Increased to
we will pay for this neglect later on."
buy m o lt Lv’a’A a and Ihc result would be an
Bank studies have shown that education
Increase In school enrollment.
raises the productivity of farmers. Women
The researchers found that another big
who have received more primary education
factor keeping kids out of school was walking
tend to use better sanitation, have healthier
distance. But. In a region or widely scattered
families and ana near fewer children than
small villages, building a lot of new schools
those with less education.
would he a much more expensive way of
A scries of somewhat controversial educa­
Increasing enrollment, they reported.
tion
studies In the United States and other
For developing countries as n group, the
Industrial countries In the 1960s found thnt
hank estimates that Investments In primary
home background — such as the Income and
education earn on average a 27 percent social
education
ol parents — were bigger factors In
rate of return — which means the totnl future
school achievement than the quality of
economic benefits to the nation (such as
education.
higher productivity and Incomes) measured
Recent Worid Bank studies have reached
against the cost.
Just the opposite conclusion for developing
For sec ondar y educat i on the bank
countries.
estimates this return at 16 percent: for higher

Let T h e m E a t V ita m in s ...
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The con­
servative publication Policy Review
suggests replacing the federal food
stamp program with soup kP-hcns
and vitamins, saying those who now
gel the stamps still arc malnourished.
"Passing out vitamin pills to the
poor would be far cheaper and more
effective nutritionally than current
programs and would not destroy
anyone's Incentive to provide for
h im s e lf.” James Bovard. n
Washington reporter, wrote In the
publication which lo funded by the
conservative Heritage Foundation.
"Enrollment In food programs has
more than quadrupled since 1960 to
about 70 million people." Bovard said.
Despite the Increase. Bovard said an
Agriculture Department study noted
only 39 percent of low-income house­
holds — Including users and non­
users of food stamps — met the
required dally allowance for nil
nutrients In their diets.
" I f federal food assistance was
Intended to fight hunger, then It was
an abject fnllure." he said. "The great
majority of had diets ... arc due to
Ignorance and bad habit, not low
Income.
The Heritage Foundation, the

think-tank that funds the quarterly
Journal, said "much of the money
spent over the years to fight hunger
and poverty has missed Its mnrk."
The Foundation suid Bouvards
a r t i c l e Is " c o n t r o v e r s i a l and
thought-provoking." though his views
are not necessarily those of Heritage.
Bovard wrote; "When Individual
Irresponsibility or Imprudence Is the
cause of hunger, it makes more sense
to provide soup kitchens rather than a
month's worth of food stamps."
Bovard criticized liberal politicians
for Increasing food prices and In­
stituting minimum wage laws that
cause unemployment and burdened
welfare rolls.
"It Is farcical to hear jwlltlclans
sobbing over the poor's plight while
they try to raise food prices by hook or
by crook or by P1K." he said, referring
to the administration's Payment In
Kind program for farmers.
"Politicians made a mockery of the
definition of need" and media reports
have caused food policy lo be shaped
by waves of hysteria. National policy
should not turn on the most sensa­
tional examples the evening news
team can find.” he udded.

Calendar

S C O R EW ITH
^ ^ H

THURSDAY. OCT. 13
Seminole County Democratic Executive Committee.
7:30 p.m.. Casselberry City Hall. Judge Robert
McGregor will speak on the Judicial System. Open to the
public.
Greater Seminole Toastmlstress Club. 7:30 p.m..
Greater Seminole Toastmlstress Club. 7:30 p.m.. 291 N.
Maitland Ave.. Altamonte Springs.
Overeaten* Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St. Open speaker.
Sanford Alanon, 8 p.m.. The Crossroads. Lake Minnie
Road off Highway 17-92. Sanford.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed. First United Methodist
Church. Oviedo.
FRIDAY. OCT. 14
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls. 7 a.m.. Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport.
Business Education Day sponsored by area chambers
of commerce kick-off breakfast. 8:30 a m.. Lake Mary
High School. Speaker TV anchor weman Carole Nelson.
Sallle Harrison Chapter DAR. 2 p.m.. home of Mrs.
M.E. Tolar Nance. 101 Par Ave.. Sanford. SpeakerBcttye Smith on "1783 Treaty of Paris."
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
Wekiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Weklva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. at Weklva Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian Church.
SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time and place.
Tangtewood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same time and
place.
,
Sanford AA. Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Closed.
Association of International Students award banquet.
International food and entertainment followed by dance.
7 p.m.. University of Central Florida dining room. Call
275-2060 or 275-2653 for ticket Information.
8ATURDAY OCT. IB
Great Day In the Country Arts &amp; Crafts Festival. 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.. grounds of St. Luke's Lutheran Church.
State Road 426 at Red Bug Road. Slavla.
Senior Citizens dinner theatre trip to Once Upon a
Stage. Orlando, to sec "T h ey'tr Playing Our Song."
Leave Sanford Civic Center. 11 a.m.: pick up Seminole
Plaza. Casselberry. 11:30 a.m. Return 5 p.m. For
reservations call 322-9148.
ftnynar sponsored by Church of God Ladles Auxiliary.
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.. 22nd Street and Holly.
Cabaret Dance with Big Band music. 7:30 p.m.. Senior
Citizen Multipurpose Center. 200 N. Lake Trip'®* Drive.
Ca&amp;selberry.
Sanford AA. open discussion. 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Sanford Women s AA. 2 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First
St.
Musical Extravaganza featuring the Trinity In­
terdenominational Choir and the University of Central
Florida Chorus In concert. 7:30 p.m.. Providence
Missionary Baptist Church. Lake Monroe.

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ORANGE CITY
2323 South Volusia Ave
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 775-7268
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
102 &amp;East Altamonte Drive
(Highway 436)
Phone 339-8311
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 West Highway 436
Phone867 7254

— OPEN 7116 MU—

Pi cm Quoted m ih.» ad ••* tewd on

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700 French Avenue
Phone 323 4700

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                    <text>PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983--1B

Cook Of The Week

By Lou Childers
Herald Correspondent
For Kathy Hcaih of Lorigwood, cooking skills go all
way bark to her family's roots in West Virginia
learned basic country cooking from my tnothci." s
this week's cook.
Kathy admits that when she moved to Sanford at age
8 with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dcnsll Triplett, and her
brothers. Denny and Richard, nnd sister. Dreama. she
had a cooking experience shc'P never forget.
"It was the first time I fried (thicken. Kathy starts,
"and when I knew the chicken was tender I went to pour
the grease out In the garbage can. I never dreamed that
our family eat for some strange reason was in there.
Well, you can imagine the scene! The ent came
screeching out of the can and Kathy's chicken — pan
and all — went flying all over the room!
Kathy has always loved to cook, and especially
enjoyed home economies In school at Seminole High.
"I've always read mugazlnes and newspapers hunting
for new recipes that sound good." That's how Kathy
found her recipe for Apple Bread Pudding. This recipe
calls for canned apple pie Piling, but In order to rut
down on sugar and calories. Kathy substitutes 4 or 5
large fresh apples pared and sliced.
One of Kathy's favorite meals to fix for her husband.
Dick, and daughter. Rebecca. 2VS. Is Super Sausage
Supper which is enhanced by the additions of Southern
corn bread and Wilted Lettuce Salad.
When Kathy's husband retired ns meat manager at
tile Sanford Publlx store, he taught her how to make
Beef Roludcn. "This is a vciy special main course, and
Ik * sure to baste the tr.p of the steak several times during
the cooking so it won't dry out." Instructs Kathy.
When the Heaths find a busy schedule Is pushing
them to "gel It together" for a meal. Kathy often turns to
Taco Pie.
Through the’ years. Kafhy has saved one recipe out
that she favors among all others. Apple Dapple Case.
Again, she uses Irish apples, and the unique feature of
this cake Is the topping pou/cd over the cake while It Is
still hot.
APPLE BREAD PUDDING
8 &gt;dices bread, toasted
1« cup butter or mat garble
I . an (20 oz.) apple pie Oiling (or 4-5 fresh apples,
pared and sliced)
Vi cuji raisins
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1cup milk
1cup hot water
1« cup dark brown sugar
2 eggs, slightly Ijcaten

nutmeg: bake 50-60 minutes nt 350 degrees or until
custard Is set. Remove from oven nud sjaInkle with
shredded cheese. Let pudding stand several minutes
bclorc serving with a dollop of whipped topping.
APPLE DAPPLE CAKE
1V4 cups oil
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
3 cups (lour
I teaspoon salt
I teaspoon soda
44 cup pecans
3 cups raw apples
Combine oil, sugar, eggs, vanilla, and add (lour. salt,
soda, pecans and apples. Pour into greased and floured
Ox 13-Inch pan. Bake for 1 hour In 350 degree oven.
T o p p in g :

1cup brown sugar
V4 cup milk
44 cup mnrgarhic
Melt margarine. Add sugnr and milk, cooking until
thick on low srlllg. Pour over hot cake and let stand in
pan at least two hours before serving.
TACO PIE
1V4 lb. ground chuck
1 large can tomatoes
1 small can green ehilies
2 to 3 tablespoons chili powder (seasoning)
1 package com tortillas (found In refrigerator section
ofgroceiy store)
8 oz. chcddar cheese, grated
2 tablespoons flour
salt &amp; pepper to taste
Brown meat and drain excess fat. Put seasonings In
and add tomatoes with all Juice. Cut green ehilies Into
small pieces and add to meat mixture. Cook for
approximately 10 minutes on medium heat. Add tortilla
shells and push in with spoon, cutting Into meat
mixture. (If sauce Is too soupy, sprinkle (lour on top nnd
stir to thicken.) Cook for bout 10 additional minutes. Dip
out on plates and pass Taco toppings of shredded
lettuce, chopped tomatoes and onions, sour cream nnd
additional shredded cheese.
SUPER SAUSAGE SUPPER
1 to 1VS lbs. Kilbassa sausage
4 to 6 medium to large white potatoes
1 pkg. fresh carrots
2 large onions
1 bunch of fresh oroccoll
Clean and cut all vegetables us for stew. Melt 2
tablespoons margarine n large skillet. Put all vegetables
In and brown a little, turning temperature to low. Cook
for 15 minutes. Cut sausage Into serving pieces and

H*r*M Photo by Loo ChiWon

K a t h y H e a th uses ca n n e d a p p le p ie fillin g
com bined w ith fresh apples for A p p le B read
Pudding.
Vii tcaspoop salt
teaspoon vanilla
nutmeg
Shredded chcddar elieesc
Spread toasted bread with butter. Arrange four slices
bread, buttered side up. in well-oiled baking p-»n. Spread
pie filling or fresh apples over bread. Top with raisins
nnd cinnamon. Cut remaining bread Into cubes and
arrange over apples, covering well. Stir brown sugar and
hot water together until sugar Is somewhat dissolved.
Add milk. eggs, salt and vanilla, pouring over breud.
Refrigerate lv;o or three hours. Sprinkle top with

place on top of vegetables Cover and continue to cook
20 minutes or longer on low to medium setting. Season
to tnstc with salt and pepper. Serve when vegetables nrc
tender. Yield: 4 servings
W ILTED LLTTIJCE SALAD
1 head of lettuce
I chopped onion
4 .slices bacon
I
bottle Old Dutch salad dressing
Break lettuce up in large bowl. Fry bacon crispy. Add
onions to lettuce. Heal 1 tablespoon of bacon grease with
drippings and pour in VS to full br,ttlc of dressing. Ileal
thoroughly to almost a boll and |&gt;our over lettuce. Toss
lightly and add crumbled bacon. Serve immediately.
BEEFROLADEN
Yield: 4 servings
I |M)imd top round steak
1 small bag herb dressing mix
4 oz. pecan pieces
1cup diced celery
1cup diced onion
14 cup butter
Have butcher slice top round Winch l hick, or into 4
thin slices. Prepare dressing according to parkage

Reductions!
&amp;

2 0 %

■ ffY ,

O ff

V ffc N

O n A l l F u ll

f f TO

D R ESSES &amp;

-r - T V M

PANTSUITS

FREEq * •

Certified A p p r a is e r
A t M u s e u m Sa turd a y
Harriell Cordell, a senior member of
the American iioclcty of Appraisers, will
bo in Sanford Saturday to give those
interested a written, certified upapralsal
of silver, cloisonne, crystal, porcelain,
ncedlewoik. linen heirlooms and old
clocks
The uppraUil session is sponsored by
tiie Henry S. Sanlord Historical Pre­
servation Society and will be held at the
Henry S. Sanford Library Museum. 520
E. First St. Oct. 15. from 3 to 5 p.m.
Mrs. Cordell Is a regular guest on
Channel 2&gt;' television, teaches the
merchandising o f antiques at Loch
Haven Art Center and Is the owner of
The Cordrlllcr. an antique shdp In

Orlando.

Harriett Cordell, A.S.A

She is an expert in the* field of
establishing the age. origin and value of
objerts and what conditions atTcet the
value of foreign and domestic antiques.
Mildred M. Caskey, curator at the
museum, onnoqhcca that tickets are
available In advance at the museum.
Donation Is $5 which entitles Hie
appraisal and certification of three Items.

She adds. "In their role of an organiza­
tion dedicated to historical preservation,
the Sanford Society Is greatly concerned
with the beliefs and wherefores of
nppralsals In cstabltfhlng the identity,
history and value of Inherited or ac­
quired artifacts for historical piescervatlon atid present Mrs. Cordell as a means
of enabling area families to have this
Information as a part of their family
heritage.

5 *''•*
fNr«OuMM

insuuuKt »
11namet
ACCEPTED

t
P *»

ln t p W W | W W * ilo

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
DR.THOMAS YANDELL
Chiropractic Phyvician
.JDt; F R E N C H A V E .

211 E. First St.
Downtown Sanford
322-3524

. SANFO RD

323-5763 *

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AN INSTANT S H O W !!
J
Reg. $1.19 EACH
*

WHILE SUPPLY
LASTS

$ 1 8 9
CHOPS JL ..

LOIN END
PORK ROAST
• Mid Brown

2-Pitci Pant Suits

6 ” BASKET

W E W I L L NO W B E C L O S E D . E V E R Y M O N D A Y

PEN N Y

I Group 01

I hMun KtMUSI

Mrs. Caskey stresses the Importance of
knowing how much lamlly heirlooms arc
worth on today'B market. "Your family
may no* know but your Insurance man
should." Mrs. Caskey says.

PRICES GOOD
WED. T H R U SAT.

• Bone
• While
• Navy

SPECIAL BUY!

D*ng*» S K p tft ol

s35 8 *38
111
All

Donation for observers is 81. For In­
formation. call the museum. 321-0710.
open Sunday. Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday, from 2-5 p.m.. or call
322-6419.
Mrs. C a sk ey says that due to
widespread Interest in this event nnd
limited space at the museum. It is
suggested that tickets be obtained In
advance to ensure admission.

IO W A
MEATS
TASSEL

SPINAL EXAMI NAT ION

STRAWBERRY
PLANTS

* 1 4 .9

P U N T NOW for a big crop!!!
Big 5” Pots. Reg. $1.49 Each

COUNTRY STYLE
SPARE RIBS
Bone-In Leon

CHUCK ROAST or
CHUCK STEAK

DRIVER
• Bone
• Cognac
^ • Navy

$1 49

[■Ira 1*0.1

Special Shipment
5tt-9Va M
7-9 Vi N
Nobody buy Nobody
Undersells Lois' Place

116 W. FIRST STREET
Welaka Bldg.

323-4X32 Downtown Sanford

FRESH
GROUND CHUCK

$ 1 6 9
3 IBS. OH MORE
J L LB.

IMPATIENS
BRILLIANT COLOR MIX 4 ” ROTS

Sklnnod C 0*«*in*d

BABY STEER
LIVER

$1 09
WHILE SUPPUES LAST

2108 S. FRENCH AVE. (17-92)
NEXT TOMR.C'S CHICKEN

PHONE ORDER AHEAD
I'l Raady Whan Yov'rt Raadyi

A c n Q

LAKE MARY
323-6133

�2B JEvw In o

ci

W r fllttd iy , Oct. 1

In And Around Longwood

&gt;

Spokes Welcome Hreo Newcomers
'- in j
^ % ^ 'L a s s .

V

For iho October meeting, the group plans to visit the
Sabal Point Country Club.

With all the new people
moving Into
Longwood

I

be refreshing for them to
know there Is a group of
willing to
take tlie
to
a hand ol friendship and

A/
|k

■

I\U I c l ’
W flr ifir
r ui n o i

Each month the Seminole Spokes, a branch of the
I'loilda Welcome Wagon, holds a special "get aerp'.dnlcd" collcc for new residents in the area,
On the th'rd Wednesday of each month, newcomers
meet
other newcomers at the Westmont
Recreation Center In the Spring Oaks subdivision, at

Eft
m w W W iB M I^ r _
m W M tS M m
—

Speaking of good things to cat. the Rock Lake Middle
School Band Is raising funds this month by selling
candy bars. The candy bars, priced at $1 each. Include a
coupon redeemable at Burger King, for "a buy one. get
one tree Whopper.”
The candy bars ran be purchused from members of
the school band or may be obtained from the
school.
The Sweetwater Oaks Garden Club met Monday at the
A C C E PT IN G MOST D E N T A L PRO G RAM S &amp;
D E N T A L INSURANCE

S I S T E R H e ars C ity M a n a g e r 1,:30nnv
,

S IS T E R Inc. o fficers, Rufh Swinney, firs t v ice
president, left, and Irene Laney, president, pose
questions tor Sanford C ity M a n a g e r W .E . " P e t e ”
Know les, guesl speaker at the S IS T E R 'S tlrs t
p ro g ra m of the season at H o lid a y Inn, Sanford
M a rin a . R e p re se n ta tiv e s of s ix o rg a n iza tio n s
attended

tne mention when Knowles discussed

future

Following the first meeting, newcomers may Join one
o f the ipany different "m ini" groups that ore meeting on
a regular basis. Small groups consist of golf, tennis or
bowling clubs, canasta or bridge groups, garden elubs.
book clubs and even a "lunch bunch."
According to Corky Hauge. a member of the "lunch
bunch." Jhis particular group of women enjoy seeking
° l" ; " ',i r" ' dlnK thr most Interesting places to go for
lunches.
In September, a group of over 75 Indies converged on
People's Restaurant on Lee Road.

$yr
GUYS &amp; GALS
i f HAIRSTYLING STUDIO V j

MOWS: Mon. Thru fit.
tVon-ngs 1 SM

ruse
C O N S U L T A T IO N

'Who Gives This Woman'
Arouses Feminist's Ange
DEAR ABBY: I am
58-year-old woman. When
I was a young girl. I
W , JM
H e a r
attended a formal wedding
/
and was greatly enraged
-Jt
A b h v
when I heard the minister
ask. "W h o giv es this A
woman...?”
—
n— — —

or

j

323-8174
323-8183
NOW

*0

Includes Cut i Stylo
(Long Hair Slightly Higher)

is pleased to announce the
opening of Iiih office for

GOOD M ON., JUES., WED. ONLY
ENTIRE M ONTH OF OCTOBER
113 W. 27th St.

F A M IL Y P R A C T IC E
at
2209 French Avenue
Sanford
By appointment: 3 2 1 -4 2 3 0

CASH &amp; CARRY -

(Next To Plnocresl School)

^

$ a n f o r d ,^ |
SUSAN WHEATON
OWNER/OPERATOR

WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS

PINECREST SHOPPING CENTER (NEXT TOJEWEL V ■
1AILY

..

rW,,,

DEAR ABBY: I learned about a year ago that, even
■with corrective surgery my chances for having a baby
are practically non-extstent. My husband. "Barry'."
never did really want children, and now he feels
relieved. He refuses to adopt one.
Abby. having a cht.’d ts very Important to me. I tried
for stx years, but tt Just never happened. I was so
depressed. I even considered leaving Barry to And a man
who could love me and adopt a child with me. I fell that
If Barry realty loved me. be would want to have a child
with me — one wav or another.
Now I realize tbit I really do love Barry. I could never
And a better man. Abby. I want to stay with him, but I
sltll have these terrible feelings of resentment because
lie ts depriving me of motherhood. (I want to adopt.) I try’
not to show it. but tt hurts so much whenever I see
children — especially when they arc with a loving father.
What can I do? Counseling is out.
CHILDLESS AND
HURTING
DEAR CHILDLESS: Counseling had better get back
In If you value your marriage, because your obsession
with motherhood and your unresolved resentment will
surely drive your hustiand away.

i

&lt;1

J a m e s E . Q u in n , M .D ,

wandered around tn the crowd.
The affair lasted two days, through three meals and
two cocktail hours. I had a great time, talked with many
people, didn’t skip any of the events nnd didn’t go sit in
•lie lobby.
JUST LOVES
REUNIONS

The question still arouses my anger, and I am amazed
that more women arc not insulted by (his question —
■ asked publicly yeU
Only the woman herself has the right to "give herself
to anyone, any t i m e , for any reason.
I’ve Anally begun to express deAunfly my Indignation
when a bride-to-be tells me she Is going to be "given
away" by her father or stepfather. Of course..! am a
"nut" to even suggest that a woman belongs to no one
but herself, and t*» uni
Inanimate object to be "given
away."
Thanks for listening.
M ARGARETJONAS
IN SAN FRANCISCO
DEAR MARGARET: The original marriage vows
.were written during Biblical times when a woman was
•considered “ chattel" — a piece of property owned by her
father. He bad the right to "g iv e " her to her husband.
•who then regarded berashfs property.
■ However. In recent years, many couples have
requested that that portion of the marriage ceremony oc
i omitted for the reason you qlled.

After a social hour and refreshments, special guest
Vlnro Sims, of Sims Grown Foliage of Fusils. presented
a program.
Sims shared a beautiful slide show. He explained
planting short cuts, landscaping designs and showed the
members a variety of exotic plants.
The Swcctwatd Oaks Garden Club Is open to
Interested women In the nrea. The club meets the
second Tuesday of each month at the church.

” ’

27th &amp; 17-92 - P h o n e 323-0 180

WHOLE OR FULL
SH ANK H A L F "

PRICES GOOD OCT.
12 THRU OCT. 18
’ •

$

*

7

SMOKED
HAM

LEAN ITALIAN SAUSAGE,, $ 1 . 5 9
BONELESS BOSTON BUTT,.$ 1[ . 3 9

SIRLOIN
STEAK

GREAT FQR THE GRILL

9

3 AND DOW N-

’

~

*

I
'/

PORK SPARE RIBS
1 .3 9
BOSTON BUTT STEAK . . $ 1 . 2 9

II

.

- -

•.

SANFORD

LE A N M EATY BEEF

SHORT RIBS

h

$ 1 3 9

WEST FRANKS
• 80 REG. SIZE-40 il/MBO

STEAKS
♦

CENTER CUT

.

EXTRA LEAN

A Crest Ptsce
To S tsrl

322-3942

Captain Nem o’s y L .
W aterbeds
B
CAPTAIN SATS ...

LAY-A-WA i' NOW FOR CHRISTMAS!
"FEEL BETTER &amp; REST EASY!” .

FREE GIFT WITH PURCHASE
OF ANY WATERBEP!

SA

TURDAYNIGHT SPECIAL
REG. *225

NOW THRU
OCT. IS

}

CENTER CUT MARKET STYLE

SLICED
SMOKED

B9C
PORK NECK BONES,, i59c
PORK NECK BONES b ,59c

SMOKED FRESH

FROM OUR DELL
SLICED TO ORDER

-w v.

OTHER
SITUS
IK U WHICH

TO CHOOSE!

1612 i\o r lh S it 127, L o n g n o o d
IN m i: HAYWOOD III ’SINES* (-ENTER

e 30 -0 i 70

MM 36 A MM3 I-Altamonte Spring**
llra n lln Njuarr

N I-II1 1

• All PRODUCTS GUARANTIED
• » « I LAI A WAT
• DO 0AY...SAW AS CASH
• FWANCINC AVAIASU
it...
10-7. M 104.
UWi

% PORK LOINfti
$149
J

HAM HOCKS .. , . . J

un

LEAN BOILED
HAM

$ 1 .5 9

Vh

WHITE OR YELLOW

KOLB
BOLOGNA

AMERICAN
. i CHEESE

1.49,

lA 9 V i

-

PORK CHOPS

SEMINOLE TRINITY
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

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

DEAR ABBY: "No More Reunions" sounds like a
sorehead. He accompanied Ills wife to her high school
reunion, and because be didn't know anybody be got
mad. skipped (be banquet and sat In ihr lobby*.
Last August I went with my wife to her 42nd high
school reunion. I figured It was her class and her party.
On my name tag I wrote "MR. Mary Smith" and Just

�Evening HereM, Sanford, Ft.

W tU n w h y , Oct. 17, i m - i B

Sports Sunday Super Menu Scores Extra Points
1 he full sports season Is a perfect time to gather
mendsi and family around the TV set for an informal
meal I nrc should be simple and delicious, as well as
easy to prepare and serve.
C hicken Dippers, for example, can he brushed with n
savory sauce that .combines coconut rum with
applesauce, catsup and other seasonings, then .re­
frigerated until It Is time to broil. The extra sauce Is used
at room temperature for dipping the wings.
A cheese spread Is another good Idea for a sports
Sunday get-together. It can be prepared a day or two
ahead of time, a plus for the hostess who doesn't want to
miss the action. The Crock 'O Cheese Spread Is
delightfully different. Using peanuts, which some fans
maintain were invented for sportswatchlng, mild
Cheddar and cream cheese and coconut rum. It Is
particularly good with fresh fruit
Popcorn Is a classic for casual cntcrtaltng. This
Tcriyakl Popcorn adds a distinctive touch yet requires
no fuss In preparation.
Beverages, too. should be assembled nhcad of time.
The Cape-Coder punch Is a sparkling mix of coconut
rum fr.;h ,md liqueurs that is eye-catching uud palate
tempting. A cider mixture, such as the warm Super
Sunday Cider, redolent with cinnamon, also Is u sure bet
for a crowd o f Sunday quarterbacks.
Any of these Ideas will help make youi gatherings as
memorblc as the event you’ll be watching and have the
added edge ol bringing the hostess onto the field Instead
ofbclng sidelined Into the kitchen.
CHICKEN DIPPERS
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
2 small cloves garlic, chopped
1cup catsup
cup applesauce •
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1 cup coconut rum
20 ciilrkrn wings (about 3'4 pounds)
In medium saucepan melt butter: saute garlic until
golden. Add catsup, applesauce and Worcestershire
sauce; simmer 5 minutes. Remove from heat. Stir in
cocoonut rum. Remove tips from chicken wings,
discard. Divide wings In half by culling through
remaining joint. Place wing sections on broiler pan:
brush with coconut rum sauce. Droll about 4-lnchcs
from source of bent for 5 minutes. Turn: brush again
with sauce. IJu.il 5 minutes longer or until cooked
through. Serve hot. with remaining sauce. (Sauce can be­
at room temperature.) Yield: 40 appetl/er portions.
CROCK 'O CHEESE SPREAD
2 packages (3 ounces) cream cheese, at room
temperaliire
I cup (14 pound shredded mild Cheddar cheese)
W cup coconut rum
W cup chopped salted skinless peanuts
Chopped peanuts for garnish (optional)
In u medium bowl beat together cream ehcese,
Cheddar cheese, coconut rum and peanuts until
combined. Spoon Into a crock and sprinkle with
additional chopped peanuts If desired. Cover and
refrigerate. Serve with sliced pears, apples and crackrrs.
Yield: about l*/« rups.
CAPE-CODDER PUNCH
1 quart cranberry grn|&gt;c drink or 3 cups cranberry
Julec cocktail plus 1cup grape Juice
1Vi cups coconut rum
Vti cup triple see
3 tablespoons lemon Julec
1 quart club soda
Orange and lemon slices
Icecube*-«*v
In large pitcher or punch bowl combine cranberry
grupc drink. Coconut rum. triple see and lemon Julec;
mix well. Just before serving stir In club Boda. orange
and lemon slices and Ice cubes. Yield: about 20
servings.
SUPER SUNDAY CIDER
1 quart apple elder
2 2-Vi inch cinnamon sticks
I V4 cups coconut rum
Apple slices
In large saucepan combine cider and cinnamon sticks.
Bring to a boll: simmer 3 or 4 minutes. Remove from
brat: stir In coconut rum. Serve garnished with apple
slices.
T E R IY A K I POPCORN

Chicken Dippers, left photo,-team with cheese spread, punch, and right photo, popcorn and cider
WHERE YOUR FOOD BUDGET WORKS BETTER WITH

D E N N I S

&amp;

K

A

T

H

Y

DOUBLE DISCOUNT SAYIN G S

'S

2690 S. ORLANDO AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 323-4950

"A HELPFUL SMILE IN EVERY AISLE"
t

T A D r

t lU V f t

USDA CHOICE
BEEF

USDA CHOICE

B O N E -IN
SHOULDER

%Mf

PO RK
LOlN CHOPS

SUM. - THUP.S. 6 A.tt. • 10 P.M.
FRI. i SAT. 6 A.M. • MIDM1TE

PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY OCT. 13 THRU WED OCT. I t. 1 M J

CENTER

v JE JjV , ASSORTED'

V lU U lf O

WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS

WE CARRY ONLY
USDA CHOICE BEEF
AND FRESH PORK.

LOCALLY OWNED A OPERATED BY DENNIS A KATHY CRINSTEAD

IA A 1 ID C

LOIN CH O PS

&amp;:■

BLA D E
CHUCK RO A ST

CHUCK ROAST

c u p b u t le r

1 small clove garlic, minced (optional)
2 teaspoons tcriyakl sauce
2 quarts plain {mpeorn
In u small saucepan melt butter: add garlic If desired
and cook until softened. Stir In tcriyakl sauce and pour
over popcorn: toss to coat evenly.

Great Treats For
Ghosts, Goblins
On Halloween
Capture the look of autumn with colorful arrange­
ments cf drtedlcavcs and Dowers, with a bowl of big red
apples, a spray of Indian com on the door and pumpkins
everywhere!
Then, capture the season's flavor with a fresh new
pumnkln dessert. Made with whipped topping with real
cream, the dessert has a nutty graham cracker crust
topped with a pumpkin pic spiced, creamy mixture of
marshmallow creme, pumpkin, gelatin and whipped
topping. Frozen topping - right from the freezer blended with orange (ulce makes another great treat for
ghosts, goblins and other Halloween revelers.
FLUFFY PUMPKIN DESSERT
1 cup graham cracker crumbs
W cup margarine, melted
W cup finely chopped nuts
2 tablespoons sugar
2 envelopes unfluvorcd gelatin
Vi cup cold water
1 cup milk
1 7-Oz. Jar marshmallow creme
1 16-oz. can pumpkin
1-fe teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
14 teaspoon sail
1 fl-oz. container (L cups) whipped lopping with real
cream. I hawed
Combine crumbs, margurlne. nuts and sugar; press
onto bottom of 0-inch square uun. Bake at 350°. 10
minutes. Cool.
Soficn gelatin In water: sllr over low heat until
dissolved. Add milk. Cool. Combine marshmallow
creme, pumpkin and seasonings, mixing with wire
whisk or electric mixer until well blended. Gradually
odd gelatin mixture, mixing until blended. Chill until
thickened but not set: fold In 2 cups whipped topping.
Dour over crust; chill until firm. Top with remaining
whipped topping serves 6 lo 8.
DREAMY ORANGESHAKES
cup orange flavored drink or pure 100% un­
sweetened pasteurized orange Juice
1 8-oz. container (3 tups) frozen whipped lopping with
real crcmc
Cut frozen whipped topping Into pieces. Place orange
Juice and whipped lopping In blender container. Cover:
process on high speed until well blended. Makes 2 cups.

USDA CHOICE BEEF-BONE-IN CAUFORNIA

.

CHUCK R O AST .................... *

* 1 .4 9

FAIRWAY OLD FASHION BARREL

. „

CORNED BEEF ROUND

D E L I C A T E S S E N

PEPPERONI L O A F ............* * 3 . 0 9

. .* * 1 .9 9

USDA CHOICE BEEF-7 BONE

CHUCK S T E A K .....................*

* 1 .3 9

E«RS, HECKBOHES or

PORK FEET.......... , . . YOUR CHOICE L*. 3
LYKES ENOS-N-PIECES

_

_ _

B A C O N .......................... 3 * &gt; ° » $ 1

.3 9

LYKES MEAT

,* * ,.

* 1 .2 9

LYKES POWER PAK

S A L A M I ........... *
PEPSI COLA
U OL

* a ............ * 1 . 1 9

CRISCO
BUTTTRY OR RtCULAR

*1.49
_anuiL.

•onus

SHORTENING
3
CAR

t:

*1.99

POST
TOASTIES
II OL
MX

99*

me ru t

DUNCAN HINES SPECIALS

PAPER TOWELS

BVBCOB M M l CHOC. CMP

PEPSI COLA
•mean.

COOKIES ..» • m . m j

.....

.

* lt l £

9I . 6 9

IHII

•out
MUFFIN MIX
uam jcacui oa n n
._
CHOW MEIN u w. m. 9 1 . 9 9
utcmv (mm an*
_ _ t
NOODLES......... i u ac 6 9
us u a ■
PINK SALMAN cu 9 1 . 7 9

BRAN MUFFINS

^ * 1 3 9

Mn/r?1°* nuMr&gt; n o «

(CMC M VAMUA)

READY-TO-SERVE
FROSTING . us «. cm 9 1 . 2 9

RUOWttSER

wnus,

M .3 9

CAKE MIXES .. us u. mi W
^
"**'*“ J “ “
»m K O
BROWNIE MIXm m . n i * 1 . 3 9

612 OL B tfcH
MUMU.1UUULU

LYKES LA TROPICANA

11*2.29

H A M .........

COUNTY FAIR BREAD
20 OL
LOAF

ROAST B E E F .................... u . * 3 . 1 9

3

LOAVES 9

1

COLESLAW OR

POTATO
SALAD
_ _

......................... is

T 9 e

9 * I SWISS C H E E S E ........... * * 2 .7 9

* _

PLUMPER WIENERS

Dennis &amp; Kathy's Fairway Coupon

HORMIL CHEESE A

CR1SCO
OIL

F R O Z E N
_40’S WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

Dennis &amp; Kathy's Fairway Coupon

F O O D S
COMBINATION ONLY

P IZ Z A S ........................ . 0 4
BORDER'S ELSIE
ICE C R E A M ................ » m

M EA T BOLOGNA"

0 1 * 1 6 9 '
l

«*l.39

* 1 .4 9

FROZEN T O P P IN G ....... o o z .c » .7 9 c
JIFFY CHICKEN OR MAC A CHEESE

WITH COUPON

uwr i

* _

wn» c m p m

couroa o m u

POT P I E S ..................... 3 • 0 2 .n o .* !
D A I R Y

G A R D E N

F O O D S

MRS. FILBERTS 2 LI. CTR.

MARGARINE SPREAD . .
BORDER'S WHttI SUPPLIES LAST

FRUIT D R I N K S .............
HYDEPARK REPRICE PA TIP

iCLDEN

* 1 .3 9

BOLDEN
DELICIOUS

APPLES

APPLES

BANANAS

oil 89*

r« *l

6 r» * l

4*4*1

.«

BUTTERMILK BISCUITS . . 4 n £ * 1
. . . 64 02. CTR.

P R O D U C E

RED
DELICIOUS

MINUTE MAID FRESH

ORANGE

F R E S H

* 1 .4 9

B A K E R Y - F R C S H L Y B A K E D
PLAIN OR SILOED

RIPE

BAKING POTATOES . . . 5 * u c * 1 . 1 9
LARGE T O M A T O E S ................... * 5 9 *
YELLOW COOKING ONIONS 3 * u c 8 9 *

RYE B R E A D ........................u &gt; « 7 3 ‘

MICHIGAN C A R R O T S .........3 . * u « * 1

APPLE P IE ......................... u c , ' 1 . 5 9

CAUFORNIA CANTALOUPE . . . i , « 6 9 *

ANGEL FOOD CAKE . . . . * « * ! . 6 9
FRENCH
CHEESE C A K E ...............each * 2 . 2 9

HOHEYDEWS
tiu t

*1.19

CABBAGE

4*,*!

RADISHES
5

bo

» pkcs. * 1

DENNIS &amp; KATHY'S FAIRWAY...DOUBIE DISCOUNT SAVINGS THURS. OCT. 13 THRU WED. OCT. 19
GRADE '.'A1

LARGE

PA.TKAY
i lb. q m .
MARGARINE

PRODUCT}

-OR
7 -U P

MILWAUKI

RED
DELICIOUS

LYKES
OAK JiflEEK

BEER

APPLES

BACON

OLD

.v I

�4B-E«*«nlnn Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wtdntrday, Oct. 12, 1931

f " ft

Tradition With A Unique Twist
Want something special for a company dinner?
Plnwheel Loaf Wellington is a unique twist on a
traditional dl9h. Economical ground beef U convcnlenty
seasoned with onion soup mix. rolled with ham and
cheese and encased In paslry. When baked to golden
pci feet ion. you'll serve a loaf everyone will love.
For more sensational.soup m|x recipes, request a copy
of "The Secret's In the Soup...Recipes from Upton."
Simply send name, address and zip code along with
$2.49 [check or money order mnde payable to Thomas
J. Llpton. Inc.) to: The Secret's In the Soup. P.O. Box
8201 MR. Clinton. IA 52730. Please allow 4 to 6 weeks
for delivery. Ofler expires when supplies arc exhausted.
(An offer of Thomas J. Llpton. Inc.. MOO Sylvan Avenue.
Englewood CIlfTs. NJ 07632.)
P1NWHSEL LOAF WELLINGTON
1envelope onion soup mix
2 pounds ground beef

H cup soft bread crumbs
cup catsup
3 eggs
1 teaspoon oregano
6 slices cooked hnnt
2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese (about 6 oz.)
Pastry for double-crust pic
Preheat oven to 350°.

Elegant Wellington
loaf Is seasoned
with soup mix,
rolled with ham

In large bowl, combine onion soup mix. ground bccl,
bread crumbs, catsup, 2 eggs and oregano. On waxed
paper, shape mixture Into 1 0 "xl2 " rectangle; top with
ham and cheese, leaving a I-Inch border Roll, starting
at 10-Inch end. Jelly-roll style; seal edges tightly.

and cheese and
encased In pastry.

Roll pastry Into 1 2 "xl4 " rectangle: arrange over loaf.
Press pastry around base of filling to seal: trim excess.
Prick with fork and brush with remaining beaten egg.
Place on rack In baking pan: bake 1 hour or until done.
Makes about 8 servings.

Snack
Snucking k a way of life
for most Americans today.
Snacks provide 10 jwrccm to 23 percent of
twelve important
nutrients, according to a
study of data collected by
the M ark et R esea rch
Corporation of America.
For people with normal
health, when and h o w
frequently we cat often arc
not as important as what
and how m u c h we eat.
Experts say the key to
good snacking Is In con*
centratlng on the q u a lity
of snack foods, not the
quantity.
Because they arc so
versatile, wholesome and
c o n v e n ie n t , g r a n o la
snacks — according to
home economists working
with Nature Valley granola
— make "snatksensc."
The home econom ists
point out that granola
products offer a taste and
texture for everyone and
arc 1UO percent natural
with no additives or pre­
servatives.
The home economists
have compiled a list ol
snack suggestions for peo­
ple In different age groups.
Snacks For
Preschoolers
Plan snacks for children
that complement their
dally food plan. Then,
choose snacks that have
energy-givin g qualities
and arc fun local.
Keep Light &amp; Crunchy
granola snacks handy for
munching. These light,
toasty. granola-covered
com puffs are fun to eat.
and the granola taste Is
satisfying.
Allow children to serve
t h e m s e l v e s when
practical. Thry arc more
likely to eat all they take.
Offer only familiar foods
when a child Is tired or
cross.
Snacks For
Teenagers
To provide teens with an
afternoon energy boost,
serve granola snacks in a
variety of forms — chewy
granola bars, granola &amp;
fruit bars and Granola
Clusters.
Reinforce good eating
choices by setting good
examples.
Snacks For The
Middle Years
Middle-aged adults, as
with people In every age
group, should choose between-meal snacks for the
contribution they make to
the entire day’s good eat­
ing plan.
Crisp, raw vegetables
ore excellent for Hnarks
Such bulky foods take
longer to eat. provide
chewing satisfaction and
are filling. Or save a food
from cne meal to eat later
as a snack.
Again, adult snacking
can Include granola pro­
ducts. Thry are not only
good tasting but also are
"go-anywherc" snacks —
convenient for the lunch
box. briefcase, handbag,
car glove compartment or
backpack.
Remember to balance
physical activity with food
Intake.
Snacks For The
Retired Years
This age group should
use snacks as a supple­
ment to smaller meals to
help maintain their diet's
nutritional balance. Eat
meals and snacks at regutoward maintaining proper
weight.
. If o v e r w e ig h t, ra t
smaller portions of food
and Increase physical ucIndulging in high calorie
refreshments.
For more snacking In­
formation. wrlle for a free
brochure: Nature Valley
SnackSense. P.O. Box
$402. Dept 876. Min­
neapolis. MN 55460.

\

BUY-1 i
GET-1 3

CO CA C O L A
P L U S D E P O S IT - 3 2 o z B T L

18oz BO X

YO U P A Y 4 8 ’ WITH THIS C O U P O N
LIMIT 1 C O U P O N PER ITEM A N D A I I O O O O R M OR E FOOD
ORDER G O O D W ED OCT. 12 TH RU T U E S . OCT. IB. 1983

PR IC ES E F F E C T IV E WED., O C T .
12 TH R U T U E S .. O C T . 18. 1983

BONUS

BONUS

Y O U P A Y 7 0 ’ WITH THIS C O U P O N
UMIT-1 C O U P O N P E P i t e m a Kid a s i o o o o r m o r e f o o d
ORDER O O O O W E O . O C T 12 TH RU T U E S OCT. IB. 1083

BONUS

BONUS

BUY

HUNT’S

S W E E T C R IS P

LARG E

ReJ or Golden

CALIFORNIA
CAULIFLOWER

TOM ATO

D ISPO SABLE DIAPERS
4 8 C T . TO O D LER. 6 0 C T . E X T R A
A B S O R B E N T -O R 9 0 C T . N E W B O R N

COMPARE

GROCERY

COMPARE

I vt MtUAv
lOA
l«« I

CHICKEN. C O R N BREAD, BEEF
OR S A N FR AN CISCO

INSTANT

Hungry Jack POTATOES

Stove Top

PRODUCE

PRODUCE

Sunkist Lemons

DRESSINGS

FRESH GREEN C U K E S OR

Bell Peppers

Green Cabbage

Juicy Juice . . .

. .

FRESH

RECONSTITUTED LEM ON JUICE

Fla. Avocados .

Rea Lemon Juice

FRESH CELLO

REGULAR OR NATURAL

A B Hot Sauce

COMPARE
CALIFORNIA

N E W C R O P C A N A D IA N

l o o s REAL FRUIT JUICE.
RED. PURPLE OR APPLE

PORT C LY D E *1 OIL

COMPARE

Crisp Carrots . .

PANTRY PRIDE

DRY ROASTED

Apple Sauce

Planters Peanuts

Mushrooms

JOAN OF ARC

PUNCH

15oz PINTO B E A N S ,
B L A C K E Y E D P E A S O R *8
G R E A T N O R T H ER N B E A N S

LAUNDRY

REG U LAR O R UO H T

6 PACK *
12 o z C A N S

CELLA
WINES

APPLE
JUICE

BATHROOM

TISSUE
G E N E R IC

BAM A

DRY
BLEACH

GRAPE
JELLY

I

GALLO
WINES

G O L D E N G R A IN

MACARONI
&amp; CHEDDAR

COMPARE

0G r o c e r '

H ANOVER

F R O M T H E A LLISO N R E E D C O L L E C T I O N

Elbow Macaroni

BITTTY CR O CK ER NOOOLES OR CH EESE

Tuna Helpers . . . ^
ITALIAN

FROM ‘4.99 TO *19.99 WITH *100 IN
PANTRY PRIDE REGISTER TA PES

Wishbone DRESSING

S E E Y O U R L O C A L S T O R E D ETA ILS.

grocery

RONCO

Pork &amp; Beans

C U B IC ZIRCONIA &amp; C U L T U R E D P E A R L RINGS. EAR R IN G S S. N E C K L A C E S
IN G O LD FILLED &amp; GOLD P L A T E D SETTIN G . P L U S K E Y CH A IN S,
M O N E Y C U P S . &amp; FO LD O V E R H E A R T PE/4DANT

COMPARE

DESIGNER OR A SSOR TED

Brawny Towels
CEREAL

. KM

Post Toasties . .

PREOO REG . M EAT OR M U S H R O O M

UOUIO

Spaghetti Sauce . „„

Superose s w e e t e n e

LDOK W H A T 'S DEVELOPING AT
P AN TR Y PRIDE

NEXT DAY
FILM DEVELOPING

GREAT A

m e r ic a n

POTATO CHIPS ■

OH YO U

REO . C O R N C H IP S OR
DU* N CH IP S A So/
UMfT. I C O U P O N PER ITEM
G O O D THMOW*it&gt;.,UCT. 19. 19A3

GET IT FREE

B

RICH &amp; CREAMY

L j
z ttd

M O N E Y t i K A it A M S
IS a t B O X O R

r i-J

14u« BOX

HALF GALLON

LIMIT-1 C O U P O N PER ITEM
O G O O THRU W I O . OCT. 19 1903

LIMIT-1 C O U P O N PER ITEM
G O O D THRU W E D , O C T 19. 1983

vf

artMAMon otisd

ICE CREAM

S A N F O R D 2 9 4 4 O R L A N D O R O A D . Z A Y R E P L A Z A AT T H E C O R N E R O F I 7 9 2 6 O R L A N D O R O A D

i

)

�onum asuM

mi

tvenlnq Herald, Sanfo.d, FI.

Wednesday, Oct. »J, 1f»3—SB

Caesar Salad, Soup Herald Football Season
It s football time and a special sardine Caesar salad
rounds out a weekend menu for those who gather for the
sport's rituals.
The salad also goes well with the soups, varied
cheeses, putes. breads and fresh fruits that make up u
tailgate picnic nt t-hc stadium. When tailgating,
assemble salad Ingredients In a covered bowl and keep
chilled until ready to eerve. Add egg, garlic dressing and
sardines and toss.
SARDINE CAESAR SALAD
1 clove garlic
Mi cupsaludoil
1 cup French bread cubes (Vi-lnch)
Vi teaspoon salt
V4 teaspoon dry mustard
'A teaspoon black pepper
1 V4 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce

1 large head romnlne lettuce, washed and dried
Vi cup crumbled blue cheese
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
1 egg
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
I can (3 Vi ounces) Norway sardines, drained
Crush half of the garlic clove: combine with salad oil
in Jar with tight fitting lid. Refrigerate 1 hour. Heat 2
tablespoons oll-garllc mixture In medium skillet. Add
bread cubes: saute until golden brown. Set aside. To
remaining oll-garllc mixture In Jar. nHd salt, mustard,
pepper and Worcestershire sauce. Shake andjrfrlgcrale.
To serve salad, rub Inside of wooden salad bowl with
remaining garlic. Tear lettuce Into bowl. Sprinkle with
cheeses: toss with dressing. Break egg over center of
salad. Pour lemon Juice over egg; toss well. Sprinkle
bread cubes and sardines over salad. Quickly toss and

serve at once. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 4 to 0
servings.
CUCUMBER SOUP
3 pounds cucumbers, peeled, seeded, and cut Into
1-Inch cubes
1 small onion, quartered
; Vi cups chicken broth
1 cup plain yogurt
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
Mi teaspoon dill weed
•A teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon white pepper

B

U

Y

GET-1

I
I

■
i

H A W A IIA N

!

P U N C H

K R A F T S

TROPICAL FR Urr P U N C H . GRAPE. VERY PERRY.
RED O R LO W S U G A R RED

I
I
I

For additional food processor recipes and tips write:
Food Processor Brochure. KttchenAld Division. Hobart
Corporation. Troy. OH 45374.

Spread
It On
Thick

£$&amp;

FREE

BUY-1
GET-1

- 1

TEA WINE WARMER
In large saucepan, combine 'A cup brown sugar. Vi
cup instant tea powder. Is teaspoon ground cinnamon
and Mi teaspoon ground cloves: add 1 quart water. I
bottle 132 02.) cranberry Juice cocktail and I bottle
(four-filths qt.) Burgundy wine. Heat through but do not
boll, stirring occasionally. Transport In 3-quart thermos.
Makes about 12scrving3.

Position steel blade tn work bowl. Add cucumbers and
onion to bowl. Process 15 seconds. Stop and scrape
bowl. Process 15 seconds longer to puree.
With machine funning, add chicken broth through

G E T -1 F R E E C O U P O N S
I
I
I

feed tube, about 15 seconds. Stop and scrape bowl.
Add yogurt, lemon Juice, dill weed. salt, and white
pepper: process 15 seconds to combine Ingredients.
Refrigerate and chIU well before serving.
Yield: 5 to 6 servings

P A R K A Y

M A R G A R IN E

4602 C A N

QUARTERS- 1 UB PKO.

Y O U P A Y 60- WTTH THIS C O U P O N
UMTT.1 C O U P O N PER ITEM A N D A S 10 OO OR M OR E POOO3
ORDER Q O O O W E D . OCT. 12 THRU TUES., OCT. 18. 1683

0
|

|

Y O U P A Y 8 6 ' WTTH THIS C O U P O N
UM fT 1 C O U P O N PER ITEM A N O A » 10 OO O R M ORE F O O D
U
ORDER O O O O W E D . OCT. 12 TH RU T U E S .. O C T. 18. 1083

_J L_°

BONUS
BUY

BONUS
BUY

BONUS

GREAT
GROUND

M ARKET STYLE

BONUS
BUY

SM OKED
P IC N IC S

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

CHUCH
ROAST

6 TO 8 LBS

*1

UMIT-1 WITH A S 7.50
OR MORE PURCHASE

SAVE 9 0

SAVE j4 0 c PER LB

BUY

S L IC E D
BACON

B E E F P A TTIE MIX

•* ‘

-

UMIT PLEASE

P R IC ES E F F E C T I V E W ED., O C T
12 T H R U T U E S ., O C T . 18. 1083

-

PER LB

*

^

5 LBS &amp; O VER

3 LBS &amp; O VER

SAVE 6 0 c PER LB

SAVE 60? PER LB

Cooks who use herbs
and spires know that a
small amount enhances a
dish in a big way. If you
add tangy mustard, subtle
cloves or caraway, plus all
kinds of fruit preserves to
s w e e t Ci'eom b u tte r ,
you've got a collection of
versatile spreads. Each
spread is quick to mtx. Use
your electric mixer. Serve
each In a small crock.
At appctiErr time, serve
a wheel of aged cheese,
whole grain crackers and
Apricot-Mustard Butter-.
Spicy Peach Butter. Or­
ange-Clove Butter and
Cherry Rum Butter each
add a hint of fresh fruit
flavor. T ry these with
warm muffins or biscuits
at breakfast or lunch.
S o u r C re a m -C lo v ^ &lt;
Caraway Butter Is equally
delicious on breads or vrge t a b l e s . T r y
A p p le -A p ric o t-W a ln u t
Butter with breads. For
the young-at-heart. peanut
butter and chocolate ore
always a hit combination.
Mix with butter and watch
Choco-Nut Butter disap­
pear with graham crackers
and bread.
Don't expect leftovers,
but y o u can store the
b u t l e r i n c o v e r e d c o n t a in ­

COMPARE

CH ECK

VMCBe

MEAT

PRK3ES

•

M Q LD 6
■

9

*

U
CO
U TTAGE
I I RUC B
DR
rvAsn
NO
u
S m

o k e d

-

S a u s a g e

^

C

o

a

9

9

N

o c k

B

o

n

_
e

lia s

h o p s

«

•

^

s .......................... u &gt;

9 9 *

U B D A. CH OICE BEEF UNDERBLADE
C a lif .

R

C a lif .

o a s t s

.

.

.

u , * 1 B *

.

m

C

h u c k

S t e a k s

• • lUAHta

LEAN

aim

G

AHOh LB
ovf

r o u n d

C

h u c k

_ _ a

4

17®

,

boneless

C

1

f'fn ci

B

h u c k

C

u b e s

.

.

H

m

C

_ _ _
*

P A N T R Y PRK3e P U R E
B e e f

B

u r g e r s

.

.

z s

.

O

is c u i t s

r a n g e

1

"

COMPARE
P o r k

P A N T R Y PRU3E
.

.

STYLE

.

lla

J u

.

CTN

19

i c e

.

.

h e e s e

CHECK
THESE
PRKTEB

&gt;

S a u s a g e

.

.

^

P A N T R Y PRK5E SLICED LU N C H M EATS.
SALAM I OR
S p i c e d

L u n c h e o n

R O U . PATTIES OR
S A U S A G E 4 BISCUIT

19

P r id e

S a u s a g e

* 1

.

" S

E

T

2 2

riununr
P ie

C

r u s t

AX E LR O O S W HOLE MILK

1

R

ic o t t a

C

•III

PRO

A Q Q

5 -J4 9

h e e s e

.

.

$ -|4 9

^

* 1

SLICED A M E R C A N SINGLES

u ,*1

. . . .

S t e a k s

U S D A . CH O ICE BEEF FOR ST E W
*

D A IR Y

P A N T R Y PRE3E CHILLED

oven LB

U H D A CH O ICE

COMPARE

m _ _ _

U 8 D A CH OICE BEEF UNOERBLADG

SLICED A S S T D BLADE
4 SIRLOIN C U T S
P o r k

CHECK
THESE
PRICED

MEAT

EXCELLENT FOR SC
S T E W S . BEEF

SK INNED 4 DEVEINED SELECT
B o e f L iv e r

COMPARE

CHECK

$2

a s

19

n m i T V t TNf PROMT TO UMfT OUANTlTWY*
P N C r t O O O O O N l V N M M M X I C O U N l V OU« TO O O P L O W PR CI O
NONE SOLO lO 3 L A U A &gt; NOT *CT*&gt;ONbAX POM TVPOOAAPlCAl IftMORB

TURKEY"
BREAST

w s m

H ALF
POUND

C L O V E R L E A F
or P A R T Y

1

F L A K E

ROLLS m , 5

9 *

ANGEL FOOD

KSfLK UIAC.

M ORTON

ffMAMP*00 RJfTftASDOr
MOWMAi. JOOAJL4OPI' 40#

CLAIRMI8T
HAIR SPRAY

Ooz

MOP*A£nOSOL PtCQ UMSCCVTtC
on KXT7U HOLD UNBCCHTtD
Acnoeotnea u n s c «k t s d
o n EXTRA HOU) UNSCCHTKO

~ JH

butter until light and
DufTy. By hand stir In U c.
powdered sugar, Vi c. sour
cream, Vi tsp. cloves and
V4 tsp. crushed caraway
seed.

IN THE DEU O AKERY S T O R E S O NLY

c i

S A V E 60"

2L B S F R O ZE N

FAMILY
2 MEALS

taoz

I ( .o N u iio N tA u r m a toe * o n h n n a

SAV E 20AUNT HANNAH

S o u r C r e a m ’ C lo v e *
C a r a w a y B u t t e r : Beat

A p p le - A p r ic o t - W a ln u t
B u tter. Add 2 tbsp. apple

VO-5
SHAMPOO &amp; 1H
CONDITIONER

SAV E ID12 P A C K

P A N T R Y P R ID E

SAVE 50'

Add 3 tbsp. apricot pre­
serves and W tsp. dry
mustard.

J89

ilC s n

16 o z
BOX

A p rico t-M u sta rd B u tter.

S O U D W H IT E M E A T

CO M B INA TIO N PEPPE R O NI O R S A U S A G E

S A lfflN B S
SALTED O R U N S A L1 E O

9 4 T&gt;€ ni&gt;
UAJttfH K l O f O Qf«.V

ITALIAN
BREAD

8149

faUCtO U M I ▼ m i r PATTY
WITH MUlifWOOM OHAVY SAUBeUPtY
STVAM OPI MEAT LOAF

80S

1602 LO AF

S A V E 20*

2

PA N T R Y PRU3E

$129

FRESH BAKED

BROCCOLI
SPEARS

LAYER
CAKE

m

$

^

9

FAB
laundry

DETERGENT

$ 2 io

COMPARE

lYtmuAi
LOW
met

NUi till.

W AUIY *'HS

12 C O U N T

M

70oz

T a b le t s

e n n o n

9

.

9

9

C o f f e e

s F U D s n c K

TOOTHPASTE

.

,* &gt; ,

1

a

P

1

t ............................. ..... *

DINTY MOORE
BEEF STEW

o

W

4 - b o o
s

g

h

t e

t a

t o

e

5

# B

h ip p e d

r , ^

. .
3

.

/ $ 1

6

APPLE. CHERRY OR PEA CH
F r ie d

F r u i t

P

i e

s .

.

9

e

c

.J Q Q
F i ll e t

.

.

.

.

~ S5»$ 1 ® 9

SAVE'5 0 CASH
P E P S IC O L A
(REG D O S U G A R FREE)

.

C h o p p e d

H

a m

YOU PAY

O
O
8

&lt;

9 £ 7'
WYITH
WITH C
CO
OU
UP
PO
ON

U

8 P A C K - 16 o x B T l _ - p l u s d e p o s i t
LIMIT-1 C O U P O N PER ITEM
Q O O O THRU WED . O C T IB. 1B83

Sw iss Cheese

B u tte r:

A d d 3 tb s p . o r a n g e
ma&gt;malade and Vi tsp.
cloves.
C hcrry'-R um B u tter. Add
3 tbsp. cherry preserves
and Vi tsp. rum extract.
Choco-N ut B u tter: Add
Vi c. chocolate syrup and
Vi c. chunky style peanut
butter.

4 1 * 1
_

. _ _

.

.

n r

.

.

nr 1

DOM ESTIC

HIQHUNER
P e r c h

MCI

HORMEL

Topping ..k -.9 9

OR MOUNTAIN DEW
SAVE 24

e

s ........................ i s s «

DIET PEPSI. PEPSI
LIGHT, PEPSI FREE-

2 4 oz
CAN

n

DAklTDV nniru:

,

. £3

DIET PO W D E R
F

n

U

IvtMUMV

PHCPAHt.D
FOODS

COMPARE

UM|

FRO ZEN

P A N T R Y PRK3E SHOESTRING

T o t RE G O R t . 4 o i GCL
C o lg a t e

S l i m

C O M PAR E
PA N T R Y P R O E

A c t f f e d

DCOOORANT REG OR SPICE

28* O FF LABEL

rvtnvoAv

Jelly. 2 tbsp. apricot pre­
serves and 1 tbsp. ground
walnuts.
S p ic y P each B u tter. Add
3 tbsp. peach preserves
and Vi tsp. allspice.
O r a n g e - C lo v e

SAAtnY stores
STORKS only
ONLY
nAAinr

CHERRY S U P R E MAB
E

IO02 F R O ZE N

IN THE D F U U A K E R Y STO R E S ONLY

49oz

SWEET AND SPICED
BUTYEitS
Vi c. sweet cream butter,
softened
Flavor variation
In small m ixer bowl
com bine butter and a
flavor variation. Beat at
mcd. speed, scraping bow)
often, or by hand vigor­
ously. until light and Duffy
(I to 2 min.). Yield 1cup.
FI AVOR VARIATIONS

JENOS
PIZZA

SUNSHINE
KRISPY

ers up to one month in the
refrigerator and about four
months in the free/cr.
Bring a sweet and spicy
touch to meals and snacks
w ith fla v o r e d b u tte r
spreads.

The World Almanac*

1
j

„

WfTH 2 VEO 4 ROLL
(SM O K E D S A U S A G E WTTH C H EESE)

Cheddarwurst mmx
1. Wh*t football team won
the Rom Bowl in 1972? is)
Ohio Slate (b) Michigan (c)
Stanford
2. In oImi year cid Aaron
Burr shoot his political rival
Alexander Hamiltcn in n
duel? (a) 1798 (b) 1804
1821
S W'cat actor starred in the
film. “ Lilic; of the Field ♦
(a) Gregory I’ccfe (b) Sidney
PoitierTc) John Wayne
ANSWERS

4 tq-23 1

�4*

•ventnn

Cl

It's Just\30 Minutes 1
Unfit Dinner Is Served
t me in the kitchen or at the grill pays handsome
i Ividcnds at the dining (able.
You can hasten your cooking even more-by following
t lese tips.
° Plan menus before shopping
0 Read the entire recipe before starting to cook
0 Assemble all Ingredients and equipment
° Slice, mince or measure other lng.Tdlents while part
c f the recipe is cooking
0 Select other fast-to-flx foods to complete your menu
Now. read on — pick the recipe you’ll warn to try first
and enjoy your cooking and newly gained free time.

with beef strips. 4 servings. Note: Partially freeze steak
to facilitate slicing.
MUSHROOM SAUCED STEAKS
4 bccfcubcdsleaks(aproxlmately lto pounds)
1 small onion, chopped
3 tablespoons butler »• margarine, divided
I cup sllrcd fresh mushrooms
to cup apple Juice
to cup beef broth
3 tablespoons Dour
to teaspoon popper
Slowly cook onion In 1 tablespoon butter In
medium-sized frying pan 5 mlnutco. stirring oc­
casionally. Add mushrooms and cook over moderate
heat 5 minutes stirring occasionally. Add apr»|c Juice
and broth and cook over high heat until liquid Is
reduced by half. Meanwhile, combine flour and pepper:
dredge steaks. Brown steaks In remaining butter In large
frying pan to desired donencss (3 to 4 minutes per side).
Pour mushroom sauce over steaks and simmer until
sauce Is slightly thickened, about 3 to 4 minutes.

KIDS’ PARTY BEEF PATTIES

AURORA
SO FT P P'N T S
OR WHITE

2 pounds ground beef
to cup mild taco sauce
2 teaspoons Instant minced onion
1 teaspoon salt
6 slices American cheese
3 stuffed olives, sliced
*
.
3 pitted ripe oitves. sliced
1 small onion, sliced and separated Into rings
8 hamburger buns, spilt
Combine ground beef, iaco sauce. Instant minced
onion and salt, mixing lightly but thoroughly. Measure
to cup of the meat mixture for each patty. Using your
hands, shape Into 8 patties, bout to Inch thick. Place cn
rack in broiler pan so (tattles arc 3 to 4 Inches from heat
(measure with ruler). Broil 5 to 6 minutes on first side,
turn and broil 5 to 6 minutes. (Ask for adult help If
you’re not sure when patties are done.) To decorate, cut
cheese slices Into desired shapes: arrange on patties
with olive slices and onion rings to form "faces. Serve
In buns. 8 servings.

Bathroom
Tissue

1to pounds boneless beef sirloin steak, cut to Inch
2 tablespoons flour
3 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided
2 teaspoons Dljon-style mustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
3 tablespoons chopped chives
2 tablespoons brandy
to cup beef broth
Cut steak Into 4 serving-size pieces. Pound steaks to
about to Inch thickness: dredge In flour. Brown steaks In
2 tablespoons butter In large frying pan for 2 minutes on
each side. Remove to platter: keep warm. Spread both
sides of steaks with mustard and sprinkle with
Worcestershire sauce. Cook chives In remaining butter
In same frying pan 1 minute, stirring constantly. Add
brandy and broth and cook, stirring, over high heat until
reduced by half. Return steaks to frying pan and beat
through, about 1 to 2 minutes. 4 servings.

Tomato
Ketchup

20C-OFF L A B E L

Lipton

32-oz. bot.

jneS»HSl.m P

S&amp;H Stamp
rar

V

SihSU W P

Skv.t C tfU »c* S

Save 30c, Weight Watchers 9%-oz.
Fillet of Fish Au Gratin or 9-oz.
Italian Style

Fish Fillets............X

*2

Save 20c. Regular Frozen Homestvte

Eggo W affle s.......

6

Save 24c. Mrs. Paul's Frozen

Fried Clam s..........f e *1
Save 30c. Mis. Pad's Crispy Crunchy

Fish Fillets............'5 r* 1
Fish S tic k s ...........
THIS AD E F F E C T I V E :^
THURSDAY, O CT. 1 3 ^
THRU W ED NESD AY ^

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
itj BEEF

Round
Steak

Save 20c. Morton's Frozen Choc
Original, Maple Nut or Coconut
D
Honey Buns
U

a h a i i

® •'Of. ,

u m a

Savo 26c. Swaneon'q Frozen Dark .
Meat Chicken. Turkey or Chopped
Sirloin Beef

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF,
FULL CUT

TV Dinners..........." X F ' V

Sirloin Tip
Roast
_____

Seafood Treat! Fresh

Flounder Fillets

Save 30c, Morton's Frozen Gravy &amp;
Salisbury Steak, Gravy &amp; Sliced
Turkey or Gravy &amp; Beef Patties

'•Family Meals” .... X jTt&gt;*1« * f

Dinner C la ssic s .... JI* *1

Tarnow Whole Hog Mild, Medium
or Hot

Pot P ie s............ 2 pkV* 71

Fresh

Save 30c, Sara Lee Frozen Pecan,
Apple, Cheese or Cinnamon Raisin

Fresh Frozen

f§| Fresh Produce

Fresh Frozen

Grouper Fillets

FOR BREAKFAST,
SNACKS
OR DESSERTS

With This Coupon ONLY
Swift Canned Boneless

C
io h d
ila t e
Fish
Fillets

Crisp Juicy Apples

Red Delicious.... 3 &amp; 79e
Good Boiled or for Slaw, Fresh
Firm Green

23°

Source of Vitamin A, Fresh

Publix Frozen
Pumpkin
Custard Pie

$429

| 26-OZ. pki

99*

*170

Armour Star Meat or Beef

Jumbo Hot Dogs.. *5: *1”
Oscar Mayer Regular or Thick

Sliced Bacon.....

*190

Cooked H a m .....

*3”

Save 20c, Birds Eye Broccoli &amp;
Water Chestnuts. Spinach &amp; Water
Chestnuts or Broccoli &amp; Almonds

Combination
Vegetables.......... ' X

Cuban Sandw ich..

99*

Orange Ju ice ........... . . .

can

99*

Save 30c. Ore Ida’s Frozen
Shredded

Hash Brown
Potatoes.............. pJUV*99*
All Beef Sandwich Steaks

59c

Steak-

umms.... ST *25’ ’AT *4«

P e a rs............ 10

Save 20c, Swanson's Frozen White
Portions

»0t M * 9

Sno-Whito Western

Cauliflow er..... ... httd 99*
Made from Concentrate,
Tropicana Chilled

Chicken TV Dinner

All Purpose

99*

Save 30c, Bridgford's
(Makes 3 Loaves)

Bread Dough........

Baked B oans.....
Fresh Made
Hot From The Deli!

Chicken &amp;
Biscuits
Macaroni A
C h e e se .........
Fresh-Baked

Lemon Krunch
Pie...............

Dairy
ASSORTED FLAVORS

Save 20c, Swanson’s Frozen
Salisbury Steak

TV Dinner............ 89*

Orange Juice.....

Pepper L o a f......
Zesty Flavored

Ripe Juicy Bartlett (150-Size)

Red Potatoes.... 5

Sau sage............

Dolicbus Honey Loaf or

Save 14c. Minute Maid Reg. or
More Pulp Concentrate

bag

Boneless Hems....

Deviled C ra b s ......$1°®

per pound

C arrots........... 2

f'.-oi. ««

International Style
Vegetables...........' X

Cabbage...........

Swift All American (2to&gt;4*lb. avg.)

Dak S lirtd

Save 20c, Birds Eye All Varieties
Frozen

4-ib. can

With This Coupon ONLY

*1

Spareribs.......... T *14#

Save 30c, Mrs. Paul’s Frozen

Hostess Ham

( U n til I P e r F a m ily P l a t o , W ith
O th tf P v rc h a ta s et ST .90 m Mata.
R i c IwS i m i A ll T a k a c c a lla m t)
( llf a a t lv a 0*1. 1 3 -IS , I M S )

Individual Danish...
Save 30c, Mrs. Paul's Frozen
Supreme Light Batter

Scallops

Boston
Butt Ro&amp;st.........
Fresh Pork

Whole Salm o n ..
Salmon Fillets...

Fresh Pork

Save 30c, Armour’s Frozen 10-oz.
Lasagna, 10*i-oz. Veal Parmigiana.
11-oz. Salisbury Steak. 11s4-oz.
Chicken Fricassee or 12-oz. Stuffed
Green Peppers
Save 20c, Morion’s Frozen Chicken.
Turkey or Beef

Seafood Treat! Fresh

BLUE CHEESE STUFFED BURQERS
1to pounds ground beef
to teaspoon salt
to teaspoon pepper
to 3-ounec package cream cheese
1 tablespoon crumbled blue cheese
1 tablespoon minced onion
1 teaspoon prepared horseradish
Sprinkle salt and pepper over ground beef mix lightly
but thoroughly. Divide meat Into 8 equal portions and
form Into patties 4 inches In diameter. Combine cream
cheese, blue cheese, onion and horseradish. Place 1
tablespoon In center of 4 patties. Top with remaining
patties. Press edges together securely to seal. Place on
grill over ash-covered coals so burgers are 5 to 6 inches
from coals. Broil 5 to 6 minutes on first side, turn and
’ broil 5 to 6 minutes, to doneness desired. 4 servings.

Aluminum

S ilt stamp

BEEF SANDWICH IN THE ROUND

COMPANY8TEAK

HEINZ
RICH THICK

,ef C e rtifie d

! boneless beef top sirloin steak, cut 1 Inch thick
(about! to pounds)
t\ i up soy sauce
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons water
1 tablespoon sherry extract
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon grated ginger root
8 cubes ( i x l Inch) fresh pineapple
1 small green pepper, cut Into 8 pieces
combine soy sauce, sugar, water, sherry extract,
garlic and ginger root. Cut steak Into sixteen 1-Inch
cubes: place In plastic bag. Pour marlndadc over beef,
turning to coat. Tie bag securely and marinate in
refrigerator 6 to 8 hours (or overnight. If desired). Drain
marinade Into small saucepan and cook slowly 5
minutes. Alternately thread 4 beef cubes, 2 pineapple
cubes and 2 green pepper pieces on each of four 12-lnch
skewers. Place kabobs on grill over ash-covered coals so
surface of meat Is 3 to 4 Inches from heat. Broil 15 to 20
minutes, depending on doneness desired (rare or
medium), turning and brushing with marinade, oc­
casionally. 4 servings.

I

PU01.IX
12-INCH

4-roll pkg.

ORIENTAL-STYLE BEEF KABOBS

12 ounces thinly sliced cooked beef
to cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon spicy brown mustard
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
to teaspoon Worcestcrshlrz sauce
1 round (1 pound) loaf rye bread
1cup coarsely chopped Romalne lettuce
to cup shredded Cheddar cheese
1 medium tomato, thinly sliced
Combine mayonnaise, mustard, lemon Juice and
Worcestershire sauce. Cover tightly and refrigerate.
Using long bread knife, slice off top 2 Inches of loaf.
Remove center portion of bread, leaving a shell
approximately 1 Inch thick. To assemble, layer
ingredients In the following order In the loaf: lettuce, to
of the sliced beef, to of the cheese and to of the tomato
slices, repeat layers, ending with a beef layer. Replace
bread top. Cut Into 4 wedges. Serve mustard mayon
nalse with sandwich. 4 servings.

Le t k id s d e corate beef p atties fo r H allow een

99*

Dairi-Fresh
Yogurt

BEEF SATE WITH PEANUT SAUCE
1 pound boneless beef chuck
blade steak, cut to Inch thick
3 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons sesame oil
to traspoun crushed red pepper pods
2 teaspoons cornstarch
2 teaspoons sugar
’ I clove garlic, minced
I to cup water
t to cup creamy peanut butter
1 Slice steak Into strips to to to Inch thick. Pour
lotnblncd soy sauce, pit. pepper pods, cornstarch, sugar
and garlic over beef strips and marinate 15 minutes,
turning once. Pour marinade Into small saucepan; add
Water and peanut butter and simmer 8 to 10 minutes.
MJrrlug occasionally. Meanwhile thread (weaving back
and forth) beef strips on thin wooden skewers. Place on
Tack In broiler pan so surface of meat la 3 to 4 Inches
from hc-at. Broil 2 minutes on each side. Serve sauce

I

With This Coupon ONLY

Blue Bonnet
Spread
2-lb. bowl

REG. COLA
A ASSORTED
DIET FLAVORS

Shasta
Drinks

ASSORTED OR
WHITE &amp; DECORATED

8 -o z.

v

cups
Pillifcury Dinner

Crescent R o lls ... 2

99*

cant

Rog. Margarine Quarters

If

Kraft Parkay.........

55*

Dairi-Fresh Cream

Whipped Topping .. 7cE 99*
Cheese Spread

Kraft Velveeta...... &amp;
Wisconsin Cheese Bar Provclone or
Mozzarella

Sliced C heese......99*
cans

Soaltest Light n’ Lively Low Fat or S
Small Curd

Cottage Cheeso....
i

89*

cup

r

�Everlnq Herald, Sanford, Ft.

The microwave oven lends Itself easily to cooking
fruits for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Pears and
apples are !n ffimrtfctatjp?iaratxacPatCy p/iUJ. arnlof the best quality notv through January. Try using
them stewed, poached and for sauces.
An easy arrival this year Is the cranberry. They
are packaged In 12 ounce bags and found In the
produce departments also. All of these fruits have a
high water and sugar content, so they microwave
quickly.
This recipe for poached pears Is a delicious ending
to a fall meal. Use the hard Florida pear found
locally or Bartlcts from California. Both of these
pears work well, but there is n difference In the
cooking time.

Microwave Magic

Fresh Fruit
Ends Meal
Deliciously

PA LM RIVER

Large

Chunk Light
Tuna

per dozen

S&amp;H StsmP

S&amp;H SUmp
•r cerU B caU

Publix

BURGUNDY, RHINE,
CHABLIS, PINK CHABLIS,
VIN ROSE OR
LIGHT CHIANTI

Publix Special Recipe

c*H Stamp

cartlUcata

irtlllca la

Savar O

Green
Beans
3

Butter Sesame
Bread....... ....... *2/* 59°
Publl.r Special Recipe Sesame

Sandwich Rolls

6 V o z . can

STOKELY SHELLIE,
UT OR FRENCH STYLE

Pound C a k e ...... •1*®

Carlo Rossi
Wine

s ti

S»H Stamp

„

2 SSi '1

25«*Off Label, For Your Laundry

Bold Detergent. ..4,?,* *1”

16-oz.
cans

Smucker’s

Grape J e lly ........ ”?* *11*
97% Caffein Free Coffee

Instant S a n k a ............... *4”
Regular or Quick

Grape Juice.........Iwt *2,#

OR UNSALTED

In Light Syrup, Stokely Bartlett

Krispy
Crackers

ALL GRINDS

Pear H a lv e s............ 69*
can s

FOR 24 HOUR ‘CO NVENIENCE
YOU C A N BANK O N . J I W v M if
• AT MOST PUCL'X LOCATIONS

1-lb. can

Fancy Feast Assorted Varieties

Cat Food........ 3

PublixTeller

Folger’s l
Coffee

Quaker O ats....... 'XV: 89*

Welch’s No Sugar Added

89*

20c*0ff Label, Dish Deterqent

Tremendous Savings On

Dawn Liquid......

16-oz.j
box

Strawberries ’n Cream
'a re

Kraft
I Mayonnais

&gt;]

.-I

Or*»v*i L*k«,
A Om *«U CauntUa OnlyI
PLU S T A X A DEPOSIT,
D ir r BITS, RSO. OR
SUO AR F R U R C 100, OR RRO.

Jell-0 Chocolate or Vanilla

Pudding Pops

&lt;5&gt;

Assorted Lady Borden's

IceCream.................. $

CAM PBELL’S

Tomato Soup
4

$4

10^-oz. ^
cons

| i
Ld

ASSORTED FLAVORS
E DUNCAN HINES

Collect An
Entwe Set

THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM

R C Cola

52M

5 Yt qt. Covered Dutch Oven
Spactal Rtltil with 110 Pinch**#

3Hr99°

(Limit 1 F i a t s * , With O i W

P u rch a se s ot $7.80 or Mora,
■ acludlng A ll Tobaeoo lt*m s)

$ 1 5 » 9
Spec*4i RetaH »*Novl P-zcMs# 12%M
(!*»•&lt;we Ocl IJ it ftaa

IN 12*01. C A N S

Miller Beer

where shopping is a

twelvo*paek

Regular or Sugar-Free

*f«. 79*
Assorted C e r ts . 3 p”*L

pleasure 7 days a week

$ 449

Red Dentyne or Cinnamon, Original
or Spearmint

"90* OFF’"'

Trident Gum .........t&amp;i
This ed effective in the following counties:
Brevard, Charlotte, Collier, Highlands, Hillsboro,
Lake, Lee, Manatee, Orange, Osceola, Polk,
Sarasota and Seminole onlyl

Cake
Mixes

With This Coupon ONLY
Rsg. or Butlsr Flavored

Crisco
Shortening
3-lb. can

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD

reg. pkg.

L0NGW 00D VILLAGE CTR.,

V.

L0NGW 00D

BJEi

PlQS t ih O d O In Bonus
Coupons By M ail
with this certificate

DUNCAN HINES
READY TO SPREAD

Asserted
Frostings
16tt-oz. c jn

Duncan Hines 13*oz. Blueberry,
9%-oz. Bran. 11tt-oz. Banana Nut
or 11ft*oz. Spicy Apple

$040 InBonus
6ft «J“ CouponsByRail
Whwi youbuyW orto IMn pwu.jp«tugt&gt;mh
SUV. **,*.« I n n g lK l^ N l* w c w M e w g I r m a

UAL: IMto«JM»c»rtoc4topijtprcu*,t4a«M»»t&lt;M
■ |IN im t

cettoig ktondt to f a t o m ond r

Muffin Mixes...... •«Sh

set

1-tuM n r , m e* 2 toOto. h n l a ^ N toto to

Duncan Hines 18*oz. Chocolate
Chip or 17*oz. Double Chocolate
Chip or 17Vi*oz. Oatmeal Raisin

AwIcWtoc Manat »«JTl«a ftwofe«l ft &gt;o«m n
I b a n Ct-to) at tot k. 1 fto* m

tow -a. to, 11 «er tow m an to

Cookies M ix e s... V

*1”

Duncan Hines 15-oz. Golden
Sugar or 16H*oz. Peanut Butter

Cookie M ix .......
AII-Purpo»»

Crisco Oil •eeeeeeeeessee

*“ *1“

H .W M M
1
4lam&gt;jw Cm tto |

4I

• &gt;WM

boL

Duncan Hines Family Size

Brownie M ix...... V

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towl'u*4
towUMw
tow k n w
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Can 0)
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twice during the cooking. Carefully remove the
pears s:;d continue cooking the syrup at 100%
power (uncovered) until it Is reduced by half, about
10 minutes. Pour over pears.
AFPLF. SLICES IN CINNAMON SAUCE
6 medium apples, peeled and sliced (about 6 cups)
■Acup sugar
1 tablespoon dour
•A teaspoon cinnamon
W cup raisins
Combine apples, sugar, flour and cinnamon In a
2-quart casserole. Cover. Microwave at 100% power
for 12-15 minutes or until apples urc tender. Stir
raisins. Serve warm or cold as an accompaniment to
roast pork.
BAKED APPLES
2 tablespoons flour
5 2 tablespoons brown sugar

IN W ATER OR OIL
STAR-KIST

k M b . pkg.

,.r c e r t in c a t *

•-« **•$.

B R E A K F A S T CLU B
GRADE A FLORIDA

Sliced
Bacon

half gal.

-4—

Home Ecouomlit
Seminole Community Ccllff e

BURGUNDY POACHED PEARS
G pears, peeled
I cup Burgundy wine
1 cup sugar
I piece stick cinnamon
1 teaspoon lemon rind—grated
Combine wine, sugar, cinnamon stick and lemon
rind In n 4-cup batter bowl or measuring cup.
Microwave ut 100% power. Pour over pears which
have iH-en placed In a 9-Inch round baking dish.
Cover. Microwave at 50*L power for 12-15 minutes,
or until pears are soft. Baste pears with the sauce

ASSO RTED
F LA V O R S

Dairi-Fresh
Sherbet v

«4

Midge
Mycoff

to m , bto, k* to

b&gt;, aw

I It -tow to tot r , m
i n -toto to to. n Ml
t U -a a a w t o t a t o a t o a

IN - t a t t o n n w i
I U - awe toto. t m tw
&lt;w.« a aa
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couroa omx

ro K iim
aarros t u u m
toviwws« •

I ’' t * e

esujJT*

Wadnetday, Oct. !&gt;, 1M3—7B

1 tablespoon butter
2 tablespoons Baked coconut
• • 9 :cV r
- .y.'H.nvJt v . ------ ----- ---- -----Vi teaspoon cinnamon
3 medium cooking apples
Combine flour, sugar, und butter In small mixing
bowl. Microwave at 100% power for Vi-1 minute or
until buttei Is soft. Mix with fork until crumbly. Stir
In coconut, nuts nnd cinnamon. Set aside. Cut
apples In half lengthwise, remove core, do not peel.
Arrange cut-slde-up In an 8 -Inch round baking dish.
Spoon topping evenly Into center of apples. Cover
with wax paper. Microwave at 100% power for 5-6
minutes or until apples are tender.
Cranberry Sauce Is as good with pork as it is with
poultry. This whole berry sauce will be n taste treat
with a roast or chops.
*
'

SPICED CRANBERRY SAUCE

1 V« cups sugar
U cup water
12 oz. package fresh cranberries
Vi teaspoon cinnamon
In an 8 -cup batter bowl, combine cranberries,
sugar, and water. Mix and cover with plastic wrap.
Microwave nt 100% power for 10-12 minutes or
until berries nrc cooked and saucey. Stir twice. Pour
Into a serving bowl and dust with cinnamon.

Pork P
Canadian
Favorite
Cool, cri&amp;p fall days call for hearty, down-home
cooking.
Taking a cue from the French Canadians and
Hungarians, here arc a sweet and savory pork pie and a
goulash pot pic for the season.
The pork pie Is a traditional French Canadian meat pte
that has fortified many a lumberjack and farmer. It can
be made ahead and frozen, then reheated.
The Hungarians gave the world "gulyas" — or
goulash — a delectable stew made with beef, onions and
paprika. Serve this version In soup bowls, with a dollop
of sour cream on top.
8WEET AND SAVORY PORK PIE
2 pounds lean pork, cut In Vi -Inch cubes
/ cup all- purpose flour
5 tablespoons vegetable oil. divided
3 carrots, diced
2 tart green apples, cored and chopped
1 large onion, chopped
1 cup beef bouillon
/ cup raisins
1 teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauec
1 teaspoon dried leaf savory
Y« teaspoon ground cinnamon
% teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon ground clove
.i2 eggs, „ ,
• n 1 •’ . .... uti.utim, jo
/i.uilin
Prepared pastry
for 2-crust pic
In large bowl, paper or plastic bag, coat pork cubes
with flour. In large skillet, beat 3 tablespoons oil: saute
pork over high heat until meat is lightly browned on all
sides. Remove meal from skillet, reserve. Heat remain­
ing 2 tablespoons oil: saute carrots, apple and union
until crisp-tender. Return pork to skillet. Add bouillon,
raisins, pepper sauce, savory, cinnamon, salt and clove.
Simmer 5 minutes until sauce thickens slightly. Remove
from heat. Beat 1 egg. Quickly stir into pork mixture.
Divide pastry dough In half. Roll out one half to an
11-Inch circle. Press Into bottom and sides of a 9-inch
turt pan with removable bottom. Spoon pork mixture
Into tart pan. Press mixture down firmly. Roll out
remaining pastry tn an 11-Inch circle. Place over filling.
&gt;rlm; seal edges. Roll out scraps of pastry and cut into 10
strips. 10-by-W Inches. Decorate top of pie In crisscross
far-blon. Beat remaining egg: brush top of crust. With
sharp knife, cut nlr vents In pastry. Bake In a 400-degree
oven 40 to 45 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes before
serving. To serve, remove sides of tart pan. This
kltchcn-»**sted recipe makes 6 servings.
GOULASH POT PIE
Vi pound (5
strips) bacon, chopped
2 pound; beef for stew, cut Into 1- Inch cubes
/ cup all- purpose flour
1 large onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
4i pound rutabaga, peeled, cut Into 1-Inch cubes
(about 3 cups)
2 cups beef bouillon
2 tablespoons paprika
2 bay leaves
1 teaspoon caraway seed
% teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce
Vi teaspoon salt
Pastry for single
crust 9-Inch pie
Sour cream
(optional)
In large saucepot oi Dutch oven, cook bacon: remove
from saucepot. Coat beef cubes with Hour. Add to skillet:
saute meat In bacon fat until evenly browned on all
sides. Add onion and garlic; saute until crisp-tender.
Add rutabaga, bouillon, bacon, paprika, bay leaves,
caraway seed, pepper sauce and salt. Cover. Simmer 35
to 40 minutes, stli-ring occasionally. Spoon Into 2-quart
shallow baking dish. On llghtlv floured board, roll out
pastry Vi Inch thick and 2 Inches larger than baking
dish. Place pastry over meat mixture. Fold under excess
pastry even with edge of baking dish. Flute edge. With
sharp knife cut atr vents In pastry. Bake In 400-dcgrce
oven 15 minutes until crust is gulden brown. Serve with
sour cream. If desired. This kitchen-tested recipe makes
4 to 6 servings.
BEEK AND PEPPERS SHI FRY
1 pound bed top round steak, cut % to 1 Inch thick
Vi cup water
Vi cup dry sherry
Vi cup soy sauce
1 large red pepper
1 large green pepper
2 tablespoons cooking oil
1 tablespoon cornstarch
Cooked rice. If desired
Slice steak crosswise Into Vi-lnch strips. Combine
water, sherry and soy sauce: pour over beef and
marinate while cutting peppers into thin strips. Quickly
cook peppers In hot oll-tn large frying pan or wok 3 to 4
minutes, stirring constantly. Remove from pan. Pour ofT
and reserve marinade. Quickly brown beef strips (Vi at a
time) tn hoi cooking oil. Combine cornstarch with
reserved marinade: add liquid and peppers to beef and
cook, stirring, until sauce Is thickened. Serve over
cooked rice, if desired. 4 servings.
Note: Partially freeze steak to facilitate sttctng Into thin
strips.

�H&gt;--Evcning Herald, Sanford, FI.

BLO N D IE
— 4 l K N O W W H A T '5
W R O N G WITH P E O P LE
THESE
V K if z f r l [ OAVS

r4C B O D Y !• WILLING

TO STAND e y THEIR
' “ I CONVICTIONS

Wednetday, Oct. U , 1P&amp;3

DO VOU R E A LLV
TH INK SO ? r —

by Chic Young
( W ELL, M AVBeJ

ACROSS

&lt;0 Biblicrl
girden

Antwer to Prtviout Puale

1 Arabiin
41 Liked (tl)
nipped
cottee
6 Slow (m ot) 48 Goes to court
12 V irg in poem 48 Moody perton
13 Enoliah
49 Shtd# ol red
p ? TT 1 ■ E
52 Revttling
u p H 1 l &gt;53 Followed
M A rt n t IO
54 F B I_____
A R ( A B b
55 Older pen on i
A T e in
n O D E N T
17 A tricin land 56 B e t m ol

R N
u

| Q D

N e w A n a ly s is S how s
O y s te rs L o w In F a t
PJF.AR n o, L A H JJ,

T

d e lig h t e d w ith y o u r
A T
comment that oysters arc
n r
low In cholesterol and fat. I
•
u n K A
s * t
was bom in New Orleans
V 1 N
R i N n
and cultivated the raw
19 Matal listener
F 1 0
E s T A
HC1DB
DOWN
IMHol
IgI»
oyster habit early In life. I
20 Diicomfit
24 G id
am 69 years old. I had a
41 Property title.
1 Thank* (Fr.)
12
28 Pina Tree
43 Think
stroke about two years ago
2 Pungent bulb , ' hu[1
ch1
State
44 Lea.e.
and was placed on a no
3 Portion
2 £»lrfu l .
27 Grampua
h iifo a v
19 fUmotre rind 45 Energy unit
11-12. Fish and Shellfish
cholesterol diet because of
30 Search
between
2 ] Lubricate.
As Health Foods, which I
atherosclerosis.
It
was
B E E T L E B A IL E Y
by Mort W alker 32Ma*We.t
4 Popular songa 22 One
47 c u*tomer
thought that my stroke am sending you. Othefc
5 Commercial. 23 Far (prefn|
&lt;8 Ru||jln
who want this Issue cah
was due to high blood
WELL, YOU POH'T TRY
YOUR P R O B L E M 15
6 Biblical pr.e.t
option
p!jn8S
send 75 cents with a long,
pressure
so
I
am
on
a
no
7
Residue
28
Veal
YOU DO N'T E A T
HARP ENOUGH,
stnmpcd. self-addressed
8 Per.ian cat
27 Leak out
* 7“
salt diet also.
TRY H A R P E R
W ELL-BALAW CEP
9 Tibetan
28 M u.ical pipa
p uev,r*
From yodr comment It envelope for It to me. In
MEALS__ _
V
garalle
29 Heart
50 «-*mprey
would appear that the care of this news papi#.
lOMitfortune
31 Boa.t
51 Scarlet
advice given me earlier P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
11 Elaborate
37 Kick type
52 Motoring
may no longer be valid so Station. New York. NY
poem
39 Shop.
a.iociatio
10019.
that I may be able to cot
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
4
1
2
3
5
oysters, which I was told
husband and I have a little
Wei.. - "no-no." The only
problem. He puts Tabasbo
12
thing I am wondering
about now la the salt. Are sauce on everything but
14
oysters high in ualt con­ Ice cream. Not Just a
tent? ! sure do hope the couple of dropn. he drowns
16
answer Is no so I can bt-nln everything will) It. 1 sav It
can't be good for hint. He
eating them again.
18
19
21 22 23
says it won't hurt him. v
DEAR
READER
The
TH E BORN LOSER
by Ar* Sansom
He's 21 years old and in
problem that occurred
regarding shellfish was a pretty good shape. But he
PERHAPS HOU ARE
IT 5H0ULWT BE TDO
MM6000 F a LOW, I HAVE BEEW A
method of analysis used to has complained of a little
32
USING THE WRONG
MUCH LONGER (SIR.
evaluate the cholesterol bit of blood In his stools
WAITIH&amp; PMIEHTL1/ FOR 4 5 &amp;
and fat content. So oysters I'm very worried.
MIHUT65 FOR W BROCK TROUTt j i
r B A tT l
35
DEAR READER - Sur­
were said to be high in
ch o lesterol but new er prisingly many healthy
methods have shown that people can tolerate very
many shellfish (but not all) hot. spicy food without
are really low-fat. low- any problem. Perhaps that
cholesterol foods. Oysters Is because the digestive
actually contain only 58 system produces some
milligrams of cholesterol pretty powerful chemicals
In 3
ounces
(100 of Its own to accomplish
grams) of the raw edible digestion.
If using hot spices docs
portion. That Is lower than
not
cause him to have
you
will
find
In
most
red
A R CH IE
by Bob Montana
m eats and pou ltry or s y m p t o m s , t h e n I
YOU'VE BEEN WORKING CLOSE YOUR EYES Y
r THERE A R E NO
wouldn't worry about It.
many fish.
TOO HARP. SIR ' WHY
LEAN BACK. LISTEN I I
FEPERAL GUIDELINES
But If he does in fact
Oysters also are only 1.8
I'M GETTING SICK AN P
P O N T YOU TAKE A FEW TO SOME SOFT /C A N 'l
. FOR THAT."
_
percent fat by weight and have some blood In his
TIRED OF ALL THESE
MINUTES OFF... _____^ MUSIC AN P
MISS
that translates Into 24.9 s to o ls , r e g a r d le s s o f
GOVERNMENTAL REGUlA
RELAX.'
J
\
PHLiPS..
percent of their calories as whether he uses Tabasco
TIONS ANP REP TAPE.'
fat. which is considered a sauce or not. he must have
u medical examination.
low-fat food.
Also, they do not contain Blood could mean hemor­
a lot of sodium. There arc rhoids. which might not br
only 75 mtlllgnuns of so­ alarming. but It can also
YOUR BIRTHDAY
made a mistake In the
dium In 3 ounces of mean a cancer, even In
OCTOBER 13, 1083
PaM- “ doc9n*‘ necessarily
raw o y s te r s . But r e ­ young people. Or It can be
More travel for pleasur- follow you'll repeat It tomember the sauce which from Irritation of the colon
able purposes Is likely this daY- ' ctl 'J1*3 ^car maY many people use may as you might see with
coming year. Contacts you Prcvcnt you from trying,
contain loads and loads of ulcerative colitis or any
make on your sojourns
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marrh sodium. So it may be lire number o f disorders that
EEK &amp; M EEK
by Howie Schneider will prove helpful In other 20) Self-deception could be sauce you need to avoid should not be Ignored.
areas of your life.
detral to you In business rather than the oysters.
_____
.
„
„
_
situations
today. Don’t kid
SXNJD5 LIKE A £HAk)GE
I have Included the
LIB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. yourself that you’re dealIIJ MAUAGEMEJJT ID WE
23) In situations where jng frorn strength where n e w e r v a l u e s f o r
you have charge over youarcnot.
ch olesterol and fat In
Others, don't t * b?9vy
A„ HI shellfish and common fish
handed or throw your ln" ~ r ® (March 2 1 April In T h e H ealth L e tte r
w eigh t around today. *9) Seek placid compaStepping on toes will make n,ons today, rather than
enemies. Libra predictions domineering types. You 11
for the year ahead are now n° l * *
**** niood to have
ready. Romance, career, olhem do thinking for you
luck, earnings, iruvel and or tell you what to do.
W eet's heart overcall
is u w
much more alscusscd.
TAURUS (April 20-May
gave North a tough pro­
Send $1 «o Astro-Graph. 2 0 ) G u a r d a g a i n s t
blem at Ills second turn to
Box 489. Radio City Sla- t e n d e n c ie s to d a y to
bid. He didn't like the idea
tlon. N.Y. 1001J. Send an magn|fy the magnitude of
by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers
o f p la y in g n o -tru m p
MR. M EN AND LIT T LE MISS
additional $2 for the NEW your tasks. If you believe
against a heart lead and
Astro-Graph Matchmaker them to be difficult, they
finally raised Ills partner's
wheel and booklet. Re- will h**
LIK E EVERYTH IN G ELSE
four-card spade suit. Need­
O N THE ONE HAND,
IN LIF E . J O G G IN G H AS
GEMINI (May 21-June
less to say. South com
♦
lots
+97
YOU K EEP F fT / r
ITS P R O S A N D C O N S /
tlnued to game.
2old risky ventures today,
SOUTH
especially those of a finan­
West made the helpful
♦ AJ8J
cial nature. Gambles (hat
lead
of the diamond aoc
▼ 104
and continued with thr
♦ 00
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. look good on the surface
trey.
♦ A K J 42
22) Your're not the type io may lack real substance.
South studied dummy
be easily Intimidated, bul
Vulnerable: Both
CANCER (June 21-July
for some time. His whole
today you could be de­ 22) Steering a middle
Dealer South
problem was the play of
feated by your own nega­ course enhances your ef­
Wot
Norik Eait
the the time.
tive thoughts. Seek sun­ fectiveness in dealing with
How about a 4 2 bicak?
shine. not shadows.
otheday. If you take a
Give West four to tiff
strong position, they may
queen and the contract
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov
be forced to do likewise.
was not going to come
23-Dec. 21) Your Industri­
BUGS BUNNY
by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl ous Intentions will go by
home. Give East that same
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
holdin g and a finesse
the boardsy if you become Kind words and gentle
X ALWAYS THOUGHT
would make things cosy,
Involved with friends who suggestions arc musts in
IT WAS 66SUNDHEIT.
Opening lead: +A
but finally South saw that
entice you Into frivolous dealing with subordinates
he cou ld handle that
activities.
today. Look for ways to
By Oswald Jacoby
holding anywuy.
praise, not to haze. If you
C A P R I C O R N (D e c .
and James Jacoby
Now he led a spade to
want good results.
22-Jan. 19) If you hope to
T h e b id d in g In the his ace and a second one
VIRGO (Al'g. 23-Sept. special Cavendish rubber back to dummy's king
make your mark In the
world today, chances are 22) Your prudence In fi­ bridge game Is sort of with every Intention of
you'll have to do it on your nancial matters could des­ catch as catch can. One leading a third spade from
own. Persons with clout ert you today. There's a thing ubout II Is that when dummy If the queen failed
chance you'll be wasteful a pair gets to one trick
aren't apt list you.
to drop. It did drop and
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- or extravagant when you below (he game, the gumc
now South had his 10
Fcb. 19) Just because you shouldn't.
is going to be bid.
tricks, game and rubber.

HOROSCOPE

i / W

WIN AT BRIDGE

F R A N K AND E R N E S T

by Bob Thaves

G A R F IE L D
HEV/ ARLENE.
LOOK AT THIS

- L A lt t Y , X ’v e gEEN
■

SO WHAT?

L 00KIN 6 Fb fiw A flp T °

JU ST WHAT POES IT TAKE S
l TO IMPRESS V O 0 ,L A P V ? J

1 A S SOON A5 SHE REGAINS ,
CONSCIOUSNESS, I'LL
CHALLENGE THE HEART PART

] _ ) MV HEAP AS WELL

A_ MV HEART r

rt, WHEN M Y MEMoffY
'vJ

iT A P T S TO 6 0 .

f$ ts
Tm a v e j

T U M B LE W E E D S

/ KNOWOF ANY '
(SCANDALS FOR MY
V GOSSIP COLUMN,
\
POCTOR!?

&lt;

io

-a

by Leonard Starr

by T. K. Ryan
N EIGHPO KING...

CANTSTOPTOTALK/ &gt;
MISS HAMHOCKER..
GOT AN OLITPRFAKOF
, GERMAN MEASLES j
\
INHOGTOWNI y

i

VILLAGE...TAKES..ON )
. ... INTERNATIONAL..)
S
..FLAVOR-.

I

-ER-MARIA DOE
SEEM 70 BE AT
HOME, OFFICERSHE PROBABLY
WENT SHOPPING

U I'D BETTER
LOOK THROUGH
THE REST OF THE
HOUSE TO M6Kc •
SURE, MISS PCfiSE.

OH, GOLLY/1 HSH / m T *
SHE COULP HUH
GOIfT
FASTER.,

J

Off?/

COYOTEf / T S I M SHE* RUNfftM «J
£— — i AWAY?fIHHEfl l)
PATROL! 7HBYHB COHWT/OH?! U
a ft e r

—

M

l

t

�Evening H erald, Sanford, FI.

W ednesday, Oct, it , 19S)—9B

TONIGHT'S TV
■M

d n eso a y
EVENING

( D O NEW S
d l (3S) B J / LO BO
CD (10) M A C N E iL / LE H R E R
NEW SH O UR
(0(1) O N E DAY A T A TIME

•

6:05

( D LITTLE H O USE O N THE PRAI-

A B C N EW S n
ai ir e
“
(35)i ALICE
( D (l)O O O O TIMES

7:00
O ® P E O P L E 'S CO URT
lli O
P M M A G AZIN E A deer
toundup m New Zealand using heli­
copters; a look at how Natalie
W ood's last movie, "Brainstorm ."
was completed, Including exclusive
loot age of har last interview

m fj

j o k e r 's

w ttn

i l l (35) THE JE F F E R S O N S
60(10) MEETING O f MINOS Steve
A*en continues hi* discus sir i of
i population control, free enterprise
It, w illi Margaret
Sanger. Mahatma G andhi and
Adam Smith. (Pari 3)
CD (I) RO W AN S M A R T IN 'S
LAUQH-4N

7:05
32

CAROL
FRI ENOS

BURNETT

ANO

7:30
O ® ENTERTAINM ENT TONKJIIT

Anne Bailee H making a come­
back In a new TV Me let
' 5 ) 0 W H EEL OF FO RTUNE
1 O FAM ILY FEUO
(It (35)B A R N E Y MILLER
T K T A C DOUGH

7:35
8 2 0 0 0 0 NEW S

an become* a limousine d ilver and
unwittingly make* hhnsalt the H r gel
of hoodlum*
(Q) (35) QUINCY

O

(2) FAM ILY TIES Mallory * boy­
friend Je lt (John D ukakli) decide*
to leave college In order to be ciot-

8:00
O
®
R E A L P E O P L E S k ip
8 i* p h e n to n 't trip via eip re**
courier; a La* Vega* arm-wrestling
c o n ie il. cal* and dog* thal help the
elderly, la te ly law* that are alienedly h a ffn M .
4 ) O WHIZ KIDS Richie learn*
that hi* pen pal. a p riton Inmate
(DwicJ Ackroyd). ha* designed a
video gam* a t perl o l an escape
pUn
(S O W O R LD SER IES Gam e 2
from AL champion'* city)
(IT! (35) HAWAII riV E -0
( 0 (10) CH ARLIE MUFFIN British
Agent Charlie Muffin attempt* lo
persuade a K G B head lo defect
CD(8) MOVIE

3:00
Cable Ch

10:00
O ® CANDID CAM ER A: NOW
A N D THEN Allen Funt and Ang&gt;*
Dickinson Introduce turn cup* from
the (Settle TV series that show
people caught In the act of being
themsetve* "(R )

&lt;!I Ml iwocpcnoEHT NETWORK
NEW S
ED (10) N EVER TURN BACK: THE
LIFE O F FANNIE LO U H A M E R The
struggle* o l Fannie Lou Hamer,
during the hot summer In the I960*
when the M ississippi d v ll rights
movement was In full swing, are
dramatized.
CD (8) K O JA K

Independent
O rla n d o

I C B S l O r.e n d a

Independent
M e lb o u rn e

( N B C ) D a y to n a B e a c h
O rla n d e

O rla n d o P u b lic
B ro a d c a t lin g System

0 ® THE FA C T S O f LIFE J o U S j
lor a wealthy young man (Peter Nel­
son I and Irles lo oiler her streetwise

12:00
® MIDDAY
O
C A R O LE N ELSO N AT
NOON
O NEW S
(35) BEWITCHED
(10) MEETING O F MINDS (MON)
(10) M A STER PIECE THEATRE

® (N * ) MISTER R O G ER S (R)
10) EVENING AT P O P S (WEO)
10) NO VA (THU)
(10) N ATU R E (TO)

(JS)P O PE Y E
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER R O G ER S (R)

10:05

12:30

0:00
0 ® Of F F R E NT 8T R O K E S (Ft)
(?) J ) DONAHUE
( D O MOVIE
(11) (35) OREAT S P A C E CO AST ER
® (10| S E S A M E STREET (ft) n
n
n nBODY
n m oBUDOtES
iin n ic a
( Bw (8)
^Y

10:30

93)5

31 (35) BOB NEWMART

32

m o v ie

9:30
O ® LA V ERN E k SHIRLEY C
COMPANY
(35) I LO VE LU CY
(S) H EALTH FIELD

(1L (35) BENN Y HILL
i d (io ) A l f r e d h i t c h c o c k p r e ­

8

sents

QD (I) TWILIGHT ZONE

10:00

n ( D LO VE CONNECTION
® O HOUR MAGAZINE
m j (35) FAMILY
ED (10) ELECTRIC C O M P A N Y (R)
(MON, TUE. THU. FRI)
CD (10) MISTER R O G ER S TALKS
WITH PAR EN T S ABO UT DISCI­
PLINE (WED)
CD ( 1 ) 0 0 0 C O U P LE

® 0 MOVIE Sunset Lim ousine"
(Premiere) John Rilter, Susan Dey.
A ccu se d by his g irlfrien d of
irre s p o n s ib ly , a wcuid-be comedi-

10:30
® S A L E OF THE CEN TU R Y
(10) U N TAM ED W ORLD
(() C LA SS IC COUNTRY

§

11:35

CD

P

12 :0 0
® C 3 P C U C E STO RY A rookie
cop te u to n Davis) goes undercover
lo Investigate a ma)cf drug ring. (R)

3 1 (35) PINK PANTH ER

Q 0 D AYS O F O UR LIVES
m O A L L M Y CHILDREN
fl t (35) AHOY GRIFFITH
ED (101 THE EMIORANT SA G A
(MON-WEO)
f f i (10) a IK NOV, H W AR (THU)
(D (10) a O R iO A H O M E GROW N
(FRft

1.05
1:30
® O A 8 THE W ORLD TURNS
iff! (35) DICK V AN DYKE
( D (10) THIS O LD HOUSE (FRI)

2:00

2)

12:45
® Q A L L IN THE FAMILY

ta i
3 2 (35) 8T R EE T 8 O F BAN FRAN -

1:10

d ) Q MOVIE. "The Sow ary M an"
C a rrla

1:15

QD O MOVIE "R ebel Without A
Ceuse" (1955) Jam es Dean, Natalie
Wood

3 1 M O V E "E ach Dawn I Die"
(1939) Jam es Cagney. Oeorge Raft

2:30
B ® EN T E R T AM M E N T TOW GHT
Gene Barry talks about hia hit
Broadway musical
3 ) O C B S N EW S NiQHTW ATCH

3.-00
N B C NEW S OVERNIGHT

3:10

Seeing Sim on
C h e ry l M c M a n n is guest sta rs as a sightless w itness to a m u rd er who
becom es ro m a n tic a lly entangled w ith R ic k Sim on (series co-star G e ra ld
M c R a n e y ) on Simon &amp; Simon T hu rsd a y at V p.m . on C B S .

O ®

MOVIE "The Fat M an119511 Juke London. Rock Hudson

®

N B C NEWS OVERNIGHT

FAMILY DAY
SPECIAL

O (J) D R EAM HO USE
m O LO V IN O
dj) (35) INDEPENDENT NETW ORK
NEW S
CD (10) POSTSCRIPTS

ALL DAY WEDNESDAY

5:50
8 2 W O RLD AT LARG E (THU)

Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!

6:00
O

®

aO R JD A'S WATCHING

Nwy.irat annat

A l l SHOWS
9 1Z U SR C NEWS AT 8UNRS95
| l O
C B S EARLY MORNING
N EW S (TUE-FRf)
0 A B C NEWS THIS MORNING
(15) INSPECTOR G AD G ET
(I) MORNING STRETCH

2
S

SMOKEY and the
BANDIT PART J
3 p ieces o l golden brown Fam ous Recipe
Fned Chicken, m ashed potatoes and gravy,
cream y cole slaw and two !resh, hof biscuits

8:45

O N EW S
(10) A J A W EATHER

M R .^ O /V \

7:00

B ® TOOAY
(FI O C B S MORNING NEW S
m O OOOO M O R M N Q AM ERICA
© (35) TOM ANO JE R R Y
CD (10) TO UFE)
3 2 FUNTIME
( D O ) NEW ZOO REVUE

'amousTgecwe.
You Make Os Famous!

WASHINGTON (UPI)

btegt W*4, Frt, Sal A Sen. srli
Clot* i t 11

3 2 (35) WOOOY W O O O PECKER
CD(10)S€8AM E 8 T R E E T (R )Q
( B (8) SPIDER-WAN
^

"Som eone has lo let
broadcasters know ihut
they can't get away with
turning children's televi­
sion into the big sell." Ms.
Charren said.

(39) B U G S B U N N Y
FRIENDS
( I (I) JIM BAKKER

ANO

TIP TOP...HOM E OF QUALITY FOODS &amp; MEAT

63)5
3 2 BEWITCHED

SHOUlDCS

USD* CHOICE BEEF
BONELESS

S r® -" '

CHUCK ROAST

4:20

ch itterlin g s . *

3 2 MOVIE - Her Kind Of M an"
11946) Dane Clark. Jams Paige

G e n e ra l

Electric

THURSDAY

Weathertron Central
Air Conditioning System
ia e M | f PLUMBING A
r V a r f HEATING INC

53)0

1007 Sanford Ave. Sanford

LEAN &amp; MEATY

6 .9 9

I UK™ ,

PORK
S '
SPARE RIBSj wings
5 us. wuf A

P h . 122-4542
O ® N EW S (TUE-FRO

C A S S E LB E R R Y
4) N. Hwy. 17-92
S1I-0IS)

8:00
32

N BC H EW S OVERNIGHT

® O MOVIE "Beg. Borrow Or
Steel" (1973) Mika Connor*. Kan)
M cCord

■ at 10:30 A M A

SANFORD
ISOS French Ave. (Hwy. 17-92)
323-1650

7^ 5
3 2 1DREAM O F JE A N N E

4:00

Cartoons Turned Info 'Big Sell

® O M ’ A * S * ll
m o NEWS
ED (10) O CEAN U S (MON)
GD (10) UNDERSTANDING H UM AN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
ED (10) FO CU S ON SOCIETY
(WEO)
ED (10) EARTH, S E A ANO SK Y

2:30

f f l (10) A JJ. WEATHER

2:20

® O

3 2 8TAR CAO E

6:30

12:30
O ® LAT E NtOHT WITH DAVfO
LETTEHM AN Uuaal. columnist Art
Buchwakt

O ®

(10) EARTH. S E A ANO SK Y
LO
(10) ART O F BEING H UM AN

0 ® AN O THER W ORLD
O O NE U F E TO LIVE
(11(35) O O M E R PY LE
ED (10? N EVER TURN BACK: THE
U F E OF FANNIE L O U H A U E R

12:05

H o llim a n ,

5:00
n 0 '- ? v r b o a t
Y O th R E E -S c o m p a n y
m O N EW BCO PE
11(35) CH IPS PATRO L
ED (lO )O CEAN U S(M O N )
ED (10) UNDERSTANDING H UM AN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
ED (10) FO CU S O N SOCIETY

3 1 MOVIE

11:30

5:30

O

3 2 MOVIE
"Tha Assassination
Bureau" (1969) Oliver Reed. Diana

(1979) E a rl
Snodgrass.

4:35
0 2 THE BRAO Y BUN CH

3 2 THE C A T IIN 8
HJ&gt;W ORLO AT LARG E (TUE)

11:45
A B C NEW S NIGHTLINE

8

( D O CAPITO L
llj) (35) I D R EAM O F JEANNIE
EU (to) FREN CH CH EF (WED)
CD (10) M AO IC O F a O R A L PAINT­
ING (FRTI

5 2 W ORLO AT LARG E (MON)

3 2 I T 8 Y O U R BUSINESS (MON)
3 2 CATH OLIC M A S S (TUE)

32THECATUN8

4:05
( Q THE M UN STERS

(10) MAOIC O F DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)
0 ) ( » BO NAN ZA

0 ® W HEEL O F FORTUNE
( 7 ) 0 THE PRICE IS RfQHT
( D O DENSON (R)
dB (35) 0 0 0 0 DAY ORLANOO
ED (10) MAOIC O F OIL PAINTING
0 ) 1 0 HIGH C H A P A R R A L

5:15

11:30

O ® 8 E A R C H FO R TOM ORROW
(Y) O
THE YO UN G AN O THE
R E ST LE SS
0 R Y A N 'S H O PE
(35) B E V E R LY HILI BILLIES

CD

11:00

O
0
TOtaOHT Host: Johnny
Carson. Quests: Charles Gredin.
Roberta Flack, Peabo Bryson
IJ' O W K R P IN CINCINNATI
(H. (35) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
CD(•) H O U SE C A L L S

0 ® FAN TASY B c A N O
® O B REAK AW AY
( D O m e r v o r »t i n
J p (35) SU PERFRfEN DS
CD i 10) SE S A M E S T R E E T ( R ) n
5 ) (6) MOVIE

12:05

8:35

on, cewe on,
mv (.erroveps c a n t
Be THAT BAb.
^

3:35
ira TWF Ft ISITSTOsrcn

3 1 PER R Y M ASO N

3 2 1LOVE LUCY

32 NEWS
3 2 MOVIE "G oodbye, Cokim bus"
(1966) R ic h a rd Ban)am ln, A ll
MacOraw A young man vacation­
ing with tha family uf a wealthy bunu v ssm in na* a sacrel love a ll air
with tha tycoon's daughter.

AFTERN OON

in a d d itio n to the c h a n n els liste d , c a b le v itio n su b s c rib e rs m t y tune in to ind ep end ent c h f nnel &lt;«.
St P e te rs b u rg , by tu nin g to ch a n n el I j tu n in g to channe* 11, w h ic h c a r r ie s sp o rts an d the C h ris tia n

by Larry Wright

S

82 TEXAS

I A B C ) O rla n d o

KIT W C A R L Y L E

G IL U O A ff 8 ISLAND
OUtOCNQ LIGHT
O G EN ER AL HOSPITAL
f35) THE FlIW T S T O N tS
(10) PO ST SCR IPT S

c I TURKEY

iup_ 7 B

I le g s ..

' GROUND BEEF

CATFISH

**1*48

W W T A C I FRESH LARG E

aORiOA ntCMIUM
CHICKEN

WHITE EGGS” "1

ASSORTED

LEG QUARTERS

p0HK C R O P S * * 1 - 0 0

GENERIC

E m m i1

PAPER
iw

n m

TOWELS

a a !

GENERIC

g e n e r ic

BATHROOM LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
TISSUE

SAVINGS ON DELMONTE

n o t iu « t

TOMATOES

t^ JJ
S f f lH

Delmoiite Peas, Whole Kernel or
Cream Style Com, French Style
or Cut Crean Beans
and Spinach
3
^ V
MIX Of! MATCH 303 CANS

IN IU IM M W f

#m

ICE CKXM .uf 1 .5 9

■

BANANAS
4us.*l

HERITAGE l
ARMIX
SUGAR
! SHORTENING
roTAT0ESii, 1 .4 9

Iiff 9

9c\
i£
99*

1100 West s3in St.
Sanford

SUPERM ARKET

i

QuotHfl ServiceI Samgsl
FOOD STA M PS W ELCO M E

wt w i t t y * re*

RIGHT 10
LIMIT QUANTiTlE:

fiiastooo
TMU

scr n. isu

�tOB—Evening Herald, Sanlnic. FI. Wednesday, Oct. U , 1W3

Leqal Notice

aM M N BaB

i »- m

Parade
Invitation
Sanford Jayceea
Christmas Parade
Chairman Larry Blair,
right, discusses parade
plana wi t h Jayceea
President Lea Balogh.
The Jayceea' annual
parade will be held on
Dec. 10 beginning at
10 a.m. along First
Street In Sanford. The
theme of the parade la
M em ories o f Christm as
Past. Blair encourages
all interested groups
to p a r t i c i p a t e . In*
formation may be obtalned by writing to
the Jaycees at P.O.
B ox 1543, Sa nf o r d
32771.

Acclaimed Black Women Feted
At Metropolitan Museum of Art
NEW YORK (UPI) - A
former nun who became
an entrepreneur and n
101-yrar old woman who
fo u g h t f o r r a i l r o a d
workers' rights arc among
11 a c c la im e d b la c k
women set to be honored
today at a gnlnJewcll
Jackson ceremony at the
Metropolitan Museum of
Art.
The women are win­
ners of the 1983 Candace
(can-day-say) Aw ards,
given for the second con­
secutive year by the Na­
tional Coalition of 100
Black Women to honor
extraordinary ach ieve­
ment by black women.
Jewell Jackson McCabe,
president of the National
Coalition, a group with
affiliates In many states,
said:

"Candace was the an­
cient Ethiopian title for
empress or queen. Thus.

Candace Is a reminder of
black female power and
accomplishment. We have
a history that dates back
to 332 B.C."
The former nun. An­
toinette Blanchl. bom In
New Orleans and raised In
Bogatoosa. La., now Is
chalr-presldcnt of Blanchl
E n t e r p r i s e s Inc.,
Baltimore. She won the
Candace technology award
for creatin g a m illion
dollar high tech firm that
assembles'electronic and
electro-mechanical pro­
ducts.
The winner of the labor
award. Roslna Tucker, a
lifelong labor leader from
Washington. D.C.. spent
the majority of her 101

years fighting for Pullman
workers' rights. Ms. Mc­
Cabe said.
In 1925 she helped or­
ganize the Washington
C h a p t e r of the
Brotherhood of Sleeping
Car Porters. For 30 years
she w as s e c r e t a r y t r e a s u r e r of the
Brothchood's Ladles Aux­
iliary.
Ms. McCabe said the the
National CoullMon pro­
vides forums nationwide
where outstanding black
women can work for polit­
ical and economic goals,
where they can think and
speak out about the needs
of the 21st century.
One premise of the Na­
tional Coalition Is that the
civil rights movement has
not met all its goals and
there Is plenty o f un­
finished business to be
done.
"W e arc trying to make
a civil rights statement by
'surfacing' blnck women
who have succeeded." Ms.
McCabe said.
Other Candace winners
honored: at a gala black-tie
ceremony this week (Oct.
12) at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art :
• Arts. Dr. Selma Burke.
91. New Hope. Pn.. for
decades has been behind
many fine arts festivals In
her state. She Is a pro­
digious sculptor whose
1943 profile of President
Roosevelt was reproduced
on the dime.
• Business. Suzanne de
Passe. Los Angeles, presi­
dent of Motown Produc­
tio n s In c ., w h o rose
through (he ranks of the
world-renow ned music
c o m p a n y . S ite w a s
n o m in a te d ^ fo r th e
Academy Award for best
screen play for L a d y S in g s
t h e H lu e s .

• Community Service.
Dr. Mattie Cook, a found­
ing member of Malcolm
K in g. H arlem C o lleg e
Extension In New York
City. She earned awards in
edu cation , co rrectio n ,
dmg abuse treatment and
' economic development.
• Econom ic D evelop ­
ment. Mary Shaw, presi­
dent and chief executive
officer of Universal Life
Insurance Co.. Memphis.
Tcnn.
• E du c a t i o n .

AT THEIR
FINGERTIPS!

READ
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
and you're
guaranteed
a spin around
the w orld of
buying and selling
...jobs and homes,
choice business
opportunities
and som etim es
just a friend...

[
i

Mary

llatwood F ut rc II.
Wauhlngtor.. D.C.. presi­
dent of the National Edu­
cation Association, the
nation’s largest teachers
union.
• H ealth. Dr. G loria
Jackson Bacon, medical
d i r e c t o r of Cl i ni c
Associates o f Chicago.
Ltd., a medical group for
low Income pa'tents.
• History. Sylvlu HIM
Williams, director of the
National Museum of Afri­
can Art. Smithsonian In­
stitu tion . W ashington.
D.C.
• H u m an itarian . Dr.
Mamie Phipps Clark, post­
humous award. With her
husband. Dr. Kenneth
Clark, she was founder of
the Northslde Center for
Child Development In New
York City and served as Its
executive director for forty
years.
• Letters. Etta Moicn
Barnet, actress and singer
who premiered the role of
Bess in George Grrsliwln's
P o r g y a n d H e s s on
Broadway, and was the
first black wonuii to slug
at the Willie House. On
behalf of Presidents
Eisenhower. Kennedy and
Jo h n so n sire made visits
to Liberia, the Ivory Coast.
Tunisia. Libya. Ethiopia.
I g a n d a . and Th e
Cameroons.

CALL

322*2611 or 831-9993

E V rJIV IiV G H E R A L D

i

Lead Notice _ J._Lenn! Na&lt;|po

•* **- *—^ ^ * —* * -----------f

N O T ir r o r p r o p o s e d A C ­
Q UISITIO N OF B A N K ASS E T S A N D
A S S U M P T IO N O F L IA B IL IT IE S
N olle* Ii hereby given lh a l lh*
F irst F id e lity Savings and Loan
Association, W inter P ark, F lorida,
has mad* application lo th# Federal
D e p o sit In su ra n c e C o rp o ra tio n ,
W ashington. D C . 2047*. for Its
written consent lo acqulr* Its* a.(« ls
ot and assum* llb ltlly lo pay deposits
In th* W eklva Branch ef Flagship
Dank ot 5«mlnol«, Sanford, F lo rid * !
th* T uscaw llla Branch ot Flag ship
Bank of Sominot*. Sanford. F lorida:
and (he Coralwood M a ll t-.anch of
Sun Bank/ Southwest. N A., Cap*
Coral. F lo rid a II Is contemplated
that a ll of lh* offlc*s of th* abov*
named banks w ill continue to b*
operated
This notice Is published pursuant lo
Section lif e ) of th* Federal Deposit
Insurance A rt
Any person wishing lo comment on
this application m ay III* his/ her
comments In w ritin g with th* Rtgional D irector of lh* Federal Depos
It Insurance Corporation a l Its R*
gtonal Office. 733 Peachtree S t .
N .E ., suit* 3400. Atlanta. Georgia
10043 If any person Je s irts to protest
th* granting of this application, he/
she has a r Ight to do so if he/ she files
a written notice of h is ' Her Intent
w ith the R e g io n a l D ire c to r by
October 3*. iv*J Th* nonconlioentlal
porltons of th* application are on file
In th* Regional O ffice as part ot the
p ublic M * m aintained by th* Cor
porallon This file Is availab le for
p u b lic Inspection d uring regularbusiness hours.
October II. 1WJ
F I R S T F I D E L I T Y SAV IN G S
A N D LO A N ASSO CIATIO N
915 South Orlando Avenue
W inter Park. Florida 37/1*
F L A G S H IP B A N K O F
S E M IN O L E
300 West F irs ! Street
Sanforc F lo r id a 33771
SU N B A N K / SO U TH W EST, N A
U I3 Cap* Coral P arkw ay
Cap* Coral. F lo rid a 33*04
P ublish September 14, 31. 31 &amp;
O ctobers. 13.14. Itt3
D ELS*
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T . E IG H
T E E N T H J U D IC IA L CIR C U IT . IN
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO 63-1114-CA OV-E
D O R IS G R IV E R S .

Plaintiff
vs.
P E G A S n IN T E R N A T IO N A L . INC.,
a F lo rid a corporation.
Defendant.
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N that
pursuant to Sum m ary F in a l Judg
men I rendered on lh# *th day ot
October. A O . 1*13. In that certain
causa pending In lh* above styled
Court wherein O O R IS G R IV E R S Is
P ie ln tllf. and P E G A S O IN T E R N A
T IO N A L . INC., a rU irW * cu.pu.«
Hon, Is Defendant, the undersigned
C le r k o l the C ir c u it C o u rt o l
Seminole County. F lorida, w ill at
11:00 o'clock A M on lh* 3rd day of
November, A.D . 1*13. offer for sal*
end sell to the highest and best
bidder lor casn. *1 th* (W esl) front
door o l th* Courthouse o l Seminole
County. F lorida, In Sanlo-d F lorida ,
lh* following described property
lying and being in Sem lnnU County,
F lorid*, lo w il:
Th* North 461 feel o l lh* MW 1 *1
the SW 'A o l Section U . Tow-ishlp 1*
South. Range 3t East. Seminole
County, Florid*. Lyin g West o l Stale
Road a l l
Th* South 4*S (eel o l the North *33
tool ot th* NW to c l th* SW to of
Section 34, Township I* South, Rang*
31 East. Seminole County. Florida
Lyin g West of State Road 413.
The NW U ot the SW &lt;4 of Section
34, Township I* South. Range 31
East. Seminole County, Florid a ;
Less the North *?0 feel thereof Lying
West ot State Rood 41}.
Said sa&gt;* is to be made to satisfy
th* term s o l said Sum m ary F in a l
Judgment.
Dated October a. 1*13
n R T H U K H B E C K W I T H ,J R .
C le rk ot C irc u it Court
Seminole County. F lo rid a
B y Catherine M Evans
Deputy Clerk
Thornes A Spetr
Ot Speer 1 Speer. P A.
p O Boa 1304
Sanlord. F lo rid * 33771
P ublish October 13. It. 1*13
O E M 73
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 IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F T H E S T A T E O F F L O R ID A . IN
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
C IV IL ACTIO N
C A S E NO. 43-1441-CA Ot-E
F R E E D O M S A V IN G S A N D LO A N
ASSO CIATIO N .
P la ln llll,
vi.
D A V ID A D IN G E S S .e te l..
Defendants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N o tic e Is he reb y g iv e n that,
pursuant to a F in a l Judg m en' ol
Foreclosure entered In lh* ib o v *
slyie d cause. :n the C irc u it Court ol
Seminole County. F lo rid a . I w ill sail
lh# property situate In Seminole
County, Flo rid a described a t:
That certain condom inium parcel
known a t U nit No. IJVB and an
undivided 1/3*1 Interest In th* land,
com m on e le m en ts and com m on
expenses appurtenant to said unit,
alt In accordance with end subject to
th* covenants, conditions, restric
Hons, term s and other provisions ol
that D eclaration o l Condom inium ol
SP R IN G W O O O V I L L A G E , a Con
ctomliilum. as recorded In O fficial
Records Book 1331. pag* KM*. Pub lic
R e c o r d s o l S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Florida
*1 public sal*, to the highest end b eti
bidder, for cash, ef th* front door of
th* Serr.ir.ok County Courthouse, at
Sanlord. F lorida , at If 00 A M . on
November 4 ,Ito l
W l I N E SS m y hand and seel ol this
court on October 10.1*13
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR .
C L E R K C IR C U IT C O U R T
By: Catherine.A. Even*
Doputy Clerk
P ublish October H a n d If. Ito l
OEM-73
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I *m
e n g sg e d In b u sin e ss at *11 N
H ig h w a y 17 *3. C a s s e lb e r r y .
Seminole County, F lo rid a under the
fictitious name of T H E A Q U A R IU M
1 F O U N T A IN SHOP, a rd that I
Intend to register said re m a w ilh the
C le rk ot th* C irc u it Court. Seminole
County. F lo rid a in accordance with
Its* provisions ol the F ictitio u s Nam*
S ta tu te s, to W it: S e ctio n ,141 0*
F lo rid a Statutes 1*17. .
/*/ E . E Burk*
P u b lish October 1.13. K.3A. m i
D E M 31

United Wfasi

—

ii

NfiTICC O F P 'J S L t C

H E A R IN G
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N B Y
TH E C IT Y OF LO NG W O O D .
F L O R ID A T H A T lh* Longwood C ity
C o m m issio n w ill hold a P u b lic
H earing on October 17, 1*13 to
consider r. Conditional Us* Request
to operate a nursing and convales
cent fa c ility and a Conditional Us*
Request lo construct a fa cility that
exceeds th* 31 fool height lim itation
on the following legally described
property
P a rt ot T ra d * t and 3. R F P L A T
O F T R A C T S I.
7, 10. II and
SO U TH H A L F O F 14 L E S S P '.O C K
•H' O F T R A C T 10. S A N L A N D O
S P R IN G S according to the plat
(hereof as recorded in P la t Book 7.
Pege I. P u b lic Records o l Seminole
County. F lo rid a together with a part
o l the 32 loot street adjacent on the
north, a ll In Section t. Township 31
South, Range 3* East, Seminole
County, and being more p a rticu la rly
described as follows:
Commence at the North '« corner
o l said Section I,- thence East along
lh* North line thereof for 1I1.*0 teel
to th* Point of Beginning; thence
continue East for 7100 feet; thence
South for 300 00 feet; thence East for
4*0 70 te jf to the E ast line of lh*
West. 14140 feet of said Tract I:
thcnc* S 00*01'}*' 'W along said East
lin e.fo r 303 32 f#*t. Ihcuce E a sl for
34131 feet lo the West line ol the East
1*4 1 leet o l said T ract 1; thence
SO O -U'41'W . jlo n g said West line
lor 004 13 leet; thence S 51*33'07"W
tor 30113 feet; thence N 73* 10 03"W.
tor 110 30 feet; thence N 70-42 16' W
tor 113.13 feel; thane* N S4aJ i ’ l2 "W.
lor 341.17 feet thence North lor t l 1*
tret to a point 104 *0 leet East and
403 40 leet South of th* North to
cornyr o l Section 1; thence E est lor
4117 leet. thence N 14*}*'00'E tor
130 *3 leet thence N 43-30 00 W tor
341* le ft thence North tor 44**1
teat to th* Point o l Beginning
P a rt ol T r a d 3. R E P L A T OF
T R A C T S I, 2. 7, 10. II and SOUTH
H A L F O F 14 L E S S B L O C K 'H ' O F
T R A C T 10. S A N L A N D O SP R IN G S,
according to th* plat thereof as
recorded In P la t Book 7. Pag* I.
Pub lic Records. Semmoi* County.
F lorida; together w ith a part ot the
31 toot street adjacent on the North,
all In Section I. Township 31 South.
Range 3* E a sl. Seminole County, and
being more p a rticu la rly described as
follows:
Commence *1 th* North to corner
o l said Saction t. thence East along
th* Nurth line thereof for 111*0 feel:
thence South for 300 00 leet to th*
Point of Beginning; thence continue
S o u th fo r 34*.*1 fe e t; fh en c*
N 43-30'00-W fur 41.01 teel to a point
on a curve concave Northw esterly, a
rad ial line to said point bearing
S 47-M'OO "E .i thence Southwesterly
along th* arc o l said c u rw . having a
radius o l 10 00 leet and a central
angle ot 42*10'00" for 37.09 feet to a
point 104 *0 feel East and 41110 feet
South of the Nurth to corner ot
Section
thence N orthw esterly
along th* continuation of th* Iasi
described curve, having a radius of
10 00 feel and a central angle ol
11-00 00". for 4100 feel, thence
SU -0 0 '0 0 "W for 141 *4 leet. thence
N 44*04 12' W. for 134 44 feel; thence
N 34*l* » W. tor 201 0* leet. thence
East along # line 731 00 feet South of
•n* north l:no of Section 2 for 340 W
feet to a point o il «o feet Eest and
22100 feet South ot th* North &lt;4
corner ot Section 1; thence North tor
7100 feel; thence E esf for 100 00 feet
to th* Point of Beginning
Being mo-e generally described *s
lh* 14 413 V4canl acres lying south of
SR 434, north ot Island Laka, and
easl of P a lm Springs Dr Iv*.
A P u b lic H earing w ill h r hFld on
Monday. October 17. 1*t3 at / 30 P M
In the- Ln-igvood C ity H all. 171 West
Warren Avenue, Longwood. Florida,
or as noon thereafter a t possible At
•his mewling a ll Interested parties
m ay appear to be heard with respect
to Conditional Us* Requests. This
herrin g m ay fce continued Irom lim e
to tim e until tln al action I* taken by
the C ity Com m ission A copy ol th*
Conditional Us* Request Is on III*
with the C ity Clerk and m ay be
Inspected by th* publ'c
A taped rccor-J of *h&gt;s m eeting Is
mad* by Hie C ity ot Longwood tor Its
U/nvenienc* This record m ay not
constitute »n adequate record tor th*
purposes of appeal Irom a decision
made by th* C ity Comrn'sslon with
respect to the foregoing m atter. Any
person wishing to ensure that an
adequate record ot the proceedings is
m ainte'ned lor appall*-* puiposet I i
advised to m ek* th* necesary ar­
rangements tor their own rip e n s*
Deled this September 73. Itol.
O .L. Terry.
C ity Clerk
C ity o'Longw ood.
F lo rid a
Publish October 2.12. IW3
D E M 3*
l
O
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T F O R
S E M IH O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
Fll# Num ber 41-331 C P
IN R E ; E S T A T E O F
JO H N A ST R A IN .
Deceased
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The adm inistration of th* estate of
JO H N A S T R A IN , deceased F ile
No 13133 CP. Is pending In lh*
C ircu it Court for Seminole County.
F lo r id * . P ro b a te O lv ls io n . the
address o l which Is P O Draw er C,
Sanlord. F lo rid a 33771. Th* names
and addresses of the personal repr*
sentatlv* and the personal re p rt
sw nlellve's attorney er e -*1 forth
below.
A ll interested persons are required
to III* w ith this court. W ITH IN
T H R E E M O N T H S OF T H E F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N O F TH IS N O T IC E
(t) a ll cla im s against th* estate end
(21 any objection by an Interested
person to whom this notice was
melted that challenges th* valid ity of
th* w ilt, th* qualifications of th*
personal repeeaewtanyw. venue. Cf
jurisdiction of the court.
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B JE C T IO N S
N O T SO f IL C O W I L L S E F G S E V
E R -B A M R E O .
P u b lica tio n o l this N olle* has
begun on October 17th. 1*13.
Personal Representative
G O RD O N A S T R A IN
1434 G eym ar D rive
Orlando. F lo rid a 33111
Attorney lor Personal
R r p re v e n ta tiv e !
B R U C E M W IG l E . III. E SQ .
Ol G U R N E Y 4. H A N D L E Y . P.A
P O Box 1773
303 N. M agnolia Av#
Orlando. F lo rid a 33*03
Telephone: (MSI *43 *100
P ublish October 17,1 * ,l* tl
D E M 44
Fictiliew s Nam#
Notice is hereby given l l u l I am
engaged m business at 1441 Semoran
B lv d . C a s s e lb e r r y . F L 37707.
Seminole County. F lo rid a under lh*
fictitious n*m **ol H O L ID A Y F IT ­
N E SS A N D A E R O B IC S A N D H O LI
D A Y F I I N E S S A N D A E R O B IC S
C E N T E R S , and that I Intend lo
register said name with the Clerk ol
lh* C irc u it Court, Seminole County.
F lo rid a In accordance with lh* pro
visions ot Iti* Fictitiou s Nam e Stot
utws. loW II: Section 1410* F lo rid a
Statutes l*W
Monday Fitness and Aerobics. Inc
/ S / H E B r o m le t l.V P
P ublish September 3* A October 1.
12. •». Iff)
D E L I lf

,. — i

N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN O
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N B Y
T H E C lf Y OF LO NG W O O D ,
F L O R ID A that lh* Longwood C ity
C o m m issio n w ill hold a P u b lic
H earing on October 17, 1*43 lo
consider a Conditional U -e Re
quested by H C A Health Services ol
F lorida. Inc.. South Seminole M e d i­
cal Cer.ter. to erect a 160 loot
transm lss'on .&lt; car on th* following
legally described property.
P a rc e l B From the SE corn* - ol
•he SW to o l the SE to ol Sec 31.
Township ?0 South. Range M E asl.
S e m in o le C o un ty, F la . c u n N
00*09'S»"W. along lh* E a tr .Via ol
said SW to. a distance o l 10 41 (eel.
Ihenc* run S l**21*ll''W . along lh#
N ortherly Right o l Way line o l St*‘ e
Road 431. a distance ot ? » 00 leet tor
a P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G , (hence
continue S. lt-71'13 "W. along said
Right of Way line. 473 *3 teet to the
P o in t ot C u rv atu re ot a curve
concave Northerly and having a
radius ol IU19.I4 teel. thence run
W esterly, along lh* arc o l said curve
and along said Right of Way lln*.
233 01 (eel through a central angle ol
01-0*’l} '' lo lh* Point ot Tengency.
Ihenc* run N. I*-74'I7"W . 7*01 feet
to a point on th* East lln* of the West
1103.34 feet ot th* SE to o l the SW
o l said Section 31. Ihenc* run N
00’ I7'4I"W.. along said East lln* of
•he West 1103 34 feet, a distance ol
744 37 teel to a point on th* South
Right o l W ay lln* o l Longwood
P a lm Springs Road, thence run N
l * * 2 0 ' 0 0 ' ' E a l o n g s a id South
Right ol Way lln*. 313.37 feet, thence
run N. I7-I» '4I"E .. continuing along
said South Right o l Way lln*. l i t *3
leet, Ihenc* run S 00-34'07"E.. 771 43
leet loth* PO IN T O F B E G IN N IN G
P A R C E L C: From th* Southeast
Corner ot th* SW '« ot th* SE to ol
Section I t, Township 30 South. Rang*
X East. Seminole County. F lorida,
run N 40-00 19"W . along the East
lln* o l said SW to, a distance o l 3*4 42
feet for a P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G ;
thence run S t*-21'13 "W . 743 34 leet,
thence run N 00-34'07"W 433 43 teel
to a point on th* South Right o l Way
lln* o l Longwood — P a lm Springs
nuw l, l i i t n i t run rv. e r-iv 41 t ,
along th* said Right o l Way tin*.
747.41 leet. Ihenc* run S 00*00'!*"E..
471 07 te e l lo the P O IN T O F
B E G IN N IN G
P A R C E L D Frdm lh* Southeast
Corner o l lh* SW to o l th* SE to ol
Section 21. Township 30 South. Rang*
M E a sl. Seminole County. F lorida,
run N OOtoO i r W . along th* East
lln* of said SW to a distance ol 3*4 42
feet, thence run S 4*-2J'i3 "W . 34 00
leet lor a P O IN T O F B G IN N IN G .
Ihenc* continue S. 4**2113 "W . 7J3 34
leet. thence run 5 00-34'07 "E.. 344 00
feel lo lh* north Right ot Way line ol
State Road 434. Ihenc* run N.
4**21‘ 13"E . along said Right o l Way
lin e , 710.00 te a t, th e n c e r u n
NOO*00*'1*” W .. 344 01 feet to th*
P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G .
P A R C E L C . rru&lt;n llw Southeast
Corner of the SW to o l th* SE to ol
Section 31. Township 30 South. Rang*
M East. Seminole County. F lorida,
run N 00-00‘i r ' W . along the East
tin* ot said Sw to. a distance o l 44 41
feet tor * PO IN T O F B E G IN N IN G ,
thence continue N 0 0 -0 0 'lf'W ..
MO 01 leet. thence run S 49-3113” W..
MOO leet. thence run S 00-00'lf "E .
143 01 feel lo a point on th* north
Right of Way lln* of State Rood 434.
thence run N. 4*-2i'13"E.. along said
Right o l Way Una. 17 00 teel. thence
run N 44-43*3)"E.. 7111 feet to th*
P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G .
Being more generally described as
th* South Seminole M edical Center
sit* on SR 434. west of West Lake
Street and south ol West W arren
Avenue
A P ublic Hearing w ill be held on
Monday. October 17. 1*43 at 7:M
P M . In th* Longwood C 'ty H ell. 171
W W a rre n A ven ue, Longwood.
Flo rid * , or as soon thereafter as
possible A t this meeting a ll interest
*d parties m ay appear to be heard
w ith respect to Conditional Us*
Request. This hearing m ay be con
tinued Irom tim e to tim e until final
action Is taken by the C ity Com
mission. A copy ot th* Conditional
Us* Request Is on til* with the C ity
Clerk and m ay be inspected by th*
Public.
A taped record of this meeting is
mad* by the C ity of Longwood lo r its
convenience This record m ay not
constitute *n adequate record tor the
purposes of eppeel Irom a decision
mad* by the C ity Com m ission with
respect to th* foregoing m atter Any
person wishing to ensure lh a l an
adequate record of th* proceedings Is
m aintained lor appellate purposes Is
advised to mek* the necessary ar
rangem enls lo r their own expense.
Deled this September 34.1*43
D L. Terry.
C ity C lerk.
C ity c l Longwood.
F lo rid a
P ublish October 2.17.1*43
DEM 1
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N B Y
TH E C IT Y O F LO NGW O O D .
F L O R ID A that th* Longwood C ity
C o m m issio n w ill hold a P u b lic
H earlnq on October 17, 1*4] lo
consider * Conditional Us* requested
by Theresa Lehnen to operate ‘ a
C o m m ercial Kennel (sm all anim al
and b ird breeding) on th* following
legally described properly:
i.o l 14. Beywood Industrial Perk.
P B 30. P G 10
Being more generally described as
11] Apple wood Drive. Beywood In
d u ttrla l P e rk . Longwood. Florida
A P u b lic H earing w ill be held on
Monday. October 17. 1*43 at 7:M
P M in th* Longwood C ity H all, 17}
W arren Avenue, longwood. Florid*,
or as soon thereafter as possible At
this meeting, e ll Interested peril**
m ay appear to be heard with respect
lo Conditional U ia Request. This
h e erirg m ay be continued Irom time
to lim e until tinal action is taken by
the C ity Com m ission A copy o l the
Conditional Us* Request I* on tile
w im the C ity Clerk and m ay be
Inspected by the Public.
A toped record dt this meeting Is
made by the C ity of Longwood lor Its
convenience. This record m ay not
constitute an adequate record tor the
purposes o l appeal from a decision
made by the C ity Com m ission with
respect lo lh* loregoing matter. Any
person wishing to ensure that an
adequate record o l the proceedings Is
m aintained tor appellate purposes Is
advised to m ek* the necessary ar
range m tn ls lor lh a ir own expense
Dated this September 34.1*43
D. L. T erry
C ity Clerk
C ity u t
Looodvood. Florid *
P ub lish October 7. 1*43 end October
12.1*43
DEM a
F T c T r f lO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby giver, that I am
engaged In business a l 4 A lg ie rs
A v * . w in te r Cnrlwgs
C^mlwwlw
County. F lo rid a under th* Itc llllo o l
name o l M IO F L O R ID A B U IL D IN G
A ASS O C IA T E S , and thaf I intend to
register said nam* with lh* C lerk of
th* C irc u it Court, Seminole County.
F lo rid a In accordance w ith lh* pro
visions ol th* Fictitiou s Nam e Slal
utot. lo W II Section 4410* F lo rid a
SU tufes 1*17.
/*' W illia m P a tric k K tlie y
P ublish October 5.17. If. 14.1*43
D E M 33

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8 :0 0 A . M . -

5 ;3 0 P . M .

M O N DAY thru FR ID A Y
SATU R D AY 9 - Noon

RATES

ttim e
S4c a lino
3 consecutive times 54c a line
7 consecutive times 48c a line
to consecutive times 42c a line
S3.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

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

12—Legal Services

71—Help Wanted

BanSrupcy S7M and Chapter 13
1410 Free conference Attorney
M P r ice For Appl. 477 7**7.

ASSEM BLY W ORKERS
L ‘ght assem bly work Irom your
home. E xco lle nl Income oppor
tunlly lo r housewives, etc Start
Im m ediately C a ll M ag g ie e l
,1-312 *4 9 -4 4 6 4
A ls o o p e n
evenings.

C U R L E Y R .O O LTIE
A T T O R N E Y A T LA W
101 d W 1st Street
Sanford FI*. 33771 37) 4000

ASSEMBLY...... ........SHOWk

23—Lost &amp; Found
Fem ale Yorkle. oold and silver,
red ro lle r answers lo M u lla n
L o ti In Suntand Estates Oct 4lh
C all 373 1344 Anytim e Reward

LOST
AM AZON PARRO T
_________ C A L L 323 41 to _________
Sm all, light
brown dog M ixed
breed Chain training collar no
tags. "H o ney". In old Idylewilde
area 333 0414 Reward!

25—Special Notices

Day or night position, permanent
Em ployer w ill train, b en llll* and
raises
A A A E M P L O Y M E N T 173 1116
A V O N C H R IST M A S W O W lT
START S E L U N G N O W II
321-441* or 331-3111_______
Avon Ladles. F u ll, p a ri Tim* o r* r
16 Sanlord. Washington Oaks
M ld .sgy A Geneva 333 41*1,
C A S H IE R S A C L E R K S F u ll A
pert lim e openings Good pay
scales N oexp n*&lt; 43* 40*4

CONSTRUCTION
W O RKERS
Snould have Home Building expe

* Fitness F a n l a s 1 1C F u n *
* * Benefits Ot Tram polines * *
* Sun Light Products 431*461*

U M A tD S TO O R D C R U
Gel Result* A le v e l!
DO N ’ T D E L A Y U t-M A IO
New Office now opening
VORW ERK
1130 W 1st S t .___

31—Private
Instructions
P la n o Lesso ns in m y Sanford
home A ll levels, theory Inc. Also
theory classes ottered Ph 32t

0401________________________
Tutor. Exp. reeding
tpwrtehtf p s
m
( a Kin
dergerden thru cohfg*. A ll 0064

R e a d in g

33-Real Estate
Courses
BO B B A L L JR SCHOOL OF
R E A L ESTATE
L O C A L R E B A T E S 323 4114
M A S T E R C H A R G E O R VISA

55—Business
Opportunities
N E W . b e a u t i f u l ice
cream /vendw lch shop Excellent
S tn to rd lo c a tio n C e ll today
♦PH-4431 * A M W rtiO O '
I*
* * * eU R O -T ILE * * * *
Men needed I# learn new trade!
High p re lit m argin. 33* 3133.

63—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
* CASH F O R M O R T G A G E S *
W* buy first and second mot Igoges
on
homes. Irom individuals,
builders, brokers, end real estate
companies w * also make home
owner loans lor home Improv
men! and b ill consolidation C all
u* and 1*1 us m*k* you an offer!
B a r b a r a C r g w lo r d 333 3610.
II you co lle rf paym ents Irom a first
or second m ortgage on property
y o u s o ld , we w i l l b u y lh *
mortgage you ar* now holding
744 2if»

Legol Notice
F ictitiou s Name
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at *40 Alberta
SI.. Longwood. Sem lnol* County.
Florida under lh* fictitious name ol
IS L A N D L A K E G A L L E R I E S , and
that I Intend to register said nam*
with the Clerk ol th* C ircu it Court.
Sem lnol* County. F lo rid * In a c ­
cordance w ilh lh* provisions ol th*
F ictitio u s Nam * Statute*, to W il:
ftortlon 4410* F lo rid a Statutes 1*17
/* Greg N Drummond
Publish September 74 A October 1,
17. I*. 1*43
D E L 117
iI T t h e C IR C U IT C O U R T OF T H E
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT . IN A N O F O R S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
CASE NO 412113 CA-Of-K
GRACE C
L IN D B L O M . AS
TRUSTEE,
P la in tiff,
v*.
R O B E R T R J A E L V I N . e t a l.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F SUIT
To Th* Defendants. G E R L I N E R
M E L V I N , and alt others whom It
m ay concern
YO U A R E H E R E B Y N O T IF IE D
th at a n a c tio n lo fo re c lo se *
M ortgage on th* Iol lowing dew-rihwd
rea l property located In Sem lnol*
County. Florida
Lot A 10 That p arcel of lawn i - : - j
in le ctio n 10. Township 30 South.
Rang* 13 Eest. Seminole County.
F lo rid a described e* follows: F ro m
th* Southwest corner of said Section
10. run North 640 00 feet to a point on
th* centerline o l the SO toot Right ol
Way o l Osceola Road; thence run
East 2100 leet lo the E est Right ol
Way lln* o l said Osceola Road,
thence run along th* E esf Right of
Way lin e o l Osceola Road. North
3174 00 teet to th* P oint ot Beginning,
thence run North 307 4] feet; thcnc*
leaving said Right ot Way lln* ol
Osceol* Road, run E ast 1010 00 leet;
thence run South 307 41 leet. thence
run West 1010 00 leet to the Point ol
Beginning
has been tiled against you and you
ar* -equired to serve * copy o l your
written defenses. If any, to II on
C H A K L E S c . M t i h t k , 34 W all
Street, Orlando. F lo rid * 32401. A l
tornay lor P la ln llll, and til* th*
o rig in al with lh* Clerk ot lh* above
styled Court on o r belor* November
4. 1*41. otherwise, 4 judgment m ay
be entered agemst you tor the relief
demanded in th* com plaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and 1**1 ol
said Court on this 3rd day o l October.
1*41
(SEA L)
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
C le rk
of lh* C irc u it Court
By; Eleanor F B uratlo
Deputy Clark
P ub lish October 1.12. I*. 34 ItoJ
OEM X

hCvth *f(E

A blest
Temperery lennces

Mon Thurs f IIA I M 3 M
TOCMrttFrtfSi jTltgsrv Bant BuOihngi
Saniya 3J1 3*40
Cooks U tilities Day-N ight
F u ll p ari lim e positions
A pply in person
Days Inn I 4 A SI. Rd 44 __
C O U P L E lo w o rk as M a n a g
e r / O p e r i t o r In I c e
Cream -Sandwich Shop C e ll lor
appointment.
331 4431 * A M to 13
D e llrary A M*&gt;nl*«aot« w&lt;Qi*u
Llsc A pply e l Sheds A m erica,
l l l l H w y 17 *3. Longwood
E a rn E x tra Money. P a rt/T lm *
F u ll/ T I m *
P r e p a id L e g a l
Services C a ll Den. 474 2407 ____
Experienced dish garden pollers
Local C e ll 333 0*40 Thursdays
only.
F A C T O R Y W O R K E R S Im medlei*
openings. H igh wages Some w ill
train. C a ll 4 1 40*4_________
Food Concessions M anagers and
w orkers M ature, experienced
p r e fe rre d A p p ly F le e w o rld .
Hwy. 17 to. T h u rs . F r l , S a l . »1
P M 331 17*3__________________

GENERAL OFFICE..... $114 Wk.lApxtxiaie.toelnib Vsb/ -A0. Lev &gt;
E x c e lla n l company o ile rs pro (
motion and b en llll}
A A A E M P L O Y M E NT
321 1176
j
Got I Course M e chan ic W a n te d .'
References required Send P O «
Draw er 1*11 Lake M ary, F lo ria *
33744
I

Legal Notice

j

FIC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business *1 3114 Sipe*
Av* . Sanlord. Semlnol* County#
F lo rid * under th* fictitious name c l
P E R K I N S E N T E R P R I S E , and l h a l )
Intend to register sekl nam* with thg
Clerk ot lh* C irc u it Court, Semlnol*
County, F lo rid a In accordance w ilt
th* provisions o l Ihe Fictitiou s Nam*
S la lu le s . to w n
S e ctio n 441 Of
F lo rid * Statutes 1*17
-s ' Georg* Cam bridge
P u b lls h O c lo b e rl. 13.19.74.1*41
;
O E M 32
VI
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F THQ
E IG H T E E N TH
JUOICIA*
CIR C U IT . IN A N D F O R S E M IN O L B
C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
C A SE NO: C t l l 1443 0* L
R A L P H P A U T R Y , J R end B E TTY
A A U T R Y . H is wife, end H D ,
R E A L T Y . INC .
.
P le ln littG
v.
J O H N N Y R . T A Y L O R en^
K R IS T IN E M T A Y L O R , his wil*.
Defendants;
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N lh a l
pursuant to a F in a l Judgm ent ot
Foreclosure deled lh* 4th day ol
O c to b e r , 1*61, C a s e N o ;
43 144] CA 0* L o l th* C ircu it Court
o l th* Eighteenth Ju d icial-C ircu it. In
and tor Semlnol* County- F lo rid a In
w hich R A L P H P A U T R Y . JR
B E T T Y A A U T R Y . M s wile, and
H 0 R E A L T Y . INC . ar* P le ln tillt.
end J O H N N Y R
T A Y L O R and
K R IS T IN E M T A Y L O R , his wile,
ar* lh* D eltndanls. I w ill sell to th*
highest and best bidder lor cash In
th* lobby at the Wesl (root door ol
th* Courthouse In Sanlord. Samlnoi*
County, F lo rid a a l 11:00 A M . on the
3rd day o l November, 1*43. th*
follow ing described proper ly *#•
forth In lh* order o l F in a l Judgment
o l Foreclosure

le* *. RAVEN15RCCX.
to the plat thereof, a t recorded In
P le l Book IS. Pag* I], P u b lic
R e c o r d s o l S e m ln o l* C o u n t/ ,
F lo rid a
O A T E O this 10th day o l October.
1*43
A rth u r H Beckwith. Jr.
CLERK
O F T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T
By: C a lh e rln e M Evans
Deputy Clerk
R E D W A R D C O O L E Y , E S Q U IR E of
Shepherd. M cCabe end Cooley
Post O llic e Box 7734
II* North M agnolia Avenue
Orlando. F lo rid a 13403
(301)421010/
P ublish October 12. It. 1*43
D E M 74
F ic t llie u i Nam #
N once it hereby given that 1 *m
engaged in business a l 1441 Semoran
B lv d . C a s s e lb e r r y . F L 17707,
Seminole County, F lo rid a under the
l i c t l l l o u i n a m e of A M E R I C A N
F IT N E S S A N D A E R O B IC S A N N
A M E R IC A N F IT N E S S AN O
A E R O B IC S C E N T E R S , end that I
Ini*.id lo register said nam* with If*
C le rk ot ttw C irc u it Court. Sem-nui*
County. F lo rid a In accordance w ilh
lh* provisions of lh* F ictitiou s Name
S la lu le s . lo W it
S e c tio n 441 o t
F lo rid a Statutes l»S7
A m e ric a n F l'n e s t 8 Aerobic;. Inc
/*/ h E B ra m te ll, V P
P ublish September 34 1 October 1
17. I*. IN I
D E L 114

�ju u n

•«« *
a *i p« t t o . M c v *

G O V E R N M E N T JO BS
Federal, $1*1* and C iv il Service
M an y p ositio n s a v a ila b le . C a ll
(ralundabla) 1 U l t ) 54*1)04 fot
d e l e l l t . O p e n T l h r s . _________

JOURNEYMAN... ..... 4310 Wk
Needs block Meant*. Some travel
Involved, e ip e n te t paid. Top
Company.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
: » 5i;s
LAN D SCAPER
P e r t o n w it h
background In detlgn, ta le t. |ob
tu p e r v ltlo n . Irrig a tio n , good
d riving record and experience
required MO &gt;371.__________
Light d elivery p a ri or lu ll Ilm 7
N t t d i econom ical car Need: to
liv e In Sanlord o r Long wood a rd
naedt to know both areat well.
C a ll *30 a m between t l ] or 5 1
Tuesdey-Frlday. M in im a l day car* help needed (or
elderly gentlemen, tern I mobile,
excellent mind, require! tom*
light cooking pit 373 2160 be
tween I and 5 445 544) alte r J: JO
P le at* Contact M r . Roth,_______
Needed at C h a rle t b H a y t Barber
Shop A n experienced barber,
lu ll lim e or part time. 101S. P ark
Ave,. Sanford C a l' home alter t
P M 377 B004__________________
Now Interviewing (or receplioneit
and d en tal a t t lt la n l le r our
current and new location at The
M aitla n d Center. 33)4140 Only
g ualllied need apply.___________
O F F IC E H E L P F u ll A part time
o penin g: a v a ila b le now. W ill
lu lly train. Phone t ] t 4Qt4
P * 'l and F u ll Tim e Production
p o ilt ion j. availab le day or night
th llt. Apply In perton Star-Line
Ent., Inc. 7*1 Rudder C ircle .
Sanlord A irport. E O E__________
P H O N E P R O 'S nation’: leading
portrait itu d lo h a t permanent
o p e n in g ! In a d v e r tis in g d e ­
partm ent. E xcellent commission
for telephone ta le t. salary guar
anteed F u ll lim e pay lo r part
tim e w o rk. C a ll O la n M ills ,
Lengwood Studio *1 a i i w t be
tween *■1] or S-g Tuesday Frid ay.
P h y tcla n 's office M edical seer*
lary . lo do transcription and
insurance Send resume (o P .0
Bo* 4040. Sanlord. F la 17773
4040,__________________________
P R O C E S S M A I L A T H O M E I 471 00
per li.n d r e d l No experience.
P a rt or lu ll lim e. Start Immedi
a t e ly . D e t a ils te n d s e lladdressed stamped envelope lo
C R .l. J00. P O Box 45. Stuart.
FI. 334*i.______________________

RECEPTIONIST....... $200 Wk
Good office skills. C R T a plus.
Casualty and property a plus.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
331-1174
Sales Perton. P a rt lim a. Retirees
w elcom el A pply Sheds A m erica.
MTS Why, t? *7. Longwood
S A L E S L A D Y P a r t tim e expert
enced in ladies ready to wear.
A pply In perton only, no phone
c a lls Ro J a y J I I E . 1st Street
S e c r e ta r y / N u r s e r y p e rto n .
Landscaping tlrm seeks exp eri­
ence,pleasant phone personality,
accounting, sales, typing, filing.
general office. 430 7374_________
Service technician wanted im m *
dlately. Knowledge In stereo’s
and television's. F ield service
need own tools C a ll] ] I 4745
T R U C K S D R IV E R S Local A Long
Haul positions H igh wages C all
today 4)0 40*4

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

i — H e lp W a n t e d
Wanted D o m istlc Helpl
Non smoker Ch ristian lady, w illin g
lo work two 7 hour days 14 00 an
hour, lunch Included. Trantpor
tatlon mandatory. ]C« a m ilt.
R t f t r t n c t t re q u ir e d
A p p ly
J77 444)______________ ________
W A R E H O U S E W O R K E R S Many
openings, lu ll tim e, god starling
_ pay. Call Im mediately. 4)t 40*4
N E E D S Chang* With The Seatons.
Went ads pay lor m any reasons

73- Employment
Wanted

with Major Hoople

n U U t iC

LIKE TW O
£AREFULGR IL L MOP
VERX0NT
„ y&lt;?u u p : KyuK-KyuKi
HOLPUP
I '14 AN^H/JRIN6 ANEW.
yauR B&gt;6
M E N WHp
J0B.PIKE! MAvtSA'I’NE £HOW
fc R &amp; a t ib
WILL&gt;0U A^ME-INAvTION MIK£
T A K E THE
W * V E y t X iR IW A L LA C E A N r ANP*/
R00NEY.' FIRST I E X ' , M O N E Y . ' 1 M
0 W N
?06 1 EVILPOERS s.TfLEN CALLIN6 IT
X JOKE ABOUT’ 'CRIMINAL x
FILL U$
IN ON

NECU6ENCE.'

T M F IC

J Bdrm , kids, pets, garage, 4435
Unfurnished
Fee P h D * 7700
Sav-On-Rentals Inc. R te llo r
Bdrm . 1 B. C H A . carpeted.
Adults No pelt. 4x70 per mo
333 730*.______________________

LO O K GOOD AS N E W II
D ryw ell Patch Repair Work
R E A S O N A B L E R A T E S 331-14))

S A N F O R D Furnished rooms by the
week Reasoned* rates M aid
service catering to working peo
pi*, 37)450), 500 Palm etto Av*
S A N F O R D . Reas weekly A Mon
thly rates. U til. Inc. eft. 500 Oak
Adults 1 441 7445_______________

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

IB d rm E l l . Patio. A/C . 4)4*
Furnished
Fee Ph 33* 7200
Sav-On Rentals Inc. R ealter__
I B drm . liv in g room , kitchen,
porch, air. carpeted, no pets. 1)45
mo, with lease. 373 7*43.________

INC. [0
'CURE KILLING US, P IK E O iM b M t n M t a iv lh iiM O i

3 bedroom I bath, spacious,
and new. 4)50 month
Ph 373 4140 or 4W 4/1)

141—Homes For Sale

Apt. for rent lo r eld erly couple, t
Bdrm .. central A /H C e ll be
twoen 4 A M . to 4 P .M 377 5757
B AM BO O CO VE APTS
700 E. A irpo rt B lvd Ph. ) )) 44)0
E fficie ncy. Irom 5)15 M o 5 %
discount lor Senior C ltlie n t
LU XU RY APARTM EN TS
Fa/nllY A Adults section. Poolside.
) B drm t. M a tte r Cove Apts.
3)5 7900
_______ Open on weekends_______
M a rin e r's V illag e on Lake Ada.- i
bdrm from 4)71. ) bdrm Irom
45)5. Located 17 t ) just south ol
A irp o rt Blvd. In Sanford. A ll
Adults, 333 4470_______________
a M ellonvllle Trace Apts, e
Unfurnished ) bdrm . Spacious Apt.
W alk To Laka Front. No Pets.
45)5 Ph 7)1 3*05_______________
N E W I A ) Bedrooms Ad|*C*nt to
L a k e M onro*. H ealth Club.
Recquetball end M ore I
Sanlord Lending S. R 44 331 4730
R ID G EW O O O A R M S A P T S
35S3 Ridgewood Av*. P h D ) 44)0
l , ) A ) B d rm t Irom 4300
U n tu rn ls h t B d rm .. I 0 . a ll
appliances 4)00 a month. 3)3
43)7 In A M or443 3440_________
T B drm . Apt .n e a r business
d istrict, pool privileges.
4335 C e il D 3 4444
__
3 Bdrm . upstairs. A dults only. 4)75
plus 41)0 damage tee. 4)1 1141
M r. Barber or 4)1-443*.

1, 2, 3 Br. Apt)., 2 I* . TJL
from * 2 8 0
ISOS W. 25th St.
0

323-3145
A lte r Hours 33) 3411
J ) l- 4 / 3 5 o r m 7t*7

keues
323-3200

54* W L4ke M a ry Blvd
Suit* B
Lake M ery. F la 33744
DRIFTWCX3D V IL L A G E
F I R E S A L E IN SAN O R A. Owner it
desperetx! M u tt sell th is week!
I nvtfy 3 bdrm . 3 b elli, *» i* tm iy
re a m a n d fe n c e d y a r d l
Tremendous p etentiell Submit
a ll o ilers. Assum able nuirtgegel
Asking 141.500 M a k to flitr.

127—Office Rentals
T H E M E R C A N T I L E B U IL D IN G
B O B M B A LL JR PA.
R E A L T O R 37)411*

KISH REAL ESTATE
1)3) F R E N C H A V E

R E A LT O R

321-0041

.’Aayfalr Pool Horn*
60 s Assum able 1155% M lg
P I 0451 o r 3)7 3)50

141—Homes For Sale
A t t u m e b l* 7W% M o rtg a g e . 4
B drm . ) Beth Cent HA.. 41.1*0
down 151.*00 Appl. 3)1 04)4

BATEM AN R E A LT Y
Lie. Reel E tlale Broker
3440 Sanlord Av*

S E E TH IS T O D A Y . Vacant. 3/1.
d ining room , Ireshly painted,
nice established neighborhood,
assume morgage I M ove In.
444.400
L A K E M A R Y . ) / } . e n c lo s e d
garage. Inground pool, fenced
back, secluded area 15**00
S E M IN O L E WOODS. 5 acres, high
and d ry , b e a u tifu lly wooded
c o rn e r, u n b e lie v a b le . S)*.)00

C R E A M H O M E IN C O IIN T R Y I
Just Ilka new. ) story, 4 bdrm, 7
b a th , w /c u s to m c e d a r
th r o u g h o u t I P lu s h c e r p e t t
sparkling peo 11 ] paddle la n tl
Large shad* trees and d t r u s l 3
g a ra g e s an d F I* , r t n . fe e l
S45.T00.

Open House, Saturday and Sunday
by owner, 3/3 split. F /P , F /R .
large pool, fenced yard, heal
pump. 411 assumption. 747 De
bary Drive, Debary.

S O U T H E R N C H A R M . L a rg e 7
story, 4 bdrm, H i b ath hon e.
W / c o u n lr y k it c h e n ! F a m ily
room I B ric k lireplec* In m aster
b d rm t F o rm a l id i.ln g room !
Com m ercial toning! E xten sive ly
rem odledl 141.004.

R IG H T ON L A K E M O N R O E .
Fishing pier. Large screened pool
and pstlo, with 3 bdrm . P i bath
A ll overlooking the lake Owner
financing. 1*5.000 C a ll Charlotte
Croslyn, Wall St. Company, Re
allocs. 331 5005 or 3D 307)

P R E 4 T IG IO U S M A Y F A I I l E xe cu ­
t iv e S e c tie n l W a lk ** L a k e
Monro* Irom this com fortable
home w ith IPs own p riv e t* in
door jungle I *1" x 15" screened
rea r patlol Custom b u ilt J j c u i i I
o il M aster Bdrm t 4 paddle lan sl
Kitchen equipped I M a n y custom
leafuret throughout! SI01.000.

RODDIES
REALTY

H IO O E N L A K E E S T A T E S . A t­
tra c tiv e 3 bdrm. 3 bath home,
d b l/ c a r g a r a g t , k it c h e n
t q p l . . C / H / A . ie n c o d y a r d ,
w / p r iv a c y he d g e! S p r in k le r
system I Com m unity pool, club
house and len nisl Law % assume
mortgage I S43.500.

321-0759 Eve 322-7443
B Y O W N E R . S u n la n d E s ta te ,
newly renovated ) B drm . 1 Bath,
house on *i acre fenced In lot.
with well. In qulel neighborhood
44*.500. No ow ner fin an cin g .
Phene 373 SOS*___________ ,
B y O w n tr - L o n g w o o d A r e a . 4
B d r m . 3 B. Pool, garden spot.
Reduced to 153,500 4 X 57*7.

C O U N T R Y L IV IN G , at Its te st In
town! .1 targe b d rm tl Sparkling
pooll 17 fru it trees! on approx »i
ecro corner lo ll Cedar and citrus
throughout! V ery p riv e t* and
lencedl Only x)).S00.
F H A V A S P E C IA L . C o m lo rllb l*
and allerd ab l* 3 b d rm , H y bath
hema. w /larg* le n ctd yard and
screened porchl Good location!
Call us quick I 443.500.

W E N E E D LISTINGS

323-5774
2404 H W Y 17 V)

P A O L A . 3/3. C / H / A . 5 a c r e
lakelron l. 47S.400 W allace Cress
R ealty Inc. 37) 50*3____________

R EALTO R . MLS
11*1 S. French
Suite 4
Sxntord. FU.

OUR IB 322-9383
S a le by O w ner. Lon gw ood 3
B drm . 3 Bats, L /R . D /R . F a m i­
ly Room with lireplaca. pool, and
much more. 573.000.5)4 0403 •
SAN FO RD R E A L T Y
R EA LTO R
373 5)34
__ A ll, Mrs 373 4*54, 333 4)4)
Sanlord/Sanora. P riv ate commm V
ty. pool, tenni. etc. 3 year els'
home. 3 bvSrm, liv in g room. D 'R ,
tarn room, F /P , screened porch,
large pn&gt;-jt* back yard. A tt u n e
m ortgage or own preference
449.400. P rin cip les only
__________ Ph 111-*3*5.
_______

D E L T O N A O S T E E N A R E A .U n d e r
construction. 1/3 w /fam lly roem.
form al livin g room on beautiful
wooded corner 1*1. P ick *our
COlOrtl Only S54.500.
LONOWOOD-3/3 N EWL Y
P A IN T E D IN SID E A N D OUT.
hug* le m lly ream, quiet drad
end street behind new hospital.
Super price e l 174.40*.
S M A L L F A M I L Y D R E A M H O M E.
Y o u 'll love this im m aculate 3/1
w /la m ily room on corner lot,
le n c c d re a r y a rd . W ill se ll
V A /F H A appraisal 541404 and
LOW t DOWN.
B E A U T IF U L YO UN G E X E C U ­
T IV E H O M E In nice section
Sanlerd /Lak* M a ry area. 3/1
energy efficient, b rick fireplace
and loo many extras te mention.
A ll lor only 175,500.

321-5005
3 Bdrm , 1 bath, com oietoly r»
stored, celling lens throughout,
oak llo o rt. large lot. good area
443.500 371 044talter 5 P.M .

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale
ST. JO H N S R ive r. 2V&gt;aert parcalt.
with riv e r access . Only 4 1*11
Starting I1*.f00 P u b lic water, 30
min. to Altemon** M a ll. 11% 30
y rs financing, no qualifying.
B roker.43A4431

E

I I A

O W N E R F IN A N C E . S A V E S U S.
3 bdrm, 3 bath. A I condition, exc.
area C /H /A . W /W /C. double
g a r a g e , w o rk s h o p , p e n t r v ,
storage shed, screened porch,
w e ll an d s p r in k le r sy ste m ,
fenced. Owner w ill llnanc*. only
473.500
Salesman Needed
R E A L T O R 1714t»l

STENSTROM
REALTY • REALTORS
S ACRE TRACTS G EN EVA
A R E A . East e l Sanlord. Soma en
hard surface road. 34% down.
Closing In 34 days. ;i Y ear
mortgage, at t*% interest. Call
tor details and Inspection.

3445 I. Perk

322-2420

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
Accounting arid Tax Sarvkos. No
b u sin e ss t* te rg * o r s m a ll.
Cem p-xlrrlied P h U l I X -

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Remodeli.T| Specialist
W* handle The
Whole B a ll o l Wax

B.Llink Const
322-7029

Janitorial Services

Painting

• Reliable A Experienced *
Rees, rales to clean yevr home.
DO N'T D E L A Y !! Call P I 11)5.

llt W a Save You M o n e y ltt
H O M ES14 Hr. D aily O F F IC E S
Sandy's Jan ito ria l Ser. 33* 3744

* • F R E E E S T IM A T E * *
Rhodes P ainting A l l Types
15Y rs E xp I f H r Phene P 3 49)1.

Q uality E le c tric a l Sarvlca
Funs, tim ers, security lit**, addl
lio n s , new s e rv ice s. Insured
M aster E le ctricia n Jam as Paul.
____________ 3)1 715*.____________
Muni M a rti There's 'H e Lim it* on
.te Bargains Y e u 'll 'Bag* It's
Easy I* Place a W A N T A G
P H O H E 377 n i l

_______Financing A v ailable

A ir Conditioning
&amp; Heating
• O IL H E A T E R *
C L E A N I N G A N D SE R V IC IN G
C a ll R alph P I 4)1).
*
3 0 \ Onscour I On Al&gt; Repairs
F a r Wlndew A ir Candlti*n*ri
One Day Sarvlta. Ph I P - I U t .

Automotive
20% On All Fotijn Cars
Repairs. October Only.
Major and Minor Woik.
277-1631

Bookkeeping
Computerised Bookkeeping
We’ ll do your books on our com
puto r lor *s little St 130 a month
C a ll G a ll JP0744
“ Hunting” F o r Results)
Y o u 'll Get Good Shots'
In H erald Want Ads.

Cleaning Service
A Money ta c k Gaurantoal
Ken Holden Sevlhere M aid U r .
B on d /lntvr. M a id 444-4*74
P A R M A ID S E R V IC E S
t 4 v* you had your homo cleaned
l a t e l y 7 C le a n in g w it h th a
personal touch 3)7 0115 474 4)11

Health &amp; Beauty
T O W E R 'S B E A U T Y SA LO N
F O R M E R L Y H a r r ie tt's Beauty
Nook SIP E 1st St 373 5743

Landclearing
L A N D C L E A K IN G . F I L L OIRT.
C LA Y A SH ALE.
337 343)

Landscaping
A A J Landscaping
Complete Law n Maintenance

s i .cat

Lawn Service
A L L YO U N E E D IS US
) P 07*7
Crockett A W aters Law n Service

Home Improvement

K IN G A SONS L A W N S E R V IC E
E a rly F a ll Clean Up. 154 Special
F a r Any Average Y4rd. 145-1*34.

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 , re e lin g , p a in tin g ,
e l id e * repair. P I -4 4 P _________

L A M la w n Car* W rvic*
Mow. edge. trim , and haul Contact
L t t or M a rk 331 5547 or 37) *141

COMPUTE CONSTRUCTION

W A D L A W N S E R V IC E .
Mowing, edging, fertilising
Fro*estim ates P h lP 0 7 e t

No |ob to sm all. M in o r A m ajor
repairs. Licensed A bonded
____________ 3)3 51)1____________
P A R T N E R S . Rooting repair, paint
ig. rem odeling and additions
roe EsI. C *:i Evas. 3 C 0 04

r

Home Repairs

A ji'.'r/ l S to S U / w !!* . Ce&lt;(xxnlry.
plum b ing , p aintin g , m aso n ry.
sprinklers, rem odeling. P I 1701
Carpentry alterations, gutter work,
painting, tiding, porches, patios,
ate A sk lor A rt Hubbla.
5*** P r l i t - i ! 777-tftJ.
M aintenance o l a ll type*
Carpentry, painting, plum bing
A electric 3)3 40)4
No |ob too sm all Horn* rep airs and
remodeling 3) Years experience
C a ll P ) *445

Interior Decorating
Custom Draper ie t/V e rtlc a lt
A F F O R D A B L E P R IC E S
Sharon's Creations S74 0353

Plastering/Dry Wall
A L L P h a s e s ot P la s t e r in g
P lasterin g repair, stucco, hard
cot*, sim ulated b ric k . P I )**)
t.,
R e s tf in
g
Does Your Old Or New R oo f Leek?
it it does. caM O avhJ Lee.
____________ 37) 4415_____________
Rrmf k U in lv n . n r .
R epair w ork.N ew wvork
Troy or George tor F re e E sl
__________ X 5 345 4440___________
" S IR O O FIN G 4I
H it I’m A r l H ubbla
I do beautiful work. I d o new roots,
root leeks. I reptacu or repair
vallays. roofs vents, etc. I w ill
save you money 13 D 1743._______
S E M IN O L E R O O F IN G
ReRoott.New Roots Root Repairs.
Free Estim ates Ph 377 4544

Masonry

Secretarial Service

B E A L Concrete t m en quality
o peration. P a tio s, d rlv a w a y t
D a y s D l 73D E ves 5)7 1331

Resume and C o ve r Letter
P rep aratio n G eneral Typing and
Bookkeeping, p I 341)

* * e O U Y 'S C O N C R E T E a * *
F R E E E S T IM A T E ! A N Y T IM E !
____35 V f t E xp 14* 54)4 _

Swimming Pool Service

S W IF T C O N C R F T E
F o o le r s ,
drivew ays, pads, floors, pools.
Chatt Sion* Free Ett/333 7.01

Nursing Care
O U R R A .1 E S A R F LO W E R
Lakeview N ursing Center
41* E . Second St .Sanlord
J P 4707

Painting
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
Hama Improvement
Painting. Carpentry
Sm a’ i Repairs
I) Years Experience. P ) 344*

REALTY • REALTORS

W E LIST A N O S E L L
MORE HOM ESTHAN
A N Y O N E IN N O RTH
S E M IN IO L E C O U N T Y

Domestic

Electrical

STENSTROM
Sanfotd's Sales Leader

Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

SU N S H IN E PO O L S E R V IC E
W ill m a m la ln y o u r pool Intop
condition, p rivate o r com.ner
clat Ph J P 434), Sunshine Pool
Service. 514 M e llo n v llle Av*.
kentofO FI 33/71

Tree Service
JO H N A l L E N LA W iV A T R E E
Any kln d o l Tree Service.
W* do most an yth in g . P l i)*u
Savel Crod.l an C aa if W**dl
JA C K S O N T R E E S E R V I C E
» Y rs. Experwmce 74441 It
T rl County Tree Service
T rim , remove, trash hauling
lir e wood, tree c t l 373 *414

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo
T E L E V IS IO N - Z E N IT H SJ" Color
TV in Walnut Contola. O riginal
P rice , over 4700. Balance due
43*5. Cath nr t»k» up payments
o l 430 00 month No Money down
Still In warranty. Free Home
T ria l no obligation 443 53*4
I f” C u rtis M athet portable. 3 year
w*)&lt;e&gt;ily. 4&lt;w or u n i otter 4
Pioneer speeker*. Pioneer 740
r e c t iv e r . P io n e e r e q u n llie r ,
cetsett* deck. M aran t 1 turnla
bl*. 41.400 or te st offer. 333 7355
between* A 3 373 4440
I f” Curtis M athlx portable, i year
warranty. 1300 o r best offer. 4
Pioneer speakers. Pioneer r*0
r e c e iv e r. P io n e e r e q u a llie r ,
cassette drek. M k t a n li turnta­
ble. 41,400 or best otter 373 775)
between 4 A 3 A fter Ph 333 4*40

M O V E RIOHT INI 5 bdrm . I bath
hom t In Sunlandl M any t x t r a t l
Nice landscaped lei I Screened
perch, fenced rear 1*1 end mere I
444.00*1
S P E C IA L ) 7 bdrm. 1 both home in
Plnecrest an a nice corner 1*11
Newley painted, new root, fam ily
room, patio, fenced rea r yard
and lets m orel 447.441.
JU ST F O R YOU. 1 bdrm . 1 bath
heme, near schools, shopping
•tc.. m a t floor plan, C /H /A ,
patio and mere. 447.944.
C O U N T R Y L IV IN G ) bdrm . I bath
home on 5 acres In Osteenl
H erse s w e lco m e l Hem * lik e
new I Fishing pond tact 444,*4*.
4 U P E R I 3 bdrm, H i bath home on
a lovely landscaped and shaded
let In Lech Arb ort M any built
In'el New reel end m a r M e y la lr
Country Clvk. 117.50*
H O R S E L O V E R S D E L IG H T . 4
bdrm. 3 bath ham* *n 4 + acres
with tt *111 G reat room, custom
eat in kitchen,
dining ream,
C /H /A . W /W /C paddle Ians. |ust
1 years eld. Barn and tach room
tool 1*4,44*.
C U S T O M B U IL T , 4 bdrm. 1 bath
home en I 4 acres in Ovied*
B e a u t ifu lly d e c e re fe d , s p ill
bedroom, la m lly loom , paddle
t e n t , s k y lig h t s , lir e p le c * ,
screened perch and so much
m o rel Horses welcom el ilf.tg o .

CALLANYTIME
7US S. Park

322-2420
U N D E R 41.44* DOWN
3 B d rm Doll H cute Affordable
m onthly payments C all owner
broker talesm en 3)1 ta il.______
a U N D E R P R IC E D *
447.400 3 B o r n U s Beth Move In
condition . C all lor appointment
Broker 33) 4X410' I 72) 431)

B U IL D I N G S II A ll Steel C lear
Span 40' x 50' x 17'. 55.7*3 00 V
X 40' x 17'. 44.157 00. 40' x 300' x
30*. 30.435 00 F O B F actory
1 400 44* 3*44 till 7 P .M

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
F I L L D IR T A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAN D
C lark A H irt 37) 7540.333 743)

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
Siberian H usky Pups B l/S llver.
w/whlta. blue eyes Wormed and
shots. 450 and up 133 4575

207—Swap Corner
H at F a ll H ovixcleaning
Turnad Up Surplus Things
Want Ad W ill Turn To Cash?

209—Wearing Apparel
• « e • V E R A 'S A T T IC * * * •
Quality Conslngmant Fashions
Man. Women. Children 331 3375

211—Antiques/
Collectables
Furniture and repair, stripping and
raflnlthlng. staining, antique* a
speciality, 331-04*3.____________
Nortake China. Rosamor Pattern
f t pieces. 14 Avon plates 73 to ’*1
Christm as end other*. 331 4457.

213—Auctions
Auction E very other Sat. night,
starting Oct. » . F lo rid a Trader
Auction. Longwood33P-S11*.
FO R E S T A T E . C om m ercial or
Residential Auctions A Appeals
a lt C a ll D e ll's Auction 373-5430.
FO R E S T A T E o r C O M M E R C IA L
A U C T IO N S Cull A I AU CT IO N
S E R V IC E 33) 41*4

C A L L A N Y T IM E

To List Your B u sin e ss-

7 Y a a r old 15 3 upright freerer.
4300 C a t g r ill used 3 lim es, 41)0.
E th a n A lla n d r e s iln g table.
I l l ) 00 Stereo4)0 331 4737

191—Building Materials
LO NG W O O D SPACIO U S A E L E
O AN T J/J's w/study, lireplec*,
wet bar, lakeside com m unity
w /lith ln g , boating, tennis. C A L L
N O W , D O N 'T W A I T . O n ly
111)444.

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

101—Appliances
/ Furniture

3 hunting p erm its for B u ll Creek
1a*h. IStti. A 14th. Both £110. C a ll
b e t w e e n * A 5 P M 333 )7**

FO R A L L Y O U R
R E A L ESTATE N E E D S

B y o w h e rr'M l'tfiJe n 'L a k e . 13*
Bored* Road. 3 bdrm . ) bath,
wooded lot. screened room, ) car
garage, large kitchen. 443.400 Ph
PI-4737_______________________
C a stle b e rry . 1/1, fa m ily room,
f ir e p la c e , s c r e e n e d p o r c h ,
fenced Just o il 17 *3 443.400
B O B M . B A L L JR PA
R E A L T O R _______________ 33)4114
c i t u li r d Results W ilt Win
Your Vet* E v ery T lm el
* * * * * * * * * * * * * *

• W/D Connections
• Coble TV, Pool
• Short Term Leases
Available

REALTY WORLD.

nrx"n»«e#xrxrpn«r

. i

) Bdrm . 3 B . kids. A/C , 4335
Unfurnished
Fee P h D * 7)00
Sav-On-Rentalt Inc. R*all*r

y_

''

Ewnlttfl Hratd, Sanford, FI. WtdntsdBy, Oct. 12, l»tl—11B

187—Spoiling Goods

L O O K IN O F O R A T R E A T I N
S T E A D O F A T R IC K 7 USE OUR
C LA S S IF IE D S .

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

t m

W E H A V E B U Y E R S II
W E N E E D LIS T IN G S!!

! O mf S

141—Homes For Sale

E x t r a large 3 story C olonial on I
acre o l Oak trees. A ll the amenl
lie s plus guest apt. Best local*
4700.000 W M . M A L IC J O W S K I
R E A L T O R D ) 7*4).

T B drm . U tilitie sP 4 ld 1300
Furnished
Fee P h)3* 7)08
Sav-On Rentals Inc. Realtor

121—Condominium
Rentals

m

REALTY, m t

Sanlord Duplex 3 Bdrm ., I Bath,
carport, laundry room, cantral
A / C , k llc h t n eq u ip . carpet.
drapes. 34)4 Lake Av*. 430 0545

I B drm . liv in g room , kitchen,
porch, air, carpeted, no pets. 4)45
mo with lease 1)) 7*43_________

H O M E W ITH IN CO M E
L a rg a m odern 3 bdrm fa m ily
hom e w ith C H A A , e a l- ln
kitrhen. (am ity room, o vertired
garage. P lu s 7 fu lly equipped
greenhouses. Going business for
fa m ily or retired couple. Owner
w ill train and llnanc* 1110.000

in l a n d

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

F»rn. Apts, ter Senior Cltlrens
) l l Palm etto Av*
J. Cowan. No Phone C e lli.

B y Owner, new V illa home In
Hidden Lakes. 7 bdrm. 3 bath,
large lot, I ca r g arag t. 450.300
414.500 lo assume Paym ent 43*4
mo M i a n /,__________________

R EA L ESTA15
R E A L T O R _______________ 3)3 74*4

io.)—DuplexTriplex / Rent

*3 — Returns fo r R e n t

141—Homes For Sale

CALL BART

4 Bdrm ., 1W Beth, livin g room A
fam ily room, w all lo w all carpel,
fenced yard, appliances 4x00 a
mo plus deposit, ) ) l 3050

• Adult &amp; Fam ily
Sections

M

N ice neighborhood, very d e a n J
B drm , I B „ dining room, living
roo m , A / C . w ith le p e r a l* I
B drm Apt A/C. Rant a t I. *550 a
month. 4500 security deposit. C e ll
between 5 A 7 P M 333 4454
■

)

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS

I 2 M

New ) Bdrm .. 3 B , Space lor
Garden, no pets 4)75 a month.
IttOteO.______________________

b u n / iu iif u

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
Sendltwood by owner. I Bdr.
I b th . c a r p e t , f u ll k it c h e n ,
w esher/dryer, A /C . pool end
m elnt.. 434.500 33) 4047
________ alter 5.373 4*43_________

157-Mobile
Homes/Sale
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 LIN E D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
P a lm Beach V illa
Grxvnleet
P a lm Springs
P alm Manor
Siesta Kay
V A F H A Financing 305 333 5300
New Homes starting at 4**f) Easy
credit end low down. Uncle Roys.
* Leesburg. US *41 *04 747 0334.

159—Real Estate
Wanted

215—Boats/Accessories
33 C h rysler Outboard Motor 1)0
H P . with power tilt and controls
1150 33 441)

217—Garage Sales
Clothing, dining table. TV. sink,
and loads ot m ltc . Oct. 15th A
14th. ( A M HIT3404Cantral O r. '
GARAGE SALE U.
F rid a y s A ) P.M .
F LE A W O R L D -H w y . 17*3
Barglns A Fun-Buying A Selling.
445 17*3.
G arage Sale. 531 F Rldge-tood St.
Altam onte Spgs. F rl. and S a t . I
III5 P .M ______________________
LO O K IN G FO R A T R E A T I N
S T E A D O T A T R I C K 7 U S E OUR
C L A S S ir iE O S .
M u lti F a m ily Garage Sale In
eludes many Fisher P rice toy*.
Sal. OCf 15. 4 to 5 P M
434
Cardinal Oaks C t . Laka M ary.
N ta r SCC

219—Wanted to Buy
G lb y Btds. Strollers. Carseats.
P la y p e n s . E l c . P a p e r b a c k
Seeks. 335 437T-17I-W44_________
Paying C ASH tor A lum inum , Cant.
Copper, B rest. Lead. Newspa
o*r. Glass. Gold. Silver.
Kokom o Tool. »!* W. 1st
4 4 :3 0 Sot.* 1373 HOP.
m ttu tm tm u
Plant a Want Ad
And Harvest P e K a rtl
W E B U Y A N T IQ U E S
F U R N I T U R E A A P P L IA N C E S
371 73*0

931 —Good Things

PRIVATE INVESTOR
WANTING TO BUY
MULTI FAMILY UNITS
NO REALTORS
CALL 323-2269.
t o r ) B E D R O O M H OUSE
Your P R IC E . M Y T E R M S
ttK M tt.

181—Appliance:
/ Furniture
A P P U A N C E S . REPO SSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged
F rom if * Up Guaranteed
N early New. 317 E. I ll St 3717450
B ro y h lll D ining Room
Table with 5 Chair* 4)00
C a ll 135 541* before 3 P .M
Cash lo r good used furniture.
L a r r y 's New 1 Used Furniture
M art. 315 Sanlord Ave. 373 4133
Kanm ore parts, service,
used wethers 33J 04*7
M O O N EY 4 P P L IA NCES
Ketrtg eraior. F rig id e ir* 17 Cu tt
her v e il gold. I yrs old. 1100
Sears Cohlspot I) cu t t , white
(rooter 4140 Ca'I 333 3533. 4 lo f
PM
Two m atching tw in bods, gold
velvet quilted headboard,, box
spring I, m attress In perfect
s h a p e . O n l y u s e d In
Guestroor.: 1150 00 C a ll 3310343
W I L S O N M A IE R F U R N I T U R E
J it J i l t F IR S T ST
371 5433

to Eat
Out tte '-C re a m Ot the C r t p l”
The Saasans Bast Buys Are
In tte Want Ads I

223—Miscellaneous
Baautllul Wedding Gown and Veit.
Sir* II. O rig in a lly 4*50 W ill te ll
4175 o r best otter. 43« 434*

223—Miscellaneous
We buy furniture, antiques or
accept consignments for Auction.
F la. Trader Auction W i l l *
1 Queen Sit* Bed
4SO I New Security Light.
4 » 37) M7)
3 davenports, lov* taels, brown lur
t« 0 , orenge/w hlte plllnw stjn
M i t e , a r t i c l e s , c e r a m ic s ,
paperbacks, ch a ir A stool 435
3473 M a rsh a ll A Santa B arbara
Sanford. Fla.

231-Cars
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Chock Easy Term s
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E S
1170S Sanford A ve
371 *075
O ebary Auto A M a rin * Sales
across the riv e r top of h ill 174
Hwy 17 *3 Oebary 444 4544
Jeep CJ5 New lop. m echanlcall /
qood. soma rust
_________ 47500 574 3)51__________
M ercu ry G rand M arq u is 74. 3
doer, fu ll ps*« r. aU . tleruo
43500.331 174*_________________
1*74 Plym outh Fury.
Good Condition P ric e 4*50
__________C a ll 173 7343 ________
1*7* C O R D O BA
CNan, Lew M ilts . W h/Brn.
A ll Power 43.444.
Call 73114*4 After*.
1*74 Monte C arlo P /S P /B . P/W . .
P /d r lock, vin yl lop. 43.300.
Ph 373 1044 a lte r 5 P . M ___
1*40 Pontlec F ire b ird
Aulo. A ir. Stereo
__________C a ll a i 5 0 4 ) ________
73 D a t s u n P i c k u p . N e e d s
m echanical work. Best offer over
S500 or (rad* 33) 4475________ _
73 Ford LT O . Good condition.
11.000 or best offer.
_________ Ph 333 7774___________
74 T. B ird W hile velour uphoi
stnry. L ik e New. 413*5 Arrange
finance. 13* * 1 0 0 _____________
74 G rand Torino * passenger
Station Wagon, ru n t good. 41.100
o r best offer. 33* *4*4.__________
*0” 'Turbo” Trans Am . T Top. P/S.
P /B . P/W , A/T . A /C . A M /F M .
cassatte. charcoal, w /w tille A
gr*-,- inferior, undercoated. Un
der 35.000 m iles A I condition.
47.500 firm Sanford 133 1054
’W T u r b o ” Trans Am . T Top. P/S.
P /B . P/W . A /T , A/C. A M / F M .
cassette, charcoal, w/whlf* A
gray interior, undtreoated Un
der 35.000 m iles. A I condition
17.000 333 1054
44 Monte Carle. Loaded, bucket
seals, blue with m atching Interl
or. E x tra nice! 7» M e rc u ry
M arquis 3 dr., im a !! V S. A /T ,
P/S. A /C P /B . A M / F M tlareo 7*
Toyota Pickup 4 c y l . sld I r a n i.
radio, topper E i nl* Jackson
Auto Sales 3317)11_______

237—T ra dors/T ra i lers
1*7*. I* tt. Prow ler with canopy
and bathroom E xce l lent cond
Asking 13.300 PM 37)Q44»

239—Motorcycles/Bikes
H A H L E Y O A V ID S O N
1*711700 CC.
P olice Special 43.000
174 15*4
* * * * * A *00 Alm ost now. still
u n d e•r \warranty. O nly 3700 m iles
11300 Includes helmet end rain
g e a r.C a ll 173 5031 a lte ra P M

241—Recreational
Vehicles/Campers
Country A ir* travel trailer,
3x’. sett contained. C e n.A /H
*4*4X34after 5 P M
Sm ell Camper, sleeps 4 Stove. s‘nk
A A/C . needs some repairs In
front Ideal tor hunter. 4)50. Ph
333 5113 after a

243—Junk Cars
B U Y JU N K C A R S A T R U C K S
F rom 410 to 410 or more
C all 373 1434 333 4313
TO P D ollar Paid lev Junk A Used
cart, trucks A heavy equipment
____________733 54*0. ___________
W F P A Y TOP D O L L A R FO R
JU N K CARS AN O TRUCKS
C B S A U T O P A R T S 3*3 4501
Wrecked 74' Bulck w ith good motor
and fre n tm lu lo n 43 » or bet!
offer. Ph 327 49*7

YAMAHA
OF SEMINOLE
“ DAYTONA'S B E S T '

S E C A 550 J
*

1895° °

S E C A 750 H
*

2595“ °

M AXIM 650 J
*

2399“ °

O .d f, T o ., T A M A H A
F a ir in js and W iadkbieW s

Use Far fa ile d Cilert.
H W Y . 17*92 L O N G W O O D

M M 483

GARAGE
SALE
1976 VW Rabbit

*1195

C AM O PAN T S. JA C K E T S . CAPS
A R M Y N A VY SU RPLU S
310 Sanford A v e __________ 373 57*1
F E N O E R S tra ta ca tttr G uitar and
sm all am plifier. 4500 00
__________ 574 35*4.____________
F o r Sale O il Drum 110 gal capaci
ty. partially tilled No reasonable
otter retuxed 375 155*__________
Hunl Here I There's 'No L im it' on
the B argains Y o u 'll 'B a g ' it's
Easy 14 P la c t a W A N T A G
P H O N E 777 7411.______________
L ik e new. 1*1) A r l* n t rid in g
lanmmower. 10 h p , 77” bled*.
CtSCtr'C »*•. ’ U . m x i w an only.
P ric e 4444. C a lim - A ll* .

1979

Pontiac Lemans

Wagon

*3995

1979 Spirit

*2895
1971 Plymouth

*350

OLD UPRIGHT
P IA N O W / B E V E L O U L S S
_____________ 100 00_____________
S E W IN G M A C H I N E
S IN O IR
F U T U R A . Ilk* new, on* o l
Singer's Top M odels A lt Stitches
built In Sold new o&gt;«r 1700 M u tt
sacrifice tor 4344 40 or Assum e
41) M onthly paym ents W ill take
trade a t part peyt.senl. Fra*
home T ria l C a ll 143 47*4
Day o r N it*

SAN FO RD
M O T O R CO
AM C

JE E P

S04 S . F r e n c h A v e . *. .
» 3 41*3

•

�’?*v

I2B —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI. Wednesday, Ocl. 12, l»M

$UPIR BONUS

S U P t R BONUS

EXTRA-LARGE

THRIFTY MAID

BOUNTY
EIG H T
O'CLOCK
BEAN
C O ffEE

'alttiiane

JUMBO
ROLL

DOZ
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 OCTOBER 11-15, l i t !

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 OCTOBER I M S , 19U

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 OCTOBER 1 M 5 , I9S3

LAND O' SUNSHINE

KRAFT

ARROW (ALL VARIETIES)

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 OCTOBER I M S , 1983

MayonnaiV
40.or

BOX
WITH ONE FILLEO SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GO00 OCTOBER I M S , iSSl

WITH ONE FILLEO SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD OCTOBER I M S , 1911

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 OCTOBER I M S , I9S1

STORE HOURS
M O N . - SAT.

8 A.M. - 11 P.M.
ORANGE A SEMINOLE COUNTIES

8 A.M. - 10 P.M.
OSCEOLA. RREVARD, VOLUSIA. LAKE,
CITRUS. SUMTER. MARION. INDIAN
RIVER A ST. LUCIE COUNTIES

SUNDAY

Non-Stick Bakeware!
»IW W i)N SA LE !4L

8 A.M. - 9 P.M.
ORANGE. SEMINOLE. OSCEOLA.
BREVARD. VOLUSIA. LAKE. CITRUS. SUMTER.
MARION. INDIAN RIVER A ST. LUCIE COUNTIES

SAVE

50

RU M P
ROAST

W"

BEEF V i
PATTIES '

STEAK

$

W -b BRAND USDA CHOICE BEEF ROUNO
BONELESS EYE OE THE ROUND

W O BRAND USOA CHOICE BEEE HIND
BONELESS CUBED

R o a s t ............ a ‘ 2”

Steaks

ORANGE
JUICE

$2 97)

SMALL MEATY FRESH PORK (J'-'j U S
DOWN)

Spareribs

*7 S A V E

iti2SB SS&gt;

' SW ISS STYLE
V YOGURT

13-os.
SAVE 30- • SUPERBRAND STA-FIT OR
REGULAR COTIAOE

SAVE 201 - p t v s SPCAKEB Y IU C v
A U VAR# IRS CHEK

CUNO

i

SAVE

PACK

CANS

I

W-D ERA MU USOA CHOICE BEEF CHUCK
BLADE CHUCK

. . . . u *1

3

^ s o u r

Peaches

Saltines

7

J bN * I THRIFTY M A ID
SSSZ SHORTENING
IOV.-OI,

REGULAR OR UNSAU ED CRACKIN'

CHOPS

Tomato

34 -o s

GOOD

9

»2”

SAVE 32

SAVE 38

SANDWICH
BREAD

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

MR. IURKEY (3-LB. PKO
GROUND

0

ROUND
ROAST

C h e e s e ..........$1

. . . . can i

WHITE
POTATOES

DANO'S
PIZZA

SHERBET or
ICE CREAM

BOILED
HAM

EACH

LAND O ' SUNSHINE CITRUS

HARVESI FRESH YELLOW

Onions . . . .

AN
SAVE 10* SW
____
wSO
e N CHICKEN.
TURKEY, FISH. SALISBURY OR CHICKEN
NIBBLE RS

E n tre e s.......... is *1"

OANIM ARK A U FLAVORS DANISH

rt.i_

&gt;*•« !

i

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                    <text>76th Year, No. 36-Frlday, September 30, 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(USPS 481-280)—Price 20 Cents

Lake Mary OKs Record Budget; Tax Bills To Be Lower
Lake Mary property owners will find their tax bills n the purchase this year on the grounds that buying the
bit lower next year as the result of a tax rate decrease equipment later when other fire department trucks are
included In a record $1 million-plus budget which has older could result In a reduced rate to city residents for
fin; Insurance.
been adopted by the Lake Mary City Commission.
Fox has contended that the city should wait a year to
Commissioner Ray Fox Thursday made one last
unsuccessful effort to remove the proposed purchase of n purchase the truck to hold down the city's Indebtedness.
Fox also pointed out that the city over the past eight
$100,000 fire pumper truck from the allocations.
Commissioner Kenneth King Joined with Fox In trying years has been paying the water department $7,500
to delete the first annual payment of about $12,000 from annuall from city general funds "for fire hydrant rental"
the budget for the 1.250-gallon-pcr-mlnutc pumper when the city's general operating accounts bought the
hydrants In the first place.
truck.
lie said he wasn't asking that the budget be changed
Voting In favor of the purchase were Commissioners
to remove that payment from the utility department
Hurt Pcrinchlef, Charles Lytic and Russ Mcgonegal.
accounts this year. He said he only wanted the
Prior to the 3-2 vote in favor of the budget, King noted commission to keep the Item In mind and to find a way
that former Fire Chief Ralph Abel, now employed by the of returning to the general fund the money transferred
fire department at the Kennedy Space Center, opposes to the utility department over the years.

[Volunteer

The $4.10 per $1,000 assessed property valutlon tax
rale Included In the budget Is a 5-ccnt reduction over the
current fiscal year. The budget Is the largest In the city's
10-year history and the first time an annual budget has
topped the $1 million mark.
The budget as adopted totals $1,025,953 with
$777,828 for the general operation of the city and
$248,115 for the water and sewer utility system.—
Donna Estes.

Lake Mary Mayor Under Fire For 'Breach of Trust'

Monday, Oct. 10 has been officially
proclaimed "Jim Orioles Day” In Lake
Mary*, honoring the city's volunteer
fire chief.
The Lake Mary City Commission
officially proclaimed the special day to
begin fire prevention week In tbe city.
Firefighter Dennis Smathcrs re­
commended the special recognition to
the man who has served as a
volunteer firefighter for the past nine
years. Joining the department within
months of moving Into the city.

Jim O rioles

He worked his way up In the
organization to chief, a post to which
he wus elected by the volunteers In
Junr. 1979. after serving for six
months as assistant chief.
Orioles is also the city's public
works superintendent, lie was first
employed by Lake Mary In July. 1980
as a part time grader o|&gt;erator and
became a full time employee In

beyond the 400 customers It had at the time of the loan.
The city Is currently serving nearly 1,000 homes and
has pledged to serve another 500 within the next few
months.
Somehow, the $7,500 pledge was translated Into
hydrant rental over the years and paid to the water
department from the general fund.

A c c u s e d

Fire Chief
Gets His
Own Day

'Jim will be
completely
surprised.'

He called the Item "Innovative bookkeeping" which In
effect subsidizes the water department from property
tax and other tax revenues when the wnler system
doesn't serve the entire city.
"There Is no sense In the total populncc subsidizing
something used by only a portion of the populace," **Vx
said. Some residents have their own water well.
Mayor Walter Sorenson and City Treasurer Madeleine
Minns explained that when the city got a loan from the
U.S. Fanners Home Administration In 1978 to finance
expansion of the water system, franchise fees totaling
$7,500 had to be pledged to repay the loan.
The pledge was necessitated by tlje federal agency's
refusal to consider that the water system's potential
growth would be sufficient to repay the loan without
additional pledges, they said.
Sorenson said the system lias actually grown far

October of the same year.
He was promoted to superintendent
shortly afterwards.
Orioles was not present as he
usually Is at commission meetings to
hear the board vote unanimously lo
extend the honor.
Smothers said Orioles Is out of town
visiting an III parent.
"Jim will be completely surprised."
Smathcrs said.
Orioles. 34. and Ills wife Shclda are
the parents of five children—Donna
Estes

By Donna Estes
Herald Staff Writer
Nine-year veteran Lake Mary
Mayor Waller Sorenson has been
charged with a "breach of the
public trust," by lame-duck City
Commissioner Ray Fox.
Fox le ve led nine charges
against the mayor nt his last
official city commission meeting
Thursday night.
Fox didn’t run for re-election
earlier this month and Is officially
slated lo leave ofllcc Monday
ufternoon.
He charged Sorenson with Im­
propriety In his use of l city
vehicle, city hall telephones for
long distance calls and city office
space for personal business.
A two-member committee was
appointed by the city com ­
m ission to In v e s tig a te the
charges.
Sorenson eat silently as City
Attorney Robert Pctree. given the
list of charges by Fox earlier In
the week, gave a lengthy dis­
sertation on actions the com­
mission could take.
After hearing Peirce say that
Sorenson has the right to answer
the charges or not as he secs fit.
Sorenson was asked by Commis­
sioner Charles Lytle If he had any
comment. Sorenson replied he
had nothing to say 'at tilts time.'
He added that It would not lie
appropriate to say what hr
thought should tic done with the
charges.

m ‘is te a rin g m y g u ts

After the meeting. Fox said
that he didn't want to hurt l-ukc
Mary. Sorenson or Ills family and
this "Is tearing my gulsoot:"
lie said he had brought many
of the Items to the attention of
the city commission during past
meetings and Individually.
"Hut no one would do any­
thing." he said. Fox said lie gave
Sorenson a copy of the charges

prior to the meeting after hand
delivering the document to each
of Ills colleagues. "I gave him one
last chance to resign," Fox said.
In Ills memorandum lo the city
commission, dated Wednesday.
Fox said that over the last year
he has passed on various pieces
of Information to the commission
regarding the mayor's acts.
"Th ese actions were taken
without the knowledge or con­
sent of the commission. This
memorandum will serve to con­
solidate the Information." the
memo said.
The charges arc: "...use of the
city-owned vehicle for personal
purposes; purchase of Items of
furniture, specifically prohibited
In the 1982-83 budget; re­
finishing of the above-mentioned
furniture at city expense: failure ■&lt;’I m M
to Inform past city councils and
..............
the present commission about
known discrepancies In a city
e m p lo y e e 's Job ap p lication ;
W a lte r S o re n so n
granting of time ofT and subse­
...n o th in g to aay 'at t h is
quent salary advance of $451.25
tim e .'
to a city employee who had been
constitute "a breach of the public"
In tills employ less than 90 days;
trust. In my opinion, should the
hosting of a breakfast for real
commission not take appropriate
estate developers at city expense
of $50; use of city phones for
action. It could be construed as
personal long-distance calls: use
sanctioning the mayor's con­
of city office space to conduct
duct."
Commissioner Kenneth King
personal business: failure to In­
called on Peirce for his advice.
form the commission when city
Going over the list. Pctree dis­
funded facilities are being used
missed the Items concerning the
Improperly.
"Fox's memo said the acts

Old County Nursing Home Eyed

Mental Health Center Seeks To Escape Crushing Rent
By Mlchesl Behs
Herald S ta ff W riter
Seminole County Mental Health
Center. Inc., officials arc Interested
In acquiring an old nursing home
adjacent lo the Seminole County
S e r v ic e s B u ild in g , fo r m e r ly
Seminole Memorial Hospital.
Executive Director Jim Berko said
today he has had discussions with
Seminole Couniy officials about the
availability of the building as
headquarters for the agency's
operations.
Berko said the private, non-profit
agency Is In the second year of a
three-year lease at Its present offices
In C ra n e's R oost. A lta m o n te
Springs. The agency pays $G0.000 a
year for the space.
"When I found out that we were
renting spare at Crane's Roost for

$60,000 a year I thought we could
save money on leases and spend it
on programs.” said Berko, who look
over as head of the menial health
center about two months ago.
The agency has been plagued
over the last two years with funding
problems that have led to the
cutback of some clinical services.
Those cutbacks led to dissension
nmong the center's staff and the
resignation of four staff members.
Director George Lindcnfeld resigned
In February over the controversy.
Berko said the move to restore
some of the clinical programs Is a
change In philosophy for the center.
But he said the agency will not
make any quick decisions which
could Jeopardize Its long-term posltlon. "It's all very much In the

exploratory stages. We don't have
any agreements, we haven't even
talked with out landlord uboul
moving out of Crane's Roost," said
Berko.
The old nursing home has about
9.000 square feet of usable space
and "would be a nice collection of
offices” according to County Ad­
ministrator T. Duncan Rose.
Berko said he Is eager to consoli­
date the agency's headquarters with
one of Its other facilities. The mental
health center operates the Aegis
Workshop on First Street In Sanford
for the mentally and emotionally
handicapped, a day care and crisis
center on U.S Highway 17-92 In
Casselberry, and The Crossroads, a
substance abuse center In Lake
Mary.

“ We’re looking to sec where most
of the needs and referrals are from."
he said. A large number of the
agency's referrals arc from Sanford,
he said.
Berko said the nursing home
could be an Ideal location for the
agency. It would provide sufficient
space for offices, an outpatient clinic
and a crisis center, lie said the
building has room to more than
double the size of Its six-bed crisis
center In Casselberry.
"W e ’ll be tulklng with the county
and private pro|ierty owners about
any other buildings they have that
would meet our needs." he said.
The mental health agency Is not
the only group with an Interest in
acquiring the nursing home.
Officials of the St. Johns River

Water Management District have
also expressed an Interest tn the
building, according to Rose. The
group's board of directors has
talked In the past few months about
relocating Its offices from Palatku.
New Tribes Mission had been
interested In both the nursing home
and the old Seminole Memorial
Hospital but bus withdrawn Its offer
for the property, a irprescntatlve of
the mission said today.
C ou n ty co m m iss io n ers said
earlier tills week they're not Inter­
ested In selling the building, on the
west side of the old hospital, until
their move Into the County Services
Building Is completed early next
year. Rose said the commissioners
want to sec If they need the space
for themselves before putting the

• Time Is running out in the search for tbe flight
recorder of the Korean jetliner shot down by a
Soviet warplane Sept. l.T h e batteries in tbe 'black
box', which emits a pinging sound to help
searchers locate it, generally last for only about 30
days. See story, page 2A.

Deaths..........................3A
Dr. Lamb..................... 8A

Sports........................ &lt;&lt;7A
Television............ Leisure
Weather..........................2A
World..............................3A

Rose said a recent appraisal of the
facility set Its value at $550,000.
The county health department's
Sanford clinic at 900 S. French
Avenue, will be placed on the
market In the next few months.
Rose said.
The clinic, which has a^iout
12.000 square feet of space, is being
replaced by a new clinic. Construc­
tion began this week on the new
30.000-square-foot facility which Is
expected to open In August. 1984.

Rabies has been found by the
slate health laboratory In a raccoon
that attacked a small dog In the
Sunland area of Sanford. Seminole
County Health and Human Services
Director Dr. Jorge Deju said today.
A second raccoon has been cap­
tured ana sent to the laboratory for
testing.

• You're down on your luck and can't pay the rent.
Your unsympathetic landlord is threatening to
throw you aud everything you own out in the
street. It's a frightening prospect not uncommon in
Seminole County. What are the procedures for
eviction? What Is the role of law enforcement? And
what rights does a tenant have in fighting
eviction? Staff W riter Charles Cobb explores the
issue in Sunday's Herald.
Editorial...................... 4A
Florida......................... 3A
Horoscope................... 8A
Hospital.......................2A
Nation.......................... 2A
People.......................... ?A

Negotiations arc underway with
Florida Hospltal-Altamonte to sell
an old mental health clinic adjacent
to that hospital.

Rabies
Found

TODAY

Action Reports.............. 2A
Around The Clock........ 4A
Bridge........................ --8A
Calendar.......................^
Classifieds.............. 10,11A
Comics..........................flA
Crossword.................... ®A
Dear Abby.................... *A

property on the market.
Rose said the county has other
property It may be willing to sell.

Deju said the residents of Sunla n d . e s p e c ia l l y w it h in th e
neighborhood of Sunland Drive and
Flamingo Drive, should be aware
that other animals In the area could
be Infected.

Coming
At Ya'

A farm er's battle against the m any pests
which would destroy his crops never ends as
Donny Burk, spraying fungicide on his young
bell pepper and cabbage plants to protect them

against plant disease, can tell you. This part of
Don and Ruth Burk F a rm s, Lak e Monroe, Is
located on West State Road 46 at Interstate 4
near Sanford.

"Area residents should have their
animals Immunized against rabies
and confined to their property,"
Deju said. Questions or calls lor
assistance should be directed to the
Seminole County Animal Control
Division.
The area In question Is being
closely monitored by both the
Seminole County Heulth Depart­
ment and the Animal Control
Division. Deju said.

�JA— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sept. 30, m 3

Congress, President Avoid Clash Over War Powers

IN BRIEF
Mondale Is Overwhelming
Choice Of Teachers’ Union
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Waller Mondales
presidential bid received a boosi today from
America's second largest union — the 1.7
million-member National Education Associa­
tion.
The NEA’s board of directors today adopted
the recommendation of the union's political
action committee that It back the former vice
president In state primary elections and
caucuses.
Leaders of the AFL-CIO are also expected to
overwhelmingly back Mondale when they meet
In Florida Saturday. Formal AFL-CIO en­
dorsement Is set for Wednesday during the
federation's 15lh biennial convention at
Hollywood.
Mondale, considered a major ally of education,
has long been expected lo receive the hacking
oft he NEA. which endorsed him and Jimmy
Carter In the 1976 and 1980 presidential
elections.
The NEA, with Just 100.000 members less
than the Teamsters. America's largest union. Is
a potent political force. In 1980 it had the largest
block of dclrgalcs at the Democratic convention
— 31 l.alxmt 10 percent of the total.

Pilots Call For Strike
HOUSTON (UPII - The Air Line Pilots
Association, upset by Continental’s bankruptcy
declaration and problems of other airlines,
called for u nationwide strike o f Its 34,000

members to point out the "disastrous times"
brought on by deregulation.
No time was set for the work stoppage, which
was approved Thursday by the ALFA board,
and union President Henry Duffy said he hoped
it would not be necessary.
The Itoard's vote authorizes Duffy to set a
strike dale. Members then would vote on
whether they wanted to strike.
The ALFA's 18-mcmbcr board also called a
strike for 3 a.m. Saturday against Continental to
protest the pay cuts and longer hours of those
working for Continental's scaled-down opera­
tion.
Duffy called for restoration of some alrllpc
regulation to assure some profitability in the
Industry, which he said lost $1 billion last year.
--------------------- C o r r e c t i o n ----------------------When Allen Nelson of Sanford displayed for a Hern Id
phtotographer the 6-foot rattle snake hr found and killed
in his backyard Thursday, his two grandchildren Joined
in the picture. Nelson said he liked the photo as It
appeared In the paper but said his 3-year-old grandson
Brent was identified as a granddaughter. The Herald
regrets the error.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Tropical Storm Dean died
down to "strong nor’euster" status in the Atlantic today,
but kept the Coast Guard busy rescuing ships
endangered by its approach. Nebraska rivers flooocd by
nearly 7 inches of rain soaked fields and closed roads,
Southern California picked up the pieces from hundreds
or traffic accidents triggered by unexpected thun­
derstorms that turned highways to vast oil slicks. Dean
roared to near hurricane force Thursday, lashing the
North Carolina-Virglnia Coast, chewing up beaches, and
threatening co.tages In the barrier island town of Kill
Devil Hills. N.C. Coastal residents of the two states
Jammed supermarkets to stock up on staples. But late
Thursday night the erratic storm slowed and weakened
abruptly, to become no more dangerous than "a very
strong nor-easter. It will gradually weaken as it comes
on shore." said forecaster Bob Case of the National
Hurricane Center in Miami. Police kept larger vans and
trucks off the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel as winds
gusted up to 45 mph Thursday night. The Coast Guard
imd lo abandon the sinking tugboat Mars Thursday to
race to the rescue of a 103-foot schooner In danger of
sinking off Nantucket Island with eight people aboard.
The cutter Bibb had to cut Uxjse from the Mars when
{mother Coast Guard cutter, the Tamaroa. began taking
on water as It went to the aid of lire schooner Fair Sarac.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today. A 20 percent
chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Highs in the low
80s. Wind northeast around 10 mph. Tonight partly
cloudy with lows in the mid to upper 60s. Wind light
northeast. Saturday partly eloudy with a 40 percent
chance of thunderstorms. Highs tn the low to mid 80s.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine lo Jupiter Inlet
out 50 miles — A small craft advisory remains in effect.
Wind north to northeusf around 15 knots becoming
northeast around 10 knots tonight and easterly
Saturday. Seas 5 lo 7 feet with higher swells. Seas
decreasing lo 2 to 4 feel tonight. Few showers and
thunderstorms Increasing Saturday.
A REA READING8 [0 a.m.): temperature: 68;
overnlght low: 64: Thursday's high: 85: barometric
pressure: 30 10: relative humidity: 90 percent; winds:
north at 8 mph: rain: none: sunrise: 7:18 a.m., sunset
7:13 pm.
SATURDAY TIDES; Daytona Beach: highs. 3:40
a.m,. 4:16 p in.; lows. 9:27 a.m.. 10:40 p.m.: Port
Canaveral: highs. 3:32 a.m.. 4:08 p.m.; lows. 9:18 a.m..
10:31 p.m.: Bayport: highs. 8:31 a.m.. 11:57 p.m.:
lows. 3:09 a.m.. 4:44 p.in.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Flortda tlegional Hoipilal

ThurwUr

ADMISSIONS
• Sanloto

. Joteph M Ada rut
CarneS Brook*
Ceiim lr Tuman

Mary E Pell. DctU'r
Hithjrd W Krrcker. Deltona

Evening Herald

Compromise

Hotel D Parkin, Deltona
DISCHARGES
Sanford.
Be,trip S Wight
ClarenctJ Week! Dtllon*
David E Ray. S' - Lake Monro*
. 'H i m L Nenbert and baby girt.
Geneva

tusps mmmi

Friday. September 30, 1983-V o l. 76, No 34
Pubiuhtd D allr and Sunder, tk c tp l Saturday by The Sanford
H treld . lac.. JM N French A v * „ la n ia r d . Fla. M77I.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President
Bengali says congressional permission to
keep U.S. marines in Lebanon for 18
more months makes it clear to the world
that the Untied Stales will fulfill its
“ re s p o n s ib ilitie s us a tru stee o f
freedom."
Congress, reluctantly setting aside
concerns that the extended presence of
the Marines in Lebanon could lend to a
conflict like Vietnam, gave final approval
to the compromise resolution Thursday.
The action averts a constitutional clash
between Congress the president over war
powers.
The Senate passed the resolution
54-46 after d efea tin g D em ocratic
amendments that would have limited
deployment of the 1.200 Marines to two
or six months. The House, which passed
the resolution Wednesday, then agreed
lo minor Senate changes by u vote of
253-156 and sent it lo Reagan. despite n
last-ditch effort by some Democrats to
sculllc it.
Reagan praised passage of the rcsolulion as evidence that "America stands

“ Toduy's vote in the Senate ... sends a
strong signal to the world: America
-stands united: wc speak with one voice,
and wc fulfill our responsibilities as a
trustee of freedom, peace and selfdetermination," the president said In a
statement.
Democrats voted solidly against the
resolution in the Senate, but Re­
publicans. relying on last-minute lobby­
ing. held their own to pass It.
Republican leaders worked on Sens.
Dan Quaylc, R-Ind.. Robert Packwood.
R-Orc., and Mark Andrews. R-N.D., who
appeared reluctant to vote with the
administration. The leaders feared other
"soft" votes might be lost if the three
bolted.
Baker and Sen. Charles Percy, R-I1L.
the chairman of the Foreign Relations
C om m ittee, cajoled the reluctant
senators even as the roll was called. Vice
President George Bush presided during
the voting in the event he was needed to
break a tie.
The only Democrats to vote with the
Republicans were Sens. George Mitchell

Trade Deficit
Hits New High
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The nation's trade dcllrli In
August reached a onc-montli record of S7.2 billion, on
the way to making 1983 the United Stales' worst year
ever In world trade competition, the Commerce
Department says.
In a report on Imports and exports, .the department
blamed the renewed demand for oil created by the
economic recovery and the disadvantage of a strong
dollar, which in August readied i&amp; peak of value In
relation lo other currencies.
Total export sales earned S I6.6 billion In August. 0.1
percent more than July, while Import purchases cosl
Americans S23.8 billion. 3.6 percent more than in July.
The trade shortfall was $280.3 million worse than the
previous monthly high. S6.9 billion In May. and topped
July's S6.4 billion deficit.
Commerce Sccrclary Malcolm Baldrigc said lie Profits from agricultural exchanges, which go a
expects the nation’s trade performance lo get worse
long way toward covering chronic deficits in the
before ft gets belter. "Exports remain depressed, down
annual foreign trade balance, registered a decline
14.6 percent from the record 1981 pare," he said.
"A rapid near-term recover)’ Is unlikely. Turning the last year. Total export v*lue was down by almost
S5 billion. And new figures Indicate another
tide of Ibis sea of red ink will require a lower dollar."
The growth in the merchandise trade deficit suggests decline this year.
that by the time September’s figures arc in. the deficit lm]&gt;orts grew 10.6 percent in volume, to an average of
will have topi&gt;ed last year’s 12-month record of S42.9 6.1 million barrels a day.
billion. From January through August, the trade deficit
The oil. at S29.73 a’ barrel, cost S5.6 billion, 11.9
grew to S40.7 billion.
percent more than In July.
By the end of the year, department analysts expect the
Non-oil Imports were S I7.9 billion and have been
deficit to grow to as much as S70 billion.
increasing at a slower rale. They were averaging a 816
Trade In fnclory goods alone produced a deficit of S3.6 billion moplbly levpl ln th e,first quarter and a $17
billion In August. S338.3 million worse than In July.
billion in the second quarter.
The nation's deteriorating trade position spreads
Trade with Japan contributed S I.8 billion lo the
beyond merchandise and the stiff competition of Japan deficit, compared to July's S2 billion.
and West Germany. Earlier this month, the department
The nation's traditional surplus from the sale of farm
reported the nation's traditionally strong surplus in the products narrowed by $78.4 million to $1.5 billion.
overseas sale of services, from engineering to Insurance,
Trade with Mexico. America's thlrd-largcst trading
stood still for three consecutive quarters through June.
partner. Improved again In August with the deficit
U.S. Imports have been growing because Americans, shrinking to about June's level. S510 million.
in the midst of an economic recover)', have more to
In July and August, exports to Mexico grew to 21
spend and because strong American dollars can make percent above the Apr!I-June quarterly average, reflectimports a bargain.
ing Mexico's gradual recovery from Its severe financial
As recovering Industries used more energy. August oil crisis.

of Maine and Edward Zorlnsky of.
Nebraska.
Congressional leaders said the War
Powers Resolution, enacted In 1973 In
response to the Vietnam War. required
Reagan to obtain congressional approval
to keep troops in Lebanon for more than.
60 days.
The administration contends the rcso-.
lution. passed over Richard Nixon's veto,.
Is an unconstitutional Infringement on
the president's authority to conduct,
foreign afTalrs.
The compromise said "the Congress
determines" and "the Congress Intends"
that the resolution applies, but Reagan Is
cxpeclcd to reject that assertion when
signing the face-saving measure.
Opponents of the compromise argued;
the American people want the Marines
out of Lebanon, where four have been;
killed and more than 30-wounded during;
the last month. A Washington Posf-ABC;
News poll published Thursday found 58;
percent of Am ericans thought the
Marines should be brought home In six;
months or less.

Post: CIA Chief I
Received Carter
Briefing Papers j
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A Republican congressional
aide has told the FBI that a political consultant claimed
he got President Carter's briefing papers for the 198(i
presidential debate and gave them to William Cascyi
Rona'd Reagan's campaign manager. It was reported
today.
The Washington Post reported that Tim Wyngaard,
executive director of the House Republican Policy
Committee, has told FBI Investigators that Paul Corblti
made thal claim to him tn a telephone conversation Iasi
April — about six weeks before the debate papers
controversy became public.
The Post said Casey this week emphatically denied he
had received any Carter debate briefing material front
Corbin or anyone else. "I never knew this material was
In the campaign." Casey, who Is director of the CIA. told
the newspaper. "It's totally false."
Casey said confusion about Corbin may have arisen
because Corbin did provide him with a six-page memo
from a New York lawyer outlining possible statements
Reagan might make In the October 1980 debate wllli
Carter, the newspaper said.
Officials Involved in the FBI Investigation of how
Carter campaign papers made their way Into the Reagan
campaign view Wyngaard's comments as potentially,
significant because It Is the first evidence that somcontf
talked about the Carter debate palters bcfqrq the episode
Was first mentioned In the media, the Rost said.
Corbin declined lo comment on the report. But
associates of his told the newspaper that he denies ever:
obtaining the Carter briefing papers or making such a’
claim to Wyngaard.
The Post said Corbin's alleged claim to the congres­
sional aide has been known about lit the White House.’
since last June, and has figured In the dispute between;
Casey nnrt White House chief of staff James Baker over:
which top Reagan campaign official first received the;
Carter briefing papers. Baker has said he got the Carter;
papers from Casey. Casey sayB he never saw them.

Searchers Say Jet's Black Box M ay N ever Be Found
TOKYO (UPI) — American teams
searching the Sea of Japan have in­
dicated the flight recorder of the Jetliner
downed by a Soviet warplane may not be
found. Japanese officials said today.
Japanese re|&gt;orts had said the Jet’s
crucial black box had been located In
waters near Moncron, a tiny islet west of
Soviet-held Sakhalin Island. U.S. officials
denied the reports but voiced confidence
the devices would be found.
However, two Japanese officials re­
turning from a three-day observation
stint aboard one of the U.S. search
vessels said the Americans were no
longer optimistic they could recover the
recorders from Korean Air Lines Flight
007.
"They said the search will continue."

said Japan's Maritime Safety Agency
official Kazuml Mina. "When asked
about prospects off finding the KAL
Right data, an American officer replied.’ 'WeJust don't know."
The gloomy assessment came as time
technically began 1o run out for the radio
"plngers" tliut emit locator signals from
the black boxes. Their batteries general­
ly last 30 days — and the airliner, with
269 people aixtard. was shot down Sept.
I.
Ten days ago. one of the U.S. ships
delected the pings for about 90 minutes,
but lost the signal before searchers could
pinpoint their location.
A fleet of six U.S. and 24 Soviet ships
sighted in the area arc in an Intense race
to find the flight data and cockpit voice

recordings, which could shed light on
why the Korean Jet strayed into Soviet
airspace.
Japan’s Defense Agency said Thurs­
day the Soviets have doubled their
MIG-23 fighter strength In the area. It
said there are now more than 20
MIG-23's on Etorofu Island, only 75
miles from the northern Japanese Island
of Hokkaido.
Mlno. Transport Ministry aircraft
Inspector Yasuhlsa Tani and other
members of an International observation
team were air-lifted hack from the
destroyer USS Callaghan to Wakkanai In
northern Hokkaido Thursday.
Quoting a naval officer aboard the
destroyer USS Callaghan. Mlno said the
Americans were searching a 4-milc

radius of water about 12 nautical miles'
northwest of Moneron.
"They use deep-sea sonar to probe a;
very uneven undersea terrain which;
runs from 150 meters to 800 meters
deep." said Mlno.
Tanl said he was told the searchers;
plan to lower one-man. deep-sea subtna-;
lines equipped with "magic hands" to
pick up the black box If Its location Is;
pinpointed.
Hiroshi Kljlma. an official with the;
Japanese rescue mission al Wakkanul's;
Mari lime Safety Agency, said 13 Soviet;
ships were steaming "at a distance of 2;
to 3 miles from the Amcrlcun vessels.;
They often cross each others wake."
Eleven other Soviet vessels were seen;
further north, he said.

Thieves Make Jewelry Haul In S. Seminole Break-In
Thieves looted a south Seminole County apartment of
jewelry and cash worth S7.720. including a gold chain
with a diamond valued at $4,000. between 9:30 p.m.
Thursday and 3:53 a.m. today.
Entry was gained through a kitchen window Into the
★ Fires
apartment thal Is shared by Laura L. Segal. 23. and
* C o u rts
Klmbcr L. Studlcy. 23. at 95 Sorrento Apartments near
Winter Park.
it Police
Miss Segal told Seminole County sheriff's deputies
thal her loss totaled $6,470. Including $630 cash, a
$4,000 gold chain with diamond, an $800 diamond
bracelet and other pieces o f Jewelry.
She said the thieves apparently used a hammer to
Miss Studlcy said her loss Included $250 In cash and ki:r&gt;ck locks off the front gate and the front door and
$ 1.000 worth of assorted Jewelry.
used a key to unlock a deadbolt lock on the door.
Property removed Included: a remote control TV set.
INHERITANCE HEISTED
.Thieves broke into a Sanford home and removed valued al $1,000: a $795 stereo console, a $500 Scars
properly valued at $3,445 between Monday and 8:09 Krnmorc washing machine, assorted yard tools worth
$400. a $300 lawnmowrr, two lamps and two wall
a.m. Wednesday.
mirrors.
Thelma Shaw Norris. 46. of 1015 Persimmon Avc..
said the properly, which she had Inhr riled, was taken
THEFT ARREST
from a residence at 2720 W. 20th St. in the Lincoln
A 34-year-old Sanford matt has been arrested and
Heights section.
charged with two counts of grand theft in connection
with the theft of nearly $1,200 from the Shcrwln
Williams paint store. 3761 S. Orlando Drive, in Sanford.
Michael James Wenninger, of Apt. 14. Sanford Court
Apartments, who was an assistant manager at the patm
■tore, waa u:tested Wednesday and later released from
the Seminole County jail on pretrial release.
Thete Quotltioni provided by Florida Power
Wenninger Is charged with taking $696.58 In cash
)
*
’,
1 Light
It»
membert of the Nelionel Anociehon
from the firm’s daily receipts on Aug. 3 and taking
it i. It '*
ot Seturlhei Dealer* ere repre
11 IIU
Freedom Saving*
$696.58 in cash on Sept. 17. ucrordlng lo a sheriffs
MCA
.. 4V« aSW
today Inter
report.
JJ'i u

Action Reports

STOCKS

deeltr market* (ben

tlk

Second C la n P e d a l * Paid at Sanlerd. Florida 31771
Hama D alirary: Week, S I.M ; Month, M IS; « M enthi. 1)4.M ;
Vaar. S4J as. By M ail: Waa* IM S ; Month. I t IS ; t Month*.
S N .M ; Yaar, SS7.M

united" behind the Marines' mission in
Beirut, but even supporters of the bill
were wary of allowing Reagan to keep
the troops there for another 1W years.
"I still have grave doubts about the
wisdom of American troops In the Middle
East, but they arc there." Senate Re­
publican leader Howard Baker told
colleagues Just before the final vote. "It
would be a mistake of tragic proportions
If the Congress were to withdraw them."
"What we're doing, truly, by this
resolution Is to give the president a blank
check," Rep. Ted Weiss, D-N.Y.. said Just
before the House gave final approval to
the bill.
But Rep. Clement Zablocki. D-Wls..
chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, said Reagan had agreed to
abide by even tighter restrictions than
those In the resolution, reporting to
congressional leaders every two weeks
and to Congress as a whole every 60
days Instead of the 90 days required in
the bill.
Reagan called the vote "a great
victor)’ " fora bipartisan foreign policy.

NCR Corp
Atlantic Bank
B«rn*M Bank
Flagihip Banki

Bid Aik
law j e j
ll 'a

JJ*«

Scotty’ *
Sun Bark*
Southeait Bank

17**, 177
D U MU
MU 1* 'i
T t i JIW
» K*

INDICTMENT
A Seminole County grand Jury Wednesday Indicted an
Orlando man who was arrested Sept. 20 on a charge of
committing sexual battery on a 7-year-old girl.

Rodney Dean Surralt. 19. of 9701 Forest City Road.;
was being held today Seminole County Jail with no
bond.
According to the arrest report, the girl, who lives in
Seminole County, told sheriffs Investigators the sexual
assault occurred between March and July.
The girl s parents reported the assault about two’
weeks ago and Surratt was arrested a few days later.
HUNGRY THIEVES
Thieves broke Into a Sanford man’s home Thursday,;
took $200 In old coins, ate hulf a Jar of peanut butter and &lt;
some cereal, drank a quantity of whiskey and wine andtook a shower.
Robert E. Young. 35. of 503 Willy Avc.. said the'
burglars also stoic four pairs of trousers worth $50. two
shirts worth $10, eight packs of cigarettes worth $6.75
and a $4 box of bullets.
Entry was gained by culling and breaking out a living
room window screen between 6:30a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
MOTOR TAKEN
A 4-hp Briggs and Stratton gasoline motor, valued a(
$300. waa removed from a sweeper at the William Clark
Court apartment complex In Sanford between 10 a.m.
Sept. 19 and 7:30 a.m. Tuesday.
The sweeper was stored In a maintenance shop and
the thief broke open the back door of the shop to gain
entry, police said.
FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the
following calls:
THURSDAY
—6:18 a.m., Airport Boulevard west of Live Oak
Boulevard, car fire.
—8-50a.ni., 1001 Palmetto Ave., house fire.
—2:31 p.m., 16th Street und Oleander Avenue, car
wreck.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, Ff.

SCC Wants Students In Class, Not On The Job

FLORIDA

questioned whether teachers were meeting the state
requirement of 15 hours of classroom contact each
week.
" I f It Is found that classes were dismissed prior to their
scheduled conclusion, the board of directors should
require Immediate corrective action by the faculty
members involved." the report said. "If the students
were absent from class without authorization, the board
should take appropriate action against the students and
their work supervisors."
Sawyer said an SCC investigation revealed that many
of the cases of Btudcnts reporting to work during
regularly scheduled class periods were due to schedule
changes. Some o f the classes were canceled or
rearranged because of field trips, lie said.
The audit report said several instances were reported
In the other Instances. Sawyer said, "students arc
of students working up to 15 minutes of a period that students. Some students skip classes. We don't
they were scheduled to be In class. The audit report nlso encourage that."
ByMIchealBeha
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole Community College officials arc Instituting
new controls to guarantee that students with part-time
Jobs at tltc college arc not on the Job when they are
supposed to tie In class.
Jim Sawyer, dean of students at SCC. said the college
Is sending copies of student schedules to their work
supervisors to be sure the students arc studying when
they're sup|iosed to be and not working.
Thr college was cited lit an uudit of Its books for the
1981-82 fiscal year by slate Auditor General Ernest
Ellison for not keeping tabs on students In Its
work-study program.

IN BRIEF
Borman Won't Quit,
Expects Wage Cut OK
MIAMI (UPI) — Eastern Airlines president
rrank Borman has vowed not to rrslgn and says
lie Is confident union members will Ignore their
leaders and approve Ids proposed wage cuts.
Angry union officials are urging their
rank-and-file to reject the 15 percent cut. which
Borman says Is the company's only chance of
avoiding bankruptcy. Chnrlcs Bryan, leader of
the machinists' union, has labelled the threat
maniacal" and called for Borman's resignation.
Contract negotiations arc still going on at
Cocoa. Fla. with the airline's 5.800 lllght
attendants, who have declared a strike deadline
of 12:01 a.m. Oct. 13 unless they reach an
agreement by then.
The firm's 15,500 non-union employees
began voting on the cuts Thursday.
Former Labor Secretary William J. Uscry.
hired by Eastern to work out an agreement with
Eastern's three unions, said Thursday he would
set up an Independent audit of the carrier so he
can form his own opinion.

Hawkins To Appeal Conspiracy, Obstruction Conviction
TAMPA (UPI) - Orlando bank prcsldent Charles Hawkins, maintaining his
Innocence, said he will appeal his
conviction on conspiracy and obstruc­
tion of Justice charges.

MIAMI (UPI) — Dade County may have as
many as 1,300 to 2,000 unsafe school buses,
highway officials said after 39 elementary
school children and their driver were Injured
when a bus blew a lire and overturned.
The Florida Highway Patrol said the private­
ly-owned bus had no Inspection sticker and four
of Its six tires were bald. As many as 1.300 to
2.000 buses In Dade County have not received

A 12-mcmbcr Jury found Hawkins
guilty of the charges Thursday after
deliberating for 12 hours. The trial was
moved to Tampa because of extensive
publicity in Orlando.
A third charge — filing false bank
statements — was dismissed by U.S.
District Judge Elizabeth Kovnchcvlch
after Jurors said they were deadlocked.
Hawkins. 55. faces 10 years In prlsOp

required Inspections, and also could be unsafe,

the highway patrol reported.
The accident occurred Wednesday as the bus
transported students home from the public
Flagaml Elcmentray School
The highway patrol said Sara Taylor, the
owner-operator of the bus. lost control of the
vehicle when a tire blew out on Miami's
southwest 8th street underneath the Palmetto
Expressway overpass, Ms. Taylor turned the
wheel sharply to avoid a light pole and the bus
rolled over on Its left side.

and $15,000 In fines. Sentencing was set
for Nov. 4.
Hawkins also is scheduled to stand
trial on embezzlement and tax evasion
charges later this year.
But he said after Thursday's verdict he
lias been wrongly accused.
"I am not guilty." said Hawkins. "I
have the utmost faith we'll win on
appeal."
The suspended president o f the
Washington Shores Federal Savings and
Loan has Insisted since he was Indicted

In April that he was persecuted because
he was black.
"1 feel I was singled out by the

government because of my high public
profile," said Hawkins. " I f you were
black, you would understand."
Hawkins lias served on the Orlando
Utilities Commission and the OrlandoOrange County Expressway Authority.
He also was the treasurer of the defunct
Washington Shores Association for Rec­
reation. a non-profit day-care center that
closed In 1980.

derail the Investigation.
Prosecutors said Hnwklns deposited
money In fictitious accounts at the
savings and loan to hide his theft of
$269,000 from another uccuunt con­
trolled by his wife's family.

Hawkins has been indicted on charges
of embezzling $200.00 from the center.
T h e conspiracy und obstruction
charges stemmed from a three-year
federal Investigation of the savings and
loan. Prosecutors said Hawkins tried to

Paul Perkins Sr., 64, an Orlando
law yer and business associate o f
Hawkins, was convlccd of similar con­
spiracy and obstruction o f Justice
charges last month. He received three
years probation and a $5,000 fine.

Hawkins' estranged wife, Kaydellc.
testified during the trial he had taken the
money.

...M ayor Accused Of Impropriety
Continued from page 1A
purchase of used desks for city hall office staff and their
rcflnishing. failure to apprise the commission of
discrepancies on a past employee's Job application, the
granting of time off and salary advance and the hosting
of breakfast for real estate developers as matters that
had been discussed by the commission previously. He
also said some of the matters were Judgment calls and
not In violation of any law that he knows of.

Pilot Has Close Shave
ORLANDO (UPI) — A pilot displayed "a great
amount of technique" In setting his troubled
single-engine airplane down on h-kjani covered
runway at the Orlando Executive Airport,
officials said.
The pilot. Bob Flldcs of Orlando, discovered
shortly after takeoff Thursday that his plane's
landing gear was Jammed. He circled the airport
for 2V$ hours, burning o(f excess fuel to reduce
the chances of a lire on landing and giving
emergency crews lime to spread foam across the
runway.
Fildes made an "excellent" landing, said
airport manager Tltn Shea.
;
Fildes cscajied Injury Ih the incident.

The other Items including use of the city vehicle, city
hall telephones and office space for personal business as
well as the failure to Inform the commission when city
funded facilities are being used Improperly may be a
violation of some ethical standard, he said, citing
various state laws.
The attorney listed alternatives to the commission for
action ranging from turning over the complaint to the
state ethics eomrhlttee!!or the state attorney's office t i
appointing an outside party or a commission committee
as fact-finders.
The commission voted unanimously to appoint King

WORLD

and Commissioner Burt Pcrlnchlef as the special
committee. The committee Is to conclude its work In no
less than 30 days.
Petrce said depending on the findings of the
committee, the city commission could determine there
is no basis for the charges, could as a matter of public
policy and conscience condemn the mayor, could
disassociate Itself from the conduct, could censure the
mayor or could decide that Sorenson devotes a
considerable amount of time to the city far and above
what Is rewarded and that the charges are of no great
consequence.
Petrec cautioned the commission thnt Sorenson 1b
entitled to a presumption of innocensc the same as
anyone tn a courtroom. He said that Sorenson Is not
obliged to make any statements, that all efforts should
be made to offer due process and that ample time should
be given, to Sorenson to present a defense If he wishes.
He said any Investigation or commission action should
be done In an "atmosphere of dignity, courtesy and
fairness."
P erln c h te f said the com m ission had to act

T h e IR S W a n t s It s S h a r e
O f S t a t e 's N a r c o t i c s T r a d e

IN BRIEF

JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - The Internal
Revenue Sendee Is cracking down on
taxpayers who “ launder" cash for Illicit
drug deals.
The IRS district office for Florida said
since 1980 It has assessed more than
$350 million In federal taxes on profits of
630 Florida taxpayers Involved In the
narcotics trade.

Soviet Official Given
Week To Leave Britain
LONDON (UPI) — A Soviet trade official who
became the sixth Russian to be ex|iellcd by
Britain tills year for alleged spying was given
only seven days to leave tiie country- opixircnlly
In a new lough line by the government.
The Foreign Office said Thursday that Vasiliy
Ionov, on the stuff of the Soviet trade mission at
lllghgate, north London, had "engaged In
activities incompatible with Ills jxjsltlon" — a
diplomatic euphemism for spying.
Ionov was given Just a week to depart.
Expelled officials arc normally given two weeks
to leave.
The Times newspaper sjicculated today that
this latest expulsion could be linked to the
removal -arller this month of three Russian
officials from Ireland. At the lime, Dublin was
said to be a center for Soviet espionage
operations In Western Europe.

"These assessments resulted from our
agency's becoming aware of Individuals
engaged In drug trafficking who ac­
cumulated large amounts of cash or
other assets without accounting for them
on their Income tax returns." said Merlin
W. Hcyc, IRS district director.
Besides the assessments, the IRS said
more than 100 high-level drug traf­
fickers. financiers and others Involved In
laundering cash for drug deals were
Indicted in Florldu for tax law violations
In 1981 and 1982.

Walesa Cheered On 40th

I

The Investigation showed no evidence (hat (eachqrs
weren't meeting the requirement for class contact, he
said.
SCC has begun efforts to discourage students from
skipping class. Beginning this semester, work-study
students must sign a document saying that they
understand they will not be [&gt;ald for work they’ do during
scheduled class time.
Sawyer said the violations cited In the audit were
minor and he believes the steps taken will eliminate the
problem.
SCC has about 110 students In the work-study
program.
Overall, school president Dr. Earl Weldon said he was
pleased with the audit, noting that there were no major
violations and that the Items cited In the report have
been corrected.

G u ilt y

School Buses Unsafe

GDANSK. Poland (UPI) - Lech Walesa's
cheering supporters mobbed, hugged und kissed
the Solidarity founder In their answer to the
Communist government’s latest attempt to
discredit him.
About 6.500 backers and friends from around
Poland turned out at Walesa's St. Brtgida
church In Gdansk Thursday to give him 40th
birthday greetings.
They cheered and sang "May He Live 100
Years" before holding a special birthday sendee
In the church, where the altar was festooned
with a ribbon wishing Walesa well.
A television broadcast Tuesday alleged that
Walesa planned, with Pope John Paul It's help,
to stnsli in the Vatican bank some $1 million
given him by Westerners. A tape recording on
the program also depicted him as foul-mouthed.

Friday, Sepf. 30, 1 U 3 -3 A

j

All Souls Students
Selling Cheese In
Fund-Raising Drive
Students from All Souls School arc selling Wisconsin
cheese products to raise funds for school equipment.
The fund drive, which began this week, will continue
through Tuesday, according to Cathy Evans, drive
chairman. Notices have been sent to ubout 90
companies In the Sanford area asking for support and
students will be selling the products to individuals, us
well.
Money raised In the project will lx* used to purchusc
new school books, sports and science equipment und a
computer for the school library’, said Mrs. Evans
Anyone .Interested In placing an order for cheese may
call Mrs. Evans at 323 3067.

Of those. 54 have been convicted und
sentenced to prison terms averaging QVi
years. Thr fines Imposed have averaged
nearly $40,000. the IRS said.
One high-level central Florida drug
trafficker wus sentenced to 45 years In
prison and fined $200,000. and a
Colombian money luundcrcr operating

out of Miami was given 10 years and
fined $200,000.
The IRS also Is able to tax at the 50
percent rate a cash amount of more than
$10,000 whose true owner cannot be
Identified. Thus, the IRS can make
immediate "Jeopardy assessments"
when a courier In an illicit transaction is
found with Inrgc amounts of cash and
denies owning It.
"In recent months we have assessed
and collected more than $750,000 under
this procedure." Heyc said.
The IRS official said the majority of the
criminal tax cases stem from IRS'
participation tn the Florida Cash Flow
Project, also known as Operaton
Greenback. Originally a South Florida
project. It has been extended statewide.
"T h is Joint effort with the Drug
Enforcement Administration and the
U.S. Customs Service has enabled us to
trace and Investigate the flow of illegal
drug money In and out of Florida." Heyc
said.
Hcye said more than half of the IRS
special agents In Florida are now
assigned to criminal tax investigations
Involving drug trafficking or money
laundering.

AREA DEATHS
Bom August 24. 1909. In resident. He was a Protes­
HARRY L.CREAQER
Harry Luther Creager. Arkansas, he moved to tant.
Survivors Include his
76. of 105 May rose Drive. Oviedo from Dearborn,
Sanford, died Thursday at Mich. In 1963. He was a wife, Gloria: daughter.
the Orlando Naval Hospi­ grocery store owner, a K im b e r ly . F r e e p o r t :
tal. Born May 16. 1907. In Lutheran and a member of mother. Grace English.
Brentwood, N.Y.; stepfa­
York, Pa., he moved here the Moose Lodge.
Survivors Include Ills th er, J a m es E n g lish .
In 1957 from Aberdeen.
Md. He retired from the wife, Goldie; two sons. B r e n tw o o d ; b r o th e r .
Army after 23 years of Charles. Hartsvlllc, S.C., D w i g h t C a r r o l l .
Gordon. Orlando; two sis­ Brentwood,
service.
Survivors Include his ters. Annabclle Meyers.
W lls o n -E lc h e lb e rg e r
wife. Dorothy: a daughter. Elizabeth Birch, both of Mortuary Is in charge of
M r s . A r t h u r W a I z . Detroit: six grandchildren; arrangements.
B e a u fo r t . S .C .: s o n . two great-grandchildren.
W inter Park Funeral
Michael Creager. Albu­
querque, New Mexico: one Home Is In churge o f Funeral Notice
arrangements.
grandchild.
C ARRO LL MR. JAN L
Funeral services and
JAN L. CARROLL
Jon Lourol Corroll, M. of DO
burial will be In Arlington
Mr. Jan Laurel Carroll, —Mr.
Dohnholt Aw* . Fro*port, N Y .
N a t io n a l C e m e t e r y . 36. of 130 Dehnhoff Ave.. who di*d Sopt. 14. will bt §1 I X
Arlington, Va. Brlsson Freeport. N.Y.. died Satur­ pm . Sohirdoy Ot Snow Hill Pro
Funeral Home. Sanford, is day at the Nassau County grow l** W IiM n tr) Boptltl Hoi I
m i l Church. 0 *n *v*. with th*
In charge of arrangements. M ed ica l C e n te r, East R*v. G W. Choppoll. potior In
Mradow. N.Y. Bom Oct. chorg*. Burlol to lollowr In G*novo
JOHN A. STRAIN
Corrwlory. Colling hour* lor fritndi
Mr. John Alfred Strain. 31. 1946. in Nassau will b « from noon to f p m lodoy ol
County.
Long
Island.
N.Y..
th* choptl Wilton Elcholbtrgor
74. of Rt. 1, Oviedo, died
Thursday at his home. he had been a lifelong Morluory In chorg*

expeditiously and not allow anyone to appear guilty by
Innuendo. Referring to a biblical quotation. Pcrlnchlef
likened Sorenson's position at this point to sitting In a
"scat of scorn." By choosing the alternative of naming a
special investigating committee, he said further scrutiny
o f the charges would be permitted, adding the
committee would be the best mechanism to look into the
matter.
Commissioner Russ Mcgonegal asked Petrce If he
would help the committee to formulate Its report and to
develop procedures for the investigation.
Petrce said It would be wholly Inappropriate for him to
give an opinion on the truth or falsity of thr allegations.
"The whole situation Is a painful one " he said. The
attorney also said it should be kept tn mind that he Is an
appointee of the mayor and serves at his pleasure..
"I have great respect for the mayor's integrity." Petrce
s a id , " a s l d o M r . F o x 's . "

Petire wild he would solicit the mayor's permission to
assist the committee and " if he objects. I would
decline."
Sorenson could not be reached for comment today.

1100 F R E N C H A V E . S A N F O R D , FL

3 2 2 -7 9 5 3

D O N ’T
M IS S

F U R N IT U R E

S

A P P L IA N C E

10- H 0 U R
S U P E R
S A LE !

SATURDAY ONLY
8 a.m. 'Til 6 p.m.

�An invitation has gone out to the dean of
the Florida Senate. Sen. Dempsey Barron,
D-Panama City, to participate in a roast of
state Rep. Bobby Brantley of Longwood
next month.
Brantley's first fund-raiser of the 1984
campaign year Is scheduled for next
month at Shakespeare's, a medieval
English restaurant in Orlando. A con­
gressman. two state senators, two fellow
representatives, a former gubernatorial
candidate and Seminole's Sheriff John
Polk arc already on the program to toast
Uie Longwood Republican representative,
but he also wants the man considered the
boss of the state's upper house of the
Legislature there too.
"Dempsey is supposed to be at a roast
for Curtis Peterson, president of the
Senate, on Oct. 7 and we are trying to see if
he can be here on the 8th." Brantley said.

Evening Herald
(LISPS 411 JIO)
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305322-2611 or 831-8993
Friday, September 30, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 81.00; Month, 84.25; 6 Months, 824.00;
Year, 845.00. By Mall: Week, 81.25; Month, 85.25; 6 Months,
830.00; Year. 857.00.

United Nations
On Wheels...
Crudely but effectively. Am bassador Charles
Llchcnstcln has revived the U.N. debate. The U.N.
debate is over such basics as. "Should it exist?"
and. If so. "Should the United States pump In
better than a third o f its budget?" and, "D oes the
United Nations have to be based in New York
C ity ? "
Many Am ericans lean toward a " n o " on all three
counts. Never mind, we felt a warm spot for
Llchcnstcln as he grappled with the latest U.N.
flare-up. His fellow U.N. diplomats began making
noises about the desirability o f the United States
as a base for the U.N.'s activities. Lichensteln
responded that he and his friends at the U.S.
mission would be "d ow n at the dockside w aving
you a farewell as you sail Into the sunset."
The casus belli for the uproar was the decision o f
New York Gov. Mario Cuom o and New Jersey Gov.
Tom Kean not to allow Andrei G rom yko to enter
their airports on a Soviet Aeroflot Jet. This,
according to the Soviet Union and Its team o f
dancing cubs at the United Nations, constitutes a
flagrant violation o f a treaty guaranteeing U.N.
personnel reasonable access to and from Its
deliberations.
Actually. G rom yko was welcom e to take any o f
several alternative routes. U.S. officials made It
quite clear he could enter via one o f several
m ilitary bases near New York — G rom yko's usual
route, in fact, because o f the relative ease o f
providing security. T his m ight not have been his
preferred route, but as U.S. Am bassador Jeane
Kirkpatrick pointed out recently on Nightline,
nothing In the aforem entioned treaty guarantees
Soviet diplom ats the right to land an y tim e any
place on any airline they choose. Nobody was
goin g to shoot G rom yko out o f the sky. and.
Kirkpatrick added, he must adm it that travel
arrangem ents and everythin g else are a lot freer
for a Soviet diplomat here than they arc in his
home country. Besides, isn’ t It G rom yko and his
governm ent that have been loudly proclaim ing the
right o f all nations to regulate activity over their
"sacred territory?"
W hatever your reading of the Soviet assertion
that Cuomo and Kean violated an International
treaty — and S oviet com m ent on treaty-breaking
is the rough equivalent o f testim ony on w ire­
tapping from Gordon Llddy — the follow-up has
been some serious debate on the very serious
question o f what to do about the United Nations.
. T h e custom ary defense o f the United Nations
that " w e need som ep lace fo r dialogue and
com m unication" begs the question o f whether the
United Nations, at least In its present form and
circumstance. Is or is not the correct place. Burton
Pines, heading up an extensive study o f the United
Nations for the Heritage Foundation, argues that
from the evidence available, the United Nations
has raised more tensions than It has eased, caused
more wars than It has stopped, and served mainly
as a staging ground (conveniently located In the
m edia capital o f the world) for anti-American and
anti-Israeli passions.
Given the spirited leadership Kirkpatrick has
shown, w e Join her In reservations about writing
the organlztion o ff com pletely. Perhaps the United
N a tio n s ca n d o s o m e g o o d , e x p e r ie n c e
notwithstanding. But we wouldn’ t mind seeing the
U.S. contribution trim m ed a little bit. Or the size o f
the Soviet mission, which serves m ainly as a
handy base for snatching technology and setting
up Interview’s o f Soviet propagandists with the
world press.
Perhaps the best suggestion for reform cam e
from Am bassador Kirkpatrick herself: Have the
United Nations spend six months o f the year in
N ew York, the other six months in Moscow*. That
would give many o f the third W orlders who so
adm ire Stalinism in the abstract a chance to see ft
up close. W orking out the airline schedules m ight
be a little difficult, but w e'd suggest the diplomats
travel by train or boat anyway. You get to see
m ore o f the countryside, and as we all now know',
it’s a lot safer than ilylng.

BERRY'S WORLD

uled to film the entire program, editing It .
to a 30-minute show for later broadcasting. '
The bar will open for the event at 7 p.m.
and guests will go into the dining room at
7:55 p.m. "Something will be going on all
night." he said, noting a magician will be
going from table to table balancing a sword
on the tip of a knife blade with a tray of
wine glasses.
And an actor brought over from England
will be performing as the English bard.
The grand finale will be a sword fight
between two Knights using authentic
medieval swords.
A six-course meal will be served and
entertainment will continue all night.
Brantley said.
Tickets can be obtained from Jim
Weinberg o f the Wall Street Co. by calling :
669-8200 or by calling Jim Stelllng at
628-5454 or 830-1971.

SCIENCE WORLD

WASHINGTON WORLD

Taking A j
Lesser Job
Destructive

Philippines
Big Choice
For Reagan
By E. Michael Myers
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President
Reagan's decision to visit Uie Philip­
pines In November will be based on the
outcome of violent political struggles
being waged in the streets of Manila.
The demonstrations against the re­
gime of President Ferdinand Marcos
have cost more than 10 lives. The
crackdown by his security forces shows
no sign of easing, and Reagan's security
dominates all other considerations In
allowing the one-day visit.

Reagan's possible reluctance to leave
town If Congress Is still In session
notwithstanding, chaos In the strccta.of
Manila or a poor security environment
will be the basts of the Judgment on
going ahead with the visit or canceling
It.
It's understood the visit could not go
forward if the Marcos regime Is defi­
nitely Implicated In the assassination of
opposition leader Benlgno Aquino, or If
It blocks an objective investigation of his
murder.
The administration wants to avoid
any action that would further weaken
Marcos If a verdict is still out on his
regime's possible role In Aquino's death.
And a premature, poorly reasoned
cancellation, without a definitive answer
on Marcos’ complicity, could still
amount to a Judgment of culpability.
Another consideration is the vital U.S.
security Interests In the Philippines.
Clark Air Base and the Subic Bay naval
facility. These bases are strategic Amer­
ican assets along the sea and air lanes of
Asia. No longer does the .United States
have such assets In Vietnam — they are
ports to the Soviet navy now
A Reagan visit to the Philippines can
be Judged by Marcos's opposition as
American support to the embattled
leader. If an anti-American regime
ultimately comes to power in the
Philippines. Clark Air Base and Subic
Bay may go with Marcos.
The United States has seen this
before. President Carter's administra­
tion supported the dictatorial shah so
long that support doomed any chance of
possible accommodation with the radi­
cal Islamic revolution that seized control
of Iran.
Yeare of support for the Somoza
regime In Nicaragua, despite Carter's
condemnation of his human rights
record, helped poison relations between
Washington and Managua and opened
the way for a Cuban and Soviet
presence on the mainland.
Washington Has expressed its con­
fidence that the Marcos government will
properly Investigate the death o f
Aquino, shot to death by a reputed
criminal on his arrival at Manila Aug. 21
after three years of exile In the United
States.
But that's not the decisive factor In
Reagan's visit.
If the Marcos government could not
protect a popular opposition leader who
placed himself in Its security, some
people ask how can It guarantee the
safety o f the president o f the United
States.

WILLIAM RUSHER

A Look At Lebanon
NEW YORK (NEA) — Every few years,
as events In the Middle East take some
new and arresting turn, I devote' a
column to reminding my readers of
certain enduring truths about that
tormented region. The time has come, it
seems pretty clear, to do It again.
|
Let me begin, then, by restating the
most fundamental and most unpalata­
ble truth of them all: There can be no
peace In the Middle East until and
u n le s s one o f the w o r ld 's tw o
superpowers — the United States or the
Soviet Union — prevails over the other
In their contest for world hegemony.
Pending that development, there can
o n ly be a p ro lo n g e d stalem a te,
punctuated by outbreaks of bloodshed.
All else — the Camp David Agreement,
etc.— Is a chimera.
The underlying problem is that the
Middle East is a classic Instance of the
situation, envisaged by Oliver Wendell
Holmes Jr., in which "two groups of
people want to make inconsistent kinds
of worlds." The Israelis believe that they
are entitled, by the gift of God Himself,
to possession of historical Palestine. The
Palestinian Arabs, now largely ousted
and dispersed among neighboring Arab
states, dispute this and insist upon
returning to their ancestral lands —
which, by virtue of their numbers and
fertility, they would inevitably soon
dominate. In such a situation. Holmes
concluded. "I see no remedy but force."
The force of the state of Israel,
deployed by Its own able and de­
termined citizenry. Is supplied in the
last analysis by the government of the
United States, which has two major
Interests at stake In the region: a frank
sympathy for the Zionist cause, fueled,
of course, by the Intense preoccupation

o f many Jewish voters with the Issue
but also by the stout support of such
Christian fundamentalists as Jerry
Falwcll. and the grim knowledge that
loss of access to the Middle East's oil
ficjtfA wout,d bring the economies of our
European and Fur Eastern allies to their
knees overnight.
The force of Israel's enemies, de­
ployed by the PLO and various Arab
states sympathetic to its cause, is
derived, at various moves from the
Soviet Union, which enjoys being on the
papular side of this issue In the eyes of
world opinion (attested by any vote In
the UN General Assembly). In addition,
the demographics of the region heavily
favor the Arabs over the long run, Israel
being far smaller In population and.
relatively speaking, shrinking.
The obscure and complex battle now
raging in Lebanon is at bottom Just
another skirmish In the ongoing ArabIsraeli conflict, though no doubt the
various Lebanese factions currently
doing most of the dying think they are
serving local causes of their own. The
basic question at Issue Is which side
shall control central Lebanon. Syria,
backed by the Soviet Union, claims it.
because Syria never really accepted the
independence o f Lebanon and considers
the area Its own. Israel, supported by
the United States, much prefers to leave
It in the hands of some Christian (and
therefore anll-Syrian| local government
willing lo live at peace with Israel. The
danger Is that, if the Lebanese govern­
ment we arc presently backing col­
lapses. Israel and Syria will be drawn
Into direct conflict. In that case, the two
superpowers would have to Impose
some sort of settlement, lest they get
dragged into conflict themselves with
Incalculable consequences.

By Lidia Wasowicx
UPI Science W riter
ANAHEIM. Calif. (UPI) - People
forced by the nation's sagging economy
Into Jobs for which they are overqualified may suffer even greater de­
spair than those with no Jobs at all,
psychologists say.
"The unemployment rate Is the tip of
the Iceberg." said H.G. Kaufman,
director of the Research Program In
Science, Technology and Human Re­
sources at the Polytechnic Institute In
New York.
" O v e r the n ex t d e c a d e s , u n ­
deremployment Is going to be a problem
that could threaten the very tabrlc of
our society. About one-fifth of all
workers who have completed college are
In subprofesslonal positions — sales,
clerical or even blue collar."
Figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics show 708.000 people with
four or more years of college were out of
work In March. While In 1971. the
bureau p red icted som e 650,000
engineering Jobs would be available by
1980, only some 534,000 actually were.
That left as many as one in five
engineering graduates who had based
their career choice on the optimistic
predictions looking for Jobs that weren't
there, the psychologists said.
"There woo a prevalent feeling among
the people In the study that their skills
aren 't being ta p p e d ." researcher
Charlene Dcpner said.
Professionals appear most likely to
experience severe stress when they lose
their Job, said Kaufman, who has
written a book on the subject.
Career setbacks appear to have the
most devastating effect on males and
female heads of households, 30 to 40
years old. highly educated, nonreligious and from disadvantaged
backgrounds.
The underemployed are most likely to
become political activists, demanding
radical social changes — both liberal
and conservative, Kaufman said.
"For professional workers, becoming
underemployed may serve not only to
further psychological deterioration but
also to create a new source of stress.
This stress may lead to non-work coping
behaviors Involving political or union
activism to satisfy needs for esteem and
fulfillment."
Typically, the out-of-work professional
passes through four phases In six
months: shock and resentment; Intense
Job hunting; high stress and emotional
Instability; and loss of motivation and
resignation.
" I f deterioration is to be kept at a
minimum, professionals should become
re-employed before the end of stagd
two." Kaufman said.
Blacks, whose unemployment rate Is
usually twice that of whites, fact*
different psychological problems, said
Phillip Bowman of the University of
Michigan's Institute for Social Research,
Discouraged by the poor Job market!
many blacks have low self-esteem,
"general life dissatisfaction" and a
sense of helplessness, he said.

JACK ANDERSON

PLO Is Fighting Again In Lebanon
WASHINGTON — Intercepted radio
messages extinguish any doubts that
may still linger about the participation
of the Palestine Liberation Organization
in the recent assault upon the Lebanese
government.
The defeated PLO forces that Presi­
dent Reagan rescued from the Israeli
onslaught a year ago — the same troops
that Marines escorted safely out of
Lebanon from under Israeli guns — are
now back. No one doubts Ihey'U soon be
firing at their Marine benefactors if the
ceasefire breaks down as expected.
Out of the guerrilla-infested moun­
tains overlooking the Marine positions
have come terse radio calls from PLO
u n its. T h e m essages have been
monitored, and my associate Luccttc
Lagnado has seen the transcripts. Here
are a few typical excerpts:

"It's one of those new talking dock radios!
Don 't you LOVE it? "

Those who have accepted Invitations are
L.A. "Skip" Bafalis, the GOP's gubernato­
rial candidate in 1982 and a former
congressman, as well as U.S. Rep. Bill
McCollum, R-Altamonte Springs who will
be master of ceremonies: U.S. Sen. Paula
Hawkins: state Sens. Toni Jennings of
Orfando and Dick Langley of Clermont;
state Reps. Carl Sclph of Casselberry and
Art G rin dlc o f A ltam on te Springs;
Seminole Sheriff John Polk and John
Evans of Channel 2.
Unable to find any place large enough for
a sit down dinner In Seminole County,
B r a n t l e y 's c a m p a ig n te a m s a id
Shakespeare’s on Church Street with a
capacity o f 420 for a sit down dinner was
selected, and it looks like at least that
many will be attending, Brantley said.
In addition, Brantley said OrangeSeminole Cablcvlslon is tentatively sched­

— "Our forces arc grouping ... We are
on the International Road to Damascus,
and we are chasing the Lebanese forces
towards Souk el GharL City."
— "Our forces are participating in the
fight that Is taking place in the
mountain side by Bide with the PSP
(Druze militia).’*
— "W e need more personnel...It is

very urgent to support the fight in
Bhamdoun City." And later: “ Our role
In the fight In Bhamdoun was extremely
appreciated and the morale Is very
high."
The story of the great turnaround In
Lebanon Is told in documents that have
been heavily classified. The CIA foresaw
the Israeli Incursion Into Lebanon and
urged "that the agency should provide
military and financial assistance" to the
Christian Phalanglst militias. The
purpose of this, pure and simple, was to
block Israel from establishing a pro
Israeli government In Lebanon.
"Should these militias remain solely
dependent on Israeli support," the CIA
argued, "the U.S. will forfeit all influ­
ence In a post-lncurslon environment,
with the likely result of suppression ol
the Moslem communities and expulsion
of the Palestinians."
Reagan &amp; Co. adopted the CIA
recommendation and, (hereafter, outbid
the Israelis for (he loyalty of the
Christian Phalanglsts. When the Israelis
struck last year as was predicted.
Reagan Intervened. The rout of the PLO
forces had been all but consummated
when U.S. pressure halted the Israeli
advance.

For a historic moment, the president
had It within his power to command
events. He could have allowed the
Israelis to complete their mop-up, crush
the PLO. chase the Syrians out of
Lebanon and establish a solid, proWestern government In Beirut.
But Secretary of State George Shultz,
who had come to the State Department
from doing business with the Arab
world, was determined lo keep Lebanon
out of Israel's clutches. He persuaded
the president to send Philip Habib to the
Mlddlp East to negotiate a settlement.
Shultz and Habib were magnificently
confident, serene in their special Insight
Into the Arab mind. All they had to do,
they thought, was to pressure the
Israelis lo withdraw. Then Syria's Pres­
ident Hafez Assad would cheerfully
agree to end his long occupation of
eastern Lebanon.
Meanwhile, they would set up In
Beirut a government that would be
pro-American but acceptable to the
Arab world, because It would be free of
Israeli taint.
Who would keep order In Lebanon
until the new regime was strong enough

'
I

to govern? Shultz arranged to send *n
the Marines as part of an international
peace-keeping force. Their stay would
be short, he promised.
But underlings tried to warn that
Assad would not pull his troops out.
that a durable Lebanese government
could not be patched together with
diplomatic glue and that this turbulent
piece of earth would wind up as a U.S.
protectorate.
The underlings — all of them experts
at the International chess game — made
another point: There was only oric
military force In the Middle East power­
ful enough, they said, to block SovietSyrian designs. That was the Israeli
army.
The alternative was to leave the U.S.
Marines In Lebanon indefinitely and risk
being dragged Into a Vietnnm-style war.
The president listened to Shultz, and
the Marines are being pulled Into a
bloody bog.
Footnote: Now the administration has
reversed Its position, begging Israel to
stay, not to leave, while telling Congress
that the Lebanese army is not so strong
after all. and needs more American
support.

�Evening Herald, Senfard, FI.

F riday, Sept. 30, 1*13—t A

mericcTs Rich Get Richer; Forbes Lists Top Fortunes
niiinn i ° iK
~ America has at least 15
ri .
; ,lw? more [M n ln 1982&lt;stahdlng at the apex
l125 mUHon
400
rich wlt*1 *°rtunrs ° r niorc than
Inlnnt u S ’ conrUlslon of Fdrbea magazine's second
“ te 1983 Forbes Four Hundred, which
a year and an expenditure of 8250.000 to compile.
' rnlSl y™ r s 1,81 *ncludcd superrlch with only S100
Bullion, but a boisterous bull market has multiplied so
fliany or the nation's lop fortunes that It now tnkes $125
till on to make the list. Some 116 on the list enjoyed at
^ast a 50 percent increase In their fortunes In the past
2 months.
K

(

•Take Sam M. Walton of Bentonvlllc. Ark., for Instance,
lie was 19th on the Forbes list In 1982 and has risen to
Dc the second richest man In the country, his $690
(Million worth of stock In the Wal-Mart discount store
enaln having more than tripled In value within the year.
It s almost unbelievable.*’ says Walton, who still

drives a beat-up Chevrolet or a pickup truck from his
modest home to the bank although he Is the possessor or
an estimated 82.15 million. Walton started In business
In 1945 and like most of the other superrlch, his fortune
Is essentially new money.
Almost half of America's big rich come from New
York. California, or Texas (Midland. Tex., pop. 70.000
Including scores of millionaires. Is the richest per capita
city InthcU.S.J.
Chief sources of their wealth are real estate, oil amd
media properties, although fugitive financier Robert
Vesco made the list by stealing 8224 million.
According to Forbes' calculations, the richest man In
America Is Gordon Peter Getty. 49. an amateur
composer and pianist with $2.2 billion to support his
hobbles. The fourth son of the late oil tycoon John Paul
Getty replaced shipping nabob Daniel K. Ludwig, wh6
headed the list with somewhat over 82 billion in 1982.

Ludwig. 86, still has $2 billion and Is the third richest
American but his fortune took too serious a beating In n
failed Amazon Jungle paper pulp venture lo grow with
the bull market. Financial setbacks accounted for many
of the 74 dropouts from the 1982 list. Including Las
Vegas casino owner Moc Dalltz and filmmaker George
Lucas (Return o f the Jcdl) who surrendered part of his
business In a divorce settlement.
Old wealth almost got lost In the rcshufllng of the
nation's assets. David Rockefeller's grandfather, John D.
Rockefeller Sr., was listed by Forbes In a 1918 survey as
the richest man In the country with $1.2 billion. David is
12th on the list of billionaires with a net worth estimated
at over 81 billion. His only surviving brother. Laurar.cc.
Is 22nd on the list with $650 million.
There arc several spectacular success stories behind
the names on the list but none more Impressive than
that of Kyupin Philip Hwang.
Hwang. 46. who emigrated from North Korea with

H e a lth
NEW YORK (UP1) — Complications
from birth control pills kill 500 American
women each year and hospitalize
thousands more, but the contraceptive
method Is still less risky than pregnancy,
a new report says.
Making Choices, a study of the hazurds
and benefits of contraception, said
bhlldbcaring Is more dangerous than any
cuircntly available birth control method.
The only exception Is the use or the pill
by women over 40 and by women over
35 who smoke.
The report estimated 30 women die
annually from complications of tubal
sterilization. 30 from use of Intrauterine
devices, and 15 from (rouble linked to
abortions.
• Deaths from pill use could be cut to
about 70 if no pill users smoked and If
none took the pill after her 35th
birthday, said Dr. Howard W. Ory.

t

Almost as dramatic is the success of Leslie Hi Wrxncr.
a 46-year-old Ohio clothing retailer who has been ,n
business less than 20 years. He owns a 900-store chain.
The Limited. Inc., valued at $541 million, but he Isn't
completely satisfied.
"I liked It better when I was Just another guy from
Columbus. Ohio." he said.
Forbes listed Its owner. Malcolm S. Forbes. 64. as No.
400 on the list because Forbes claims he doesn't know
an accurate figure or what Forbes magazine is worth,
although '1 will say I'm happy with how I’m fixed," The
Wall Street Journal has estimated Forties' fortune at
$200 million.

Calendar

’ BirthControl Pills Kill 500 Am ericans Every Year

i

850. swabbed dishes In a California casino to lluancc
college, and founded TelcVkfco Systems Inc. In 1975 In
his garage. Hwang went public last March, his shares In
TelcVldco soared to a worth of $575 million, and he
became a newcomer on the Forbes list.

epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease
Control and an author of the report, paid
for by the Commonwealth Fund, the
Rockefeller Foundation and Needmor
Fund and published by The Alan
Gultmachcr Institute — a research
affiliate of Planned Parenthood Federa­
tion of America.
Overall. Ory and associates estimated
54,000 of 14.6 million women who use
the pill or IUD or who obtain abortions or
tubal sterilizations have major com­
p lic a tio n s associated w ith those
methods.
Dy comparison, the report said, each
year about 60.000 of the 3 million
sexually active women who do not want
to get pregnant but use no birth control
method have Caesarean sections or
ectopic pregnancies, two major com­
plications of pregnancy and birth.
More than half of all American couples

want no more than two children and
most women, as a result, spend an
average of 25 lo 30 years of their lives
trying to avoid pregnancy, the report
said.
If health were the only consideration, a
woman's safest course would be to start
with the pill and continue with that
method for four years (to get maximum
protection against ovarian cancer), have
the number of children she desires by
her mld-20s. and then persuade her
husband to have a vasectomy, the
authors said.
The report also said:
-Pill-related deaths arc offset by the
drug’s prevention of an estimated 850
ovarian cancer deaths each year.
—An estimated 9.600 IUD users arc
hospitalized annually due to complica­
tions from lUDs, the most common being
pelvic Inflammatory disease.
—Complications from sterilization.

surgical and permanent birth control
causes additional hospitalization for
32.000 women annually.
—Some 5.000 of the 1.6 million who
obtain legal abortions each year suffer
major complications.
The report said about 0.1 percent of all
pill users have major complications each
year, as do 0.4 percent of IUD users. 4.5
percent o f those o b tain in g tubal
sterilizations, and 0.3 percent of those
having abortions.

FRIDAY. SEPT. 30
17-92 Group A A. 8 p.m.. Messiah Lutheran Church.
Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road. Casselberry.
Wckiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m.. Wcklva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. nt Wcklva Springs Road. Closed.
Lnngwond AA, 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian Church.
SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same lime and place.
Tanglcwood AA, 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church, Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same time and
place.
Sanford AA. Step, 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Closed.
SATUR D AY, OCT. 1

Seminole County Farm Bureau barbecue qnd annual
meeting. 6:30 p.m., Sanford Civic Center.

Sanford AA. open discussion, 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Sanford Women's AA. 2 p m., closed, 1201 W. First
Ory and the other authors. Dr. Jac­ St.
Winter Springs Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5405
queline D. Forrest and Richard Lincoln
of the Gultmachcr Institute, said In­ and Auxiliary celebrate first anniversary of new post h
formation in Making Chalet s will enable ome with festivities starting at 2 p.m.. 420 N. Edgcmon
women to make Informed choices about Ave. Buffet, sing-a-long and dancing to music by Les
birth control at different stages of their Landrum (8-mldnight).
IDEA ART HI outdoor art show, begins at 10 a.m..
reproductive lives.
Crealdc Arts. Inc.. 600 St. Andrews Blvd.. next to Alonta
The S6 report Is available by mall from Center. Winter Park. Coffeehouse, 9 p.m.
the Alan Gultmachcr Institute. 360 Park
Lake Mary' High School Booster Club Monte Carlo
Avc. South. New York. N.Y. 10010.
Night, 7-11:30 p.m.. Eastmontc Civic Center. Altamonte
Springs. Open to public 19 and older.
Goldcnrod Craft Fair and Flea Market Bazaar.
Goldcnrod Civic Center. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.. one block
south of Aloma Avenue on Palmetto Avenue.
Youth Rally featuring the musical. "Drcamln"* by
that might compromise the health of
First Baptist Church of Sanlando Springs Youth Choir. 7
your baby and that Includes marijuana."
p.m., sanctuary of First Baptist Church. Altamonte
she said.
She said a recent survey of pregnancy Springs. 887 E. Altamonte Ave. Open to public.
clinics in three cities found that about 15
SUNDAY, OCT. 2
percent of women used marijuana while
Sanford Big Book A a . 7 p.m., open discussion. Florida
pregnant.
Power &amp; Light building. N. Myrtle Avenue.

• Pregnant Moms Who Sm oke M ay Damage Children

BOSTON |UP1) — Women who smoke
marijuana while pregnant — as many as
15 percent — may risk causing birth
defects ln their babies. Including ab­
normal facial features and stunted
nervous system development.
"W e believe that the marijuana may

have a toxic effect on the fetus," said Dr.
Doris Milman of Downstate Medical
Center of the State University of New
York In Brooklyn. "It seems an awful lot
to risk to smoke marijuana."
She reported In the New England
Journal o f Medicine that children whose

Legol Notice

REALTY TRANSFERS
Robert E. Jetob Jr., A Pamela to
Robert L, D evil Jr,,A w t Martha. lo t
*4. Blk B. Groan wood L atte Un. I,
*47,500
Willi* A trill* M at William* to
Honry A Coro Lm Bredly. L oti I A 4.
Blk F, Watt Sonford R tilty Co. S/D.
15.000
S.C.B. Corp. to Robert B Engel A
wt Ruth S , Lot 152. Spring* Lending
‘Un 4. I 1M.J00
Alvo J. Fl*th#r A hb Nathan to
Raymond R Swier A wt Nancy, Lot
11. Blk E. SwMtwatar Oak*. Sac. I.

JII*.000

• Jama* M. Rladtl A Linda T. to
Jama* M Ftrguton A wt Lorraine.
Lot 2, Prairl* Lake E t t t . *121.000
&gt; Ma uric* J. SI mm* A wt AIINon to
(tarry Q Llvttay A wt M J*an. Lot

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISS IONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 200 el the Samlnoi* County
Courlhoute. Sanlord. Florida, on
October 11. 1*42 at 7:00 P M , or a*
won th»r*att*r a* potllbla. to con
*ld*r a SPECIFIC LAND USE
AMENDMENT to the Samlnoi*
County Comprehensive P&gt;tn and
REZONING ot tht datcrload pro
party.
• AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
ORDINANCE
77 21
WHICH
AMENDS THE DETAILED LAND
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM: LOW
INTENSITY
URBAN/PHESERVATION
TO:
UOW
DENSITY
RESIDENTIAL
FOR THE PURPOSE OF REZON
INC FROM: A l AGRICULTURE
TO: R-IAAA SINGLE FA M ILY
DWELLING DISTRICT. Ih* follow
fog deterIbad property.
The W 1/2 ot NE 1/4 ot SW 1/4 arid
the NE 1/4 ot It * NW 1/4 ot the SW
1/4 ot Section 25 70S 2*E and the Sly
500 f**t of the W 1/2 ot ttw NW 1/4 ol
Section 25 20S 2*E lying Ea*t of SR
400 and the Wly M Ft. o l Ih* SE 1/4
of Ih* NW 1/4 ol Sac. IS JOS 2*E.
Seminole County. Florida Contltllng
ol 47 acre* MOL I Further dawrlbad
a* North ol Grace Laka. on the N and
S ild e o lD lio n Road I (D IS T .&gt;21
APPLICATIO N
HAS
BEEN
SUBMITTED BY: ELLSWORTH
GALLIMORE
. Further, th* PLANNING AND
’ ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold *
! public hearing In Room 200 ol th*
Seminole County Courthou**. San
lord. Florida, on Sapt. 7, lt d . at 7:00
-p .M - or at toon thereafter a*
poulblt. to review, hear comment*
- end make recommendation* to the
'Board ol County Commluloner* an
(he above captioned ordinance and
reioning
Additional Information may be
obtained by conlacllng the Land
Management Manager at 1114110.
Eat. 1*0
Perw n* unable lo attend the
Rearing who with to comment on th*
proposed action* may r,*&gt;m!l written
Hat*menu to th* Land Management
Divlilon prior to th* scheduled public
rlng. Perton* appearing al th*
ring* may submit written »lateman!* or be heard orally.
Per ton* ere advltad that, II they
decide to appeal * « y tkcliton mad*
'at the** m wling*. they will need a
-record ol the proceeding*, and, lor
tuch pur put*, they may need lo
bnture that a verbatim record ol Ih*
proceedingi li mad*, which record
Include* the testimony and evidence
upon which th* appeal l* lo be bawd
Bo*fd of County CocnmISSlfiftifI
Samlnoi# County, Florida
By: SandraGlonn, Chairman
A Haft: Arthur H. Bockwlth. Jr.
Publish: Augvt! 22 A Saplambar 14,
-J4.IW1

C

MK-fl

111. W tklva Hunt Clip Fo« Hunt Sac.
Anl’la John*.A hb .‘ bate to'Bonnl*
R. Walton, trull Lot 14. Brook
Hollow. 174.400
Wanda J. Smith to Sam Rangan
than A Ra|lnl, Lot 24 River Run, Sac.
Thrta. f 14.*00.

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUITCOURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
41-445 CP Fll*Number
IN RE: ESTATE OF
JAMES RALPH TAYLOR.
Dec** tad
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST
THE ABOVE ESTATE AND ALL
OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED
IN THE ESTATE:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
thn th* administration ot th* above
ettet* end File Number It pending In
th* Circuit Court tor Seminole
County. Florida. Probata Division,
th* eddreit ot which It Seminole
County Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida
11771. Th* personal representative ol
th* estate It NELL TAYLOR
BAKER, whose address I* 411
Parkwood
Avenue.
Altamonte
Springs. Florida 12701 Th* name and
addrn t ol th* personal repr*
senlahv*'* attorney a t* w t forth
below.
All parsons having claims or de­
mands against th* (state are re
qulred.
W ITHIN
THREE
ID
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, lo III* with th* clerk
ot Ih* above court a written state­
ment ot any clelm or demand they
may have Each clelm must be In
writing and must Indicate the basis
tor th* claim, th* name and address
ol tha creditor or his egenl or
attorney, and Ih* amo.nl claimed. It
th* claim Is not yet due. th* dal*
when It will become due shall be
stated. It th* claim I* contingent or
unliquidated, the nature ol Ih* un­
certainty shall be siatad. II Ih* claim
I* secured, th* security shall be
described Th* claimant shall deliver
sufficient copies ol th* claim to th*
Clark lo enable th* clerk lo mall on*
copy lo each personal repr*
sentative.
All persons Interested In th* ettet*
to whom a copy ol thl* Nolle* ol
Administration has been mailed are
required. W ITHIN THREE
(11
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, le til* any ob|tctlont
they may have that challenge tha
validity ol the decedent's will, th*
qualifications ol tha personal repr*
senlallve. or the venue or jurisdic­
tion of Ih* court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANOS. ANO
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Oat* ol th* llr*t publication ol this
Notice -&gt;1 Administration: September
71.1143
i Nell Taylor Baker
A* Personal Representative
ol Ihe above Estate
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
FRIEDMAN A FRIEDMAN
By: J. Oon Friedman
P O .B o iN I
127 West Church Avenue
Longwood. Florida 3275C
Ttlaphon*. (K D 414 7474
Publish September 73. X. 1441
DEL 122

f OW IH E

HE V I

TV SERVICE
C A t l M i l LE HV
ph

u i cm

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL C ltC U IT
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CIVS) Adten N e.i 4 M 4 4 P C A 4 **.'!
BANKERS
MORTGAOE
COR­
PORATION, etc..
Plaintiff.

mothers smoked pot during pregnancy
may suffer s)ow development of their
nervous systems, abortiormal facial
features and other minor defects at birth
— some of which could be permanent.
"Our advice to pregnant women is not
to take anything — a drug or alcohol —

S e m in o le C o u n ty F o o tb a ll
W o t c h f o t i t in
-. ?

| -in

&gt;&lt; *’

'

lt* »u m i

.tili.&lt; 4Sj II u li o l .1

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vs

C H AU NCE YL.TAYLO R It.at ui.
Da fondants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:
CHAUNCEY L TAYLOR II and
LINDA J. TAYLOR, hll WIN
RESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that Ml
action to foreclow a mortgage on th*
following property In Seminole
County, Florida.
Lot lit . SUNRISE UNIT TW OA.
according to th* Plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 23. Pag* II.
Public Records ot Seminole County.
Florid*.
has bean fllad against you end you
are required to serve a copy ol your
written delentn. II any, to It on Pawl
F. Bryan. Swann A Haddock, P.A.,
Plaintiff's attorney, whow mailing
address Is P.O. Box 7434. Orlando,
Florida 37* 54. on or be tor# th* 12th
day ol October, 1*41. end III* th*
original with the Clerk ol this Court
either before service on Plaintiffs
attorney or Immediately thereafter;
otherwlw a default will be entered
against you tor th* relNt demanded
In th* complaint or petition.
WITNESS my hand end the w al ot
this Court on September 4.1*41.
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH, Jr.
CLERK
OF THE COURT
By: Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Swann and Haddock, P.A.
400 Court land Street,
Suit* 400
P.O. Box TWO.
Orlando. Florida 22454
Publish September t, 14.22.20.1*41
DEL 44______________ _______________
F kittle vs Name
Nolle* It hereby given that we are
engaged In business at P O. Box lot.
Sanlord.
Fla.
12771,
SemlnoN
County, Florida under th* fictitious
nem* of SOUTHERN RENTALS,
and that we Intend to register said
name with th* Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, SemlnoN County. Florid* In
accordance with th* provisions ol the
Fklltlout Nam* Statutes, to Wit:
Section 145 Of Florida 5la lutes m i .
/t/ Mary Ann* Jarrell
/t/ C iw y Jarrell
/t/W.W. Fox
Publish September (. 1*, 21.10.1*41.
DEL-45___________________________
FIctltNvs Nam*
Notice N hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 220 Longwood
Hills Road. Longwood. Samlnoi*
County, Florida under Ih* lictlllous
name ol STAR ROOFING AND
PAINTING CONTRACTORS, and
that I Inland to register said name
with tha CHrk el tha Circuit Courl,
SemlnoN County, Florida In ac­
cordance with tha provisions ol th*
Fktltlou* Nam* SfaluNs. to Wit:
Section 445 0* Florida Statutes 1*41.
I\i Thomas Philip Costa
Publish September 14, 21, 20 A
October 7,1*41.
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The race for the Five Star Conference football title Is wide open as county teams
begin the fourth week of action. Seminole's stunning upset of Lake Howell last
week created a fervor ln the conference. Lake Howell had been the favorite of
the coaches In a preseason poll.
Seminole. 2*1. goes for Its third straight win Friday when It travels to
Daytona Beach Mainland. Lake Howell. 2-1. will try to get back on the winning
trail at home against the Injury-riddled DcLand Bulldogs
But the biggest game county-wise will be d Lake Mary where the Hams will
dedicate thetr new stadium against Lyman. Lake Mary. M . looked Impressive
against DcLand In its opener, then got blown away by Lake Brantley last week.
The Patriots. 2-1. are Idle Friday.
Lyman. 1-2. lost two tough games to Metro Conference foes Boone and
Colonial. The Greyhounds handled Lake Brantley between the two losses.
Oviedo, meanwhile, will try to even Its record* at 2-2 at home against
Leesburg. The Lions whipped St. Cloud last Friday.
Evening Herald Sports Editor Sam Cook will have all the action on the Lake
Mary-Lyman clash while Sports Writer Chris Flster will cover the action
between Seminole and Mainland at Daytona Beach.
Catch It all ln Sunday's E\rnlng Herald - the only complete sports section In
Seminole County.

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Evening Herald
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

�J

6A—Evening

Tribe Goes
After No. 3
At Mainland

R a m s C h ris te n
N e w S ta d iu m

Qll

By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor
OFFENSIVE IT A R T E R t
Split end....... .
DAYTONA BEACH - On the
Tackle.......... ....... Keith Brown (71)
■Surface, tonight's 8 o'clock
'game here between Sanford's
Center........... Todd Hlldebran ( » )
Guard............. ....... David Linton (S3)
Fighting Scmlnolcs and the
Tockle.......... ..Charlei Thomai (771
Mainland Bucs nppeurs to be a
Tight end
.. Robbie Brumley (M l
'mismatch. Seminole is 2-1 and
!
Quarterback ....... Mike Futrell (1)
Fullback...... .. Daryl Edgemon (U )
s u r g in g , w in n e r s o f tw o
Halfback......
straight. Mainland Is 0-3 and
Halfback.......
(foundering.
K i c k e r ...
But with a record for the past
DEFENSIVE STARTERS
14 games of 2-12. the Tribe Isn't
End ......... ...Tracy Holloman (JO)
taking any team lightly. And
End.................
Tack It............ ....... Anthony Hall (U )
Mainland, with an 0-3 ledger. Is
Tackle..........
Just dying to win a game, which
Linebacker....
•hi the problem facing Buc coach
Linebacker....
Linebacker.... ..Vince W lllltm i (51)
Bob Wallace.
Cornerback
•'Wc’ rc still hanging in there."
Cornerback... ...Kelvin Roblneon (71)
Said Wallace Thursday. “ A lot
Safety........... ....... Brian Brooke («3)
Safely,.,....... .
o f Inexperience plus a number
Rob Cohen (IS)
o f injuries have put us in a hole.
•But for being 0-3. the kids have
an excellent attitude."
Injuries robbed the Bucs of two starting tailbacks. David Jones
has been hampered by the flu while Quent Dixon suffered a broken
arm. Wallace has tagged defensive backfleld whiz Gary Stansbury
(no. 27) as their replacement, but he doesn't have the speed of
either. Defensively, tackle Buck Dobbins fno. 77. 6-0, 200),
linebackers George Clark (no. 51. 5-9, 180) and Leroy Galnous (no.
56.5-10.180) have been the best Buc defender.
The Bucs live and die on the arm and legs of senior quarterback
Eric Childs. "Eric is the best athlete on the team." said Wallace
about the 6-0. 170-pounder. "W e've been relying on him to pull Us
through. If he gets time to throw, he can throw It well."
But he hasn't had the time during the first three games, and the
way the Scmlnolcs' defense has been pressuring the QB. he might
not have it tonight either.
"Eric has had to scramble a lot because the protection Just hasn't
been there." said Wallace. "I'm hoping we'll be able to throw the
ball effectively Friday. If the protection holds up. we'll be all tight."
Although Wallace Is Impressed with his QB's arm. Seminole
coach Jerry Posey Is more impressed with the legs.
"I'm not so much scared of his passing as his running." said
Posey. "When he starts scrambling around back there. It scares the
daylights o f m e."
Daylight, nevertheless, is something defensive coordinator Dave
Mosurc hopes his band of 11 Indians won't give Childs. Mosure will
lny much of the responsibility for the elusive Buccaneer on his
outside linebackers. William Wynn and Vince Williams.
"H e's (Childs) quick with very good speed." said Mosure. "W e'll
change the play of our outside linebackers so that they have more
containment and read hts movements."
Seminole will have 16 'contain Childs without the help of
eornerback Deron Thompson. The hard-hitting Junior was
suspended for school for two days (Thursday and Friday) for a
classroom-related discipline incident. Thompson, who Is fifth in the
county with 18 tackles and four assists, will be replaced by Junior
Charlie Smith.
“ It's hard to tell how much It (Thompson's absence) will effect
us." said Mosure. "Smith covers the comer pretty well and can
contain, but he's not the pass defender Thompson is."
Outside of Thompson, the rest of the defense Is Intact and Tim
Lawrence Is the only offensive player hurting. The 5-10 senior Is
still hobbled by an ankle injury and Daryl Edgemon will against
' start at fullback. Lawrence, though, will see a lot of action.
The defense Is led by middle linebacker Ed Rlnkavage and
defensive tackle Bryan Debose. Rlnkavage played up to potential In
last week's upset of Lake Howell, making an Incredible 15 solo
tackles and helping out on three others. For his efforts, the
205-pound senior was named Burger King Defensive Player of the
Week and Sanford Optimist Player of the the Week.
Debose. a 5-6. 166-pounder, has been 1983's pleasant surprise.
'"W e always knew Bryan w’as quick." said Posey. "But he's
surpriced us with his strength. He actually whips big kids. On more
than one occasion. Debose has grabbed players much bigger than
him and Just thrown them down."
Which may be one reason the Junior mltey mite is leading the
county In sacks with six and Is third with 19 tackles and six
assists. *'We figured him as being the type of player who would
shoot the gaps for us." continued Posey. "But he has been
surprising In meeting them head up too. He Just shucks them
aside."
And the Seminoles would be very happy to shuck Mainland aside
tonight. Last Friday's upset over Lake Howell was a big confidence
builder. In fact. Posey said the hardest part of this week's practice
ftas been settling down his excitable boys. "Our biggest problem
Iras been getting them to calm down and get back to work." he
said. "They're got to realize they didn't win a championship or
anything last week, although it was a big win."
Posey said he sees a lot o f the ‘82 Seminoles In Mainland.
"T h ey’re in about the same boat we were last year," he said.
See TRIBE. Page 7A.

A g a in s t L y m a n
By Chrli Filter
Herald Sports Writer
The Lake Mary Rams will
christen their new stadium to­
night in a tough Inter-county
m a t c h u p w it h L y m a n 's
Greyhounds. The new stadium
at Lake Mary High will hold
3.000 spectators on the home
side and about 1.500 on the
visitors side. Lake Mary coach
Harry Nelson Is hoping the fans
will help the Rams forget all
about a 32-6 setback at the
hands o f Lake Brantley last
week. Festivities begin at 7:30
p.m. with the kickoff at 8 p.m.
Lake Mury. which started the
season one week later than
most teams, now slandq at 1-1
for the season and in the Five
Star Conference. On the other
hand. Lyman Is 1-2 and 1-0 in
the conference. Both o f Its
Ned Kolb|ornsen looks for a

victory against Lym an to­
night when the Lake M ary
R am s dedicate their new
stadium.

N e d K o lb jo r n s e n :
T h e L e a d in g R a m
By Chrla Pieter
Herald Sporte Writer
The concensus about Lake Mary's
offensive lineman Ned Kolbjornsen Is
you couldn't run into a nicer guy.
Unless, of course, you play defense for
the opposing team.
"He's isn't blessed with tremendous
ability, but he's a real workhorse."
Lake Mary coach Harry Nelson said of
the 6-1. 230-pound senior center who
Nelson moved to center from tackle
upon taking over the Rams."He’s a

Tonight's G am es
The Five Star Conference football
race heats up tonight with the Lake
Mary-Lyman matchup highlighting
the prep card.
The Rams, 1-1, will dedicate their
new stadium tonight and would like
nothing better than to christen the
3,000 seat structure with a victory
over coach Bill S co tt's Lyman
Greyhounds. Lyman is 1-2, but 1-0 In
conference.
Elsewhere, coach Jerry Posey's
Fighting Seminoles travel to Daytona
Beach for a key Five Star encounter
with 0-3 Mainland. The Bucs lost a
close one to New Smyrna Beach In
their opener, but have since been
blown away by seventh-ranked
Apopka and Spruce Creek. Seminole,
2-1 and 1-0 In the Five Star, will be
looking for its third straight win. The
Tribe upset Lake Howell last week.
The Sliver Hawks, 2-1 and 1-1. will
have Injury-stricken DeLand at
home. Oviedo, 1-2, looks to even Its
record at home against Leesburg.
The Lions outlasted St. Cloud. 27-20,
last week as Burger King Offensive
Player qf the Week Barry Williams
scored three TDs.
In Thursday's lone Five Star game,
Apopka topped Spruce Creek. Coach
Dave Tullls* Lake Brantley Patriots
are Idle tonight after squashing Lake
Mary, 32-6, last week.

topnotch student, and a good school
leader who Is well like by the students
and well respected by the teachers."
While Kolbjornsen (no. 55) has
made quite an Impression on Nelson,
the first-year coach has made a good
impression on Kolbjornsen. "H e's
turned the u’holc team around,”
Kolbjornsen said of Nelson. "W c got
down on ourselves a lot last year, but
coach Nelson has made us believe In
See KOLBJORNSEN. Page

7A.

losses

have conic

to

Metro

Conference teams (Boone and
Colonial).
"Lyman lias excellent runn­
ing backs and very’ good overall
speed on both the offensive and
defensive lines." Nelson said.
"They're stronger than we are
and wc might have the same
problem wc had ngalnst Lake
Brantley."
The Rams were manhandled
a week ago by the rugged
offensive and defensive lines of
the Patriots. Lake Mary gained
under 100 yards rushing while
the Patriots racked up over 300.
Nfclson hopes the experience of
playing a stronger opponent last
week will help the Rams against
Lyman.
' 'W e ’ ve had v e r y g o o d
practices this week." Nelson
said. "W e're In pretty good
shape Injury-wise, and I'm
hoping we'll be up for it emo­
tionally. Being at home will help
a lot. too. The stadium looks
real good."
Offensively, running backs

Football
Scott Underwood. Neal Wcllon
and Charlie Luearclll have all
looked good at times. Underwood leads the Rams with
119 yards rushing on 28 carries
in two games. Wcllon. who
started the season In place of
injured Palt Murray, has carried
17 times for 78 yards while
Lucaretll has picked up 53
yards on 21 carries. The
"Italian Stallion" provided Lake
Mary's only score against the
Patriots with a long kickoff
return.
Sophomore quarterback Ray
Hartsflcld has a good complc
tlon ratio as he has complete*
12 of 17 passes for 116 yard
and has been Intercepted once
Junior wldcout Donald Graysoii
has nabbed six of Hartsflcld'^
12 completions for 85 yards)
Hartsflcld ranks third among
Seminole County quarterback^
and Grayson Is the third-leading
receiver In the county.
Defensively. Tim Curtin ha$
performed well for the Rams as
he leads in tackles with 14 solo$
and four assists. Curtin also ha)
two Interceptions and has rej
covered a fumble (all agalns
DeLand). Junior linebacker Bll
Cnughcll has 10 solo tackle
and five asslstk while defensiv^
end Don M e y e r has lw&lt;f
quarterback sacks.
Although Lyman'j
Greyhounds arc 1-2. they coula
very easily be 3-0. Both losscfr
were by narrow margins. 12-6
to Boone and 20-46 to Colonial.
Lyman was convincing In Its
lone victory. 17-6 over Lake
Brantley.
Offensively. Tony Johnson
and James Pilot share the
See RAMS, Page 7A.

'Noles Upends Lake Mary; Pats, 'Hounds Roll
Daryl Taylor threw a pair of
touchdown passes and Larry Byrd
may a key Interception late In the
game as the Seminole Junior
varsity upended Lake Mary's JV.
14-6, Thursday night at Lake Mary
High.
"It was a tough game both
ways," Seminole coach Mike Fer­
rell said. “ It's a big rivalry and the
guys are really excited about
beating Lake Mary."
The Tribe JV now stands at 2-0
on the season and will go up
against Lyman next Thursday at
Lym an High.
The Tribe opened up the scoring
In the first quarter as Taylor
hooked up with David Rape for a
20-yard TD pass. The two-point
conversion failed and Seminole
had a 6-0 lead.
The defense took over after that
and neither team's offense could
mount another scoring threat in
the first half as the Tribe clung to
Its 6-0 lead at halftime.
Seminole opened “up a 12-0 lead
In the third quarter as Taylor hit
Melvin Brinson, who made a cou­
ple good moves, and darted into
the end zone for a 45-yard scoring
strike. Mike Hickman then ran In
the two point conversion to give
the 'Nolesa 14-0 lead.
The JV Rams then got Its offense
going In the fourth quarter behind

J.V. Football
quarterback Mike Schmlt. Schmit
d rove Lake Mary inside the
Seminole 10, but the Tribe defense
toughened up and forced the Rams
to gamble on a fourth and goal at
the five-yard line. Schmit kept his
cool and tossed a five-yard TD pass
to Brett Mollc to cut Seminole’s
lead to 14-6 with less than seven
minutes remaining in the game.
The two-point conversion failed.
Sem inole took the ensuing
kickoff and picked up a couple of
first downs before having to punt
the ball away with two minutes
left. Lake Mary mounted a last
chance scoring drive to try and lie
the game. Schmit drove the Rams
to the Seminole 25 as Lake Mary
was wlthlng striking range with 45
seconds remaining.
However, with 30 seconds left to
play. Byrd stepped In and picked
olf a Schmit pass to preserve the
victory for the Seminoles.
In other JV action Thursday.
Lake Brantley's JV Patriots Im­
proved to 4-0 for the season with a
33-21 victory over Lake Howell at
Lake Brantley High.
Mike Beams led the offensive
attack as he picked up 161 yards
on 20 rarries to raise his season

total to 510 yards In four games'
Lake Howell took an early 7-0
lead, but Brantley cut It to 7-6 as
Beams scored from six yards out.
The Patriots took a 12-7 lead when
Mike Plnckcs threw a 65-yard TD
pass to Aaron Kindel. Beams Inter
broke loose for a 76-yard scoring
run to put the Patriots In control.
20-7.
Lake Howell came back to cut k
to 20-13. but Freeman scored from
eight yards out to put the Patriots
up. 26-13. Lake Howell cut It to
26-20 before the Patriots Iced the
victory as quarterback John
Gowan. who completed 7 of 10
passes for 123 yards, hooked up
with Kindel on an eight-yard
scoring strike. Kindel caught three
passes for 121 yards for the night.
Defensively for Brantley. Matt
Wilson and John Polak each had
six solo tackles and one assist
while Jimmy Cochclos had five
solos and an assist and Pinckes
added an Interception.
Lake Brantley will go for its fifth
straight win next Thursday at
DeLand.
At Lyman Thursday night. Joe
Rinlharamy and Randy Mathis
scored two touchdowns each to
lead Lyman's Greyhounds to a
35-0 rout of Bishop Moore. The JV
Greyhounds now stand at 1-0 on
the season.
- CHRI8 PI8TER

Silver Hawks Need To Win A Bunch; Lions Look For New Streak To Grow
Oviedo and Lake Howell experienced
different sensations after their football
games last Friday night.
One of Jubilation and the other of shock.
One winner, one loser. One holding on to
Win and the other blowing a big lead.
"Even today (Tuesday), after watching the
film. I still have trouble believing we lost."
said Lake Howell coach Mike Blsceglia. “ I
just can't believe all of those mistakes we
made."
Sanford's Fighting Seminoles can believe
them, though. Because they forced them
and they capitalized on them. The Silver
Hawks fumbled five times and lost three of
them. The Tribe turned each Into a
touchdown to overcome an 18-polnt deficit
fora 29-27 victory.
The setback severely Jeopardizes Lake
Howell's dream o f the a Five Star Confer­
ence title. The Hawks were the preseason
choice o f the coaches. And. indeed, they do
have an Imposing attack. But that attack
spultered In the second half last week. The
Hawks are 2-1 overall and 1-1 in the Five
Star and district.
,
,
,
"W e're going to have to win the rest of
them." conceded Bisccglla whose team tries
jo regroup tonight at home against DeLand.
Our attitude Is still good. Wc had some
good practices this week. We'll be ready to
go"

i

Which may not be said for DeLand. The
Bulldogs lost their second best running back
Otis Robinson with a broken leg last
Thursday In a loss to West Orange. They
also lost quarterback Ferrell Gordon with a
seaprated shoulder. That leaves the of­
fensive burden to. running back Terry
Nettles, and although he is a good one, It
might be a little too much to ask.
The Hawks didn't get any help Thursday
night ejther when Spruce Creek practically
handed a game to Apopka. 42-21. Biscclgla
took in the game and was Impressed with
the Blue Darters despite the gift-wrapped
package. "Apopka Is awesome offensively."
said Blsceglia. "But Spruce Creek had two
blocked punts, a touchdown called back,
they fumbled on their kickoff and also
fumbled deep in their territory."
Despite outgalnlng Apopka. 319-201,
Spruce Creek was blown away.
Lake Howell doesn't play Apopka until the
second to the last game of the season. It's
conceivable that the game could be for the
district and conference championship. It's
still a long road for the Hawks, but with
fullback Jay Robey, tackle Jim Royal,
quarterback Darin Slack, free safety Bill
Lang and strong safety Troy Quackcnbush
— the road came be navigated a lot more
smoothly.

Sam
Cook
Sports Editor

Speaking of smooth roads. It was about a
year ago when Blanton's Oviedo Lions
began an Incredible streak which gave the
3A power seven victories to cap an 8-3
season.
Oviedo, which had to replace Its entire
olfenslve line, stumbled out o f the blocks
this year, too. losing Its first two games
before outlasting St. Cloud. 27-20. last
week.
Tonight at 8 In the Lions' Den. Oviedo
shoots to even Its season mark at 2-2
against an Improved Leesburg squad. The
Yellow Jackets used to be the laughing
stock of Lake County, once compiling a
losing streak which almost hit 20 In a row.
1 hat's all changed now. however, at least
offensively. "That have a real good offense."
said Blanton. "They start out with Joe Viola
at quarterback and then bring in Dwayne
Cornelius. He's the thrower."
The Yellow Jackets have a nice set of
running backs from their wishbone to

accommodate Cornelius. Fullback Erick
Berry and halfbacks Sam Banks and
Andrew Graham can all tote the ball.
Defense, nevertheless. Ib another matter.
“ They’re not real big defensively." said
Blanton. "Our offensive line Is coming
around and (coach) Paul Greer has got our
defense playing pretty wc.l. We should be
able to score some points."
Doing the scoring will be the county's best
backfleld tandem of Barry Williams and
J.W. Yarborough. Both are powerful sprin­
ters. Williams Is more of the slasher type
while Yarborough likes to run people over.
Williams ran for 149 yards and three TDs
last week. Kevin Thompson continues to do
a commendable Job at OH for the Lions
while wide receiver Howard Llngard (11 for
227) is averaging 20 yards per catch.
Defensively, a shift of senior Kevin Ycntz
to linebacker has solidified the defense.
Junior Larry Grayson turned Ip the big play
last week by Intercepting a pass In the final
30 seconds to cut short q St. Cloud drive
Inside the 10 yard-line o f the Lions.
Defensive bark Ed Norton heads up a strong
secondary, which also features sophomore
Andrew Smith.

Q U E88E8 — Can you Imagine anyone
picking Notre Dame over Miami lust week?
And. I'm not even Irish. Anyway. I'll take

9-1 every time. Tonight's picks: Seminole
by 12 over Mainland. Lyman by 8 over
Lake Mary, Lake Howell by 28 over
DeLand, Oviedo by 4 over Leesburg, UCF
by 3 over Valdosta State, L8U by 14 over
the Gators Ithat's for you Dycusl, F8U by
10 over Auburn. Miami by 27 over Duke,
Baca by 6 over Packers and Dolphins by
14 over Saints.

Politowicz Wins,
Seminoles Run 2nd 3
Trinity Prep's Adrienne Politowicz mn 'i

away from Lake Mary’# Sue Kingsbury

with a half mile to go Thursday to w in ]
the Freshman-Sophomore two-mlle a t *
Lyman High School. Polltowlcz's time of
11:55.7 broke her cld record of 13il5
which was set last year. Lake Howell’s *
girls easily won the team title with 26
points.
In the boys race. Seminole finished*
second to Bishop Moore. 3 1 *4 2 .’
Seminole sophomore Billy Penlck was
second to the H ornets' R ich ard
McKenna Individually. See Sunday's
Evening Herald for a complete rundown [
of the meet.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, PI.

Lady Seminoles Splash
fast Hawks For No. 2

Scott Leads Howell
Sweep Of Lake Mary

H

Dana Ray,afl(i Stacy Jlunto had a pair
?!, u . P ^ -C9 cach ,0 lead the Seminole
Hlfth |l»la swim team to a 98-6? dual
-FncdT victory Thursday over Spruce
Creek s Hawks at the Sanford Bath A
Tennis Club.
The Lady Tribe is now 2-0 for the
season going Into Saturday’s Sharldnn
Invitational. "It was another solid effort
for the girls team," Seminole coach
Donalyn Knight said. "The boys team
looked good, but we have a l» v Injuries
holding us back."
The boys team dropped a 96-45
jjcclslon to Spruce Creek Thursday with
Chuck Burgess’ 1:00.0 In the 100
freestyle the only first place. The boys
team Is 0-2 for the season.
... Thursday's meet marked the second
straight time that Jlunto and Ray. both
juniors, have recorded two first places.
Last week. In a dual meet victory over
Orlando Evans. Jlunto won both the 200
‘freestyle and 500 freestyle while Ray
won the 50 freestyle and 100 backstroke.
V Jlunto won the same two events
lagalnst Spruce Creek as she clocked In
ut 2:28.5 In the 200 freestyle (almost
.three seconds belter than her time last
week) and she recorded a 6:37.4 In the
500 freestyle (two seconds better than
last week's time).
ll Ray also won the same two events as
she cruised to a 28.6 In the 50 freestyle
(1.3 seconds better than last week) and

Swimming
Ray shaved nearly 14 seconds oir her
time last week In the 100 backstroke as
she clocked In at 1:16.6.
Other first places for the Lady Tribe
Included, senior Patty Eilmorc who won
the diving competition with 95.8 points:
sophomore Shnu’na Cole rnme In first tn
the 100 By with a time of 1:22.0 and she
was second In the 200 Intermediate at
2:53.0. Senior Alison McCall finished
first In the 100 breaststroke at 1:31.1.
Second place finishes Included Suzy
Porter's 2:41.2 In the 200 freestyle and
Kristy Keeling's 1:09.0 In the 100
freestyle.
Seminole also won a pair of relays as
the team of Ray. McCall. Cole and Porter
combined for a lime of 2:22.3 In the *200
medley relay and the team of Jlunto.
Lisa Cooper. Tracy Reed and Chris
Sparrow won the 400 freestyle realy with
a tlmcof 5:09.4.
In the boys meet. Burgess added a
secon d p la c e fin is h In the 100
backstroke with a time of 1:11.0. Tim
Dycus had a couple of second place
finishes, one In the 50 freestyle at 30.4
and another In the 100 breaststroke at
1:19.8. Brian Spnrrow recorded a second
place In the diving competition with
116.4 (mints.
In other swimming notion Thursday,

Continued from 6A.

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monstrous Robert Rawls made It to

ground yet in '83. Johnson has
completed Just 2 of 8 passes for
96 ynrds. one a 81 -yard scoring
strike- to Jody Foster. Pilot has
completed 1 of 4 for 57 yards.

Ti

against Colonial. Phil Gennano Mike Henley and Paul Ellis
Is the leading ground gainer for qlong with linemen Tyrone
the Greyhounds with 161 yards Simpson and Bubba Jones.
Mark S c h o fie ld and Mike
on 27 carries.
Defensive standouts Include McFadden pave the way for
secondary men Tyler Hughes Lyman's stable of wishbone
1g -&gt;kV»H

Dodgers Stagger On;
Warren No-Hits Sox

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Htberl IL )

Before he gets Into the ncademy.
though, Kolbjornsen must gel an
appointment to a Navy prep school
where he must attain a C status to get
Into the Naval Academy. Other re­
quirements Include a high grade point
average In high school.along with
being a school leader.
Kolbjornsen's goal for this season is
to make the state wrestling competi­
tion. He would also like to sec Lake
Mary High win the all-sports trophy, a
title that Lyman won last year.
Right now. Kolbjornsen Is working
hard to lead the Rams to a respectable
season. Although quarterback and
running back are the glamor posi­
tions. guys like Kolbjornsen make the
QBs and RBs Jobs a lot easier, and
safer.

lilt
■ Baltimore
Oatroil
Nt* York
Toronto
MilaOukf*
Batton
Clartland

e

0

stadium.
Football Is not the only sport
Kolbjornsen excels In. He Is also a fine
wrestler and hopes to get a scholar­
ship to the?Naval Academy.
"The coach from Navy Is coming
down here to talk to me on Saturday."
Kolbjornsen said. "It would be a big
step to go to the Naval Academy, they
were fifth in the nation In wrestling
last year."
As for wrestling. Kojbjomscn Is one
of coach Frank Schwartz' studs. He
was a tough performer at 189 pounds
and should be even better this year
with his added strength acquired In
the ofT-season. Lake Mary put Its
grappling program on the map In Just
three short years when teammate
Jack Likens captured a state title and

Greyhounds' passing game,
which was the best In the
county with QB Jerry Axley a
year ago. lias not gotten off the

G»

—

i

1

back - Mooney (L ) 1:01.3; IOO braaat 1 08 4: 400-fraa ra lly - Mainland 1 44 5

college prospect." two years ago,
Kolbjornsen may not rcuch that
exalted plateau, but he has been a
pioneer for the Rams, trallblazlng a
path a lot of athletes would like to
follow.
He suffered through the lean years
in the past, but now. like the Rams'
budding sports' program — he Is
ready to bloom. Last year's football
record. 1-9. was a bummer, but
Kolbjornsen has seen vast Improve­
ment In Just a half of a year under the
volatile Nelson.
Kolbjornsen said one of his goals is
to help the Rums to the Five Star
Conference title In the school's first
year In the conference. Lake Mary has
a key conference game tonight at 8
when It hosts Seminole County rival

AMERICAN LEAOUE

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the semifinals.

STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAOUE
' H it

Lyman opened the season by sweeping a
dual meet with Daytona Beach Mainland
at Lyman Hlghr The boys team slipped
by Mainland. 86-80, whlfe the girls team
swam away with a 101-67 victory.
Lyman Is gearing up for the Shartdan
Invllaltlonal which begins at 9 n.m.
Saturday at the Shartdan Aquatic Club
In Longwnod. — CHRIS FISTER

Lyman and dedicates ltf new football

"ou r

Sophomore Pell Thompson has
also seen playing time. The

Continued from 6A.
q u a r t e r b a c k d u tie s w ith
Johnson being the starter.
.A C nton«I
*AAM 04*5

Seminole's Chuck Burgess swim s to victory Is the. 100 free.

first major-

Roger Dcuthard.

ourselves. He’s affecting ever)’ sport
In the school."
Kolbjornsen Is In the first graduat­
ing class at Lake Mary- High and he
doesn't regret It that he could have
gone a different school If he had been
u year older. Athletes at the more
established schools often get a belter
chance at a scholarship than athletes
n school thut hasn't been around very
long.
"I thought about transferring to
Lyman In my freshman year." Kolb­
jornsen said. "But I'm glad I stayed at
Lake Mary."
The articulate senior has been the
Lake Mary football anchor for three

...Rams

HaraM Phot* by Tommy Vincent

years now. Called by former coach

...K o lb jo rn sen

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F r U ity &gt;tp t. JO, m i - 7 A

United Press International
The play of (he Los Angeles Dodgers Is simply
staggering.
"W e can'l panic." rookie Greg Brock said Thursday
night after the Dodgers dropped a double-header to
remain stalled on the verge of the National League West
title. "W e can't start pressing now. We got a three-game
lead with three to go. You play every game like you've
got to win that gumc."
Andy Hawkins tossed a seven-hitter and struck out 10
over 8 2-3 Innings and the San Diego Padres scored
three runs In the sixth Inning on one hit. en route to a
4-1 victory over Los Angeles and a double-header sweep.
In the opener. Tony Gwynn singled In Tim Flannery
with the go-ahead run to trigger a six-run eighth that
gave the Padres a 7-1 victory.
"W e have to go out tomorrow and forget about today,
yesterday and the day before." said Dodgers' manager
Tommy Lasorda. "W e Just weren't able to win. We
scored Just six runs In three ballgames."
Earlier, the Braves did their pari to keep the majors'
last pennant race alive when Randy Johnson's two-out,
ntnth-Inntng single helped visiting Atlanta to a 5-4
victory over the Houston Astros.
The Dodgers' magic number remained at one. Los
Angeles returns home for a weekend scries against
arcb-nemcsls San Francisco while the Braves travel to
play three games against the Padres. Any Dodgers'
victory or Braves’ loss will hand the Dodgers the division
crown.
"W e Just gotta' win one or they gotta’ lose one." said
Lasorda. "I'd still rather be In our position rather than
ihclrs."
"If wc can't win one of the final three. 1don't think we
belong In major-league baseball." added the Dodgers'
Dcrrel Thomas. "W e're the team to beat. We don'i stay
In a losing streak very long."
The Dodgers have lost 11 of 15 games to the Giants
this season.
Al Houston. Chris Chambliss singled off Vcm Ruble,
8-5. and moved to second on a groundnut before
Johnson's hit. Gene Garber, 4-5. picked up the victory
with ninth-inning relief help from Terry Forster, w’ho
notched his 13th save.
Giants U ,R c d i 7
At Cincinnati. Chris Smith's two-run homer led the
Giants despite a two-run pinch hit single by the Reds'
Johnny Bench In the final home appearance of his
career. Reliever Randy Lcrch. 2-3, was the winner and
reliever Ben Hayes. 4-6. the loser.
Pirates 4, Met* 2
At Pittsburgh. Rick Rhoden scattered four hits over
eight innings and helped his cause with two hits to lead
the Pirates. Rhoden. 13-13. struck out five und wulked
none before giving way to Ceclllo Guaotc. who finished
for his ninth save.
A ' b S, White Sox 3
A year ago Mike Warren was riding the btn*s In the
bushes. Now he's riding on Cloud Nine.
Warren, who pitched for Modesto In the Class A.
became the Orel rookie In 10 years — ana the second
pitcher In four days — to hurl a no-hlttcr Thursday night
tn leading the Oakland A's to a 3-0 victory over the
American League West champion Chicago White Sox.
"It was a dream come true." he said. “ Just being in
the major leagues was a big thrill and now this. I won't
believe It 'Ul I read about It In the paper."
Warren's masterpiece was the third no-hlttcr tossed In
the mujor leagues this season und the second this week.
Bob Forsch of the St. Louis Cardinals pitched a no-hlttcr
ugulnst the Montreul Expos Monday night und Dave
Rlghrttl of the New York Yankees tossed one against the

A

.

Jo h n n y B e n ch

C h r is C h a m b lis s

A.L./N.L. Roundup
Boston Red Sox on July 4.
Warren. 22. struck out five and walked three In
winning his fifth game In eight decisions. The last
no-hlttcr produced by the Oakland pitching staff was on
Sept. 28. 1975, when Vida Blue. Glenn Abbott. Paul
Llndblad and Rollle Fingers combined for a 5-0 victory
over the California Angels.
The last complete game no-hlttcr by an A's pitcher
was turned In by Blue against Minnesota In 1970 and
the last no-hlttcr pitched by a rookie was hurled by Jim
Blbby. then of Texas, who beat Oakland. 8-0. on July
30. 1973. On April 27 of that same year. Kansas City's
Steve Busby shut down Detroit. 3-0.
There were no outstanding plays behind Warren and
pinch hitter Mike Squires' drive to the warning track In
right field was the hardest ball hit off the right-hander.
Yankees 4, Red Sox 3
At New York. Don Mattingly delivered a single with
the bases loaded In the ninth Inning, capping a two-run
uprising that rallied the Yankees to victory. Willie
Randolph led off the ninth drawing a walk off loser John
Tudor. 13-12. and scored on a double by Ken GrifTcy.
Mattingly then singled, making a winner of Guidry.
21-9.
Twins 2, Rangers 0
At Minnesota, rookie Ttm Teufel hit a solo homer and
Ken Schrom pitched a seven-hitter for his first major
league shutout. Schrom. 15-8. walked four and struck
out three In posting his first shutout tn six complete
games. It was the second straight shutout suffered by
the Rangers. Teufel's third home run since being called
up from Toledo Sept. 1. came off loser Dave Stewart.
5-2.
Tigers B. Orioles 4
At Baltimore. Enos Cabell's threr-run homer capped a
five-run first Inning that carried the Tigers to a
three-game sweep of the Orioles. Milt Wilcox, 11-10.
scattered 10 hits in picking up the victory over the
American League East division chumplons. The Orioles
have lost three straight since clinching the pennant
Sunday. Mike Flanagan. 12-4. took the loss.
Indians 4, Brewers 2
At Milwaukee. Oorman Thomas hud three hits.
Including a two-run homer, and Rick Sutcliffe scattered
14 hits to feud the Indians. Sutcliffe, 17-11. struck out
six und walked one In completing his 10th game of the
season. Milwaukee starter Tom Candlottl. 4-4. allowed
nine hits and three runs In 6 1-3 Innings.
Mariners B, Royals 4
At Seattle. Ken Phelps went 3for-4. including a homer
that sparked a four-run seventh Inntng. to lead the
Mariners. Phelps' sixth homer of the year and second In
two nights was a leadoff shot olT loser Bud Black. 10-7.
Reliever Mike Stanton. 2-3. picked up the victory and
Bill Caudill earned his 26th save.

By Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer
Behind the outstanding front line play of Christy Scott
and consistent serving. Lake Howell's Lady Silver
Hawks rallied for a 13-5. 15-12 victory over the Lady
Rams of Lake Mary Thursday In prep volleyball action at
Lake Howell High.
Scott came through In the clutch with some
devastating spikes and the Lady Hawks defense did a
good Job of containing Lake Mary's Laura and Peggy
Glass as the Hawks Improved to 5-1 for the season (all
Five Star Conference games). The Lady Rams, who
looked Impressive at times, fell to 4-5 overall and 3-4 In
the conference.
"Christy Scott was Instrumental In enabling us to take
control early.” Lake Howell coach Jo Luciano said. "She
had a lot ojj key spikes and the setters did a nice Job
getting the ball to the hitters."
Lake Howell served to open the match, but a booming
spike by Laura Glass gave the Rams the serve. Another
spike by Laura Glass gave Lake Mary a 1-0 lead, but
Scott came back with a spike to give the serve to the
Hawks.
Lake Howell tied the game at 1-1 on another Scott
spike, but a missed serve gave It back to Lake Mary.
Scott planted another spike Into the Rams defense to
give the serve back to the Hawks and they eventually
took a 4-1 lead.
Lake Mary later came back to close to within two
points. 7-5. but Scott came up with her fourth successful
spike of the game to give Lake Howell the serve.
With Caryn Krumwelde serving, the Lady Hawks ran
up a 11-5 lead, the U th point coming on yet another
spike by Scott. A nice block by Robyn Plnnock broke
Kmmwcldc's serving string, but the Rams couldn't
capitalize as Scott drilled another spike Into the floor,
her sixth of the game, to give the serve back Lake
Howell.
The Hawks eventually won the first game. 15-5 as
Lake Mary couldn't score a point on Its last five service
chances of the game.
The second game was much closer, with the Rams
erasing an early deficit before bowing out In the end.
Lake Howell built a 12-3 lead with consistent serving
from Beth and Cathy Saunders and Krumwelde with
Scott chipping In with two more spikes.
Lake Howell was up. 13-6. before the Rams started
clawing their way back. With Laura Glass serving. Lake
Mary pulled to within 13-8 before losing the serve. Laura
Glass gave It right back to the Rams with a nice spike
and Lake Mary closed to within 14-11 on the serve of
Peggy Glass.
Again. Lake Howell could do nothing once It regained
the serve, and Michelle Swartz served a point to cut the
Lady Hawks lead to two points. 14-12. But. the Hawks
cashed In on their next opportunity and Kathy Barma
served the last point as Lake Howell claimed the match.
15- 5, 15-12.
"I thought we played well, but we weren't able to put
a string of points together," Lake Mary coach Cindy
Henry said. "W c had moments of excellence, but we still
haven't gotten over our tlmldncss. We need to be
aggressive for the entire match."
The Lady Hawks and Lady Rams will have a rematch
Tuesday at Lake Mary High. The gome will not count tn
the conference but lt promises to be an exciting
matchup as Thursday night's battle was.
In Junior varsity action, the Lady Rams played an
outstanding tie-breaking game en route to a 16-14.6-16.
•15»3victoryovertheJV Hawks.
rt U1&lt;
The first game was back and forth all the way
through, but Lake Mary pulled out the victory as Alex
Michelle served the last two points to break a 14-14 tie.
Lake Howell capitalized on numerous Lake Mary
mistakes tn the second game and took an easy 15-6 win
to even the match. Lake Mary needed the serve only two
times to put the Hawks away In the third and final
game.'
Shannon Kavanaugh's blistering serve enabled the
Rams to take an early 5-1 lead with the fifth point
coming on a nice spike by Kelly Skeens. Lake Howell
trimmed the lead to 5-3 before giving up the serve, and
the Lady Hawks didn't get the serve back.
Betsy Perry opened up a string of 10 straight service
points with an ace and the Rams crusted to a 15-3
third-game victory and the match.
Elsewhere, the Seminole Junior varsity Improved to
3-2 overall and 2-0 In the conference with a 8-15. 15-3.
16- 14 victory over Lyman’s JV.
Wendy Lawrence served six o f the Lady Tribe's eight
points In the first game, but Lyman managed to come
away with the victory.
Seminole took control In the second game as Ancka
Mitchell served eight straight points to lead Seminole to
a 15-3 win. Mitchell came back to serve five straight at
the beginning of the deciding game, but Lyman played
step for step with the Lady Seminoles.
Christy Gonzales came on to serve seven straight
points and even up the game at 14-14. "Spuffy" Pakovlc
served the 15th point for the Tribe and Melissa Moak
served the 16th and winning point.

...Tribe Goes After No. 3
Continued from 6A.
"They're having a tough time, but their skill people
are are pretty good."
Wallace, likewise. Is Impressed with Semlnofe's skills.
"That (CllfT) Campbell has good foot speed." he said.
"I'm very Impressed with the team speed and
aggressiveness. They really come after you on defense.
That (Tracy) Holloman and (Fred) Brinson are both good
(defensive) ends.
"But wc know what ihey're going to hit us with. Jerry
(Posey) has been very consistent with his offense the
past few years." he added.
Which means the ‘Noles will try to run the ball down
Mainland's throat using Juniors Campbell and Jo Jo
McCloud on the pitch plays and slants along with
Edgemon. Lawrence and Dexter Jones up the middle.
Linemen Keith Brown. JefT Bender and David Linton
will once again pave the way. Charles Thomas. 6-1 and
262. will start at tackle to free Rinkavagc for his
defensive responsibilities. Senior Todd Hlldebran will
also return at center, replacing Strickland Smith after
II game with an Injury . Junior
missing the Lake Howell
Robbie Brumlcy will split time with Wynn at tight end.
McCloud broke a klckoft return for 80 yards against
Lake Howell and is coming Into hts own as a return
inun. something which has been lacking at Seminole for
the past three years. The 'Notes haven’t had a punt or
klckofT returned for a TD since Fred Howard did so
against Apopka two years ago.
Although it’s a bit earlier to start taking the Five Star
Conference race seriously, a victory this week would
give the Seminoles some good momentum going Into
next Friday's big one at Apopka. The Blue Darters are
3-0 and ranked seventh In the 4A poll.

APOPKA 42. IPAUCE CREEK It
IfU K k C lM t

71) 7 l - U
7 7 7 1 — 21

Sprue* Craaa - Moor* II P *»»
from Hamilton (Jurklawict kick);
Apopka - Smim * run (Elmoro

kick). Apopka - lawman 11 run
(Elmar* kick); Apopka — Jonat 17
p m i trom Browur (Elmoro k kk l,
Apopka - Fonchor * p an from
Brawar (E lm ort kick);
Sprue*
Croat - Dark) 21 rtm (Jurklawict
kick); Apopka — Smith I run
Iclm oraklck)

V

�I A—Evening H arald, Sanford, F I.

B L O N D IE

I'VE BEEN WAITING
FO R HEATHER'S
PHONE C A L L
POP TH REE
HO URS

Friday, Sept. JO, lf U

b v C h ic Y o u n g

^ A L E X A N D E R , GO
O U TSID E AND G E T

37
30
1 M ika laci
40
4 Plant dlieaae 41
across

8 01

12 Compaaa
point
13 Bull (Sp)
14 Law
15 Elaborate
poem
IS Elam)
18 Similarly
dafined word
20 Character of a

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

T H E BORN L O S E R

42
45
40

Copper coin
River in Africa
Front
Finiahed
garment edge
Employed
Putting down
Not in
perspective
Woolen cap
Biblical land
Hunt
Greek letter
Sown (Ft.)
ll human
Spanish titla

Amwar to Previous Punla
n tJ N n B f.T tT iiu H u n iv ,

n n n n lr - ir a n tiilo n m
c in n n in j
u iiu j.itiu n rm n n m
M

a a d n

iiL’j u n i Y

o n n a

Depression Causing
Sleepless Nights?

nnnnuyu

DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm
thoroughly disgusted with
81
my doctor trying to pacify
nnn nn
52
Y D r.
me
and not doing any­
iiL o u n n n n m
53
thing about my problem.
O lO lT j
54
: : ° | y i s f n v i I? T A T
4
I'm a female. 63 years old
55
n n iiH n n n n in n n n
and can't sleep nt night. If
56
people
57
I get one hour o f sleep I’m
33 Hereditary
17 Revoke at
21 Day ol weak
lucky. I’ve been this way
"blueprints"
cards
(abbr)
dow n
,9
38 Less distant
for a month or more. I
22 Charged
Measure of
40 Woman (Fr J
particlei
have high blood pressure
weight
Pairs
not addicting and do not
24 Hebrew letter
41 Cuts at
and I take one Dyazldc a
Singer
23 Public
by Mort W alker 26 Root edge
cause the same problems
42
Comas
Turn
day.
I
also
have
arthritis
Williama
24
27 Spaniih for
43 Small Island
ninny sleep medications
Score, ordinal 25 Indirect
and had two cortisone
one
44 Gad
may.
Diamond
allusion
shots a month ago.
30 Segmenti
48 Coffin stand
Meanwhile I am sending,
Mythical herb 26 Chemical
32 New Year1!
I have taken N y lo l.
47
Group
of
Accumulation
you
The Health Letter
drink
compound
Western allies Somtnex, hot milk, quit
of wane
34 Meaning
10-6. Sleep and Insomnia.',
27 Infinite
drinking
cofTcc
or
tea
after
48 Government
7 Also
35 Threadwhich Includes suggest
28 Christmas
agent
5 p.m. and still no results.
8 Worries
winding
lions
on your lifestyle and
20
Evil
giant
(comp
wd)
0 Scramble
I don't get sleepy during
sleep habits that may hcjpr
31 Put into
50 Mao _ _
36 Indefinite in 10 Miiture
the day. I'm completely
cipher
tung
11 For males
order
exhausted and 1Just don't you.
know how much longer I ' DEAR DR LAMB - I an)
9
4
7
10 i t
1
5
6
2
3
* 8
a 16-ycar-old girl. 5 foot HJt
can goon.
I lost my husband 16 and about 85 pounds
14
13
12
months ago from a heart overweight. I am on n diet.,
attack but 1 have adjusted and exercise nnd have.,
17
16
15
..
to his loss pretty well and already lost 18 pounds.
I started Jogging but an).,
I’m
not
under
any
pre­
20
18
19
ssure. My doctor will not concerned that Jogging
by Art Sansom
give
me any nerve or w ill d e v e lo p m u scles
22 23
21
sleeping pills nnd I would which will add to my,,
like to know whr.t you weight Instead of allowing
28 29
24 25
26
me to lose weight. I also do
suggest.
”
DEAR READER - Don't little exercises such aiH
33
31
32
30
•
be angry with your physi­ slt-ups and side bends
35
34
cian. He Is trying to help which I think will help
you without harming you tone better than Jogging.
DEAR READER 39
38
36
with medications.
You won't appreciate the M u scles g e t Just b ig
,0
41
thought but perhaps he Is enough and strong enough
concerned that you may to contract against the
42 43 44
47 48
45 48
have a depression. That Is re s is ta n c e th ey w ork
sometimes the cause' for against, such as lifting a
St
49
50
Insomnia. And you could weight. When you walk or I
have a depression about Jog your leg muscles must I
52
53
54
the loss of your husband be strong enough to lift |
long after the event, rather your body with each step, j
57
56
55
Just look at marathon !
than Immediately after It.
You should discuss what runners and other runners I
you plan to do with your and you will not see a !
doctor but. with his con­ successful runner who has l
currence, I would make large muscles. Even the {
some suggestions. First, leg muscles are not huge. !
I f y o u g a i n so m e t
stop coffee, tea and all
sources o f caffeine en­ muscles while you a r c !
tirely. not Just after 3 p.m. losing fat that Is good. The j
Second, you might do well muscles will help you use !
calories even at rest and }
TOUR BIRTHDAY
can be made today at with an antihistam ine
fat will not. Walking —
such
as
you
would
find
In
OCTOBER 1 ,1B83
social gatherings with
and
Jogging and running
Chlor-Trlm
eton
allergy
Look for new markets persons you haven't met
for your wares and talents before. Set sail for a sea of syrup or allergy tablets for those In shape to do It !
— Is good exercise to help •
th a t y o u c o u ld b u y
this coming year. You new faces.
lose weight. Long walks ■
without
a
prescription,
or
could be ullc lucky In
PISCES IFcb. 20-March t h e a n t i - m o t i o n
use a lot of calories. But I j
by Howie Schneider areas where you’ve never
20) You're luckiest today medication Dramanilne.
do
like to see a well- |
made Inroads before.
in situations that have R em em b er that these
balanced exercise pro-*
x i m ^ s K r w je p Q O T D
THEYfcE DEALING WITH
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oet. high stakes, so now Is the
make you drowsy In gram. Including slt-ups
MV GROUP‘mtKAPV SE5SI0U.
R&amp;JECTIOfJ THIS WEEK... 23) You're likely to con­ time to go after those could
the day If you use them In and other exercises, to us&lt;^
ceive some exciting Ideas tempting big targets and
Wfc'RE- ALLOWED TO BRlkJG
IT MIGHT DO VOU SCMB
the daytime, but they are all your body musclestoday which can be helpful play to win.
guests , v ’fckjouu...
GOCD!
to you In your career. Jot
ARIES (March 21-April
them down so you don't
19) Projects whose size
forg- , them o v e r the
wecitcnd. Order now: The previously Intimidated you
will not do so today. You'll
NEW Matchmaker wheel
know how to cut them
s p a d e s a f t e r c le a r ly ,
and booklet which reveals
showing my distribution*
NORTH
MS4J
romantic compatibilities d ow n to m a n a g e a b le
♦ a to :
and West opened the ace
proportions.
for all signs, tells how to
VKS
o f h e a rts . I d ro p p ed
TAURUS (April 20-Maj
get along with others,
♦ AKU
dummy's king and Weal
finds rising signs, hidden 20) Don't be discouraged
♦AKQJI
shifted to a diamond. I wastoday
by
associates
who
qualities, plus more. Send
WEST
EAST
by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers
In dummy and considered
$2 to Astro-Graph. Box view obstacles as Insur­
♦ I
♦ q »5 j
the
significance of that
m
ountable.
Y
o
u
'll
see
V I72
VA94
489. Radio City Station,
unusual ace lead. Finally !•
♦ 101641
♦ 953
E V E R Y T H IN G
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to possibilities where they
came lo my hand with the
♦ 714
♦ 9512
G O E S IN O N E
give your zodiac sign. Mall won’t.
club 10, led my Jack of
SOUTH
EAR A SP OUT
an additional $1 for your
GEMINI (May 21-June
spades and let It ride
♦ KJ974
TH E O TH ER /
Libra AstroGraph predic­ 20) Partnership arrange­
V Q J 1063
successfully. Now It was a
tions for the year ahead.
ments could be more for♦ J7
-simple matter to take a
tuuntc than usual for you
♦ 10
second spade finesse, cash
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
today. Go along for the
dummy's ace. ruff a club
22) You're capable of out­
Vulnerable: North-South
ride If a go-getter makes a
back lo my hand, pick up
standing accomplishments
Dealer North
worthwhile proposal.
West's queen of trumps
In several areas today.
Writ North Eail South
CANCER (June 21-July
Just because things come
and claim my slam."
Pan !♦
24
easy, don't underestimate 22) Your possibilities for
Pan 34
Pau IV
"B eautiful p la y!" wc
personal gain look good
Pau 4V
Pan !♦
their worth.
com m en ded. "Y o u
Pau 4NT Pau 54
today, but rewards arc
S A G ITTA R IU S (Nov.
follow ed your Instinct
Pan 64
Pau Pau
unlikely from ventures
23-Dec. 211 Steer clear of
against the percentage,
Pau
which arc of a speculative
friends today who always
w hich was to finesse
nature.
by Stoffel &amp; Heimdahl
do things by role. You'll be
against East for the trump
Opening
lead:
VA
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
happiest associating with
queen. Why so morose?"
2 1t&gt;LD&gt;t)UfT WOULPNT &amp;£'
You
have
the
ability
today
persons who have a sense
S M A R T ID CAM P IN ECHO
to accomplish whatever
"Look a the complete
of adventure.
CAN YO N .
you set your mind to.
By Oswald Jacoby
bidding. My partner coul(j
C A P R I C O R N (D e c . regardless of whether It's
and James Jacoby
surely have bid six no22-Jan. 19) If roadblocks In the business or social
The unlucky expert had trum p, which spreads
confront you today, you'll world. Get going.
a more mournful look than
without any flnessse or
be quite Ingenious at de­
VIRGO (Aug. 23Scpt. usual. He looked so sad other problems. Wc gnf
vising ways to outflank 221 An Important matter that we broke down and
one match point for my
them. Once you zero In on can be expedited today by actually asked him what
play. The only other spade
an objective, success is using bold and Imagina­ had gone wrong.
.declarer went down one.
likely.
Hr replied, "Here Is a but 11 other declarers bid
t iv e m e a s u r e s . P la n
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- carefully and act posi­ hand from last night's
and made the no-trump
Feb. 19) Valuable contacts tively.
duplicate. I arrived In six
slam."
Cp p ?

n a n n n c ia □ □ □ n
n n c - in n n r i r i □ □ □
□ n ra n n n n n n n n n

Lamb

■

■

HOROSCOPE

What The Day Will Bring...

E E K &amp; M EEK

SM...IVEGOTAU IDEA,,.
VJHAYRE SOU DOIOG W m l

WIN AT BRIDGE

M R. M EN AND L I T T L E MISS

BUGS BUN N Y

ij/tfATS
0VOotf

oe ooc?

,O
P

by Jim Davis

F R A N K AND E R N E S T

I
I

£ &gt; I D N T * N I,C F.
TH O U G H T Yo u
* N IF F £ 0 .

A N N IE

TU M BLEW EED S

by T . K. R yaa

PO V00

P P F lM im y A

R J U IK E

M IN U T E S I G O T
LUNCH 0K&amp; 4K 1

see a
0KI6HT
irj Youpf
CAREER?

iM P D m V W E

-MARIA WON'T
THEN SHE SURE
EVEN TRUE ANY WOULDN'T LET
HELP FROM
HELP HER, EITHER/
M Q ELd,
THINHS TM DIRT.
COYOTE/

WELL, N0-5HE SAYS YOU'RE
VERY CL e ve rt, STRONG
FERRIES6 r S E SO SUCCESSFUL
AT WHAT YOU'RE ( ~
d o in '. ,
i— i d X f *
' im i,

HUH?/

-B U T SHE SAY5 YOU USE THOSE I
QUALITIES T PROFIT FROM
TH' MISERY OF OTHERSWHICH MARES YOU
LESS THAN DIRT.

r

�PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sepl. 30,1913—»A

G ardening

It's S t r a w b e r r y P la n t in g
For the past several weeks I have
c b v c r e d v a rio u s s u b je c ts In
dooryard ornamentals und lawns.
Ifbw. with the fall gardening season
well under way. it Is time to take a
look at some vegetable gardening
tips for those who arc Interested In
growing food for their tables.
A good place to start is wltn
strawberries since we are rapidly
approaching the proper time to
plant this popular Florida crop. In
addition to their taste appeal und
attractive appearance, strawberries
are well suited to Florida conditions
ahd are relatively easy to grow-.
' The strawberry plant is perennial
by nature, but Is grown as an
annual in Florida.Thc plant goes

Frank
J. Jasa
County Extension
Director

323-2500

through a cycle o f bcgctatlvc
growth, flower formation, fruit
production and then runner devel­
opment. For those familiar with
growing strawberries In the north, It
Is impurlunt to note that our
production season is totally re­
versed.
Strawberry plants should be set
out during October and no later

T im e In C e n t r a l F lo r id a

than m id-Novem ber. The cool
nights and short days o f winter
stimulate the plant to produce
flowers which develop Into fruits
ready for harvest In about a month.
Plants set out in mid-October should
produce ripe fruit by Christmas.
Berry production and harvesting
continue throughout the rest of the
winter and through spring. As the
weather gets warmer and the days
grow longer, the plants will stop
producing berries and form run­
ners.
These runners will take root and
become new- plants, however, for
most home gardeners It is more
practical to destroy the plants at the
nul of the crop season and purchase

new plants in the fall.
Although strawberries can be
grown In Just about any type of
Florida soil they prefer a -w ell
drained soil which can be kept
moist but not wet. A sandy soil with
considerable organic matter is the
best. Because strawberries have a
rather shallow root system, some
form of irrigation will Ik?required.
Since straw b erries arc very
sensitive to such climatic condition
as day length and temperature. It Is
Important to select varieties adapted
to Florida conditions. Varieties such
ns Dover and Florida Belle yield
large fruit and are resistant to a
common plant disease called an­
thracnosc. Other varieties recom­

mended arc Florida 90. Tioga and
Sequoia. "Everbearing" varieties
nre not recommended for Florida.
Strawberries should be planted on
raised beds u’hich arc approximate­
ly six inches high. For a 100 sq. ft.
area, broadcast about 2Vi lbs. of
8-8-8 fertilizer and work It Into the
soli before making the beds and the
same amount In bands six inches
deep and to the side of the plant
rows.
After the beds have been formed,
fertilized and well moistened, cover
each with a sheet of IVt mil plastic.
Plucc soil on the cdgc3 o f the plastic
to hold it in place. Then cut slits In
the plastic where the plants are to
be inserted. Space the plants 12

inches in the rowe.
Always start with certified, dis­
ease-free plants which should be
available at your favorite garden
store this month. Keep them moist
before planting. It is extremely
Important to set them at the correct
depth so that the crowns are not
covrred and roots not exposed.
With proper maintenance and a
bit of luck, you should enjoy fresh
strawberries for several months.
Additional information on growing
strawberries In the garden is avail­
able from our office. Vegetable
Crops Fact Sheet VC 9-77.
All Extension Programs are open
to anyone regardless of race, color,
sex, or national origin.

TV Personalities
Join Cake Show

M arie Mlchellnl, W ESH -TV Channel 2 meteo­
rologist, will |oln other participants In a fun
cake decorating contest Saturday.

The Cake Arts Society of Sanford will hold its Fifth
Annual Cake Show Saturday. Oct. 1. from 1-4 p.m..
at the Greater San ford Chamber of Commerce.
The afternoon events Include the Judging of cakes
previously submitted, drawings for door prizes
Including a S50 gift certificate from Publix. a snack
bar and a craft table featuring kitchen Items for sale.
In addition, a live cake decorating contest will be
held with local public officials demonstrating their
decorating skills. Orlando television personalities
Joining the decorators will lie Marie Michctinf.
WESH-TV Channel 2. and Tom Hale. WCPX-TV.
Channel G. Both arc mcteomllglsts and Mlchcllnl
says. "I am looking forward to seeing everyone."
Proceeds from the event, open to the public, will
benefit the Meals on Wheels Program, a continuing
project of the Cake Arts Society.

H*r*M P W « by T*mmy Vlnont

1

Speech Conflict 'Makes'
A Mountain Of Molehill
I

. ..

lob

ii,nv in miy

Zeta X i's 26th
Anniversary

01

Zeta XI Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will celebrate its 26th anniversary in
Sanford this ye ar. According to the president, continuing community service
projects are planned for the 1983-B4 year. O fficers serving the chapter are,
from left, Fra n ce s M cAdam s, recording secretary; Tess Morgan, treasu rer;
M yra M ichels, president; Donna T tu m aso n rv ice president; and M yrt C lark ,
corresponding secretary.

needle phobia und how it Is alleeilng Ills life und vours.
you will. Has that "beautiful, caring man" ever
considered hypnosis for a painless blood test? Suggest It.

Speech Is a method of communicating a thought or
Idea. Speech at its best Is communicating simply and
clearly.
When someone says, " I ’ll make the bed," I un­
derstand what the person means. ’ T il dress the bed"
-sounds pretentious. (One dresses himself, a doll or a
Jchicken.)
The word "m ake" is used In any number of ways: to
make believe, make do. make good, make book, make
fun, make eyes, make sport, make hay, make love, make
waves, and to make a mountain out o f a molehill, of
which this Is a dandy example.

DEAR ABBY: Help! I. loo. need to "gel out of the
closet." My secret? My sin? I hate dogs! I must confess, I
drsplse dogs! All kinds. When I sec a dog lick the hands
or face of a child. 1get 111Just thinking about where that
dog's nose has been. And when I see a grown person
walking a dog. then stop and stand there while the dog
deposits a filthy mess — always on someone clse’s
proj»crty — I wonder how that person can look in a

A IL ^
ROSE BUSHES

mirror.
I could never hurt un animal, but I would gladly
sterilize every dog in this world. Just imagine, a world
(rce of dog filth, free of barking, yelping, growling — free
of the stench of dog urine! Our children could play on
the grass without stepping Into a foul mess.
And please don’ t (ell me that a dog is man's best
friend. Abhy. Is that the best man can do?
DOG-

S H A D E TREES

TIRED
DEAR DOG-TIRED; There’s not enough space on this
j ' DEAR ABBY: I have a problem I’ve never seen In
Iyour column. "Bobby" and I have lived together page to rejKjrt how much pleasure, companionship,
i(happily) for three years, lie’s a beautiful, caring man. comfort, safety and service dogs have given man over
Und I know he loves tne. but he won't marry me for a the years.
If a dog Is a nuisance lor any reason — blame the
[reason you're not going to believe. He's afraid of the
owner, not the dog!
[blood test.
’’ Ever since he was a young boy lie's been terrified of
DEAR ABBY: My husband lias not worked for over u
mecdlcs — so much that he hasn’t been to a doctor for 10
year, and we are Just barely making ends meet. Is there
(years.
I- I'm pregnant now, and Bobby Is delighted. Our child a tactful w’ay to stop exchanging Christmas presents?
[will have his name, but 1 won't. I hate the thought of We can’t afford to send any, and we don't want any
being an unwed mother, but we can't get married unless gifts, so how can this be handled?
IN DEBT
fjpobby takes a blood test, and he has flat-out refused.
IN DULUTH
I What should I do? Don't suggest that Bobby sec a
DEAR IN: As I've suggested before, around Thanks­
shrink. He's been seeing one for five months about
another problem, bui he refuses to tell Ills shrink about giving. send cards to those on your Christmas gift list
saying. "W e arc thankful for folks with whom we can be
Ihlsfcnrof needles.
NO MRS. IN frank. We nre not in a position to send Christmus gifts
MANHATTAN tills year, and we don’t expect gifts, but please accept
DEAR NO MRS.: An ultimatum is in order. Tell our iovc and and sincere good wishes for a healthy,
lobbv that if he doesn't tell his "shrink" about his happy, blessed holiday."

INVENTORY

ARRIVAL
j Mr. and M rs. T o n y
(N a n c y ) S trick la n d o f
Banford. announce the
birth of their son. Brian
Adam. Sept. 17. at Winter
Park Memorial Hospital,
fie weighed 8 lbs.. 12 ozs..
and was welcomed home
by his sister. Trisha. 21
months old.
j Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs.. Ivan
Benedict. Franklin. N.C.
Fatemal grandmother is
Lira. Lona Strickland of

BONUS
SATURDAY
1 DAY ONLY
OCT. 1

*

Cm*/0FF

100% Organic

WE CARRY
ALL OF YOUR
LAWN AND
GARDEN
CHEMCALS

$£88
3

W

r~ *o g

r

MIXED
BOUQUET

FULL FLORIST SHOP
jH k

ALL VARIETIES

FRUIT TREES
WIRE SERVICE

(T ^ S

Waddttogi-Funard
SpaUol Occoilom

$000
ALL
GALLON CONTAINERS
A zalea - Juniper ■Oleander
Ligustrum • Viburnum
Hibiscus and Many Others

'T fo iid teu td tfrvid w (fatten.
2397 French Ave. Ph. 323-7150 Sanford
323-4132

COME SEE OUR
MANY UNADVERTISED
SPECIALS

HOSPITAL
SPECIAL

STOREW IDE

Greet Piece
T e S te rt

FERTILIZER

All Regulor Priced Merchandise
(Excluding Aigner)
Bernardo • Cologne

SEMINOLE TRINITY
^CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
4

CASH
VISA
MASTER CARD
ONLY

APPOX. 4‘
liv e Oak • Red Maple
Camphor • Red Bud
Purple Plum Etc.

OPfN DAILY 8:30 • 5:30 WED. 8:30 - 1:30 CLOSED SUN.

�V

10A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN AND TO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
CASE N O .U U n CA M G
IN R E iT H E MARRIAGE OF
JOHN RAY DEAN.
Petitioner,
and
BREND AG AYO EAN.
Rfripondr.il
I
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:RRENDA GAY DEAN
JIM Marlow Road
Wilton. North Carolina 37193
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action lor Dissolution ol Marring*
ha» bfrfrn mod against you and you
art rrquirfrd to Serve a copy Ol your
wrlttrn d*tpni*i II any, to It on SION
W CARTER. JR . Petitioner's at
lor nay. whole addran it 401 Eait
Jaction Street, Suite 300. O.'lando.
Florida 33*01. on or before November
3, IfU , and III* the original wllh the
clerk ol thli court either before
service on Petitioner's attorney or
Immediately thereafter, otherwise a
default will be entered against you
tor the rellel demanded In the
complaint or petition
DATEDon September 23.19(3
ARTHUR H BECKWITH, JR.
As Clerk ol the Court
By CatherineM Evans
At Deputy Clerk
Publish September X A October 7.
la ,31, l**3 OEL 173
---------------- TO t i c c o f -------------■
PUBLIC HEARING
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 200 of the Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford, Florida, on
October It, IMJ at 7 00 P M . or at
soon thereafter at possible, to
slder a SPECIFIC LAND USE
AMENDMENT to the Seminole
County Comprehensive Plan and
REZONING of the described pro
party.
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
ORDINANCE
77 35
WHICH
AMENDS THE DETAILED LAND
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM: LOW
DENSITY
RESIDEN
TIAL.PRESERVATION TO: HIGH
DENSITY
RESIDENTIAL
FOR
THE PURPOSE OF REZONING
FROM A-l AGRICULTURE TO
R 3 M ULTIPLE FAM ILY DWELL­
ING DISTRICT the following de
icrlbfd y ppf f t y .
The East i* and the West to 0f the
NW
ot the SW to ol Section
24 2tS30E. consisting of approal
mately aO acres. (Further described
at at the southeast comer ol Dodd
Road and Red Bug Lake Road I
(DIST.4II
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
SUBMITTED BY: AMURCON OF
FLORIDA INC AND CLUSTER III.
INC
Further, the PLANNING AND
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
public hearing In Room 200 ot the
Seminole County Courthouse. San
ford. Florida, on Sept. 7, IM3. or as
toon thereafter at possible, to re
view, hear comments and make
recommendations to the Board of
County Commissioners on the above
captioned ordinance and rezonlng
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 323 SIX,
Ext. 1*0
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish to comment on the
proposed actions may submit written
statements to the bend Managereent
Division prior to the scheduled public
hearing. Persons appearing al tin
hearings may submit written state
men ts or be heard orally.
Persons are advised that. It they
decide to appeal any decision made
at these meetings, they will need a
record ot the proceedings, and. tor
such purpose, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim record of the
proceedings Is made, which record
Includes the testimony and evidence
upon which the appeal Is to be based
Board of County Commissioners
Seminole County. Florida
B y: Sandra Glenn. Chairman
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
Publish August 23 A September 14.
X. 1M3
OEK (7
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
U -U AC PFIIe Number
IN RE: ESTATE OF
M ARTHAJANE ABRAHAM,
also known as
M ARTHAJ.ABRAHAM .
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL
PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST
THE ABOVE ESTATE AND ALL
OTHER PERSONS INTERESTED
IN THE ESTATE:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
lhal the administration ot the above
estate and File Number is pending In
the Circuit Court tor Seminole
County. Florida. Probate Division,
the address of which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanlord. Florida
32771 The personal representative ot
the estate Is W ILLIAM E. OE
TAMORE, whose address Is 2357
Surrey Lane. Clearwater. Florida
33575 The name and address ot the
personal representative's attorney
are set larih below
AH persons having claims or de
mendi against the estate are re
qulred.
W ITHIN
THREE
(31
MONTHS fR O M THE OATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to flic with the clerk
of the above court a written stale
ment ol any claim or demand they
may have Each claim must be In
writing and must indicate the basis
lor the claim, the name and address
of the creditor or his agent or
attorney, and the amount claimed It
the claim Is not yat due. the date
when It will become due shall be
slated If the claim Is contingent or
unliquidated, the nature ol the un
certainly shall be staled If the claim
is secured, the security shall be
described The claimant shall deliver
sufficient copies ot the claim to the
clerk to enable the clerk to mall one
copy to each personal repre
tentative
All persons interested in the estate
to whom a copy ol this Notice ol
Administration has been mailed are
required. WITHIN THREE
(3)
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to file any oblecttont
they may have that challenge the
validity ol the decedent's will, the
qualifications ot the personal repre
tentative, or the venue or lurtsdic
tton of the court
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
BEFO REVERBARRED
Date of the first publication of this
Notice ot Administration September
23,19(3.
/*/ William E Oelamore
As Personal Representative
gt the above Estate
ATTO RNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
FRIEDMAN A FRIEDMAN
B y J. Don Friedman
P O Bor Ml
137 West Church Avenue
Long wood. Florida 32750
Telephone: (305)(Ja 1414
Publish September 23.30. IM3
DEL 131

Friday, Sept. 3 0 ,19M

~NoTTcFSnTEICUOTiotJ----CLOSING. VACATINO
ANDABANDONING
RIGHTS OF WAY OR
DRAINAGE EASEMENT
TO WHOM IT M AY CONC E RN:
NOTICE Is hereby given lhal the
Board ol County Commissioners ol
Seminole County. Florida, at Its
Regular Mealing held on the 37th day
ol September. A.O., Ito), in the
County
Commissioners'
Meeting
Room In the Courthouse al Sentord.
Seminole County, Florida, pursuant
to Petition and Notice heretofore
given, passed and sdopfrd a Resolu
lion closing, vacating and abandon
tng, renouncing and disclaiming any
and all right ol the County ol
Seminole and the public In and to the
following described rlghti of way or
drainageeasement. to wit:
The West 15 teet ot the drainage
easement defined as comprising the
East 75 Ittt of the following de
scribed Property: The South 15 (eel
ot Lot a and the North 15 leel ot Lot 5.
Block "M ". English Estatas Unit
Two. as per Plat thereof as recorded
In Plat Book 13. Paget la. »5. Public
Records
ol
Seminole
County.
Florida.
By the Board ol County Commis­
sioners ot Seminote County. Florida,
this 77th day of September, A O .

m3

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING
OF PROPOSED CHANOES AND
AMENDMENTS
IN
CERTAIN
DISTRICTS AND BOUNDARIES OF
THE IONINO ORDINANCE OF
THE
CITY
OF
SANFORD.
FLORIDA.
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held al the
Commission Room In ttw City Hall In
the City si Sanlord. Florida, at 7:00
o ’clock P M on October 10. 19*3. to
consider changes and amendments
to toe Zoning Ordinance o( the City of
Sanlord. Florida, as follows:
The Code ol the City ol Sanlord.
Florida; Appendix A, Zoning Ordl
nance: (Ordinance No
1097. at
Amended).
ARTICLE
V. USE
PROVISIONS
Sec. I. SR IAA Single Family Res
Identlat District, paragraph C De
nsity Controls, shall be amended by
the addition o ' sub paragraph (9f as
follows:
(9) Density — 3 units per acre
Sec. 2 SR 1 A Single Family Reil
dential Dwelling District, paragraph
C. Density Controls
shall be
amended by the addition ol sub
paragraph (9) at follows:
(9) Density — 5 units per acre
Sec 5. MR t Multiple Family Res
Identlat Dwelling District, paragraph
D Density Controls, sub paragraph
(3), Item a shall be amended to read
at follows a Density — 15 units per acre
Sec. *. MR 2 Multiple Family Ret
Identlal Dwelling District, paragraph
D Density Controls, sub paragraph
(I). Item a shall be amended to read
at lot lows:
a Density — 20 units per acre.
Sec 7. RMOI Multiple Family Res
identlal. Office and Institutional
District, paragraph D. Density Con
troll, subparagraph (31. item a
lhal I be amended to read as tolknvs;
a Density — ao units per acre
All parties In interest and citizens
shall have an opportunity to be heard
at said hearing
By order ol the City Commission ol
the City ol Sanlord, F lor Ida
H N. Tamm, Jr.
City Clerk
Publish September 30. M. INS
OEL 102

BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
(SEAL!
Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Clerk
By Sandy L Wall
Deputy Clerk
Publish September X . IH3
DEL 174
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 200 ol the Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida, on
October It. tf*3 at 7:00 P .M . or at
soon thereafter as possible, to con
slder a SPECIFIC LAND USE
AMENDMENT to the Seminole
County Comprehensive Plan and
REZONING ol the described pro
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL
perty.
CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR SEMINOLE
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
ORDINANCE
77 35
WHICH
CASE NO.: U-ICU'CA-09-P
AMENDS THE DETAILED LAND
DIVISION: "P "
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
DUVAL FEDERAL SAVINGS AND
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
OF
INTENSITY URBAN TO: MEDIUM
JACKSONVILLE, a corporation.
OENSITY
RESIDENTIAL
FOR
Plalntlll,
THE PURPOSE OF REZONING
FROM: A t AGRICULTURE TO:
BE McCALL and PATRICIA A.
R7A 7 SINGLE FAM ILY MOBILE
McCALL. his wlla. and COTTON
HOME PARK DISTRICT, the follow
STATES MUTUAL
INSURANCE
Ing deter Ibed property
COMPANY
and
SOUTHEAST
The West to ot the Southwest to ot
BANK, N A . and FLAGSHIP BANK
the Southeast to ol Section II-3IS
OF SEMINOLE.
3IE. Seminole County, Florida.
Defendants
Parcel 3* Consisting ol approii
NOTICE OF ACTION
mately 34 acres. (Further described
TO:
as located south ol Harrison St and
B E. McCall and
west ot Denlta Street). (DIST. 41)
Patricia A. McCall,
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
his wile
SUBMITTED
BY:
HARRIS
B
Residence Unknown
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
MULLINS
Further, the PLANNING AND
that an action to foreclose a
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
mortgage on ttw following property
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
In Seminole County. Florida.
public hearing In Room 200 ct the
Lot 3. Block A. THE SPRINGS.
Semlnola County Courthouic. San
DEERWOOO ESTATES, accord.ng
ford. Florida, on October 5th. 19*3. or
to ttw plat thereof as recorded In Plat
at soon thereafter as possible, to
Book ta, pages 75 and 7a. ol the
review, hear comments and make
public records ol Seminole County,
recommendations to the Board ot
Florida.
County Commissioners on the above
has been tiled agalnsl you: and you
captioned ordinance and re toning
are required to serve a copy ot your
Additional Information may be
written deterses. It any. to It on
obtained by contacting ttw Land
Edward S. Jones, plalntitl's at
Management Manager al 321 1330.
torrwy. whose address Is 314 Duval
Ext HO
: - '
Federal
Build,nq.
Jeckeonvtlla.
Persons unable to attend the
Florida. 32703. before October 24,
hearing who wish to comment on the
19*3. and Ilia the original with ttw
proposed actions may submit written
Uerk of this Court alttwr before
statements to the Land Management
service on plaintiff's attorney or
Olvlfion prior to the scheduled public
Immediately thereafter; otherwise a
hearing Persons appearing at the
default will be entered against you
hearings may submit written state
for ttw relief demanded In Itw
menli or be heard orally
complaint or petition
Persons are advised that, If they
WITNESS my hand and ttw teal ol
decide to appeal any decision made
this Court on this 20th day ol
al these meetings, they will need a
September, A D. 19*3.
.
record of the proceedings, and. for
(SEAL)
'
such purpose, they may need to
ARTHUR H. BECKWITH. JR..
ensure that a verbatim record ol the
CLERK
proceed'ngs is made, which record
By: Eleanor F. Buratto
includes the testimony and evidence
Deputy Clark
upon whtch the appea I Is to be based
Publish September 23, M A October
Board ot County Commissioners
7,14. IN3
Seminole County. Florida
DEL 134
By Sandra Glenn. Chairman
NOTICE OF
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr
PUBLIC HEARING
Publish: September U. X . 19*3
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
DELS
MISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
HEARINO
ir Room 200 ol the Seminole County
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida, on
October It. 19(3 at 7 00 P M . or *s
MISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
soon thereafter as possible, to con
tide, a SPECIFIC L A W r USE
In Room 200 ot the Seminole County
AMENDMENT to the Seminole
Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida, on
County Comprehensive Plan and
OCTOBER 25, 19*3, al 7.00 P M . or
as soon thereafter at possible, to
RE ZONING ot the described pro
perty.
consider a SPECIFIC LANO USE
AMENDMENT to the Seminole
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
County Comprehensive Plan and
ORDINANCE
77 25
WHICH
AMENOS THE DETAILED LAND
REZONING ol the described pro
pert|,
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM: LOW
ORDINANCE
77 25
WHICH
OENSITY
RESIDEN
AMENDS THE DETAILED LAND
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
TIAL/PRESERVATION TO HIGH
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
OENSITY
RESIDENTIAL
FOR
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
THE PURPOSE OF REZONING
DENSITY URBAN TO INDUSTRI
FROM A I AGRICULTURE TO
AL FOR THE PURPOSE OF RE
R 3 M ULTIPLE FAM ILY DWELL­
ING
DISTRICT. Itw following de
ZONING
FROM
At
scribed properly
AGRICULTURE TO M I INDUS
TRIAL, the following described
The SE U ol the SW M ol Section
property
74 3IS ME. less toe W to and ttw E to
ttwreot. containing 30 acres more or
The South 313 7 teet of the North
I73t 1 teet of the Northeast to West ol
less In addition, all ol Itw property
Lake Mary Road and ttw South 713 7
situated North of the Center Line of
teet ot the North lljt . l teet ot toe
Howell Branch Creek located In
East US feet ot the Northwest to ot
Parcel A/II. toe East tool the SE to
Sec. 29 20$ ME. Seminole County
ol toe SW to of Sec J4 21$ ME.
Consisting ot approximately 3 3
Seminole County (cons.sling o( ap
acres (Further described as on the
proaimafely
72
utabie
acres
West side ot Longwood Lake Mary
altogether) ( Further described at
Road, 700 teet North ot C 427 )
12*0 feel south ol Red Bug Road,
(DIST 421
abutted on the North by toe Wilt*
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
Springs Shopping Center ) (DIST. I l l
SUBMITTED
BY
DEAN
J
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
OAKLEY
SUBMITTED BY
EDWARD N
FIELDING. JR
Further, the PLANNING AND
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
Furttwr. the PLANNING AND
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
public hearing In Room 200 ol the
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
Seminole County Courthouse San
public hearing Ln Room 700 of Itw
lord. Florida, on SEPTEMBER 7.
Sam mol* County Courthouse. San
19*3 AT 7 00 P M . or at toon
ford. Florida, on September 7. tvuj.
thereafter as pots,bie. to reviaw.
*1 7 00 P M . or as loon thereafter at
hear comments and make recom
possible, to review, hear comments
mersdationi to ttw Board ol County
and make recommendations lo Ih*
Commissioners on ttw above cap
Board ol County Commlsilonert on
honed ordinance and rezonlng
the above captioned ordinance and
rezonlng
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting ttw Land
Additional information may be
Management Manager at 323 «3M.
obtained by contacting the Land
Eat 160
Management Manager at 17) 43M.
Persons unable to attend the
Ext 140
hearing who wish to comment on the
Persons unable to attend the
proposed actions may Submit written
hearing who wlsn to comment on Ih*
statements to the Land Management
proposed actions may submit written
Division prior to the scheduled public
statements to the Land Management
hearing Persons appearing al ttw
Division prior lo the scheduled public
hearings may submit written stale
tearing Persons appearing at the
menti or be heard orally.
hearings may submit written state
Persons a** advised that, If they
ment* or be hear ) orally.
decide to appeal any decision made
Persons are advised that, II they
al these meetings, they will need a
dec id* to appeal any decision mad*
record of ttw proceedings, and. lor
at thas* meetings, they will need a
record ot the proceedings, and. lor
such purpose, tfwy may need to
ensure the I e verbatim record ot the
such purpose. Ihey may need to
ensure that a verbatim record ol the
proceedings is mode, which record
proceedings Is mad* which record
includes the testimony end evidence
Includes t l * testimony and evktenc*
upon which ttw eppeal is to be based
upon which It* appeal isJo be based
Board ot County
Commissiorwrs
Board of County Commissioners
Seminole County. Florida
Seminole County. F lor Id*
by Sandra Glenn. Chairman
By Sandra Glenn.
Chairman
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr.
Attest Arthur H Beckwith. Jr
Publish August 22 A September 14.
X . 19CJ
Publish September 1 . 1*.M . 19(3
OEK (5
DEL 15

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING
OF PROPOSED CHANOES AND
AMENDMENTS
IN
CERTAIN
DISTRICTS AND BOUNDARIES OF
THE IONINO ORDINANCE OF
THE
CITY
OF
SANFORD,
FLORIDA
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held al the
Commission Room In the City Hall In
Itw City ol Sanford, Florida, at 7:00
o'clock P.M. on October 10. 19*3. to
consider changes and amendments
to Itw Zoning Ordinance ot Itw City of
Sanford. Florida, as follows:
A portion ol that certain property
lying North ol Paola Road (C-44AI
and Wast ot Oregon Avenue Is
proposed Lo be rezorwd from AD
(Agricultural) District to SR IAA
(Single Family Residential) District
and SR I (Single Family Residential
Dwelling) District. Said property
being more particularly described as
lollowv
PARCEL I I : FROM AD (A G R I­
CULTURAL) DISTRICT TO SR-IAA
(SINGLE-FAM ILY RESIDENTIAL)
DISTRICT.
The West to of ttw Swto ot ttw
SWto ot Section 33. Township It
South.
Range M
East. LESS
Right ot Way ol Oregon Avenue.
AND THE SEto ol the SEto ol
Section S3, Township l» South. Range
M East. Semlnola County. Florida.
LESS the West 145 teet thereof and
LESS Right ol Way of Paola Road
AND ALSO LESS ttw following
described parcel:
From ttw Southwell corner ol
Section 33. Township I f Souto. Range
M East. Seminole County, Florida,
run N 0l*04'4l"W., along ttw West
line ol Mid Section 33. a distance ol
75 00 teet to a point on Itw north
Right ol Way line ol Paola Road for
a Point ot Beginning; thence run
S *f*a*'lS"E
along
Mid
North
Right of Way line and paraltal wllh
ttw South line ol Mid Section 53. a
distance ot 440 53 leel to ttw West
Right ol Way line ol Oregon Avenue;
thence run N 00*01'05"W.. along Mid
West Right of Way line, a distance ot
355 00
feet;
thenca
run
W 19*41 15"W., 750 00 leel; thence
run S 7C25'3t "W.. 122.54 teet; thence
run N. 19*4I'15"W, 345 00 teet;
thence run S 44*31 00 "W., 243 45 teet;
thence run S 0O*U'43"W.. 143 M feet
to a point on the aforesaid North
Right ot Way line ol Paola Road,
thence run N tf*59'7t"E . along Mid
North
Right ol Way
line being
parallel with and 25 00 teet north ol
the South llna of Section 12. Township
19 South. Range M East, a distance
of 770 (0 teet to ttw Point ol Beglnn
Ing Containing 47.127 acres, more or
less. ISR IAA)
AND
PARCEL 12; FROM AD (AG R I­
CULTURAL) DISTRICT TO 5R-I
(SINOLE FAM ILY RESIDENTIAL
DWELLINO) DISTRICT.
from the Southwest corner ol
Section 33, Township 19 South. Range
M East. Seminole County, Florida,
run H O fO a-arw .. along ttw West
line ol Mid Section 33. a distance ot
35 00 leel to a point on ttw North
Right ol Way line ol Paola Road for
a Point ol Beginning; thence run
St9*al‘ 1S"E., along Mid North
Right ol Way line and parallel with
the South line ol Mid Section 33. a
distance ol 440 53 leel to the West
Right of W ty line ol Oregon Avenue;
thence run N 00*or05” W.. along Mid
West Right ol Way line, a distance of
355 00
teet;
thence
run
N * 9* 4I ' 1 S"W . 350 00 leel; thence
run S 7**35'39"W , 122.5* teet; thence
run N *9*/4'15"W. 165 00 teet;
thence run S 44*3I'00"W.. 342 AS leel
thence run S00*tt'aS "W . 14311 teet
to a point on ttw aloreMld North
Right ol Way llna at Paola Road,
thence run N 19*59'2* "E „ along Mid
North
Right ol Way
llna being
parallel wllh and 25 00 teet North ot
Itw Souto line ol Section J2, Township
19 South. Range M East, a distance
ol 270 10 teet to ttw Point ol Beglnn
Ing Containing 4 743 acres, more or
less (SR II
All parties In Interest and citizens
shall have an opportunity to be heard
al Mid hearing
By order ol ttw City Commission ot
the Cl ty ol Sanlord. F lor Ida
H.N. Tamm, Jr.
City Clerk
Publish September » . M . 19*3
OEL 74

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP
M ANAGEM ENTAND
CIRCULATION
I Title of Publication: The Even
ing Herald
7 Oat* ol Filing: September M,
19(3
3 Frequency ot Issue: Dally
E xcept Saturday A Christmas.
A No ot Issues Published
Annually 312
B Annual Subscription Prlc*
545 00
4 Location of known otllce ol
publication (Street. City, County.
State and Zip Code)- 300 N. French
A v e , Sanlord. Seminole County,
Florida 33771.
5 Location ol ttw headquarters ol
general business offices of the
publishers (Not printers) Same as
above
4 Names and com pltlt aodresses
ol publisher, editor, and managing
editor
Publisher Wayne O Doyle. San
lord. Florida 32771.
Managing
Editor
Thomas
Giordano. Sanlord. Florida 22771.
7 Owner (It owned by a corpora
lion. Its name and address must be
stated
and
also
Immadialely
thereunder ttw names and addresses
at stockholders owning or holding I
percent or more ol total amount of
stock It not owned by a corporation,
ttw names and addresses ot ttw
Individual owners must be given. It
owned by a partnership or other
unincorporated firm. Its name and
address, as well as that ol aach
Individual must be given I
Ttw
Martinsville
Bulletin,
Martinsville. Virginia.
I.
Known
bondholders,
mortgagees, and oltwr security hold
ers owning or holding I percent or
more of total amount ot bonds,
mortgages or oltwr securities (It
there are none, so slate I
None
A. Total No Copies
Printed (Net Press Run)
1400
B Paid Circulation
1 . Salat through
Dealers and carriers.
Streel vendors and
77(4
counter sales
315
2 Mall subscriptions
C Total Paid Circulation
KJOf
O. Fra* Distribution
by mall, carrier or
other means samp las.
complimentary, and
other Ira* copies
120
E. Total distribution
(Sum olCandD )
(t n
F Cop&gt;*s not distributed
1 Office us*, left
over, unaccounted.
150
spoiled after printing
7. Returns Irom news
321
agents
G. Total (Sum ot E.F t
and I — should aqual
net press run shown
(400
In A)
1 rertity that tr* statements mao*
by me above are correct and com
plate
WaynaD Doyle
PublisZwr
Publish September X . TW
DEL 15*

Legal Notice
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal
the undersigned, desiring to engage
In business under the fictitious name
ol LEONARD SHELL SERVICE at
number 3500 Park Avenue. In ttw
City ol Sanlord. Florida. Intends to
register the Mid name wllh Itw Clerk
ol ttw Circuit Court ot Seminole
County. Florida.
DATED at Sanlord. Florida, this
IJIh day ot September. 19(3.
LEONARD A SONS
ENTERPRISES. INC.
By: Calherl.seA Leonard.
President
Publish September M A October 2,
14.31.19*3
DEI 170
NOTICE OF RESOLUTION
CLOSING. VACATINO
ANDABANDONING
RIOHTSOF-WAYOR
DRAINAGEEASEMENT
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE Is hereby given that the
Board ot County Commissioners of
Seminole County. Florida, al Its
Regular Meeting held on ttw 77lh day
ol Septtmber, A D .. 1**3. In the
County Commissioners' Meeting
Room In the Courthouse *1 Sanlord.
Semlnola County, Florida, pursuant
lo Petition and Nolle* heretofore
given, passed and adopted a Resolu­
tion closing, vacating and abandon
Ing. renouncing and disclaiming any
and all right ol Itw County ot
Semlnola and Itw public In and to the
following described rights of way or
drainage easement, to wit;
That dedicated Right ol Way.
twenty live (25) leel In width lor
Charles Streel, lying North of Lots I
A 2. Block A. and Lots I through 4.
Block B. and vacated Bank Street as
depicted on the Plat ot Sanlando
Springs. Tract No. 17, as recorded In
Plat Book 4. Pag* 55. Public Records
of Seminole County. Florida
By ttw Board ol County Commis­
sioners of Seminole County. Florida,
this 27th day Ol September, A D .,
19(3
BOARDOF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERSOF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
(SEAL)
Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Clerk
By Sandy Wall
Deputy Clerk
Publish September M. 19*3
OEL 173
NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARINO
OF PROPOSED CHANOES AND
AMENDMENTS
IN
CERTAIN
DISTRICTS AND BOUNDARIES OF
THE ZONING ORDINANCE OF
THE
CITY
OF
SANFORD,
FLORIDA
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will tw held al ttw
Commission Room In ttw City Hall In
Itw City of Sanlord. Florid*, al 7:00
o'clock P.M. on October 10. 19*3. to
consider changes and amendments
to the Zoning Ordinance ot ttw City ol
Sanford. Florida, as tollown:
The Code of the City of Sanford.
Florida; Appendix A. Zoning Ordl
nance. (Ordinance No
1097. as
Amended I
ARTICLE
VI.
O FFSTRE E T
PARKING AND LOADING REGU
LATIONS
Sec I Definition ot Oft Street
Parking and Loading Space shall be
amended by ttw addition ol The
following;
Exception: Any totally residential
facility that requires ten ( 10) parking
spaces or less may apply lor a
substitute parking area surface that
can be porous and other than pava
men! and It may be an approved
mulch, river rock, ate. el an
approved thickness and such sub
stltute surface must be maintained
continuously In an approved condi­
tion and if not maintained properly,
then the hard surface shall be
provided Immediately. All parking
areas requiring a driveway entrance
shall provide the concrete epron es
required by the City Ordinance and
ttw alevation of ttw apron shall be
such a* to prevent the substitute
surfacing materials from washing
Into the streel
All parties In Interest and citizens
shall have an opportunity to be heard
a I said hearing
By order ot lt,e City Commlssln of
ttw City ot Sanlord. Florida
H N Tamm, Jr
City Clerk
Publish September 30. M. 1913
DEL-103
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARINO
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 200 ol the Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida, on
OCT 25. 19*3. at 7 00 P M . or as
soon thereafter as possible, lo con
slder a SPECIFIC LAND USE
AMENDMENT to ttw Seminole
County Comprehensive Plan and
REZONING ol the described pro
perty
AN ORDINANCE AMENOING
ORDINANCE
77 71
WHICH
AMENDS THE DETAILED LAND
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
OENSITY RESIDENTIAL TO ME
DIUM OENSITY RESIDENTIAL
FOR THE PURPOSE OF REZON
ING FROM R I SINGLE FAM ILY
RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT TO R3
ONE AND TWO FA M ILY DWELL
ING DISTRICT, ttw lollowlng de
scribed property
Lots I through 19. Block B. Replat
ol Lak* Mobile Shore*. Seminole
County, Florida. Plat Book I. Pag* 55
In Section 7 3IS-ME. Consisting of
less then two acres (Further d*
scribed es on ttw south side ol Lak*
Mobil* Orlv* ) (DIST. 94)
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
SUBMITTED BY HOWARD
R
YEATON
Furttwr. the PLANNING ANO
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
public hearing in Room 200 of Itw
Semlnola County Courthouse. San
lord. Florida, on SEPTEMBER 7.
19(3 AT 7:00 P .M . or * i soon
thereafter as possible, to review,
hear comments and make recom
mendetkms to ttw Board ot County
Commissioners on the above cap
Honed ordinance and rt zoning
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting ttw Land
Management Manager at 323 4JM.
Eat 140 '
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish lo comment on the
proposed actions may submit written
statements to ttw Lend Management
Division lor to Itw scheduled public
hearing Persons appearing at ttw
hearings may submit written state
menti or be heard orally
Persons are advised that, II Ihey
decide to appeal any decision made
at tfwsa meetings, they will need *
record ol the proceedings, and, lor
such purpose, they may need to
ensure that a verbatim record ot ttw
proceedings Is mado. which record
Includes Itw testimony and evidence
upon which Itw appeal Isle be based
Board ol County
Commissioners
Seminole County, Florida
By Sandra Glann.
Chairman
Attest: Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
Publish September 1.14. M. 1**3
DEL U

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MISSIONERS
OF
SEMINOLE
COUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 200 ol Ih* Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida, on
Octoter It, 19*3 at 7:00 P M., or as
soon thereafter as possible, to con
slder a SPECIFIC LANO USE
AMENDMENT to the Semlnola
County Comprehensive Plan and
REZONING ol the described pro
perty.
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
ORDINANCE
77 25
WHICH
AMENDS THE DETAILED LAND
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM: HIGH
DENSITY
RESIDENTIAL
TO;
COMMERCIAL
FOR
THE
PURPOSE OF REZONING FROM:
R 3 M ULTIPLE FAM ILY DWELL
ING DISTRICT TO: C-3 RETAIL
COMMERCIAL, the lollowlng de
scribed property.
From NW corner ol SW to ol SW to­
ol Sec. 14 IIS ME. run S 02* 2l ' 4r E
540 57 II along W line ol said SW to ol
SW to for ttw POB of this description,
run thence N 11*03 35'' E 341 94 tt
parallel with S line ol said SW to to
Wly R/W line ol SR 43*. thence run S
23*54’35" E 40* 73 It along said Wly
R/W line ol SR 434. thence run $
IC O IS" W 51104 tl along a line
parallel with the South line ot said
SW to ol SW to to W line ol said SW
to thenca run N 03*7l'4t" W 37* 42 tl
along W line at said SW to ol SW to to
Itw POB. Containing 1.793* acres,
subject
to
any
easements,
right of ways or restrictions ol re
cord: AND; From Ih* NW corner ol
SW to ol SW to ol Sec. 14 21S ME. run
S 0?*7*' 4I" E 939.14 It along W line of
said SW to of SW to lor POB ot the
description, run thenca N ***03'15" E
111 04 tt parallel with S line ol said
SW to Wly R/W line ol SR 414. thence
run S 21*54'25" E 414.77 tt along ttw
said Wly right of way o&lt; SR 414.
thenca run S M*01’3S" W 443 41 II
along S line ol said SW to ol SW to to
Itw SW corrwr ot the said SW to ol
SW to thence run N 07*2»'4P W
1*4 72 tt along Itw W line of said SW
to ol SW to to POB Containing 5 1*74
acres MOL Sub|ecl to eny ease
ments. right ol ways or restrictions
ol record (Further described as
being located on Itw west side ol SR
434. north ot the Orange County line.)
(O IS T .H )
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
SUBMITTED
BY:
FRANKLIN
INVESTMENTS. LTD
Further, the PLANNING ANO
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hold a
public hearing In Room 200 ol the
Semlnola County Courthouse. Senlord, Florida, on Sept 7, tftl, at 7:00
P M . or as soon thereafter as
possible, to review, hear comments
and make recommendations to ttw
Board ol County Commissioners on
ttw above captioned ordinance end
rezonlng.
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting Ih* Land
Management Manager at 12143M.
Eat. 140
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wllh to comment on the
proposed actions may submit written
statements to ttw Land Management
Division prior to Itw scheduled public
hearing Persons appearing at ttw
hearings may submit written state­
ments or be heard orally.
Persons are advised that. It they
decide lo appeal any decision mad*
at these meetings, they will need a
record ot Ih* proceedings, end, for
such purpose, they may need lo
ensure that a verbatim record ol ttw
proceedings Is made, which record
Includes the testimony and evidence
upon which Itw appeal Is lobe based
Board ol County Commissioners
Seminole County. Florid*
By: Sandra Glenn. Chairman
Attest: Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish: August 22 &amp; September 14.
X . IMJ.
OEK *4
NOTICE OF A
PUBLIC HEARINO
OF PROPOSED CHANGES
ANDAMENDMENTS
IN CERTAIN DISTRICTS
AND B O U N D A R IES OF
THE ZONING ORDINANCE
OF THE CITY
OF SANFORO. FLORIDA.
Notice ll hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held el ttw
Commission Room In the City Hell In
ttw City of Sanlord. Florida, at 7:00
o'clock P.M. on October 10, 19(3, lo
consider changes and amendments
lo ttw Zoning Ordinance ol ttw City ol
Sanlord. Florida, as follows
The Cod* of ttw
Cltyol Sanlord. Florida
Appendix A,
Zoning Ordinance
(Ordinance No 1097.
as Amended)
ARTICLE V
USE PROVISIONS
Sec. J. SR I Single Family
Residential Dwelling District
Paragraph B.
Conditional Uses
Sub paragraph (1)
Horn* occupations
shall be amended by Itw addition ol
Ham (a ) at follows:
(a ) Horn* occupations, telephone
service only, may be authorized by
ttw Licensing and Building Divisions
without Planning and Zoning Re
view.
All parties In Interest and d llten i
shall have an opportunity lo b* heard
at Mid hearing
By order ol ttw City Commission ol
the City of Sanford. Florida
H.N. Tamm, Jr
City Clark
Publish: Sap'embar 20 and M. 19*3
DEL 104
Fictitious Nam*
Notice It hereby given that I am
engaged In business al 302 Fairmont
Dr., Sanlord. Seminole County.
Florida under the fictitious name of
M U FACETTING AND GEMS, and
that I Intend to register Mid name
with ttw Clerk ol Itw Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florida In *c
cordance with the provisions ol the
Fictitious Nanw Statutes. loW II:
Section 1410* Florida Stalulet 1917.
/*/JoanE Immlch
Publish September M &amp; October 7,
14.21,19*3.
DEL 171

Florida
Federal

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

Hlme

RATES
................... J fC R lI n *

3 consecutive tim es . 54c a line
7 consecutive tim e * A t e * fine
10 consecutive lim es 4 J c *lin e
*2.00 M in im u m
) Lines M in im u m

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

12—Legal Services
Bankrupcy S7M and Chapter 13
*410. Free conference. Attorney
M Price For Appt. 422 2997.
CURLEY R.OOLTIE
ATTORNEY AT LAW
•
101 B W ist Street
Sanlord Fla. 3277) 373 4000

59 —Investment Brokers
Cypress Clock *nd Wood Manulac
turer need Investor or Investors.
115.000 - 520.000 secured, above
average return. Contact Robert
Rowe 371 2470

63-Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

25—Special Notices
New Ottlc* now opening
VORWERK
__________ 1120 W. 1st SI.__________
REWARD lor contents stolen.
9/77/11. 314 Magnolia Ave
Please call JJ7 I f J9

33—Real Estate
Courses
BOB BALL JR SCHOOL OF
REAL ESTATE.
LOCAL REBATES 3714111
MASTER CHARGE OR VISA

t CASH FOR MORTOAOES*
We buy first and second mortgages
on
homes, from Individuals,
bui'ders. brokers, and real estate
companies W* alto maka horn*
owner loans tor home Improv
ment and bill consolidation Call
us and let us make you an ottertBarbara
Crawford
323 74Kf.’
II you collect payments from a (Irsl
or second mortgage on property
you told, we will buy the
mortgeg* you are now holding
_____________ f t ! 2599

71—Help Wanted

45—Arts &amp; Crafts

AAA EMPLOYMENT
DISCOUNT FEE
TERM !
7700 FRENCH AVE.
323 5)74

Art ClISMSl Adults 4nd Children!
Supplies ter Pro. and Habbylsttll
711*. Hwy. 427 Blk. South 414
AR TTE R IO RSe * * *319 3193

Assistant Service Manager. Exp*
rlenced. Busy garage Excellent
working conditions. 105 574 5194
Assistant teacher position avail'
able with SCA Prelect Headstart
Mutt have had txperlenc*
working directly
with prrk Indergarden children eges 3.4.A
5. and-’ or training In early
childhood development
Send
resume lo
Portia
Spencer,
Seminole Community Action.
Inc.. P O Box Drew 11(9, San
ford. FI* 3377), no later than
Oct. 17, 19(3 Equal Opportunity
Employer.
AVON CHRISTMAS WOWII
START SELLINO NOWIt
337 (459 or l i t 1515

ORIGINAL
PAINTINO t. Com
missions, portraits; Mictwal W
Ger|ovlch. artist, photographer,
freelance commercial artist,
wall murlalt. decorator, furor,
art consultant, lectures, private
lessons Any sub|*ct medium or
style. Private showings by ap
polntmenl only Phone 157 05*7.
* Professional Artist Charcoal *
Or Pastel Animat Perlralts,
It Years *»p. Pit. 322-9151 Sanlord.

55—Business
Opportunities
For Sal* Small Paper Rout*.
Call after 1 P.M
,
222 4477
* * * eU R O -TILE * * 4 *
Men needed to learn new trad* I
High protit mar*ln. 339 ISIS.

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COM
MWS TONERS
OF
SEMINOLECOUNTY will hold a public hearing
In Room 200 ot ttw Seminole County
Courthouse. Sanford. Florida, on
October II. 19*) at 7 00 P M . or as
soon thereafter as possible, to con
slder a SPECIFIC LAND USE
AMENDMENT to the Seminole
County Comprehensive Plan and
RE ZONING ot ttw described pro
perty
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING
ORDINANCE
77 25
WHICH
AMENDS THE DETAILEO LANO
USE
ELEMENT
OF
THE
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
COM
PREHENSIVE PLAN FROM LOW
DENSITY RESIDENTIAL TO ME
OIUM OENSITY RESIDENTIAL
FOR THE PURPOSE OF REZON
ING FROM R 1 SINGLE FAMILY
OWELLING DISTRICT TO
R3
ONE AND TWO FAMILY DWELL
ING DISTRICT the following de
scribed property
Lots, I end 7. 14 and 15. end ttw E to
ol Lott 2 and I) (Lest the South 71.51
teet ol Lots 2 and 3 and Less the East
ol Lot 13 and the W 40 II. ol Lot
14), Frost Addition Nn 3 to Ally
monte, PB t, Pg », in Secllcn
1I2ISM E Consisting ol less tfun
two acres (furttwr described at .it
the SW corner of North and Jeekstn
Streets. Seminole County, Florid*!
(DIST 44)
APPLICATION
HAS
BEEN
SUBMITTEO
BY
CECIL
R
CUMMINGS
Further, the PLANNING AND
ZONING
COMMISSION
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY will hoJd a
public hearing In Room 200 ol the
Seminole County Courthouse. San
ford, Florida, on Sept. 7. 19*3. at 7 00
P .M . or at toon thereafter at
possible, lo review, hear comments
and make recommendations lo the
Board ot County Commissioners on
ttw above captioned ordinance and
rezonlng
Additional Information may be
obtained by contacting Itw Land
Management Manager at 33) 4I X
Ext. 140
Persons unable to attend the
hearing who wish to comment on the
proposed actions may submit written
statements or be heard orally.
Persons are advised that, II they
decide to appeal any decision made
al these meetings, they will need a
record ol the proceedings, and. for
such purpose, they may need lo
ensure that a verbatim record ol ttw
proceedings It mad*, which record
Includes Itw testimony and evidence
upon which the appeal It lo be based
Board ol County Commissioners
Seminole County. F lor Ida
B y: Sandra Glann. Chairman
Attest Arthur H. Beckwith. Jr.
Publish: August 22 A September 14.
M. 19(3
OEK 94

O ffice
C e n te r

* * * Bookkeeper* * *
Full charge thru profit and loti
statement Computer experience
Polygraph test required Apply
75th and Park Park and shop.
,
Carpet cleaners wanted Expert
■need preferred, but not nects
tary Full or part lime, i l l 0051

Legal Notice

to

Avon Ladles Full, part Tim* over
tl. Sanlord. Washington Oaks
Midway A Geneva 222 41(5.

CO N STR U CTIO N
W O RKERS
(Should h «v t Mom* Building 9«p*
fienct

o

N F V t k t ltt

Ablest
temporary (emcee

Mon Toes iV *0
(0(3200
200 N m I ts Si (f laatfvp Bant Bwkkngl.
Sankjn) 3Z1JM0

Convenience Store Assistant Men •
ager, lull time Mature, r e ­
sponsible person needed Nights;
and weekend days Patd Insur •
anc*. profit sharing, polygraph ;
Apply Ideal Food Store J0O&gt;
Upset* Rd 4 AM to 3 PM
__________ See Manager■
.
Earn Extra Monty. Parl/Tlme"
Full/Tim#
Prepaid
Legal*
Services Call Pon.4711S47______ !
FACTORY WORKERS Immediate’
openings High wages Some will*
train Call 439 4094______________ *
HEALTH FOOD DEALERSHIPS £

4 v 4 il4blt Nut Shack It looking lorambitious neat appearing, oulgo *
Ing individuals, lo operate retail
outlets In area Flea Markats-t
Great incoma opportunity. Must*
have reliable transportation and!
mutt be abl* to work weekends
Contact Terry 904 445 1771
alter 5 P M_____________________ __
Landscapers Experience wanted,
but will train Full time. Valid
Drivers license required

3221111

OWN YOUR OWN
DESIGNER JEAN AND
SPORTSWEAR STORE,
National Company oflgri
uniquo opportunity soiling
nationally
adv«illt«&lt;J
brand* at substantial sav­
ings to youi customers, this
It lor ft* fashion mlnd*d
parson qualified to own
and op«rot* this high proIHbusinou.
*20,000.00 Invgitmgnt In­
cludes beginning Inven­
tory. fixtures, supplies, train­
ing. grond opening and air
tare (1Jperson lo corporate
training center.
FORtROCHURIAND *
INFORMATION
CAU TOU FRII
_______ M O O -2 J1-6411

919 W. Highway 436
Altamonte Springs

C U S T O M -D E S IG N E D
O F F IC E S U IT E S
NOW A V A ILA B LE !
C O R P O R A T IO N
The Oftice Space Professionals

Realtors
615 E. Princeton St.
Phone: 898-0780

�I-H e lp Wanted
kOER TR A IN E E ..............I t !
5 lor management. S titt or
i evperlence e plot. Large
ding company
UPLOYMENT 37)317*
)EL) Immediately General
era. and (killed carpenter!
•mporary |obi. No appllcaI lee with this ad
ERSONNEL U N U M IT T 3
m m * _____________

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Lovely | Bdrm Apt Newly deco
rated !3S per week, plus 1300
Sec. Dep Call 133 330* or 331

0*43,____________________

3 Bdrm.. appl. kids, porch 130 Wk.
Foe. Ph 33*7300
ta v On-Rentils Inc. Reoller
3 Bdrm. kids, pats o k . sirs a mo
Fae. P h il* 3300
lav-On-Rentals Inc, Raattar

O UR B O A R D IN G H O U SE

3 Bdrm. trailer near Geneva. 1300 a
mo. plus uoo See. Dep Utilities
Included. Ph 333 *403.___________

lim e help wanted al One Hour
ere. Apply at corner ot Oak
&gt;2nd SI., downtown Santrod.

3/3 Bdrm.,large fenced yard. Os
teen area. Will rent unfurnished
&gt;300 a mo. 333 0371

Smell 3 Bdrm. I bath, air condition
and carpet, Ideal tor coupl*. 1335
plusdepotll. 333 3354___________

nan. Lite. Real Eitete. Great
dimity
for
aggressive
n. In imall Seminole County
lice, dealing In gentral lilting,
tin (mail tracti a (peclalty.
altor. Orlando &lt;33 7374._______
Truti Plant Needi
Experienced Table Leaden.
Call 32) 3*77.___________
REHOUSE WORKERS. Many
nlngi. full time, good darting
ay Call Immediately 41* (0*4

' t • W ELD ER• • •
|e e e o e m a t J i e e a e e

73—Employment
Wanted
ekeeper
and
Apartment
gleaning Bachelori only. Whlta.
jv e r j r r e l l a b [ r 3 I 3 « * 0 _

91—Apartments/
House to Share
nan with ion would Ilka room
land board wllh elderly In
■exchange lor houtekeeplng, erI rends and companlonihlp. Ph
|33IQ«05________________________

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
Apt. lor rent lor elderly couple. 1
Bdrm., central A/H. Call beIweenl A M .Io O P M ,___________
BAMBOO COVE APTS
300 E . Airport Blvd. Ph. 1314410
Efficiency, from S315 Mo 5 %
discount tor Senior Cltliens.
LUXURYAPARTM ENTS
Family A Adults section. Poolside.
3 Bdrms. Matter Cove Apts.
3217*00
_______ Open on weekends.________

Call 333 MU___________
kN FORD Fumtihed roomt by the
week. Reasonable ralei. Maid
service catering to working peo
pie 333 &lt;507 500 Palmetto Ave
kNFORD, Rees, weekly A Mon
Ihly rales. Util. Inc. ett. 500 Oak
Adults 10417003________________
jUnfurnished room in private home.
Pool, laundry, kitchen privileges.
|S*Q/wk.S40S*C Pep 331 4340.

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Furn. Apts, tor Senior Cltltens
310 Palmetto Av*.
J. Cowan. No Phone Calls.

UNDER *2,X * DOWN
1 Bdrm Doll House. Affordable
monthly payments. Call owner
broker salesman. 311 tail._______
• U N D E R P R IC E D *
147,700. j Bdrm. I l l Bath. Move In
condition . Call lor appointment.
Broker 171(441 or 1721 (111

Mobil* horn* on golf course Ideal
tor slngla or retired couple New
carpet and drapes. 1115 per
month with purchase option
Free golf. 11* M il.

THE CROSSINGS at 13* Morning
Glory In Brandtrmlll. Preview
lovely brand new 3/1 with many
• lir a s . Daceratar wallpapar,
Laka Mary Schools. *41,tee

141—Homes For Sale

H I—Homes For Sale

Mariner's Ylllags on Lake Ada. t
bdrm Irom 1175, 2 bdrm from
1315. Located 17 *3 |ust south ol
Airport Blvd. In Sanford. All
Adults. 333 M70,________________

Warehouse Office Com. Sanford
Laka Mary A rt*. 1150 sq tl. to
5000 sq. ft.
11.50 per sq.ft
) 110 0«**/333 4070

Assum abl* 7 *4% M ortgage. 4
Bdrm. 1 Beth. Cent. HA., 15.IM
down.ui.700. Appl. 331-0(34.

NEW 1 A 3 Bedrooms. Adjacent to
Leke Monroe. Health Club.
RacquatballandMorel
Sanford Landing S R, at 3314330.
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS
3540 Ridgewood Av*. P h J ll 4430
1.2 A 1 Bdrms. Irom 1300

121—Condominium
Rentals

Bond money! Why rent when you
can own this 1 Bdrm. homo with
ity l* and Hair of tha more
expensive. 137,*54. Call Real
Estate One, Eileen Bergln. 411
t lt t
E v e . 1 2 7 -7 *0 *.
EXTRA large 2 (lory Colonial on I
acr* el Oak trees All the amenl
tie* plus guest apt. Best local*
1300.000 WM. MALICZOWSKI
REALTOR 1317*11.

R E A L T OR

Unfurnished 1 bdrm. Spacious Apt.
Walk To Laka Front. No Pats
1335. P h llt 3*05.________________
1.2, or 1 Bdrm, kids, air, pool. Firm
SMO.FtePhUf 7200
lev-On-Rental* Inc, Realtor
1 Bdrm. Kids O K. 170 a week
Fee P h il* 7300
lav-On Rentilt Inc. Realtor

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
Deltona. 1 bdrm. C/A. fenced back
yard, 1375 mo. plus sec.
__________ Call 333 4t30.___________

1 Bdrm, kids, air, pool, SJ4U.
Unfurnished
Fee Ph 11 * 7300
bvjOn-RentaliJnc. Realtor

127—Office Rentals
THE MERCANTILE BUILDING
BOB M BALL JR PA.
REALTOR 123 (111

141—Homes For Sale

1 Bdrm. W/W carpet, appliances
Nice area. 1135 plus deposit
___________ Ph.331 X30___________
2 Bdrm., I l l Bath, Townhouse
Condo. Pool. L/R, F/R, eat In
kitchen 1375 a month. 7110444 or
1313*47 after hours_____________

2/1.

carport, fenced, screened
room. Inside utilities, t i l l plus
deposit. References. 333 10* 1 .
1 Bdrm. Fenced yard, kids O K
1415 Monthly. 1 Month security.
Call owner 131-1(1)_____________
1 Bdrm, l . l rooms, kids, pets
1175 a mo. F t* Ph 33* 7300
lav-On-Rentals fisc. Realter

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS
• Adult ft Family
Sections
• W/O Connections
• Coble TV. Pool
• Short Term Lease!
Available
I, 2. 3 It. Apt!.. 2 BA. IH.
From *2 1 0

HOME WITH INCOME
Large modern 1 bdrm. family
horn* with CH A A, eat In
kllchen. family room, overtired
garage Plus 1 fully equipped
greenhousn. Going business for
family or retired couple Owner
will train and finance. 1110 ,000.

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR

INLAND
REALTY,
INC.

Sanford. 405 Hally, 1 blocks N.
171*1 Nice I Bdrm.. porch.
1350. 4 security. No pets. 142 1*0*

321 74*1

REALTY WORLD.

SANFORD. 3 Bdrm Us bath, large
fenced yard, rear accns. Florida
Room, new carpet, on* year
hom* protection. 137,500
F A N T A S Y IS LA N D , 3 Bdrm.
country leg cabin, surrounded by
1 acres of sprawling |ungltl
Sctnlc pondl Walk t* Laka
J tiiu p l Double wide m tblle
hem*. Owner very am levsl Only
MM*

ID YLLW ILD E. Lovely, large 1
Bdrm , 3 Bath, custom designed
hom*. Loaded with closets.
Mester bedroom hat separata
d r t iiln g area. Garaga door
opener. 115.000

305-323-3145
Alter Hours 31) M il
•005 131471)

■t

W E N E E D LIS T IN G S

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

54* W. Lake Mary Blvd

323-5774

IU -M M

Suit* B
L*k* Mary. F I* 33744
DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE

2404 HWY 17*3

321-0041

LAKE M AR Y AREA. Reduced
11.750. 1/3, carport, largt yard,
screened porch, ferrato floors.
Now only 144.000.
Bob M. Ball Jr. PA. Realtor
_________
3334111._____________
• LEASE OPTIONOR R E N T *
L e k e M a r y - C r o iiln g t - L e r g i,
3/Bdrm ,3/B, Excutlve hom*
with fireplace 1471 a month.
___________Call 1*13331.___________
LEAVES Quit and Fall In October.
HERALD Classifieds work all
year.
Osteen Small 7 Bdrm. home Lot
72x15* 5. fenced S14.SW Owner
finance 14* 545*________________
Profession al O lflc t. Sanford.
E x c e lle n t p a r k in g . G ood
assumption t*f.500
Sanford, 1/1is, wllh family room,
CAC, privacy lanced, excellent
location , good assum ption,
150.500
Laka Mary, 1/2, screen porch,
carport, reduced lo 54*.000.
Hurry I
Lake Mary. 3/1*1. CAC. carport.
privacy fenced, only SJ7.700
Lake Mary, 3/3, famllly room, den.
double garage, pool, fenced, cit­
rus galore,
bananas, grapes,
mid IIO's
Sanera, 3/2, great room with
fireplace, double garage, double
lot. 171.700
I t Acres, Sanlord. owner financing.

3114111________________ REALTOR

9^2L
YOU ARE INV1TEDTO AN
OPENHOUSE
SATURDAY OCT. Tit. I I la 3 PM.
411 Park Av*. Sanlerd.
On* ol the areas most beautiful and
historic 3 story homes. Includes 5
Bedrooms, and 4 Baths, with
central air conditioning and
heating, and 5 fireplaces. 1*7.500
REALTOR
•03 S. French Ave.

MLS

322-8678

CON SULT OUR

■ O B B ir s

AND LET AN EX P ER T DO TH E JO B

RimofMini Sptciilisl
It *
h *

W * hand I* The
Whole Ballet Wax

B.LUnk Const
322-7029
Financing Available

Air Conditioning
&amp; Heating
O O IL H E A T E R *
CLEANING ANDSERVICING
Call Ralph. 3314713.
M% Discount On All Rapalrs
Far Window Air Conditioners
One Day Service. P h lT M lH ,

Automotive
: * # * MR. MUFFLER * * *
; Brakes! Frenter Rear, lla *511
1411 S. French Av*. 1237111.

I Carpet/Floor Coverings
I ! * eD EE PSTK AM CAR PK T* •
All open •rees for Mf.tS.
* L/R. D /R ,h elltl* *5 33)4051.

Cleaning Service
p a r m a id s e r v ic e s

Have you had your home cleaned
la t e ly ? C le a n in g w ith the
’ewfsonal touch 3174111.471 431).

■ r™ '

Electrical
TkedUiawTlec»HrcrTj47ll*^
Lite New Ret A Ser Work
Celling font install. Free Eli.
-7 Duality Electrical Service
Fees, timers, security llles. add*
(tons, new services, Insured
.Mat&gt;tr Electrician James Paul.
333 755*.

' General Services
•
PROFESSIONAL
Detailed adltlng. ravlslng. rewrll
;irtg proofreading Will research
•Any subject Technical editing:
rtp o rls . proposals. Resumes
^prepared Cover lelteri com
M sed Term papers researched.
■Written. and typed Prompt and
.Call Jo*. 173 511*
H o te n ih le .'
MAGIC P E N C IL * • •
SBI (•TTHE
HEM
Your Idee or ours prepared lor
construction 11 134 714*

H ealth* Beauty
ARTHRITIS PAIN RELIEVER
too % Results. RecngnUed effect
by AMA. Cell Leo A Ray 331-517*.
TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FO R M E R LY Harriett's Beauty

Horn* Improvement
Additions, repairs, porches, con
crele. block work. Coed Prtcesl
Call Ous. IM4534._______________
Carpentry by "B IL L "
W O O D A r te s ia n C e n t r a l
carpentry, screened room door*
etc. Rees. Retes. 327 3* 30.

Roofing

ALL YOU NEED ISUS
133 07*7
Crockett A Water* Lawn Service

C A O LEAK REPAIR Rapalrs all
types of roof leaks. Replaces all
rotten wood. 30 yrs experience.
All work guaranteed for 1 year.
31* *017.

W A D LAWN SERVICE.
Mowing, edging, fgriliii ing
Free esIlmaiet.Ph 337074*
"Hunting" Fer Results?
You’ll Get Good 'Shots'
In Herald Want Ad*.

Masonry

C O L L IE R 'S HOME R E P A IR S
carpenlry. reeling, painting,
wledew repair, a 1-4433__________

BEAL Concrete I man quality
operation. Patios, driveways
OavsM I 7133 Eve* 327 U31.

COMNiTE CONSTRUCTION

* a * GUY'S CONCRETE* * *
FREE ESTIMATEI ANYTIM EI
13 Yrt. Eip. 34t l ilt .

No |ab to small. Minor A major
repairs. Licensed A bonded.
_____________ 3334111_____________
PARTNERS. Roofing repair, paint­
ing. remodeling end additions
Free E H C a ll E v e t l X 0004

Home Repairs
Malnltnenct Of all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 333403a
MANNING'S SERVICES
FENCING - HOME REPAIRS
AND TREE WORK 331-4474
No job too small, Heme repairs and
remodeling. 35 Years experience.
Call 331 *445

S W IFT CO N C R E TE . F o o fa ri.
driveways, pads, floor*, pools.
Chaft. Stone. Free Esf/333 7101.
CAN-1 FIND ITT* Den i Olv* Upll
Look lor It her* In the Evening
Herald Wont Ads.

Nursing Care
OUR RATESARE LOWER
Lakavlew Nursing Confer
t i t E. Second SI.. Sanford
333 *7117

Intel ior Decorating

Painling

Custem Draperles/VerllcaH
AFFORDABLE PRICES
Sharons Creatiens 4710311.

CENTRALFLORIDA
Hom* Imprevemenl
Painling, Carpantry.
Small Repairs.
13 Y e a n Espertenc*. 2237147.

Landclearing
Land Clearing, till dirt,
top soil, drive way malarial.
Call Lae Eity 333 7344
LANDCLEARING. FILL DIRT,
CLAY A SHALE.
133 M il

Landscaping
A A J Landscaping
Comp let* Lawn Maintenance
___________ 331 43*1___________
Fill Dirt, Delivered.
East San lord, 13.00 Per Yard.
Ph t i t SOM

Paper Hanging
* ALBERT S DECORATIONS*
Wallpaper banging. Heme repair.
Sehabla Etpanel. 3*3 11*4

Plastering/Dry Wall

UR IB 322-9283

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

Lawn Service

KINO A SONS LAWN SERVICE
ta rty Fall Clean Up. SM Special
Far Any Averaga Yard. 1411*3*.

REALTOR. M LI
33*1 I. French
Iv llt *
lanterd. FI*.

SANFORD REALTY
REALTOR
12) 5334
Alt Hr*. 333**54.31) 43*5

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

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

Liberty. 10x14. 3/Bdrm., 1/0,
Air A Heat
Raasonabla A
Assum. 34* 500*. Must be moved.

OWNER FINANCE, SAVES US.
3 bdrm, 3 bath, A I condition, exc.
a rt*. C/H/A. W/W/C. double
g a ra g e , w orkshop, p antry,
storage shed, screened perch,
w ell and sprinkler system,
fenced Owner will line nee. only
S73J00.
Salesmen Needed
REALTOR 111-4t*1

SEMINOLE ROOFINO
RtRoofs.New Roofs, Root Repairs.
Fre* Estimates Ph. 333 1541

Security
* Iren Week • Window Guardi •
Highest Qualify I Lewesl Prices I
Call » 3 I * M .

Sprinklers/Irrigation

Swimming Pool Service
SUNSHINE POOL SERVICE
W ill maintain your pool Infop
condition, private or commer
d e l Ph. 13313*2. Sunshine Pool
Service. S t! Mellonvllle Ave.
Sanford FI. 33771

Tree Service
JOHN ALLEN LAWN AT REE
Any kind of Tree Service
We do most anything 331 1X0.
STUMPS ground out.
Reasonable, free estimate*
7*1 0441

Well Drilling

A L L P h a i t t o f P la s t e r in g
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
cote, simulated brick. 3315*»)

K A R Wall Drilling SpacialUing
In Affordable shallow wells
Alto pumps repaired 3310431

Wanl ads 1*11 bargain hunters
w h e re to fin d th e G a m e !
HEARLD Classified 123 3*11

THE DAYS~MAV BE GETTING
cooler, bul the Cfault led Ads art
alill Holt.

ROOM TO OROWI Truly one ef e
kind. 5 bedroom, formal living
r o a m , h u ga f a m i l y re a m
w/dramalic fireplace A wet bar,
plus gama rm. Laka Mary area.
MUST SEE TODAY. Wen’t last
at U ) 404.
UNBELIEVABLE. BUT SEEING
IS B E U E V IN O I Lovely 2/3
w/iolld eak cabinets, eel-ink lichen, screened pa fie w/sauna
t spa, saparafa work shop,
alarm system. Only 17*,7W.
DOLL HOUSE. You'll lev* this
Immaculate 3/1 w/lemlly room
on corner lot, lanced rear yard,
w ill sail VA/FHA appraisal
M l^M . LOW DOWN.
RAMBLEWOOD. V3 In area at lint
homes, great roam, weed cabi­
nets, firep la c e , trees. FHA
assumable. 171.3*4
IJkKE MONROE. Acre B lovely
hem* wllh 14 x 11 screened peel
and p olls avarlaaklng laka.
Fireplace, central H/A. OWNER
W ILL FINANCE SW.TM.
DUPLEX OR TRIPLEX. Cauld ha
built an this larga corner let.
Ideal location, you mutt so* this
one. H U M .

321-5005
4 Bdrm 2 Bath. Cant, hast / air,
eat In kitchen plentiful cabinets
B clouts. Carpel, patio, land
scaped, fenced back yard, trees,
sprinkler* 154.30C. 337*H7.

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
C a r p e t C le a n in g B u sin e ss .
Eitabllsad accounts. Earn In­
come right away. 14 years of
operation lo back company
name. 115.400.337-7*11.

151—Investment
Property / Sale
October
Turns
Everything
Golden.... Even Opportunities
for Went Ad Readers.

153—Lots-Acreage/Sale
Lot for Sale 1C x IW Asking
1*500.00 Cell after 7:00 p.m.
333*157.
__________________
• SAN FORD 14 A 44 •
21* Acre + • country home site.
Oak pine some cleared paved. 10%
downl 0 Y r s .il 12%
STENSTROM REALTY
REALTORS
• Cell 333 24X Anytime •
ST. JOHNS River. Its acre parcels,
with river access . Only * tell.
Starling SIMOO . Public water. X
min. to Altamonte Mall. 13% X
yrt financing, no qualifying
Broker. *31 4AX)

By Owner. Beautiful is acre on
Crystal Laka, with many oaks
and pines In Loch Arbor area.
Georgeout view I 113.000.133 5*44
or 133 4441. Ask for Mary Ml re,

STENSTROM
REALTY •

REALTORS

BEAUTIFUL 3 Bdrm. I Bath hom*
In nice neighborhood near naw
hospital. 1-4 and Laka Monroe.
Central beat and air, wall I j wall
carpet, eat in kitchen, pall* and
mere. U4.S00
COUNTRY LIVINO 3 Bdrm. I Bath
ham* en S acre* In Osteen. Pend,
fruit trees, end horses wtlctm *.
Hem* like new. S54.7M.
HANDY MAN SPECIAL 3 Bdrm. I
Bath ham*, wllh a cauntry
Fu lIn ’, spacious living ream,
fireplace, nice dining room, near
1-4 area. S340W.
CAN-1 BEAT THIS 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
hem* in Sunltnd en a corner lei,
well kept htme, eal In kitchen,
pane and fenced yard. H 1 3 M
A IN 'T THIS CUTE3 ) Bdrm. 1
Bath ham*, in W**dmere, has
large family ream, plus screened
porch cempltieiy fenced yard,
■•tally ranevated. Lika new.
Must see. Only S42.3M.
SUNSHINE HOUSE 3 Bdrm. 1
Both heme. In lovely Highland
Park, this hem* has everything.
Central air and haal, wall to wall
carpeting, paddle Ians, double
garage, Fla. ream, screened
perch, all this plus beautiful
landscaped lei. 157,sea.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
35*11. Park

322-2420

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
APPLIANCES.
REPOSSESSED,
reconditioned, freight damaged.
From tv* Up Guaranteed.
Nearly New. 117 E . Ill SI 31) 7*30.
Cash for good used furniture.
Larry's New A Used Furniture
Marl. I l l Sanlord Ave. 1214131
Kenmore parts, service,
used washers. 31104*7
MOONEY APPLIANCES
MAHOGANY Dining Room suit*.
Table, a chairs, bullet and china
cabinet. Exc. cond 333 *74«
Welk behind vaccum. 7 H P. ang.
Vac cum s and mulches, blows off
driveways, has clipper attach­
ment, clips up to 3" dlam. Only
used 5 hours I 3111434 or 331 *404.
1433 00._________________________
WE Buy and Mil Good used
furniture. The Furniture Houu
_____________ 13130*3_____________
W ILSONMAIER FURNITURE
311-31SE. FIRSTST.
333 1433

Good Used Televisions 115 And Up.
MILLERS
3*1*Orlando Dr.
_____________333 0152._____________
TELEVISION • ZENITH 35" Color
TV In Walnut Console. Original
Price, over 1700. Balance due
13*5. Cash or take up payments
ol I X .00 month. No Money down.
Still In warranty. Free Heme
Trial • no ebilgetlen. 143 53* 4.
Two
large
Stereo
Realistic
speakers. Ex. cendltan 17S. 1* In
color portable T.V. Good cond.

130.331 sag

187—Sporting Goods

“

SUNDAY OCT 2nd 1 PM.
Approximately 100 quality collect­
ibles end modern hand guns,
rlllet. and shot guns
SHOOT STRAIGHT
Apopka Plata
Comer 441A 434
MORE INFO
____________ ItW-OAti.____________
"Hunting" Fer Results*
You'll Get Good'Shots’
In Herald Want Ad*.

191—Building Materials
Building, All Steel
Summer CWu Out*
2X100 to 50.000 sq. It. Irom 1U7 •
sq ft. 1 3*741737 collect._________
• • • P A N E LW O R LD ** *
Do II Yeuruller* So veil
4311 Edgewatur Dr. 2* 574*0

193—Lawn &amp; Garden

199—Pets &amp; Supplies

REALTORS

ACRE
TRACTS
GENEVA
AREA. East at Sanlerd. Seme en
herd surface read. 2*% dawn.
Closing In X days. II Yaar
mortgage, at 11 % Intarest. Call
tar datalls and Inspect Ian.

C A L L A N Y T IM E
2M5 S. Park

322-2420
t acra ol wooded land located In
DeBary, ett ol Highbank* Rd.
11000 down, laka over payments
•t 1111.14 • mo . for 1 yrs. end I
mo*. Cell 233 0717, ask ter Gary.
10 Acres in Osteen. Lot 3 ef Cypreu
Isles. 137,000 with 10% down 10%
interest end 10 years to pay. Will
consider • cash otter. Writ* T B.
Burleson. **01 Harrisburg Pika.
Grove City, Ohio. 43133

157—Mobile
Hom es/Sale
By Owner. Family Section ot
Carriage Cove F t Champion, t
B drm . A C . Storage E ld g.
Petlo Awning. A Skirting. M.tSO
33) 1303________________________
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES INC.
AREAS LARGEST EXCLUSIVE
SKYLINE DEALER
FEATURING
Palm Beact i Villa
Greenleat
Ptlm Springs
Palm Manor
Siesta Key
VA FHA Financing. 305333 5300

Furn . lots of clothe*. Mlsc. Hems.
Com* and see what we hovel 411
Beth Dr. Saf. A Sun * til.________

LAKE M AR Y clothe* end mlsc.
Lots ot 354 Items Frl A Sat. 774
Abbott Ave 333*475.____________
Moving Sal*. Sleeper iota, bureau,
coffee and end tables, recllner,
bar stools, stereo and bullet
table. Call otter 5 333 5737.
,
Sal. Oct. 1, Sanora South Home
owners Big Yard Saiel At
entrance off Sanora South., on S.
Sanlord Ave. I : X A M . Til.
Barglnsl Barglwsl Aarglnsl
Twin headboard SM. Dresser SX.
Fiberglass cartop carrier S35.
Tub shower doors SI0. Stormdoor
515. Adult and children cloltiet,
records tapes, toys. A game*.
Sat. * to S P.M. Comer of Floyd
and Abbott. Laka Alary.
Want ads tell bargain hunters
where to find the Gomel
HEARLD ClatsIHed 3333*11
Yard Sale, Sat., Oct 1st.» A M to 3
P M . only. Comer 7*th and Gal*
Place, east pit Sanlord Ave.
Yard Salat Furniture. Mlsc., all
kinds ol goodies. It* E. Coleman
Cr ■Plnecresl. Frl. A Sal.*Til,
*11 Park Ave. Sanlord. Piano, tine
furniture
and
miscellaneous
Hams. Realtor also holding Open

&gt;_Hoirta;JtiurdajrX2£*ii^_»—

219—Wanted to Buy
Paying CASH lor Aluminum, Cant,
Copper, Brass. Lead. Newspa
per. Glass. Gold. Sliver.
Kokomo Tool, *11W. 1st
! 4 : X 5 a t * 1 333IIM _____________
Wanted, baby furniture, crib*, play
pens, car saat, strollers, etc.
333 1377 or 333 *504._______________

183—Television/
Radio/Stereo

F ILL DIRT A TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clark A Hlrt 333 7M0,313 3133

STENSTROM

Frl. A Sat. Orkntal rug. Scan
dining room tabla. largt China
cabinet bookcau All under H00
378 Hibiscus Rd. Casselberry,
Friday and Saturday Career ef
lak e and W. lath * till. Air
compressor, refrigerator. King
Sire spring and me tires*, dress
er, tools and mlsc. 333 7457

Hug* Yard Sale. Sat. Oct 1 st, Cars,
guns, movie earner*, household
Items. MM S. Sewfurd Avenue

163—Waterfront
Property / Sale

gun wenon

Children's.
men's.
ursmeq's
clothing.
housetwld
Items,
Port a crlb and mlsc. 110 W. Itttl
Streel Thur*. Frl and Sal * te 4.

Oarage 5*1* Saturday. I » W.
Grand Bend, Lake Mary. Toys,
furniture, eel Ph 373 5737

2or)BEOROOM HOUSE
Your PRICE. M Y TERMS
33)4441

EXTRAVAGANZA

1

PUMP SALES iSCRV.
SANFORD Irrigation A Sprinkler
Systems Inc. Free esf. 31307*7.
25 yrs. t i p

ID E A L F A M IL Y HOME FOR
STARTERS. 1/m wllh family
room, quiet dead and straet, aft
Sanlerd Ave., well kept. S5I.5M

REALTY •

Dons Your Old Or New Roof Leak 7
II It does, call David La*.
333 *453
Root Maintenance
Repair work New work
Troy or Georg* for Free Est.
3013*30040

LOVELY SPENCER HEIOHTS.
1/4 split- plan* fencad yard, de­
faulted garage with bath A large
area fer work shop. Ul.fOC

Carport
SUN ONL y U / I m .1
til 7 Many baby Items. Mlsc.
Item*. 3504 Hlghlawn A v e _______

Garaga Salt, Friday and Saturday
115 Rabun Court. S. Sanora
From * till.______________________

1523 FRENCH AVE

JUNE P0R2IG REALTY

323-3200

1505 W. 25th SL

KISH REAL ESTATE

BOB M. BALL JR. P.A.

FIRE SALE IN SANORA. Owner Is
desperetot Must sell this week!
Lively I bdrm, I bath, w/famlly
room and fenced yard I tremen­
dous pntentlall Submit all oiler*.
Assumable m e r tg * l«l Asking
14*,500. Make offer.
COUNTRY LIVINO, at Its best In
tewnl I large bdrms I Sparkling
pool I 17 trull fro n t un approx “j
acr* earner fe ll Cedar and *
c y p r t t s th ro u g h o u t! V a ry
prtvata and tencadl Only 151,500

• e Wilson R. V. Seles • e
t»72 Hunters and Campers special
t l ’3 Ft. Corsair, perfect eondl
Don sleeps4. II. 0U.
71 Holiday RxmbUr Series MM,
sleeps* Eic.cood.S4150
Decamp 71 ft. t r s Modal. *1750.
Sleep* 4. M il contained
Cebra Sting Ray l*r* sleeps 4, air
cond . M lf contained, 12250
31 It. Air Stream Excel!* !M . New
condition throughout. 117,500
* Cell anytime M4-73A-MA5 *

159- -Real Estate
Wanted

107-*-Mobile
Homes / Rent

For Rent 3 Bdrm, 2 Beth, air,
washer, dryer, celling fans, pool,
Rac. room. Sandlawood Condos.
No pats. Chlldrtn OK. 1135
Month Call 445-1134.____________

217—Garage Sales

157-Mobile
Homes/Sale

»

3 Bdrm. kids, air, lanced yard,
1150 Fee Ph 13*7200
Sav-On-Rantals Inc. Raaltar

113—Storage Rentals

93—Rooms tor Rent
Room(or Rent.

Sanford. Year old horn#, 1 bdrm. 3
bath, garage, large porch, kidney
shaped pool, fenced back yard,
landscaped, frees, cn Cau d* Sac.
Hidden Lake Estales X I San
Franando Ct. 5*4.600 Owner. Ph
i l l 0514________________________

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent

CE HELP Full lime. Many
nlngi Good darting pay.
(immediately. P h il* awe

F riday, Stpl. M , 1W1—l i f t

141—Homes For Sale

IB d rm . kids. pet*. 1WB.1375
Fee P h il* 7300
Sav-On-Rtntals In*. Realtor

S Sanford. Close In. Qulel setting.
1 Bdrm. Carport, utility room
W/D hook up. air, carpet,
drapes. Equip kitchen. 1304545.

CESS M AIL AT HOME I WS 00
hundred! No experience
l/lull time Slarl Immediate
Details send (e ll addreiied
nped envelope to C. R. I. 300.
1. Box (3, Stuart FI, 334*3.

Evening Herald, Sanlord, Ft.

with M a jo r H oople

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

For Sale German Sheppard Pup
pies. AKC Rag. I l » each 333
S7S2 between I A M to 4 P M

207—Swap Corner
RENT
SELL
BUY
With*
W ANTAO
Dial 1311411

211—Antiques/
Collectables
"Corrigan's Comer" now located
at **• E. Heftner. Upstairs at
Willard’a. All-1131.

213—Auctions
Auction Every Sat. night. Florida
Trader Auction. Longwood 137
111*. See our big ed*n Sat, paper.

Auction Sal*
Frid ay N ite7P M
Dinette eats. Dvlngroom chairs,
bookcases, chest* end dressers,
metal cabinets cabinet sewing
machine. T V ’s and stereos,
mattress and box springs, plus
all kinds ol mlsc- to mumerous
to mention. Dlnnerware,
glassware and novelty Items

WE BUY ANTIQUES
FURNITURE A APPLIANCES.
33) 7)40_____________

223—Miscellaneous
• • LI CENSED MANICURIST • •
SpecUlltlng Eacl. Sculpture Nalls
Call Diane ter Appt. 337-I4S)
Private Sal*. Bedroom suit, an­
tique dining table and 4 chairs,
china closet, colt** table*, end
tables, and odd chair*. 333-4573.
SEWING MACHINE. SINGER
FUTURA, Ilka new. on* ef
Singer's Top Models. All Stitches
built In. Sold new over STM. Must
sacrifice for |)M.M or Assume
S i! Monthly payments. Wilt tefce
I - Trade A T pact garm ent.-1 m e '
home Trial. Call M3 S)*4.
___________ P a ye r N ile ___________
TARPS, COTS, LUGGAGE
AR M YN AVTSU R PLU S
310 Sanlord A v e ___________ 333 57*1
We buy furniture, antiques er
accept consignments tor Auction.
Fie. Trader Auction 3M 3)1*.
Wedding Dress, low cut In front,
completely covered with tec*.
Long train, end hand sewn u
qint. Originally SaOO. will sell fer
s i x s ite .a *. 311 u n .
_____
ao gallon elect lc hot water heater.
3 mo*, old. PS.
131*40*
S40C0 BTU ell tired furnace with 3
ton elr conditioner. UOO or best
otter. A lter* P M 321-4541.

2 3 1 -C irs
Bad Credit 7
No Credit 7
WE FINANCE
NeCredN Check Easy Term*
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
1IMS. Sanlord Ave
1314075
Cadillac.
1(77 Coupe DeVilie
Leather, E.F.I. engine, new
tires, auto elr lifts, fully loaded,
many extras, spotless, one
owner. 5MHO miles, must see to
appreciate, asking S5.W0
S74 457* Before I P.M
Debery Auto A Marine Seles
•cross the river lop el hill 174
H oy 17 T2 Debery *44 4344
e KIDDY'S KAR SALES*
Quality Used Can A Truck*
HITS Sanlord Ave. 3X3 555*
PERSONALIZED AUTO SALES
SeetiaHatagta Cadillacs!
541 Hwy, 17-71 t i l - m i.
REDUCED MUSTSELL
1*01 Datum 510 a door hatchback,
5 speed. AM/FM casett* stereo,
tactary air. Good condition, ona
owner. U .W 1 313 *441.__________
1*4* Ford L.T O Red and black
vinyl tap. S IM M Call between 4
and 3 PM . Ph 333 IW7.__________
1*73 Dodge Dart. Spt Cpe Slant a
engine, A/C, auto Iran*, will run.
needs repairs 1*04.00 cash. Ph
333 4X3________________________
1*7) V.W.sq. back.
SI.(M ar A/D.
_____________331-MI*._____________
I I ' V.W. rebuilt Motor Iran*, and
rear and. Cut with fiberglass
body and tap. needs to be
assembled vmc oo Ph 33)301
71 Chevy Pickup VS. Stan. Tran*
AM/FM. Runt good. Body Rusty.
S IX Firm. 333 1444______________
14 T. Bird. White velour uphoi
Story. Like New SIMS. Arrange
l.nancx t it tIM ________
77 La Mens Pontiac, (.'door, auto
irons, radio. H/A Seme hail
damage 11706 3310144.
___
71’ Ford Feirmont Wagon P. S.
A/M/F/M. Good Condition, U.W0
___________ P h D ) 3434___________
71 Da i sun 200 SX S Speed, elr
conditioning. AM FM cassette.

^5^00Mq#sJ«7g0J2JJkSl^_

CASH DOOR P R IZ E S
Delia's Auction

239—Motorcycles/Bikes

13MW.Hwy.ea
_____________ 333 54X_____________

Tl- Super Sport. CB 7XF. Parte
cam# and get uml Make offer,
Ph. 333 1757

New Homes starting at M**3 Easy
credit and low down Uncle Roys.
Lrrib j'Q US.44I 704 717 0334

FOR ESTATE Commercial or
Residential Auctions 4 Appeals
a i*.Call Dell * Auction m iO M .

243—Junk Can

74o deposit required. Will take
application by phone Ever.-one
buys Call ior Doug We finance
all. *04 717 0334. Open week
nights to l PM.__________

FOR ESTATE or COMMERCIAL
AUCTIONS Ceil A I AUCTION
SERVICE 133 4IM.

No morwy down and 3 days service
on all VA I Inane ing Short on
Credit? Cell end ask for Tom
Uncle Roys Leesburg Open I I
yyu LrHf*u. u-u iiT Atti

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From Stf to I X X more.
Cell 372 1434)33-4113

217-Garage Sales

TOP Dollar Teid tar Junk A Used
car*, trucks A heavy equipment.

Big Bargain isle Set I t e lG r M I.
water heeler, fires. Kit. Items,
clothe*, ml sc 3471 Celery Av*.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR
JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS.
CBS AUTO PARTS 3*3(305

__ )?: vwo__________

�Evening H e ra ld , S anford , F I

F rid a y , Sept. 30, I9B3

QUALITY
at LOW
1. W e sell only U .S.D .A . C h o ic e S te a k s &amp; R o a sts.
2. W e sell o n ly U .S.D .A . G rad e A Poultry.
3. W e sell o n ly T o p Q uality P ro d u ce and yo u p ick
w hat yo u w ant.
4. W e sell a co m p lete variety of National B ran d s,
Private Label and G e n e rics at Everyd ay Low P ric e s

/

WITH Q U A U TY G U A R A N T EED ... T A K E T H E P R IC E T E S T !

LOOK
WHAT l c
BILL BUY!

P A N T R Y PR ID E
FR ESH GRADE A

/W r

W I T H T H I S C O U P O N Y O U P A Y 1* W I T H A $ 2 8 0 0 O R M O R E
F O O D O R O E R . U M fT O N E P E R F A M IL Y . O O O O T H R U
T U E S , O C T . 4, 1083.

WITH A $25.00 OR M ORE P U R C H A S E

FRYING

MARKET
STYLE

SLICED
BACON

BONELESS
BOTTOM
ROUND

BONELESS
.

W HOLE

EYE ROUND

3 LB A V G . P K G

BAKING
POTATOES

4-6 LB A V G

F L A V - O - R IC H

FLO RIDA

YELLOW
CORN
EARS

io / n

I
'W O K E

ICE

REG U LAR O R H O I

18 o z B T L .

H A LF G A LLO N

�L v e n in g lle iu ld

L E IS U R E
Compl«t« W n k 's TV Listings
Sanford, Florida — Friday, Scptambar 30, l*i3

Pets A n d People
Best Friends And Good Med icine, To Boot
By Jane C asselberry
H erald S ta ff W riter
"L o v e me. love my d og ." expresses the close bond
between most pet owners and their canine com pa­
nions.
The relationship with man and his "best friend"
goes back many thousands o f years. In fact, one
th e o ry has It that the first a n im a ls to be
domesticated — the ancestors o f Cauls fainlllaris.
the dog o f today — were initially tamed by children
as pets, not for use In hunting or warfare as one
might suspect.
This close primal relationship is supported by an
archeological discovery dntlng back to 12.000 IJ.C.
The fossil skeleton of a man wllh Ills hand resting on
a young dog was unearthed in Israel In 1978, some
say. a sign of the bond between them.
Man's second-best friend, the cat. was consorting
with the Egyptian royalty nearly 3.500 years ago.
This ancient relationship Is still flourishing In the
United States today with more than half all
households including nt least one dog or cat. The
human population o f 230 million is supplemented
by more than 40 million dogs, more than 23 million
cats, between 8 and 9 million horses and numerous
other creatures from fish to birds.
Supermarket shelves arc (lacked with dozens of
kinds o f expensive dog and cat food as well as
groom ing products, toys and accessories.
What is the passion for pets? According to
Desmond Morris, author and anim al-behavior
expert, it is a perversion o f human relationships — a
misdirection o f human sympathy towards animals
rather than people.
Are we guilty o f squandering our compassion and
wealth on useless animals?
Not according to Judith White, education officer at
the National Zoological Park In Washington. D.C..
who says "a ll forms o f life have value, a mouse no
less than an elephant— or a human being."
In addition to their value In guiding the blind,
hunting, protection. Bidding out drugs, tracking
criminals, herding sheep, and pulling sleds, dogs arc
now being recognized for the psychological support
und comfort they give their human friends.
Science is beginning to demonstrate that the bond
lx*tween man and beast Is good for us. mentally and
physically. Pets, scientists say. may even help their
owners live longer.
Research at Ohio State University in the mld-70s
on the effects o f dogs In the treatment o f the
m enially ill and on the well-being o f the elderly In
nursing homes revealed that animals had direct,
positive effects on patient behavior and sense of
contcnlmcnt. Pets also served as a "social lubri­
cant.” Increasing Interactions between patients and
others.
Other research has shown that petting and talking
to animals (or watching Rsh) can lower pulse rate
and hlood pressure.
That's the reason the Humane Society o f Seminole
County takes pets from its shelter to visit area
nursing homes and a senior day care center.
Ursula West, who coordinates the program, says
that so muny nursing homes recognize the benedts
o f such patient—animal contact thul she has
See PETS, page 7

H «r«M P t » t « hy Tarnmr Vinctnl

D ora Benton, 63, e n jo y s a few m om ents of
com p anio nship w ith T in k e r during a recen t

v isit by the H um ane Society of Sem inole
County to the Longwood H ealth C a re C en ter.

�2— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

F r id a y, Sep l. 30, 1983

Is Burt's Mother Italian? Does He W ear Lifts?
DEAR DICK:I've read that B urt R eynolds’
m other ta Italian. If so, w hat w as her maiden
name? Also, how tall Is Burt? I read that he
w ears lifts. — D.F., Naples, Fla.
I put the question to one o f his^uddles who said,
yes. his mother is Italian. But when he cheeked, he
found her maiden name was Fern Miller. So. if she's
Italian, she Is probably Itallun on her mother's side.
Burt Is 5-foot-11 or 6-foot. If he wears lifts. It's only
to reach very high shelves.
DEAR DICK: In a recent showing o f Masada, It
w as noted that the Roman soldiers spoke with
a British accent. W a s this great picture made
by a British company? — W .J .A ., Hollywood,
Fla.
Masada was a co-production between our Univer­
sal Pictures and an English company. Most o f the
speaking parts were played by English actors. In big
international productions, when they get actors
from all over, accents arc a problem. Sometimes,
they dub in a lot o f speaking parts to give the words
a uniformity. But in this case, it was simply that
they used English actors.
D E A R DICK: A bou t four or five y ears ago,
David N iven introduced a wom an on a talk show
as his "n e w w ife ." He said they had made a
picture together. She bad an odd name and w as
very attractive. But his o bitu ary named two

2 Z Z Z Z 2 Z Z n 22 Z Z X

Ask Dick
Ttfk* Kleiner
w ives and neither o f them w a s the name he had
given on that show. W e re they divorced or ju st
living together or w hat? — F.M.D., Saginaw .
Mich.
You must have misunderstood at some point.
Niven's widow is a lovely Swedish woman whose
name Is Hjordis. They had been married for many
years. (Her name Is pronounced "Y o rd ls ." so It is
possible it's the same woman; the name looks
different in print.)
DEAR DICK: I recently w atched a 1957 movie
called Lea Glrla w ith Gene K elly and M ltzi
Gaynor. The other two m em bers o f the dancing
act looked very fam iliar. Could you tell me
their names? — L.M., Jupiter, Fla.
T h ey were the lovely English comedienne. I he late
Kay Kendall, und the Finnish ballerina-actress Talna
Elg. Kay played Lady Wren and Talna was Angel in

Z r Z n Z Z Z Z X Z Z 7 .Z 2 7 7 7 Z Z .7 2 Z l 7 2 Z :

Western Sizzlin Steak House's
9thAnniversary Celebration
THANK YOU SALE

s-

S
N
K

25% off

V
‘N

s
■v

ON ORIGINAL 15 STEAKS

No. 1
SIZZLIN
r

This Is The 3rd Year W e Have
Run These S a m e Low L o w Prices

&gt;

* 3 82

SIX SHOOTER
ROUND-UP ;
* * *374 ijif *2 * 7

No. •

CHETENNE

No. 13

No. 11

WESTERN

BIG TEX
STAGE COACH
3K
$ ] 0«
&gt;yr $J32

3 * * 4 49

* * * 4 27

No. *

No. 10

GUN SMOKE
No. 14

RANGER
•yV $179
*
1
No. 15

COLT 45

SHISH-K-BOB
y r $322

%yf SJ 62

HOT 0 0 0 0 WITH OTHER DISCOUHTS OR COUPOHS

s
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S

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1

MAVERICK

DUDE

MARSHAL
sr

No. S

No. 4

No. 3

TRAIL BLAZER
1 No. 7

No. 6

N
v

No. 2

»3M

S

SALE STARTS
SATURDAY-OCTOBER 1

Western
SIZZLIN Steak House
2900 S. ORLANDO DRIVE (17-92), SANFORD

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that fine old film.
D E A R DICKtMy dad and I have a $100 bet on
this. He thinks the lady in Urban Cowboy,
Sissy, la the sam e lady who played In Alien. Is
he correct? — T.H., W illiam sport, Pa.
Tell dear old dad it’s time to have his glasses
tuned. Debra W inger was In Urban Cowboy, and
Sigourney W eaver was in Allen. Sigourney Is about
eight or nine Inches taller than Debra.
D E A R DICK: Y ears ago, I rem em ber a movie
called I'd Climb the Highest Mountain. It
starred Susan H ayw ard. D idn 't W illiam Lundigan star w ith her? H aven 't seen or heard of
him in years. Is he still living? — B.R.G.,
Chelalis, W ash .
Your memory’ Is sharp; Bill Lundlgcn was Susan
Hayward's co-star in that film. But he’s gone: he
died in '75.

'Emerald Point'
Mim ics Real Life
By Dick K leiner
HOLLY WOOD iNEA) - In the global scheme of
things, what happens on the CBS series Emerald
Point N.A.S. hardly matters, but It does to Michael
Carven! Because the horrifying tragedy o f the
Korean airliner, shot down by Soviet fighter planes,
could conceivably cost Carven his job.
On the show, he plays a Russian fighter pilot used
by our Navy as an expert, after an Am erican plane is
downed by Cuban fighter planes. The coincidence is
startling und since the real-life tragedy. Carven (a
Romanian-born actor) has not worked. There are
high-level talks on whether or not his character will
continue on the show.
BARRY LIVINGSTON is another name and face for
the "W h atever happened to " flic. In case you don't
know or remember, for seven happy, formative
years Barry played Ernie on M y Three Sons.
H e’s a big boy now, and has been for some time,
and has turned Into a fine young man. He's still
uctlng in the theater In and around LA and in a
couple o f weeks Barry and his brother, Stanley, will
be seen in the NBC m ovie High S ch oo l U.S.A.
Like most ex-child stars, he had a dry period.
When that happened, he went to New York. There
he'got lucky and was part o f the historic production
o f The Skin O f O ur Teeth, presented both on
B r o a d w a y an d at th e K e n n e d y C e n te r In
Washington, as part o f the hicentcnnlal theatrical
celebration.
" I think I lost som ething by being a child star,"
Livingston says. *‘ l can't quite define what it was
but. for lack o f u better word. I'd say it was 'choice.' 1
continued acting because It was there. I've often
wondered what I might have done had I had more o f
a choice. College, maybe? Then who know s?"
T E R R Y K 1NG SLE Y-SM ITH grew up around
Hollywood, because his mother. Dorothy Kingsley,
was a noted screenwriter. She wrote most o f the
Esther Williams films and the original Seven Prides
F or Seven Prathers.
Young Terry watched it all. His best friend, as a
kid. was Margaret O'Brien, and he watched all o f
what happened to her. too. His big brother. Dennis,
was Elizabeth T aylor's first date — their mothers
urranged It when they were both 14 — and he took
Debbie Reynolds to her first prom. T erry watched all
that. too.
Terry became an actor and a writer. Now he's
written a book, The M urder o f an O ld-Tim e M ovie
Star, that draws nicely on all those events he
watched as a kid.
The book fcuturcs the private eye Pete McCoy.
And Terry hopes this Is the first o f a series o f Itooks
about McCoy. He also hopes they become movies.
T erry's mother thinks Sylvester Stallone would be
great us McCoy. Jaclyn Smith asked for a copy and
wants to play the leading lady.
So we may all be watching T erry Klngsley-Smlth
writing a new chapter in Hollywood history.
P A T COLLINS is the bright and pretty woman
who does the arts and entertainment things for the
CBS Morning News. She is a nice person, so it Is only
fair that her first book is called How To Be a Really
Niee Person.’' •'

�E vening H e ra ld , S aniord, F I.

‘Gambler II' Eyes
Wild West Scene
By Dick K lein er
SEDONA. Arlz. (N E A) — This Is a picture-postcard
pari o f Arizona, with unreal red spirt** sticking up
atop unreal red mountains surrounding this quaint
town. It is therefore a great place to shoot a Western,
because wherever you point the camera there is
bound to be an Incredible scenic backdrop.
In this case, there Is an Incredible scenic front
drop on the premises, too — a lady known as Linda
Evans. Linda — alias Krystlc Carrington o f Dynasty
— Is certainly one o f our more Incredible blonde
natural resources.
She Is sandwiching In this role — opposite Kenny
Rogers In the CBS moVIc. The Gam bler. Part II —
between her trip to China as one o f The Love Boat
guest cruisers and her return to Dynasty. She says
she didn't want to work. In the few weeks she had
between the China trip and her regular Job.
"B u t." she says, "m y friend, Christine Belford.
who played K enny's wife In the first G am bler movie,
told me this was a nice com pany and everybody was
plensant and It would be fun and easy.
"S o I said I would do It." she says. " I got here Just
one day after I returned from China — and the first
‘ fun and easy' thing they had me doing was
hanging. There I was. hanging out there In the sun
— and the temperature was 113 degrees. I'm going
to kill Christine the next time 1sec h er."
Miss Evans plays a fast gun In this, and her
practicing gave a few deliverym en In Los Angeles a
start. She says they gave her a gun to work with and
she wore It strapped around her waist for several
weeks, trying out her fast draw every few minutes..
" I really startled a bunch o f delivery m en ." she
says. Another o f the group supporting Kenny Rogers
In this T V m ovie Is Bruce Boxlcltncr.

F rid a y , Sept. 30, 1 » 3 — 3

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273-8603

"I'm a lot more optimistic about this scries,"
Boxlcltncr says, "th an I was this time lust year
about the scries I was doing then B ring ‘Em Back
Alive. I think this series appeals to a much broader
segment o f the audience."
It also has humor in It — as docs The Gambler.
Part II — and Boxlcltncr considers him self primarily
a com ic actor. He says his earliest acting experi­
ences were all In comedy.
" I believe." he says, "that there is some com edy
In every character. I wouldn't want to do only
com edy, but I also wouldn't want to do something
that had no humor in It at a ll."
Boxlcltncr was part o f the first G am bler film and It
was a-huge ratings hit. There was talk, he says, o f
spinning that film o ff Into a scries, revolving around
(he character he plays. Billy Montana. CBS realized
that Rogers would never do a scries, because his
heart Is primarily In singing and entertaining.
"B u t." Boxlcltncr says, "th e Idea o f doing a Young
Gam bler series was dropped when Jim Garner's
M averick scries was a failure. They figured our show
was designed for that same audience, so no point In
doing it at a ll."
Boxlcltncr says Ids wife. Kathryn Holcomb, whom
he met when they were both in The Macaltans
series, has retired from acting.
"1 never asked K ilty to qu it." he says, "an d If she
wants to com e back later, she certainly can. But for
the time being she’s happy being a mother to our
son. Sam. who Is 3 ."
Boxlcltncr has done a lot o f Westerns, and loves
them. He hopes they make a comeback. He says the
reason so few are being made today Isn't the fault of
the Western Itself. " T h r truth Is they simply made
some bad ones." he says, "a ll that psychotic and
anti-hero crap. Westerns have always been popular
because they are simple, and that's the kind they
should m ake."
Miss Evans, like everybody else who made that
China trip with and for The Love Boat, found It a
fascinating experience.
"P eop le ask me If I had fun." she says. "B ut It
wasn't fun so much as It was Just very exciting. I
learned — contrary to what I'd been told — that the
Chinese arc very warm people. I'd go out In the
street and they would Instantly surround me. They
weren't threatening, they were Just curious, and
they would smile and stare at m e ."
T h ey probably do that In Scdona. Arlz.. loo — If
you look like Linda Evans.

JOIN THE

M U G C L U B
!■

Buy a big yellow
Biskits mug for just $1.99,
V W
get F R E E coffee when you
^
bring it Into any Biskits restaurant.
For one whole year.
Join our Mug Club today and we’ll keep
on pouring you coffee for the next twelve
months. Abkilutely free. Stop by any
Biskits and join up!

�A—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday, Sept. 30, m 3

Kathleen Revives Turner Tradition
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) For years, Lana Turner was
the queen of sexy sizzle in
movies. Now we have anoth­
er Turner, Kathleen (no
relation). In "Body Heat"
and “The Man With Two
Brains," she has showed that
she is quite adept at the sexy
sizzle, too.
It seems to be Holly­
wood's illustration of the old
saying that one good Turner
deserves another.
Kathleen Turner, as a
result of playing the title
body in "Body Heat" and
following that with some
great comedy moments in
"T h e Man With Two
Brains,” is one of the hottest
properties around town

these days.
She just finished her third
movie — "A Breed Apart,"
with Rutger Hauer and
Powers Boothe — and is
currently off to Mexico for
her fourth, “ Romancing the
Stone,” with Michael Doug­
las.
She thinks she has gotten
better in each film. Anyone
who was awed by her beauty
in "Body Heat” might be
surprised to learn she thinks
she looked even more beau­
tiful in “ The Man With Two
Brains.”
"It's a combination of bet­
ter makeup and better
lighting," she says. "Plus
I’m getting better as I get
older."
She is also getting braver.

She says she is now brave
enough to say no to offers
more often, and believes
that saying no frequently is
a key to acting success. She
said no a lot after "Body
Heat” zoomed her to the top.
Naturally, a lot of producers
flocked around with offers
to play parts similar to Mattie Walker and she didn’t
want to do that.
"I turned them all down,"
she says. "Instead, I went
back to the stage for a
while."
She considers herself pri­
marily a stage actress.
That’s what she started out
to be, and that's what she
still wants to be.
She grew up here and
there. Her father was in the

foreign service and there
were four Turner children.
Two of them grew up hating
that peripatetic life — liv­
ing in Venezuela, England,
Canada and Cuba — and
wanted only to settle down
somewhere forever. But
Kathleen and her younger
brother thrived on the mov­
ing around and all the new
experiences.
At 14, she decided she was
going to act. She says her
mother insists she always
was an actress.
“ Mother says I always
performed," she says. “She
says I first sang a solo when
I was four, In a department
store.”
She went to high school in
London, and they let her

K ath leen T u rn e r's c a r e e r hasn't cooled down
sin ce her red-hot debut In B o d y H eat. She
followed It up w ith The M an With Two B ra in s
and Is cu rre n tly w o rking on h e r fourth m ovie.

oppa Jay’s “It’s Free”
e

Ocginninq

October

s right i&lt; your b i r t h d a y is in O c t o b e r (or y o u h a v e a fr ie n d
w h o s e b i r t h d a y is in O c t o b e r ) c o m e i n t o a n y P o p p a J a y s l o c a
lion a n d t h e b i r t h d a y g u e s t g e t s t fie S p e c i a l B ir t h d a y M e a l
Y O U R FREE^SPEC IAL B IR T H D A Y M E A L IN C L U D E S
O u r d e l i c i o u s ’All Y o u C a n Eat C h i c k e n &amp; S a l a d Bar B u f f e t , a
re g ul ar S o ft Q n n k . a n d a s p a r k l i n g S t r a w b e r r y S h o r t c a k e F O R
F R E E " N o strings a t t a c h e d ' (Well
b a l l o o n y o u g e t 1)

e x c e p t to t h e h e l i u m filled

TH ^ R E ARE O N L Y 3 RULES
Lunch &amp; Dinner Hours
Sun_ Thurs
10 A M 1 1 P M
Fri &amp; Sat
10 A M 12 P M

|IO|»|KI |J1YS|
w h e re file choice is yours. 5.
2501

French A v c .,

Sanford

892*7567

1, 1 9 8 3

audit classes at the various
London dramatic schools.
That was a big help. But
then her father died, and the
family moved back to its
basic home of Springfield,
Mo., so she studied acting at
Southwest Missouri State.
She considers New York
her home now, because she
went there right after col­
lege and still lives there.
In "A Breed Apart,” she
plays a rural woman. So she
asked her M1- uri grand­
mother for sumc Ozarkian
sayings to sprinkle into her
dialogue. Several of them
have found their way into
the script.
One she particularly likes

is: "That man’s so full of
himself that he thinks he
could put out Hell with a
bucket of water."
After her red-hot debut in
"Body Heat," it took some­
body like Carl Reiner to
realize that Miss Turner
could be funny as well as
sexy.
"I loved working with
Carl (in 'The Man With Two
Brains’)," she say* "When
we started, I asked him how
far he’d allow me logo
‘"How far can ycu go?1he
asked me. "So I said, ’Just
watch me."*
Chances are we’ll all be
watching Kathleen Turner
for a long time to come.

G*______________*
O GUIDE
______^

_________ ___

The Dnncc Company, Inc.. In concert. 8 p.tn.,
Friday. Sept. DO. Annie Russell Theatre, Hollins
College. Winter Park.
Lake Mary High School Booster Club Monte
Carlo Night. Oct. I. 7-11 pan.. Eastmonle Civic
Center. Altamonte Springs. Open to public for $5
donation, must be 19 or older to attend. Benefit for
new Sports Complex.
Goldcnrod Craft Fair and Flea Market Bazaar, 9
a.in. to 4 p.ni„ Oct. I. Goldcnrod Civic Center, one
block south o f Aloina Avc.. on Palmetto. Sponsored
by the Goldcnrod Civic Club.
General Sanford Museum and Library. Fort Mellon
Park. Sanford, 2-5 p.m.. Sunday. Wednesday and
Thursday.
Fall Sidewalk Arts A Crafts Festival. Pine Hills
Shopping Center. 5143 W. Colonial Drive. Orlando.
10a.m. toG p.m.. Oct. 7-H.
Southern Ballet Theatre presents "A n Evening
with Dancers from the New York City Ballet." 8
p.m.. Oct. 11. Bob Carr Performing Arts Centre.
Orlando.
"Creatively 18". an all member show In a variety
o f media. Creative Art Gallery', Hidden Gardens. 324
Park Ave. North, Winter Park, through Oct. 15.
Open to public, 11 a.m.-4 p.nt.. Wednesdays
through Saturdays.
An Ex!tlb!tlon-."Thc Ages o f M exico". DeLand
Museum, throughOct.31.
IDEA A R T 111, day o f festivities at Crcaldr Arts.
600 St. Andrews Hlvd. W inter Park Saturday. O ct.l.
Art exhibition and hands-on activities. At 9 p.m. the ■
coffeehouse opens for fellowship, music and poetry. **
Anyone can exhibit their work or Join in performing
arts.
.

�Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

F rid a y , Sept. 30, 19*3—5

T ELEV ISIO N
Septem ber 30 thru O ctob er 6
L a b lr Ch

CD

C able Ch

O

IC R S I O rland o

05(35)
(6) ffi

(N B C ) O a y lon a Beach
O rlando

(10) ffl

1 ARC I O rlando

(5 )0
(4 ) Q

In depen den t
O rlando
Independent
M elb ou rn e
O rlando P u b lic
B ro a d c a tfm g System

In addition to the chan nel* lu te d , c a b le v m o n su b scrib ers m ay tune in to independent channel 44,
51 P e ters b u rg , by tuning to channel 1. tuning to channel 1]. w h ich c a r n e t t p o r lt and the Christian
B roadcastin g N etw ork (C B N )

O f The W eek

Specials
DOGS Barbara W ood house uses
her thill* of understanding and the
basrc technique of firm control to
Improve the behavior of dog*.

SATURDAY
EVENING

7:30
CD (10) NATIONAL H U H SCHOOL
C H E E R LE A D IN Q
C H A M P IO N ­
S H IP S E igh teen c h e e rle a d in g
■quad* from all over the country
com pete In this annual con le t! held
al S ee World In Orlando, Florida,

6:00

0
(B) MINK DEVILLE A T THE
SAVOY Mink DeVMIt and hit band
perform "Harlem Nocturne," “ Slow
Dram." "L o v e M e Like You Did
B efore" end other hit* at the Savoy
In New York City.

MONDAY
EVENING

0

MORNING

10:00
0 (2 ) HOW THE WEST W AS WON
AFTERNOON

8:00

(10) THE NAVIGATORS Thia
d o c u m en ta ry re s e a r c h e s * Ih e
ancient Polynesian skill of navigat­
ing without chart*, com passes or
sextants, and profile* one native
who It determined to keep this art

Sky*.

12:30
S I 110) RED BARBER REMEM­
BERS Veteran base baa announcer
Red Barber describe* how hi*
career developed.

4:30
0
(10) A VISIT WITH REGINALD
STEW ART
In te r n a t io n a lly
renowned conductor / pianist Regi­
nald Stewart is profiled; Interview*
with Stewart and with hi* contem ­
poraries. and historical footage are
Included.

EVENING

0

6.-00
(10) BARBARA'S

PROBLEM

the planning, building, habitation
and siege ol a fictionel !3lh century
castle, with additional on iocatlon
visit* to castles throughout Wales.

AFTERNOON

2:30
12:30

GD (10) 10*3 DRUM CO RPS INTER­
N A T IO N A L
C H A M P IO N 8 H IP
HIOHLIOHT 8 Highlight* of the
w orld cham plon thlpa held In
Miami'* Orange Bowl are present­
ed

SUNDAY

TUESDAY

0:00

0 CD TO N IG H TS 21ST ANNIVER­
SAR Y The late-night program 's
aerker year* ere highlighted in dips
introduced by Johnny Carson and
Ed McMahon; bandleaders Doc
Sever Insen and Tommy Newsom
• re featured, as are guests includ­
ing Bob Hope, Burl Reynolds and
Joan River*

10:30

( to) G R ANT W OOD'S AMERICA
Iowa-born artist Grant W ood,
famous tor hit painting "American
Gothic." la profiled.
EVENING

AFTERNOON

2:00

0

(10) RAINBOW MOVIE OF THE
WEEK

7:00

0

(10) THE NAVIGATORS This
d o c u m en ta ry re s e a r c h e s th e
ancient Polynesian skill of navigat­
ing without charts, compasses or
sextants, and profiles one native
who la determined to keep this art
alive

WEDNESDAY

EVENING

9:00

0

Orlando Evan* vs. Winter Park

MORNING

8.-05

11:00

0
NCAA FOOTBALL Arizona vs
California

O ( t ) WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

123G
(2 ) O

N CAA TODAY

10:30

0 (I) NFL WEEK IN REVIEW

11:20
0
BASEBALL Atlanta Brave* at
San Diego Padra*

12:30
CD O

SUNDAY

N CAA FOOTBALL

1:00
0

(1 ) WRESTLING

2:00
0 ( 9 BASEBALL
3:00
(9
O
SPORTSBEAT (Starting
time subject to ch a n ge )

3:30

CD O NCAA FOOTBALL (Starting
time aubject to ch a n ge )

4.-00
(9 Q
TENNIS "U S. Women *
Indoor Cham ploneltlps” Earlyround coverage (live from the Hart­
ford, Conn. C M c Cantor).

635

P MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
EVEHMG

6:10
7 :5 5
P RED
REP MAM FOOTBALL ACTON
M FO ET

too ___

•

MORNING

0

SCHOOL FOOTBALL

0

10:00

0

(10) MISTER ROGERS TALKS
WITH PAR ENTS AB OUT DAY
CARE Fred Rogers talks with par­
ents who have children In day cere
and others who have chosen to stay
al home with their ctikdren.
AFTERNOON

4:00
CD O ADC AFTERSCHOOL SPE­
CIAL “ The Hand-Me-Down K id" A
young girl (Tracey Ootd) accidental­
ly loses her older stater's bicycle,
then concocts a wild story to cover
up the Incident. Q )

EVENING
030

0

(10) CASTLE Animation and
live action are used to demonstrate

FRIDAY
AFTERNOON

12.-00

0

(10) CASTLE Animation and
live action are used to demonstrate
the planning, bunding, habitation
end aiege of a fictional 13th century
castle, with additional on-loceUon
visit* to castles throughout Wales.
EVEHMG

M0

0 (10) THE EMIGRANT S A G A

"A
New Beginning" Arriving in New
York after a terrifying voyage
across the Atlantic. Ihe Oskars find
the long )oumey to Wisconsin
hampered try hardship* and Christi­
na’* pregnancy.

1 :3 0
(D 0

1230

S3 NFL TODAY
130
0 ( 9 NFL FOOTBALL Coverage
ofLoe Angelas RMdara at WaMdngton. Darner at CNcagoi,
al CtncinneaL Slan ts at
or HouWon at Pittsburgh

(9

BASEBALL NL Playoff
Gama 1 &gt; NL East Champion at NL
W eal Chamfkon

WEDNESDAY

430
( 9 NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dol­
phins at New Orleans Saints
P
BASEBALL Atlanta Braves at
San Diego Padrse

AFTERNOON

430

330
0

(9

BASEBALL AL Playoff
Gam e 1 • Chicago White Sox at AL
East Champion

EVENMQ

SARAJEVO *84

830

EVENING

0

(9

BASEBALL NL Ptayofl
Gama 2 • NL East Champion at NL
Waal Champion

730
O (• ) ANGLERS M ACTION

THURSDAY

735
P

WRESTLING

EVENMQ

12.-00
( 9 0 JOHN M CKAY

O

0

11:30
0 ( 9 BOBBY BOWDEN
AFTERNOON

830

230

11:00
0 ( 9 CHARLEY PELL

EVEHMG

TH18 WEEK M BASEBALL

CD O BASEBALL A gam e Import­
ant to the divisional pennant races
In the NL East and / or NL W eet wS
be televised

® O

Jeff (John Jam es) eoconatera a despondent K irby (Kath­
leen S eller) who Is straggling over her dilemma of tell­
ing him the truth about her pregnancy, la- “The
Bungalow," on A B C s "D ynasty," airing Wednesday,
Oct. 5.

TUESDAY

0 (* )W R E S T L M Q

10.-00

( • ) CO LLEG E FO O TBALL
Louisiana Stale University vs. Uni­
versity Of Florida

WEDNESDAY

(10) THE EMIGRANT SAGA
"T h e Emigrants" A Swedish cou­
ple. Christina and Karl Oskar, set
sell for America In hopes o l settling
In the rich term country ol Ihe mid­
west.

Sports On The A ir
SATURDAY

Madeline (Madeline Kahn, I.) encounters n mummy
who’i no dnmmy when the make* a pan at him, think­
ing be la her huiband Charlie In the "Mammy Dearest"
episode o! the new ABC comedy aerie* “ Oh Madeline,"
airing Tuesday, Oct. 4.

MORNING

0 (10) G R ANT W 0 0 0 *8 AMERICA
low *-bom artist Grant W ood,
famous lor Me painting "American
Gothic." la profiled.

THURSDAY

0

0

830
&lt;•) C O LLEG E

FOOTBALL

Unheretty ol Central Florida vs
Valdoeta S tale Coaege

830
(9

BASEBALL A L

Playoff
G am * 2 . Chicago White Sox at AL
East Champion

836

1035
PSPO R TSPA Q S

#

MONDAY York

Q

0

0 NCAA FOOTBALL Citadel vs.
Virginia MMary Ineluta

FRIDAY
• I NL

�9—Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Friday, $9pt. 30, 1993

Banks Bank On Movie Studios, Not Stars
B j Vernon Scott
UPI H ollywood R eporter
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — The Bank o f
America, largest banking Institution
In the country, holds there Is no such
thing as a bankable m ovie star.
B o l A Is an authority on such
matters. Its entertainment section has
a $2 billion credit line out to studios
and major producers this year alone,
to p p in g by fa r all o th e r m o v ie
bankrollcrs.
Should such box-office winners as
C lin t E astw ood , d ire c to r S te ve n
S p i e l b e r g a n d w r i t e r W illia m
Goldman come seeking a loan, they’d
be turned away.
The sophisticated business o f fi­
nancing movies has changed dramat­
ically in the past decade with loans
and lines o f credit — up from $250
million in 1968 to $2 billion today —
going only to corporations or their
studio subsidiaries with little If any
consideration given star names.
it's understandable considering a
chcapie like Porky's without a single
star, earned $100 million, and an
expensive film like A ll N ight Long.
starring Barbra Streisand and Gene
Hackman, went down the drain.
Jam es A. Parsons. Bank o f Am erica
v ic e p r e s id e n t o f e n t e r t a in ­

ment-media-hcalth services, and Peter
W. Geiger, vice president o f the bank's
N o rth A m e r ic a n D iv is io n , lo o k
primarily at studio balance sheets and
other assets when loaning money.
Curiously, m ovies arc only high-risk
Investments for the companies which
make them — Paramount. Disney.
U n iv e r s a l. M GM. C o lu m b ia and
W arner Bros.
B o f A never loses m oney on movie
loans. Unlike other industries, no
studio since Fox In the 1920s has ever
gone bankrupt.
The cyclical nature o f studio profits
protects banks. One year a studio may
lose a king's ransom while another
hits the Jackpot. A year or two later
their positions m ay be reversed.
MGM teetered on the brink o f
bankruptcy two years ago but made a
dramatic comeback.
Certainly, many m ovies — perhaps
most — lose money. But breakaway
hits more than make up for losers.
Hits such as E.T. and Return o f the
JedI haul In a quarter billion dollars.
G eiger and Parsons arc closely
tuned to studio production slates,
cognizant o f scripts, stars, directors
and producers scheduled to make
which movies.
But their principal concerns arc

Lynda &amp; Loni

Ofcettuuy
SAT. OCT. 1
*2 5 &amp; &gt; 50 G am es
m

i

7 PM

3 -* 2 5 0 Jackpots

G IF T T O

B V IR T O N I

Present This Ad For FR EE Early Bird Book
T B JM P LI S H A L O M
Elkcam I Providence
Deltono. FI

BINGO PLAYED
EVERY SAT. NITE 7 PM
SUNDAY MAT. t2i30

Lynda Carter and Loni
Anderson will star in an
NBC mystery series that
will debut as either a midseason replacement this
year or in the fall of 1984.
The one-hour shows will
be filmed in San Francisco.
The two women will portray
the ex-wives of a famous
private detective who was
murdered. The first show
will be a two-hour special
depicting how the women
decided to take over their
late husband's agency and
their first case involves
finding his killer.
Leonard Stem, executive
roduccr of "McMillan &amp;
ife.*’ "Get Smart” and
"The Governor and J.J."
will produce the scries.

6

at Its
1 1 coupo"
I

33-est!

" " " " " " " " " " "

"c o u ro "

ENJOY

GRAPEFRUIT
FR O M FIO R ID A

J

rj

GRAND O PENING S P E C IA L

00
I

OFF ONE DOZEN

1

S TE A M E D CRABS

| J CARRY OUT ONLY

REAL
MARYLAND
STYLE

FRESH FISH,
SHRIMP, CRAB
CAKES A OTHER
SEAFOOD SPECIALITIES

LUlZJ

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Hvr ir«t

studio management teams, track re­
cords and talent at putting together
salable slates o f films.
"W e 're Interested In corporate lead­
ersh ip ." Parsons said. "W e don't get
involved In creative aspects o f movies.
In venture capital you look for three
things — management, management,
m anagem ent."
P a r s o n s g r in n e d w h e n a s k ed
w h eth er he .th ou gh t the Cannon
Group (an Independent) was going
o v e r b o a r d in o ffe r in g S y lv e s te r
Stallone a record-breaking $12 million
to star In a new picture.
"W e hate to see salaries go up to
$12 million because o f the profit
factor." Geiger said. "But we arc not
engaged In basing loans on casting."
" W e 'r e not finan cin g C an n on ."
Parsons udded. "T h e key clement to
financing m ovies doesn't involve star,
script or d irector. T h e y m ay be
bankable to producers, theater groups
or studios but not to banks."
G eiger said. "T h ere are bankahlc
produccrs and we like some better
than oihcrs. men like Francis Coppola
and George Lucas. Even so. we don't
make them loans. Credit is extended
to corporations they work through,
major studios and independent pro­
ducers."

FR ID A Y

ru m )

6.-00
0 (3 K D Q C D O new s

O D (S B ) b j / L 0 6 0
S3
(10) M A C N Q L / LEHRER
NEW3HOUR
GD (B) ONE DAY A T A TIME

6.-05
OX UTTLE HOUSE ON THE P fW -

7:00
O (43 PEO PLE'S COURT
(J ) i s P M MAGAZINE Burl Rey­
nolds' new role as spokesperson lor
Big Brothers And Big Sisters ol
A m e ric a ; a you n g C alltorn la
entrepreneur who has m ade a lortune seOmg the Idea o l diamondstudded dothlng
I O JOKER S WUXI
) (35) THE JEFFERSONS
(10) EVENtNQ A T PO PS Nell
Carter and Hew York's renowned
Abyssinian Baptist Church Chow
tom John Williams and the Boston
Pops Orchestra lor an evening ol
oospel and |an (R)
CD ( I ) R O W A N A M AR TIN 'S
LAUGH-IN
(Ul
CAROL
FTVENOS

BURNETT

AND

7:30

) TIC TAC DOUGH
7:35

8.00

U M

0 ( 3 ) MR. SMITH Mr. Smith takos
to the gambling tables of Las Vagas
to raise enough money to buy the
freedom o l fee brother Bo-Bo.
THE DUKES OF HAZZARO

liZM siujzrv
hw,

u n t

sum *

%

D &lt;y-B
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fcftl

CINftRM f O M lilll

AIM

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®

displaying strange behavior after a
visit from the ghoet o f Me friend
Jeeelcs T ale (Katherine Hatmond)

Site

HAWAB FIVE-0
(10) W A S M N G T 0 N WEEK M

0 ( B ) M OVC

II97B)

OX

8:05

MOVIE
"Silent Running"
(1972) Bruce Dern. Ckff Potts A
botanist m charge of sustaining
plant kfe on another planet yearns
lor human companionship
0
(3) M AM M AL (Prem iers) P ro ­
le s s o r.c rim in o lo g is t Jon ath an
Chase (Simon MacCorklndale). who
can transform himself Into various
animals, (oms a policewoman (M el­
ody Anderson) lo prevent an arms

OX OOOO NEWS
fob

The financial health o f Hollywood
studios Is illustrated by the fact that
the Bank o f America has a $2 billion
com mitment for financing films but
only $500 m illion In outstanding
loans.
"M o v ie s ." Parsons concluded hap­
pily. “ are a very good investment for
our bank."

8:30

6:30
NBC NEWS
C 8 S NEWS
ABC NEWS Q
) ALICE
B) OOOO TIMES

8

»(•**«*«

Currently, according to Parsons.
Disney and MCA don't need bank
money because their cash flow is so
great. T h e y use the bank on a
stand-by basis.

Bisect After 30 years, a relentless
Swiss detective stN cannot prove
that a master criminal Is gusty of
murder

EVEMNG

Behind the scenes oI late-night
news shows.
WHEEL OF FORTUNE
FAMILY FEUD
) BARNEY MILLER
745-9:11

Financial umbrellas protect banks
against losses. Not the least o f these
are studio film libraries, studio real
estate and corporate ownership by
such giants as Coca Cola (Columbia).
M C A (U n iv e r s a l). W a r n e r C o m ­
munications (W arner Bros.) and Gulf
and Western (Paramount).

10:30
(II) (39) BOB NEWHART

11:00

O

0 (3 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

DEE
WALLACE

"W e don’ t finance pictures on their
stand-alone basis. W e finance entire
slates. Therefore, we never lose sleep
over whether any one picture makes
or loses m on ey."

Septem ber 30

7:05

99*

"W e don't Interfere with production
costs. We allow the film company to
spend it's line o f credit as it secs fit."
Parsons said.

"End O f The G am e"

CD O

WEBSTER The short-Inheight but determined Webster
decides he wants to )oin a commu­
nity loot ball team
S) (10) W ALL STREET WEEK

9:00
Cl) O DALLAS (Season Premiere)
J R . Sue Ellen, John Ross and Ray
all face an uncertain lata as the fire
at Southlnrk encompasses the
entire house
CD O LOTTERY! Flaherty and
Rush travel lo Detroit lo deliver
winnings lo a prison inmate (Glynn
Turman), an oppressed office worker (Bruce French) and an answering
service employee (Barbara Cason)
(35) QUINCY
(1 0 ) 8 IX G R E A T ID EAS
"Equakty" Mortimer Adler and Bill
Moyers discuss the issues o l bio­
logical mlarlortty. affirmative action,
and the struggle between "h a ve s"
and "h ave nots " (R)

S

10.00
0

(33 FOR LOVE AMO HONOR
The scheming Capt Wiecek plana
a surprise maneuver that ha hopes
wt« prove Grace (Rachel Tlcotm)
incompetent
CD O FALCON CREST (Season
Premiere) Juke (Abby Dalton) Is
I site d lor two murders as Dr.
Michael Ran son (Ckfl Robertson)
arrives tor the funeral of one o f the
victims
CD O M ATT HOUSTON.
&lt;U) (36) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 (1 0 ) BIX G R E A T I0 E A 8
“ Justice" Mortimer Adler asks
why justice la key to an Individual s
happiness, and whether one should
better sutler Injustice at the hands
o f other* or b e un)usl to them (R)
OX BASEBALL Atlanta Breves at
San Otago Padrss
0 (t)K O J A K

(3 ) GDO CDO n e w s
(TX (3 9 )BENNY HILL
GD (10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
O l d ) TWILIGHT ZONE

11:30

O

(33 TONIGHT Guest host Joan
Rivers Guests Eileen Brennan. Dr
Ruth Westhelmer. Loreruo Lamas
X W KR P IN CINCINNATI
8 O LBJ OOE 8 TO W AR
President Lyndon B Johnson's
determination &lt;o keep North and
South Vietnam separata at the
same time Ho CM Mmh was trying
lo reunite them Is recalled
(35) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
(9) LATE IS GREAT

12.00

O

BATTLEATAR QALACTICA
(9) MOVIE "Sherlock Holmes
In New Y ork " (1976) Roger Moore.
Patrick Macnee

12:30

O (3) FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS
Musical minl-laaturas highlight
tunes by Billy Joel. Elvis Costello.
Madness. Air Supply, Pet Benatar.
Olivia Newlon-John and Santana, a
"Private R eels'' segment profiles
Lover boy

CDO

12:40
ALL IN THE FAMILY

1:00
OJ) (39) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

1:05
OX MIGHT TRACKS

CD O

1:10

MOVIE
"Alesender The
Greet
(1959) Richard Burton.
Fredrtc March

2.00
0 (33 NBC NEWS OVERNIOHT
2:05
OX NtOHT TRACK 8

2:30
0
(9) MOVIE
"O n e Spy Too
Many" (1966) Davtd McCaBum.
Robert Vaughn

3:00

0 (3) ENTERTAINMENT TOMQHT
Frankie Avalon talks about Ms
nightclub act and Upco ming movie.
Leonard MaMln looks at movie
Westerns

0 (3
) n ew s
(D O

3:30
3:50

MOVIE "Daddy Long L e gs"
(1955) Fred Astaire. Leaks Caron.

4:00

0 GDNBC NEW S OVERNIGHT

�Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

SA TU R D A Y
U iv
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5.-00
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5:05
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6.00
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LAW ANO YOU
CHILDREN'S THEATER
OXCD(t) NEWS

6:30
0 ( 7 ) MARIE A COM PANY
( 5 ) 0 SPECTRUM
(? ) O BULL WINKLE
JB (39) IT*S YOUR BUSINESS

October 1
haunted houee's glowing red room,
where they are taunted by transpar­
ent figures. ( R ) n
( U (35) M OVKT "From The Earth
To The M oon” (1B58) Joseph Cotten, G eorge Sanders. Three men
and a woman embark on a perilous
Journey to the moon aboard a rock­
et ship.
( 10) O RO W M Q YEARS
( 8) AMAZING SPIDER-MAN

S

12:30

B

( D AM ERICA'S T O P TEN
N C A A FOOTBALL
(D O
AMERICAN BANOS TAND
Quests: M arshal Crenshaw, Erie
Bur don and the Animals
S (10) GROWING YEARS

(3) O

1:00

7:00
® (TJTHUNOARR
(T ) O BLACK AWARENESS
m O BEST O f ON THE OO
J r (35) FROM THE EDrrOfT 8
DESK
CD(B) PICTURE O f HEALTH

7:05
(Q) BETWEEN THE LINES

7:30
I ® OIL D O AN 'S ISLAND
) 0 THIRTY MINUTES
) O SCOOBY OOO / MENUOO
) (35) VAL DE LA 0
I (■) WEEKEND GARDENER

7:35
OX ROMPER ROOM

8:00
I (T ) THE FU NT 8 TONE FUNNIES
) 0 THE BtSKITTS
) Q KIDSWORLO
) (35) IMPACT
)(1 0 ) QUILTING
) ( • ) PANO RAM A

8:05

B

B

3 ) WRESTLING
(10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

MOVIE "T h e Giant Spider
Invasion" (1B78) S ieve Brodle. Bar­
bara Hale. Strange crystalline
shapes from another planet shower
the Midwest, where they hatch Into
mammoth spiders
B (10) FAMILY PORTRAIT

2:00
(3 ) BASEBALL
(35) MOVIE
"T h e Boston
Strangler" (IB M ) Tony Curtis. Hen­
ry Fonda. A schizophrenic plumber
la responsible lor strangling several
Boston women, but go es undetect­
ed untl he Is arrested lor breaking
and entering.
~ (10) IT 8 EVERYBODY'S BUSI­

8

ED (8)

MOVIE
"Allan Attack"
(1B7B) Martin Landau, Barbara
Bain Leaky nuclear waste contain­
ers p ose a threat to Inhabitants o l a
colony on the moon.

a x ST ARCADE

8*30

S

THE 8 HIRT TALES
8 ATUROAY 8 UPERCADE

O t h e MONCHHICHIS / LIT­
TLE RASCALS / RICHIE RICH
(U) (35) HERALD OF TRUTH
S ) ( 10) QUILTING
d ) (5) COMMUNITY FOCUS

8:35
a x MOVIE "S m o k y" (IB M ) F e u
Parker, Diana Hyland A dom esti­
cated itaJbon turns on N s trainer's
brother as a result ol Inhumane
treatment.

9:00
d ) 8M URFSQ
(35) BIONIC WOMAN
(10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(• ) FREY REPORT

i

9*30
QD O
DUNGEONS AND DRA­
GONS .
(Z ) O PAC-M AN / RUBIK CUBE /
MENUOO
CD(10) FRENCH CHEF
CD(8) REAL ESTATE ACTION LINE

10:00
)o

THE DUKES
S ' (35) MOVIE "S tageco ech "
(IB M ) Ann-Margret. Bing Crosby
The trauma o l Indian attack affect»
the passengers c l a stagecoach In
varied ways
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINT1NO
CD(8) TARZAN

10:30

O
CD ALVIN AND THE CHIP­
MUNKS
(1) O CHARUE BROWN AND
SN O O PY
O THE LITTLES
(10) THIS OLD HOUSE

S

10:35

OX MOVIE "T h e Missiles Of O cto­
b e r" (IB74) William Devane. Martin
Sheen Events within the Kennedy
Administration during the 1952
Cuban Missus Crisis are depicted.

11:00
I (4) M R T
)®

2:05
OX MOVIE "S tageco a ch " (IB M )
Ann-Margret. Bing Crosby. The
trauma o l Indian attack affects the
passengers ol a stagecoach In var­
ied ways

2:30
B (10) IT S EVERYBODY’ S BUSI­
NESS

CD O

3:00

8 PO RTS 8 EAT (Starting
time subject to change.)
B ( 10) PRESENTE

CD O

3*30

NCAA FOOTBALL (Starting
time subject to c h a n g e )
B (10) TONY B R O W N S JOURNAL
" A Tribute To Eubw B lake" A p ro­
file of the Ida and work o l the late
Eubre Blake Is presented (R )

4*30
HIGH CH APARRAL
( 8 ) A U 8 TIN CITY
ENCORE

8

( 10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
( 8) WRESTLING

11:30

B CD AM AZING SPIDER-MAN /
INCREDIBLE HULK
B (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
AFTERNOON

Deaf Picket O ver Captioning
By United P ress International
Deaf protesters carrying picket
signs and speaking in sign lan­
guage demonstrated outside CDS
television stations nationwide
this week to show disapproval
w ith th e n e tw o r k 's lack o f
closcd-captioned programming.
Various groups for the deaf
staged peaceful protests outside
statio n s in C a liforn ia. North

U M IT 8

5.-00
B
CD BARBARA MANDRELL 4
THE MANORELL BISTERS
OD (38) DANIEL BOONE
0
(10) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
B (8) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD

5:30
B ( 10) W ALL STREET WEEK
CD(8) NASHVILLE MUSIC

5:35
OX MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
EVENING

6.00
0 C D G D B new s
J p (38) GRIZZLY ADAMS
B (10) BITS. BYTES AN O BUZZ­
W ORDS
B (8) CLASSIC COUNTRY

6:10
(Q) W RESTLING

12.-00

6:30

(X ) Q N C A A TODAY
( D O ABC WEEKENO SPECIALS
"T h e Red Room Riddle" A bizarre
boy traps two youngsters In a

0 ( 7 ) NBC NEWS
( D O CBS NEWS
B (10) A CONVERSATION WITH
RED B A R B E R .........................

Carolina. South Carolina, West
Virginia. Indiana. Iowa, South
Dakota and Florida. They asked
for a daylong boycott o f CBS
programs.
"W e want CBS policymakers to
know how we feel down here. Wc
can't get up there (to New York)
to protest." said Pauline Hicks.
65. In Jacksonville.
CBS said it adopted a caption­

ing system early this year, but
decoders to translate the signal
probably won't be available from
manufacturers until 1984. ABC.
NBC and PBS provide captions
for hearing-impaired viewers.
CBS does not participate In the
"L in e 2 1 " system that brings
captions to deaf viewers o f other
n e tw o rk s .

...Pets And People, A Healthy Mix
•■pct-ln-rcsldcnce" (hat residents could have a part
In caring for and feeding. "Som ething to which they
can give o f them selves." Mrs. West said.
“ It's wonderful, they (the patients) react to it very
w ell," said Kaye Marie Stroup, social services and
activities director at Longwood Health Care Center,
where the Humane Society volunteers have visited
with their animals.
"It Is good therapy for the patients. Everybody
loves a puppy, it makes them happy and gives them
a good feeling Inside."
It Is not Just Ihc elderly who benefit from this
contact with pets. Mrs. West said emotionally
disturbed children are also helped by having them
around.
Parents often get their children pets with the goal
o f teaching responsibility, but animals can suffer In
the care o f children if not carefully guided by adults.
With proper supervision, however, both kids and
their pets can benefit from a close association. What
else but a pet can offer unconditional affection,
loyalty and pure fun?
Researchers arc beginning to Investigate what
Ilets mean to the development o f children. Universi­
ty o f Pennsylvania psychiatrist Aaron Katcher
suggests that a pet may be the only creature capable
o f givin g affection to and receiving it from boys at a
certain stage o f development — that point when
they are too old to kiss mom and too young to kiss
girls.

Continued from page 1
difficulty In fulfilling all their requests for visits
because o f a shortage o f volunteers.
On a recent visit to an adult day care center In
Casselberry. Mrs. West said a puppy was Jumping
around making everyone laugh."One elderly gen ­
tleman wanted to hold the dog. something that was
warm and alive next to h im ." she said.
"T h e
people were Just thrilled. It seems to remind them o f
happier days when they were In their own homes
and their children were growing up and they start
telling us about pets they used to have and held fond
memories for.”
Male patients usually prefer dogs and the women
enjoy petting the cuddly kit lens, she said. "W c have
a hard time getting them to let go when It was time
to leave. They talked about how friendly Ihc pets
were and how soft they felt. It was a very worthwhile
cxperincc for everyone concerned."
One nursing home Is even considering having a
7:00
B (7 ) DANCE FEVER
! } &gt; 0 HEE HAW
(D O
MEMORIES WITH LAW ­
RENCE WELK
(ID(35) BUCK ROGERS

7:30
(3 ) FLORIDA'S WATCHING
(10) NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL
C H E E R L E A D IN G
C H A M P IO N ­
S H IP S E igh te en c h e e rle e d ln g
•quad* from all over the country
com pel a in tbit annual contaat
at Saa World In Orlando, Florida.

8

7:55
OX RED M AN FOOTBALL ACTION
REP° RT

o/vo

8:00

O

4:00
0D O
TENNIS " U S
W o m en s
Indoor C h am pion sh ips" Earlyround coverage (Hve trorn the Hartlord, C o m . Civic Center).
(ID(3 5 )INCREDIBLE HULK
B (10) THE QtUUNI CONCERTS
Carlo Marla Qkilml conducts the
Los Angeles Philharmonic In Bee­
thoven's Symphony No. 2 and
Schumann s "Manfred Overture."
(R)
CD ( 8) POP1 GOES THE COUNTRY
CLUB

8 O U 0 GOLD

) O PUPPY / SCOOBY DOO /
8CHOOLHOU8E ROCK

S

1:30

CD O

F rid a y , Sept. 30, 1903— 7

(3) D IFF R E N T STROKES
(Season Premiere) Arnold meets
Mr T when the "A -T e e m " start
films scenes In the Drummonds'
apartment building q
_
(3 ) O
CUTTER TO HOUSTON
"^Premiere) T t J ii ^ u n g “ d o c 't « i
(Sheitoy Hack. Jim MeUtor. Atoc
Baldwin) trained at tha Taxas M edi­
cal Center a rt sent to the small
town o l Cuttar. where they establish
a community hoepltel
CD O
T J . HOOKER (Seaton
Prem iere) Hooker re-entera the rtarcolics underworld to start a
probe o l his detective perlner'a
murder tour years earlier. Q
~ (35) CHARLIE'S A N G E lS
1(10) 1983 DRUM C ORPS INTERN A T IO N A L
C H A M P IO N 8 H IP
HIGHLIGHTS Highlights ot the
w orld cham pion sh ips held In
Miami's Orange Bowl are present­
ed
CD (8) HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
Orlando Evans vs. Winter Park

OX (35) SALUTE

B

10:00
(3) CANDID CAMERA'S 35TH

BIRTHDAY PAR TY Alton Funt and
lo o t Anderson celebrate the popu­
lar program s mttoatona with classic
clips showing "p eop le caught In tha
act o l being themselves " (R)
(JJ) ( « 5)
) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
B (10) DAVE ALLEN A T LARGE

10:30
01) (35) BOB NEWHART
( 10) MONTY PYTHON S FLYING
CIRCUS
(5) NFL WEEK IN REVIEW

B

8:30
B (3)

ROOSTERS (Premiere)
__________
White working as
general peace
tor a traveling carnival.
Wyatt Earp III (Chad Everett) tries to
keep the m em ber! o l hit boisterous
(amity In kne
9 :0 0
CD o
MOVIE "T h e Cannon be*
Run" (1981) Burl Reynolds. Roger
M oore. A no-holds-barred auto
race attracts various competitors
vying to win by driving from coast
to coast In the shortest time.
CD B LOVE BOAT (Season Pramtore)_The cry
end p e a s s n g e rs o l

BAR B-CUE RIB DINNER
WESTERN DANCE

(fi) (35) BENNY HILL
0 ( 10 ) MONTY PYTHON 'S FLYING
CIRCUS
(D ( 8) MUSIC MAGAZINE

11: 2°
®
BASEBALL Atlanta Braves
San Diego Padras

M u s ic

11:30

B (3)

SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Hoat: Stevie Wonder (R)
« ) O STAR SEARCH
(Z ) O
MOVIE
"Caaablanca"
(1943) Ingrid Bergman. Humphrey
Bogart
Ol) (35) MOVIE
"W edding In
W hite" (1973) Donald Ptoasence.
Carol Kane
(1&gt; ( 8 ) LATE IS GREAT

12:00

By

j
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1:00

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1.-05

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"T h e Fugitive Kind"

I T ” Marion B" W* * " • “ **-

Include John Forsythe. Ursula
Andreas. Unda Evans. Lee Majors,
4 :0 5
Susan Anton and Lee Horsley. Q
OX NIGHT TRACKS

TW0PLUS-TW0
O VER

*3,000 In Prizes

OCT. 8th

DINNER 5-7 PM DANCE 8-12 PM
SANFORD CIVIC CENTER
TAX
DEDUCTIBLE
DONATION

$

O
A
Sm
W

PER
PERSON

C H A R IT Y P R O JE C T -R O T A R Y C LU B

1:30

( D O MOVIE
"A n Affair To
Rem em ber" (1957) Cary Grant. 1/
Deborah Karr.

2:05

D r a w in g
S a t.

1230
'
(2 ) O MOVIE "T h e M an" (1971)
James Earl Jones. Marlin Balsam
J
B

FREE

/
/
'j

B ( 8) MOVIE "Charty" (1965) CUtt /
Robertson. Claire Bloom
( .

8:05
OX NCAA FOOTBALL Arizona vs
Caktomia

COUNTRY

1 1 :0 0

0 ( 3 ) (D O (D O new s

★ TICKETS ON SALE *
ANY SANFORD ROTARIAN
•SANFORD TICKET OFFICES• J.C . Penney Co.
• C of C Office
• Publix Market
• Nice Day Laundry
• Southeast Bank
• Care-O-Sell
OR AT T H E DOOR

�a— Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, FL

F rid a y , Sept. 30, 1M3

SUNDAY
MORNING

5:05
©

NIGHT TRACKS

6:00
HARMONY AND ORACE
LAW AND YOU
I O AGRICULTURE U S A
) (35) IMPACT
) 0 ( 8 ) NEWS

8

6:10

Boss Hogg (Sorrell Booke, I.) of Haiurd County pays a
visit to Mel (Vic Tayback) and tries to fast-talk him into
signing away bis diner, on the eighth season premiere of
"Alice " Sunday, Oct. 2 on CBS.

ESM 3

FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN

9:05
©

LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

0

Johnny Carson, late-night T V 's monarch of mirth
(shown through the years: counter-clockwise from lower
right, In 1M1, 1 M «, 1979 and 1912), wUI recall fond
memories In "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny
Canon: 21st Anniversary Special," Monday, Oct. 3 on
NBC.

P H tS O
PRESS

©I3S)1
)TH E JETSON 8

®(10)I
(10) M A Q C OF FLORAL PAINT­
ING
0 ( 8) M S D C YOUR SCHOOLS

3:00

( 8 ) MOVIE "Designing W om ­
an " (1957) Gregory Pack. Lauren
Bacal. A lop drees designer end a
■port » wtliar leal the strains ot mari­
tal biiss

4 *0

3 ) NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dot­
9:35
phina 1al New Orleans Saints
© ANDY GRIFFITH
(35) INCREDIBLE HULK
©(36
_
BASEBALL
Atlanta Bravea at
©
BJ
San Diego Padres
I
HOW THE W EST WAS WON
M S IA' M E R K A W ORKS
4:30
© (36|
(36) M O V E "W ay. Way Out" (D O MOVIE
"T h e Gathering
(1966) Jerry Lewis, Connie Slavena. Storm " (1974) Richard Burton. VkA meek astronaut la propetod kilo gkiia McKenna. Prime Minister Win­
•pace with a pretty tamala compan­ ston Church* becom es a leading
ion to operate a lunar wealhar sta­ hours m World War II
tion
CD O SARAJEVO *64
0 ( 10 ) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE 9 (W ) A VISIT WITH REGINALD
PAINTING
STEW ART
In te r n a t io n a lly
0 (■ ) COLLEGE FOOTBALL renowned conductor / pianist Regi­
Louisiana Stala Univarsity vs. Uni­ nald Stewart la profiled, interviews
varsity O f Florida
with Slawart end wtlh his contem ­
poraries, and historical footage are
10:05
Inducted,
© BEST OF QOOO NEWS

10*0

Ta A Ketu OutfaoJd
VISION and FASHION
Need Not Be Expensive
SINGLE

VISIO N

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES

5:00

10*0

T IN T S A P H O T O O N E Y A V A IL A B L E
• Your Doctors Proscription Filled
G lasses D uplicated* Free Adjustm ents * Repairs

) Q FACE THE NATION
) O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
I {10) W O O O W R K M T 8 SHOP

YOUR EY EG LA SS ES
S A V IN G S C EN TER

©
MOVIE
"T h a M on em en "
(1871) Omar SharH. Jack Palanca.
The ln|ured son ot e champion
equestrian sportsman In Afghani•tan attempts lo regain his glory.

1 0 *5

BUDGET
OPTICAL
S A N F O R D • 3 2 3 -8 0 8 0

(36) DANIEL BOONE
(10) FIRING LINE
( I ) MOVIE "T h e Lemon Drop
K k T (1951) Bob Hope. Marilyn
Maxwell. A gangster receives a bad
lip and Insists that his informer
deliver 1 10.000 wtthki a month.

CDO

5:30
NEW 8 COPE

11*0
0
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T O O THIRTYM MUTES
0 no b
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, bytesa n d b u z z ­
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11*0

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BLACK AW:

S I1

2544 S. FRENCH AVE. (17-92)
Men. T ire Prl.

© (38) MOVIE "Tha Day Of Tha
Dolphin" (1973) Georg# C. Scott.
Trtsh Van Davara. A group ol dol­
phins ars kidnapped from their
trainer by saboteurs who sra
scheming lo blow up a yacht carry­
ing the president o l the U S.
OS (8) ABBOTT AND COSTELLO

9:30
(3) MONTAGE: THE BLACK O

I PRIME OF YOUR UFE
Q D f lP

Tteot yeiMaed

(N e X T T O A O O U * )^

12:30

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WITH DAW

0 ( 1 0 ) VANE. WHAT PLEASURE

■ngnoMrog 10 0 iu unpaw
on IndiMtry, medicine am
baa v a examined. &lt; R )Q

8*0

I

L a a tta t W H m

Ricardo MouUiban (seated), who stars as Ihe mysteri­
ous Mr. Roarke la ABCs "Fantasy Island," Is joined this
season by Christopher Hewett, who will portray the
urbane, erndite and consummate personal hide,
Lawrence, when the series makes IU sixth season prem­
iere Saturday, Oct. 8.

S

CHURCH
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"Von Ryan's
Express” (1965) Frank Sinatra, Tre­
vor Howard An American leads a
prisoners' revolt against the Nails
taking them lo Austria.
CD (10) WINE. WHAT PLEASURE
"S p a rk lin g W in e s ". Dom alne
Chandon Brut. Le)on Pink Cham­
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CD O EYEWITNESS SUNDAY
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O
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old Robbins A rich young executive
(7 1 0 PICTURE OF HEALTH
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© (15) BEN HA DEN
affairs.
© THE WORLD TOMORROW
1:00
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7:30
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Q ® TAKING ADVANTAGE
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2:00
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MORNING

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medical wonders.
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9 (10] SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
9 (9) ANGLERS IN ACTION

7:05
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mysterious drifter (Sam EHiott)
ta a ia VMVtl
(D O TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.
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~ (35) KENNETH COPELAND
, (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Picture*" Ruby L Sesrs crashes
a film studio party and manages to
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studio lol.

7:30
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( 8 ) LOU BABAN

8:00
O
®
KNIGHT RIOER (Season
Premiere) Computer expert April
Curtis (R eb ecca Holden) loins
Michael, who meats his evil double
as ha battles a rampaging semi­
trailer made from tha seme materi­
als as KITT.
(3 ) 0
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Hauard County's Boss Hogg (S or­
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S hr oyer) vtad Mei » Diner ki an
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cedmala stages a holdup during
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10:05
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10:30
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1 0 *5
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11:00
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(35) BOB NEWHART
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8 *5
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11:30
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ENTERTAINMENT THIS
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( D O SiSKEL A EBERT A T THE
MOVIES
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AMERICA -8 MUSIC TRACKS

8:30
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and their husbands give advice to
Ann and Sam, who era each trying
to adjust to their second marriage

CD O

9 *0

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Premiere) Aware ot Tom WEts's
tear of being swindled. G eorge
recruits con artist Jimmy Townsend
(Garrett Morris) lo cure him. (P a n 1)
(D O MOVIE “ Heaven Can Watt"
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Attar tha Ida ot a pro foo tb a l star la
mistakenly claimed before his time,
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Gregory Peck. Richard Baaaharl.

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Gary Cooper, Ann Sheridan.

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(36) TOM ANO JERRY
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5:00
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5:05
92 WINNERS (TUE)
5:20
02

WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

5:25

CD

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5:30

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(TUE-FRI)
92 IT S YOUR BUSINESS (M ON)
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02

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5:35

7:15

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8:00

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8:35
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9:00
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6:30

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7:00

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Connors. Phil Slivers. A group ol
terrorists hijacks an airliner with
live beauty pageant finalists on
board
(12 MOVIE
"M ister R oberla"
(1955) Henry Fonda. Jemea C a g­
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his great desire lo be In combat

7:00

I (3 ) PEOPLE'S COURT
J

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P.M. MAGAZINE Break
dancing the spinning sheet
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7:30

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Kale Jackson talks about her new
TV series
(3 ) Q WHEEL OF FORTUNE
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(T|) (35) BARNEY MILLER
0 (B ) T1CTAC DOUGH

7:35
02OOOO NEWS

0

9:00

® TO NIG H TS 21ST ANNIVER­
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earlier years are highlighted In dips
introduced by Johnny Carson and
Ed McMahon; bandleader* Doc
Sevartnsen and Tommy Newsom
are lealured. as are guests Includ­
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Joan Rivera.
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S tale*
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(U) (35) QUINCY
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Burton and his daughter Kale star
m this adaptation o l Eva La GaSIanna's Broadway production ol
Lewis Carr oil's classic.

8:00

9:30

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adoption ot a young orphan named
Banjo (Julie Ann Haddock) makes
youngest family member Squirt
Jealous.
(3) O
O SCARECROW ANO MRS.
KINO (Prem iere) Washington. D C
divorces and mother Amanda King
(K ale Jackson) helps Intelligence
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ffl O
T H A T 8 INCREDIBLE! A
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a cheetah, a man who eats Irve
crabs
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11:05
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11:30
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C la s s ifie d t a lk * o n a a rla l
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NEWS
0 (B) KOJAK
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10:30
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(10) GRANT W OOO '8 AMERICA
Iowa-born artist Grant W csd.
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3:05
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3:30
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(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

3:35

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4:00

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THUjFRO
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0 (10) SESAME STREET ( R ) Q

$31

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TU ESD A Y

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LE T T E R M A N Q u ests: M ich ael
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CD Q W KRP IN CINCINNATI
0 2 (35) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
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11:35

EVENING

6:00
0

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0
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0 ( 8 ) ONE DAY A T A TIME

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8:30

12:00

NBC NEWS
CBS NEWS
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) (35| ALICE
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8

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kidnapped alter being mistaken lor
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7:00
® PEOPLE'S COURT
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who sounds exactly Ilka Frank Sina­
tra; a profile ol actress Patricia
Neal
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sextants, and profiles one native
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1:00
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MOVIE
"H otel Sahara"
(1951) Yvonne De Carlo. Peter Usti­
nov.
9D (35) STREETS OF S A N FRAN­
CISCO

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LAUGH-IN

1:10

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chess champion (Laurence Harvey)
murder* hit Russian opponent In
order lo prolect his title. (R)

1:30

0®

2:35

3:00

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0
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(1375) Jell unuges. bam VYalerslon.

B U R N E TT

AND

7:30

WHEEL OF FORTUNE
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BARNEY MILLER
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8

2:30

9 2 MOVIE
"Arsenic And Old
L ace" (1944) Cary Grant, Joaaphine
Hun

MARTIN'S

ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An Interview with Andy William*.

NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Behind the scene* o l late-night
news shows
CD a CBS NEWS N IG H T *A TC H
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Leigh

8

7:05
92 C A R O L
FRIENDS

7:35
92 QOOO NEWS

0

8:00

®
BASEBALL NL Playoff
Gam e 1 • NL East Champion at NL
West Champion
ffi O THE M ISSISSIPPI Ben rep­
resents a midwtta (Malinda Dillon)
accused ol being an unllcansed
practitioner altar a baby she helped
deliver goes Into a com a
f f l O JUST OUR LUCK A tier
Keith lose* his TV-weatherman job.
Shabu tile* to help him wm a new

position as g roving reports!.
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Sophia Loran. A beautiful young
Imrmgranl slow * away In lha state­
room of an American dipiomal.

8:30

H APPY DAYS Joanie
rejecti Chachi's proposal of mar­
riage. then suggests they should
breakup Q

12:05

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LETTERMAN Guests
Jacqueline
Bisaet. singer Barry While, com edi­
an Bob Goldthwalt (R)
CD O ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE

92 MOVIE

ffl O

92
MOVIE
"R om an Holiday"
(1953) Gregory Peck. Audrey Hep­
burn.

12:30

The remarkable forms ol deception
used by both predators and their
intended victims - lo eat or avoid
being ealen - are examined. Q
0 (1 ) MOVIE "T h e Quest" (1976)
Tim Matheaon, Kurt Russell Two
brothers sestet) the Old West for
their sister, captured years earlier
by Indians

8:05

6:05

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4:00

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TUE, THU)
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1:30

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11:30

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3:00

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2:00

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2:30
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ING (FRI)

1:05

) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
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Gothic.’ ' Is profiled.
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02 MOVIE

12:00
NELSON

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DAYS OF OUR LIVES
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12:35

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11:00

6:30

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(MON, TUE, THU. FRI)
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12:30
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10:30
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THE YOUNG AND THE
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10:00

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9:00
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Katharine Ross, Linda Hamilton A
widow and her daughter, who Is
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both fan deeply In love with a
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9:30

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throws a costume party wtiera a
case o l mistaken identity leads lo
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(Judith-Marie Bergen)

10:00
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gem slashed In a mallet leads to
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takes pari In a polo match. Q
92 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
0 (10) VIETNAM: A TELEVISION
HISTORY "R oots Ol War 'Althoogh
relation* between American inteikgence and H o Chi Mfnh remain cor­
dial alter World War II, French and
British hostility lo the Vietnameee
revolution lays the groundwork lor

4:05
02

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4:30
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4:35
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5:00

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0 (10) FOCUS ON 80CIETY
(WED)
0 (10) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY
(THU)
0 (10) A R T OF BEING HUMAN
(FBI)

5:05
(Q) 8 TARCADE

5:30
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NEWS
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(10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
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(35) BENNY HILL
(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
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0 (8) TWILIGHT ZONE

11:30

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f f l TONIGHT Host: Johnny
Carson
Guests: Paler Ustinov.
TonyBenneli.
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THE CATU NS
(5) HOUSE CALLS

12:00
f f l O MAGNUM. P.t, A former film
star (Ian McShane) hiros Magnum
lo investigate the suicide ol an
actress (R|
92 MOVIE "O n e Step To H e ir
(1965) Ty Hardin. Rossano Brain
0 ( 8 ) NEWS

12:30
O f f l LATE NIGHT WITH DAVII
LETTERMAN Guest, comedian J i

Lam .
ffl

O

ALL IN THE FAMILY

1:00
f f l Q MOVIE "For A Few Doila&gt;
M o re" (1967) Clint Eastwood, Le&lt;'
Van Cleef.
(U ) (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

1:10

(3 ) O MCCLOUD A British k
(Jack Cassidy) who com es lo Arm
lea as a Jewel Ihiel ends up susper
ed of murder. (R)

0ffl

1:30
NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:00

92

MOVIE “ So End* Our Night"
(1942) Fredric March. Glenn Ford.

2:30
O f f l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Kale Ja- /son talks about her new
ffl

O

CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH

3.-00

0 fflNBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
3:10
ffl o
MOVIE
"Th e Roots Ot
H eaven" (1955) Errol Flynn. Jukette
Greco.

0 ffl

4:00
m e NEWS OVERNIGHT

4:30
9 2 THE AMERICANS

0 (8 ) KOJAK
1 0 :2 0
9 2 NEWS

10:30
0 2 { S 5 )C " ; n e * m a h i

11:00
0

0 ( 8 ) MOVIE

® &lt; i } O f f l G N E * S --------» -

rru O Y

�10— E vening H e ra ld , Sanford, F I.

F rid a y , Sepf. 30, 1983

Just 23, Timothy Hutton A Special Case
By Vernon Scott
U PI H ollywood R eporter
H O L L Y W O O D &lt;U PI) O nce n
m llle n lu m . p ro vid en c e con fers a
special brilliance on an actor — as can
be attested by anyone who has seen
the near genius o f Tim oth y Hutton.
Hutton. Just turned 23. became the
second youngster actor to win an
Oscar — three years ago for his
performance as the suicidal teenager
In Ordinary People. (Tatum O’ Neal
was the youngest).
He followed his stunning debut with
a triumphant performance as the
obsessed military school cadet com ­
mander In Taps last year.
This year he has flowered as an
adult In the title role o f the con­
troversial Daniel, based on the story of
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, executed
as spft-.s for passing atomic secrets to
the Russians.
T i m 's e f f o r t l e s s , c o n v i n c i n g
portraits o f young Am ericans In tor­
ment rank him among today’s great
film actors, without the petulant
rebellion that conferred sainthood on
Jam es Dean and other method actors
o f the 1950s.
Tim has never taken acting lessons.
He Is an original.
OIT-scrccn there Is a curious aura
about him. com bining self-possession
with the shy nervousness o f a man of
en o rm ou s g ifts cau gh t up In a
maelstrom even he does not fully
comprehend. He seems predestined
for greatness.
Tall, slender, pale-skinned and with
quick. Intelligent blue eyes, he Is the
Image o f his uctor father, the late Jim
H utton, but w ith ou t the latter's
sardonic wit and cynicism.
Tim may be the w orld’s best paid

T im o th y H u tto n
23-year-old. He participates in the
profits o f his films, but lives modestly
at the beach, wears scrulTy clothes
and avoids Hollywood’ s glitter.
What goes through T im ’s mind
when the cameras start up and he
begins to com m u n icate with the
audience with an absolute minimum
o f facinl expression and body Ianguage?
"In every scene I feel as if we're

SAFE *

EFFECTIVE *

ECONOMICAL

* F R E E CO N SU LTA TIO N

• S U P E R V IS E D B Y F L O R ID A P H Y SIC IA N .
• NO CO N TRACTS e NO P R E -P A C K A G E D FOODS

30

I~Ev

Certificate
TOWARD PAYMENT OF LAB &amp; PHYSICAL
O n * certificate per person
■ ■

__ ■ I I

at!

W h ir * Walght Control U Mora Than Juat A Dlatl
_ _. , _
Two Locations Opan
,
- , .

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W ED N ESD A Y

"1 try not to remember the Oscar or
to rely on the success o f Ordinary
People as a motivating force In my
life. I don't want to sound ungrateful,
hut I have higher goals.
"W in n in g an award doesn't mean
forgetting other goals, playing dif­
ferent kinds o f roles, continuing to
grow and learn. Doing work that
touches olhcr other people means
more lo me than any aw ard."

0.-00
0 f f l f f l O 0D O NEWS
(U) (38) BJ / LO0O
0D (10» MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
CD(I) ONE DAY A T A TIME

M on d a y

Thru
Friday

| 3 2 3 - 6 5 0 5 |
|
r.»i wu ja m
|

He grinned and said. "B efore m y
father died I learned a lot o f Important
things about his values and attitudes.
Also from my mother.
" I ’ ve been living on my own for
quite a while now. When I feel I'm
getting out o f line. I remember M om’s
and Dud's words and settle dow n ."

O ctober*5

flb (10) RECLAIMING THE ST.

Carson
Guests: Sean l-onnery
("N ever Say Never Again"). Braitllan pianist Tania Tania Maria, actor
Keenan Ivory Wayans ("F o r Love
And Honor").
f f l O W KRP IN CINCINNATI
f f l O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
Op (38) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
0 ( 8 ) HOUSE CALLS

JO H N8

11:35

CD( I ) MOVIE

6:05
(ffl UTTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAI­
RIE

6:30
NBC NEWS
CBS NEWS
) O ABC NEWS Q
)(3 S ) ALICE
^
1(S)Q O O O TIMES

S

(O) THE CATU NS

6:05

12:00

0 2 MOVIE "S abrin a" (1884) Hum­
phrey Bogart, Audrey Hepburn. The
daughter ol the tamity chauffeur Is
sought attar by two wealthy social­
ite brothers.

f f l Q POLICE STO R Y A M e.icanAmertcan police sergeant (P ed ro
Armendaru Jr.) tries lo prevent a
gang war in hi* old neighborhood.

CD( 8) NEWS

9:00
ffl O
MOVIE "C arp o ol" (Prem ­
iere) Harvey Kor man, Ernest Borgnine The lour members ol ■ carpool coma Into conflict over a mtllion-doliar cache they retrieved
when it accidentally tell from an
armored car
ffl O DYNASTY Kryttle defends
Mark (Geoffrey Scott), who is sus­
pected ol setting the cabin hre, and
Alexis realties that a killer Is attar
her. n

7.-00
f j f f l PEOPLE’ S COURT
(tl O
P.M. MAGAZINE Advice
from the author ol "T h e Great
American Man Shortage And What
To Do About It", the 10 -year ciaaa
reunion ot a California high school.
(T ) Q JOKER'S WILO
(ffi (38) THE JEFFERSONS
OD (10) MEETING OF MINOS
Margaret Sanger, Mahatma Gan­
dhi and Adam Smith |otn Steve
Allen lor e discussion ot population
control, tree enterprise and aocial
morality. (Pari I)
CD ( 8 ) R O W AN A M ARTIN’ S
LAUGH-IN
BURNETT

T h ere is an attractive hum ility
about young Hutton that poses the
question o f when or whether Ills huge
success, the prnlsc and money will
Inflate his ego and alter his values.

Tahitian Island by Coll. Howie and
Jody attar she erects computerised
revenge on her es-tover
Ml (38) HAWAII FIVE-0

E V EN IN G

8

(35) QUINCY

(10) CASTLE Animation and
live action era used to demonstrate
the planning, building, habitation
and siege ol a fictional Uth century
castle, with additional on-locatlon
visit* lo castle* throughout Wales

10:00
f f l Q HOTEL A beauty conlestent
(Heather Locklear) questions her
own morals, and a professional
thief (Robert Hooks) plans to rob
the hotel vault
(U) (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
® (10) VIETNAM: A TELEVISION
HISTORY "T h e First Vietnam War
(1946-1984)" The French e ip e c l to
defeat Ho Chi Minh’s guerillas, but
the fighting drags on for eight
years, culminating In the defeat ol
Iha French al Dten EUen Phu
(D (8) KOJAK

7:05

linics

F

T im further demonstrates his versa­
tility In two new films. Therlcvm an. a
science-fiction thriller In which he
plays an archaeologist, and the reallife ro le o f c o n v ic t e d U.S. spy
Christopher Boyce In The Falcon and

&lt;U
CAROL
FRIENDS

*

H ill j z n a
6 2 9 -1 4 4 1
\
mi m m
|

What has Tim to look forward to.
having won an Oscar In Ills first
m ovie? What goals arc left?

It was no accident that after playing
two Juveniles he has moved up to
adult parts. Nor is It coincidence that
his first three parts have been widely
dissimilar — frightened son, militant
fanatic, soul-searching survivor.

• PR O V EN S U C C E S S F U L

$

" I lloat like a hummingbird or a
walcrbug skittering around, skirting
as much as possible to hit every level
o f feeling and emotion.

T im ’ s approach lo acting, while
both emotional and Intellectual, is
essentially Instinctive. All the same,
h is c a r e e r c h o ic e s h a v e b e e n
brilliantly pragmatic. He has made no
wrong choices.

Am erican H ealth &amp; W eight Control can help you
regain control of your weight with five excellent diet
programs designed to your needs. Am erican Health
&amp; Weight Control offers the H C G (Human Choronic
Gonadatropln) Plan used so su cce ssfu lly In Europe
but cla ssifie d a s a prescription drug not approved
by the FD A for weight reduction p urposes.

VERU N D A W ELLS

The Snowman.
‘ ‘ It w as tim e to stop p la y in g
teenagers." Tim said. " I wanted to
play a college man with a wife, fam ily
and baby. Playing 18-year-olds wasn’t
much o f a stretch for me anymore. In
Dan/c/l'm 25. In The Icem an I’m 27."

" I t was easy to play the high
emotional range o f Daniel. 1 tried to
make the characters I play more
Interesting by holding back and let­
ting their unspoken feelings provide
, the strength."

“ I WON *63
BY LOSING 63 POUNDS!”

★

really doing It." he said somewhat
uneasily, reluctant to exam ine his
talent too closely.
" I see a brilliant light and I head for
that light to make it bigger and bigger
so everyone can see It.

AND

7:30
O GP ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Kevin Kline talk* about hi* upcomI movie.
) O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
) O f a m i l y FEUO
J(36) BARNEY MILLER
I ( 8) TIC TAC DOUGH

7:35
0 2 GOOD NEWS

6.-00

10:30

O
(3) BASEBALL NL Plsyolt
G am * 2 • NL Ea*t Champion at NL
W est Champion
ffl O WHIZ KIDS (Prem iere) A
young genius (Matthew Laborteaui)
and three ot hi* triends (Andrea
Etaon, Jeffrey Jsequel. Todd Por­
ter) use his talking computer to
uhm an aidany woman s death
) Q THE FALL GUY A bail lump­
er (Carol Lynley) Is pursued to a

(38) BOB NEWHART
NEWS
® CD O f f l O NEWS
(38) BENNY HILL
(10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS

8

0 (8 ) TWILIGHTZONE

0

»

TONIGHT Host

f f l LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERM AN Guests: com edian
David W ood. Warren Eckstein with
Biotic animat*,
f f l O ALL IN THE FAMILY

o

1:00

ffl
MOVIE
* Bullitt" (1968)
Steve McQueen. Robert Vaughn
OX (38) 8 TREET 8 OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

1:10
ffl O
MOVIE
"T h e Longest
Ortve" (1976) Kurt Russell. Tim
Mstheson

O

1:30
f f l NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:15
(Ol MOVIE "Orta For The B ook"
(1947) Eleanor Parker. Ronald
Reagan

2:30
O f f l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
An interview with Andy Williams
f f l O CBS NEWS NIQHTWATCH

3:00
0 f f l NBC NEW S OVERNIGHT
f f l O MOVIE "B eyond The Blue
Horlton" (1942) Dorothy Lamour.
Richard Denning.

4:00
f f l NBC NEW S OVERNIGHT

4:20
f f l O MOVIE "T h e Adventures Ol
Nick Cartsr" (1972) Robert Conrad.
Shelley Winter s

4:25

11:30
ffl

12:30

0

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11:00

S

12:05
(Q) MOVIE "T h e Last Dinosaur"
(1977) Richard Boone. Joan Van
Ark.

Johnny

(12 THE AMERICANS

�Evening H e ra ld , Sanford, FI

F rid a y , Sept. 35, 1853-11

Another 'Star Wars' Film?
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Dale Pollock, who wrote
"Skywalking," the biogra­
phy of "Star Wars" creator
George Lucas, believes the
recent breakup of Lucas’
marriage may turn out to be
good news for his movie
fans.
Until the split, Pollock
felt that Lucas was not
Interested in making loo
many more movies. He
thought there was little
chance of any more "Star
Wars" films. Pollock says
Lucas has six more “Star
Wars" films outlined, "but
he is afraid of the cost
factor."
"The first ‘Star Wars' cost
somewhere around $11
million," Pollock says. “The
most recent, ‘Return of the
Jedi,* cost $40 million or so.
Lucas is afraid the next cou­
ple could come In at around
$80 million each, and he
doesn’t believe he could
assure himself of a profit if
it cost that much.”
So Pollock thinks Lucas
wasn't thinking of more
movies. But now, the writer
says, “ the breakup of his
marriage could push him
into more active film
making." Lucas had been
saying he wanted to spend
more time with his family,
but now that can’t be, so he

may go back to his other
love, making movies.
Incidentally, Pollock has
an interesting theory about
the Ewoks, the fuzzy little
creatures in "Jedi.” He
thinks they are simply "cutdown versions of the Wookles, such as Chewbacca —
note that their names con­
tain the same letters.”
SUSAN ANTON says she
now knows what an animal
In a zoo must feel like.
She was talking about her
trip to China as one of the
guest cruisers on "The Love
Boat." The Chinese couldn't
take their eyes off her.
Besides, she was there
with her sister, also tall and
blonde, and, to Oriental
eyes, the sight of those two
skyscraping blondes was
totally incredible.
"Whenever we stopped on
the street or anywhere,"
Susan says, "a crowd of 50
to* 60 people would gather
and just stare. They
wouldn't try to touch or
speak, just stare. If you
smiled, they smiled, but
they never smiled first.”
Susan is pleased with her
career progress. For a
while, it was dragging. Her
movie, "Golden G irl,"
turned to lead and she had
two unsuccessful TV series.
"I was a bit discouraged
then," she says. “ But now

TH U R SD A Y
EVENING

2

6:00

(9 (3 )0 0 3 0

new s

(30) BJ / LOGO
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
CD ( I ) ONE DAY A T A TIME

O cto b er 6
explore* the IHe. history, and habi­
tat ol the grizzly bear. (R)
OD(5) MOVIE "T h e Long Journey
Bach" (1STS) Stephanie ZlmbaSst.
Clorta Leach man. A lean-age girl
wages a courageous battle lo live a
com plete end meaningful Die after
being crippled In a tragic accident.

6 : 0 fi
I I UTTUE HOUSE O N THE PRAI­
RIE

6.-05
m NCAA FOOTBALL Citadel vs
Virginia Military Inalula

6:30

8:30

) NBC NEWS
I CBS NEWS
I ABC NEWS □
) (35) ALICE
1 (5 )0 0 0 0 TIMES

S ) (10) THIS OLD HOUSE A look is
taken at the nearly finished product
and the last touches are put on th e'
picket fence, the deck and the yard.

(R»g

7:00
O (1 ) PEO PLE'S COURT
(T ) o
p m MAGAZINE A record­
ing studio where anyone can
becom e e tinging tie r lor 199. a
group ol American* plan their
aacenl o l Ml. Everett.
( C O JOKER'S WILD
(Tf) (35) THE JEFFERSONS
f t ) (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(5 ) R O W A N 4 M AR TIN 'S
LAUGH-IN

7:05
&lt;□)
CAROL
FRIEN08

BURNETT

AND

9:00

(3 ) O SIMON 5 SIMON A radio
disc (ockey (P.J Soles) hires Rick
end A.J. lo find a missing co-work­
er.
0
O I TO 1 The female office
workers com pete lor the enactions
of handsome salesman Michael
(G eorge DeLoy).
(35) QUINCY
(10) THE EMIGRANT SAG A
"T h e Emigrants" A Swedish cou­
ple. Christina and Karl Oskar, sal
sell lor America In hopea ol settling
In the rich Iarm country o l the mtd-

8

7:30

9:30

Wayton Jennings on lour in Flori­
da.
Q WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O FAMILY FEUD
(35) BARNEY MILLER
( I ) TIC TAC DOUGH

CD O IT S NOT EASY Sharon la
shocked lo discover that her hus­
band N eel spent the night at his a l ­
ette's horns

7:35
( 0 ) 0 0 0 0 NEWS

6.-00
O
9 )
BASEBALL A L Pleyolf
Geme 2 • Chicago White S o t at AL
East Champion
GD O
MAGNUM, P X Magnum
ciaehea with a tough Inveatigator
(Eugene Roche) horn SI. Louie white
•earchina lor a m ilting girl
CD O TRAUM A CENTER A man
goaa on a thootlng tp ree al the
exotic nightclub hi* wile it al tend­
ing. and a preacher M bitten by a
venomous snake n

8 (35) HAWAS FiVE-O

(10) M L D AM ERICA 'Tima 01
T h e G r is t ly " M a rly S to u fter

Colleen has been raising
the money to get it made.
And, if and when it is made,
she’ll be the associate pro­
ducer as well as co-writer.
But she is not abandoning
her acting career.
I BUMPED into Ray
Bolger — the straw man in
“ Wizard Of Oz” among
many other graceful roles
— and he was hobbling
badly. He told me he was
facing an operation to
replace a hip.
" I seriously doubt,"
Bolger says, "that I will
ever dance again."

KNOTS LANDING Chip con ­
vinces Diana to trust him. and Vai's
new
with Ben Gibson
nvw relationship
r iw
Is Jeopardized.
(Douglasi Sheehan)
I
® 0 21 100 /2 0
_ ( 3 5) )INDEPENDENT
NETWORK
iffi
*
NEWS
B (t) KOJAK

10:30
(Q) (35) BOB NEWHART

11:00
B

(9 (D O (D O new s
0 5 ) BENNY HJLL
B &lt; 10) ALFRED HITCHCOCK
SENT 8
• (5 ) TWILIGHT ZONE

..

ax new s

(9 TONIGHT Host: Johnny
Carson. Guests: Elaine Strttch.
actor James Stephens ("The Paper
Chase"). Police Chief Ronnie Porter
(from Weleetka. Okie).

-

Garp's
Gang

Robin W illia m s (top and bottom rig h t) s ta rs in
the title ro l? of T h e W o rld A c c o rd in g To G a rp ,
the co m ed y-d ram a w h ich debuts Sund ay at 8
p .m . on H B O .

W KR P IN CINCINNATI
A 8 C NEWS NtGHTUNE
) (36) THICKE OF THE NIGHT
) ( I ) HOUSE CALLS

8

12:00
(D
O
TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.
Several unusual people are Ihe
first participants in ■ cooperative
care program instituted by Trapper
and Goruo (R)
CD ( 8 ) NEWS

12:05
02

THE CATU NS

12:30
(9 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID

L E T T E R M A N Q u a s i: c o o k in g
expert Julia Child.
( D O A U . IN THE FAMILY

12:35
OT MOVIE " A Man Alone'' (1855)
Kay Maland. Mary Murphy.

CD

1:00

O
MOVIE
"T h e Virginian"
(1845) Joel McCrea. Brian Don levy
OS (35) STREETS OF 8 AN FRAN­
CISCO

(D O

1:10

MOVIE ' Doctors' Prtvsle
Lives" (1878) John Gavin, Donna

B

1:30
2:30

ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Kevin Kline talks about hta upcommovia.
O C SS NEWS N K U TW ATC H
O MOVIE "A n d Now Tomorr (1844) Loretta Young, Alan

2:35
0 2 MOVIE "T w o Guys From Tan­
a s " (18451 Dennis Morgan, Jack
Carson.

3:00
B (9 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
4:00
B

( 9 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
O MOVIE "A m i Misbehavin'
" (1955) Rory Cathoun. piper Lau­
rie.

(D

4:30
O

D i n n e r . . . Chicken, D u m plin gs
an d M em ories. ..$ 5 .6 9

( 9 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

B (9

11:15
-i

11:30

B

10:00

CDO

...

COLLEEN CAMP, who
has done many good things
(including "Apocalypse
Now" and "The Cloud
Dancer") Is back acting
after taking a year off to
write. She and her friends,
Martha Coolidge (who
directed "Valley Girl") and
Sandra Will, wrote a script
called "Twelve’s a Crowd"
and they arc all optimistic it
will be made.

O

O ( 9 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

!

things arc happening, so I'm
optimistic again." She’s off
to Arizona for a role in Burt
Reynolds' "Cannonball Run
2" and there arc other
things brewing. And she
says she and Dudley Moore
arc still doing a lot of nice
things together.

THE AMERICANS

The smell ofchicken anddumplings... hon:miadefrom-scratch strip dumpling. .with that indescribable
texture...juicy tender chicken. Oh, you remember.
Sewedevery Sundayfrom ll:S0am, withyour choice
ofthreesidedishesandall the memoriesyou want.
T h e A p p le V a lle y R ib C o .

1330 North Woodland Mid.

DeLand, Florida
1/V04-734-2011

Sun.-Fri. serving from 11:30 a.m.

Sat. aerving from 4J O p.m.

�</text>
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                    <text>Evening Herald—IUSPS 481-2801—Price 20 Cents

76th Year, No. 35—Thursday, September 29, 1983—Sanford, Florida 32771

Should District Cars Be Driven Home?

School Board Members Scrap Over Data Request
By Mlcheal Beba
Herald Staff W riter
A request for information on drive-home use of school
district vehicles led to a head-on collision between
School Board Chairman Roland Williams and board
member William Kroll nt Wednesday night’s board
meeting In Sanford.
Williams asked Superintendent Robert Hughes to
collect Information on the number of faculty and staff
members taking district-owned vehicles home from
work.

Vrnii stepped in
mnUinii n
Kroll
In. making
a mntinn
motion lo
to tnblc
tnblc the
the request
request
for two weeks since It was not Included In the board s
agenda packngc a week prior lo the meeting. The
board's policy says that any Items requiring ad­
ministrative research be placed on the agenda a week
before a meeting.
After board member Pat Tclson seconded Kroll s
motion and board members Nancy Warren and Jean
Bryant voted In Its favor. Williams ruled the motion out
of order since there was no item before the board for
discussion.

parliamentary procedure.
procedure.
Kroll said the board’s
board's policy Is explicit In providing parliamentary
...... .
Williams said he can sec no reason why gathering the
Hughes and other administrators nt least a week to
gather Information requested by board members. He Information would be any problem.
Hughes suggested Williams might want to study the
said William’s request violates the policy. Williams gave
board's minutes for the past three years to refresh his
no time frame for gathering the data, however.
memory on why faculty and stall arc permitted to drive
"This violates our policy," Kroll said.
district vehicles home.
"Mr. Kroll you’re out of order," Williams said.
"Mr. Williams, you're taking advantage of being . Driver’s education cars and school buses arc driven
home to protect the cars from vandalism on school
school board chairman nnd I resent It.” Kroll replied.
Kroll said later lie would file a written protest of the campuses. Hughes said. He added that some malntcSee SCHOOL, page 2A
action nnd requested a work session to clarify

It's SR-

Volt Surge
Kills Man
First Day
On Job

Commissioners Drop Compromise,
Opt For Single Family In Core Area
.

By Donna E stes
Herald Staff W riter
The Sanford City Commission dlscaidcd compromise early Wednesday
evening and decided to go ahead and
rezone a core area of the old city to
single-family residential. SR-1.
The area has carried a multi-family
designation for 40 years.
Reversing a tentative decision made
Monday night based on a suggestion
Irom Mayor Lee P. Moore, four members
of the city commission — David Farr.
Milton Smith. Ned Yancey and Eddie
Keith — moved forward to rezone from
multi-family residential to single-family
residential the old section of the city
from 4th to 13th streets between Laurel
Avenue and the center of Palmetto
Avenue.
A public hearing and preliminary
adoption of the rezoning Is scheduled for
Oct. 10 and public hearing and final
adoption will take place Oct. 24.

A 28-year-old Sanford construc­
tion worker was electrocuted on his
first day on the Job at a hotel
construction site at Lake Buena
Vista, south of Orlando.
Mark Douglas Theller. of 2580
Ridgewood Ave.. was killed Monday
afternoon by a surge of 440 volts
when he apparently got too close to
a fuse box which contained live
exposed wires at the Grand Cypress
Resort, a Hyatt hotel, an Orange
County sheriffs spokesman said.
Theller "Is believed to have come
too close to the hot wires which
arced and electrocuted him.” the
spokesman said.
Theller. an electrician’s helper
with the Trl-CIty Electric Co. of
Altamonte Springs, was alone when
he entered the power box room.
Mrs. Paula Eldcll. secretary at
Trl-CIty and wife of owner Buddy
Eldcll. said today the Incident Is
being Investigated by the federal
Occupational. Safety and Health
Administration, the state of Florida
and the Insurance firm and Trl-CIty

Also last evening, the board ugrecd to
adopt a resolution giving the owners of
apartment and rooming houses In the
area up lo two years to bring their
structures Into compliance with the
city’s fire codes.
Officials said In some cases this will

would have ho continent until those

investigations arr complefe.
A fire department helicopter took
Theller from the construction site to
the Orlando Regional Medical
Center at about 3 p.m. He was
pronounced dead on arrival.
"He (Theller) wanted to be an
electrician.” said Deborah Anne
Kandalec. the victim’s sister. “We
thought It would be good for him."
"He had no experience. It was his
first day on the Job. We can’t
Imagine why he was allowed to go
near the fuse b o x." said Mrs.
Kandalec. who lives In Sanford.
"When we saw the news on TV
with the helicopter landing at the
hospital and they were taking his
body out of the helicopter and I
realized that was my brother. It was
an unbelievable experience. You
hear about things like that hap­
pening all the time, but It's always
someone else." she said.
She said Theller's wife Victoria Is
expecting a child.
"Everybody loved him. He was a
very outgoing person. He loved
animals. He was always picking up
stray animals."—Charles Cobb

H*r»M Ptwta k r Tkm m y Vm ctnt

Snakes
A live

Allen Nelson of Sanford holds up his two-year-old granddaugh­
ter Amanda and the six-foot rattle snake he killed with a shovel
In his backyard on Bedford Avenue, while granddaughter
Brent, 3, looks like she wants no part of It. Nelson said he found
the diamond back rattler Wednesday afternoon - colled and
ready to strike with Amanda just six feet away. After picking
up Amanda and moving her away he said he got a shovel and
came up from behind the snake and chopped at it. Nelson, a
docent at the Central Florida Zoo who works with non­
poisonous snakes, said at first he didn't realize It was a rattler
because he hasn't seen one In the area for 22 years.

Cleveland Shares Airport's Success Story
The success story of the San­
ford Airport since It was acquired
by the city of Sanford from the
federal government 14 years ago
was shared with a group of
Orlando businessmen Wednes­
day.
J .S . "Red" Cleveland, aviation
director of the airport, toured the
1.500 acre facility with members
of the Orlando Cham ber of
Commerce’s aviation committee
before treating them to lunch at
the airport’s restaurant.
The committee tours such facil­

ities regularly
M ay o r L ee P. M oore In
welcoming the guests told of the
city’s pride In the facility, adding
the city has never contributed a
dime to the operation of the
airport.
Giving a brief hlslory of the
airport. Cfcveland said that 865
acres were donated to the U.S.
Navy In 1942 and the Navy
added another 615 acres for u
Navy base. When the facility
closed after World War II. the
property was used for a time as a

site for a county hospital, a
county home and by the New
York Giants farm system before
the Navy reacquired the tract In
1951 as a support facility In the
Korean War.
.
The navy base closed In 1968
and the city acquired It from the
federal governm ent In S ep ­
tember. 1969. Cleveland said.
The airport Is governed by a
seven-mem ber authority, ap­
pointed by the city rnmmlsslnn.
Six of the seven members have
served continuously since the

mean only the Installation or smoke
detection devices and fire extinguishers
while In others fire walls between
apartments must be Installed. Mayor
Moon.* estimated costs could nm as high
as $3,000 for some owners.
The commissioners agonized for 90
minutes over the “Moore compromise
before coming to a decision that It Just
wouldn't work.
Moore's plan was to create a new
zoning where owner-occupants of single
family homes could convert them to
apartments to supplement their retire­
ment Incomes. Absentee landlords could
also continue their apartment complex­
es. but could not expand them or rebuild
them If they were destroyed by fire.
Moore made It clear from the beginn­
ing he personally opposed both the
rezonlng and the compromise, preferring
to keep the multi-family zoning the area
had had for 4 decades. Nevertheless, he
spoke on Wednesday as he had at the
city com m ission’s meeting Monday
night on compromise to protect property
rights.
Property owners of single family
homes In the area lined the wall of the
city manager's conference room at city
hall. Just as they had earlier this week.
But those who spoke at the workshop
session did so only to question and try* to
understand where the complex dis­

cussion among commissioners was at
the moment.
In the thinking of George Willis of the
planning and zoning commission, which
recommended the rezonlng to SR-1.
Moore’s plan could be abused.
He said, however well designed to
protect the rights of current homeown­
ers. Moore s plan to allow owneroccupants lo rent to others would fall
prey to the unscrupulous who could

'Shrewd Investors will
laugh and say thank-you'
if the compromise
is approved.
-G e o rg e W illis
become "owner-occupants" of many
houses In a year. They might. Willis
said, buy a house, live In It and convert It
for sale. He said a person could slip
through the well-intentioned loophole
and convert a dozen houses a year,
thwarting the Intent of the plan.
"Shrewd Investors will laugh and say
thank-you," Willis said of the Moore
compromise.

The SR-1 zoning the commission
dually settled on permits. Farr noted, not
only single family homes, but also
two-family dwellings as a conditional use
If recommended by the planning and
zoning board and approved by the city
commission.
Farr suggested the city's overall zon­
ing ordinance be changed to require
public hearings prior to conversion of a
single family home Into a two family
dwelling. This would give neighboring
property owners the right lo object, he
said. The four other commissioners liked
the Idea.
In addition, the commission agreed to
adopt a resolution giving the multi­
family property owners in the district up
to two years to comply with the fire
codes as non-conforming properties.
The section of the zoning ordinance
permitting the multi-family structures to
remain forever as long as their use for
that purpose did not stop for six months
or longer was read to settle the fears of
multi-family owners that their property
would lose preferred zoning If sold.
And It was noted that multi-family
structures could not be rebuilt If 60
percent or more of the structure was
destroyed by fire. The owners would
have the right to keep, them In good
repair.

city acquired the property. Cleve­
land said.
Since the acquisition many old
buildings have been demolished,
and many new buildings built.
One or the major reasons for
the airport success, Cleveland
said. Is that It has been free of
political meddling and yet there
Is a coordinated and cooperative
sp irit betw een the A irport
Authority, the city commission,
the city manager and the alrjxirt
staff.—Donna E stes

today

Southern Bell Ends Phone Soles

Action Reports..................2A
Around The Clock............4A
Bridge............................... 2B
Calendar.......................... 6A
Classifieds......................4,5B
Comics............................. -2B
Crosswot d......................... 2B
DearAbby..........................IB
D eaths.............................*

Telephone customers will not be ublc to purchase
phones at Southern Bell’s Sanford office after Ja n . I. If
not before.
Sanford ofTIce manager Larry Strieker said today the
Bell Service Center, formerly called the Phone
center Store and located in the Sanford office, will lx*
c|0#cd Retail phone sales will be offered by AT&amp;T
Information Systems, an entirely separate company.
strlckler said.
The change Is being made due lo divestiture required

"Z Z rZ Z M
Florida..............................3A
Horoscope........................2B
Hospital............................. 2A
Nation.................................2A
People.................................IB
Sports............................. 8,9A
Television......................... 3B
Weather........................... 2A
World..................................5A

" » Sovemmcn,.
The Sanford Southern Bell office will remain open.
Strlckler said he Is trying lo gel the three employeeb In
the Service Center, whose Jobs will no longer exist.
transferred to AT&amp;T’s Orlando Phone Center, or to other
positions withsimilar salaries. The Service Center here
will remain openuntil the end of the year, or sooner If all
three can be placed In Jobs before then.
The only difference for the customer will be that they
will not buy phones retail at the Sanford office. Strlckler

f

1

said, but phones can be purchased Just about anywhere
now.
"We will still have an office open where customers will
still be able to walk In and pay tlu-lr bills make
Inquiries, upply for service, or talk lo m e." lie added.
Other changes ure expected during the coming year.
Strlckler said as part of an over ull consolidation which
Southern Bell has been Implementing over the lust four
years. Some time next year the service representative*
In the Sanford business office will also Ik- relocated In
Orlando, but the customers will not sec any difference as
they will be dealing with the customer representatives
over the phone as they arc ulrcady doing.
As for Strlckler. he said In the future, he will Ir­
responsible for the same geographic urea as now und
probably more. Throughout lhe Southern Bell system,
levels of management responsibilities ure being In­
creased to hlghten productivity
Strlckler said the average |H*rson on the street will not
n o tice th e c h a n g e s w hen th ey o ccu r.
— J a n e Casselberry

Shrine On...

— —

Stan Rockey, president of the Sanford Shriners, left, accepts a proclam ation
from M ayor Lee P. Moore declaring Frid ay and Saturday Bahia Tem ple's
Paper D istribution Days In Sanford. Shriners F irst Vice President Bob
Baker, holds a copy of the newspaper the d u b distributes as a fundraising
pro|ect to help support 21 hospitals for crippled and burned children. The
hospitals care for needy children regardless of race or creed or ab ility to
pay.

�3A— Evening Horald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Sapt. 29, 19H

NATION
INBRIEF

Tylenol
One Year After Poisonings, Case Still Unsolved

W ar Powers Compromise
N o w Before The Senate
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan,
having swayed an edgy House, called on the
Senate to demonstrate "responsible leadership”
today and approve a resolution allowing him to
keep U.S. Marine* In Lebanon for 10 more
months.
”Thls Is not an easy decision for anyone, but
believe me. It Is a necessary one for our country
and the world.” House Speaker Thomas O’Neill
told hts colleagues Wednesday before they voted
270-161 to accept the compromise plan, which
O'Neill helped negotiate with White House.
The Senate also Is expected to endorse the
resolution, despite opposition from minority
Democrats, who. like some of their counterparts
In the House, are fearful the United States will
become ensnared In a Vletnam-ltke conflict.

Stopgap Spending OKd
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House, resisting
the temptation to add pork-barrel projects to
crucial legislation, has approved a "clean”
stopgap spending bill needed to fund most
federal agencies past midnight Friday.
The Senate could consider the measure late
today. There are Indications It will follow the
House's lead and avoid attaching controversial
riders to the bill.
The stopgap bill, which would fund the
government until Nov. 15. is needed because
Congress has not yet passed eight of the 13
regular appropriations bills for fiscal 1984.
which begins Saturday.
Spending authority for most federal agencies
will expire with the 1983 fiscal year at midnight
Friday, although government services would not
be affected until Monday, the next regular work
day. If the resolution is not enacted.

...despite the adverse publicity afforded the poisonings of seven people
from cyanide-laced Tylenol, the pain reliever has regained Its form er
popularity

CHICAGO (UPI) — A year has passed
since seven Chlcago-arca residents died
from taking Extra-Strength Tylenol
capsules laced with cyanide and the
killer has not been caught.
"W e hnve 10 Investigators still work­
ing on the case full time — five from the
FBI and five from the Illinois Division of
Criminal Investigation." DCI Command­
er Thomas Schumpp said Wednesday.
"Currently we have 25.000 pages of
materials (and) we have used computer
technology to collate and analyze a lot of
s e e m in g ly u n r e la te d m a t e r i a l ."
Schumpp said.
"W e have been sitting down and
reanalyzing and rcdlgcstlng the material
... making sure that everything we
developed during the course of the
Investigation was handled to the nth
degree," he said.
Investigators hope renewed Interest on
the anniversary of the killings may spark
some new leads.
A young man In north suburban
Arlington Heights became the first
victim the afternoon of Sept. 29. 1982.

School O ffic ia ls O K R ezon ing
Plan To H e lp Balance G ro w th

Later, his brother and sister-in-law.
distraught over his sudden death, took
Tylenol capsules and also were stricken.
In nearby Elk Grove Village. Mary
Kcllcrman. 12. suffering from a mild
cold, died suddenly the same day.
Two suburban firemen noted slm l-j
laritles between the deaths and made a j
"wild guess" that their common link
was Extra Strength Tylenol, taken by all
the victims prior to their deaths.
Four more people would die over the
course of the next few days, and In each
case, cyanide-tainted Extra-Strength
Tylenol was the killer.
The pace of the Investigation has
slowed since the first hectic weeks.
Schumpp said there have been no new
leads In the past few months.
"We arc out on the street pursuing a
number of leads." Schumpp said. "It's
still a major case."
,
Ironically, Tylenol, despite all the j
publicity lavished on the poisonings, has j
recovered Its former position as the •
nation’s leading aspirin-free pain re-1
llever.

A ll Charges Dropped
Against Court Clerk
All charges have been discharged against a
Seminole County court employee who was accused
of practicing law without a license.
Circuit Judge Robert B. McGregor Jr . discharged
the two remaining misdemeanor charges against
Mary Ann Knight at a hearing Tuesday because of
the state’s "failure to either prosecute or file an
appeal" In the case.
Ms. Knight. 34. of 3644 Main St.. Sanford. Is the
supervisor of the microfilm department of the
Seminole County Clerk of Court's office.
Ms. Knight's supervisor. Court Clerk Arthur
Beckwith, said that "as far as she Is concerned, the
matter Is settled."
McGregor discharged charges of unauthorized
practice of law and attempted evidence tampering
against Ms. Knight because, he said, the State
Attorney's office moved too slowly In filing an
appeal In the case.
On Nov. 29. 1982. McGregor dismissed a felony
charge of witness tampering against Ms. Knight and
at that time Assistant State attorney Alan Robinson
announced his Intention to appeal the dismissal.
McGregor agreed to postpone setting a trial date on
the two remaining charges until the result of the
appeal was known.
However. Robinson failed to prepare an order of
dismissal for the appelate court despite repeated
requests from McGregor that he do so. McGregor
said.
tfcfcult;1'M cGregor,,ty*chqfgetj^ipe two
remaining charges because "under the law, she
(Knight) is entitled to a prompt disposition of the
charges against her." McGregor said.
The state has 30 days In which to file an appeal on
McGregor's Tuesday decision. Assistant State At­
torney Ralph Eriksson, who Is now handling the
case, was not available for comment.
Ms. Knight was arrested Sept. 1, 1982 after
Beatrice Lee Baker of Midway told a Seminole circuit
Judge that Ms. Knight had prepared her divorce case
and was paid $ 180 for the work.
Mrs. Baker's daughter. Mary L. Daugherty, later
told prosecutors that Ms. Knight had offered her 950
to destroy handwritten Instructions and to disavow
her claims.
Ms. Knight faced a $1,000 fine and one year In Jail
on each of the misdemeanor counts. The felony
charge earrirs a five-year Jail term and a $5,000 fine.
Beckwith reinstated Ms. Knight In her post as
microfilm director last January at the advice of the
county's labor attorney, pending the resolution of
the charges against her.

By Mlcheml Beha
•because the board wants to reduce
Daugherty said he appreciates the
Herald S taff W riter
attend ance at Lake Mary and
problem faced by the Seminole
Seminole County school officials Idyllwllde. with enrollments of 759
County School Board In trying to
hope a rczonlng plan for eight and 638 respectively, to provide for upgrade or replace older schools.
elementary schools in northern anticipated future growth In those
"Seminole County Is unlike a lot
of others." he said. "Because of Its
Seminole County will balance rapid areas.
growth at Idyllwllde and Lake Mary
location the district Is still growing
Complicating the rezonlng effort
elementary schools with slower Is a federal desegregation order and there Is a lot of new construc­
growing areas In Sanford.
requiring thnt the schools maintain
tion."
Assistant Superintendent for In­ th e ir p re se n t ra c ia l b a la n c e .
A timetable for the rezoning was
struction Dan Dagg said the rczon­ Goldsboro and Pine Crest were approved Wednesday night by
lng Is Intended to provide space for made split schools as a desegrega­ school board members. That plan
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - City Supervisor
future growth at schools outside the tion technique.
calls for consideration by a com­
Wendy Nelder. who sponsored one of the
c ity w ith o u t u s in g p o rta b le
mittee composed of Board member
Burils Dougherty of the Justice
nation's toughest anll-smoklng ordinances In
classrooms.
Department, today said his de­ Jean Bryant. County Commissioner
June, has challenged to public debate four
The rczonlng will create an at­ partment will have to examine the Bill Klrchhoff. Willie King of the
tobacco companies helping a campaign to repeal
tendance zone for Hamilton Ele­ proposed rezonlng and determine Seminole County NAACP and rep­
the law.
mentary School, scheduled to re­ Its Impact on the district.
resentatives from the eight schools
She sent mallgrams Tuesday to Drown &amp;
place Sanford Grammar. South Side
He said the Justice Department affected by the rezonlng. That group
Williamson Tobacco Corp.. Lorlllard. R .J.
and Hopper elementary schools will not get Involved In the rezonlng is scheduled to submit a tentative
Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Philip Morris Inc.,
when it opens next year. Dagg said until a plan Is submitted and will plan to Hughes In February' for
but so far she has received no response.
projected attendance at Hamilton not make Its own proposals for presentation to the school board In
The repeal campaign has greatly outspent the
will be around 700.
March.
rezonlng.
campaign to retain the ordinance, which orders
Pine Crest, with first, second and
employers to provide smoking and non-smoking
third grades, and Goldsboro, with
. areas In the workplace.
kindergarten, fourth and fifth
grades, will each be made full
elem en tary sch o o ls with k in ­
A site plan for the new Hamilton
flow would result oq
dergarten through fifth grade Elementary School In Sanford,, dc;, a 24-foot wide residential s U o « t,,,i „•&gt;
classes. Dagg said the rczonlng tailing trafftc patterns for buses at
Knowles said the school ad­
Continued from page 1A
would probably give each of those the facility, has been unanimously
ministration
prefers not to use
nance workers who are on 24-hour call also drive district
turned down by the Sanford City Celery Avenue ns an access since It
schools enrollments o f700 as well.
vehicles home so that they can report Immediately to
"There are Just over 2.100 ele­ Commission.
has future plans for its Celery
emergencies rather than going to a district complex to m entary stu d en ts In Sanford.
C ity M anager W .E . " P e t e ”
Avenue
property over which the
pick up a car or truck.
There've been about 2.100 for the Knowles said although a letter from
buses would travel
T'What makes It cost effective to drive those vehicles past three yers.” he said. "There's
Benny Arnold, assistant school su­
The commission Monday voted to
hdme?” Williams said. He said he wants to re-cxamlnc
slow growth In Sanford proper. perintendent for facilities and
deny
approval for the site plan until
the board's policy to determine If It Is Indeed less Around the edges Its growing
transportation. Indicates bus trafllc
traffic Is routed to Celery Avenue,
expensive to allow the vehicles to be taken home.
faster."
would come Into the school from rather than over a residential
■'}ic asked Hughes to provide Information on who is
The rezonlng could be difficult Mellonvlllc Avenue, a major traffic street.—Donna E stes
authorized to take the county-owned vehicles home,
hdw far their homes are from school and estimates of
hqw much money the county saves by allowing them to
bd taken home.
Hughes said he would comply with the request.
HOUSTON (UPI) — The threat of an Industrywide aftrr It reorganized and resumed Hying Tuesday.
In other business, the board unanimously approved a pilots' strike or work stoppage by pilots against
Meanwhile, the leader of Eastern Airlines' machinists
815.000 settlement of a lawsuit filed by Mark Tyler of Continental Airlines loomed today for the bankrupt but
union has demanded carrier President Frank Borman
Casselberry whose truck was destroyed In a collision airborne air carrier.
resign, claiming Borman's "doomsday" ultimatums arc
vyith a school bus in 1981.
Representatives of all 46 airline units of the Air Line causing employee burnout.
.Board attorney Ned Julian Jr . said "there Is no Pilot's Association scheduled a meeting In Houston
Borman has told employees the airline will go
question of liability in this matter. The bus creamed the today to consider a nationwide strike to protest pay cuts bankrupt unless they accept a 15 percent across-thetruck."
and workload Increases Implemented by Continental board paycut Nov. 1.
Julian said the board had offered the $15,000
settlement earlier this year but It was rejected. After
reconsideration. Tyler asked that the settlement be
offered again.
The board delayed action on a suit filed by a South
TUESDAY
A man broke Into a Sanford woman's bedroom early
Seminole Middle School student who blames the school
-4
:1
9
p.m..
25th
Street
and Sanford Avenue, rescue.
today,
placed
a
gun
against
her
neck
and
threatened
to
district for an Injury he received at the school
-9 :2 9 p.m., 204 S. Maple Ave.. rescue.
kill her. a Seminole County sheriff s report said.
playground after school.
-1 1 :56 p.m.. 705 W. 24th Place, rescue.
Bertha Taylor. 48. of 2540 Crawford Ave.. said she
Julian told board members the district's Insurance
★ Fires
WEDNESDAY
carrier. Gallagher A Bassett of Orlando, recommended awoke at 3:30 a.m. to find a man standing next to her
-12:16a.m .. 214 W. 15thSt., rescue.
payment of all medical bills Incurred by Curtis Roberts. bed. She screamed and the man sat down on the bed
★ Courts
-1 2:38 p.m.. 1600 W. 5lh St., rescue.
14. of Casselberry. Those medical bills have been about next to her. put a small gun against her neck and told
her
"to
shut
up
or
he
would
kill
her."
the
report
said.
★ Police
$4,000 so far for Roberts who required surgery to repair
When the man got Into the bed, Mrs. Taylor told him
a. severe elbow fracture he received when he fell on a
"he shouldnh do that" and he got out of bed. picked up
basketball court at the school.
’ Roberts claims he slipped on gravel which school her purse which was at the foot of the bed and walked said her purse was In the band room when the money
Into the living room, the report said.
was taken.
acetals should have removed from the court.
The man removed $9 In cash from a wallet in the
BOATTAKEN
*\Jullan said the boad's liability Is difficult to figure
A fiberglass boat and outboard motor, valued at
because of the slate policy on leaving school play- purse and left through the front door.
AREA READINGS (B a.m .): temperature: 73;
The Intruder had entered the residence earlier by $ 1.500. were stolen from a southwest Seminole County overnight low: 64; Wednesday's high: 85: barometric,
iunds open to the public. "A Jury might very well say
ce we have to leave the playground we should have removing a screen on a kitchen window and using a man's home between Sept. 15 and 8 a.m. Tuesday.
pressure: 30.04: relative humldfty: 87 percent; winds:
lawn chair to climb through, the report said. He used a
Robert Masclmowicz. 23. of 5803 Bear Lake Circle, north at 8 niph; rain: none; sunrise: 7:17 a.m., sunset
someone there to supervise."
•Hughes was not eager to settle the matter. The Bchool coat hanger to unlock a bathroom door and walked said his 8-foot red fiberglass boat with a 35-horsepower 7:14 p.m.
Johnson outboard motor was docked In Big Bear Lake at
board .cannot be responsible for Injuries on the through the bathroom Into Mrs. Taylor's bedroom.
FRIDAY TIDES; Daytona Beach: highs. 2:23 a.m..
the edge of Ills backyard.
playground after school hours. Hughes said.
3:13 p.m.; lows. 8:22 a.m.. 9:32 p.m.: P ort Canaveral:
BULLDOZER BINGE
VAN
DOOR
VANI8HE8
’ ’Students wander on and off the playground at will. A
Someone "hotwired" a bulldozer and drove It through
highs. 2:15 a.m.. 3:05 p.m.; lows. 8:13 a.m.. 9:23 p .m .;'
A door on a Longwood man's 1977 Dodge van was
student may have thrown gravel on the court. Hughes a construction site near Chuluota. causing $150
Bayport: highs. 6:42 a.m., 11:05 p.m.: lows. 12:40'
stolen between 6:30 p.m. Monday and 7:50 a.m.
stUd. "This could set a precedent.”
damage.
a.m.
,3:1 2 p .m .
.1
Tuesday.
The manager of the construction firm which owns the
Jam es A. Besslngcr. 55. of 727 N. U.S. Highway
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy today with a 20
bulldozer said someone broke Into the Ignition box of the
17-92. said someone removed the glass In a rear door of percent chance of thunderstorms. High low to mid SOrj
yellow John Deere bulldozer, "hotwired" it. drove
the van to gain entry, then used tools to detach the Wind northeast 10 to 15 mph. Tonight partly cloudy. A
through the construction site leaving a trail and passenger side door, valued at $500.
20 percent chance of showers. Lows lows mid 60s. Wind
abandoned it In the middle of the construction site
light northeast. Friday partly cloudy. A 30 percent
BOAT STOLEN
-------------------------------between 5:30 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday.
Spring*
CenUtl FWt k U R t f ton* I H ttp U tl
chance of thunderstorms. Highs low to mid 80s.
A
green
boat
and
a
ski
Jacket
were
taken
from
the
yard
The
construction
site
Is
off
Ft.
Christmas
Road
about
D IS C H A R G E S
of a southwest Seminole County woman's home
Son lord
one mile from Lake Mills.
.
• ADM ISSIO N S
BOATING FORECAST! St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet'
Bur noli L Boll
between 11 p.m. Friday and 5 p.m. Monday.
Xtnferd
PURSE 6TOLEN
out
50 miles — A small craft advisory remains In effect.
U e n t l }. V w ln o
W llllt m S. Brown
Connie S. (sing.. 28. of 3202 Holiday Ave., near Wind north to northeast 15 to 20 knots today decreasing
Someone stole $26.50 In cash from the unattended
Edw in I M ogorto. D tlro y
J v liu t Ford
H titn Show. D tllono
puree of a Lake Mary High School student between 2:30 Apopka, was the victim.
to around 15 knots today then becoming easterly 10 to
i f m t t B M c C lu rt
E upon# F O ro o l. O t lt t n
PIKE CALLS
JoonnN Pnngle
and 4:30 p.m. Tuesday.
15 knots on Friday. Seas 5 to 8 feet with higher swells
MlchoU*
E
W
o
lktr.
O
k
N
tn
Don H. T u ck tr Sr.
The Sanford fire department responded to the today. Seas decreasing to 4 to 6 feel tonight. Few
Melissa Clark. 14. of 115 Tarrytown Trail. Longwood.
f t t v t r lr S W f h t
following calls:
showers or thunderstorms.
f
K o rl K . Nenrtll. D tllo no
BIRTHS

D ebate Up In Smoke

H a m ilto n S ite P la n N ix e d

...School Board

Pilots M a y Strike; 'Borm an Should Q u it'

Woman Tells Intruder In Bed: 'You Shouldn't Do That
Action Reports

WEATHER

S

HOSPITAL NOTES

fconcy L . Spray, D tllo no
ft e r lly n
P.
R o tch tr.

W ln ltr

A r lW and Jtttico L.
bofcy girl, Gtntva

ti

STOCKS

Sylvan Lake C e m e te ry C lean u p Saturday

E m i i n g H e r a ld
Thursday, September 29, 1983-Vol. 74, No. 35
&gt;«MlkJw4 Dolly and Swndoy. ticopt Saturday ky T M Saatard
Herald, lot.. M lN . Preock Art.,Seniori. Fla. JI77I.
Sound Clot l F t tie f t Paid at Soaltrd. Florida 1071
H om e D e liv e r y ] W eek. I t a « i M e a t* . H I S ; I M ootfct. SS4.M&lt;
’ V e e r , MS.ee. B y M a ll: Week S l. lS i M onth, t i . l l / « M e n ttu .
IM N i Y e a r. U 7.ee

Theee quolellonM provided by
member I ol I’ve Nelionel AttOCletlon
el Securlllee Deelert ere rrpre
eenlellvt inter deeier pnett et of
epprotlmeteiy noon lode, Inter
deeier mertete ihenge throughout
the do, Pricet do no' Include retell
mere up mere down
Atlantic Bank
Barnatt Bank
Flagkhlp Bank*

Florid * P o * tr
ft Light

MCA
M orrison's
N CR Corp ....

074 U 14*.
C M H 70H

0171k 11H

Sun B o n k s ...........
Souttttktt B«nk

PJIV'J 1IU
O il's lfSm
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041 44*4
CJ4'* 241*
0I7‘ « I7H
0177 I77W
071U«77k.
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077 77'*
074 74'k

A cleanup day Is scheduled for
Sylvan Lake Cem etery, Paola,
beginning at 9 a.m . Saturday.
Relatives of those buried there and
any other Interested volunteers arc
asked to romc and bring equipment
su ch us tru c k s, h oes, ra k e s,
mowers, and wheelbarrows to help

spruce up the old cemetery, located
on old W. State Road 46 near
Orange Avenue.
Volunteers are asked to bring a
picnic lunch. Folding chairs. Ice.
water and cold drinks are also
needed.
A group of (H'reons having rela­

tives burled In the privately-owned '
cemetery have organized a fund-'I
raising drive to establish a perma-'nent fund so that someone can be
hired to provide future care and '
they will not have to depend on1'
volunteer*. To date. 91.000 has
been collected.
rl

*

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Fatal Accident Nets
Crane O w n e r $1,280 Fine
TAMPA (UPI) — The cause of an Industrial
nccident In which four workmen were killed at
Tampa Stadium In March still Is under
Investigation, but the company operating the
crane that collapsed has been fined for Improp­
erly using the equipment.
Bill Dcmery, area director for the Occupational
Safely and Health Administration, said Current
Builders Inc. had been fined $1,280. But he said
the violations which drew the fines did not
cause the accident.
"The possible causes of the accident are still
being reviewed," Dcmery said. "We hope to
release those findings soon."

Pershings Perfect
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - The Army
launched five Pershing 1 missiles on test flights
Wednesday In an annual test of equipment and
military personnel, officials said.
An Army spokeswoman said all of the test
flights were successful.
The Pershing Is are to be replaced In West
Germany by the controversial Pershing 2
missiles later this year. The new missiles have a
1,000-mllc range, giving NATO forces the
capability of striking Inside the Soviet Union,
and are more powerful than the Pershing 1s.

G etting A Free Ride
MIAMI |UPI) — Commuters could get a free
ride on Dade County's $1 billion Metrorall moss
transit system If a federal grant comes through,
transportation officials said.
The county has asked for a S3.1 million grant
from the Urban Mass Transportation Ad­
ministration to pay "start-up costs" for the
trouble-ridden system that opens Dec. 18. If
approved, the grant would allow passengers to
ride free or at reduced fares uniII the system is
fully operational, said transportation chief
Warren Higgins.

E v n ln q Harold, Sanford, FI.

Murder
Stano Said He Stabbed Teen, Went Skating
TITUSVILLE (UPI) - A tape
re c o rd in g o f c o n fe ss e d m ass
murderer Gerald Stano telling police
Investigators he had an argument
with a hitchhiking Port Orange
teenager In 1973 and then "Just
went ahead and did away with her"
visibly stunned Jurors charged with
deciding Stano’s fate.
Stano. who has admitted to killing
more than three dozen women and
stands to become the most prolific
mass murderer In U.S. history. Is
accused of killing Cathy Schnrf. 17.
In December 1973.

"She started to get aggravated
toward m e." Stano said on the tape.
"I was a little Intoxicated at the

to a remote section of the Men lit
Island National Refuge where he
killed her.

'I got her in sort of an

"I got her In sort of an arm lock
and I told her this was the end of the
Hue." Stano said on the tape. "Then
I Just sort of went ahead and did
away wllh her" by stabbing her
repeatedly.

arm lock and I told her
this was the end of the
line. Then I just sort of
went ahead and did away

Despite giving a confession lo
Brevard County sheriffs deputies.
Stano has pleaded Innocent to
charges he killed Miss Scharf.
Prosecutors Wednesday played
the 10-mlnute recording — made In
August 1982 — despite defense
attempts to have the tape ruled as
prejudicial evidence.
On the recording, Stano said he
picked up the young woman as she
walked along a highway in Brevard
County and "a little discussion
started."

with her/
—mass murder suspect

Gerald Stano
time. She wouldn't shut up so I hit
her ... I believe I hit her right In (he
face ... wllh the back of my hand.
That shut her up for a little bit."
On the tape. Stano told sheriffs
Investigators he drove the teenager

The girl's skeletal remains were
found covered by palm fronds In
January 1974 In the Merritt Island
National Wildlife Refuge.
After killing the woman and
hiding her body, Stano said on the
tape he washed up at a nearby gas
station and went roller skating.
The nine-woman, three-man Jury
looked stunned and stared at the
tape recorder. Some occasionally
glanced at Stano. who turned away
from the Jury and recorder.
Assistant State Attorney Dean
Moxlcy said the confession had a big
impact on Jurors because Stano
"w asn’t relating fiction. He put you
right there In the car.”

Thursday, Sept, i f , I T t l- lA

Ex-Lake Helen C o p
Charged In Drug Raid
ORLANDO (UPI) — A fnrmrr l,ake Helen law
enforcement officer was among three people ar­
rested on dnig charges resulting from a four-month
undercover Investigation.
The three Dcland-area people were arrested al
their homes Wednesday and more than 2 pounds ol
cocaine — worth $100,000 In street value — was
, seized.
One of those arrested. Jam es Perry Davis, also has
been linked toamurdcr-for-hlre scheme.
Besides Davis. 28, authorities arrested hts wife.
Debra Lorraine Davis. 26. and Mark Cerasolt. fhc
Davises live In DeLeon Springs and Cerasolt resides
In DcLand.
Davis, a lifelong resident of the DcLand area,
served briefly as marshal of the police department In
Lake Helen, a small Volusia County town. In 1975.
He was fired after only six months for misuse of
department equipment.
He has worked In recent years ns an Investigator
for several local law firms.
A fourth person. Sandra English, was arrested at
Ccrasoll's residence but later released for lack of
evidence.
The trio was being held In the Orange County Jail.
U.S. Magistrate Donald Dietrich set bond at
$ 15,000 for Mrs. Davis and $25,000 for Cerasoli.
Heeding a request by federal prosecutors. Dietrich
set bond at $250,000 for Davis after an undercover
DEA agent testified Davis contracted him lo kill
another man.

Florida's W ine Industry R ea d y 'To Take O ff'
By United Press International
Florida is one of the nation's fastest
growing wlnc-drinklng states and It also
Is developing a modest reputation as a
wine making state.
Experts say Florida's wine Industry,
still In Its Infant stages, is taking Its first
wobbly steps In the right direction.
"It looks like It's going lo lake off,”
said University of Florida food science
professor Bob Bates, a wine authority.
The number of wineries in the state
has Jumped from one lo five In the past

two years and overall production capaci­
ty Is up to 200.000 gallons from 50.000
gallons Just a year ago.
There's more.
Grape plantings have doubled In the
past year and annual sales are up lo
$500,000.
That's Just a drop In the domestic wine
tub, which Is a $6.5 billion annual
market.

am ong the n a tio n 's largest wlnedrlnklng states behind California and
Texas.

But ihere’s no question a thirsty wine
market awaits right here in Florida.
Florida now ranks in third place

Growers have found ways to overcome
Florida's main problems In the harvest­
ing of grapes — a hot climate and a

"There Is a hell of a market for a
Florida wine." said Tony Plzzo. general
manager of Fruit Wines of Florida which
turns out a variety of sweet, citrus-based
vines and table wines. "We haven't even
scratched the surface."

vlne-rottlng disease transmitted by In­
sects.
Having found ways around those
problems. Florida's wine makers are able
to produce a quality wine In modest
quantity.
However, making money is another
matter.
Of the state's five wineries, only one —
Fruit Wines of Florida, a Tampa-based
operation that is the state's oldest and
largest winery — is turning a profit.
Other winery operators say it could be
several years before they break-even.

Tot's M e d ic a l B ills P ile U p A s H o s p ita ls B ic k e r
on member hospitals. Is out of money.
The Florida Patients Compensation Fund
agreed to pay Desiree and her family after the
court verdict In her favor last March, said
Desiree’s family attorney, T. Patrick Ford.
But the fund has not come across with the
cash because hospitals across the state have
started refusing lo pay "back assessments"
for cases that cleaned out the fund's coffers.
’.’It’s very frustrating." Ford said. "The
hospitals are playing technicalities with the
" court while Deal MantneX loses Valuable time?*
I’ve got a live 3-ycar-old client who Is in
The problem stems from a legal battle over
desperate need of medical care."
a state fund created to pay malpractice
Doctors who now care for Desiree arc
verdicts. The fund, supported by assessments
MIAMI (UPI) — A crippled three-year-old
who won a $3 million malpractice settlement
In March may be unable to get the medical
care she needs until the slate settles Its
malpractice Insurance battle, her attorney
says.
Desiree Martinez, who Is unable to walk on
her own because of a complication at birth,
has not seen any of the $3 million awarded
her six months ago. Her medical costs are

Ag Department May
Be To Blame For
EDB Contamination
TAMPA IUPIJ — The Environmental Protection
Agency Is Investigating allegations the Florida Depart­
ment oT Agriculture has been violating federal standards
on the use of the pesticide EDB for several years.
Roy Clark, an EPA regional ofTTclal, told T h e T a m p a
T rib u n e a report on the Investigation is expected within
a few months.
EPA researcher Stuart Cohen said he asked for the
Investigation after a pesticide manufacturer tipped him
Florida was not conforming to label directions and was
using far more EDB than permitted.
Cohen said the Information from the manufacturer
was confirmed by a state researcher' who Indicated
Florida was using 2Vi times the amount of EDB
permitted by federal regulations.
Federal and state officials have blamed the agriculture
department’s use of EDB for contaminating 107 water
wells throughout Florida.
Cohen said Florida Is the only slate currently under
Investigation for possible pesticide misuse.
Florida Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner, who
earlier this month suspended the use of EDB In the state
for GO days, said he doesn’t think the state has violated
federal regulations.
Department official Sal Alflert agreed and said the
state had following the guidelines of the U.S. Depart­
ment of Agriculture, which he said were ultimately
approved by the EPA.
" If they say we’re In violation, then the USDA is in
violation and that’s scary." Alflert said.

getting impatient for the $100,000 In out­
standing medical bills the family is unable to
pay. the child's parents say.
Desiree, who hobbles to therapy on braces
and crutches, was bom at Mount Sinai
Medical Center on Oct. 23. 1979. Her
umbilical cord was wrapped around her neck.
Ford charged In a lawsuit that hospital
personnel should have known there was a
problem.
The umbilical cord complication resulted In
brain damage, severely Impairing the child's
ability to walk. Ford said.
In March, a Jury awarded Desiree $3
million. Her parents were awarded 8400,000.

GiveYburseKA
Low Distance Break
TmsWfefclrefid!

SOLITAIRES
MEN S RINGS

EARRINGS
PENDANTS
IF YOU EVER DREAMED OF
OWNING DIAMONDS.. NOW IS
THE TIME TO BUY...OUR ENTIRE
INVENTORY OF DIAMONDS IS
REDUCED 25%t
tVEHY DIAMONO HAS A WRITTEN CERTIFICATE

Johnny A p p le seed No Rube
LEOMINSTER. Mass. IUPI) - Monday was the 209th
birthday of Johnny Appleseed — the man who earned
his enduring nickname passing out seeds for his favorite
fruit.
But in his home town of Leominster, historians say
John Chapman was not the rube wearing a tin pot on
his head as he was portrayed In a Walt Disney cartoon.
They say he was a nature lover and one of the country’s
first shrewd businessmen.
"Johnny wore a wide-brimmed hat, not a pot. on his
head." said Evelyn Hachey. chairman of Leominster's
Historical Commission. "He was a bit eccentric, walking
all over the Midwest barefoot, but he was also a practical
nurseryman who recognized homesteaders' need for
apples and set up a business to supply them."
Bom on September 28. 1774. Chapman went as a
young man to Join pioneers In the wilds of the Midwest.
There he Soon learned about the apple’s growing
Importance and why the government required all new
homesteaders to plant 50 apple trees during their first
year on the land.
"With apples, you could survive hard times In those
days.” said Mrs. Hachey. "Because they lasted for
months on end, apples were a key food and with the
poor transportation, if the well ran dry. you could
always drink cider.
"People also used apple vlnrgar for preserving food,
plus It was nice to have a little applesauce as a treat
around the house too.”
Using free seeds from local cider mills. Chapman
planted over 10.000 apple trees throughout the Midwest
which he either sold or gave to needy homesteaders.

SPECIA LS END TH IS W EEK EN D

14 KT. G O L D J E W E L R Y !
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Low weekend rates apply lo in-state and out-of-state cans dialed
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�E v e n in g H e r a ld
(U S P S « M » &gt;

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30W22-2811 or 8314993

#1 O l i A .

Thursday, September 29, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; .Monlh, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Black Miss
America Beautiful
Parents pass on to their children a bedrock
Am erican dream: Any boy can grow up to be
president of the United States. Any girl can grow
up to be Miss Am erica.
T h e d re a m e m b o d ie s A m e r ic a 's lo v e o f
egalitarianism , a firm belief that with dedication
and hard work, the sky Is the limit. Perhaps that Is
why these apple-pie m yths left blacks so dis­
illusioned.
Minority children had their dream s too. but the
reality was that only white m en and women ever
becam e Am erican presidents or Miss A m ericas.
Part of that barrier tumbled down when Vanessa
Williams becam e our first black Miss America.
V a n essa W illiam s, who sin g s like B a rb ra
S treisan d and already h as m astered several
m usical Instrum ents at the age of 20, Is highly
accom plished. In fact, sh e 's upset the media has
made such a fuss over her race.
S h e was not crowned only for her achievem ents,
th o u g h . S h e a lso .w o n for p e r s o n a lty and
appearance. And this was an Im portant sym bolic
victory against racial discrim ination, the kind of
skin-deep bigotry that singled out targets on the
basis of color and features.
True, the new Miss Am erica has light eyes. And
because of the way In which pageant officials tend
to homogenize the com petitors' appearance, she
did not look rem arkably different from the other
co n testan ts.
But the fact Is that as a black wom an, she would
have been barred from com peting during the first
three decades o f the 63-year*old beauty pageant.
During those early years, the only ch an ce the
Vanessa W illiam ses o f the world had o f getting
d o se to the fam ous runway was to play the role of
a slave to the white royalty.
With the changing tim es, black women were
allowed to com pete. But until this year, only two
ever got to the finals.
Fem inists, who already dism iss the pageant as a
degrading sexist ritual, may view W illiam s' win as
a token gesture.
After all. this y ear's runner-up Is black too. W hat
a coincidence.
And W illiam s apparently had no plans to
participate until pageant officials in New York saw
her perform and recruited h er.
Nevertheless. MuS^Amerlcaas V lntageA m erican .’
the beauty queen o f the heartland, the girl next
door. S h e is held up as an ideal.
Now that the Miss Am erica racial barrier is
broken, we hope it won’t be long until parents of
all races can tell their boys (and girls), “ You could
grow up to be president of the United S ta te s ."
And mean it.

Self-Inflicted Wound
Free traders, ourselves included, have opposed
on principle the United Auto W orkers’ plan to
legislate auto im ports out of existence. But we also
strongly suspected that the proposed legislation,
known a s the local con tent bill, would elim inate
more Am erican Jobs than It created. Accordingly,
we took more than passing note of a new econom ic
study that reached precisely that conclusion.
T h e s tu d y w a s c o n d u c te d by W h a r to n
Econom etric Forecasting A ssociates, one o f the
nation's most prestigious forecasting firm s. In the
interests of full disclosure, it should be noted that
the W harton study was com m issioned by J a p a ­
nese autom akers, a fact prom inently printed in the
report itself. But W harton's reasoning and data are
as sound as the firm 's reputation for careful
scholarship and Integrity.
W hat W harton found was th is: A m erican
consum ers and workers alike would be far bM t t t
o ff if th e local co n te n t m easu re, req u irin g
most-imported autos to contain a high percentage
o f Am erican-m ade parts. Is not enacted. For
starters, passage of the bill would cost the
Am erican consum er $ 1 8 billion per year In higher
new-car prices, an increase averaging a full 10
percent.
Putting such a blatantly protectionist law on the
books would trigger Inevitable retaliation abroad.
One consequence would be slower growth and
d im in ish ed A m erican e x p o rts. T h e W harton
econom ists estim ated that, while 5 8 .0 0 0 new Jobs
would be created in the dom estic auto industry by
1991. 4 2 3 .0 0 0 A m erican Jobs in other areas of the
econom y would be lost.

BERRYS WORLD

“ E x c u s e m e. b u t h a ve n t I se en y o u in a m a g a ­
z in e a d ? "

\

«i o c*

By Jan e Casselberry

Yqu can tell there's Fall in the air when:
— the temperatures drop from the
listless 90s to the more invigorating 80s
and 70s.
— raiders from a rival high school swoop
down on your campus with cans of paint to
vandalize the place.
— the armchair athletes come down with
football fever.
— the school PTAs arc having open
house and hoping to sign up members.
— organizations crank up for their plans
for annual events such as Fall for Art. 4-H
Week, the Farm Bureau barbecue and the
Golden Age Games.
— but one sure sign Is the klck-ofT for the
annual United Way or Seminole County
campaign.
There were a few new faces at the United
Way breakfast Tuesday at the Sanford
Civic Center, but most of the volunteer
workers were veterans of many a hardfought campaigns. It was like old home
week seeing each other again and there
were a lot of hugs and fond greetings as
they re-enlisted for yet another year.
How good it was to see Bill Glelow back
on her feet again Involved In community

service after recuperating from the severe
Injuries she suffered when she and her
husband Walter were struck by a car while
crossing the street at Daytona Beach
earlier this year. You Just can't keep a good
woman down.
Among the other familiar faces &lt;ycre
those of George Touhy. whose Involvement
with United Way drives here dates back to
year one: Sheila Brown, who has served on
every level from "house-to-house” to
president: Bob Daehn. a former campaign
chairman and past president: and the Rev.
Hezeklah Ross, a member of the board,
and Thelma Mike from the Good Samari­
tan Home.
Missing from the scene was Timothy
"Pappy" Wilson, president of Good Samar­
itan Home. Thelma said her father was
recuperating from eye surgery for cata­
racts.
A new United Ostomy Association
chapter Is being organized at 2 p.m. Oct.
16 at the chamber of commerce building at
Sanford Avenue and First Street In San­
ford. according to Laurie Smith, RN-ET.
All Seminole County residents who have
hod an ostomy, and members of their

families arc Invited to attend, she said.
There are 600 chapters In the United
States and the only one currently In the
Orlando area Is out of Winter Park
Memorial Hospital.
Basically the chapter will serve as a
community support group and to provide
professionals to speak at the monthly
meetings In order to assist the ostomates
with their care. There will also be a
business meeting.
Art enthusiasts and car buffs alike will
benefit from the day-long“Rally for the
Arts" starting at 12:30 p.m. from Mead
Gardens, Winter Park. Sponsored by Louis
Motor Cars, It will benefit the Council of
Arts &amp; Sciences for Central Florida out­
reach programs. It Is a fun mileage and
accuracy competition for veteran ralllers
as well as newcomers. After the Rally,
participants will meet at the Cheyenne
Saloon at Church Street Station for a
western barbecue and live entertainment.
There will also be awards for antique,
standard And exotic model cars and
costume Judging for participants at 1 p.m.
Dial THE—ARTS for brochures ^ p j t ’lnformation.

JEFFREY HART

ROBERT W A G M A N

Why Alan
Cranston
Must Worry
PORTLAND. Maine (NEA) - Alan
Cranston's campaign seems to be In
trouble — although no one in his camp
will admit It.
Some of the problems were apparent
as Cranston made the rounds of small
receptions and meetings, trying to woo
the support of Maine Democrats In their
straw-poll contest.
Cranston Is campaigning to become
the candidate of the liberal side of the
Democratic Party. As his advisors see It,
if they can capture the left from Gary
Hart, they can leave former Vice
President Walter Mondale and Ohio Sen.
John Glenn to fight It out for the center.
Cranston's advisers believe that Glenn
will knock Mondale out during the early
primaries and that the later primaries
will be Glcnn-Cranston contests. They
feel that at that point, a majority of the
party will swing their way, since Glenn
Is too conservative for most Democrats.
Cranston has been campaigning
almost exclusively on two Issues —
arms control and the nuclear freeze —
and has found a responsive audience
among many Democrats. Suddenly,
however, two events In quick succession
have threatened to undermine his
philosophical base.
"The first was the shooting down of the
Korean Airlines 747. The nation's mood
became much more hawkish almost
overnight, and many Democrats have
begun to question the position of arms
control at almost any price, which
Cranston represents.
Hard on the heels of the Soviet action
came the announcement that the old
liberal warhorse, George McGovern,
would again enter the fray.
In terms of concern, most of the
contenders' camps equated McGovern's
announcement with Harold Stassen'a
quadrennial statement of candidacy.
Publicly, the Cranston camp was un­
concerned — but privately, they have to
be worried: The Democrats who they
counted on for their Initial base of
support are exactly the ones who will be
most attracted to McGovern. In fact,
most of Cranston's team members can
trace their first political experience to
McGovern's 1972 campaign.
These problems were evident when
Cranston met with party regulars In
Maine. The Korean 747 occupied most
people s thoughts, and Cranston was
forced to Reid some very sharp ques­
tions.
Cranston praised President Reagan's
"sound handling" and "measured re­
sponse" to the downing of the 747, but
called for renewed emphasis on secur­
ing a new arms-control pact with the
Soviets. Cranston argued that as the
Soviets' behavior worsen", the need for
a treaty grows.

Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharop
was forced from office after a Lebanese
faction allied with the Israelis slaugh­
tered hundreds of Palestinian civilian))
in their Lebanese refugee camps. A
subsequent high-level Israeli investiga­
tion indicated that the Israeli military
had been lax In this matter, and Sharofi
resigned, though he retained cabinet
rank.

JACK ANDERSON

Pentagon's O verruns
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon has
blundered Into the computer age with
all the recklessness of the legendary
Light Brigade.
C om puter c o n tra c ts have been
bursting like shrapnel, scatterin g
dollars to the winds. The coat to the
taxpayers Is already measured In the
hundreds of millions of dollars. Here are
three outrageous examples of sky-high
overruns In Pentagon computer con­
tracts. all with the same supplier — the
Boeing Co.:
— In 1980. the Army signed a
contract with Boeing to streamline
recruiting programs. The Intlal cost was
supposed to be $8.5 million over a
five-year period. Three years later, the
cost estimate now stands at a whopping
$120 million, with no hard final figure
In sight. The Army expected to pay no
more than $ 10,000 a month for the
computer service; yet the first month's
bill from Boeing waa $1.3 million —
nearly a 13.000 percent overrun.
— During the same period, the Navy
awarded Boeing a contract for similar
services. The original cost estimate waa
$524,000 over a thrce-and-a-half year
period. The Navy now has revised that
estimate up to $13 million. The monthly
cost of the service was supposed to be
$ 12,000: the first month's bill was
$350,000.
— The Air Force gave Boeing a
five-year contract for teleprocessing
services, at a total estimated cost of
$426,000. The contract Is only about a
year old. so no exact figures on cost
overruns are available yet. But In a
letter to Rep. Ja ck Brooks. D-Tex.. the
General Accounting Office predicted:
"Th l3 contract could cost the govern­
m e n t fa r m o re th a n h a s b e e n
estimated."
Congressional Investigators told my
associates Indy Badhwar and Donald
Goldberg that the main reason for the

huge cost overruns Is quite simply bad
management — or none at all — by
Pentagon officials responsible for the
computer programs. They don't know
what they're doing or what the com­
puters should do.
An analysis prepared for the General
Services Administration explained why,
this problem m ay exist In U!F»fttteHlt
agencies: Program managers' tenure Is
often no more than 18 or 24 months, so
they’re looking for quick fixes Instead of
long-term results. Furthermore, their
backgrounds have not prepared them to
cope with high-technology problems —
and the computer field Is still so new It's
hard even to find outside consultants
who know what they're doing.
Meanwhile, the GAO has recom­
mended that all three services' con­
tracts with Boeing be terminated and
put out for competitive bids. The Army
and Navy have shown a willingness to
heed the GAO's suggestion. But the Air
Force "has remained firm In Its support
of the contract,” a GAO memo said,
adding: "We believe the Air Force is
wrong."
SOME JUNKYARD: President Reagan
campaigned on a promise to clean out
waste and fraud in government agencies
by appointing inspectors general who
were as mean as Junkyard dogs. A
principal target of Republican wrath
was the scandal-ridden General Services
Administration.
It now appears that the GSA's In­
spector general. Joseph A. Slckon. Is
more Intent on turning his Investigators
Into well-groomed poodles than Into
bare-fanged watchdogs.
He recently ordered 32 auditors and
office directors to attend a two-day
training course (at $309 a head) that
GSA insiders refer to as a "finishing
school for etiquette training."

But even before this scandal. Sharon'fe
grand design for Lebanon had bee(i
frustrated, even as the Israeli military
advance ground to a halt before takln
Beirut. Israel had come under Inten
International pressure, in pari becau
of highly exaggeried reports of Leban
civilian casualties. And Washington wa;
pari of the pressure.
For that, we are now paying a hlgi
price, and the president's options arf
severely limited.
Sharon had In mind a grand design
for Lebanon which, had It been pressed
to Us conclusion, would have spared us
the present agony. He set out to smash
the Palestine Liberation lighters In
Lebanon, and succeeded admirably. He
humiliated the Syrians. ;f&gt;y destroying
their »alr force-, and , he..terrified.,the.
Soviets by showing that their missiles
could be destroyed on the ground.
Sharon's goal was to get the Syrians
and the Palestinians out of Lebanon,
and install a government In Beirut that
would be neutral In the Arab-Israell
conflict.
But Sharon fell far short of these
goals, and the PLO. the Syrians and
their Soviet backers are very much back
In the Lebanon picture. The Israelis
have withdrawn southward, effectively
partitioning the country, and Reagan Is
left with the mess.
From a long-range point of view, one
must conclude that the Israelis have
now lost their first war, and that the
skies in the Middle East are rapidly
darkening. The stage Is set for an
Israel-Syrla war, with the superpowers
close at hand.
President Assad of Syria Is achieving a
strategic victory despite his military
defeat, and he is achieving It by his
skillful manipulation of Lebanese re­
ligious and political factions. There are
at least seven private factional armies
fighting in Lebanon, plus the regular
Lebanese army, plus the International
Peacekeeping Force. At times, people on
the scene are uncertain about who Is
Bhoottng at whom, The Syrian goal Is to
topple the rickety governm ent of
Lebanese President Gemayel and turn
Lebanon into a Syrian protectorate.
The Israelis will never tolerate a
Lebanon allied with Syria.

SCIENCE WORLD

Centers Act Against Research Fraud
By Glso Del Gncrclo
UPI Science W riter
BOSTON (UPI) - In New York, a
doctor used a felt-tip pen to paint black
spots on mice to falsify transplant
research. A Philadelphia physician pla­
giarized works of his colleagues. At
Harvard, a young researcher's doctored
data forced a prestigious medical
Journal to issue two retractlohs.
Altogether, at least a dozen cases of
research fraud have hit the headlines In
the last 10 years — more, it is believed,
than ever before.
Instead of allowing increased public
scrutiny, however, many universities
and science centers are closing their
doors to keep any incidents of fraud
strictly under their control.
"M ost acad em ician s in m edical
schools are now more secretive than the
military was with My Lai." said Robert
H. Glew. a tenured professor at the
University of Pittsburg School of Medi­
cine.
"Their first reaction Is to protect and
guard very carefully any information
that might appear negative or critical of
the medical school, health center or
physician."

Private universities have the right to
protect their reputations, but they are
also the users of enormous amounts of
taxpayer-funded scientific grants. Tax-dollar contributions to U.S. research
totaled $37.7 billion this year.
Generally, the users of public funds
are held accountable for how they spend
them. But by Instituting policies that
keep Incidents of fraud secret, un­
iversities are able to protect scientists.
"It's a double standard," said Eric G.
Stover, a staff member of the American
Association for the Advancement of
Science. "We maintain that scientists
shouldn't have any special rights.”
Some people also argue that keeping
scientific fraud secret encourages scien­
tists to cheat. Also, when public dis­
closure of fraud is not made, a scientist
caught cheating can often skip to
another university.
"The first reaction of the institution
when confronted with fraud or some
other deviant behavior Is to make sure
they get the problem out and it lands
som ew here e lse ,'* said Ju d ith P.
Swazey, a medical ethics scholar and
president of College of the Atlantic, Bar
Harbor. Maine.
"In this way many physicians go

bouncing from institution to institu­
tion," she said.
Universities, however, feel Justified in
setting strict protocols. One spokesman
said a d m in istra to rs fear ad verse
publicity can hit an Institution In Its
pocketbook. resulting In less chance of
getting approval for grants.
Even though the controversy seems to
have boiled up overnight, fraud Is
nothing new. it has been practiced
throughout history by some of the
world's greatest scientists.
The first modern physicist, Isaac
Newton. Is said to have manipulated
data to support his theory of gravitation.
The published results of experiments
conducted by the father of genetics.
Gregor Mendel, are generally believed to
have been too good to be tme.
Even Galileo, founder of the scientific
method. 1s said to have exaggerated the
outcome qf experiments.
Until recently, however, the problem
was viewed as Inconsequential because
there were so few reports of fraud. But
over the past few years, many of the
nation's top universities and research
centers have been embarrassed by
public disclosure of trickery In »hc
laboratory.

Yale University, Massachusetts Gen­
eral Hospital. Cornell University, Emory
University, Harvard Medical School and
the National Institutes of Health have
been affected by researchers in recent
years who passed off plagiarized results,
concocted fake data or otherw ise
doctored their experiment results.
Why there seem to be so many recent
cases remains the subject of great
speculation.
Some people believe the Increase Is
due to a doubling of the number of
scientists every decade since World Wqr
II. Another theory points the finger at
post-Watergate Journalists seeking fo
find a scandal wherever they look. Still
another theory rapidly gaining accep­
tance suggests the self-policing mecha­
nisms once thought to have existed In
science have broken down under evefIncreasing pressures.
And some, like Dr. Francis Moor*,
former dean of Harvard University
Medical School, believe reports of fraud
are more frequent because the issue b
Simply getting more publicity.
"I don't think fraud is any mohe
frequent today than In the past. The
press Just makes a bigger case out of It."

�W O RLD
INBRIEF

Rebel Threat Delays
Reopening O f A irpo rt
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UP!) — The Lebanese
government canceled plans to reopen Beirut
airport today after Druze Moslem rebels threat*
ened to break a Irucc and shell the airstrip.
Their threat Wednesday coincided with Druze
artillery shelling and Syrian machine-gun fire
that violated Lebanon's cease-fire In effect since
Monday. A hand grenade also wounded two
French soldiers In the multinational peace­
keeping force.
Druze militiamen claimed opening the airport
would violate the cease-fire accord because the
Chrlstlan-lcd government has put the facility to
military use.
The airport, closed during the latest round of
sectarian strife, also serves as the base for 1.200
U.S. Marines In the peace-keeping force.

Protest W ill G re e t Reagan
MANILA, Philippines (UPl) — President
Reagan will be met by "a million" protesters
and mass sit-down demonstrations In the streets
If he visits Manila In November as planned, a
leader of the political opposition warned today.
Former Sen. Salvador Laurel, president of the
UNIDO opposition coalition, said the protests
would be aimed at preventing Reagan from
traveling through the capital's streets.
Reagan is scheduled for a Nov. 5-6 visit to the
Philippines, a chief U.S. ally In Southeast Asia
und home to two major American military
bases. White House officials have considered
scrapping the Manila stop. However, American
officials both In Washington and at the U.S.
Embassy today maintained there has been no
change as yet In the planned trip, which critics
assert would be an endorsement of Marcos's
troubled regime.

Burford Defends Handling
Of EPA Superfund Cleanups
WASHINGTON (UPl) - Former
Environmental Protection Agency
chief Anne Burford Is brushing off
as a "flip remark" her reference to
former California Gov. Edmund
Brown at a 1982 Republican lun­
cheon und swears she did not delay
a toxic waste cleanup to hurt his
Democratic Senate campaign.
Her voice sometimes rising, some­
times wavering in her first sworn
testimony since she resigned March
9. Mrs. Burford Wednesday rejected
charges she played politics with
to x ic w a s te c le a n u p s w h ile
Environmental Protection Agency
chief.
"I know this allegation Is com­
pletely untrue," she told a House
Energy and Commerce subcom­
mittee of evidence she held up a
cleanup of the Strlngfcllow Acid Pits
near Riverside, Calif., among the
nation's worst toxic waste dumps.
"The Department of Justice re­
cently came to the same con­
clusion." she said.
The Justice Department found
Insufficient evidence to prosecute
Mrs. Burford on charges she manip­
ulated federal Superfund money for
the site for political reasons.
Mrs. Burford said she could not
recall — but did not deny —
commenting at a Republican lun­
cheon on Aug. 4. 1962. that she
planned to freeze the Strlngfcllow
cleanup funds until after the elec­
tion to damage Brown's chances.
A participant at the luncheon

"I may well have made a flip
remark about Gov. Brown," Mrs.
Burford testified. "But that had
absolutely nothing to do with my
d e c i s i o n n o t to m a k e t h e
Stringfellow grant In July of last
yeai."
Skeptical House Democrats filled
the record Wednesday with evi­
dence that the EPA staff had
approved $6.1 million for cleanup of
the site, only to sec action stalled for
months when Mrs. Burford ordered
a study on whether the state should
pay 10 percent or 50 percent of the
cost.
Rep. Jim Slattery. D-Kan., told
Mrs. Burford that agency lawyers
testified In closed session to the
panel that they had concluded the
Strlngfcllow site qualified for 90
percent federal funding long before
she ordered the study.
Mrs. Burford suggested allega­
tions of political influence referred
from the White House to the Justice
Department live days before her
resignation may have been a setup
to oust her and quiet the EPA
controversy that forced 20 other
executives to leave their jobs.
Mrs. Burford said she was en
route to California to announce the
grant In late July, 1982. when she
found that briefing materials re­
garding the site "were severely
Inadequate." Mrs. Burford said she
then canceled a news conference
and ordered a study of all such sites.

Anne Burford
...'this allegation Is completely
untrue'
aboard the yacht Sequoia reportedly
told the FBI Mrs. Burford remarked,
with reference to the Strlngfcllow
cleanup. " I ’ll be damned If I am
going to let Brown take credit for
that."

Thursday, Sspt, n , I W —SA

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H e a r in g S e t O n U t ilit y R a te H ik e
The state Public Service
Commission will hold a
public hearing Oct. 24 at
the Lake Monroe Holiday
Inn on a proposed water
and sewer rate Increase by
Lake Monroe Utilities.
PSC staff helped LMU
officials prepare the new
rates which would hike
the bills of the firm’s 34
customers, most of which
arc at the port.- by about
3 0 0 p e rc e n t. M onthly
water bills for average

customers would go to
8 1 7 3 .9 6 . up from the
current 846.31. Average
monthly sewer bills would
go to 892.96. up from the
current S22.50 monthly.
The new rales went Into
effect W ednesday but
could be amended follow­
ing the hearing.
In a related m atter.
Dolgncr also received a
copy of an order from the
PSC to LMU, instructing
the utility to provide the

authority by Oct. 3 with a
letter on whether or not
water and sewer service
are available for a new
building under construc­
United Press International
tional the port.
Rebels claimed they killed 19 Sandlntstn
The port and LMU have
soldiers and wounded 25 more In a fierce battle
been at loggerheads over
at a Nicaraguan border crossing to Costa Rica,
the new building. LMU
destroying the station and virtually Dealing the
owner. Dr. J.W . Hickman,
country’s borders In the second such attack in
wants water meters at the
two days.
port placed alongside the
Rebels announced earlier In the week a new
road outside the complex
offensive called "Marathon” intended to create a
and has refused lo give the
liberated zone.
authority the letter unless
authority members agree
to his plan.
The authority has ref­
used to go along, cltlrtg
costs for moving meters
and laying new lines.
ROBERT M . BABBITT
Funeral Home. Orlando, is Edward ElllsGotns Jr .
Funeral
■■uncral scrv
services and
The letter stipulated
’ m S R .;'1In charge of arrangements,, , w tlso it-jB tc h le b e rd e r but
the utility can
:,,‘JMfc’ ‘MJWrtaV
Bkbtflft0' ll»«A R * D. TTMTIUElr «•
Home'lfc WcMVge “MalW
'^service to the
M r. M ark D o u g la s of arrangements.
Sr-.-ifee. or 169 W. Bay
Funeral Home is In charge inulldlng or a well and
Avc.. Longw ood, died T h c l le r , 2 8 . o f 2 5 8 0
septic tank are necessary.
oflocal arrangements.
-Tuesday at Winter Park Ridgewood Ave.. Sanford,
AGNE8 M. PITTS
Memorial Hospital. Bom died Monday at Orlando
Mrs. Agnes M. Pitts, 76.
J u n e 2 9 . 1 9 1 7 , i n Regional Medical Center. of 1306 C lassic Drive,
&lt;WellsvDie. N.Y, he moved Bom Dec. 15. 1954. in Longwood. died Wednes­
to Longwood from there In Miami, he moved to San­ day morning at Orlando
1 9 1 8 . He w a s s e l f - ford from there In 1960. Regional Medical Center.
employed In the salvage He was an electrician and Holiday Division. Born
'business and was a Pro- a Baptist.
Ju ly 13. 1907. In Quincy.
Survivors Include h's Mass., she had lived In
'testont.
Survivors Include his wife. Victoria; parents. Longwood since January.
wife, Gloria A.; son, Robert Doug and Barbara. Alta­ She was a homemaker and
M. Jr .. Columbia. S.C.: five monte Springs; brothers. a member of St. Augustine
daughters. Mrs. Marlon Bruce William. Orlando. C a t h o l i c C h u r c h .
Vargo, Longwood. Mrs. Gregory. Winston-Salem. Casselberry, and was In­
Gloria Yamcll, Wiley. Ga.. N.C.: four sisters. Virginia volved with Hospice of
M rs. J e r l C l p r l a n o . Schllck. Lakewood. Ohio. Central Florida. Survivors
H o p k in s . S . C . , M rs. Deborah Ann Kandclec Include three daughters,
. V i r g i n i a T r o x e l l , and Cindy Lou Hall, both Mary Dcgan. Brockton.
Casselberry. Mrs. Alice of Sanford. Linda Lee. Mass.. Annette Roberts,
C a r v e r . L a k e M a ry : Altamonte Springs.
East Bridgewater, Mass.,
B a 1d w l n •F a I r c h 11 d Dorothy Morrell. North
mother. Cassle. Orlando:
brothers. Howard, Mars Funeral Home, Altamonte Wymoulh, Mass.: a son.
.HU). N .C .. C la r e n c e . Springs. Is In charge ol R i c h a r d J . P i t t s ,
^ O v i e d o . E l w y n . arrangements.
Longw ood: 12 g ra n d ­
•C asselberry: 17 grand­
ERMA COOPER
children; and 7 great­
c h i l d r e n : 11 g r e a t Mrs. Erma Cooper. 67. of grandchildren.
-grandchildren.
600 S. Beach St., Daytona
: B a l d w l n - F a l r c h l l d Beach, died Tuesday at
Funeral Notice
t Funeral Home, Altamonte F l o r i d a H o s p i t a l 'Springs. Is In charge of Altamonte. She was bom M R S. E R M A C O O P E R
^arrangements.
Oct. 13, 1915, In Pelham. — Funeral m t v Ic m tor M r» E rm a
G a . . u n d m o v e d to Coopor, 42, «l MO S_ B tocti St..
LcROTR. STOVER
D tytona Booth, w ill b o o l 2:10p.m.
• Mr. LcRoy R. Stover, 87, Daytona more than 40 Soturdoy o l W ot! Sonford Froowll!
'o f 2066 Penguin Court. years ago. She was a Hoi Ir&gt;o&gt;i Ch urch, 114 M u lb o rry
. with oldort Horokloh R o n .
Oviedo, died Monday at h o m ( m a k e r a n d a Avo
p otior, ond Lorm o B. Whlto ol
'Florida Hospital, Orlando. member of AOH Church of llo lolln g . B u rlo l In R otllo w n Como
tory, Sonlord. Colling hour* noon to
Born April 22. 1890. In God. Daytona Beach.
Survivors Include a sis­ O p m . F r idoy ot chopol ond IB o.m.
Reading, Pa., he moved to
to funorol tlm o on Soturdoy ot Iho
Oviedo from California In ter. Mrs. Jewell Jackson. church. W ilton Elcholborgor It In
1953. He was a retired S a n f o r d ; a g o d c h ild , chorgo o l orrongom onti
insurance office manager
und was a member of St.
k,uke‘s Lutheran Church,
vie was a past president of
Altamonte Springs Garden
Club, past commander of
w orld War I V eterans
,'Barracks 2898 and past
‘‘t r e a s u r e r o f S o u t h
,'pemlnolc Library.
He is survived by his
,'wlfe. Florentine.
J B a ld w l n - F a l r c h l l d
Funeral Home. Goldenrod,
i Is In charge of arrangeiments.
JOELFLATOW
Mr. Joel Flatow, 47. of
*'1034 Douglas Road. Alla'in o n t e S p r in g s , d ied
‘ Wednesday at Winter Park
‘Memorial Hospital. Born
' .July 17. 1936, In New
A'ork City, he moved to
’Altamonte Springs from
•there in 1962. He was n
leal estate broker and a
member of the Lake Mary
High School band boost­
ers. He was Jewish.
b Survivors Include his
,- d a u g h t e r . S a n d r a ,
Longwood: son, Michael,
Longwood: mother. Rose,
^icw York City.
Call your Ttiw l Agont or Amtrsk ol SOO-3 4 2 -2 8 2 0 .
B a I d w I n * F u I r c h 11d

Rebels A ttack Border Post

Evtnlng Herald. Sanford, FI.

AREA DEATHS

7 finally

* * * * *
Miciowave Oven etc

i

found a car
roomy enough
to take my
fam ily o f sever
on vacation ”

WE HAVE
MOVED

KARAS

■■XH H H SBH BK R m B

�«A —

Evening H trzld, Sanford. FI.

Thursday, Sept. It, IfU

Traffic Deaths Down 11%

Pollution Slowly Killing Chesapeake Bay
WASHINGTON (UPI) -- A comprehensive
study says the Chesapeake Ray Is slowly
being poisoned by a flood of pollutants and
only a conrertcd effort by three slates and the
federal government can save Its valuable
fishing waters.
A seven-year federal study labeled the bay.
the nnlion's largest estuary, "an ccoystcm In
decline" because of massive infusions over
the years of toxic chemical wastes, fertilizer
runoff from farms and sewage plant dis­
charges.
Those pollutants, the report said, have nit
Into catches of fresh-water spawning fish
such as shad and striped bass, decreased
oyster and clam populations and reduced
submerged aquatic vegetation — grasses that
serve as a "womb" for crabs and other
species.

The massive study also outlined a program
for Maryland. Virginia. Pennsylvania and the
federal government lo reduce pollutants
(lowing Into the bay from feeder rivers such
as (he Susquehanna. Jam es and Potomac.
The report said one ol the biggest problems
Is agricultural fertilizer. Il urged slate officials
to teach farmers how lo reduce fertilizer
runoff from their lands and give them
Incentives for doing so.
Scientists believe phosphorus, nitrogen and
other nutrients from fertilizers are snurrlng
growth ol microscopic plan! and animal life In
the water. That. In turn, has clouded Ihc
water and cut sunlight lo the crucial
underwater grasses that support bay life.

—A nalyze all m ajo r In d u stria l nnd
municipal discharges for toxic chemicals and
toughen water quality standards where
needed.
—Institute chlorine eontrol programs.
—Toughen enforcement ol programs con­
trolling runoff of alormwnler from city si reels.
—Strengthen wetlands protection laws.
—C on sid er lim itin g th e am ou n t of
phosphates In dclcrgents.
The study urges Maryland. Virginia and
Pennsylvania to formulate a comprehensive
bnstn-wldc cleanup plan by Ju ly 1984.
Officials estimated the cost of a bay cleanup
program at more than $1 billion, but said It
was loo early to say who would shoulder the
costs.

Other recommendations were that govern­
ments Involved:

TUESDAY, OCT. 4
Optimist Club of Sanford. 11:45 a.m., Western Slzzlln
Steak. Highway 17-92.
Sanford Lions Club. noon. Holiday Inn on lakefront.
Historic Longwood Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m.. Longwood
Hotel. County Road 426.
Winter Springs Sertoma. 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress.
Sanford Toastmaster. 7:15 a.m., Sanford Airport
Restaurant.
Rotary Club of Longwood. 7:30 a.m.. Cassidy's
Restaurant, SR 434.
Longwood Woman's Club, I p.m., 150 W. Warren
Avc.. Longwood. Speaker Michael Imbrononc on home
computers.
Lake Monroe Amateur Radio Society. 7:30 p.in..
Eastmontc Civic Center. Altamonte Springs.

The decline In traffic deaths was all
the more sta rtlin g becau se the
number of drivers and Ihc numlicr of
miles driven have shot up more than
20 percent since 1974.
Traffic fatalities have generally
climbed slowly since 1974 along with
the number of drivers nnd number of
miles driven.

s65 off

Men’s Suits

Polyester Wool Blends
Assorted Solids
And Patterns
Orig. *155

Men’s Dress
Shirts
Short Or Long Sleeve
Button Down Collars
A ssorted Solids
And Stripes.
O rig. To *24

SATURDAY, OCT. I
Sanford AA. open discussion. 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St,
Sanford Women's AA, 2 p.m.. closed, 1201 W. First
St.
IDEA ART III outdoor art show, begins at 10 a.m..
Crealde Arts. Inc.. 600 St. Andrews Blvd.. next to Alomn
Center. Winter Park. Coffeehouse. 9 p.m.
Lake Mary High School Booster Club Monte Carlo
Night. 7-11:30 p.m.. Easlmontc Civic Center. Altamonte
Springs. Open to public 19 and older.
Goldcnrod Crafl Fair and Flea Market Bazaar.
Goldenrod Civic Center. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.. one block
south of Aloma Avenue on Palmetto Avenue.

MONDAY. OCT. 3
Sanford Rotary Club, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Free dating service for mature adults. 1 p.m., Deltona
Public Library. 1691 Providence Boulevard. Deltona.
Overcaters Anonymous. 10 a.m., Deltona Public
Library.
Alanon Step and Study. 8 p.m.. Senior Citizen Center,
N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Fellowship AA Group. 8 p.m., closed. Senior Citizens
Center. N. Triplet Drive. Casselberry.

"We've had a couple of grassroots
movements preaching driving safely,
said AI Lauersdorf. NSC administrator
of highway safely. " It's hard lo
measure Ihclr efferl on driving.

Sale Starts Friday, Sept. 30. Doors Open 9 A.M.

FRIDAY. SEPT. 3 0
Norman De Verc Howard Chapter United Daughters of
the Confederacy. 2:30 p.m.. at home of Mrs. Harold
Jones. 630 Red Sail Lane. Altamonte Springs. Program
by Mrs. Jones on Gen. B.T. Beauregard.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls. 7 a.m., Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanlord Airport.
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m., Messiah Lutheran Church,
Highway 17-92. south of Dog Track Road, Casselberry.
Wcklva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m., Wcklva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. at Wcklva Springs Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian Church.
SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time and place.
Tanglcwood AA. 8 pan.. St. Richard’s Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon, same lime and
place.
Sanford AA. Step. 8 p.m.. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Closed.

SUNDAY, OCT. 2
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m., open discussion. Florida
Power &amp; Light building. N. Myrtle Avenue.
Seminole AA. halfway house on Highway 17-92 oil
Lake Minnie Road, Sanford. 5 p.m.
Narcotics Anonymous. 7 p.m.. 1201 W. First St..
Sanlord.

attributable lo the 55 mph law. We vc
been rucking our brains lo find out
what caused ihc major drop Ibis year,

12 H ourSale

Calendar
THURSDAY, SEPT. 2 9
Overeaters Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m. Community
United Methodist Church. Highway 17*92, Casselberry.
Sanford Ala non. 8 p.m.. The Crossroads. Lake Minnie
ltoad off Highway 17-92. Sanford.
Oviedo AA. 8 p.m.. closed. First United Methodist
Church. Oviedo.

CHICAGO (UPI) - Despite an In­
crease In traffic. Americans In 1982
recorded the biggest dro^ In auto
fatalities since the 55 mph speed Until
became Inw. the National Safely
Counrll said.
About 46.000 people died In motor
vehicle accidents in 1982. according
to the council. The tolals are down 1 1
percent from 1981.
Much of ihc decline Is attributed to
a 17 percent drop In deaths uniong
middle-age drivers (45 to 64 years
old), usually a statistically stable
group.
"In 1974 we recorded a 17 percent
drop tn overall traffic deaths." said
Alan Hoskins, munager of the NSC
statistics department. "But that was
1

Sale

89"

Sale

Large A sso rtm en ts
O f Silk Ties
O rig. To 13.50

099
Save

Save Up To 45%
Men’s Slacks
Sale

|
1

4

"

Save Up To 50%
Men’s Casual Shirts
• Knit Pullovers
; • Button Front
O rig. To *18

Sale 8 "
Save Over 30%
Men's Button Down Long Sleeve
Oxford, Solid Or Stripe
_ .
Orig. M6

Plain Pocket Jeans
For Men

%

Men’s Novel ty T-Shirts

A ssorted Loop or B elted S tyles
Large S electio n O f Colors
0 r i9 T ° ' 29

£i o

ja q q

Sale 108S

B lack Bart, O ne Eyed Jack,
B aham a M am a.
Short Sleeve
O rig •a Sale 3
Long Sleeve
O rig. •14 Sale 6

W estern S tyling, Trim Fit
D enim Extra
"

R e 9 ' *15

^

Sale Ends

bdlG

Sat., Oct. 1st

"

J J Q Q
T T *7 w
1 *

-

Pony®
Save Up To 35%

Save Up to 40%
Family Warm Up Suits
Draw String Pants, Zip Front Tops
M e n ’s O r W o m e n ’s
O rig. 2 1 .9 9 Sale 1
Y outh
.
O rig. 21.99 Sale

For M en, W o m en , Boys
• All Leather Low C ut
• N ylon W ith Suede Trim
Orig. To 29.99
«f 0 9 9

Women’s Velcro Tennis

Norelco® Coffeemaker

4a9
13"

Shoes
Orig. 12.99

C o in £ 9
bale
D

Sale

9

1

10 Cup Orig.
Sale
•5 Mlg. Rebate

34.99
23.99
5.00

Sale

18.99

Save Over 30%

Save Over 70%

Save Over 60%

M e n 's A ll L e a t h e r D r e s s S h o e s

B o y s ’ T e n n is S h o e s
HI Or Lo.
Orig. To $23
Sizes 3 To 6

T a b le C lo t h s
Lace Or Woven
Assorted Sizes
Orig. To *27

Slip-On O r O xford
Q Q 9 9
o rig . '6 0
Sale 0 5 7

Wrangler® Fashion Jeans
Slim O r Reg.
Size *8 To *16

Special

.f

099i

1

0

e

.

!

bale

C hildren's Sizes
To 90 Lbs.

Sale

99

4
1

•

Brazilian Leathers
Leather Look Urethane
Great Selection

Sale
“

Alt Quantities
Are Limited
&gt; tM ) J C P*&lt;v*r C o f^ * r , me

Standard Orig. $15
Queen
Orig. $18
King
Orig. $21
**2 Mfg. Rebato

Sale 9.49 -Final 7.49
Sale 10.99 ‘ Final 8.99
Sale 12.49 -Final 10.49

Dressy And Casual Shoes
•

0 9

q q

50% O ff

•

MM*

a

0 . U ^
b 3 ie W

50% Off Quallofil Pillows

Life Vests

Sporty Joggers
For The Entire Family
Men’s, Women’s, Children’s

O

1

sale”!

2

7

"

"

JCFtenney
Sanford Plaza

j

Open
Sunday 12 To 6
Mon. thru Sat.
9:30 to 9 P.M.

�Evinlng H «nld, Sanford, FI.

d e s ig n a tio n L e tte r P re p a r e d ?

KKK O w e d H er
$115,000, But She
Dies A P auper

Reagan Says Watt Controversy Is Over
By Helen Thomaa
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President
R eagan. hoping to put an end to
•speculation that Jnm cs Watt may have
jto resign, says he considers the flap over
•his Interior secretary’s remarks settled,
j So. apparently, does Watt, whose
•wisecrack that members of his coal
{leasing advisory commission Include a
{black, a woman, "two Jew s and a
Jcrlpplc" set off a clamor on Capitol Hill
:fui Ids icslgnaliuu.
{ The White House "wanted to end all
[this speculation." a presidential aide
{explained
J The Washington Post reported today
{that Watt prepared a letter of resignation

last Saturday but decided not to submit
It after becoming convinced neither the
president nor the White House stall
would press him to quit.
Watt had no Immediate comment
about the report. A W hite House
spokesm an said he did not know
whether Watt had prepared a resignation
letter or not.
Watt, the most controversial member
of the Reagan Cabinet, has ridden out
similar storms in the past and has
nlways emerged with the president’s
backing.
It appeared for a time that Reagan
might be giving his fellow Westerner a
wider berth since the latest gaffe. In an

Interview published Tuesday. Reagan
said of W att’s possible resignation,
"Well. I think that Is a decision that he.
himself, would have to make."
Hut the president Wednesday stepped
back Into the controversy firmly behind
Watt and passed the word to his aides to
do the same.
"President Reagan considers the mat­
ter closed and all his aides do too."
deputy press secretary Larry Spcakcs
said. "The matter Is behind us."
Spcakcs said Reagan Is not going to
ask for a resignation and Watt Is "not
going to submit It."
Top Senate Republicans also signaled

they thought Watt would survive the
furor caused by his remark. But Senate
Democrats endorsed a resolution calling
for him to leave and a similar measure
was Introduced in the House.

CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. (UPIJ - Katherine
Johnson never collected $115,000 awarded her In
an unprecedented civil rights suit against the Ku
Klux Klan. She died a pauper and her family burled
her in an all-black cemetery overgrown with weeds.
Mrs. Johnson. 51, and four other black women
were shot by three Ku Klux Klansmrn three years
ago as they stood on a street comer.
Friends at her funeral Wednesday said the frail
woman lived In a small, shabby dwelling and gave
up hope of ever collecting the money awarded her
19 months ago.
"She only said that she hoped God would let her
live long enough to see the day that everybody Is
treated equally," said Opal Jackson. 49. who also
was wounded by the shotgun blasts.
The five women were awarded a total of $535,000
In the February 1982 lawsuit touted as the first ever
filed based on the Ku Klux Klan Acts of the
Reconstruction era.
Civil rights leaders hailed the Judgment as a
victory against "Klansmcn and terrorists every­
where." But the Klansmcn disappeared without
paying a penny and their faction — the Justice
Knights or the Ku Klux Klan — disbanded.
Mrs. Johnson had been hospitalized In de­
teriorating health for several weeks before her death
seven days ago. Civil rights leaders raised $500 for
the funeral. Otherwise, they said she would have
been burled as a pauper In a pine box at the
Hamilton County Penal Farm.
“That would have been so terrible. A pauper’s
funeral Is cold and cruel." said the Rev. M.T.
Billingsley, pastor of the Baptist church that Mrs.
Johnson’s family attends.
About 25 friends and family members gathered at
a simple graveslte In the Ill-kept Highland Cemetery,
reserved for blacks since segregation days. Another
Woman shot by the Klansmcn. Fannie Crumscy.i
lifted a pink carnation from the casket and shook
her head.
"I feel very sad today," said Mrs. Crumscy, 62.
"Sh e was a dear friend. I will never forget this until
those Klansmen are punished for their misdeeds."
The NAACP has hired private detectives to search
for the Klansmen — Bill Church. Marshall Thrash
and Lany Payne.
The women filed the civil rights suit after an
all-white Jury Judged Church and Payne Innocent of
attempted first-degree murder charges In Ju ly 1880.
Thrash was given a light sentence on a reduced
charge.
The verdict triggered three straight nights of riots
In which eight Chattanooga policemen were
wounded and scores of blacks were arrested for
throwing firebombs In housing projects.

Rep. Newt Gingrich. R-Ga.. Joined the
ranks of politicians demanding Watt's
dismissal, calling a news conference
today to release a letter urging Reagan to
fire the Cabinet official.
Sen. Charles Percy. R-III., Chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
said Watt "has an obligation to at least
put a letter of resignation on the
president's desk ... and let the president
decide."

1 2 1H O il ir Salle

Sale Starts Friday, Sept.;30. Doors Open 9 A.M.

50%

Save Over

0

40%

Famous Name
Blouses.

M is s e s A ll C o t t o n
C o r d u r o y B la z e r

Soft and Silky
Choose Short or Long
Sleeve In Assorted
Solids For Juniors
Orig. *30

Orig. *45

Sale

24"
5 0 % O ff B e d s p re a d s
Morning Glory Flower Design
Twin
orig. m o
Sale 19"
Full
Orig. *50
Sal6 24?.9
Queen
ong. *60
Sale 29"
King
orig. *70
Sale 34"

Save o\rer 60%

30% Off

Junior Stripe&lt;i
Trousers.
■o . ii&amp;IVI

Misses Blouses
Notation®

40% To 50% O ff Sheets

Save Up To 30% 60% Off

2 Styles
Orig. To *32

Morning Glory Floral Design
Standard Case
« .
orig. 8"
Sale 538
Twin Sheets
- .
...
Orig. 8»
Sale 449
Full Sheets
_ . ...
orig. 10"
Sale 659
O ther Sizes Also On Sale

50%

T w in
F u ll

fit*
O

J

L,

Q ueen

B edsacks

King

0rlQ 118 Sale 8 "

Orig. *22 Sale 10”
orig. *25 Sale 12”
Orig.*30 Sale 14”

C e ra m ic F lo ra l D e sig n

Sale

50% Off Lamps
O rie n ta l C e ra m ic
Orig. '80

1 Q *'*'
1w
or&gt;QQ
3

!

O r ig .

*35

9

”

Canvas or Nylon
Special

Cotton Print.
Blue or Pink
Orig. *12 To ‘18

Orig. '8

Hand
Orig. *6

i 'Wash
Orig. *3

m

All Guantities
Are Limited.
■I N I J C P»nn»» C o m p v . K-C

Buy

Sale

C 99
O

|

Gold Electroplate d
Orig. *5 To 1250

Sale 3"
Sale 2"
Sale 149

S a le 3 "

Misses Long Sleeve
Print Blouses
Orig. T o ‘ 18
Sale
Jacket Dresses
Misses.
O r ig . *45

Sale

A A 99
1 1
O Q 99

Max Factor
Cosmetics
50% Off Entire Line

099

£

40% Off
O u r L u s c io u s L e a th e rs
Great Selection
Variety O f Shapes
And Sizes
Orig. *30

Sale

17"

Does Not Include
Entire Stock
Similar To Picture Shown

JCFfenney
Sanford Plaza

The Japanese news reports that U.S. search ships had
located the airliner's electronic flight recorder and that
Its recovery was Imminent were again denied by White
House press spokesman Larry Speakesn.

1

Save Over 30%

799 . „ 99
1 TO 10

Sale

Bath

T9"

Novelty Knit
Short or Long

Fashion Jewe&gt;lry

j \ Take your Pick Of Thick,
1. , Thirsty Terries In A Stack
; I O f Solid Colors

S a le

0ri9 9”

TOKYO (UPI) — Soviet ships moved their search for
wreckage of the downed South Korean airliner Wed­
nesday toward a U.S. search area tn the northern Japan
Sea amid reports American searchers had located the
plane’s flight recorder.

- AAO

Save Over 30%

Travel Bags

^ a iB

Soviet Search Ships
Crowd U.S. Navy

Junior Sleepwear

S a le 1 4 "
S a le 2 4 "

Orig. ‘24

s**.

wm m m
VISA'

9"

Sleepw ear Coordinates
Long Gown or Robe

Off Towel Sale

i(

S a te

° '19 ’30

Women’s Sleepwear

50% Off Canister SeL
Orig. 39"

u f iii^ lib u

Thuriday, Stpt. M , W 3 - 7 A

Open
Sunday 12 To 6
Mon. thru Sat.
9:30 to 9 P.M.

The flight recorder could help explain why the Korean
Air Lines Boeing 747 veered hundreds of miles olf
course Into Soviet airspace Sept. 1. A Soviet fighter shot
the plane down with the loss o f269 lives.
Spcakcs said a 10-member International party invited
to board U.S. ships to observe the operation would be
given the recorder, or black box. for examination If and
when It was found.
The Japanese Maritime Safety Agency said the main
force of the Soviet fleet was diverted Into waters
northwest of Moncron Island near where specially
equipped U.S. Navy vessels were searching for the
plane's wreckage.
"Most of the Soviet ships conducted search operations
northeast of Moneron tn the past." a spokesman said.
"Today, the main force of the Soviet flotilla was sighted
near the U.S. search area."
Bad weather hampered search operations, but seven
U.S. ships. Including the deep-sea sonar-equipped tug
Naraggansett and the survey ship Conscrvcr, were
sighted In the area, the Japanese spokesman said.
Nine Soviet ships. Including a destroyer and a
mlssllc-carrylng cruiser, were sighted near the Ameri­
can ships about 12 miles northwest of Moneron. Four
other Soviet ships remained In waters far to the east.
The observer team.

Love Canal Area
Still Unsafe: ERA
NIAGARA FALLS. N.Y. (UPI) — The Environmental
Protection Agency says new evidence of leaking
chemicals In the Love Canal area has forced It to
rr-cvaluate whether the area is safe to live In.
"Maybe the outer reaches of the declaration area
might be habitable." said Environmental Protection
Agency spokesman Robert Ogg. Ogg announced the
agency has now revised plans to determine whether the
area was a safe place to live.
"I cannot tell you It Is safe" at this time, said one slate
Health Department ofllclal to a member of the Love
Canal Revitalization Agency.
Ogg said the updated Information would be turned
over to the Centers for Disease Control In Atlanta and
the state Health Department, who would make the
decision on habitability. A decision is not anticipated
until between March 1985 and February 1983.
The EPA and state Department of Environmental
Conservation said the review was partially due to an
analysis from the OiTlce of Technological Assessment
that found the EPA should not have told people It was
safe to live In the area around the infamous dump site.
The New York Times reported today that the EPA had
found evidence of leaking chemicals In the area. The
agency said a "total review" was needed of the scientific
data amassed by the agency last year and used as the
basts for the declaration that the area — a block and a
half to six blocks from the contaminated canal — was
habitable.
Love Canal was used in the 1940's and 1950's as a
toxic waste dump sltt by the Hooker Chemical and
Plastics Corp. After It was developed Into a residential
neighborhood, the chemicals began to seep Into homes.
The government relocated 80 0 families from the area
In 1980 and the slate had earlier relocated 237 families
living closest to the canal.

�SPO RTS
SA—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Sept. 29, 1913

Flustered Forecaster
Sounds Call For Help
Would anyone out there like to take a crack at
this? You can’t do much worse than I have over the
last three weeks. Here's all you have to do: Send In
your predictions for next week's games (the week
of Oct. 3) by next Wednesday (Oct. 51 and the
person who has the best record gets to write this
column the following week. Pick the winning team
and by how much they are going to win.
The games Include all six Seminole county high
schools. UCF. Florida and Florida State (sometimes
the University of Miami) and the Tampa Hay Hues
and Miami Dolphins, There arc 10 games to be
picked. In-case of a tie. closest to the point spreads
wins. Send predictions to. The Sanford Herald
(sports department), P.O. Box 1657. Sanford.
At least everyone is taking my advice and not
betting their bank roll on my predictions. Well,
almost everyone. A guy named Guido said he and
his ''family" were disappointed In my perfor­
mance. Guido said he is reserving a spot at the
bottom of Lake Okeechobee for me — right next to
Jimmy HofTa, no doubt.
After last week's mediocre 5-5 record. I stand at
1 5 1 4 1 for the season. That's a pretty good reason
to try and dump this column, or at least let
someone else do it for one week.
SEMINOLE AT MAINLAND
The Tribe is riding high after a stunning 29-27
comeback victory over Lake Howell a week ago. On
the other hand, the Mainland Hues arc playing
about as well as their professional namesake. A
three-game winning streak is well within the reach
of Jcrrv Posev'sScmlnolcs. Tribe by 12
LYMAN AT LAKE MARY
The Rams want to look good In their home
opener. Hut, If they play like they did against Lake
Brantley, it's going to be a long night for Lake Mary
fans Lyman has been pretty unpredictable this
season, though, and this one will go down to the
wire. Lyman by 2
DELAND AT LAKE HOWELL
The Silver Hawks arc mad. They arc going to be
out for blood Friday night and don't expect them to
lose the lead once they get It. DcLand’s Bulldogs
will be the Hawks' prey and it could get pretty
ugly. Lake Howell by 18
LEESBURG AT OVIEDO
Maybe I’ll pick a tic in this one. The Oviedo Lions
have played three games thus far, and I haven't
picked the outcome correctly yet. The Lions are
coming off their first win of the season and the
offenstvc line ts starting to open up holes for Barry
Williams and J.W. Yarborough. Leesburg got
hammered Its last time out and they won’t recover
In time for Friday s game. Oviedo by 10
VALDOSTA STATE AT UCF
It’s Homecoming for the Central Florida Knights
and coach Lou Saban will have his team at its best.
The Knights arc out to snap a two-game losing
streak and the Valdosta State Blazers will be the
victim. UCF by 8
FLORIDA AT LSU
Playing a night game in Baton Rouge. La. is
about as much fun as snorting fiberglass. LSU
always has an added advantage at the "Pit" down
in the bayous, where Gators are often turned Into
luggage. LSU by 6
FLORIDA STATE AT AUBURN
What an exciting town Auburn. Alabama is. I
won't tell you what they don’t have, but the
biggest night spot is the Wendy's down the road
from the campus. And that closes at 10 (10:30 on
weekends). The Auburn Tigers don't have much
else to do than concentrate on football, and
sometimes they don't even do that too well. This
week will be one of those times. Florida S tate by
13
MIAMI AT DUKE
The Hurricanes demolished Notre Dame last
week and will clean off their trail by blowing away
the Duke Blue Devils. Miami by 24
BUCSAT PACKERS
The Tampa Hay Hues arc 4-4 in 1983.
Unfortunately, all four of the wins came in the
preseason and don't count. Jack Thompson seems
to have won the starting quarterback spot and he's
lucky. If he was on the New York Giants he wuuld
be- fourth string and probably on waivers about
now. The Giants don't play the Hues, so maybe
they can lend Tampa Hay second stringer Phil
Simms or third stringer Jc (t Rutledge. Packer* by
17
DOLPHINS AT SAINTS
"Snake" Stabler was uncoiled in his own end
zone for a safety that cost the Saints an upset
victory over the Dallas Cowboys last week. Stabler
and the Saints are eager to upset somebody, and. if
the Snake is at his old form, the victim will be the
Dolphins New Orleans by 1
BIG JV GAME TONIGHT
Lake Mary's Rams dedicate their new stadium
Friday night against Lyman, but tonight at 7:30.
the Rams and Sanford's Fighting Semlnoles get
together in a Junior varsity game which should be
a good one.
Seminole whipped Lake Howell. 14-13. last
Thursday when running back Alvin Jones broke
lose for two long TD runs — one on a punt return
for coach Bill Zcis9‘ Semlnoles. Jones has been
running behind linemen Carl Tipton and Clint
Boyles.
Defensively, tackles Jerry Littles and Alan
Kendall have made it rough on the opposition In
the trenches while linebackers Dave Merkel and
Larry Byrde and defensive back Dexter Franklin
have been the big hitters In the secondary.
OPTIMIST TENNIS
Wednesday. Oct. 5 is the deadline for entries for
the Sanford Recreation Department &amp; Optimist
Club of Sanford T en n is Tournam ent. The
tournament will he held Saturday. Oct. 8-9 at
Seminole Community College.
T IC K E T S

Lake Mary athletic director Bill Moore reports
that tickets for the Lake Mary-Lyman game will be
$3-50 at the gale, but only S2.50 at the schools
before the game. Save a buck and gel one early.

i

H*r*W P ho lM b» Tom m y V ln to n l
Eiloon Som tlton

Coach's Calling

A coach's calling Is never done — especially on Frid ay night. Above,
Seminole high coach Je rry Posey points the way to victory against Lake
Howell. At the right, an exhuasted Lake M a ry coach H arry Nelson still has a
couple of word for running back Neal Wellon against DeLand. At the lower
right, Seminole offensive line coach Roger Beathard makes a point with
Keith Brown (left) and Strickland Smith. At the lower left, Lym an offensive
line coach M arcus Kendricks urges M ike M cFadden (left) and M a rk
Schofield to block. Lym an and Lake M a ry along with Seminole at M ainland
highlight F rid a y 's action.

Saints Dunk Rams; Oviedo Netters Win
Coach Walt Morgan’s Lake Mary
swimmers are Improving — but they still
haven’t Improved enough to dunk
Trinity Prep’s powerful Saints.
The Saints tripped Lake Mary for the
second time this season Wednesday —
swimming to an easy 104-55 victory In
the girls' meet and taking a 96-70 win in
the boys' meet.
Jenny Pence led the girls’ romp as she
won the 100 fly and the 50 free along
with anchoring the 200-yard medley
team, Susan Suwalskl also took two
events — the 100 free and the 200 IM —
in addition lo lending a hand on the
medley relay. Eighth grader Lauren
Aspinwall captured the 200 free and
helped out on the victory in the 400 free
relay. Rachael Wcightman took the 500
free and was on the winning medley
relay.
Sherry Purkerson (100 breast) and
Sheri Clayton (100 back) had the Lady
Rams only two first places.
In the boys' meet, the Donahues
combined to win three events and a
relay. Brian look the 20G free and the
500 free while Chris grabbed the 200 IM.
Boili Joined Robert Penn and Brian
Wcightman to take the 400 free relay.

Roundup
Penn also won the 100 Ircc.
Lake Mary's Scott Wise captured the
100 fly and’ 100 back and also helped
Todd Stcbbins. Tim Orange and Brian
Cook to the 200 yard relay victory.
G IR L S
T R IN IT Y F R C P 104. L A K E M A R T S3
200 y a rd m t d lr y r e la y — T raeu ltr. Su«al»kl. Pence.
W cightm an (T PI I 00 27 2 0 0 fre e - A ip ln * a !l (T P)
) OT 4*; 200 IM - 5 u * e lU I ( T P t 2 22 M 8 0 free Pence (T P I 25 U. 100 O y — Pence (T P) I 02 41; 100
fre e
- Suw altki (T PI S5 4»; 5 0 0 fre e - Wetghtm 4n ( T P i
5 37 W t o o back — C la rio n I lM ) 1 04 20. 100 b r e a d
Porkerven ( IM J 1.17 13. 4 0 0 fre e re la y - A ip ln n a ll.
Kinney. Smatherr, Stewart (T P I 4; l l 25
SO TS
T R IN IT Y F R C P 98. L A K E M A R T 70
200 y a rd m t d lt y re!»y - W lK , Co*K. IM ib tftt,
Orrenge ( IM I 1 S3 T* 200 free - B Oonehua (T P)
I S* 31. 2 0 0 IM - C Donahue 1TP) 2 10 42. SO fre e Weightman (TPI 22 74. IOO Hy - W n (LM ) 54171 100
fre e - Penn (T P) 54 15. BOO fre e - B Donahue (TPI
54 35; 100 b e rk - W ile ( I M I 101 12. 10O b ree at —
Weightman (T P) I 04 4*. 4 0 0 free re la y - C Donahue.
B Donahue, Penn Weightman (T P) 151 75

Elsewhere in county sports action
Wednesday. Oviedo's volleyball team
trimmed Lvman. 15-4 and 15 12 In a

dual match at Lyman.
The Lady Lions rolled to an easy
victory In the first game behind lhe solid
spiking of senior Fayetta Robinson. The
second game looked like a repeat as
Oviedo assumed a 13-4 lead, but coach
Annelle G riffin's Lady Greyhounds
stormed back behind six service points
from sophomore Dawn Boyensen.
After Lyman inched to within, 14-13.
however. Oviedo regrouped lo nail down
the victoiy. "We didn't get our act
together too well." said Gridin. "There
were a lot of balls hltttng the lloor."
Lyman. 3-5. travels to Lake Howell
Tuesday for a Five Star Conference
match.
Coach Joh n Horn's Oviedo Junior
varsity football team rolled up 346 yards
In offense while holding Osceola to a
minus 48 yards as It rolled to a 15-6
victory Wednesday night at Kissimmee.
Running back David Lockwood broke
loose for scoring runs of 25 yards In the
second period and 48 yards In the fourth
quarter for Hie Oviedo points. Cornell
Green ran in'the first points after while
Doug Murphy booled the second PAT.
"Lockwood didn't run the bull much.

but when be did he broke loose." said'-**
Horn about the sophomore's 76 yards In—
three carries. Green was the leading
ground gainer with 96 yards on 11 totes, j
Quarterback Cory Batoon hit 6 of 1 1
passes for 105 yards.
Defensively, free safety Burnell Sim ­
mons bad an outstanding game with
nine tackles and 10 assists. Craig
Duncan chipped in with six solo stops while Mike Hass had six tackles and six,
assists.
Oviedo. 2-1. hosts Leesburg next
Thursday at 7:30 p.rn.
Boxing resurfaces tonight at the Amcr-1
lean Legion Coliseum In Orlando with
six bouts beginning at 8.
The main evcnl features Orlando’s '
Greg Young and Fort Myers' Robert
Spcnccr In an eight-round junior mid-die weight fight. Young has won 16 of 22
fights with 12 knockouts while Spencer.
Is 18-6.
Marty Carson, a correspondent for
R in g magazine, is promoting the event.
Tickets arc on sale at the gate for $12, $9 .
and $6. The American Legion Is locatedthe entry' ramp below 1-4 and Ivanhoc
Boulevard.

Life Begins At 40 For Morgan, N.L. East Champion Phillies
Despite gray-balred players
making some rem arks that
made management see red. the
Philadelphia Phillies wound up
In the pink this season.
"I know that I never gave up
on myself or tills tram this
year." 40-ycar-old Jo e Morgan
said Wednesday after his four
hits helped the Phillies clinch
th e N ational League! E ast
Division title with a 13-6 victory
over the Chicago Cubs. "I'm 40
and I'm proud of it. I wouldn't
switch places today with any­
one 23 ."
Bo Diaz added five bits and
three RBI In the victory, the
Phillies' llth In their last 12
games, mathematically elimi­
nated the second-place Pit­
tsburgh Pirates and gave the
Phils their fifth divisional title
and first since they won the
World Series in 1980.
The Phillies will llkrly meet
the Los Angeles Budgets, who
are on the verge of clinching the
Wesl Division. The Dodgers,
whose magic number is one.
bud (heir game against San
Diego washed out in the 14th
inning with the score il**d 4-4.
Mike Schmidt belled his 40th

homer of the season to Ignite a
three-run third and tripled and
scored to help the Phillies.
Willie Hernandez. 9-4. went 1
1-3 innings.
Early In September, Schmidt
blasted the Phillies manage­
ment and Paul Owens, the
club's manager and general
manager, claiming the team
was wracked by dissension
because players didn't know
who would be In the lineup from
day today.
"If wc go 3-19 Instead of 19-3
after that, then I can hang up
my spikes. But dag-gone It. I'm
going to take credit for It." said
Schmidt. “Some guys came up
to me after 1 said It, and said
that I took the pressure olf. I
stuck my neck out. and It
worked well."
"1 don't know. I don't think
that was a turning [mint." said
Owens. "W e’re not as old as we
seem. May lie older players play
better."
Morgan doubled and scored In
the first, bad an RBI single In
the second and a two-run single
In lhe fifth. Diaz belled a solo
homer In the second and added
a l wo- run shot in the third.

N.L. B aseb all
Dick Hut liven. 13-12. traded
from the Phils to the Cubs on
May 22 for Hernandez, yielded
six runs In 2 2-3 Innings as the
Phillies pounded out 19 hits.
After the Phils scored a run In
the top of the first, the Cubs
came back with two In their half
of the first off Charles Hudson.
Ryne Sandberg reached on
shortstop Ivan DcJesus’ error
and scored on a double by Bill
Buckner, who came around to
score on Ron Ccy s sacrifice fly.
Diaz's homer In the second
tied the game and DcJcsus
followed with a triple and sc ored
on Morgan's single to give
Philadelphia a 3-2 lrad.
Jody Davis doubled to lead off
the Chicago second, went to
third on a sacrifice and scored
on Dave Owen's squeeze to tic
the game.
The Phillies took the lead for
go»«i with three In the third.
Schmidt led off with a homer,
his 39th al Wrlgley Field In his
career, and Diaz added a two-

run homer later In the Inning.
The Phillies fared poorly
against the Dodgers, losing 11
of 12 games.
"That's a big psychological
thing, bul 1 can't wait for us to
have a chance to turn it uround
against Ihe in in the playoffs,"
said Owens.
M e t* 4 ,P lra * e s 2
At Pittsburgh. Darryl Straw­
berry smashed his 26th homer,
a two-run shot, and added an
RBI groundout and Ron Darling
scattered seven hits for his first
major-league victory, to spark
New York. Darling. 1-3. walked
five and struck out four and bad
two wild pitches. The loss went
toLeeTunnell. 10-6.
Red* 5, Giant* 4
Mario Soto, 17*13, hurled
two-hit ball through seven In­
nings but lost his shutout In the
eighth when Joel Youngblood
led off with his 1fitli homer of
the year.
Expo* 4 , Cardinal* 0
At St. Louis. Bryn Smith
pitched a four-hitter and Gary
Carter doubled In a run lo lead
Montreal. Smith, 6 1 1 . pitched

W*

Ills third shulout of the seasont ,
and second against the Cardl-r :
mils. Smith struck out four and; *
walked three In pitching hlsc-,
fifth coijiplcte game.
Brave* 3*1, A stro* 1*8
At Houston. Jo e Nlekro p ile"
ched a five-hitter, helping the n
Astros to the split and leaving
the Braves on the verge o ?!,
elim ination . Nlekro, 1 5 -14 .:-walked three and struck ouF .
three In his ninth complete,',
game. Ken Dayley, 4-8, took the
loss. In the first game, Pascual
Perez pitched a four-hitter and&gt;«
scored the tie-breaking run for,:
the Braves.
*v

to
Dodgers 4, Padre* 4
The Dodgers will have to wait-' *
a day to clinch their division.’^*
Los Angeles and San Dicga
battled to a 4-4 tie before ralrr*
hailed the game in the loth
inning. Je rry Reuss had a '
two-run double for the Dodgerv'
while Terry Kennedy socked agame-tying solo homer. The twd
tram s play a double-header
tonight wiih the Dodgers’ maglcnumber (either an L A. win or
Allanla loss) at one game.
a

)

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

STANDINGS

Luzinski's Record-Tying Homer Hands Dotson 21st Win

K A ro N A L l e a o u i
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Untied Preee International
It would be like leaving your car keys home after
walking a half-mile to your car. Chicago's Greg Luzlnskl
did not want to come all this way arid have lo slnrt over
again next season.
Luzlnskl hit a record-tying homer and Chris Nyman
homered and had two RBI Wednesday to give Richard
Dotson his 21st victory and lead the American League
West champion Chicago White Sox to a 5-3 victory aver
the Oakland A's.
Luzlnskl hit a two-run shot in the fifth off loser Tim
Conroy, 7-10, to break a 2-2 tic. The homer was his 31st
of the year as a designated hitter, tying the mark shared
by Jim Rice, RleoCarty and Andre Thornton.
In an game delayed by rain In the 14th Inning, l«os
Angeles and San Diego were tied 4-4.
Tigers 0, Orioles 8
At Baltimore, Larry Herndon's two-run homer
highlighted an eight-run second Inning to lead Detroit.
The Tigers mauled three Orioles pitchers for 13 hits to
lift starter Dan Petry. 19-10. Mike Boddlcker, 15-8. took
the loss.
Twins 3 , Rangers 0
At Minneapolis, Tom Brunansky hit a solo homer and
Pete Fllson and Ron Davis combined on an eight-hitter

A .L. B aseball
lo lift the Twins. Fllson. 4*1. pitching on Ills 25lh
birthday, allowed seven hits in 7 1-3 Innings. Davis held
the Hangers to one hit the rest of the way for his 30th
save.
Red Sox 3, Yankees 2
At New York. Jerry Hcmy drove in one run and scored
nnothcr and Bob Stnnlcy recorded his 33rd save to lead
Boston. Stanley pitched the final 2 2-3 innings, lifting
Bob Ojeda to 12-7 and dropping Shane Hawley to 14-12.
Brewers 6, Indians 4
At Milwaukee, Robin Yount and Ben Ogllvlc ripped
two-run homers during a four-run ninth that rallied the
Brewers. With Milwaukee trailing 4-2. Charlie Moore led
off with a single oft reliever Jam lt Easterly. 4-3. and was
forced at second by Paul Mollior. Yount then smashed
his 16th homer of the year Into the left-field seats. Cecil
Cooper then reached and Ogllvlc followed with his 13th
homer of the year.
Bine J a y s 5, Angels 3
At Anaheim. Calif.. Dave Collins had three RBI and
Damaso Garcia scored the tlc-brcaklng run on right
fielder Ellis Valentine’s error In the seventh Inning to

happen a g a in ," say s Florida qu arterback

Wayne Peace. "Everybody has talked to
us about ft, even the coaches. Frankly,
we’re tired of It."
T h e B e n g a ls. a fte r a tw o-w eek
absence, moved back Into the rankings
this week following their 40-14 victory
over then 7th-ranked Washington and
are slight favorites over the Gators who
swept past Mississippi State. 35-12, to
Improve to 3-0-1 (the tie was with
Southern Cal three weeks ago).
A crowd of more than 82,000 Is
expected to watch a passing duel
between Peace, the current Southeastern
Conference career total oftensc leader,
and sophomore Je ft Wickersham.
Peace, who has a career total of 5,557
yards — Just 19 yards behind fifth-place
Archie Manning on the SEC's all-time list
— completed 21 of 34 passes for 260
yards and two touchdowns last week
while Wickersham was 16 or 27 for 259
yards and one touchdown and ran for
three touchdowns against the Huskies.
" W ic k e r s h a m Is m a tu rin g and
becoming a better leader every day."
says LSU coach Jerry Stovall said. "He's
helping us grow os s team. Jc ffris «
veteran now — he's played 12 quarters."
Peace says Florida "can throw with
anyone... and also have a pretty good
running game.” But LSU. which has
won two straight since opening the

lOlh-rankcd Auburn hosts Florida Stale.

1 R icard o E to n *
7.00 5 00 1 00
7 P lla B a rq u In
4.40
J R*oa Agulrr*
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O (4-7) 44.Mi P (1*7) tt.T ti T
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(0-4-4) 147.10

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tilth 0*4*4

tt a ld T o t a r k a
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44 00 IS 40 7.00
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10JO 7 *0
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a ( u ) t u t ; p ( ii) u i. r t i T
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Eighth gam*
O A ram ayo A tan o
15.40 11.40 4 40
I AAanote lu b l
1 00 4.00
I Echava AAandl
100
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a ia ld Kaaca
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(14-1) 414.44) P k 4 (741-74-1) I
wirnwr 4 at 4 p a n 407.40/ carry o ra r
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7.00 I JO 4JO
I OurangoKId Barquln
7 J0 4 J I
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4JO
a (14) 41.07, P (4-1) 177.40) T
(4-14 ) 447.40

Kitegam*
I G a iia
lE c h a v a

q (14) 44J 0) P 114) 14U0) T
(74-1) 447JO

tlth g a m *
I C a lla Totonca
11-00 M 0 140
4 OurangoKId Zub)
4*0 100
4 Coro* tola A lano
U00
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(144)144444
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aC h arola Ira ia ba l 17 40 17.40 7 *0
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(4-11)441.44
A — M i l ) Handte 1117 414.

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torward (rat
N** Y frt - SlgnodI cantor
&lt;
agari I r k Famatoti
Buff*!* - Slgnod lately AA*------------IlMbackar Mark Aterrlil and mm tockto
lUIAckar.
Ntw England - Flacad Lnotteciari Stev*
Ntltan and Brla* Ingram an InJunaM
rtiarv*. Ugnad h i t agant Hnabackar* Ed
RtyneidtandJdnGliten
PNtodHphia (N F ll - Co) punter Ma*
Runagar; ligandpmter Tam U tod an ytel
iridti yf*r canlract. ptocad dttonalv* hack
John Scterra an Ik* tafurad IW; Ugnad
dHtnuvf bark Damn Da Vaughn, waivfd
guartorbact Don Pattorlnl
II. Laud - Rtlaatad IMbackar Jim
Eiteputo*
Wathngtei (U S F ll - Stgnad dotonuvr
tockte Richard Tharp*
Hackty

9 AM-2 PM

AGES S - 21

- i n .aus p{FUf MMAiiyf i v v tfH h i m u

D eals

6 0 7 SAVAGE COURT
L0NGWO0D, FL

^

Ole Miss hosts Southern Miss. Tennessee
plays The Citadel (In Memphis) for the
first time since 1939. T.ilanc hosls
Vanderbilt and 15th-ranked Miami of
Florida visits Duke.
Kentucky. 4-0 and ranked No. 18 after
going 0-10-1 Iasi year, has an open dale.
There's no line on unbeaten Alabama
although Memphis State, playing the
Crimson Tide for the first time since
1959. lost by only 14 points at 5(hranked North C a ro lin a . A labam a
quarterback Walter Lewis leads the SEC
In passing with 35-of-GO and is second In
total offense with an average of 240
yards per game.
Unbeaten, once-tied Georgia Is an
11-polnt favorite as the Bulldogs open
their bid for a fourth straight SEC
ch a m p io n s h ip . T h e ir gam e w ith
M ississippi S ta te pits two form er
Valdosta |Gn.| High School teammates
quarterbacks John Bond of State and
John Lasttngcr of Georgia,
Bond, was Lastinger's receiver when
he was a Junior and Lasttngcr a senior at
Valdosta. He Is second to Peace among
active players on the SEC career total
offense list with 5.457 yards.
Lasttngcr lost Ills starling role to
sophomore Todd Williams but regained
ft last week when Williams was Injured.

OtonCRMtry
HighicNmI
O I E U C U E S A A A A HONOR R O L L
T m h »&gt; t. Oraao* P a rk (OP), I.
Tam pa Late (TL), 1. Matte*nd Laha
Haw*ll (LH ). 4. 11. Petersburg
N o rltw a tl ( N E ). I. Dunadln (D l, *.
Ateamaato Spring* L s k t Branttoy
(L B ) , 1. Coconut Crook (CC), 0.
O rlando Colonial (C l, f. Orlando
Boon* (B ), IB. Brandon (B).
I n d M d M ti, 1. M a ry Oougharty
(N E I 11:15.0; 7. Lout** S c h a o llrtr
(Winter Cardan W *tl Orang*)
11:44 4; 1. Shari Rahm (O P) l) : S I J ;
4 Donna Kuttell (0 ) 11:14.0, S.
M a to n ir Strum (Tampa Plant)
) I : » J ; 4. Juanita Saquara (T L)
)):S 7J; 1 Kathryn H ayw ard I L B )
H:47.7) 0 Nancy G vffoy (T L)
1I:J0J) 9. Sutan Haynte (N E )
J M I J ; It. 4m Klngsbwry (L*k*
M a ry ) 11,14.0
B O Y IC L A 4 I A A A A HONOR R O LL
t 1. Largo ( L ) J
Late (T L). 1. Winter P a rk (W P), 4.
C a ln o iu llte Buchholt (S B ), 1. O r­
lando O ak Ridge (OR), 4. Clearw ater
C o u n try tld i (CC), 7. M ia m i Kitten
(M K ), A O rlando Edgowator (E d), 7.
Tem po Cham berlain (T CI, II. Lako
M a ry (L M )
ladhrMaato, t. Kan Ctwaaaman
(M aitland Laka Haw oll), 4. Chrl*
P a lm a r (L ), 1. Kurt Bacfcman (L ). 4.
Grog
Organ
(Fort
Laudtrdate
D illa rd ),
I.
Dong
A A c B rw n
llj M M t d
L v ih a n ), A. G eorot
C ard n ar (O R), 7. John Brannan (L),
A K a rl AAotltor (L), f. Jaam H*nrl
(M K ) , 10. Chrl* Duggan (T L).

L0NGW00D
LANES

season with a 40-35 loss to Florida State,
has the SEC's second and third leading
rushers In sophomore co-tall barks Garry
Jam es and Dalton Hilliard.
In other Saturday games. 4th-rankcd
Alabama hosts Memphis Stale. 8ihranked Georgia hosts Mississippi Slate.

C ro ss
C o u n try

At
W*4n*M*y N p l rteMtti
F irs t I M M
I fllc a r to O y a r l
7 *0 4 00 1.40
4 P((a A g u lrrt
S 40 4.00
1 Bilbao-Ectteva
ISO
Q tt-4) 1*44, F | H ) f)J0 * T
(1-4-1) M4.M
larte ftet ays **|a

Kids ‘Strike’
ItB igH erel

College Football

SCORECARD
Ja i-a la i

spark Toronto. Jim Clancy. 15-10. scattered 10 hits.
struck out six and walked one over 8 1-3 Innings.
Royals 11, M ariners 8
At Seattle, Willie Alkcns belted two homens and drove
In five runs and George Brett drove in four to propel
Kansas City. Alkcns belted a three-run homer In the first
inning then became only the 11th player to reach the
upper deck In the Klngdome when he belted a two-run
homer In the seventh.

Peace Duels Wickersham
As 'Edgy' Gators Visit LSU
United Press International
You ca n 't blam e the 9th-rankcd
Florida Gators for being n bit edgy about
their Saturday night visit to 13th-rankcd
Louisiana State.
This Is the third time In four seasons
the Gators have been unbeaten prior to
playing the Bengals — and the other two
times LSU spoiled that record.
"We're determined not to have that

Richard Dotson

G re g L u z ln s k l

INC.

SANFORD

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C h e ro k e e an d W agon eer. L e a n e r. . .w ith
the b est gas m ileag e e v e r in a Je e p v e h i­
cle. M e a n e r. . .w ith a h o rsep o w er-to w eight ratio that S-10 B lazer 4x4 c a n 't
m atch. B ro n co II an d B lazer ca n 't m atch
C h e ro k e e a n d W ag o n eer's gro u n d cle a r­
an ce , either. O r th eir fo u r d o o rs. O r
seatin g for five. O r ca rg o ro o m .*
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N E W R E N A U L T A L L IA N C E

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N E W JE E P G R A N D W A G O N E E R

G ran d W a g o n e e r is th e U ltim ate W agon .
T h ere's secu rity in its tractio n , an d p re s­
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are sta n d a rd , in clu d in g a p rem iu m ste re o

mst h w y

Renault Fu ego. W ith aT ieritag e b o m of
G ran d Prix racing. B o sch b je t r o n ic fuel
in je ctio n , five-sp eed j
drive. For ev en m ore
op tion al Turbo m od e

N EW REN A ULT FU EG O

(car shown)

Je e p C J-7: th e free-w h eelin g
fo u r-w h e e le r that b eca m e a
le g e n d . CJ g e ts its w h e e ls
in to places o th e r v eh icles
w o u ld n 't d are. For a feeling
you can get o n ly in a Jeep.

MPA MST MPG'

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(904) 427-4134

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••Use figures for comparison. Your mileage may vary
with speed, weather, trip length. Actual highway
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Jeep is a registered trademark of Jeep Corporation.

FER N P A R K
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(305) 322-4382

�P EO P LE
E v e n in g H e ra ld . Sanford. FI.

Miss
Tu,
T.W. Wilkes
Repeat Vows

T h u rid a y , Sept. 21, 11*3 — IB

Geneva d ogger Named
Ultimate Urban Cowgirl

R eba Y arborou gh of
Geneva, clogged her way
to win the Ultimate Urban
Sandra Dawn Turner and 1 homas Wayne Wilkes were
Cowgirl contest sponsored
married Sept. 24. at I p m., at the United Church of
by WSGL. Naples, and the
Christ. Altamonte Springs. The Rev. Wayne E. Smith
Marriott Marco Beach Re­
performed the double ring and unity candle ceremony.
sort. As a finalist In the
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward V.
weekly contests. Rcba won
Turner. 950 Vlhlcn Road. Sanford. The bridegroom Is
a weekend In the pent­
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jam es A. Wilkes. Huntsville.
house at the Marriott.
Ala.
And as the grand winner
Given In marriage by her mother and father, the bride
of the contest, she won a
wore her mother's wedding gown when she was married
week's trip for two In
35 years ago. The Ivory satin gown was fashioned with
Barbados.
a n
off-the-shoulder neckline, long slim sleeves
There were 10 Florida
terminating In cnlla points at the wrists and a full
girls In the finals. "We
gathered skirt shirred at the bottom to form points.
were all asked a few ques­
Rows of laee bordered the flowing cathedral train. A
tions on stage.” Reba says.
"Then, one by one. we
danced for nbout two
minutes. Then they broke
It down to five girls, and
then two girls. Then we
danced again, and they
announced that I was the
Groomsmen were Michael Turner. Gregory i urucr auu new U ltim a te U rbnn
Cowgirl."
Ccsldlo Conte. Junior groomsman was Ryan Turner.
According to Rcba. she
Following the reception held In the fellowship hall of
the church, the newlyweds departed on a wedding trip received a standing ova­
tio n fro m th e 1 .5 0 0
lo Charleston. S.C..atid Amelia Island.
They will make their home In Sanford where the bride persons atten d in g the
Is employed In public relations by Turner Neon Inc. The co n te st In clu d in g her
bridegroom Is employed by Martin Marietta. Orlando, as m o th e r. M rs. Edw ard
Yarborough, and her sis­
a research and design technician.
ter. Lynn Yarborough.
"I won by clogging and
the biggest smile you’ve
ever seen .” the pretty
Oviedo High School Junior
said.
Reba has been dancing
since kindergarten when
s h e s t a r t e d d a n c in g
lessons at the School of
D an ce A rts. S a n fo rd ,
where she and Lynn now
teach clogging. She Is a
m em ber of a clogging
group. Sun-Slatlons. At
OHS. she plays basketball
and softball.
Although "u rb a n ” Is
city. Rcba. 16. Is a ranch
girl at heart. She lives on

Student's Friendship
Unpleasant To Teacher

thing about her and asked if she would tv my special
friend. I told her she reminded me of my mother who
died a few years ago; then I asked her If Ijcould call hei[
by her first name outside of elnss;
at all. She said she couldn't
She didn't scent pleased
|'
' was a teacher and 1
be mv special friend because she
was her pupil, and she didn't want me to call her by her
Then she
first name anywhere. TL-..
' said she fell uncomfortable being "loved" so nine h by a student, and I should
tn ’ to get over It.
That night I wrotr her a letter apologizing for making
her feel uncomfortable and begging her to be my spccal
friend.

Reba Yarborough: A ranch g irl at heart
th e f a mi l y r a n c h In
Geneva where she helps
with her share of the
ch o res. S h e has been
clogging for four years.
"Y ou might say she
traded In her !&gt;oots and
spurs for her dancing
shoes which she docs two
nights a week working up
routines with the SunS t a t i o n s . ’ *

At Hfa,
T V iocA v i 7 V iti A

London F o g ‘

M r s .

M a k e L ig h t O f
The W e a th e r In
A P ra c tic a l,
F a s h io n a b le
London Fog* Coat

Yarborough says.
"I d like to encourage
everyone to clog." Reba
says. "Look where It got
me." -Doris Dietrich

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doing In

Whan you r* timing for ■ poiithtd, profttttontl look, IhtM trimly
Itllortd pumps bland with tvtrythlng Iromlubdoad tutting* to tlmpit tllkt lor confidant Itthion you'll count on lor tvtry working dty.
Sling In Nary, Block or Burgundy, J4.M. Optn iot pump In Block,
Ttupt 35.99. Both In Narrow AMtdlum Width*

N lf M l* and Call**
Pa.ma-P.ati
Campa.aal2 .9 Syd

SUPER VALUE

FABRICS

la d lin g
Borgoin*

Full into Winter

/

Solid* AFrtnt*

C o a ts

ia * o H o r « o | » 4 *

N *w Shipman! *1 Sw aafa. Kn it. Su.iahU
fa. 0&gt;#»» and Blawta Fathw ni

a n d S P '- a d * --------- -

IS KtO WW M ill St
fa d m m d ih .

Get Kcudy For Those
Chilly Days That Are
J u k i Around T he
Corner. Come In And
Make Your Choice While
The Selection I n Good.

cnyoS in* HiWtt

WAS } Jf

NOW

NOW

9
FAM O US M AK19

1 CARDED
BUTTONS
AH 5 4 "
m a tk t* * *

■.•as-

5 S m .T .o » « »
Ph. 322 23*3
200 North Pork Avt.
Downtown Stnlord

WAS I I I

$ 4 98

From MILUKEN-------------- -

• H«W-W#avat # NaW»*

F *tim in g Fsthlons Ju tt For You

NOW

][ b o SHOE STORE
SANFORD

322*0204

10 0 ° a P O IY E S T E R

DOUBLE
KNITS
*na&lt;iUiaikti

l °"'»V
pALLOWEEl
iPRIHTS
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�IB -E v e n in g Herald, San lord, FI.

B L O N D IE

Thursday, Sept. 21, If 12

b y C h ic Y o u n g
*a i i r t i - r r

D A IS Y IS C H A S IN G
H E R T A IL

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by M o rt W alker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

1

2

4

3

5

6 • 7

6

9

12

13

14

15

16

17

t8

19
22

24

25

26

31

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■
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33

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35
40

41

n
47

11

29

30

51

62

marin for a number of
years and have been de­
creasing the amount until
now I take one 0.3 milli­
gram tablet three times a
week.
So now I am taking both
P re m a rln and O s-C al
Forte. I need to know If my
condition will get better.
Can the bone structure of
my spine Improve if I keep
on this? Is there anything
else I can do?
DEAR READER - It Is
not unusual for a person to
have both arthritis and
osteoporosis. The latter Is
loss of bone mass and Is In
fact related to a decreased
absorption of calcium with
Increasing age. There Is an
Important decrease of a
derlvltlve of vitamin D In
the body.
An Increased calcium
Intake Is advisable, proba­
bly 1.5 gram s a day.
Female hormones,
estrogens, also help to
arrest or prevent the bone
loss. I still see comments
that physicians arc reluc­
tant to prescribe estrogen
to p o s t - m e n o p a u s a l
women because of the
concern that It may In­
crease the risk of en­
dometrial can cer. That
docs not need to be a
problem because good
studies now show that If
enough progesterone Is
given, too. there is no
Increased risk of cancer.
Fluoride also helps In
some cases. I would like

21

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34

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HOROSCOPE
W hat The D a y W ill B ring ...

EEK &amp; M E E K

/
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by Howie Schneider

W O R M S
A R E STR A N G E
CR EA TU R ES

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W H A T

PO T H E Y
G E T CAST
OF L I F E ?

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F R ID A Y S

I W A T O -T P A L L AG

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BUGS B U N N Y

2

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by Stoffel &amp; Heim dahl
'fH Ey SEEM TO BE A BIT
OUT OF CANGE,GENERAL,

FRA NK AND ERNEST

why

Calcium, Estrogens
For Osteoporosis

49 Recondite
Anawer to Prtviout Punle
53 Droop
a ra n a tj
1 Totals
54 Energy
S Ax
agency (abbr)
TUlTlWlA
9 M ile parent 56 Spoila
I t I M o T c lH
oto
12 Encircled
57 Under the
at i it
13 Gave signal
weather
I DEAR DR. LAMB M Combuition
56 One
I About 10 years ago 1 was
remnant
59 State (Fr)
15 Territory
told I had arthritis of the
60 Biahopa
16 Hindi dialect
province
spine. Since then It has
17 Fish egga
61 Head
been getting worse. After
18 Penned anew 62 Writer
a n u H t - m n n n B n n n my fall last year It really
20 Fitaure
Marquie de
caused me a lot of pain. I
22 Contend
□ □ □ I d o d o d I ITIOI
q o o
wore a b race for five
23 Legume
43 Lota
DOWN
23 Sweepa
24 Urge
months.
camera
27 Moat facile
46 Talk foolishly
I asked my orthopedic
Bacterial
24
Worda
of
un­
31 Eaat Indian
46 Osiris' wife
d
o
c t o r If 1 ha d o s ­
culture
demanding (2
tree
47 Secluded
teoporosis. He said yes,
Life and death
* d i)
32 Water bird
valley
which frightened me. I
Selected card 25 Clayey earth
34 Curved root
Famiah
26 Trudge
35 Mythical
48 Amorous look asked If there was some­
Critical
27 Cuahy
Greek
49 Redact
thing I could do or take to
Hard
28 Long time
bowman
stop
the process from get­
50
Whit
7 Lett letter
29 Plant diaeaae
37 Abatract
ting worse or to Improve
51 Tailless
being
8 Evokes
30 Decadet
the condition.
amphibian
39 Hebrew letter 9 Remove rind 33 Water hole
40 Old
10 Preposition (2 36 Flippered
He said perhaps Os-Cal
52 Feminine
42 Law chargee
wdt)
animal
F o rte w ith h o rm o n e s
(suffix)
44 Become ill
11 Hone
36 Shade of tan
would help. It so happens I
55 Genetic
45 Expert
19 Lubricates
41 Revolt (2
have been taking Prematerial
46 Icona
21 Put down
wdt)

YOUR BIRTHDAY
SEPTEMBER 3 0 ,1 9 8 3
S m o o th e r tim e s a rc
ahead for you this corning
year. One or the principal
reasons for this Is that you
have learned valuable
lessons from past mistakes
and they're not apt to be
repeated.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.
23) Others may talk to you
today ntxoui things of little
consequence. However,
your mind will turn them
out and focus on impor­
tant objectives, Libra pre­
dictions for the year ahead
are now ready. Romance,
career, luck, earnings,
travel and much more are
d lscu sc d . Send 81 to
Astro-Graph. Box 4 8 9 ,
Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Send an additional
$2 for the NEW AstroGraph Matchmaker wheel
and b o o k le t. R e v e a ls
romantic compatibilities
for all signs. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Friends have respect
for your views and opi­
nions. and you can be
helpful to them today by
offering suggestions which
will expand their outlook.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
23-Dec. 21) Although you
might not be an original
thinker today, you have
the knack of taking others'
Ideas and transforming
them into something more
worthwhile.
C A P R I C O R N (D e c .
22-Jan. 19) A Lank dis­
cussion with your mate
today can help solve a
collective problem. Say
what needs to be said
without pulling any pun­
ches.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20*
Feb. 19) Jobs or projects

requiring your full con­
centration and brainpower
should be your cup of tea
toduy. Use your splendid
mental faculties.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) Tact and diplomacy
are your greatest assets
today. You’re likely to
become Involved In several
situations where you will
use them to your advan­
tage.

U llt '3

f o r y o u to s e c a
rheumatologist to sort out
which Is arth ritis and
which Is osteoporosis In
your case and to get you
on a proper program with
the right amount of calci­
um , v i t a mi n D and
e s tr o g e n s a lo n g w ith
whatever other medication
seems Indicated In your
particular case.
Meanwhile I am sending
you The Health Letter
6-10. Osteoporosis: Bone
Softening.
DEAR DR. LAMB Could you give me some
Information on the new
ca lciu m b lo ck e r. P ro ­
cardia? Will It rob my
bones of needed calcium? I
am on two and my pre­
ssure Is the same as a
23-year-old. Before the
doctor put me on It I was
dizzy and had chest pains,
but not the real painful
kind.
Procardia Is new in this
c o u n tr y so I w ill be
pleased to hear from you.
DEAR READER - It
must be confusing to the
public, but a very small
amount of calcium that
exists as Ions, not In com­
bination as a calcium salt.
Is essentia] for nerve and
muscle action. These Ions
migrate Into and out of the
muscles In the walls of the
arteries. By blocking the
calciu m m igration the
muscle contractions arc
prevented.
This prevents spasms
that close off the arteries.
This action on the muscles
In the walls of the arteries
also lowers blood pressure.
The calcium In your
bones Is calcium salt,
p a r t ic u la r ly c a lc iu m
phosphate. It will not be
affected In any way by
Procardia. I'm glad you
have had such success
with It.

WIN AT BRIDGE

ARIES (March 2 1 -April
19) Your mind readily re­
sponds today to new Ideas
which could, benefit your
family. Use your wisdom
to help sort good sugges­
tions from bad ones.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) You arc likely to be
both sociable and restless
today. Plan a schedule so
that you can drop in on a
number of friends for brief
visits.

NORTH
♦ A2
V A 74
*741

1- t M I

♦ KJSJ2
WEST

EAST

♦ QJI0I4

♦ 111
WQ to

f j i n

♦ KJ I
♦ I

* 10951
♦ Q 10 • 7
SOUTH
♦ K 71

V K15 2
GEMINI (May 2 1 -June
♦ AQ9
20) Normally you toss
♦ A 94
your Junk mall Into the
trash can. but today you’d
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
be w ise to s c a n an y
advertising materials. You
Wnl North Eon
Sooth
might spot a real bargain.
l NT
Paw J NT Pan
Pan
CANCER (June 2 1 -July
Pan
22) Your mind will be
receptive to new informa­
tion today. Don't fear to
Opening lead: +Q
ask questions. You may
learn something you could
put to a profitable use.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Opportunities un­
recognized by others are
By Oswald Jacob y
not likely to escape you
and Jam es Jacob y
today. You won't make a
D u p lica te Dave was
killing, but you could playing rubber bridge for a
make some small gains.
change. He arrived at a
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. normal no-trump game
22) Seek out companions and wasted no time In
today who share Interests going after overtricks. He
sim ilar to yours. Each won the spade lead In
could learn something of dummy, led a club to his
value from the other by ace and a second club
exchanging Ideas.
tow ard dum m y. W est

G A R F IE L D

by Bob Thaves

Dr.
Lamb

discarded the eight of
diamonds and all of a
su d d en th e e x p e c te d
o v c r tr ic k s had d isa p ­
peared into thin air. In
fact, while he might still
have brought home the
game, he wound up going
down.
He would not have had a
bad match point score.
The three no-trump con­
tract was a very normal
one and every declarer
would have takenslmple
club play to go after as
many ovcrtricks as possi­
ble.
An expert rubber bridge
player would have taken a
specialized club safety
play. The safety play Is
designed to make sure of
four club tricks against
anything but a 5-0 break.
expert attacks clubs by
playing dum m y's king
followed by a low club
toward his own hand. East
would play his eight and
South would finesse his
nine. East would then be
held to one club trick.
F or th e re co rd , the
e x p e r t r u b b e r p la y e r
would win Irst spade In his
own hand. He would re­
tain both major suit aces
in dummy, so that he can
set up and play the fifth
club.
b y J im C

cx&gt;ef He HAve

To SAg6te So EAPtY
IN THB M O ^ N lN S ?

M

'

TUM BLEW EEDS

SHE'S JUST KHOIVSARj

WHO]
IS ?,

HI THERE,
CttCHlE/

W H o f U t HO PHEf?CHIEF. ECHO LOST
JHAGICAI^ |S | Y ? i X 1HE C R A IN S ID HER COLORING
CLTiTiU I

LYING”
.T riE K E v

A N N IE

by T. K. Ryan

&gt;— , i

IG M AR IA

AA0UKD?

by Leonard
MAYBE YOU'D BETTER
HOT BOTHER HER.
COiOTE. SHE'S GOT
EH0UQH PROBLEMS/-

-WHAT WITH HER
I
HUSBAND GONE A N j
a

GLAAV ON TW/

J

0aM4W/SHES|sURE/BUT5HE
aOlN'T'HEED

.

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+2*

€
6 ''

WONT ACCEPT
any //

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Sept. 2», 1983—16

TONIGHT'S TV
apply prlmar and Bob VHa talks
about initaiim g an oak Boor and
land in g floor* (R |g

BKUiWA’l
even in g

835

8:00

OX BASEBALL Atlanta Brava* al
Houalon Alt rot

Q ® ® O ® 0
U W B J/ L O T O

n ew s

B:00
O (?) WE OOT IT MADE Mlckay'a
lata boura, flaahy wardrob* and
auddan waollb cauaa Jay and David
to bacoma auspicious
ID O
SIMON i SIMON (Saaaon
Pramlara) A J. and Rick try to dear
• maattr magician (Donald O'Con­
nor) chargad with murdaring a fal­
low Nluaioniai.
CD O S TO S (Saaaon Pramlara)
Hart taka a surprised VkAat to poaa
aa hit wtta at Mt coflaga raunlon.
© (3S) QUINCY
CD 00) JAZZ IN AMERICA “Olay
Olltaipla" Paquko d'R/vara, Ed
Sbarry, Vaiarta Capara, Tom Campball, Tom Madntoah, Mlchaal
Houma and Ray Brown )oln Dtay
Ginatpia in ■ four-tong aaaalon at
Conoartt by tha Saa In Radondo
Batch. Calif..

I wH uT * * ' * *
09 (•) On e

d a y a t a tim e

6 :0 5

UTTLE HOUSC OH THE PRM*.

8:30

0® N BCNEW S
(U O c s s NEWS
O ASCH EW Sg
(30) ALICE
|«)'WOO TIMES
7:00

O ®

p eo pled court

( I) O P M M AG AZIN E A profu* of
J«m*» D u n on the 28th annlver.
u r y of h it d aith . an Inlervtew urtth
Sm okey Robinton
CD O JO K E R 'S WILD
© (38) THE JE F F E R S O H S
f f l (10) B A R B A R A 'S P R O B LE M
0 O O S Barbara W oodtouee uaaa
twr aktfli ot undem anding and Iba
baale tachmqu* ot Arm control to
Improva Iba babavtor ot d o g i
CD (I) R O W A N S M A R TIN 'S
LAUQH-JN
7:05
©
CAR O L BURNETT
F R IE N D S .

AND

6:00

Pramlara) Hlgglna launchaa an
amargancy aaa mlaaion to raacua
Magnum, who ha* baan itrandad
m»a* from ahora by a atrong cur­
rant.
CD O TR A U M A CE N T E R Cuttar
part or m i amargancy aurgary on
atunt-aeddant victim Mown Mun­
io n (Doug Barry (Tha c a ll ot "Tha
F*8 Ouy" g u a a ta ig
(ID (36)HAWAII FIVE-0
CD (10) S N E A K PREVIEW S Naal
Gabiar and Jattray Lyona boat an
Intormattva look a l w hal's naw al

6:30

0 ® NBC NEWS AT SUNRISE
(J) O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING
(35) CASPER AND FRIENDS
(I) MORNING STRETCH

O

MOVIE "Woman At Watt
(1979) Linda Purl, Andrew
Stamna.

S

1:30

O ® NBC NOWS OVERNIGHT

8

2:30

O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
An Inlarvlaw with Laiiay-Ann*
Down on lha tat ot bar naw mini-

6:45

0

NEW8
(10) AM . WEATHER

) TOOAY
I CBS MORNING NEWS
I GOOD MORNING AMERICA
) (36) TOM AND JERRY
) (10) TO UFEI
J FUNTIME
(6) NEW ZOO REVUE

© MOVIE "Berlin Corratpondent" (1942) Dana Andrawa. Virginia
Ollmor*.

J 10^X)
® LOVE CONNECTION
O HOUR MAGAZINE
(35) FAV9LY
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
(A) 0D0 COUPLE

12:30

® SALE OF THE CENTURY
(10) OYE WILLIE
(!) CLASSIC COUNTRY

o ® SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(J) O THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
8 0 RYAN-8 HOPE
(35) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
O BENSON (R)

4:20

6:00

©

© MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

(35) BUOS

BUNNY

6:05

«

5.-00

(35| POPEYE ’
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

© I LOVE LUCY

0.00

12.00

Pramlara) Mama trie* lo aav* Bun
and Sonji i achool dano* whan lha
aoheduiad punk-rock band Iaka to
ahowup
CD (10) THIS OLD HOUSC The
house painter demonstrates how lo

®

O

TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.

Oonto and hH patiant (Dick Gau­
tier). an author ol tad-help books,
bacoma the target! ot death
threats. (R)

1. Who was Bjorn Borg’s
final opponent in the men's
singles championship at
Wimbledon In 1981? (a) Jim ­
my Connors (b) John McEn­
roe (c) Roscoe Tanner
2. In 1962, James Meredith
became the first black stu­
dent at what university? (a)
Harvard (b) University of
Mississippi (c) University of
Virginia
3. George C. Scott refused to
accept the Oscar he won (or
his role in what film? (a)
Patton (b) The Godfather (c)
R'-n-Hur

S iz e s 3 to 24V&gt;

Mastercard and Vita accaptad
Tha lotait fall.and holiday fashions
ar* arriving In a variety of stylas.
Wa ar* featuring! Ratty O'Neil outfits, O'Nall
Petllei, Kevin Stuart Polite*, Act lll/MIss Accent
for tha full figured tody; Condor and Jerell suits,
and o wide selection of sllk-llke blouses.

May t in a t lM
A LL SEA TS

Tnvm c
flLIUE»=

, Prlvst* AM. ar P.M. Sheeiag
- I j A ppaintmint Only

CALL 3234366

S at

101 A W

I I I S tre e l

and Corner of Park Avtnut.
Sanford. Florida

May.trail, until

QUILTS

25%
All 45

MUSLIN
Peg. $ 1 2 2 - 3 8 " Wide

88*

Per Yard

ENTIRE STOCK

DRAPERY FABRICS

20% OFF
321-2061

I
»

321-4440
DIN®Jj*,

15 M in u te P ic k -u p .

M

r

PINECREST SHOPPING CENTER (NEXT TO JEWEL T)
27th &amp; 17-92
PH. 323-0180
323 0180
SANFORD

£

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M.-7 P.M.
SUN. 11 A.M.-4 P.M.

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CALIFORNIA

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Sam and Olana't nawty altriad
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A man (Kan Howard) and bit aiwtta (Cartana Watklna). who I* now
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"Tew ard Tha
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Lloyd Nolan

SUCED

�4 B — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Sept. 29, 19IJ

Conviction May Intensify
Probe Of Teamster Chief
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Government attorneys say the
embezzlement conviction of Allen Friedman for collectinn a union salary without working may spur a more
Intensive Investigation of his nephew. Teamster presi­
dent Jackie Prcsscr.
Friedman. 6?.. who was listed ns n business agent lor
Presser s Cleveland Local 507. was convicted Wednes­
day by a U.S. District Court Jury on four counts ul
embezzlement.
Prcsscr, who Is a target ol the investigation. Is still
secretary-treasurer of Local 507. He has repeatedly
denied'any wrongdoing.

Legal Notice
N O TICE O F A P U B L IC H E A R IN G
TO CO N SID ER T H E A DO PTIO N OF
A N O R D IN A N C E B Y T H E C IT Y OF
SA N FO R D . F LO R ID A
N olle* I* hereby given thal *
Public Hearing w ill be held s i The
Commission Room In Hie City H e ll In
the C ity ot Sanford, Florida. at 7:00
o’clock P M . on October 10. 1193. to
consider the adoption ol an ordl
nance by the C ity o l Santord,
Florida, as lot lows:
O R D IN A N C E NO. HS1
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C ITY
O F S A N F O R D . F L O R I D A , TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H E CO R
P O R A T E A R E A O F TH E CIT Y O F
SA N FO R O . F LO R ID A . UPON
A DO PTIO N O F SAID O R D IN A N C E .
A PO RTIO N O F T H A T C E R T A IN
P R O P E R T Y L Y IN G N O RTH O F
A N D A B U T T IN G L A K E M A R Y
B O U L E V A R D A N D W EST O F SIR
L A W R E N C E D R IV E . SAID P R O
P E R T Y B E I N G S I T U A T E D IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
IN A C C O R D A N C E W IT H T H E
V O L U N T A R Y A N N E X A T IO N
PRO VISIO N S O F SECTIO N 17L044,
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S : P R O V ID
ING FO R S E V E R A B IL IT Y . CON
F LIC T S. AN D E F F E C T I V E D A T E
W H E R E A S , there has been Hied
with the City Clerk ot the C ity ot
Santord, Florida, petitions contain
Ing the names o l the property owners
In the area described hereinafter
requesting annexation to the cor
porate are* o l the C ity ot Santord
Florida, and requesting to be In
eluded therein; and
W H E R E A S , th e P r o p e r ly
A p p r a is e r o l S e m in o le Coun ty,
F lorida, having certified that there
are lour owners In the are* to be
annexed. and thal said property
owners have signed the Petition for
Annexation, and
W HEREAS
It h a s been de
termlned that the property described
hereinafter is reasonably compact
and contiguous to tha corporate
areas ot the C ity o l Santord. Florida,
and It has further been determined
that the an n e ie lio n ol sold property
w ill not result in the creellon o l an
enclave; and
W H E R E A S , the C ity ot Sentord,
Florida. Is In a position to provide
m unicipal sarvlces to tha properly
d e s c rib e d h e re in , end the C ity
Commission of the City o l Sentord,
Florida, deems It In the best interest
o l the C ity to eccept said petition and

to annex said property
N O W , T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
E N A C T E D B Y T H E P E O P L E OF
TH E C I T Y OF S A N F O R D .
F L O R ID A
SECTIO N 1; Thai the property
described below situated In Seminole
County. Florida, be and Ihe same Is
hereby anneied to and made a part
o l ihe C ity ot Santord. Florida,
pursuant to the voluntary anneiation
provisions ot Section 171 Oss. F lorida
Statutes
NW
ol SW
o l SW '4 A N D W ■»
of the SW '4 ol SW U ol SW &gt;4 A N D
E *» ol SW &lt;4 ot SW ‘A of SW ’ 4 A L L
L Y IN G IN See 10. Twn 70 S, Rng »
E , Seminole County. Florida
SECTIO N 7: That upon this Ordl
nance becoming effective, the pro
party owners and any resident on the
property described herein shall be
entitled to *11 the rights and p rlvl
leges and Immunities as are from
tim e to lim e granted to residents and
p rop e rty owners o l the C ity ot
Santord. Florida, and as are further
provided In Chapter 171, F lorida
Statutes, and shall further be sub le d
to the responsibilities ot residence or
ownership as may Irom tim e to lim e
be determ ined by the governing
authority ol the City ot Santoro.
Florida, and the provisions ot said
Chapter 171. Florida Statutes
SECTION 1 It any section or
portion ol a section ot this Ordinance
proves to be Invalid, unlawful or
unconstitutional, It shall not be held
to invalidate or im p air the validity,
lore* or ettect ot any section or part
o l this Ordinance
SECTIO N 4 Thai all Ordinances
or parts ol Ordinances In conllict
herew ith, be and the same are
hereby repealed,
SECTIO N 5: That this Ordinance
shell become effective Immediately
upon Its passage and adoplion
A copy shall be available at the
O I K * ot the C ity Clerk lo r all
persons desiring to exam ine the
same
A ll parties In Interest and citirens
shall have an opportunity to be heard
at said hearing
By order ot the C ity Comission ot
the C ity el San lor d. F tor i da
H.N Tamm, Jr,
City Clerk
P ub lish September 15. 77. 7* A
October 4, m i
O E L 15

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
N O TICE OF A P U B LIC H E A R IN G
TO CO N SIO ER T H E ADO PTIO N OF
AN O R D IN A N C E B Y T H E C IT Y OF
SA N FO R D . F L O R ID A
Notice Is horeby given that a
P ublic Hearing w ill be held at the
Com m ission Room in the City H all In
the C ity ot Santord, Florida, at 7 00
o'clock P M , on October 10, 1991, to
consider the adoption ot an ordl
na nce by Ihe C ity o l Santord.
Florida, as follows
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1457
AN O R D IN A N C E O F TH E CIT Y
O F S A N F O R O . F L O R I D A . TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H E COR
P O ftA T C A R E A O F T H E C IT Y OF
S A N FO R D . F LO R ID A . UPO N
AD O PTIO N O F SAID O R D IN A N C E .
A PO RTIO N OF TH AT C E R T A IN
P R O P E R T Y L Y IN G B E T W E E N
19TH S T R E E T A N D I9TH S T R E E T
E X T E N D E D E A S T E R L Y A N D BE
TW EEN M U L B E R R Y A V E N U E
AND O L E A N D E R A V E N U E
E X T E N D E D S O U T H E R L Y ; SAID
P R O P E R T Y B E IN G SIT U A T E D IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F LO R ID A .
IN A C C O R D A N C E W IT H T H E
V O L U N T A R Y A N N E X A T IO N
PRO VISIO N S O F SECTIO N 171 044.
F LO R ID A 5 T A T U T E S
P R O V ID
ING FO R S E V E R A B I L I T Y CON
F LIC T S. A N D E F F E C T I V E D AT E
W H E R E A S , there has been Hied
with the C ity Clerk ot the C ity ol
Santord. Florida, petitions contain
Ing Ihe names o l the property owners
in the area described hereinafter
requesting annexation to Ihe cor
porate area ol the C ity o l Santord.
Florida, and requesting to be In­
cluded therein; and
W H E R E A S , th e P r o p e r t y
A p p r a is e r o l S e m in o le Co un ty,
Florida, having certified thal there
are two owners In the area to be
annexed, and that said properly
owners have signed the Petition lor
Annexation, and
W H E R E A S , It h as been de
termlned thal the property described
hereinafter is reasonably compact
and contiguous to the corporate
areas o l the C ity of Sanford. Florida,
and It has further been determined
that Ihe annexation ol said property
w ill not result In the creation o l an
enclave; and
W H E R E A S , the City of Sanford.
Florida. Is In a position to provide
m unicipal services to Ihe property
d e sc rib e d h e rein , and Ihe C ity
Commission ol Ihe C ity ot Santord,
Florida, deems It In the best interest
ol the City to accept said petition and
toannex said property.
N O W , T H E R E F O R E , B E IT
E N A C T E D B Y T H E P E O P L E OF
TH E CITY OF S A N F O R O .
F L O R ID A
SECTIO N I: Thai the property
described below situated In Seminole
County. Florida, be and the same is
hereby anneied to and made a part
ot the C ity ot Sanford. Florida,
pursuant to the voluntary annexation
provisions of Section 171.044, F lorida
Statutes:
Lot 10. Block A. M M Sm ith’s 7nd
Subdivision, es recorded In P la t Book
I. Page 101. P u b lic Records ol
Seminole County. F lorida
SECTION 7 That upon this Ordl
nance becoming effective, the pro
perty owners and any resident on the
property described herein shell be
entitled to a ll the rights and p rlv l
leges and im m unities as era Irom
tim e to lin e granted to residents and

p ro p e rty ow ners ot the C ity o l
Santord. Florida, and as are further
provided In Chapter 171, F lorida
Statutes, and shall further be iu b | td
to Ihe responsibilities ol residence or
ownership as may Irom lim e to time
be determ ined by the governing
authority o l fh* C ity of Santord.
Florida, and the provisions ot said
Chapter 171, Florida Statutes
SECTIO N 1 It any section or
portion ol a section ol this Ordinance
proves to be invalid, unlawful or
unconstitutional. It shall not be held
to Invalidate or Im pair the validity,
lore* or ettect o l any section or part
ot th it Ordinance
SECTIO N 4 That all Ordinances
or p a rti o! Ordinances In co nllict
herew ith, be and the sam e are
her rb y repealed.
SE C T IO N 5: That this Ordinance
shall become effective im m ediately
upon Its passage and adoption
A copy shall be available at the
O ffice ot the C ity Clerk for all
persons d esiring to exam ine the
same
A ll parties In Interest and d llte n s
shall have an opportunity to be heard
at said hearing
By order o l the C ity Com ission ot
the City of Santord. Florida
M N Tamm, Jr.
C ity Clerk
P u b lish September 15. 77. 7» A
October*, 1993
D E L 14
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT FOR
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
File Number 15 410 CP
tN R E : E S T A T E OF
D AW N E A S T E R KID D Y ,
a/k/a DAW N E K ID D Y ,
Deceased
N O TICE OF A D M IN IST R A T IO N
The adm inistration of Ihe estate ot
D A W N E A S T E R K IO O Y . a / k /a
DAW N E KIO O Y . deceasrd. File
No IJ 410 CP. Is pending In the
C irc u it Court lo r Seminole County.
F lo r id a , P r o b a le D iv is io n , the
address of which 1s North Park
Avenue, Sanford. F L 17771 The
names and addresses ot Ihe personal
represantatlv* and 'he personal rep
resentatlve’s attorney are set forth
below
A ll Interested persons are required
to tile with this court. W ITHIN
T H R E E M O N T H S OF TH E FIR ST
P U B L IC A T IO N -O F THIS NOTICE
( 1) a ll claim s against the estate and
(II any objection by an Interested
person to whom this notice was
m ailed thal challenges the validity ol
the w ill, the qualifications ol ihe
personal representative, venue, or
jurisdiction ot the court.
A L L C L A IM S A N O O B JE C T IO N S
NOT SO F IL E D W IL L B E F O R E V
ER BARRED
P u b lica tio n o l this Notice has
begun on September 79.1993
Personal Representative:
I V Jettrey Kiddy
10719 Tlerra Santa Boulevard
San Diego. CA 97174
Attorney tor Personal
Representatives
/S ' Bruce Stone
ot H O L L A N D 1 K N IG H T
Post Office Box 015441
M ia m i. F L 1)101
Telephone (305) 374 1507
Publish September 79 A October *.
19*1
D E L 149

N O TICE
N O T IC E IS hereby given pursuant
tp Section 75] 115. F lorida Statutes,
that the Board o l Trustees ol the
Internal Improvement T r u ll Fund
has received an application (No.
59045)554). Irom B o n ilre Develop
ment Company, Inc., ot 101 Wymore
Road. Suit* 504. Altam onte Springs.
F lo rid a 17701. lor a submerged land
teas* by the Trustees of 7.750 square
leel. more or less, ot state owned
submerged land appurtenant to th tlr
ripa rian ownership on Lake Howell.
Section 71, Township 31 South. Range
10 East. Seminole County. Florida,
lor the purpose o l constructing a
recreational docking fa cility, for us*
by tha r t i l d a n l i o l tha upland
condominium
Anyone h a vin g any questions,
comments, or concerns regarding
the leasing ot this slate owned tub
merged land should file them In
w riting w ith the Bureau ol Slat*
Lands Management. Department ol
N a t u r a l R e to u rc a s , 1900 Com
m onweallh Boulevard, Tallahassee.
Florida 13301, on or before 5:00 p m.
on Ihe ) 4th day ot October. 1993
P u b lis h S e p te m b e r 17. 79 and
October 4.1993
D E L I E __________________________
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F ile Number 9) 447 C P
DIVISION P R O B A T E
IN R E ; E S T A T E O F
RETM AB M U FFLEY.
Deceased
N O TICE O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The adm inistration o l the estate ol
R E T H A B M U F F L E Y . deceased.
F ile No t] 447 C P . it pending In the
C irc u it Court tor Seminole County.
F lo r id a . P ro b a te D iv is io n , the
address ol which It Seminole County
Courthouse. Santord. Florid*. 73771.
The name and addresses ol the
p ersonal rep rese ntative and Ihe
personal representative's attorney
are set torth below
A L L C L A IM S A N O O B JE C T IO N S
NOT SO F I L E D W ILL B E F O R E V
ER BARREO
A ll interested persons are required
to Hie with this court. W ITHIN
T H R E E M O N T H S OF T H E FIR ST
P U B L IC A T IO N O F THIS N O TICE:
It) a ll c la lm i against the estate and
(3) any objection by an Interested
person to whom this notice was
m ailed lhat challenges the v alid ity ol
the w ill, the qualifications of the
personal represenlallve, venue, or
jurisdiction ol the court
Oal* ol the first publication at this
notice o l adm inistration: September
33.19*3
/*/ B illy Sunday Kennedy
Personal Representative
Attorney tor Personal
Represenlallve
D O U G LA S ST E N ST R O M .
E S Q U IR E .o l
ST E N ST R O M . M d N T O S H . JU L IA N .
C O L B E R T A W H IG H AM . P A
P O Box 1)30
Santord, F L 37777 1330
Telephone: 1)05) 373 3171
Publish September 77.79.1911
D E L 107

- F L O R ID A *

ARRIVE ALIVE
_ SUNSHINE S T A T E .

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4

The rare for the Five Slar Conference loolball title Is wide ojien as county teams
Iwglti the fourth week of action. Seminole's stunning upset of Lake Howell last
week created a fervor In the ronferrnre. Lake Howell had been the favorite of
the coaches In a preseason poll.
Seminole. 2-1. goes fur Its third strulghl win Friday when II travels lo
Daytona licacli Mainland. Lake Howell, 2-1, will try to get bark on the winning
trail at borne against the Injury-riddled DcLand Bulldogs.
Hul the biggest game county-wise will be A Lake Mary where the Hams will
dedicate their new stadium against Lyman. Lake Mary. 1-1. looked Impressive
against DcLand In Its opener, then got blown away by Lake Brantley last week.
The Patriots, 2 -1, arc idle Friday.
Lyman. 1-2. lost two tough games to Metro Conference foes Boone and
Colonial. The Greyhounds handled Lake Brantley between the two losses.
Oviedo, meanwhile, will try lo even Its record* at 2-2 at home against
Leesburg The Lions whipped St. Cloud last Friday.
E v e n in g H e ra ld Sports Kdltor Sain Cook will have all the ucllon on the Lake
Mary-Lyman dash while Sports Writer Chris Flstcr will cover the action
between Seminole and Mainland at Daytona Beach.
Catch It all In Sunday s £ veiling H e ra ld — the only complete spoils section In
Seminole County.

Start Your Subscription Today, Call

Evening Herald
322-2611

831-9993

Legal Notice
'N O T I C E o f a p u b l i c h e a r i n o
TO C O N SIO E R T H E AD O P T IO 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 O , F L O R ID A
N otice It hereby given that a
P u b lic Hearing w ill be held *1 the
C o m m lu lo n Room in the C ity H a ll In
the C ity ot Sanford. F lorida, at 7:00
o'clock P.M . on October 10. t f t l, to
co n ild e r the adoption of an ordl
na nce by th e C ity ot Sa n tord .
F lorida , a t fol low):
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1454
A N 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 I D A . TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H E CO R
P O R A T E A R E A O F T H E C IT Y OF
SA N FO R D , F LO R ID A . UPO N
A D O P T IO N O F SAID O R D IN A N C E .
A P O R T IO N O F T H E P R O P E R T Y
L Y IN G B E T W E E N F I F T H S T R E E T
AN D JE W E T T LA N E AN D BE
T W E E N A IR P O R T B O U L E V A R D
A N O J E R R Y A V E N U E ; S A ID
P R O P E R T Y B E IN G S IT U A T E D IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A .
IN A C C O R D A N C E W IT H T H E
VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION
PRO V ISIO N S O F SE C T IO N 171044.
F L O R I D A S T A T U T E S : P R O V ID
IN G F O R S E V E R A B I L I T Y . CON
F LIC T S . A N D E F F E C T I V E D A T E .
W H E R E A S , there hat been tiled
with Ihe City C lerk ot Ihe C ity ol
Sanlord, F lorida, p e llllo n i contain­
ing Ihe name) of the property owner!
In the area deicrlbe d hereinafter
requeuing annexation to the co r­
porate area ot th^ C ity ot Santord.
F lorida , and requeuing lo be In
eluded therein; and
W H E R E A S , the P r o p e r l y
A p p r a lie r ol S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lorida , having certified that there
are two ow n eri in the area to be
annexed, and thal M id property
ow n eri have ilg n ed the Petition lor
Annexation, and
W H E R E A S . It h a t b een d*
termlned that the property d eicrlbe d
hereinafter l i reaionably compact
and co n llg u o u i to the corporate
a re a i of the C ity o l Santord, F lorida,
and It h a i further been determined
that tha annexation o l la id property
w ill not retult In the creation o l an
enclave; and
W H E R E A S , the C ity of Senlord.
F lorida. I i In a p otlllo n lo provide
m unicipal le rv lc e t to th* property
d e ic r lb e d h e re in , and th* C ity
C o m m lu lo n of th* C ity ol Santord.
Florida, deem) It In th* b elt Ifiler e ll
ol th* C ity to eccept la id petition and
to annex la id property.
N O 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 O F
TH E C I T Y OF S A N F O R D ,
F LO R ID A :
SE C T IO N I: Thai th* property
d eicrlbed below tllu a le d In Seminole
County. Florida, be and th* u r n * Ii
hereby annexed to and mad* a part
ot th# C ity of Sanlord, F lorida ,
p un ua nt to th* voluntary annexation
p ro v ltlo n i o l Section 171.044, Florida
Statute*:
SW W o l B lk 70 M M
Sm ith'!
SubdlvIUon, P la t Book I Pag* 55.
P u b lic Record* ol Seminole County,
F lo rid a
SE C T IO N 3: That upon th li O rdl
nance becoming effective, th* pro
perty owner! end any retldent on tha
property d eicrlbe d herein th a ll be
entitled to a ll th* right* and p rlv l
leget and Im m u n lllei a t are Irom
lim e to lim a granted to rtU d e n ti and
p ro p e rty owner* o l th* C ity ol
Sanlord. F lorida , and a t are further
provided In Chapter 171. Florida
Statute*, and that I further be iub|*ct
to the reip on ilb ltltle* o l reildenc* or
Ownerihlp a t m ay Irom lim e lo lim e
be determ ined by th* governing
authority ol th* C ity ol Sanlord.
F lorida, and th* p ro v ltlo n i ol la id
Chapter 171, F lo rid a Statute*
SE C T IO N 7: II *nr lection or
portion o l a lectio n ol Ihtt Ordinance
p ro v tt to be Invalid, unlawful Or
unconUltuftonal, It th a ll not be held
to Invalidate o r Im pair th* valid ity,
lore* or effect ot any tec Hon or part
ot Ih iiO rd inanca.
SECT IO N 4: That a ll Ordinance!
or p a rti of Ordinance* In conflict
herew ith, be and tha ta m e are
hereby repealed
SECTIO N 5: That th lt Ordinance
th a ll become effective Immediately
upon lit p atia ge and adoption.
A copy th a ll be availab le at the
O flic* o l the C ity C le rk lo r a ll
per ion* d e ilrln g to exam ine th*
Mm*
A ll parti** In interetl and d t lt e n i
th a ll have an opportunity to be hoard
at M id hearing
By order ot th* C ity C o m liU on o l
the C ity ot Sanford. Florida
H.N. Tamm. Jr.
C ity Clerk
P u b lith September IS. 77. 79 A
October*. 1993
O E L 14

I N T H E C IR C U I T COURT
E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
C IR C U IT C IV IL NO. 9 1 147ACA-94 P
IN R E T H E M A R R IA O E O F
W IL L IA M A N T H O N Y
H uiband/Pefltloner
and
F R A N C E S P .A N T H O N Y
W lfe/Retpcndent
N O T IC E O F ACTIO N
TO: F R A N C E S P A N T H O N Y
1033 Llpplncott Street
North Woodbury. N J 09094
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D lh a t a
Petition tor 01*1010*100 ot M arriag e
ha* baen tiled and you a r t required
to **rv* a copy ot your wrlttan
detenia*. II any, lo It on C. C A L V IN
H O R V A T H . E S Q U IR E . 1499 Lee
R o u t, S u lla 770, W ln lt r P a r k .
Florida 37799 on or be Iore th* 341h
day of October, 1997 and Ilia tha
o rig inal with tha Clark o l tha Court
allho r before to rvlca on Petitioner’ *
Attorney or Immediately thereafter;
o th e r* I»* a default w ill be entered
ag ain tt you for tha relief demanded
In th* petition.
W IT N ESS m y hand and tha teal ol
thl* C o u rt on th a I t lh d ay of
September, 1993.
(S E A L )
A rth ur H. Beckwith. Jr.
A t C lerk of th* Court
By P a tric io Roblnton
A t Deputy Clerk
P u b lit h S a p lt m b a r 77. I f an d
October*. II. 1991
D E L 179

N O T IC E U N D E R FICT IT IO U S
N A M E STATUTE
TO W H O M I T M A Y C O N C E R N ;
Notice I* hereby given that tha
u n d t r ilg n e d , p u n u a n t to th a
"F k tltlo u * Nam* Statute," Chapter
945 09, F lo rid a Statutai. w ill re g life r
with th* C irc u it Court. In and lor
Seminole County, Florida, upon re
caipt o l prool o l th* publication ot
Ih it nolle*, th* (Ic tlllo u t name,
lo wit:
Brook* Development Company, a
co pertnerih lp .
under which we expect to engage In
b u i l n a n In S a m ln o l* C o u n ty ,
Florida.
That th* p a rtia l Inlerattad In la id
bu lin e n enter pr 1le ar* a t fol low*:
Kenneth S B ro u it
KennxthS Brookt. Jr.
A lb ert C. Brook*
O a l t d a t S a n lo r d , S a m ln e la
County, F lorida, September 17, t f f l
B#n|amln T. Shuman
Attorney A t Law
411 N Pin* H UH Road
Orlando. Florida 7790*
P u b lith September l|, 73. If, A
October 4.119)
D E L 71

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

.

Orlando * Winter Park

'322-2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A .M . — 3:30 P.M .
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
S A TU R D A Y 9 - Noon

831-9993

RATES

Mime
5&lt;c • lln*
3 consecutive limes Sec line
7 consecutive times . 4Sc line
to consecutive times 42c line
SI.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

a
a
a

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

12—Legal Services
Bankrupcy S230. and Chapter 13
|4t0. Free conference. Attorney
M . Price. F o r Appt. 477 7997.
C U R L E Y R .D O L T IE
A T T O R N E Y A T LA W
101 B W i lt Street
Sanlord Fla. 37771 373 9000

25—Special Notices
N tw Off let now opening.
VORW ERK
1I30W l it SI
R E W A R D lo r c o n t tn lt ito le n .
9/17/93. 314 M a g n o lia A v a .
P te u e ca ll 377 *779____________
G atling M a rrie d !
te llin g wedding dret* B ring*.
B e it e lt e r l.C a ll 371 last.

31— Private
Instructions
e O K IN A W A N K A R A T i*
eaaeUECHIRYU*****
C la n Into. Jack Daley. 799-9997.

33—Real Estate
Courses
BOB B A L L J R SCHOOL OF
R E A L ESTATE.
L O C A L R E B A T E S 313 4 tIt
M A S T E R C H A R G E OR VISA
T H E D A Y S M A Y B E G E T T IN G
cooler, but the C la u lfle d Ad* are
H ill H otl.

45—Arts &amp; Crafts
A rt Cl* 1M l I Adult* and Chi Idrtnl
Supply* tor Pre. and H eb b ytitl 11
l i t S. Hwy. 477 B lk . Savth 454
A R T T E B I O R t* a a *379-3197
O R I G I N A L P A I N T I N O t . Com
m illio n * , p o rtro ltl; M lcheal W
Ger lovlch. o rflit. photographer,
fre e la n c e c o m m e rc ia l a r t lit .
w all m u rlalt. decorator. |uror,
art coniultant, lecture*, private
le t ton* Any »ub|*ct medium or
Ityt*. P riv a te thow lngt by *p
pointm enl only. Phone 353 0517.
• Pro tentorial A r f lit Charcoal a
Or P attel Anim a l Portrait*.
IB Y e e rt e x * f b . 4 t * ie t ll la n ia rd . *

Legal Notice
L E G A L N O T IC E TO
A R C H IT E C T S , P R O F E S S IO N A L
E N G IN E E R S , R E G I S T E R E D
L A N O SU RVEYO RS
Public Ann eu nctm tfll
Con »tr vet ton Prefect*
Th* School Board of Seminole
County. In Com pliance with Contul
le n t* C o m p e t it iv e N e g o tia t io n
Act Chapter 75 791. doe* declare fh*
Intention to c trttty firm * o r Individu
a l l at Coniultant* o r to perform
tarvlce* lo r protect* beginning In th*
1993 94 u h o o l year.
To b* eligible lor contideratlon. all
inlerattad firm * m utt be certified by
the School Board o l Seminole County
a* qualified, purtuant to Coniultant*
Com petitive Negotiation* Act. and
regulation* ofth* Board (F orm 154)
Any llr m or Individual d e ilrln g to
provide profettlonal te rv lc e t lor th*
School Board o l Seminole County
th a ll apply In w riting tor conild
era llo n w ith a letter ol Interetl
deter Iblng th* firm '*
a. C ap ab ility*
b Adequacy ot Pertonnel
c. P a it Record
d Location
a. Recent, current and projected
work load
I. W illin g n e u to meet tim e and
budget requirement*
g. V olum e o l w ork p rev lo u tly
•warded to the firm by Ihe Board
TO B E E L IG IB L E FO R CONSID
ERATION ALL APPLICANTS
M U S T B E R E G I S T E R E D IN TH E
S T A T E OF F L O R I D A TO
P R A C T IC E T H E IR P R O F E S S IO N
A T T H E T IM E OR A P P L IC A T IO N
A P P L I C A T I O N W IT H O U T T H E
D A T E D E S C R IB E D W IL L B E CON
.S ID E R E D I M P R O P E R . E A C H
F IR M W IL L SU B M IT A G E N E R A L
S E R V IC E S A P P L IC A T IO N F O R M
154 A N D A P E R S O N A L L E T T E R O F
I N T E R E S T TO P E R F O R M
S E R V IC E S .
F irm * In fe retted In p ro v id in g
tarvlce* m ay apply d ire ctly to the
S u p e rin te n d e n t'* O lllc e a t l i l t
M ello n v ill* Avenue. Santord. F lorida
17771. Application* w ill ba received
between the h o u ri of I 00 A M and
4 00 P M , until 1 00 P M . October
70. 1991 Th* School Board w ill
co nild e r only firm * lhat apply and
ar* certified by the Board lor th*
1993 94 K h o o l year. Th* lollow ing
project* are anticIpalad
N tw M id d le School X and Varlou*
M ltcallanaou* Pro|*c'» Including a
New Maintenance and T ram porta
lio n F a c ility .
Dated thi* 701h day o l September.
1993
IV Roland V. W illiam *,
Chairm an
IV Robert W. Hugh**,
Superintendent
P u b lit h : S a p ltm b a r 33. 79 and
October 4.111997
D E L - 179________________________
N O T IC E O F IN T E N T IO N
T O R E O IST E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N lhat
th * u n d t r i l g n t d i n d iv id u a l* ,
p un ua nt to th* tktIHou* name *lat
Ufa. Sec I‘on 995 09. Florida Statute*,
d a iire to engage In b u tin e u at i l 44
Duncan D rive. C a u e lb e rry , Florida
317C9. with b u tin e u baing conducted
In Orange and Seminole County*,
under Ihu lol low ing tlctltiou* name
SA A A D V E R T IS IN G A G E N C Y
Upon receipt o l proof ot public*
Han o l Ih it notice, th* un dtrilgn ed
w ill re g ltle r »uch llc tiflo u t name
with th* Clark of tha C irc u it Court ol
Sem lnoy County, Florida
Dated th lt 9th day o l Septem ber
1993
David B Arm ttrgng
Dorothy M A rm ttrong
P u b lit h : S a p ltm b a r 37. 79 and
October*. 13.1991
D ELH I

55— Business
Opportunities
For Sal* Sm all Paper Route.
C all alter 5 P M
____________373 4477____________
4 * * 4 U R O T IL E * • • •
Men needed to le trn new trade I
High profit m ergln. 379 3531.

59—Investment Brokers
Cyprei* Clock and Wood Manufac
turer need Inveitor or inveUor*.
911.000 - 170.000 tecured above
average return C onlacl Robert
Rowe 331 3430

43—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold
• CASH F O R M O R T O A O E S *
We buy l lr t l and lecond mortgage)
on
home*, from Individual*,
builder*, broker*, and real etlate
com pany* W* alto make home
owner loan* tor home Improv
men I and b ill consolidation Call
uft and let irt make you an offer!
B a r b a r a C r a w lo r d 133 1410
II you collect p iy m e n tt Irom a l i r i l
or lecond mortgage on property
you to ld , we w ill b u y the
mortgage you are now holding
791 1399

71—Help Wanted
A S I E M B L E R S .....*............ 11*4 Wk
M echan ically inclined, ttrong You
can re a lly go placet with Ihl*
company
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
735 1174
A t t liU n t Service Manager Expe
r y n e td B uty garag* Excellent
working condition) 103 574 17*4
A V O N C H R IST M A S WOWII
ST A R T S E L L IN G NOWII
133 9439 e r l l l l l l l
Avon Ladle* F u ll, p * rl Tim e over
It Sanlord. Wavhlngton Oak*
M idw ay A Geneva 373 4193
* • * Bookkeeper* * •
F u ll charge thru profit and lo u
U altm e n t C o m p u y r experience
Polygraph te tl required Apply'
31th and P a rk Park and *hop
Carpel d r a n i r t wanted Expert
•need preferred, but not necei
la r y F u ll or part tim e 331 0051

CO N STRU CTIO N
W ORKERS
Should have Home Building t i p t
I rlence
.. .
i n . . .
N CVtA A FIE

A b le s t
Temporery Pence**
Won . lue* ( W*d
900200
J0 0 Y w « fr« S i in e gth -p B * "* B u tts;!
Santord 321 3940

leg al Notice

**
F k tltlo u i Name
•
Notice It hereby given that I a n f
engaged In b u tin e u at *07 W lin e
St . Sanford. F la 17771, Sem inoiC
County. Florida under the IlclitiouC
name ot H A IR NOW, and that [
Intend to re g lite r la id name with th *
C lerk ot the C ircuit Court. Seminol^
County. F lo rid a in accordance w ith
the provltlo nt ol the Fictitiou* Nam e
Statute*, to W it: Se ctio n 9*5 09
F lo rid a Statute* 1*37
I V M e rle B Reeve
J
P u b lith September 79 A October 4 f
17.70.1993
*
D E L It*
__________________________4
F tc litio u l N tm t
Notice l l hereby given that I am
engaged In b u tin e u at 1014 Sun* a
R d , Winter P ark 13797, Sem inol*
County. Florida under the lictltlo u k
nam e ol H O M E E X C H A N G E
S E R V IC E , and that I Intend to
r tg t U tf la id nama with the Clerk ot
the C ircu it Court. Sem lnoy County,
F lo rid a In accordance with the pro
vltlon* ot the Fictitiou* Nem* Stat
utet. to Wit: Section 945 09 Florida
S la tu y * 1957
IV Ed ith E n lw lit y
P u b lith September 79 A October 4
17.10.1997
D E L 1*7
FIctlHev* N in e
•
Notice i* hereby given thal I am
engaged In b u tin e u *1 7014 Suttex
R d . Winter P ark 37793. Seminole
County. Florida under the ficfltlo u f
name ot T H E PM O TO W O RKS, arid
that I intend lo regitter ta id name
with the Clerk o l th* C ircu it Court,
Sem inole County, F lo rid a In ac
cordance with th* p rovltlo nt ol th*
F ictitiou * Nem e Statute*, to WII
Section941 09 Florida Statute* 1957
IV Edith E n lw lit y
P u b lith September 79 A October 4r
11. 70. 1991
O E L 141

F k t lty v * Name
Notice I* hereby given the! I err
engaged In builntu *1 901 11 S
Wymore Rd , Altam onte Spring*. F I
33714. Sem lnoy County, F lo rid a un
d t r tha tlctltiou * nam e of SUk
SEASO N S P U B L IS H IN G , and lhat 1
Intend to regitter taid name with th*
C yrk of 'he C ircu it Court. Seminol*
Cuunty, F lo rid * In accordance w ilt
the p ro v ltio n i ot Ihe F k t lllo u i Nam*
Statute*, to W it: Se ctio n 4*3 01
F lo rid a Statute* 1957
IV P r ltc a lla G lo rr o
P u b lith September | j. 13, 79 a
O ctober*. 1993
D E L 79

Flclltyut Name
Notice It hereby given that I at
engaged in b u tin e u at l i t Alrpoi
B lv d . Sanlord. F la 11771. Seminol
County. F lo rid a under Ih* fk lilto c
name o l H O RIZO N A C C E P T A N C
C O . and that I Inland to regitter t*i
name with th* Clerk o l the Clreg
Court, Sem lnoy County, Florida i
accordance with tha pro v ltlo n t ol th
F k t ltlo u t Nam e Statute*, to WII
Section 195 09 Florida Statute* 1957
/*/ Robert Rem ut
P u b lith Sep It m her 15, 11. 79 ,
October 4. |«g]
D E L 10

�71—Help Wanted
Convenient* Stor* Assistant M a n ­
a g e r. fu ll tim e . M atu ra. r*.
ipon»ibl* perton needed. Nights
end weekend day*. Peid inturance, profit sharing, polygraph
A p p ly Ideal Food Store. MO
Upaaia R d . a A M io lP M
„ . Sa* Manager.
C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E .... M M Hr.
P a r i tim e, weekends and e v tn ln g i
E n | o y p u b lic c o n la c f a n d
lup p llm en l your Income.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
3 » 517*
D E L I V E R Y ...............................l i t
H e re 'i your chancel Good driving
record, knowledge of th lt area a
plut. Fan laiflco p p ortu n ity!
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
335 117*

W A R E H O U S E W O R K E R S M any
opening*, full lim e, good tfartlng
pay. C a ll Immediately. *7* 40*4

• ••W ELDER***
* * * * *$77-4711* * e * e

73—Employment
Wanted
E n g llth Tutor, tlh to 17th grade.
B e tlc gram m ar A compotition.
__________Call $7? 70St.__________
H o u te k e e p e r an d A p a r tm e n t
cleaning. Bachelor* only. White.
bonded very reliable. 77$ *7*0.

E a rn E it r a Money. P art/T lm *
Full/TIme
P r e p a id L e g a l
Service* Call Don, *7*34*7
F A C T O R Y W O R K E R S . Immediate
opening*. H igh wage* Some w ill
train. C a lltT t 40*..
O A L FR ID A Y ..
..11M Wk
A ccurate typing, general o lllc*
background. Permanent career
w it h t h l t l i a b l e c o m p a n y .
Excellent b en llltt
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
333 lit *
H E A L T H FO O D D E A L E R S H IP S
availab le Nut Shack I* looking for
ambltlou* neat appearing, outgo
Ing Individual*. to operate retail
outlet* In area Flea Market*
G reat Income opportunity. M u tt
have reliable trantporlalloh and
m utt be able to work weekend*
Contact Terry *04 U S 1771
a l t e r i P M _____________________
L a n d tc a p e rt E ip e rle n c a wanted,
but w ill train. F u ll time. V alid
Driver* llcente required.
____________m m i . ____________

91—Apartments/
House to Share
Woman with ton would Ilk* room
a n d b o a rd w ith e ld e r ly In
eichang* for houtekeeplng. »r
rand* and companlonthlp. Ph
$710*05.

93—Rooms for Rent

O F F IC E H E L P F u ll time. Many
opening*. Good attar IIng pay.
C a ll Immediately. Ph*3* 40*4
P . M R O U T E C A R R IE R S Needed
P a rt Tim * Incorg*. Auto a M utt.
Sl« D ey*a Weefc.Call C T &gt;411,
P a rt llm * help wanted at On* Hour
Cleaner* A pply at corner of Oak
and 3nd SI., downtown Sanfrod.
P R O C E S S M A IL A T H O M E I $73 00
per hu nd redi No eaperlenc*.
P a rt/fu ll time. Start Immediate­
ly. Detail* tend *elf addretied
•tamped envelop* I* C. R. I. X 0 .
P .O .B o x 43. Stuart FI. 134*3
Salesman U K . Real E tlat* . Great
o p p o r tu n ity fo r a g g r e ia lv *
perton. In tmaM Seminole County
otllc*. dealing In general llttlng,
with em ail tract* a tpeclalty.
Realtor. Orlando 473 7374_______
T H E O A V S M A Y B E G E T T IN G
cooler, but the C la M ille d Ad* are
•till H otl._____________________
T rv w Plant Need*
E vperlenced Table Leader*.
__________C all 77$ 7*77.__________
W a llre tt Wanted. A pply In p*r*on.
C a t a M ia P l i t a r l a . K M a r t
Shopping Center. Ph 77$ $00*.

__________C all $77 1(33__________
S A N F O R D Furnlthed room* by the
week Reatonabl* rate*. M aid
service catering to working peo
pi*. $7$ 4507. 500 Palmetto Ay*.
SA N FO R D . Rea*, weekly $ Mon
thly rate* Util. Inc. eff. 500 Oak
Adult* 1*417**]_______________
Unturnlihed room In private home
Pool, laundry, kitchen privilege*.
**0/wk.*«0Sec. Pep. $71*740

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Fum . Apt*, ter Tenter C ltlie n t
$11 Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowan N okitonaCall*.
Lovely I Bdrm . Apt. Newly deco
rated *75 per week, p lu t *700
Sec. Dep. C all 333 73** or 771**47,_____________________
7 B d r m . appl. kid*, porch *70 Wk.
Fee. Ph $$» 7700
Sev-On-RentaU Inc. Reatter
7 Bdrm . kid*, pett o k *775 a mo
Fee PhJT* 7700
Sav-On-Rentalt Inc. Raalter
7 Bdrm . tra ile r near Geneva. l$00 a
mo p lu t *700 Sec Dep. U tllltle t
Included Ph 777 *407.__________
7/$ Bdrm .large Nnced yard. Os
teen area. W ill r*nl unfurnished
*700a mo $77 *77*.

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
Apt. tor rent for elderly couple I
Bdrm ., central A /H . C all be
tween* A-M. to * P .M .________ •_
B A M B O O CO V E AP T S
$00 E. Airport B lvd Ph. $7$44$0
E fficiency. from *1$) M e 5 %
discount tor Senior Cltlten*.
LU XU RY APARTM ENTS
F a m ily $ Adult* lection Poo Itide.
7 Bdrm*. M atte r Cove Apt*.
773 7100
Open on weekend*.

GENEVA GARDENS
APARTMENTS

SHENANDOAH
VILLAGE

• Adult I Family
Section*

A

• fU H U ft MlCOMf

• ottutic root
‘ FUTtioueo

fit

323*2920

Tram*280
I I M

H

-

MU4H A S A 5VLLABLE/

N E W 1 $ 7 Bedroom* Ad|ac*nt to
L a k e M onroe H ealth Club.
Racquetbell and M o rel
Sanford Landing S R **371 *770

S

OU THE
TAB LE
a *t t h e

I/C L U B 6 0

R ID G EW O O D A R M S A P T S
75*0 Ridgewood Ave. Ph 77$ *470
1 .7 A 3 B d rm t from &gt;700. __
U nlurnlthed 7 bdrm . Spec lout Apt
W alk To Lake Front No P e lt
*775 Ph 371 7*05_______________

ft

1,7, or 3 Bdrm kid*, a ir. pool. F irm
*7(0 Fee Ph $3* 7700
_ le v On R ental* Inc. Realtor

R EALTO R . MLS
77*1 I. French
Suit* I
(enter*. FU.

7 Bdrm . Kid* O K. *70 a week
Fee Ph $3* 7700
Sav-On-Rentalt Inc. Realter

(9 322-9283
SANFO RD R E A LT Y
R EALTO R
173 5374
A lt. Hr*. 377 4*54. 773 43*5

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

or

STEMPER AGENCY INC.

8

EXACTLY WHAT HE H A D IN

Seniord. 405 H olly. 7 block* N
17A*7 N ice I Bdrm . porch
*750 ♦ tecurlty. No pet*. *471(0*.

127—Office Rentals

141—Homes For Sale

7 Bdrm . W/W carpet, appliance*.
N ice area. *375 p lu t deposit
__________ Ph 371 3050__________
7/1. c a rp o rf, fenced, icre e n e d
room. Intide u tllltle t *335 plu*
depcult. Reference* 377 10*3.

TH E M E R C A N T I L E B U IL D IN G
BOB M B A L L JR P A
R E A L T O R 377 411*

A tt u m a b l* 7**% M o rtg a g e *
Bdrm 7 Bath Cent. HA.. (5.1*0
down *5I,*C0 Appl. 371 0414

141—Homes For Sale

3 Bdrm Fenced yard, kid* O K
*475 Monthly. I Month tecurlty
C all owner 331 1*11.____________
3 Bdrm . * 5 room*, kid*, pett.
*375 a mo Fee. Ph $3* 7300
Sav-On-Rental* Inc. Realtor

Bond money! Why rent when you
can own Ihl* 7 Bdrm . homo with
it y la and fla ir of the m ora
••p en sive . *17,*so C a ll R eal
E t'a t* One, Eileen Bergln 471
((»*■ E » l . 4 7 7 - 7*4*.

1 Bdrm .. kids. pets. 1 ' s B *375
Fee Ph 33* 7700
Sav-On-Rental* Inc. Realtor

105—DuplexT rip le x / Rent

F A N T A S Y I S L A N D . 3 B d rm .
cauntry leg cabin, lurrounded by
3 acre* at tp raw lln g |ung I* l
S ca n lc p o n d l W a lk ta L aka
J t t l u p l Double w ltft m obile
home. Owner very a m le u il Only
*41300

S. Sanford Clot* In. Quiet te llin g
7 Bdrm . Carport, utility room
W /D hook up. a ir , c a r p e t.
drape*. Equip, kitchen, (30 05*5
Sm all 3 Bdrm I bath, a ir condition
and carpet. Ideal lor couple. *735
plu* depotll. 373 335*___________

F I R E S A L E IN SAN O R A. Owner It
d e tp e re ltl M u tt te ll thi* week I
Lovely 3 bdrm . 3 bath, w /lam lly
ream and fenced yard l tremendout potantlall Submit a ll alfart.
A iiu m e b le m artg ag el A tk in g
*41.500. M ake niter.

7 Bdrm . kid*, a ir. fenced yard,
*3SO Fee Ph 33* 7700
l e v -P is Rentals Inc. R ealler

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

C O U N T R Y L IV IN O , at It* b elt in
town I 3 large bdrm i t S p ira lin g
pool! 17 fr v ll tre e tl on e p p re i &gt;i
a c re c o rn e r l o l l C e d a r and
c y p ra * * th ro u g h o u t! V a ry
privato and tencodl Only 553.500.

M obile home on goU courte. Ideal
lor tin g le or retired couple New
c a rp e l and drape*. (1(5 per
month w ith p u rch a te option
Free poll. 33* **l(.

W E N E E D LIS TIN G S

113—Storage Rentals

323-5774

W ar thou** O il ice Com. Sanford
Lake M a ry Area. 1350 »q It to
5000 tq ft.
*3.50 per *q ft.
I (300(«*/373 4070

_________340* H W Y 17*7

INLAND
REALTY,
INC.

121—Condominium
Rentals

REALTY W ORLD.

S A N F O R D . 3 Bdrm H*b*1h. I«rge
lenced yard. r»»r accott. Florida
Room, now carp al, ona yoar
home p ro tK tlo n . *37.500
‘I D Y L L W I L D E . L ovel/T larg e $
Bdrm , 7 Bath, cu t tom designed
hom o. L o a d a d w ith c lo se ts
M a ile r bedroom he* teparate
d r o n in g are a . O a ra g a door
opener 5*5.000

N E W C O U N T R Y LISTIN Q I
1 Bdrm .7 Bath. M obile on 5 acre*
+ or -. W ith pond naar Laka
Jessup Assum able mortgoge, no
qualifying *$*.500
C all Susan Lee. Reeltor A ttocleto,
Eve* 111 750*

"H un tin g” F ar Result**
Y o u 'll G el Good 'Shot*'
In H erald Want Ad*

KISH REAL ESTATE

ItarMJni Specialist
We handle The
Whole B ell of W a i

B.LUnk Const
3227029
Financing A vailable

Air Conditioning
A Heating

Health A Beauty
A R T H R IT IS PA IN R E L I E V E R
100 % Results Recognltad effect
b v A M A Call L e e * R ay 3315*7*

A L L YOU N E E D IS US
tti 07*7
C ro c k ttl A Water* Lawn Service

T O W E R 'S B E A U T Y SALO N
F O R M E R L Y H a rrie tt'* Beauty

K IN O A SONS LA W N S E R V IC E
t a r ty F a ll Clean Up. 53* Special
F o r Any Average Yard . 3*11*3*.

Horn* Improvement

W A D LAW N S E R V IC E
Mowing, o d g lng .ferfllliln g
Fra* estimate* Ph 371 070*

Addition*, repair*, porches, can
Crete, block w o rt. Good Price*!
Call Q««. (30*134._____________

Masonry

a O IL H E A T E R a
C L E A N I N G A N D SE R V IC IN G
C a ll Ralph 33I-07I3.

Carpentry by "BILL**
WOOD Artatlan Oanaral
carpentry, tcraanad room door*
atc.Rao*. Rate*. 777 3*30 '

J*% D itcevnl On A ll R ap alrt
F a r Window A ir Condltlonor*
One Day Service. Ph 777-1*31.

CO L L I E R ' S HOME R E P A IR S
c a rp e n try , ree fin g , p ain tin g .
window repair. 3114477_________

Automotive
* * * M l MUFFLER’*- A *
•rake* l F re n i ar Rear. *3* *111
3*31 &gt;■ French Av«. 313-3(11.
L E A V E S Quit and F a ll In October.
H E R A L D Classified* work o il

Cleaning Strvice
P A R M A ID S E R V IC E I
Have you had your homo cleaned
la t e l y ? C le a n in g w it h th e
1touch 3 7 M I I M 7 M 3 I I .

Electrical
Bradshaw E lo c t r k Co (34 7SK.
L l K Now R t ( A Sot . Work
Colling fan* Install. F roo E * t.
Q uality E le c tric a l Service
Fans, timer*, te curlty Diet, add!
Hon*, new aarvlra*. Insured.
M a tte r E le ctricia n Jam a* Paul.
773 731*.

General Services
P R O F E S S IO N A L
O alallad editing, re v ilin g , re w rll
Mg. proofreading W ill reW broh
any »ub|act Technical aditlng:
re p a rft. proposal*. R ttu m e *
prepared Cover Utter* com
posed Term paper* researched,
written and typed Prom pt and
reatonabia C a llJo a . 373 *31*
• o o T H E M A O IC P E N C IL * # a
Y ou r Idea or our* p. aparad tor
construction 11 (3* Tie*

Lawn Service

R E A LTO R

COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION
No fob to sm all. M inor A m*|or
ra p a lrt Licensed A bonded.
____________ I734III____________
P A R T N E R S . Roofing rtp a lr. paint
Ing. remodeling and addition*.
Free E»t. C a ll Eve* 3770*04

Home Repairs
Maintenance of a ll type*
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
A electric 333483*
M A N N IN G 'S S E R V IC E S
F E N C IN G -H O M E R E P A IR S
A N D T R E E W O R K 7314474
No |ob too sm all. Horn* ra p a lrt and
remodeling. 75 Year* tip a rla n c a .
CAII373 *445

Interior Decorating
Cuitem O rtp e rle i/ V e rllc a li
A F F O R D A B L E P R IC E S
Sharon ** Croattaaa *7*4353.

Landclearing
Land Clearing, till dirt,
top toll, d rive w ty m aterial.
____ C a ll Lee E » y 177 73*4
L A N D C L E A R IN G . F I L L D IR T .
C L A Y A SH A LE
377 343J

Landscaping
A A J L a rd ic tp in g
Com pute Law n Maintenance
771 4701
F ill D irt. D t llr
East Santord. (100 P t r Yard
P h 43* 50(0

B E A L Ctvtcreto I man quality
operation. Patlo*. d rlv o w a y t
D a y * 331 7373 Eve* 3371371.
e e e O U Y '5 C O N C R E T E * • •
F R E E E S T IM A T E I A N Y T IM E )
7 3V r» .E « p . 34*5*74

L A K E M A R Y A R E A . Raducad
*3.*50. 3/3. carport, large yard,
screened porch, terrato Iloor*
Now only *44.000B o b M B all J r PA. Realtor
____________$71 a m ____________
L A R O E 3 B R .O L D E R H O M E
In Super Shape Large lot, quiet
lo c a tio n . I n d u d a t sep a ra ta*
garaga/thop. *41,500 with owner
financing ( 1.0QQ down, balance—
t 3 7 * 1 4 lo r l5 y r r a m %

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R __________

S E M IN O L E R O O FIN O
R tR oo ft.N ew Root*.Root Repair*
Free Ettim et** Ph 173 *5*1

* Iron Work • Window Guard* *
H ighetl Q u e lltyl Lowest P ric e d

Nursing Care

Sprinklers/lrrigation
PUMP SALES ft SERV.
S A N F O R D Irrigation A Sprinkler
System* Inc. Free t t t . 333 07*7
33 y rt. exp

Painting

O c ta h a r T u rn * E v e r y t h i n g
G olden.... Even Opportunities
lo r Want Ad Reader*

Plastering/Dry Wall
A L L P h a se * ot P l a t t e r l n g
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
csta. sim ulated brick. 311 5*71

Roofing
C A O L E A K R E P A I R . R ep elrt *11
type* of rool leak* Raplacat all
rotten wood. 70 y r t eaperlenc*
A ll work guaranteed lo r I yoar.
33*10(7 ______ ________
T H E O A Y S M A Y B E G E T T IN G
cooler, but the Classified Ad* ar*
still Hotl

* Bdrm 3 Bath. Cent, heat / air.
eat In kltchan plentiful cabinet*
l c lo te lt Carpet, patio, land
leaped, fenced back yard. tree*,

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
C a r p a l C le a n in g B u t ln a n .
E tla b lite d account* E arn In
coma right away. I* year* of
o p e ra tio n to b a c k co m p a n y
name *15.000 33* 7*11.

151— Invesfmenf
Properly / Sale
O c la b t r T u rn * E v a r y l k l n g
G olden.... Even Opportunities
tor Want A d Reader*

153—Lofi-Acreage/Sale
Lot tor SaU I t ' x iCW Asking
*4500 00 C a ll after 7:00 p.m.
773 *117______________________

-

REIDY, I8C. ~
Lictnwd Rul Estate BroUr
1224 Providdtct Bhrd.-Doltonj

574-2185
a * LO TS O F L O T S * *
(30) Baawtlhri Standard U h A ll
over Deltona. E a c h .......... *4,too
(I) L A K E F R O N T LO TS - Side by
•Id*. Lake Louise E a c h .... I ( J M .
(I) L A K E F R O N T L O T O v e rH ie d
Lake L o u lte..............
I* J N .
II) L A K E F R O N T LOTO&gt;«r*lM d.
Laka D uPont......... .......... SI7J00.
( I ) L A K E F R O N T L O T - St.
Johnson C t..............
(M M .
(I I ) CORNER LOT*
_______ ____Between H j a M t J N .
ST. JO H N S R iver. l'.» acre parcels,
with riv e r access . O nly a left.
Starting S 1 M 0 0 . P u b lic w a te r.»
min. to Altam onte M a ll 17% 70
y r t fin ancing, no q ualifying .
Broker 47( 4477 ____________

REALTY •

REALTORS

Swimming Pool Service
SU N S H IN E PO O L S E R V IC E
W ill m aintain your pool Inlop
condition, private or commer
d e l. r h 371 (143. Sunshine Pool
Service. S l( MeUonvill# Ave
Senlord FI. $7771.

Tree Service
JO H N A L L E N LA W N A T R E E
Any kind o l Tree Service
We do moot anything 331 53(0
Sava l Credit an Ooad Weed I
JA C K S O N T R E E S E R V IC E
M Y r t E&gt; per tenet m e i l i
S T U M P S ground out.
Reatonabl*. tree e ttim e ie t
7M044I

Well Drilling
K A R Well D rillin g S p e c u lu m ,
In Affordable shallow well*
A I m pump* repaired i l l 0411
W ant ad* 1*11 b a rg a in hunter*
w h e r e to l l n d th e C a m e l
H E A R L D C la s s ifie d 377 7*11

* ACRE TRACTS OCNEVA
A R E A . East af la n ia rd . Seme an
hard surface read. 7*% daw*.
D a tin g la $• day*. I f Y ear
m arlgage, at 11% Interest. Call
le r detail* and Intpectlen.

C A LL A N Y T IM E
Sanford's Sales Leader
C O U N T R Y LIV IN O , 3 B drm 1
bath home, on 1 e acre I Horse*
w e lc o m e l N ew r o o l. fa m ily
room, dining room, aai In k itch ­
en. porch and m orel *33.500.
S U P E R , 3 B drm . 3 bath home with
m o th e r In la w s u it* , t p l l l
b ed ro om p la n , la n c e d y a rd ,
w athar/dryar. new rool. central
heal and a ir, w all to w all capet.
panelling A ll on a shaded corner
lot *3*.«00
LO TS O F E X T R A S . 3 B drm It*
bath home, newly decorated, new
root. |utt p ainted, p an ellin g,
p ad d le tan*, a a l In k llc h a n .
fenced yard and nlcaly land
scaped *45.000
R E D U C E D . E x e c u tiv e s ty le 3
bdrm
3 b a l h h j m * . In
Remblewood! Sunken living with
fireplace, sp ill bedroom plan, aal
In kitchen, didm g room, enclosed
porch, overlooking wooded natu
ral setting M any extra*. »7*.*00
E X E C U T I V E H O M E . * B drm I k
bath home overlooking M a y fa ir
C o ll Court# and view o l Lake I
S p a d a u * fa m ily ro o m , t p l l l
bedroom p ltn . central heal and
a ir, large polio, new c arp al and
mora ***.*00.
C U S IO M B U IL T . 1 B d rir. 3 belA.
m odular home on 1.4 -&lt;re*. on
W tik lv a R lv e rl E v e ry feature
Im a g in a b le ! On* o l a k ln d l
*110.000

C A LL A N Y T IM E
IM S I P ark

322-2420

W E B U Y A N T IQ U E S
F U R N IT U R E A A P P L IA N C E S
773 7340____________

223—Miscellaneous
Baby Furniture
F o r Sale
____________ 333*147____________
E lectro nic cash reg lttar used, lor
ta le Slightly damaged, works
good Sold new. 1430 atkin g 1150
Orange B lvd and 15 A . Laka
Monroe. 373-1147.______________

Ken more part*, service,
used washer* 373 0**7
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
W alk behind v*ccum. 7 H P eng.
V eccum s end mulches, blow* oft
driveway*, hat clip p er attach
mant, clip* up to 3 " diam Only
used 3 hour* I 373 1414 or 173 *4*4
143JJX_______________________

Getting M arried ?
Selling wedding dress A ring*.
Best eWerl. C a ll i n - r ( l l .
• • L IC E N S E D M A N IC U R IS T • •
S p e cia lliln g E x d . Sculpture Nall*
C all Ptane ter Ap p l. 330-U33

W E Buy and ta ll Good used
furniture The Furniture House
___________ 771 70*7
_

S E W IN O M A C H I N E . S I N O E R
F U T U R A . Ilka new, one of
Singer’* Top Model*. A ll Stitches
bull! In. Sold new over $700. Must
sacrifice for 13*410 or Assume
SIS M onthly payment* W ill taka
trade a t part payment. Free
home T ria l. C a ll (43 53*4
__________ D ay or N ile.__________

W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
311115E. F IR S T ST.
137 5*71

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo

T A R P S , COTS, L U G O A O E
A R M Y N A VY SU RPLU S
710 Senlord A v e __________ 377 57*1

Good Used Televisions *7! And Up.
M ILL E R S
7* If Orlando Or.
____________ 777 &lt;053.____________
T E L E V IS IO N - 2 E N IT H 73" Color
T V In Walnut Console O riginal
P rice , over *7M. Balance due
*7*5 Cash or taka up payment*
o l *30 00 month. No Money down.
S till In w arronty. Free Home
T ria l -noobitgatlon.i*3 S3**.
T w o la r g e S t e r e o R e a l i s t i c
speaker*. E x. condlton *75 I* In
color portable T .V. Good cond
tso 771 54*4

We buy furniture, antique* or
accept consignment* tor Auction.
F la Trader Auction 33* 111*______
Wedding D m * , low cut In front,
completely covered with lece.
Long train, and hand sewn teq ln t O rig in ally *400. w ill ta ll for
*150 S U e .M . 331*754_________
40gallon electIc not water heater.
1 mot. old. *75
____________ 333*40*____________
(4000 B T U oil tired furnace with 1
ton e lr conditioner. *500 or best
o ile r A f t e r * P M 777*5*4

187—Sporting Goods

75*5 S. P ark

322-2420
10 Acre* In Osteen. Lot 3 e l Cypres*
l»let. *77,000 with 10% down 10%
Interest and 10 year* to pay. W ill
consider a cash otter W rite T . l .
Burleson. *401 H arrisburg Pike.
G rove City, Ohio. *3177_________
* 3 Acre*. Lake Sylvan Araa.
*47.500 W. M a llc io w tk l Raalter.
373 7M3

157—Mobil*
Home* / Sal*
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 LIN E D E A L E R
F E A T U R IN G
P a lm Baach V illa
Greaniaaf
P a lm Spring*
P a lm M anor
Siesta Kay
V A F H A Financing
305 177 5700
New Home* starling nt ***** E a iy
cred it and low down. U n d e Roy*.
Leesburg. US. aal *0* 7*7g774.
No dapoait required W ill laka
applka&lt;Ion by phona. Everyone
buy* C a ll for Doug Wo finance
•II. *0* 7*7 073*. O pen w e ik
night* to ( P M .
________
No money down end 1 day* ta r v k a
on a ll V A financing Short wn
Credit? C a ll and ask f t r T l ~ .
Uncle Roy* Leesburg. Open M
Weekday* (0* 7(74034
(0 Liberty. *0x14. 7 / B d r m . I/ * ,.
A i r A H eat. R a a io n a b ia B
A»m m 74* TOO* M u si be moved

159—Real Estate
Wanted
l o r 3 B E D R O O M MOUSE
Your P R IC E . M Y T E R M S
373 44*1.

231-Cars

GUN AUCTION
EXTRAVAGANZA

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Check Easy Terms
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E S
1)703 Senlord A re
3314075.

SUNDAY OCT 2nd 1 PM.
A p p ro x lm tfa ly 300 quality collect
Iblet and modern hand gun*,
rifle*, and shot gun*.

C a d illa c . 1*77 Coup* D eV ffie
Leather. E .P .I . engine, new
lire*, auto a ir lifts, fully loadad.
m a n y e x tr a s , s p o t lts t . ana
owner. St.000 m iles, m utt tee to
eppreclete. asking *3.000
37* *57* Batora I P M .
D e ba ry Auto A M a rin e Sales
•cross the riv e r top of h ill 17*
H wy 17*7 Debary «*( (5*1

SHOOT ST R A IO H T
Apopka P la ta
Corner 441 A O*
M O R E IN FO
___________ iaa*0*43___________
"H u n tin g " For R e se ttit
Y ou’ ll Get Good 'Shots'

^^^^n2teraldWanhAdv^^_

FO RD FALC O N F U T U R A
New l l m and battery
___________Ph m 3453__________

191—Building Materials

• K ID D Y 'S K A R S A L E S *
Q uality Used C a rt A Trucks
1137 S. Sanford Av». 773155*

Building. A ll Steel
Summer Ciete Out*
1.0M to 50.0M *q It. from *3 57 a
*qH.13*»-07S7 COlltCt._________
eeePANELWORLDe* e
Do It Y o u rte lU r* S a ve li
4331 Edgeweter O f. 3*3 74*0
■M i l l

P E R S O N A L I IS D A U T O S A L E S
S p e cia lliln g In Cadil l ac* I
1*5 Hwy. 17 *7 731-1*31.

-Lawa*Garten., i .

F I L L D I R T A T O P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAN D
C lark A HIM 333 7540.333 3(73

P ly m o u th D u tta r, 1*7*. 34,000
m iles. A lr-R a d ie . Auto, clean.
t n , P h 777 7*5*. •__________ .
'R E D U C E D M U S T S E L L
*
IN I Oatsun SIS * door hatchback. *
3 speed. A M / F M cese tU stereo
G ood c o n d itio n , one ow ner.
17.**5 333*441_________________

199— Pats &amp; Supplies

IN* Ford L .T .D Red and black
vin yl top. *550 00 C a ll between e
and 1 PA*. Ph. 373 1(43,_________

F o r Sola. G erm an Sheppard Pup
p lat. A K C Rag. (730 aach 733
5753 between ( A M . to 4 P M .

t*73 Dodge Oart, Spt. Cpe Slant •
angina, A /C . auto tram , w ill run.
needs repair*. 5*0000 cash. P h .
333 44*7______________________

207—Swap Comer
RENT
SELL
BUY
W ith#
W ANTAO
Dial 133 3*11

209—Wearing Apparel
m ice## a

211—Antiques/
Collectables

REALTY • REALTORS

STENSTROM

Want ad* t*H bergaln hunt*r»
w h i r r to f in d fh a G a m a l
HEARLDC'ast'tMd 377 Tail.

A P P L IA N C E S , R EPO SSESSED ,
reiondltlenad. freight dameged
F rom *** Up Guaranteed
N early Now. 317 E. li t St 733 7*30.
Cash fo r good used furniture.
Lorry** New A Used Furniture
M a rt 313 Senlord Ave. 373 4)33
Furniture
And Appliance*
___________Ph 373 *573__________

3 * % O F F S P E C IA L S A L E H
Open* Day* 1311 7371

STENSTROM

Security
r It an Work * Window O uardt *
H ighetl Quality I Lew ott Price* l
_________ Call 333 1*44._________

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

M LS

Doe* Your Old Or New Root Leak?
IIII doe*, c a ll D avid Lae.
____________333 4453____________

C^flSlona^ro^E»t|^7^IO^

In ltrla r and E it t r ia r .
Free Ettlm ate*.
C all 333 71(3 l i t . 101

Y O U A R E IN V IT E O T O A N
O P E N HOUSE
S A T U R D A Y OCT. 1st. K to 1 PM .
*11 P ark Ave. Senlord
On* o l the ere** most beautiful and
historic 3 story home* Include* }
Bedroom*, and 4 Bath*, with
c e n tra l a ir c o n d itio n in g and
healing, and 5 flrep lacat 1*7.500

Paying CASH tor Alum inum . C jn t.
Copper, Bret*. Lead. Newspa
per, G iet*. Goto. Silver.
Kokom o T o o l.f K W lit
I 4:30 Sat. (-1373 1100 ____________
Wanted, baby furniture, crib*, ptey
pent, ca r seal, stroller*, etc
371 t3 H or 373 *504

By Owner. Beoutlful '* acre on
C rystal Loxo. with m any oak*
and pint* In Loch A rb or araa
Georgeout view I *73.000 371 5*44
o r 373 4*4* A tk for M a ry M il*

321-5005

177 74**

Roofing

Cali 1117 tea.

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
Hem* Improvement
Painting. Carpentry.
Sm all R ap alrt
13 Year* lip e r le n c e . 173 7(4*.

C O M M E R C IA L LA W N M O W E R .
tele* end service business. In
c lu d t * In v e n to ry an d la n d .
Owner w ill help with financing.
ii* * m .

322-8478

S W IF T C O N C R E T E
F o o le rs ,
drlvow ayt. pad*. Iloor*. pool*.

O U RRATESARELO W ER
L a k rvle w Nursing Cantor
( I f E . Second S t . Senlord
377 *707

* U N D E R P R IC E D *
S47.*00. 1 Bdrm . It* Bath M ove In
condition . C all lor appointment
Broker 773 44*1 o r 1 723 4313.

321-0041

R EALTO R
107 S French Ave

Root Maintenance
Repair work New work
Troy or George lor Free E tl.
__________ 305 3*5 (*4u__________

219—Wanted to Buy

U N D E R »1.*0* DOWN
1 Bdrm . D oll House Affordable
monthly payment*. C a ll owner
broker salesm en . 331-1*11.______

T ill F R E N C H AV E

JUNE P0R2IG REALTY

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

163—W aterfront
Property / Sale

s p rin k le rs 15* 500 333 4*17.

305-323-3145

To List Your Business-

Salesm an Needed
R E A L T O R 777-4**l

54* W Laka M a ry Blvd.
Sulfa B
Lake M ary. F la 33744
D R IFTW O O O V IL L A G E

A lte r Hour* 177 3*31
or305-771-4733

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

O W N E R F IN A N C E , S A V E S U-».
1 bdrm , 7 b*th. A I condition, axe.
area. C /H /A . W /W /C. double
g a ra g e ,, w o rk sh o p , p a n try ,
storage sited, screened porch,
w e ll a n d s p r in k le r ty t t a m .
fenced Owner w ill finance, only
S77.S00

FO R A L L YOUR
R E A L ESTATE N EED S

323-3200

Thursday, Sept. J», I f * ) —SB

Osteen. Sm all 3 Bdrm . home. Lot
77x15*5. lenced SU.S00 Owner
finance. 34* MSS

■ O M ir t

CONSULT OUR

Additions A
Remodeling

• L E A S E O P T IO N O R R E N T *
L a k a M a r y - C r o t t ln g t - L a r g a ,
1 /B d rm .,3 /B . E x c u tlv a hom e
with fireplace **75a month
C a ll »*7 713*__________
L E A V E S b u ll and F a ll In October
H E R A L D C la ttllle d s work a ll
year.

'EVERWNE
C C U IP
HEARY9U
BETTER'

Wanted to rent, or rent with option
to buy e J Bdrm . home In Sanford
area C all c o lltc t 404**1 7711
M r O-Rourka

4J2B S. OttAMBO DEtYI
SAHTOtO

I HEARD l

UMENTS.' THEN WEt&gt; RECITE ) YOU
THEM IN C L A 66/V /0E TO ^L E A R N E P ,
THE UNLUCKV LAP WHO V&gt; THE
5TuMBLEP^VER SO y S Hirtooi
W T IM 6

M a rin e r’* V illag e on Lake Ada. I
bdrm from *775. 7 bdrm from
*775. Located 17 *7 |u*t touth of
A irp o rt B lvd In Sanford A ll
Adult*. $7$ 1*70.
___________

Evtnlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

141—Homes For Sale

H A P T 0 ME/MPRI2E ENTIRE &lt; TrtAT
,THAT YOU
PASSAGE* OF HISTORIC VOC- WHERE
STOOP

123—Wanted to Rent

•CIU1M
0UU

1, 2, 3 Ir. life. 2 I* m
ISOS « . 25 tk SL

A » t;

with Major Hoople

UHVA6, IN MY PM, 5TUPENT6 / WA6

F o r Rent 7 Bdrm . 7 Balh. air,
wat/ter. dryer, celling Ian*, pool.
RtC. room Sendlewood Condo*
No pel* C h ild re n O K . *335
Month Call *45 1(74.
_______
3 B d r m ' kld*.' a ir ,'p o o l *143
U nlurnlthed
Fee Ph 33* 7700
Sav-On-Rental* Inc. R ealler

*310**‘"'*

• W /D Connection*
• Cable TV, Pool
• Short Term Leatet
Available

li* r e iw W u

99—Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

Deltona 3 bdrm. C/A . fenced back
yard. *775 mo p lu t tec
__________Call 377 4*30__________

Room for Rent

M A N A O E R T R A I N E E .............. M l
T rain for management. Sale* or
college eiperlgnc* a p lut Large
« (pending company.
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
333-117*
N E E D E D Im mediately. General
Laborer*, and tk llle d carpenter*
for tam porary |ob*. No appllca
tlon fee with th lt ad.
P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
____________373 5*4*.____________

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

71 -H elp Wanted

" C a rrlg e n 'i Cartier" now located
at aw E . Hotfnar. Upstair* at
W illard'*. (31-1711

213—Auctions
Auction E very Sat. night. F lorida
T rader Auction. Longwcod 33*
111*. Saa our big o d ln Sol, paper.
F O R E S T A T E . C om m ercial or
R esidential Auctions A Appeal*
• U . C a ll D ell'* Auction 773 3430.
F O R E S T A T E or C O M M E R C IA L
A U C T IO N S C a ll A I AU CTIO N
S E R V IC E $33*1*1.

1*73 V .W .iq -h a c k .
IIA W a rt/O .
____________ B H d t , ____________
' 1*71 Ford Fairm on t Future. 4/tpd.
7/dr, In gqod.,cond. A M / F M ,
cassette. Approx 4*^00 miles.
C a ll 373 1*04. * : » A 1:38 P M .
1*70 M ave rick.
Runs food. (ISO.
____________34* 5414____________
71 Chevy P icku p V (. Stan. Trans.
A M / F M . Runt good Body R utty.
*310Firm. 333 3M4.____________
74 T. Bird. White velour uphol
ttery. L ik e New. *13*5 A r r a y s
finance. 33**100._______________
77 La M ans Pontiac. 4/door, auto
Iran*, radio. H /A . Soma hall
dam age *1.300.333PIM.________
(0 Dodge Omni 4 Door, power
Steering, cruise control. (3*00.
F u lly loaded 371044*

237—Trectors/Trailers
S' X 10- A llis C h alm art utility
trailer. Sleelgrid Iloor. 4* tildes
and gate, tilts down. Perfect lor
hauling or light weight tractor,
*450 Ph 333 3434 or 333 *444

239-M otorcy cits/ Bikes
7* Super Sport. C B 7S0F. Part*
come and get urn 1 M ake attar.
Ph 373 (737

CAN-1 F IN D ITT? Dun’t Otv* Up 11
Look tor It hare In the Evening
H erald Want Ad*.

241—Recreational
Vehicles/Cam pers

217—Garage Sales

Layton Slid* In cam per, sleeps A
G o o d c o n d it io n |(7 S . 3333
P«'m w ey or t a ll 373 305*

B ig Bargain sola Sal. ( to 3 G rill,
water heater, tire*. K it. Item*.
ptothe*. m lK . 3*71 Ce le ry Ave.

243—Junk Cars

C h ild r e n '* , m a n 'a , w o m a n '*
c lo t h in g , h o u s e h o ld H am *.
Port a crib and m lK . ItO W. Ifth
S tra ti. T h u rt F rt and Sat. * to *
F r l. A Sat O riental rug. Scan
dining room tebia. large China
cabinet bookcase A ll under 5100
370 H ibiscus R d Cataetberry

B U Y JU N K CARS A TRUCKS
F ro m 5M lo *50 or more.
C e ll 333 1*34373*317

A T w a n t ,A D (ALA
AV
Y UOAOK
O t N T L I A S A L A M B BfeT I t
w o e x it L I K E Ak LLIO
f O NN IliIf D ia l

F rid a y and Saturday Corner at
Laka and W. 7*tk t till. A ir
compressor, refrigerator. King
SUa spring and m attress, d m *
or. toeU and m lK . 773 7*57
L A K E M A R Y clothe* and m lK .
Lot* Of 75* Item* F r l A Sat 77*
Abbott A v e -773 MTS.___________
M oving Sale Sleeper iota, bureau,
cottae and ewt i w w rcC'.Uw,
b ar ttaoit. Itereo and buffet
table. C a ll otter 1 773 3777
Sat. Oct. I. Sonora South Home
• w n e r | B ig Y a r d S a la l A t
•ntranca oft Sanora S o u th. on S.
Sanford A ve • .10 A M . T il
B a r g le il B a rg N a l B a r g l t l
Tw in heedboard *30 Dresser *30
F ib e rg lass cartop carrtar *15
Tub shower door* * to Slormdoor
SIS. Adult end chi'dren clothes,
records, tapes, ter*. A games
Sat. » to 3 P M . Corner oI Floyd
a n d A b b o ll, L a k a M a r y .

T O P D o llar P aid tor Junk A Used
c a rt, trucks A heavy equipment.
----------------- m m ____________
W E P A Y TO P D O L L A R FO R
JU N K C A R S A N D TRUCKS.
C B S A U T Q P A R T S 7*3 4505

YAMAHA «p
M S Hwy. 17-12 - Laafwaad

FALL
CLEARANCE
XZ 550BJ .. Rtf. S32M
NOW » a i t 8

n 2S0J ... Rag. $1(49
NOW • l i f t
IT 17SJ .. Rtf. 91S99
MW ‘ l i f t
YZ12SN
R»t-S1S2S
. NOW M i t t
PARTS SERVICE
AND ACCESSORIES
Sbep Mare Far T o r Best DoaL

�&lt; %t 1

1

1

**

4B— Evtning Herald, Sanford, FI,

s

1

V

Big Hospitals Sinking
Under Growing Burdens

Thursday, Stpt. 2f, ItU

REALTY TRANSFERS
Roufcen S»mi &amp;, w l L e m 1 Jack
Sam i &amp; w l Sara to Roland L
Pataraan (m arr.) Lot I 4 E ' l o l I
Spring Ham m ock, 1700 000
Ralph A
O arnall lo Bannla
D arnall. W Ini: E JT o l l o l 44 1 W I
It o l 17 Concord Wood* VIII. Sac I.
175,000
,
Sabat Point Day lo G alllm ora
Home* Inc . l o l a». Sabal Gian at
Sabal Point. 531000
Sabal Point Prop lo Tharm al
E nergy C Sary Horn# S y l . Inc.. Lo l
5. Tim ber rldga at Sabal Point. Un I.
tjo.aoo
Sabal PI Oav. to G alllm o ra Homaa
Inc . L o l If. Sabal Gian at Sabal
Point. SM.000
(OCDI Loula Alaaandar lo V irg in ia
W. Alexander. L o l *. B lk t. T lar 7.
Sanlord. T ra llo rd l Map. *100.
V irg in ia W. A le.e nd e r lo Charlaa
M . Camaron t w l M a ry Ann. L o l 4.
b lk t. Tlar 7. Traltorda M ap ol
Sanlord. 133.XO
(OCDI Candi P Brady A hb Tarry
lo Candi P. Brady L hb T arry M .
L o l 15 1 W aO- o l II. B lk l. Longwood
‘ P a rk. *100
Pioneer Fad to Joaeph B Law laai.
agl. Lo l 30 W aklya Cove. Ph One.
1101.500
The Sprlnga lo Suncralt P lr . III.
L o l 10. Rlyeralde At the Sprlnga,
*41.700
(OCDI Carol F. Ryan, agl to David
F . Ryan. L o l 31. W aklva Hill*. Sec
Four. *100
M ichael G B lad to* A w l Janal lo
P aul P. H arrla A w l Deborah L-. Lol
11. Sandalwood. *71000
Kay R aalty A Dev lo Barbara
A lle n Moore, agl A Albert R.
Feldm an (m a rr.)L o l 70 Blk B.
Oakcreal. *55.700.*
Paul A. K allar A w l M argaret J. lo
Ruaael H. Given* A w l M argaret K..
Lo l 14. B lk B. Gian Arden HI*..
*100.500
C raig A Thompaon. agl lo Carlo*
E. Silva A w l Joaephln*. Lo l t l .
W aklva H lllt. Sc. 4. *110.000.
D avid L. Scott, agl. A C h rltlln a .
agl lo Roy E. M cD onald A w l Rhaa
L . Lot 44 Cypreat Landing a l Sabal
Point. *105.000.
Summay Pow ell to United Co. Inv.
Group Inc . S 50‘ ol W 3*5 laat W 735'
ol N tto l SWW ol NWS. o l SEW Sec.
3S 1*74.1100
M icha el J. Pauluccl. Tr. lo United
Co Inveator* P ar. A : N 31' ol S •*’ ol
E 75' ol W TOO'ol NW Ol SW U o l NWW
o l SE*« Sec 15 I f 7f. ale.. 7 parcel*
*4.500
United Co. Inv. lo Wm. Inveat
mania Inc., tam e a* above, ale.
*17.500
United Co Inv G rp lo M ichael J.
P aulu ccl. Tr. S 50* o! E f0' of W 305’
ol NW o l SW U o l NWW I SEW Sec
1* I f 7f. *1.000.
Anne G. P ric e A Cheryl Anne P ric e
M ille r to Jam a* E. Wlnne Jr.. agl.. E
50' of Lot I A W SO' o l 7. B lk A. P la cid
H ltlaS /D , *17.000
Stephan H. H erm an A wf M e rle L
to J. N eal Wlae (m arr.I Lo l 54.
Trallw ood E tta Sec On*. *551X10.
Robert D. Chllm onlk A w l Cheryl
to P au la S. H arter*, a g l. L o l &gt;4. B lk
B. North O rlando Ranch** Sec. I.
*43.500
G rant Booth A wf Olane lo Slaven
Chauate. agl A Laurie J. Brunner,
agl. A V irg in ia Chauate. agl.. Lot 5.
Blk F. Semlnol* Site*. *41.400
B ayard H. Sm ith A wf EU rleda to
E m e tl J. Cooper A wf Andrea. Lot 4.
B lk G. O akland Shore* 111 Addn.
*45.000
Norm an C Head A w l M a rth a to
M ichael G Biadto* A w l Janat L .
Lot 14. B lk P. The Woodland* Sec
Four. *41.000
L a ty Oak* Ltd. to A ll M oham m ad
M a ra la l. agl A D r C y ru t A ilm l. Un.
5103 L a ty O a k aC o n d . *51.400
W.W Horn* A w l Ruth lo Clyde E.
Balford Jr.. A wf C h rltlln *. Lota f 10
A 15. B lk 11. Highland park. *17.000
Jim W. H ollow ay A w l Joanna to
Joseph R M ich a la k agl.. L o l 43.
Cedar Ridge Un. III. *74.000.
R yland Group Inc. lo Paul M
Strong A wf C ynlh la A B everly A.
Sllle t. a g l. Lot 70 Dear Run Un. 7A.

*44. too
The Ryland G rp Inc lo Anthony L.
C ib ot A wf C h rltlln * L.. L o l 14. Dear
Run Un 7 A .» ' 1.400.
Ryland Cruup Inc to Jam es E
Foley A wt Jean E . Lot 17 Deer Run
Un I B. 411,100
R yland Group Inc. lo R ich ard P.
Baker A wf Carolyn. Lot 3*. Deer
R u n U n 7A. 144.400
Ryland Group Inc. to K a rl P.
Eriksson A w l Chari*. Lot 44. Deer
R u n U n . IB . (41M0
R yland Group Inc. to Timothy H
Anderson A wt laobel M . Lot 14.
Deer R u n U n IB . *44.100
Ryland G rp Inc. lo Draw E Band,
a g l. Lot 40. Daer Run. Un. 7A.
*40 300
Ryland Group Inc. lo L a rry G.
Col* A wf B arb ara H „ Lo l 23. Daer
R u n U n 4A.(7S.f00
the Ryland G roup Inc. lo Valeria J.
Horner, a g l. Lot If. Deer Run Un 7A.
*47.400
Ryland Group Inc to Lew is J.
Fulgonl. agl.. LI 43. Dear Run Un. 7A,
*47.400
R yland Group Inc to E llio t L iv ­
ingston A wf Nan S . Lot 17 Deer Run
Un. 7A. *47.100
(OCDI Ruth L u cille E n n lt to
M icha el E n n lt A Ruth L.. Lot II. B lk
O. Th* F o ra tl. (100
Joaeph F. Hunt A wf Irlt C. lo
Slaven L G rie r. E 1* ol N 70 O' ol Lot
50 A E W o la f, Pin* H i t . *11.100
Tito Lugo lo Frances Samuels A
Law rence J . Lot 12. B lk
15.
Draam wold. *70.000
Gordon L. H a ll A Barbara J. to
John P. P alladin o J Jr. A wf Janlco.
Lot 44 Wlndtra* Waal. *74.000
The Babcock Co to Ann* La*
Ham er. Un 701 Crane's Rootl VIII.
Sec 7.*4f.000
Floyd K irk la n d A Rosalie to Re
glnald L Blocker A wt A lvara. Lot
77. B lk 5. Bal A ir, *100
Royal Arm * Cond to Ja llra y L.
Hutchinson A wt Susan. Un. 507 77
R oyal Arm * Cond . (40.700
Royal A rm s Cond
lo Elalna
Schoanlaldt. agl.. Un. 500 17 Royal
Arm * C o n d . *40.000
Royal Arm * C o n d . L id lo Debra
A Braddock. a g l. Un 510 21 Royal
Arm * C o n d . *70.500
Joaeph S Hauer A wf Sharon E. lo
Charlotte G Newcomer, a g l. Lot 1.
Cluster M Un 74. Sterling P ark,
taf.ooo
(OCDI M L F ra d a rlc k i A Hannah.
Ind A Tr. lo Development Curp of
51 John*. E H o l SWW ol NWW o l
SWW o l Sec. 5 TO 17. etc.. (100
Dev Corp SI. John* lo Tareta L
Rice. agl.. Tr. If M ullet L k Retreat*
Un :. (11.500
Batty Schlutem ayar lo P Richard
Franks. Janlne N Pater R. A M a ry
E . Frank*. *a W Ini. Beg *40' E A
702 t r N o l SW cor . of Sec 107011
•tc ,*100.000
Sem inole Inv. P tr lo Betty J.
Kennedy, a g l. Un 71. Southport.
C o n d Ph 4. (42 *00
Wrenco Home* Inc., lo N icholas O.
Hoan A wf M onlqiw N., L o l 471.
Wren wood Un. 1 .4th Addn. (45.100
Scott Brandon Inc. to Frank J
Sim as A wf M a ry . Lot f. M arkham
Place. *54.000
Cathryn G W aiter A hb R O to
R uata il N Settle Naples - L o l 4
D avey’s S 'D (C Waalay. Ill* eat I
(100
F ran cisco I A lu la A Solll* lo
M a rio M ira n d a A wf Susan. Lot 1.
B lk O. Sweetwater Oaks. Sec II.
*217.*00

Kannalh W. W hicker A w l Iran* lo
Donald C. O 'M * lla A wf Carol
0 M alia. Lot f. B lk J. E ng lish E d s
Un 3. *47X00.
(OCDI C ynlh la Lam lo C yn lh la D
Lent 4. M a rjo rie L. Jt. Tan. L o l 1M
Wlnsor M anor 1st, (100.
(OCDI Leon T. Slaglrlad A wf
M a ry lo Thomas L . agl.. F rom SW
cor o l NWW ol N E W Sec 77 71 11
a le . *100
Thomas Slaglrlad lo E a r l C arr A
wf Cassandra, F rom SW cr. ol NWW
01 NWW Sec 77 21 17 ale . *7.500
Thomas W. Dearth A w l P atricia
lo Edw ard C. W hile A w l Kathy C..
Lot 17 Lake Searcy Shores, lass pari.
(75.000
U S. Home Corp. lo Joseph D
H urley A w l Rosem ary E . Lot 74.
Un 7. Sutter's M ill. *44.700.
Eq uity R aalty Inc to Tim othy W.
Melon*. Un 770D Destiny Springs.
(55.400
Urban E ap Corp to Craven Dav.
Co. Inc.. Lo l 71 W aklva Cove, Ph
On*. *77.100
C a rl E. A m i. agl A Catharine
M urphy, sgl. to Charles Benton III A
w l M a rca L . Lo l 77. B lk A. Spring
V alle y Farm s. Sec. 2. (177.100
O M N I Conttr Corp lo Douglas R
Haugsby A w l Christine M . Lo l 71.
Skylark In Th* Woods Un. II. Uf.fOO
Byars P Levy A Peggy lo W illard
H Seaman A w l Dot I.. Un. D. Bldg
4. SauaallloCond Ph. 1.(41.000
(OCDI Slaven J
Bean A wl
P a tric ia lo Slaven J Bean (m arr.)
WW o l NW o l SWW o l Sac 171017.
(100
Slaven Jon Bean A w l Linda to
W illia m B. Robinson agl.. WW ol NW
o l Sec 17 7011. *54,000
Kalth C. Stokes A w l Judith lo N
Dwayne G ray A w l Rebecca. Lo l 4.
Casa A ioma 144.000
IOCOI Nancy S Lanier A hb
Doyla V. lo Deborah Smathers. a g l.
F rom Cantor o l Sec 7 70 30 ale.. *100
W illia m H W alker A w l Thalma.
ale., lo B arbara Jo Comstock, sgl.,
L o l 13. Second Addn to C B *17.500
Central FI Inv. G R P L id . to Gunn
Seawall. Lot 7. blk 10. H altler Homes
O rl Sec On*. *54.700
(OCDI Jam a* E Ford A wt Joan to
Jam es E
Ford A w l Joan A
Charlotte E Ford, w ld . Lot 154.
Wyndham Woods Ph Two. *100
Oleder R Nabors, wld lo Olader
R Nabor. as trust**. SW o l Lo l *.
Homestead ol A N H arrington 2'7I
a le . 1100
P earl Regency Assoc to Norton
H errick, part o l L ott 30 31 A 17.
For as I C ity Orange P a rk. *2.150.000
Laws G Stubbs A wf V irg in ia to
B tn ja m ln R T illm a n A wt E m m a l ,
l o t 47. B lk A. Lake Brantley Islet
2nd Addn. *1.100
Cantaa Homaa o l FI. lo Samuel A
Drlnkut A wf Bonita J.. Lot 55.
Cardan L a k a E t lt Un 1.(74.000
Norm an H arrlt.T ru ala* A Ind to
C rack's Band Partners. Lot 17
C rte k ’t Bend. (25.000
C ra a k 't Bend P lr. lo th* House ot
Rothschild Inc.. L o l 17 C rack's Bend.
(17.500
Urban E . p Corp to G rad y M .
Cooksey. Lot 14. W aklva Cove. Ph
On*. *34.400
Norm an H arris. Tr. to C rte k 't
Band P tr.. Lot 74 Creek s Band.
*75.000
Creek a Band P lr to CBS. lots II 74
A 54 Creek s Band. *47.500
W igbart S Gould A w l Theresa to
D avid H Schneider A J ill T . Lot 747
W aklva Hunt Club Fo« Hunt Sac
Two. *44 000
(OCDI L a rry L Howard A wt
M lchaalyn
to
th*
Century 23
Partnership. Lot 1. B lk G. Carriage
H ill Un.7. t'00
Chatter Sm ith to th* Century 13
P tr . Lot 1. B lk G. Carriag e H ill Un
2. *44.700
B G Adkins Conttr Co to W illiam
K. Dickey J r A wt P a tricia . Lot 10
Tuacawilla. Un 11,(1*0.000
(OCDI G lo ria A Piaraol M arino to
Charlaa J M arin o A wf G loria, W
Ini Lot I. B lk A. Lake Brantley Isle,
2nd Addn. (100
W illia m H. W illiam son A w l
P am ela lo M illa rd M Corbin J r A w l
Ran** S . Lot 1. B lk C. Paradis*
Point. 1st Sec .*74.000
M a ilm Building Corp to Georg*
M Stuart A w l Nancy S . Lots l f A
10. B lk G. Lake M ills Short*. (43.000
(OCDI M artha E Selther lo Dnald
L Seither. Un S I Lak* Kathryn
V illage. Cond .1100
John R
K u slv to Rhonda K.
Chappell. Un 44f Altam on* H t s .
Cond . (34.500
(OCDI P tg g y L Gunter lo Howard
M Gunter Jr.. Lot II. Tuskaw llla
A cre * .(100
D e c c e ttiin * Conttr Corp lo Brian
W Andersen A w l P a tric ia a . Lol 4
Sweatwa'ar oaks. Sec. If. (147.500
Darand Eq uity G rp Inc to Ronald
J Roderick A wt Susan. Lol 3.
O akland V illag e Sec Two. *40.100
G raham Brook er to G
B la ir
Me G arvey A Clem en L K u ti. L ott I
14 74 A 10 A la ia n d a r Place. *100
Theodor* T Navolio A wlJaann* lo
Robert P Teal A w l Sandra. Lol 142.
Spring Oaks Un 7. *40.000
R ulh Hardem an lo R o c h tllt C.
Swindle, sgl A Clifton E . Swindle A
Ruth L Hardeman. Un. I B Sausalllo
C o n d . P h i . *74.500
I DC DO Agnes Johnson to W illiam
O Johnson A w l Carol M . Lot 404 A
404 Frank L W ood ru llt S/D of So
Sanf (100

Mess
Tim e

M ilit a r y m acaw s G e n e ra l M a c a w t h u r and
A d m iral Bird en|oy a slurpy lunch break w ith zoo
keeper Sharon Thompson, who seems m ore
amused than Intim idated by their rank. The birds
were hatched In mid-August at the D ark Continent
in Busch Gardens, Tam pa.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Many of the
nation’s big public hospitals arc stag­
gering uflder the burden of caring for
unemployed, uninsured patients, even
though local taxpayers pick up about
$500 million a year of the costs, a public
hospital group says. _ .
Several major public hospitals are "on
the verge of going out of business."
according to Larry Gage, president of the
National Association of Public Hospitals.
He singled out Wayne County General
Hospital In Detroit and St. Louis City
Hospital as among the Institutions
hardest hit by financial problem s
stemming from the large number of
unemployed patients without medical
Insurance.
In the nation’s IOO largest public
hospitals, patients without Jobs and
hospital Insurance have been unable to
pay about $500 million a year In hospital
bills and those costs have been passed
on to taxpayers. Gage said In n telephone
Interview.
The association, which represents 47
large urban public hospitals across the
country, said In a statement that a
u ’p n lt . in m f M i i r v r v of ftiX I T ld lo r p u b l i c

hospitals lust month Indicated more than
three-quarters of their uninsured pa­
tients were nlso unemployed. That
percentage would translate Into about
150.000 unemployed, uninsured pa­
tients a year, the group said.
A less comprehensive study of data
gathered at 12 other hospitals na­
tionwide during the same week In
August showed 79 percent of their 1.000
uninsured patients were Jobless, the
association said.
The group released results of Its
survey along with a call for congressio­
nal passage of federal health care
Insurance for the unemployed.
The House approved the legislation
Inst month, but the Senate has not yet
acted.
"In the absence of federal support, the
burden of caring for these unemployed
patients has fallen primarily on local
taxpayers." Gage said In a letter sent last
week to Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Robert Dole. R-Kan.
"As unemployment continues at high
levels ... this burden has become Increas­
ingly difficult for local and stale governnipnia in ■shoulder alone." he said.

mPRICES SO LOW. . . j

k IT S LIKE GETTING &lt;
f A DISCOUNT ON ◄

EVERYTHING YOU BUY!

FIBERGLASS
ATTIC BLANKET

In W hite and colors 12 o t net
weight
m
„„

Wm
Mm
O W 1N S

COONiNG

•The Higher the R-value. the greater
the insulating power. Ask your Scotty’*
salesman for the fact sheet on R­
values
R -25* 8 2 3 "
-

F101 QGlAS

•The h ig h e r th e R-value. the
greater the insulatin g pow er Ask
your Scotty's salesm an lo r the
fact sheet on R values

R -1 T

Sq Ft

3w "xi5"4 a v , .
3IVx23"1

R-19*

5

*

E 3 3
k x x
—

Sq Ft

rx15"M 2 0 *

THE M OST POWERFUL ROLL OF
INSULATION YOU CAN BUYL

i

In d o o r-O u td o o r
CARPET

H 0U D A Y F0GGER
Room logger that kills most era wl
ing and flying insects 6 or can.
HILL S PET PRODUCTS

K S

t

S co tty*

In Green. Cocoa. Mexican Orange
and Blue Green. 12’ widths.

JAN N EL

5 / 8 H.P. ELECTRIC
GRASS TR IM M E R
Cuts up to a 13" path.
No. K ST4217LD .

Rosario J. M ila lll A wf Karan to
Roger S. W alu klaw ici A wt Lorraine.
L ott 1 A 2. B lk 15 Senlendo Th*
Suburb Beaut .*4.100
M urphy Prop Inc to Edward J.
A d am k law lci A wf Cheryl J . Lot 5.
B lk II, Draam wold. Third Sec..
*74,tOO

THOM AS

Irving Ostarhoudt A w l M argaret
lo Franca* D H ofm elttar A w l
Roberta
A.
Lo l
14.
Blk
B.
Sweetwater Oaks. Sec. 14.(114.000
H a rt's Holding Co Inc to Jospeh
E . H art A wf Jana*. L o is I t 71. last W
10" A S 440 14' o l L o tt 12 A II. Eureka
Ham m ock l/I O ta ta l f p a rc e ls.(100
O lln Am er. Homes to Susan J.
DeVoa. Lot I4B Branch Tree. 141.400
O lln Am or. Homes to Robert M .
C arlin. Lot 74A branch Tree. 147X00
O lln Amec. Homes to John M .
D lF lg llo A wf H olly. L o l 71A Branch
Tree. *41.400
O lln Amec. Homes to Rufh C.
M cCord. LI U A Branch Tree. *70.400.
(QCO) S K B Inv.. Inc., lo Roll
Ingwood Homes Inc.. L o tt 11 A 14.
B lk T. Howell Cov*. 4th Sec. *100
V ictor W. Shrader J r.. A wf Sharon
to H Ronald Huber. L o l 77. Blk H.
F o im o o r Un. 1. (40.000
Glen V. G la ta A wt Geraldine to
Clyde M EIseo. sgl .*44.000
h i R ick D outhll A w f Jen* to Van
V. V ick e rs A W. Judith. S 15 t f ol
Lot 4 A N 44’ o M . B lk F . Oommarlch
H ills 4lh Addn. (102.000
L k Florence Prop etc., to Thomas
A Hit*. Lot 41. P elica n Bay. (14X00
E a rl F Showers A w l M *r|orl* lo
Daniel L. P a l arson A w f Sharon. Lois
« A 7. B lk L . Lak* W aym an Heights,
la k e Addn *1*000
A lle n R. Snr wtan A wf Volanda to
G erald H h*»k*th A wf Barbara J .
Lot 111. Longdal* 1st Add *15.000
Com m unity Home* Co lo James
M R ltta n b irg A wf F a ith C., Lot It.
B lk E .O a kcre at. 441X00.
Thomas O D rake A wf M ary to
Rory A E vans A w l Dlan*. Lot S:
F rom SE cor
Lot 147 Blk D.
M itc h e lls Survey of M o te t E Levy
G rant (300.000

SPRUCE STUDS
2x4x96"

2

W E A T H E R -^ [

1

1

STR IPPING w

FIBERGLASS SHINGLES

3 / 1 6 “ x 3 / 8 " x 1 7 \ No 202

Three tab in W hite and colors 2 0 year limited
warranty.

. 8

0

Square

■ ■ 2 3 "
W l *
Square

1 X 12 No. 3
PINE SHELVING

S h e a th in g
PLYWOOD

A dhesive-B acked

M W *
®
:

COX sheets. Agency approved
3 / 8 “ x 4 ’ x 8' .............................
1 /2 " x 4* x 8 ’ &lt;3 ply)..................
1 /2 “ x 4 ’ x 8 ‘ (4 ply)..................
5 /8 " x 4 ' x 8 ‘ .........................

O RANG E CITY
2323 South Volusia Ave.
Highway 17 and 92
Phone 775-7268
A LTAM O NTE SPRING S
1029 East Altamonte Drive
(Highway 436)
Phone 339 8311
ALTAM O NTE SPRING S
875 West Highway 436

8' thru 16* lengths

PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 6

- OPEN T l. 6 P M SA NFO RD
700 French Avenue
Phone 323 4700
Scotty * More* open at 7 3 0 * m
Mo. vary thru Set unity
Clotad Sunday

Prices quoted in this ad are based on
customers picking up merchandise
at our store Delivery is available lor a
smalt charge Management reserve*
the right to limit quantities on special
sale merchandise

VISA'
■ ■ ■ ■

I

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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, September 29, 1983; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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