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SUNDAY EDITION
E vening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481-240)—P rice 35 Cents

75th Y ear, No. 157-S unday, F e b ru a ry 20, 1983-S antord, F lo rid a 32771

Proposed Tougher Graduation Rules Draw Criticism
A state commission report recommending tougher
graduation requirements and increased state control of local
school programs faces tough opposition, according to one
Seminole County school administrator.
Dan Dagg, assistant superintendent for Instruction, said the
state education commissioner and the state superintendents
association oppose the plan. “ It will have a hard time getting
approval."
The report, prepared by the governor's commission on
education, recommends requiring all students to have 22
credits for graduation.
The report also seeks more emphasis on basic education­
reading, writing, mathmetlcs, science and English—and less
emphasis on vocational education and elective subjects.
The commission recommended these requirements: four
years of English, three years of mathematics,three years of
science and three years of social science. Also recommended
Is four years of foreign language Instruction.
'i f the requirements were for a specific academic diploma, I
could go along with the 22 credits," he said. "Otherwise, It’s
unrealistic."
Dagg said he agrees with a lobbyist for the Florida School
Board Association who says the recommendations would
severely hurt students who don’t have college aspirations.
The recommendations would result In higher costs to the
county school districts. "It would require six periods of In­
struction. We’d have to hire one-fifth more teachers. There's
no way we can fund that."
Increased emphasts on science would require construction of
more laboratory facilities, he said.

"The attem pt to upgrade high schools is good," Dagg said.
"But the state of Florida can’t afford It."
Seminole County already Is known for its high scholastic
standards. Dagg said 60 peicent of the district s 2,088
graduates In 1980 went on to college.
Seminole County students score consistently above the state
and national average on the Scholastic Aptitude Test, con­
sidered a barometer of students’ readiness for college.
Seminole County students scored an average of 916 on the
grueling examination In 1982. The state average was 889 and
the national average was 893. In Orange and Lake counties the
average score was 887 and 890, respectively. Seminole
County’s average on the SAT has been above 900 for the past
six years.
"We have boys and girls at MIT, Duke, CalTech, Vanderbilt
and the prestigious Ivy league schools," Dagg said. Many
district students also have been accepted Into the service
academics.
Dagg said Seminole County already has special programs
for college-bound students. The Pride awards single out
students for exceptional academic achievement and the
county has a special creative writing class for college-bound
students.
Seminole County students also are eligible for $750 college
scholarships through the Florida Academic Scholarship
program. To qualify for the scholarships, students must score,
at least 1,200 on the SAT test and carry a 3.5 academic point
average.
— MICHEALREHA

TTic state has proposed m aking It tougher for
graduates like these to earn a high school
diploma. But educators say the new rules would

Volunteers
Thrill At Return To The Classroom
Thirty-five dignitaries had a ch a n ce lo
learn first-hand Friday w hat 1.800 volun­
teers In S em inole C ounty school d istric t's
D ividends program have know n nil along:
learning Is fun.
L earning Is w hat th e D ividends program
Is all ab o u t. T he s tu d e n ts w ho receive
special a tte n tio n th ro u g h the program
certainly learn from It. And If the reactions
of som e of. the p a rtic ip a n ts In F riday’s
special program are a n y Indication, the
v o lu n teers learn a s m u ch ns they teach.
" I ’ve ask ed to go b a c k .” C asselberry
M ayor C h arles O lasscock said. *Td like to
en co u rag e all of th e VIPs to do It agnln. We
a s public officials can do m u ch to Influence
th ese k id s.”

Sem inole County scnooi
Chairman Roland Williams
with Sheila Stephens, a sophomore
at Seminole High School In Sanford
as part of the school district’s
observance of state School Volun­
i c r Week.
w c c r i
teer

G lasscock, w ho visited Lake Howell High
School. sald.*’My eyes w ere o p e n e d .”
C ounty C o m m issio n er S a n d ra G lenn
agreed th at the dignitaries should m ake a
co n tin u in g effort to w ork w ith the Divi­
dends. Mrs. G lenn, w ho h a s w orked with
th e v o lunteer program for several years.

said. "I do go back, all y ear long."
B u t A lta m o n te S p rin g s M ayor Ray
A m brose w as not as e n th u siastic about his
experience. ” 1 ad m ire the teac h ers." said
A m brose, w ho w orked at A ltam onte Ele­
m e n ta r y S c h o o l. " B u t I h a v e no
overw helm ing desire to go b ack ."
D espite su ch reticence, m ost of th e
d ig n itaries praised th e aw aren ess of the
s tu d e n ts w ith w hom they w orked.
Lake Marv M ayor W alt Sorenson, who
visited Lake Mary E lem entary School,
learn ed lo m ak e granola b a rs w ith fifth
g rade s tu d e n ts before fielding th eir q u e s ­
tions ab o u t local go v ern m en t. S orenson
m arv eled a t th e pro g ress m ade by a
C am bodian stu d e n t h e tu to red .
S ta te R e p s. B o b b y B ra n tle y
RL o n g w n o d . A rt G rln d le . R -A ltam o n tc
S prings, a n d Carl S elph. R C asselberry.
w ere grilled by s tu d e n ts at Lake Mary High
School. L ym an High School an d S outh
Sem inole Middle School respectively.
Bui each sh ared th e feeling th at they had
learn ed front th e experience.
— M 1CHEALBEHA
r&gt;.

A s A Teacher, I'm A Good Reporter
B y M ICHEAL BEHA
H e ra ld S ta f f W r ite r
A s s is ta n t P rin c ip a l Mike M lzw lckl’s
w ords of enco u rag em en t did little to chase
th e lum p from m y throat Friday m orning
n s I p rep ared to e n te r classroom s at
ld y llw ilde E le m e n ta ry S chool In S a n ­
ford...as a v o lunteer teacher.
I’ve know n about the D ividends program
for a long tim e. P are n ts an d Interested
citizen s com e Into the schools an d work on
an Individual basis or w ith sm all groups of
stu d e n ts. T he level of ex p ertise Isn't as
Im p o rtant us th e e n th u siasm a n d concern
you have for the kids.
But all th e en th u sia sm In th e world
w o u ld n 't have m ade th in g s an y easier for
m e Friday. I w as about to e n te r an alien
world — th e c la s s ro o m — a n d work w ith
first, second an d third graders.
My first assig n m en t w as w ith a first
g rad er w ho w as having som e difficulty
learn in g to co u n t. We sat dow n a n d w ent
over a series of m a th problem s. (M ath w as
n ever one of m y best subjects, a n d here I
w as teach in g a child to add.) F ortunately,
m y pupil wus m ore experienced at the
ro u tin e th a n I a n d sh e pulled m e through.
S he breezed th ro u g h th e problem s a n d o u r
m u tu al confidence soared.
From th ere It w as on to u n o th c r first
grade class. T h is tim e I w as to conduct u
re a d in g s e s s io n for a g ro u p of five
stu d e n ts. Aguln I wus lucky. T h ese guys
h ad been w aiting for m e a n d w ent th ro u g h
th eir read in g like a knife th ro u g h hot
b u tte r. (The m ost vexing problem I faced

w ith them w as a recalcitrant shoelace
w hich refused to stay lied.)
Bouyed by m y overw helm ing su ccess. It
w as on lo the second grade.
Here I got to w ork w ith a congenial
g roup on finding solutions to various
w ritten problem s. My m ethod of p ro ­
blem -solving h a s alw ays been to call m y
Dad bu t seeing a s how the school w ouldn't
pay for the long d istance call, we got
th ro u g h th e session w ith a m inim um of
difficulty an d a new u n d e rsta n d in g of the
problem s of teaching.
Next. I got a n o th er group ol second
graders. T his tim e I'd been asked to do a
presen tatio n on new spapers. Finally so m e­
th in g I knew a little ab o u t. I took th em on a
verbal to u r of the new spaper, pleased th at I
could relax.
"A ny q u estio n s?" I asked
"W hy does th e Ink com e ofT on your
h a n d s? " one child nsked.
Luckily, a s I search ed frantically for
som e pithy reply. I got a reprieve an d w as
ush ered lo th e th ird grade pod.
Here I w as ask ed to w ork w ith a group of
stu d e n ts w ho had been practicing th eir
creative w riting. I let the kids do the work
th is tim e. After reading th eir creations, we
h ad a d isc u ssio n ab o u t le ttin g o n e 's
Im agination flow th ro u g h th e pen und
onto paper.
My last g ro u p ol th e day w as three young
readers. T hey w ere try in g to learn new
w ords und Im prove th eir vocabulary by
reading about Haiti. Luckily, they w ere

q u ick learn ers a n d ag ain m y teach in g w as
lim ited lo say in g "v ery good.”
T h a t w as It. m y d ay a s a school
v olunteer. I w as fatigued after th e expert-

Sanford Commission
Will Again Review
Feather's Land Deal
March I d ate to begin co n stru ctio n or
By DONNA ESTES
lose the property.
H e ra ld S ta f f W r ite r
He has asked th e city for perm ission lo
At a special 11 a.m . m eeting Monday,
delay co n stru ctio n for a year to IH
the Sanford City C om m ission will again
m o n th s. He also su rp rised city officials
d iscu ss th e form erly city-ow ned property
w ith the an n o u n cem en t th at he paid
behind the E vening Herald building and
som e 8 300.000 for th e tract and h as
facin g th e la k c fro n l w ith S em in o le
sp en t 870.000 m ore for plan p re p ara­
C ounty C om m issioner Robert G. "B u d "
tion. stu d ies an d to acq u ire a certificate
Feuthcr.
o
f n e e d fro m th e s l a t e to p e rm it
T he m eeting will be held In City Hall.
co n stru ctio n of a GO-bcd n u rsin g hom e
30 0 N. P ark Avc.
a s part of his project. He said If th e city
W ith u M arch t d e a d lin e ra cin g
tak es back th e pro p erty for *100.000. h e
F eath er to begin developm ent of his
will lose S 270.000. F eath er h a s also
proposed m ulti-m illion dollar life-cure
placed a 81 5 0 .0 0 0 m o rtgage on l he
facility
on th e 8.8-acrc parcel, the
property w ith S u n Bank.
co m m ission will decide w h e th e r to g rant
F eath er's atto rn ey . E dgcrton van den
F eath er th e 12-18 m o n th delay In co n ­ Berg, (old city officials th is past week
stru ctio n he h a s req uested o r to buy . th at If th ere Is u real ch a n ce th at F eath er
back th e tract for $100,000 (Its original
will lose th e property, he m ay apply for u
sale price) an d place It on th e m ark et for
building perm it from th e city an d begin
resale.
• .c o n stru ctio n by the deadline. Van den
T he m ajority of th e com m lsslotv-DavId
Berg said beginning co n stru ctio n could
Farr. Milton S m ith an d Ned Y anceym ean nothing m ore th a n tu rn in g a few
Indicated at Its M onday night m eeting
sh o v elso f earth.
th is week th at they favor re a c q u irin g
Mayor Lee P. Moore, how ever, said If
th e property and th en giving F eather
F eath er tries so m eth in g like th at, he
first op p o rtu n ity to rep u rch ase it for
personally w ouldn't take kindly lo ll.
w hat they called a "fair p rice" at to d ay 's
City M anager W.E. 'P cte" Knowles. In
m arket value.
a m em o to th e City C om m ission Friday,
F eath er acquired th e property nearly a
noted th at th e tract w as ap p raised at
y e a r a g o fro m T o m R u c k e r , a n
8219.351 In 1971 an d could be w orth as
A ltam o n te S p rin g s c n tre p re n e u r.w h o
m uch as S300.000 to $ 400,000 today.
As of J a n . 1. 1981. S em inole C ounty
had planned to build a condom inium on
Property A ppraiser Bill S u iter's office
th e site. R ucker originally bought the
appraised the tract far tax pu rp o ses ai
property from th e city and as part of the
p u rch ase agreed to develop the land over
$226,000.
a d e sig n a te d period of tim e or Its
T he City C om m ission will also hold a
o w n ership would revert to th e city.
special m eeting al noon T u rsd a v with
W hen th e city allow ed F eath er to assum e
City Auditor Harold H arlsock lo discuss
o w n e rs h ip , h e a g reed to th e sam e
th e audit of city acco u n ts for th e 1981-82
condition. T h u s. F eath er Is bound to a
fiscal year.

Etchberger Quits

Evening H erald Staff W riter M icheal
Beha gives first g ra d e r Nicole Teslo
some Instruction in counting F rid ay a t
ld y llw ild e E le m e n ta ry School in
Sanford.

J e f f E t c h b e r g e r .w h o w a s n a m e d
A ltam onte S prings' first city m an ag er In
N ovem ber. 1980 an d w ho proceeded
w ithin w eeks to get th e city out of a
financial fix. h as resigned.
T he 32-ycar E tch b erg er Friday said
th at he h a s accepted th e position of
executive vice president of I he O rlando
Area C h am b er of C om m erce. R efusing to
d iv u lg e h is n ew s a la ry . E tc h b e rg e r
w ould say only. "T h ey ofTercd m e an
extrem ely nice p ackage." His salary as
A ltam onte S p rin g s' city m an ag er wus
$52,388 an n u ally .
He replaces J a m e s O. Plconc who
resigned from h is 855.000-plus post last
m o n th .
E tch b erg er said he will In- leaving his
m unicipal Job w lihln th e next four to six
weeks, d ep en d in g on th e City C om ­

Personal Income Steady In January
WASHINGTON (UPI) — I t * government says the nation's
paychecks got no bigger in January but fuel for full economic
recovery Is not drying up.
The Commerce Department’s monthly report on personal
income rounded cfl Friday to a tero, where economists had
hoped to see some increase. A scant $800 million gain raised
the annual rate of income only three-hundredths of a percent,
to
trillion.
Government analysts blamed the leveling off on several
special factors, the biggest of which was the inflation of
December’s farm income by a new government program to
pay price supports In advance
Overall Income in December was up a revised 0.3 percent,
but when government payments did not hit hard again in

discrim inate against all but the college-bound
student,

January the figure was pulled down.
Within the report were encouraging signs unemployment
benefits may have peaked. The total Income from Jobless
benefits dropped (or the first time in a year.
And income from commodity producers — mainly manufac­
turers — went up for the first time since May.
More serious was the accompanying measurement of per­
sonal spending, which also showed no change for January.
Personal spending was not hit by m ajor extraneous factors
and its failure to increase could be an ominous sign consumers
are not ready yet to shed their caution from the recession,
some analysts said.
Commerce Department chief economist Robert Ortner said
one reason spending appeared to be stalled was a drop in
gasoline prices, rather than a drop in volume. On balance that

»»

would be a positive development, he said.
"The January number for spending is modestly above the
fourth-quarter average so that we ai e starting the first quarter
up slightly," Ortner said.
The price of oil was the major topic of discussion among
analyst* trying to assess the effects of an announcement
earlier Friday by Great Britain and Norway that they are
cutting at least $3 a barrel from tiie price of North Sea oil.
The move prompt-id worried Arab oil producers enough to
call another emergency meeting to discuss what may become
another round of global oil price reductions.
Some analysts suggested the lower revenues the cuts could
mean for heavily Indebted oil producing countries like Mexico
could shake the world financial system.

m issio n 's w ishes. He said he h as offered
to h e lp th e c o m m is s io n find
h is
replacem ent.
He said he an d Ills family plan lo
co n tin u e living In A ltam onte Springs.
E tc h b e rg e r w as em p lo y ed by th e
co u n ty far th re e years, first a s budget
director and later as budget directorassistan t co u n ty ad m in istrato r.
He said the ex citem en t and challenge
of th e Job In A ltam onte S prings w as
show ing th at a co m m u n ity of th at size,
even w ith the problem s of th e past, could
becom e a model for local governm ents.
He said th e acco m p lish m en t of w hich he
Is m ost proud is th e lean t of Individuals
he pul to g eth er In th e city governm ent
w ho are callable of accom plishing " a n y ­
th in g '-DONNA ESTES

TODAY
Action R e p o rts....................IA
Around The C lo ck ...............4A
B rid g e................................. IB
B u lk ie s t..................
IA
Calendar ........................... 2A
O u tU M A d s ................. 8-JB

Horoscope ...................
IB
Hospital ..............................2A
Nation .............................. 2A
O pinion................................ SA
People .............................. 1-3B
ReU|lon .............................. 5B

Con,‘c , ‘' ' .......................... School Menu* .............................. 7B
Crossword ......................... IB o _
D en rA b b y.......................... 2B JP®11* . ..........................
D e a th .................................12A Television .......................... IB
E dito rial..............................4A Weather .............................. 2A
The Lake Mary girls
championship gnmc
victory over Eustis.

�2A — E ve n in g H e ra ld , S anford, F I.

Sunday.F e b . 20, l f M

NATION
IN BRIEF
P a re n ta l Perm ission N o t
N e e d e d For Birth C ontrol
WASHINGTON (U P I)-It is illegal for states
receiving federal family-planning money to make
teenage girls get parental permission to receive birth
control devices, a federal court has ruled.
Acting in a Utah case, the U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals In Washington ruled, 3-0, Friday that current
regulations prohibit states from discriminating on the
basis of age in dispensing federally funded con­
traceptive services.
The appellate panel was careful to limit its ruling to
the state of the law under current regulations, which
the Reagan administration wants to change.
The Health and Human Services Department
already has adopted a new rule, the so-called
“ squeal rule," that would require parents to be notified
if their children request birth control from a federally
funded health clinic. The new rule also would permit
states like Utah to enforce tougher requirements, such
as parental consent.
The “squeal rule" was to take effect Feb. 25. But a
federal judge in New York earlier this week blocked it
from going into effect nationwide.

W ilson G ets 17 Years
HOUSTON (U P I)-A federal judge sentenced for­
m er CIA agent Edwin Wilson to 17 years in prison and
fined him (145,000 for conspiring to ship 20 tons of
explosives to Libya but refused to classify the former
spy os a "dangerous special offender."
U.S. District Judge Ross Sterling said Friday,
Wilson’s sentence will not begin until a previous prison
term of 15 years is served. A different Judge sentenced
Wilson to 15 years in prison in December on a separate
weapons smuggling charge.
Prosecutors sought to have Wilson classified as a
"dangerous special offender," extending the
maximum sentence to 25 years. 'Hiey claimed Wilson
plotted last December to kill two federal prosecutors
and six other people.

EPA Battle Settled
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Ending a two-month con­
stitutional confrontation, the Reagan administration
will provide a House subcommittee full access to
secret Environmental Protection Agency files on toxic
waste enforcement.
In an agreement hammered out Friday night,
representatives of the administration and the House
reached a compromise that also will mean an end to
the House prosecution of EPA Administrator Anne
Gorsuch for contempt of Congress.
Mrs. Gorsuch, citing executive privilege and orders
from President Reagan, had refused to turn over the
EPA files subpoenaed by Congress.

13 D ie In M ass M u rd e r
SEATTLE (UPI)—Thirteen people were massacred
early today in what was reported to be a mass shooting
at a private dub in the International District on the
edge of downtown Seattle.
Seattle police have refused to rdease any details on
the slayings.
A local radio station reported that police have ten­
tatively called the massacre a robbery.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Heavy rains that doused the sodden
Pacific Northwest for two days eased today and treacherous
SO-mph winds swirled through the western mountains.
Travelers’ advisories were posted over northeast Nevada and
the Utah and Colorado mountains for up to 8 inches of snow.
Record high temperatures wanned the Northern Plains as
readings reached the 60s Friday as far north as North Dakota.
Winds peaked at 80 mph at Slide Mountain, Nev., Friday and
hit 77 MPH at Milford, Utah, where state road 257 was closed
because visibility was so poor due to blowing dust. The high
winds made travel hazardous. A trailer was blown over on
Highway 50 near Silver Springs, Nev., and the gusts downed
trees and signs at Enterprise, Utah. A travelers’ advisory for
high winds was issued for northern Arizona and sections of
Southern California. Billings, Mont., Friday recorded a record
high of 50-edging the old mark by 1 degree. Grand Junction,
Colo., broke a 1921 record with a high of 62 and Cheyenne,
Wyo., tied a 1943 record at 63.1716 blustery rains that roared
through the Pacific Northwest for the second straight dry
Friday caused a major mudslide, a freak funnel cloud and
flooding along two major rivers.
AREA READINGS (I a.m .): temperature: 60; overnight
low: 49; Friday high: 74; barometric pressure: 30.02; relative
humidity: 71 percent; winds: northeast at 7 mph; rain: none.
Sunrise 7 a.m., sunset 6:18 p.m.
SUNDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 12:38 a.m., 1:02
p.m.; lows, 6:67 a jn ., 7:08 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL: highs,
12:30 a.m ., 12:64 p jn .; lows, 6:48 a.m., 6:59 p m BAYPORT:
highs, 6:46 a.m ., 5:46 p m ; lows, 12:22 a m , 11:37 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SLAufUtlae to Jupiter Inlet, Out SO
Miles: Wind northeasterly around 10 knots today becoming
easterly 10 knots tonight and 10 to 15 knots Sunday. Seas 3 feet
or le u . Partly cloudy with a slight chance of showers today.
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness today with a slight
chance of showers, highs near 70 or low 70s, easterly wind 10
MPH. Rain chance 20 percent. Tonight and Sunday mostly
fair. Lows upper 40s to low 50s. Highs in the 70s. Variable light
wind tonight. Extended forecast - Chance of rain Monday.
Lows near 50. Highs In the 60s. Partly cloudy and a little cooler
Tuesday and Wednesday. Lows in the 40s. Highs in the 60s.

HOSPITAL NOTES
C entre I F ie rid a R eg I # * * I H ospital
F rid a y
A D M IS S IO N S
Sanford
Fran ces Broom
Rod K m *! D . F re e m a n
Jam es L Johnson
R uth Kolloen
E llia b e th C . L e o elte

Evening Herald

M e r y H . W illia m !. Deltona
O IS C H A R O E S
Sanford:
W illia m V . C annovlno
R odrigue! D . F re e m a n
K im L . Tucker
M ich a el O. Y a le !
M a r y H . B rian. D eltona
R obert O . S m ediey. Deltona
iv s f s

ny MICIIEALBEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Two Seminole County refuse collection
operators say Refuse Management Corp.
is undercutting prices in an attempt to
take their customers.
F rank Williams, who operates
Seminole Garbage Service, and Joe
Watson of Watson Garbage Service said
Refuse M anagement Corp. is un­
dercutting prices all over the county.
Refuse Management Corp. is managed
by Jeff O’Connor, who said last week the
company is cutting its price only in areas
east of Oviedo. O'Connor also runs
Danjohn Services, Inc., a Longwood
company that county commissioners
claim is delivering poor service.
Williams, who serves about 350 to 400
customers in the unincorporated area
west of Sanford, said many of his
customers have received notices from
Refuse Management offering them two
months service for the price of one.
Williams just received a certificate of
convenience In January after five years
of being out of the refuse collection
business. Prior to that he had operated a
company for 14 years.
He said many of his customers had
been served by Danjohn before he
resumed operations.
Watson, who Is Williams' brother-inlaw, said Refuse Management is in direct
competition with his company’s service
in the unincorporated areas around
Oviedo. Watson also has an exclusive
franchise for garbage collection in
Oviedo.
Watson said his customers in Chuluota,
Fort Christmas and l.ake Harney areas
have all received a notice of the special

offer from Refuse Management.
Watson's 2,000 customers pay $8.50 a
month for service. At that price, he said,
the firm is competitive with the$8.40 rate
charged by Danjohn.
But the $6 offer for two months service
may have «.n effect on his customers.
"Most of my customers see it as a snake
in the woodpile. But if he keeps it up some
people, particularly the retired people in
Chuluota, will quit," Watson said.
Watson said he has lost about 15
customers to Refuse Management while
he has taken between 55 and 60
customers from Danjohn.
Both Williams and Watson said it
seems unfair that Refuse Management’s
customers are getting service for $2.40 a
month less than Danjohn’s customers
when both firms are run by the same
people.
"They’re picking up for $8.40 in one
area while five miles down the road
they're picking it up for $6, Watson said.

Williams said the competition is no
major worry. "He doesn’t worry me .If
you do good service, word of mouth gets
around."
He said he will not drop rates below the
$6 a month he currently charges
customers. “ I do it as cheap as I can do
it."
Watson also said he feels the com­
petition will have little effect on his
business.
" In w inter garb ag e collection is
quieted down, lie can handle it now.
Right now anyone can do it," he said.
" It’s when summer comes that it gets
hard. People put their grass cuttings out

Published D a ily and Sunday, e ic e p t Saturday »y T h e Sanford
H e ra ld . In c ., loo N . F re n c h A ve .. S an terd, F la . 2 W I .
Second C la tt P e lta te P aid a t Sanford, F lo rid a IT P I
H om o D e liv e r y : W ee k. S I.N ; M o n th , S4.XS/ 4 M e n th t. I X . M /
Y e a r. S45.ee. By M a il: W eek l l . l t ; M o nth, S M S ; « M o n th !.
U M O i Y e a r. S I M *
_____________________

loo. You’ve got a couple of bags of gar­
bage and six or seven bags of grass."
One of Williams' customers also claims
th at Refuse M anagem ent Is using
Danjohn's records to send out notices to
any customers who quit Danjohn.
She quit Danjohn service in January
and soon after received a notice from
Refuse Management.
"I called them to find out how they got
my address," Violet Cook of Paola said.
"He (O'Connor) denied having anything
to do with Danjohn."
Mrs. Cook said she dropped Danjohn
because the com pany arb itra rily
changed its pick-up dates without notice
to customers.
"Hiey were picking up on Tuesday and
Friday," she said. "But suddenly they
quit without any notice and started
picking up on Wednesday and Satur­
day."
She added the company raised its rates
at the end of 1982 without any notice to
customers. 1
County officials were upset at that
increase because the county's refuse
ordinance stipulates that customers and
the county must receive 30 days notice of
rate hikes.
County officials have sent a letter to
Danjohn officials giving them 30 days to
reply to complaints about the company's
service.
Meanwhile, Environmental Services
D irector Ken Hooper is preparing
amendments to the county’s ordinance
giving (he county authorization to fine
companies for poor service.

Seminole Wants Another Judge
Seminole County is asking for a fourth county judge to help
share an increasing workload, but there's no guarantee the
request will be upproved.
The Florida Supreme Court asked the I&gt;egislature Thursday
to approve the hiring of 25 extra judges of which one would be
assigned to Seminole County Court. Two previous requests for
a fourth county judge were turned down in 1980 and 1981.
A case for the fourth judge was made recently to chief
Circuit Court Judge S. Joseph Davis by County Court Judge
Alan Dickey who pointed out that the number of attorneys and
law enforcement officers had grown over the past few years
but the number of Judges had not increased since 1976.
Each of the Seminole County judges handles about 18,000
cases each a year and the number is rising, Dickey said.
If the legislature agrees to a fourth Judge for Seminole, no
decision will be made before March and it is unlikely that the
new Judge would start work before next January'. Dickey said.
The supreme court, In tts annual ‘ certification of judicial
manpower," asked Thursday for two additional district ap­
peals court Judges for 1983-84, 11 extra circuit judges and 12
extra county Judges.
It asked for only two district appeals court judges in 1984-85,
but reserved the right to seek additional new positions in early
1984.
The court's request is a reasonable, conservative one, said
Supreme Court Chief Justice Jam es Alderman. It is for 16
fewer new positions than funded by the legislature during the
last two budget years, he noted.
FEATHER’S SUIT SETTLED
A foreclosure suit against Seminole County Commissioner
Robert G. "Bud" Feather was settled Thursday less Ilian 24
hours after he sold property In Longwood for $611,000.
The property, a 4-acre site on State Road 434 near Meredith
Manor Boulevard, was sold Wednesday afternoon, only a short
time before its foreclosure became final. The property was
auctioned in a foreclosure sale with the sole bidder being one of
the three creditors, Fort Lauderdale artist, Steven B. Clippinger, whose $10,000 bid was the only one submitted for the
property.
With the sale, Feather was able to pay off the $97,423 mor­
tgage owed to Clipplnger and $81,000 to Dr. J.W. Hickman, a
dentist and real estate investor. A sum of $14,000 also was paid
to a Daytona Beach attorney, I.W. Adams, who held a mor­
tgage on the property.
The order formally dismissing the Clipplnger foreclosure
sale was signed by Judge C. Vernon Mize Jr. Thursday af­
ternoon.

S a n fo rd S e e k s
N e w

C ity E n g in e e r

The city of Sanford Is looking for someone to replace Mack
I.aZenby as utility director. The job will pay $27,678 to $39,030
annually. And the successful applicant must be a person with a
degree in civil or sanitary engineering and have experience in
public utility management.
LaZenby's resignation will be effective when a new city
utility director is on board, he said.
The deadline for applications is April 1, said city Personnel
Director Francie Wynalda.
UZenby has been with the city for nearly 12 years and has
performed in the dual role of city engineer and utility director.
He resigned to accept the job of assistant to Director of
Aviation J.S. "Red" Cleveland at the Sanford Airport.
Miss Wynalda said the d ty will follow the usual procedures
in recruiting a replacement for I-aZenby. First the position will
be posted “ in house" for five days to give city employees who
might be qualified the first opportunity for advancement.
Applications from current employees will then be reviewed. If
no city employee Is found to have the necessary’ qualifications,
the d ty will publish newspaper ads seeking an applicant,
advertise in professional journals and post the job with the
Florida state Employment Service, she said.
-DONNA ESTES

Farm Bureau Agency
Here Is Recognized

« i-t« &gt;

Sunday, February 20, IVtI-Vel. 73, No. 1ST

I

Refuse Collectors Claim
Firm Undercuts Prices

The Seminole County Farm Bureau's agency force was
recognized for high life production by a county unit during the
Florida Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company’s (1 billion
celebration and awards ceremony recently.
Bill Cooper of limgwood and David Haines of Sanford were
recognized for outstanding efforts in the life Insurance
Company's Trailblazcr sales contest.
"We did what a lot of people said was impossible," FFB
President Walter J. Kautz said.

V

A c t io n

Pesticide Temlk Found
In Volusia W a te r W ell
TALLAHASSEE (U P I)-T raccs of the pesticide
Temlk have reportedly been found in yet another
Florida well, this time a deep one.
State officials disclosed Friday that residues of the
chemical were discovered in a 240-foot deep well near
Dclicon Springs in Volusia County.
The Department of Health and Rehabilitative Ser­
vices said the level of Tcmik was below the federal
safety limits and the water is considered drinkable.
However, officials noted it was the first time the
pesticide had been found in a deep well in Florida.
Traces have been found previously in shallower wells.
Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner placed a
ban on Temik's use in non-potted plants Jan. 28 after
the discovery of Temlk residues in well water in a
citrus grove near l.ake Wales. He later relaxed the ban
to allow the one-time use of Tcmik on potato plantings
in the Hastings area.

G asolin e Prices D ow n
MIAMI (UPI)—Florida motorists saved an nverage
of more than 3 cents a gallon on gasoline last month
compared to the previous 30-day period, the American
Automobile Association clubs of Florida report.
The largest decline in price continues to show up at
the self-service pumps, the organization's February
statewide survey of gas prices showed. Self-service
regular dropped 4.1 cents a gallon to $1,024 a gallon this
month.
Full-service gasoline prices also continued to drop,
although by less. Full-service regular now averages
$1.26, down $2.7 cents per gallon and full-service
unleaded was selling for $1.327,2.4 cents lower than the
average January price.
The latest figures show self-service regular dropping
by 9.9 cents a gallon since Christmas and 16.6 cents per
gallon since July.

IN BRIEF

it P
Police
olice
THIRSTY THIEF
A man walked into the Cumberland Farm store at 2250 Stale
Road 434, longwood, at 10 p.m. Tuesday, picked up two six
packs of Coors beer worth $9.36 p.m. and walked out without
paying, police said.
SHOPLIFTING ARREST
Frankie Lea Platt, 34, of 299 Magnolia St., Altamonte
Springs, has been released from the Seminole County Jail
under the pretrial release program after having been arrested
for shoplifting at Zayres, State Road 436, Altamonte Springs,
at 1:15 p.m. Sunday.
Platt is accused of stuffing two pairs of pants and a cassette
under his coal and leaving the store without paying.
FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following
emergency calls:
THURSDAY
—10:20 a.m., 4300 Orlando Drive; false alarm
—12:23 a.m., Fine Arts Building; Seminole Community
College; rescue.
—12:44 p.m., Apartment 77, William Clark Court, mattress
fire.
—4:48 p.m., 540 Pecan Ave., dumpster fire.
—4:59 p.m., 1080 State St., rescue.
—7:45 p.m., Higgins Terrace, rescue.

MONDAY, FEB. 21
ENTREE
Cheeseburger
Taler Tots
Green Peas
Milk
EXPRESS
Cheeseburger
Taler Tots
Fresh Fruit
•Milk or
Orange Juice
TUESDAY, FEB. 22
MANAGER'S CHOICE
(Ground Beef)
Menu Will Vary
By School
(Cherry Cobbler)
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 23
ENTREE
Flshwicb
Macaroni A Cheese
Garden Spinach
Applesauce
Milk
EXPRESS
Flshwich
Hamburger on Bun
TaterTots
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
THURSDAY, FEB. 24
ENTREE
Oven Fried Chicken
Whipped Potatoes
Broccoli
Ice Cream
Oven Baked Rolls
Milk
EXPRESS
Chicken Pattle
French Fries
Fresh Fruit
Milk or
Orange Juice
FRIDAY. FEB. 25
MANAGER'S CHOICE
(Ground Beef)
Menu Will Vary
By School

IN BRIEF

W ORLD

R e p o rts

★★ FFires
ire s
★i t C o u rts

MENU

FLO R ID A

Is ra e li N e g o tia to r Says
Lebanon A g re e m e n t N e a r
NETANYA, Israel (UPIO—Talks on the withdrawal
of foreign troops from Lebanon could finish with on
accord in the “not too distant future," the chief Israeli
negotiator said, although he refused to name any date.
Chief Israeli negotiator David Rimche said, an
agreement had been reached on large sections of the
final accord in the U.S.-sponsored talks between Israel
and Lebanon.
Klmche spoke in a telephone interview Friday after
the 15th round of negotiations.
News reports said Israel and lx: ban on have prac­
tically clinched an accord on ending the state of war
between the two countries. They still reportedly differ,
however, on security arrangements demanded by
Israel.
Israel has said it will not withdraw its forces,
estimated at 30,000 men, unless it can maintain small
military bases in south Iibanon.
Israel has said it needs the zone of bases, extending
27 miles north of the Israel-I.ebanon border, to protect
itself from guerrilla raids. Ixibanon rejects the
demands as a violation of its sovereignty.

Poverty In Cities Rated
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Census Bureau
reports the worst poverty of any large city is In
Newark, N. J., where one of every three people
had incomes at or below the poverty line.
The bureau set poverty rates of $3,686 for an
individual living alone or with an unrelated
person, $7,412 for a family of four and $14,812
for a family of nine or more.
At the other end of the income scale among
cities with 100,000 or more people living inside
the corporate limits was Livonia, Mich., which
reported the fewest number of people, two out

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 N O . U -M -C A -S t-E
D O U G LA SS P L U M B IN G , u M l *
proprietorship ,
P I* ini Ilf
V !.

W A L T E R A . B U R R IS and SAN
D R A L. B U R R IS .

Defendant!
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO: W A L T E R A . B U R R IS and
S A N D R A L . B U R R IS
L e tt known a d d r * ! !
300 S w ee tw a ter C lub C irc le
Longwood. F I »TSU
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D th a t a N otice of U s
P e n d e n t a n d C o m p la in ! In
foreclosure has been file d in this
Court against you. and th a t you
a re re q u ire d to serve a copy of
your w ritte n defenses. If an y upon
Ih * a tto rn e y for lb * P la in tiff,
C A R M IN E M . B R A V O . P .A ., IS O
SR 4)4 , S u it* 103, Longwood , F I
S7S0 on o r befo re Ih * 15th d a y of
M a rc h . I H ) . o rig in a l to be Ilia d
w ith Ih * C le rk of this Court before
service upon said a tto rn e y , o r
im m e d ia te ly t h e r e a f t e r , o r a
d e fa u lt w ill be en tered ag ainst you
for th e re lie f sought In the Com
p lain t.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal this
IM h d a y of F e b ru a ry , I H ) .
(S ea l)
A rth u r H . B eckw ith. J r.
C lerk , C irc u it C ourt
E v e C ra b tre e
D eputy Q * r k
P ublish: F e b 20. V . M a rc h 4. I ) ,
IH )
DEEDS

of every 100, under the poverty line for that
year.
The readings for 1979 showed Livonia, a
working-class suburb of Detroit, with only 2.2
percent of its 103,424 people at or under this
poverty figure.
Ranking next to Newark was Atlanta, where
27.5 percent of the city's 1980 population of
409,424 reported 1979 income at or under the
poverty level.
Next was New Orleans, with a rate of 26.4
percent among 544,539 residents.

Legal Notice

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
AND
FO R*
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
C iv il A ction N * . U -4 1 S X A 04 P
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E O F
K A T H E R IN E A. D E V O R E .
W ile P etitio n er,
and
THO M AS H E N R Y D E V O R E .
Husband Respondent.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO :
THOMAS H E N R Y D E V O R E
whose address is unknown
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE O that an
action fo r D issolution of M a rria g e
h a t been f llod ag ainst you and you
a re req u ired to serve a copy of
your w ritte n defenses, if an y, to it
on- SUSAN A . E N G L A N D . A t
torney lo r the W it* P e titio n e r,
L E G A L C L IN iC O F E N G L A N D l
C H E E K . P A.', 4)0 E as t H ighw ay
4)4. S u it* 204. C asselberry, F lo rid a •
33707. on or befo re M a rc h 17th,
I H ) . and file the o rig in a l w ith the
C lerk oi the Court e ith e r before
service on P e titio n e r's attorney
s ta le d a b o v e , o r Im m e d ia te ly
th e re a fte r, otherw ise, a default
w ll* be e n te re d against you for the
relief p ra y e d fo r In the P etitio n
W IT N E S S M Y H A N D and the
Seal of this C ourt on this loth day
of F e b ru a ry . I H )
(S E A L )
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H JR
C lerk of the C ircu it Courl
B y C ynthia P rocto r
As D eputy C lerk
Publish F e b ru a ry I ) , » . V &amp;
M a rc h 4. I H )
DEE t l

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C d U R T IN A N D
FOR
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY.
F L O R ID A .
CASE N O . 12-291) CA Of K
C R E D IC O F IN A N C I A L . IN C ..

HC.,

P la in tiff,
v.
M O L Z W O R T H H O M E S , IN C ., et
a l„
D efendants
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N otice is given th at pursuant lo a
final iv d g m rn t d a te d F e b ru a ry 14,
I H ) . In Case N o. I ) 291) CA Of K of
the C ircu it C ourt of tit* E ighteenth
J u d ic ia l C ir c u it in a n d fo r
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a , in
w h ic h C R E D IC O F IN A N C I A L ,
IN C ., f k a and successor to,
C R E D IC O F IN A N C IA L C O R P O R
A T IO N O F F L O R ID A , a F lo rid a
corporation is the P la in tiff and
H O L Z W O R T H H O M E S . IN C ..
W IL L IA M A . H O L Z W O R T H and
J U D IT H A H O L Z W O R T H , his
w it* and E H . M A U K A SONS.
IN C . a re the D efendants. I w ill
sell lo the highest and best bidder
lo r cash in Ih * lobby a t the West
door of the Sem inole County
Courthouse in Sanford, F lo rid a at
11.00 A M , on M a rc h 14. I H ) . the
follow ing described p ro p e rty set
forth in the fin a l Judgm ent.
Lof 14, Block C . Sw eetw ater
Oaks. Section 10. according to the
P la t thereof as recorded a t P la t
Book 20. Pages ) • ) t of the Public
R e c o rd s o f S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo rid a
O AT E D F e b ru a ry 14, I H )
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H
As C lerk ol the C ourl
By: C a rrie E B uetlner
A t D eputy C lerk
Publish: F e b 20. 2T. I H )
D E E 1)4

�A

Salvation Army Group
Elects Berger, Others
Bruce Berger, Sanford district manager
for Florida Power &amp; Light Co., was elected
chairman of the Seminole County Salvation
Army Advisory Committee at its annual
meeting Wednesday at the Army's Sanford
center at 700 W. 24th St.
Serving with him for the year will be
Bettye Smith, vice chairman; Robert
Gregory, secretary; and Wayne Doyle,
treasurer.
Named to the Advisory Committee for
three-year term s were Bob Daehn (retiring
chairman), Judge S. Joe Davis, Gib
Edmonds, Walter Glelow, Winifred “ BlU"
Glelow, Edwin Keith, Clyde Long, G. Troy
Ray Jr., Sheila Roberts, Dr. W. Vincent
Roberts, George Touhy, W.W. Tyre Sr., and
Dr. Earl Weldon.

Capt. Mike Waters reported on the ex­
traordinary demands on the organization
because of the adverse economic conditions
and complimented the community for its
cooperation In caring for the unfortunate,
especially during the Christmas season.
Emphasis was placed on the April 26
Friends of the Army dinner designed not
only to report to the area the activities of
the army In the past year, but to serve as a
means of receiving donations through the
sale of tickets to the banquet at the Sanford
Civic Center.
Life members Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Austin
Smith were commended for their con­
tinuing support. The Salvation Army is an
agency of the United Way of Seminole
County.

E ve n in g H e ra ld , S a nlord, FI.

FORT IjAUDERDAIJ? (UPI) - For 180,000
one can Join Kal Julsen's "family" for three months
of living In lavish luxury.
While some people scratch for their dally bread.
Julsen's family is having fresh lobster flown across
the world from Maine each week, eating breakfast
In bed and ordering any kind of caviar they want,
any time they want. Smiling servants are ever
ready to bounce across deep carpets to serve Dorn
Perignon champagne.
Julsen's family — 505 passengers on the M.S.
Vlstafjord ocean liner — pay 160,000 each for three
months of his company on a world cruise. The
current cruise launched from Fort Lauderdale Jan.
5. It's in Hong Kong this week. Next week, Thailand.

His hair is much grayer than it was a year
ago but there were welcome, if only occa­
sional, flashes of the good humor and winning
smile that have always made him one of the
most agreeable of dignitaries.
How are things now?
"Tough," he said. He has a tendency to use
words that his children appear to have brought
back from their vacations with their American
cousins, the Kellys of Philadelphia.
“ But I’ve got the kids and this place to worry
about," he said, "so I keep busy. There’s so
much to do following through what's going to
happen."
Rainier said he wants to correct the im­
pression in some quarters that without Grace
as a glamorous ambassador to the world,
tourism would diminish along with the
demand for apartments and hotel and
restaurant reservations.
He reiterated that he would abdicate in the
next few years in favor of Albert who will thus
become the first half-American to occupy a
European throne.
And he said he was bitter at insinuations in
the fringe media that Princess Grace had not
had the best medical treatment.
"How much more can the magazines
squeeze out of this tragedy?" he said. “That
was another attitude that hurt me, all that kind
of stuff like: Should the Princess have died?
And: She could have been saved. And so on.
Useless and nasty things. They Just didn't
understand the case clinically from 5000
kilometers" — a reference to self-appointed
overseas diagnosticians.
"I believe everything possible was done and
moreover it was done in a human, good way.
The hospital in Monaco bore her name and she
was greatly loved there. I called in the best
professor in Paris for vertebraes for Stephanie
(who was in the car with her mother) and he
said that if it (the fracture in her neck) had
been one-tenth of a millimeter (1-250th of an
inch) more she would luure boon paralyzed
from the neck down for life.

luxury cruising. Each year the plushly appointed
25,000-ton vessel makes Its way around the world,
taking a different route with different ports each
time. And each year, most of the passengers are
people who've decided to come back for more of the
pampered life.
Most are elderly. All are wealthy.
They keep busy with a dally routine that Includes
breakfast In bed; sports or arts and crafts on deck;
lunch (in the dining room If you're dressed, on deck
otherwise); sightseeing and shopping while In port;
more sports and crafts; cocktails; dinner; dancing
or a show; bed. And their Is plenty of conversation
with fellow passengers, Julsen says.

Shop Orlando dally 9:30 -9:30 Sun 134.
Shop Sanford daily 9:30 • 9:00, Sun 12 - 0
Shop Ml. Dora, Clermont daily 9-9, Sun 12 4
Shop Leesburg, DeLand, Kissimmee dally, 9 -9 ,Sunil

Without Grace, Life Is
'Tough' For Rainier
MONTE CAR1X), Monaco (UPI) — Anyone
who saw Prince Rainier abandon the iron
discipline of royalty and weep at the funeral of
Princess Grace must know how terribly he
misses the beautiful wife who was so much a
part of his plans for the future of Monaco.
But for heads of state, the affairs of
government move on Inexorably whatever
their personal tragedies.
After a period of official mourning, during
which he conducted the nation's business from
the seclusion of the palace, the 59-year-old
prince Is once again In public command of his
lovely title country and ready to defend its
interests.
His first priority, as he sees it, is to counter
media speculation that Grace’s departure
from the scene will affect the economy of the
principality.
He appeared for an interview the other day
in his office in the sands.olored palace of the
Grimaldis preferring for publication a favorite
photograph of himself with his son and heir
Prince Albert, who will be 25 in March.
The buttoned vest of his dark gray suit
flapped loose showing how much weight he has
lost since Grace, after suffering a stroke,
crashed her car on a mountain road last
September.

"What you’re paying 180,000 for Is the personal
touch," Julsen says In his thick Norwegian accent.
"You order a drink once, and the waiters remember
what you drink. You order your eggs once, and they
remember how you like your eggs."
They should, says Jean n e Schum an, a
spokeswoman for Norwegian American Cruises, the
ship’s owner. There Is roughly one crew member for
each couple on board, she said. And Julsen said he
demands his employees make the passengers part
of the family.
“The waiter, he has time to listen and talk with
the passengers. Then he becomes like their son," he
said.
The Vlstafjord represents the ultimate In old-time

Sunday, Feb. 2 0 ,1 9 1 3 -2 A

Sunday Thru Tuesday Only

"They have such a nasty way of questioning
this event," he said. "Stephanie got out herself
and walked to the ambulance. She got out of
the door on the passenger side."
He stressed this since it is in answer to
rumors Stephanie, who had no license, was
actually driving.
"Grace was a slow, very careful driver. The
kids used to say they could walk down (the
mountain) faster. British Leyland mechanics
examined the car and said there was nothing
wrong with the brakes.”
That, in his view, leaves unchallenged the
medical verdict of the doctors who examined
Grace and gave her a brain scan — she suf­
fered a stroke while driving and never
regained conciousness.
Rainier admitted there were spreaders of
gloom in the shock of the sudden death of the
Princess, including one functionary quoted as
saying they, would miss her friends at the
casino.
"That was such a corny and bad thing to
say," he said. “ I’m also surprised at the at­
titude of some magazines that things in
Monaco have been going down the drain since
the event. The Princess was a great asset and
a formidable ambassadress for the country.
Anyone would prefer her smile to mine. But
they must have forgotten that the Principality
has existed for 600 years."
He said no nation was Immune to world
economic trends but Monaco had no national
debt and was safe and stable. He might have
added that the budget for 1982 shows a surplus
of Income over expenditures and that while
Monaco is not exactly a tax paradise there Is
very little personal taxation.
“ After Grace's death a miracle happened,”.
Rainier went on. "Princess Caroline stepped
into her mother’s shoes. She has the same
spirit as her mother. The way she is handling
the Jobs I have given her, (President of the
Princess Grace Foundation and the Garden
Club and Vice President of the Red Cross) are
a source of great satisfaction to me.
“ Of course we all miss Princess Grace. But
things have to go on. We will do our part."

vvm

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY !•
Jewish Community Center Couple* Group annual
Purim Old TV Show Costume Party, S p m-, JCC, 851N.
Maitland Ave., Maitland. Call 862-2214.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., (open), Florida
Power &amp; lig h t Co., 301 S. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.
Spaghetti Supper, 5-7 p m , Congregational Church,
2401 Park Ave., Sanford. Children under 6 free.
Senior Citizens’ tour to Peabody Auditorium,
Daytona Beach, for Don Williams Western M use
Show, leave Casselberry Seminole Plaza, 4 p.m.; pick
up at Sanford Civic Center, 4:30 p.m. For reservations
call 322-9148.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY B
Sanford Lions Cluh, noon, Holiday Inn on lakefront.
O vereaten Anonymous, open, 7:30 p.m., Florida
Power &amp; lig h t, 301 S. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Club, 1 p.m., chamber of
commerce. First Street and Sanford Avenue.
Sanford Toastmasters, 7 a.m., Skyport Restaurant,
Sanford Airport.
Historic Longwood Rotary Club, 7:30 a.ra.,
Longwood Hotel, County Road 428.
Seminole Halfway House AA, 8 p m., off 17-92 on
Lake Minnie Road, Sanford. Closed.
Rebos and Live Oak Reboa Club AA, noon and 8 p.m.,
220 liv e Oak Center, Casselberry. Qoaed.

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Q. W hat Is TMJ
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A . Those loftors stand tor
T e m p o ro m an d ib u lar
Joint
S yn d ro m *, a p a in fu l disorder
that to m e s w hen chew ing
m uscles and the |olnt» of the
la w refu s e to w ork h a rm o n i­
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E ven diseases such es a r ­
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The fa m ily dentist can
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Counseling can ease th e em o
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Prince Albert, tail, blond and handsome,
strongly resembles his mother while Caroline,
26, and Stephanie, 18, have the dark,
Mediterranean beauty of Rainier's mother,
Princess Charlotte.
Albert was about to start a course In banking
at Morgan Guaranty in New York when the
accident happened and postponed it until
January. He spent the Intervening months
“getting more and more into public affairs,"
as Rainier put it.
“ I will abdicate when Albert is ready and
feels ready," Rainier said. " I’m not a hangeron. Why should I hang around until I'm gaga?
But it must be in full agreement with him. I'm
not going to Just quit. I don't feel old and aged
yet. But I don’t want another Edward VII.’’
(Britain’s King Edward VII did not succeed
his mother, Queen Victoria, until he was in his
60th year and worn out by high living. He died
within nine years.)
"I hope I’ll be able to pass things on to
Albert, to be on a position to help him if he
needs advice, before I’m senile. But I won’t
force it. He has his own way of doing things.”

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1

�Evening Herald
(U S P S 411-210)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 305322-261 lo r 831-9993
Sunday, F e b ru a ry 20, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

V

Federal Spending
Peril Intolerable
Anyone who still doubts the need for decisive
action against m assive federal deficits ought to
read a new Congressional Budget Office report.
Alice M. Rivlin, the respected CBO founding
director who recently resigned, w arns that failure
to reduce the deficits will block economic
recovery as well as lim it "fu tu re stan d ard s of
living and A m erican com petitiveness in the world
econom y.”
Can anyone doubt R ivlin’s call for quick action
by Congress to end the alarm in g deficits
projected to grow from $194 billion this y e a r to
$267 billion by 1988? Incredibly, governm ent
borrowing by 1988 would increase to an unac­
ceptable 50 percent of the gross national product.
What this m eans is th at the tiny sh are of credit
left for private investm ent would leave American
businessm en too weakened to com pete in the
international m arketplace.
M oreover, the intense com petition for credit
would undoubtedly drive interest ra te s back up
again, discouraging businesses from m aking the
c a p ita l in v e stm e n ts re q u ire d fo r c o n tin u ed
economic recovery.
If we a re to av ert d isaster, painful political
decisions will have to be m ade. "M arginal
tinkering with the budget cannot yield adequate
savings,” w arns Rivlin in h er report to Congress.
Our difficult alternatives lie eith er in increasing
taxes or cutting appropriations, or a com bination
of both. Tax increases discourage the work effort
and p riv a te in v e stm e n t. C u ttin g sp e n d in g
alienates numerous voters benefiting from en­
titlem ent program s a s well as endangering such
necessary program s as national defense.
'Hiose choices, however, will have to be m ade
and soon. The ever-widening chasm between
governm ent receipts and expenditures now pose
an intolerable national peril.

Whose Disarray?
As so often in the past, the la te st " d is a rra y ” in
the A tlantic Alliance m ay be less serious than it
appears. T h at’s the reassuring m essage we draw
from Vice P resident George B ush’s report on his
trip to W estern Europe.
Bush says he was able to c lea r up m isun­
derstandings about President R eag an ’s com­
m itm ent to a rm s control, thus blunting the effect
of Soviet leader Yuri Andropov’s effort to c re a te ,
divisions within the NATO fam ily.
The allies, says Bush, a re "strongly united” in
their support of the decisions to deploy Pershing
II and cruise m issiles in W estern E urope next
D ecem ber if there is no agreem ent with the Soviet
Union to lim it th eir deployment.
The vice president is not denying th a t m issile
deploym ents and arm s control negotiations a re
heated political issues in NATO countries. The
point he m akes is th at these issues are not
creating divisions am ong the NATO governm ents
even if they a re creating divisions between the
governm ents and opposition p arties within the
NATO countries.
The th re a t of real d isarray in the alliance would
seem to lie in the potential for opposition p arties
to becom e governing parties and bring to office a
com m itm ent to take a new path in th eir defense
policies. T hat is the th re a t which m akes the
M arch 6 election in West G erm any so crucial to
the future of NATO.
Bush has m ade it c le a r to governm ent leaders
that P resid e n t R eagan is a s interested a s they a re
in reducing the danger of w ar in W estern Europe.
It is up to those leaders to m ake su re th at th eir
own people have no m isunderstanding on th a t
subject.

c

Lo ‘ +

By DORIS D IETRICH

T h e re 's a new club aro u n d .
It’s called th e "T ow n an d G ow n."
T he n am e m ight Im ply thnl th is Is n
sw inging group th at g ets all gowned for a
n ight o u t on th e town.
Out d o n 't co unt on It.
T he Town an d Gown C lub h as been
organized a s a Joint effort betw een m em ­
b ers of the U niversity of C entral Florida
staff an d area w om en for th e pu rp o se of
creatin g b e tte r relatio n s
betw een the
u n iv ersity an d th e co m m u n ity and to
en c o u rag e c o m m u n ity p articip atio n in
special ev en ts an d activities at th e u n iv er­
sity.
T he club will m eet for o rien tatio n at the
UCF cam p u s on M arch 7. sta rtin g with
coffee at 9.30 a.m . In th e p re sid e n t's dining
room.
Dr. Alan Flckctt, assistan t vice president
for u n iv ersity relations. Is coordinating

JU LIA N B O N D

High Noon
Now For
Helms?
Watch out, Jesse Helms!
Some of your North Carolina friends and
neighbors are out to get you. They want you
out of office in 1964. And they aren’t at all shy
about asking for help.
They include form er North Carolina
governors and an ex-congressman, mayors of
North Carolina hamlets, educators and, not
coincidentally, a few politicians.
They’ve formed something called the North
Carolina Campaign Fund, and hope to use
Jesse Helms’ direct mail techniques—if not
his politics—to retire the man Senate
colleague Alan Cranston of California called
“the most dangerous figure in the Senate
since the late Joe McCarthy."
A fund-raising letter from William D, Cox,
mayor of Hertford, N.C., gives Helms'
political history and outlines the plans made
to defeat him. Helms started In politics in 1950
doing publicity for the “ race-baltlng
senatorial campaign of Willis Smith,” the
letter says. Smith's campaign distributed
handbills saying "White People Wake Up"
and showing doctored photographs of his
opponent's wife dancing with a black man.
The victorious Smith took Helms to
Washington with him as an aide. Ten years
later, in 1960, Helms was back in his home
state working as a television commentator.
Over the next 12 years, he authored more than
2,700 broadcast editorials which reflected the
conservatism—and racism—that has marked
his Senate career. He attacked “ restless
Negroes" and the "immorality" of blacks,
and saw his editorials carried on 70 radio
stations across the state.
In 1972, Helms became a Republican
candidate for the Senate against a popular
Democratic congressman, Nick Qaliftanakla.
He called OalinanaMs, the son of im­
migrants, "Nick the Greek," and reminded
North Carolina voters that Jesse Helms "Is
One of Us!"
In 1972 Nixon landslide carried Jesse Helms
to Washington, and the rest of the nation was
introduced to what had been a purely local
phenomenon. His arrival coincided with the
first national stirrings of what would become
the backbone of the New Right—Jerry
Falwell's Moral Majority.
Using Falwell's direct mail genius, Richard
Viguerie, Helms founded the Congressional
Club, a m oney-raising ap p a ratu s th at
threatened to make Jesse Helms the banker
for the New Right’s political efforts.
When he faced re-election in 197$, Helms’
Congressional Club bad 300,000 donors from
every corner of the nation. He raised $6.7
million dollars for that campaign, but won reelection with only 55 percent of the vote, a
single percentage point increase from his 1972
victory.
As senator, Helms’ legislative agenda
comes directly from the narrow minds of the
New Right. He promoted the Human life
Amendment, a restriction on abortion so
severe it would be denied to victims of rape or
incest. Helms was one of two senators—the
other was North Carolina colleague, John
East—to vigorously oppose renewal of the
1965 Voting Rights Act.
He sponsored legislation that would prevent
sex education, eliminate infoi motion about
birth control and repeal federal child and wife
abuse laws, led the effort to eliminate legal
services for the poor, cripple the food stamp
program and reduce the school lunch
program.
These positions are unfortunately popular
with many Americans, and—to date, at
least—with many voters in North Carolina.

u m

a rra n g e m e n ts w hich Include a m eeting
w ith the p resid en t’s advisory staff and a
to u r of th e cam pus, us well as th e new
research park grounds.
L uncheon will he served at 12:30 p.m .
For Inform ation on Joining the club for
w om en only, call the university.
On th e Sanford scene, an o th er club Is
new on th e block. This one Is geared for
C orvette en th u sia sts as well a s family fun.
according to Jo lc n e D ennison Morgan.
T h e Mid-Florida Corvette C lub Invites all
area C orvette ow ners to a tten d the m eet­
ings on the first T uesday of each m onth at
th e G reater Sanford C ham ber of C om ­
m erce building. 401 E. First S treet, at 7.30

p.m.
"W e’ve organized to enjoy o u r ears at
ca r show s, rally rarcs. picnics an d o th er

activities. " Jo lc n e says.
Officers arc:
Pat Morgan, president.
3 2 1 0 6 8 4 : Ken Ireland, vice presid en t.
323-7812: an d B arbara Mayo, secretary
treasu rer.
S un d ay Is an afternoon for art w hen
m e m b e rs of I he S an ford-Sem inole Art
A ssociation stag e th eir an n u al show an d
exhibit for m em h ers only.
T he Sanford Civic C en ter is 'th e site for
th e colorful ev en t open to th e public a I no
adm ission ch arg e from noon to 5 p.m . T he
tea h o u r is from 2:30 to 4 p.m .Several
SSAA m em b ers have d o n ated w orks of art
for d raw ings d u rin g th e afternoon.
R enow ned lor Its an n u a l "Fall For A rt"
Show held in th e a u tu m n in dow ntow n
S aniord, SSAA invites one a n d all to
"S p rin g for A rt" S u n d ay . Feb. 20,

RUSTY BROW N

■THt UWfcKX eitfMCM/W*

When An
Opportunity
Knocks...

AMERICAN GOTHIC, 1963

JEFFREY HART

Miscalulation Message
The day-to-day accounts of the recent
Falklands Islands War did not convey the
overall shape of the thing, nor its meaning in
retrospect, nor its lessons for us now.
It remained for a remarkable new book by
the Sunday Times of London Insight Team
called “The War in the Falklands: The Full.
Story" to put the whole thing In perspective
The narrative is gripping and well-written,
and remarkable In its comprehensiveness for
* book published so soon after Uie event, and
the author*" and their staff Interviewed
participants on both the British and the
Argentine side.
To begin with, (he story is chilling, in the
sense that one had hoped — without much
evidence to draw upon — that sheer
miscalculation on a grand scale had been
largely ruled out in major confrontations.
We know, for example, that constant
rational war-gaming and the working out of
various “ scenarios” goes on all the time at
the highest levels of modem government. Bui
during the winter and spring of 1962, the
mutual miscalculation reminds one of Kaiser
Wilhelm Czar Nicholas, and the Hapsburgs.
The Thatcher government hoped, against
the evidence from its intelligence in Buenos
Aires, that the Argentines would not do
anything “silly.” While conceding nothing to
Argentine claims, London did not reinforce its
Falklands garrison.
The Galtleri Junta, reeling under economic
problems and political unpopularity, saw
selling the islands as a way of unifying the
country and recovering esteem. Galtleri
refused to believe that the British would do
anything, even when A1 Haig flew to Buenos
Aires and repeatedly warned him that the
British would go to war. At the last minute,
Galtleri brushed off a personal phone call
from President Reagan, and Jumped over the
precipice.
Even after the Argentines occupied the
islands, the affair came within an inch of a
peaceful solution.
The Peruvian government came forward
with a proposal for withdrawal, international
administration of the islands, and a
negotiated settlement. For two hours, this
seemed acceptable to both sides, when the
news came th at a British submarine had
torpedoed the Argentine cruiser General
Belgrano. The tenuous movement toward
agreement was over. The war was on.

The Belgrano was torpedoed by a nuclear
sub, the Conqueror, using WWIJ torpedoes.
The "Tigerflsh is extremely expensive; some
estimates say $857,000 a time. It is also, in the
opinion of some submariners, unreliable; the
fact that during the trials — off Malta In 1967
— a test Tigerflsh independently charged
course by 160 degrees, and very nearly sank
its launch submarine, is well known in the
navy."
V Nor did the British win easily. The
Argentine air force, especially Its advanced
F rench E n ten d ard s with th eir Exocet
missiles came dose to defeating the whole
enterprise, but ran out of Exocets after
wasting the last two on a sinking hulk,
believing it to be a carrier.
The Argentine command made the tactical
mistake of permitting the British to gain a
beachhead rather than contesting it, and
counting on a static defense to the capital
Stanley. But the fighting, brief as it was,
proved to be savage.
The British prevailed only because of the
cold professional courage of men like Major
Chris Keeble, second in command of 2
Parachute Battalion, an Elton and Sandhurst
man. Keeble: “ Our people ARE extremely
aggressive. They are trained to fight... You
can't mince it. You have got to kill the enemy,
you have got to destroy that machine gun,
before he destroys you. When you fire anti­
tank rockets into a trench a lot of people die.
If you have four people In a trench and a
grenade comes in, four people die. Every
trench you attack, you DESTROY It. You
jump in the trench and rake it with fire... As
far as I was concerned, here was a guy which
was occupying a piece of terrain which we
wanted back; there was not question of us
losing, there was no question of them win­
ning... You deal with the trench, and then you
head on."
To a degree, both sides behaved with
restraint. The Argentines did not use the
Island's civilians as hostages. The British did
not rocket Buenos Aires, or think of their
atomic bombs. Their professionals won It for
them, but, despite the celebrating today, it
will be sometime before we can say, in
historical term s, exactly what they won.
Galtleri lost, as he should have — but so did
the United States, which forfeited at least
temporarily its developing close relationship
with Buenos Aires.

The dilemma of Eva Hill is not new.
She’s in a limbo now that I am familiar
with. Both of us gave up good careers because
our husbands were offered challenging jobs
elsewhere. I found a niche with a newspaper
column. Eva has yet to find hers. So, when she
expresses her worry I listen with compassion.
She came to town three months ago because
her husband. took a position with an
Albuquerque utility company. She had left a
job she held for 10 years, as personnel
director of a 350-resident retirement home In
A lexandria, Va. Though h er husband's
company gave her some leads, she has been
unable to find anything.
"I’ve worked harder on the search than I
did at my former Job," she says, her voice
tinged with anxiety. As the weeks pile up, her
confidence goes down.
Eva is among countless working wives who
have experienced similar career disruption
and its accompanying anguish and identity
loss. Only very occasionally—about 5 percent
of the tim e—is it the wife who transfers, so it
is usually women who sacrifice jobs and then
find their feelings running to resentment, selfpity and fear.
Some companies are trying to ease the Jobhunting pain by providing for the spouse one
or more of the following':
—Job counseling, Including help with
resumes and personal referrals to employers
in other firms.
—Lists of companies in the area that are
hiring, or lists of companies with Jobs similar
to the one already held by the wife. Prudential
Insurance Co. of America is a leader in
providing this service.
- A Job within the firm. If a couple works &lt;
for the seme c o o p m r end one U ufceC t*
transfer, the other is put at the top of the
placement list at the new location. Example:
IBM.
-P a y in g employment agency fees up to
$2,000. Example: American Telephone and
Telegraph's Long Lines Division.
—Giving the wife three month’s of her
former salary while ahe searches for a new
Job. Example: Petro Lewis Corp. of Denver.
The trouble Is, only one-fourth of 610 major
companies offer any of these balms, ac­
cording to a 1982 survey by Merrill Lynch
Relocation Management Inc.
Most working women still face great risk,
emotionally 8nd financially, if their husbands
relocate.
Some wives have tried com m uter
m arriages to hang onto good Jobs. But
commuting usually doesn't work because it
can too easily damage the Job, the family or
the marriage. I've seen examples of all three.
In the case of two college professors, she
look a top Job in Cleveland while he stayed at
an Alabama college. After three years, they
divorced and blamed the long distance.
An interior designer recently gave up
com m uting between Albuquerque and
Phoenix when she realized her 16-year-old
daughter, adjusting to a new school, new
community and new peers, “needed to talk
with me on a day-to-day basis."
Another woman, whose physicist husband
came West stayed on at a New York ad­
vertising agency. The cost of air fare and
phone bills, the exhaustion of every-olherweek commutes plus the omnipresent feeling
of loneliness made her give it up after a year.
It seems to me the only real solution to tills
dilemma lies with the husband.
When he is offered a new Job he should not
accept until be and his wife have looked at
alternatives.

JACK ANDERSO N
BERRY'S W ORLD

Death Of Witness Leaves Questions

"OH. GIVE M E A H O M E WHERE THE DEFICITS
R O A M ..."

WASHINGTON — Not long ago, a tragic
young woman named Helena Stoeckley
stepped out of the shadows to save a man
from life In prison. She told my office a story
that brought her nothing but grief and
threats. Last month ahe was fovid dead in her
hideout apartm ent in South Carolina.
Her statements Implicated a black wit­
chcraft cult whose members, ahe said, had
threatened her with violence. Her story alto
embarrassed the authorities who may have
sent the wrong man to prison.
Stoeckley was a key witness in the murder
case against Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald, the
Green Beret doctor who is now serving three
consecutive life sentences for the 1970 murder
of his wife and two young daughters at Fort
Bragg, N.C.
What made Stoeckley a crucial witness In
CapL MacDonald's case was that ahe had said
she was a member of the cult that, she said,
perpetrated the murders. This corroborated
MacDonald's claim that not be, but a drugcrazed “hippie group" had killed his family

and seriously injured him.
Unfortunately for MacDonald, Stoeckley’s
post-trial disclosures were not admitted as
evidence to support the appeal of his con­
viction. At his trial, Stoeckley had said ahe
couldn’t remem ber the events of the tragic
night at Fort Bragg.
Since then, however, Stoeckley told my
aaaociate Donald Goldberg that MacDonald
was telling the truth. She admitted being part
of th« drug-oriented cult that committed the
killings. She said the motive for the murders
was that MacDonald had refused to supply
illicit drags to the group, which included
soldiers at the base.
At MacDonald's 1979 trial, Stoeckley said,
“I was afraid that I was going to go to
prison." So she claimed she couldn’t
remember what happened.
There was more than Just fear of prison,
though. “ At the trial I was hit on the nose,"
Stoeckley said. "My nose was broken by one
of (the members of the cult). He told me the
same thing I've been (warned) the w trte time

now. He said 'Keep your mouth shut.'
That wasn’t the only time Stoeckley had
been intimidated by members of the cult, she
said. They tracked her down last year In a
shopping-center parking lot. There, she said,
she was beaten up and her infant son was
knocked to the ground.
South Carolina police officials say there
was no evidence of foul play In Stoeckley's
death. But Prince Beasley, a former detective
In Fayetteville, N.C., believes that ahe may
have been murdered.
Beasley had known Stoeckley for 15 years;
be even picked her up with other cult mem­
bers the night after the MacDonald family
killings. But Beasley lacked authority in the
case, which had taken place on the military
base outside of town. He held the suspects for
Army investigators for nearly two hours.
They never showed up, so Beasley had to let
the suspects go.
Beasley says Stoeckley told him on several
occasions that she was being threatened by
cult members. In fact, Just days before her

death, she contacted him and asked him to
meet her. Beasley said she sounded
frightened, but he was unable to meet her.
But shortly before that, Stoeckley had
managed to get a message to Beasley. She
told him of another cult member who could
corroborate her story.
That member has since been located and
has told Ted Gunderson, a former FBI agent
in charge of the Lea Angeles office, of in­
volvement in the cult. Shown photographs
that Stoeckley had Identified as those of
members of the drug cult, the informant
confirmed the identification.
The informant also provided important new
information on the activities and whereabouts
of the cult members.
What is most frightening, though, is that the
member of the cult was able to tell in­
vert igntors where Stoeckley was hiding out.
Obviously, If one member of the cull knew
where she was living, other members might
also have known.

1

�OPINION
OUR READERS WRITE

Special State Law To Help
/

Library Bond Issue Opposed
As you are oware, 6.2 percent of the
registered voters (2.4 percent of the
population) li Seminole County voted
for approve of subject bond Issue.
Really now, does this mean the tax­
payers of Seminole County want to end
up paying i total of some $20 million in
the next 2W0 years to retire this debt?
And when you compile such additional
costs as new library materials, staff,
and maintenance, the total bill will be
staggering! Obviously, I am opposed to
any new legislation that would certify
these bonds.

In the geographic center of Seminole
County is a very well staffed public
library with a myriad of reference
m ateria ls, books, etc... Seminole
Community College. Should a citizen
really require the services of a public
library, rest assured t h y will make
sufficient effort ro go to the SCC library.
Or even better yet, at nominal cost we
could upgrade the existing library
facilities in the County schools and
make them available to the public at
certain hours. We need good libraries.

But this need can be filled as I
previously stated. We also need better
roads and the only solution for this is
additional monies, such as bond issues.
My peers and I are fully convinced
that this bond issue would never have
been approved if put on the ballot
during the General Election instead of
the Second Primary. Your opposition to
legislative certification of this bond
issue will be greatly appreciated.
Tom A. Binford
Winter Springs

Cuts Offered To Help Achieve
Balanced Federal Budget
The problem of balancing the Federal
Budget is vital to the American public.
Expenditures must be reduced and

All Souls
Says Thanks
Thank you for the space in your
newspaper for our school news. All
Souls has serviced the Sanford com­
munity for 30 years and has many
graduates in the area of all
denominations.
We are preparing a student to write a
column in the very near future.
linda Holt
(Parent I

there can be no "Sacred Cows". Every
budgeted item must be reviewed and
the entire public must accept a portion
of the sacrifice. This Includes
management, labor, government and
investors There are examples of labor
foregoing wage increases and
m anagem ent personnel accepting
reduced salaries. These efforts must be
expanded to include Government
employees of all categories and all
retirees receiving any form of federal
pensions.

increases for all retirees to Include
Civil Service, Military and Social
Security.
(3.) Cut all salaries for Federal
employees in the category of GS-12
through GS-18 and the equivalent
category or rank in the Military by 10
percent on July 1, 1983.
( U Cut all Federal retirees’ pen­
sions by 5 percent on July 1, 1983.

We recommend the following ac­
tions:

These recommendations may be
considered severe. However, they must
be put into effect if the damaging
deficits are to be controlled.

(1. ( Cancel Cost of living Adjustment
salary increases for all Federal em­
ployees, including the Military for 1983.
&lt;2. \ Cancel Cost of living Adjustment

U s White
President,
Maitland South
Chamber of Commerce

Will Medicare Be Cut?
Q. I’ve heard that President Reagan
has proposed cutting Medicare again.
Medicare Is already too limited, as far
as I'm concerned, and I am paying
more and more of the costs myself.
What can we expect?
A. In the proposed federal budget
submitted to Congress on January 31,
the administration put forward a
number of steps for saving money in the
Medicare program in fiscal year 1984
and beyond. First, the administration
seeks to require beneficiaries to pay
part of the cost of their hospitalization
— in addition to the deductible (now
$304) which already applies to each
hospital stay.
Under the president's plan, in 1984
beneficiaries would pay $28 per day for
days two through 15 and $17.50 per day
for the 16th to 60th days. These amounts
would go up each year as hospital costs
rise. Under a "catastrophic cap," co­
payments for a hospital stay longer
than 60 days would no longer be
required. The average length of a
hospital stay under Medicare is 11 days,
so out-of-pocket costs would rise sub­
stantially for all but the small number
who are hospitalized for more than 60
days at a time.
A second proposal would increase the
Part B premium beneficiaries pay each
month (currently $12.20). This Is in­
tended to lower the amount of money
for physicians’ services paid from
general tax revenues and Increase the
amount that Is supported by premiums
collected from Medicare beneficiaries.
This Increase would be in addition to
the Increase which ordinarily comes
about each July 1.
A further administration proposal
would index the Part B deductible to the

systems and inventions which seem to
have acquired Uvea and wills of their
own. And now, as man attempts to
grapple with the greatest challenge of
hts existence—the nuclear arms race—
be appears resigned to not much more
. than a choice between anarchy and neo­
animism: between abject surrender to
a fear-driven technological imperative
and a return to the unavailing In­
cantations of the past.
This return to animism Is evidenced
in the nuclear freeze movement.
To be sure, no one believes that
nuclear weapons have approachable
"spirits" (some might claim that
neither does the military-industrial
com plex.) But insofar as .people
demand to "freeze" the quality of
hum an technological Inventiveness,
they might i s well be asking to stop the
sun In its path. And insofar as people
demand, and put their trust In, magic
formulas such as "no first use," they
b etray th eir heritage as thinking
beings. For technological Innovation —

and especially such Innovation within
the framework of the nation-state
system — cannot be froxen: a fact
freely admitted even by such anti­
nuclear writers as Johathan Schell. Nor
can unenforceable (and therefore
meaningless) assurances of benevolent
. Intent assuage the fear which drives the
arm s race.
The nuclear freeze movement Is a
betrayal of mind. And therein lies
much of its danger. For at no time In
human history has thought—clear,
logical, rational thought—been more
desperately needed.
Nuclear freeze proponents should put
aside the shamanistic mum bo-jumbo,
the easy slogans, the rally rituals. They
should admit the difference between an
expression of desire and a workable
policy. And they should recognize that,
In the world as it is, you can't stop the
tide.
You can, however, build a sea wall.
And a sea wall is something that we
all could use.

O ld e r
U.S. Rep.
Claude Pepper
Medicare Economic Index, the scale
used to determine what Medicare will
pay for doctors' services. This proposal
is similar to one Congress refused to
enact last year and is Intended to tie the
deductible to rising costs. In 1981,
Congress reluctantly increased by 25
percent, from $60 to $75, the Part B
deductible — the amount a beneficiary
must pay before Medicare even begins
to help pay for doctors’ services. If this
new proposal went Into effect, the
deductible would rise to $80 In 1984 and,
assuming health care costs continue to
go up, by additional amounts in future
years.
The administration seeks to establish
a "voucher” system which would
enable beneficiaries to purchase ser­
vices through a private plan rather
than Medicare. Critics of voucher
proposals are concerned that there
would be too few standards relating to
health care providers and moreover,
that the voucher system wouldn’t
guarantee Medicare beneficiaries any
additional services. Inasm uch as
Congress rejected a similar proposal
last year, I am certain that the new one
will undergo very careful scrutiny.
A further proposal would delay
Medicare eligibility by one month —
moving it back from the first day of the
month in which a person turns 65 to the
first day of the following month. Some

156,000 Americans turn 65 every month
and, while some companies’ employee
health plans continue until Medicare
coverage begins, others do not. And, of
course, those who are not working when
they reach age 65 would have to wait an
additional m onth, too. Congress
rejected this proposal last year.
The administration also proposes
freezing physician reimbursement for a
year in order to hold constant the fees
considered by M edicare to be
“reasonable" — and, thuse, allowable
— charges. This idea, again, Is similar
to one the administration put forward
last year. But Congress rejected It,
partly out of concern that more
physicians would refuse to accept
assignment. Currently, doctors accept
assignment - or agree to charge what
Medicare allows — in Just a little more
than half of all cases. In the other,
M edicare beneficiaries o f te n .a r e
required to pay much more of their
doctors' bills than the 20 percent
required by Medicare law.
O ther proposals, such as one
establishing a propectlve payment
system for hospitals, are Included In the
administration's budget package.
I am deeply concerned about the
increased
burden
M edicare
beneficiaries would be required to
shoulder if these proposals were
enacted. But the process has just
begun. It remains now for Congress to
examine these proposals with careful
attention to their potential Impact on 29
million elderly and disabled Americans
who rely on Medicare.
R EP. CLAUDE P E P P E R Is the
ranking member of the House Select
Committee on Aging.

M sm

Nuclear Freeze M ovem ent
Show s Return To Anim is
By PHILIP GOLD
(Dr. PMUp Gold la an instructor In
pmbUe policy at Georgetown Univer­
sity.)
Not so many centuries ago, humanity
faced this world with a mixture of
dread, bewilderment, incredulity, and
superstitious awe. People believed that
natural forces could be manipulated by
the right Intonations, propitiations,
rituals, sacrifices, whatever. Gradually
(very gradually), man realized that his
wishes and his spells made no dif­
ference, but his understanding and his
actions did: that an eternity spent In
supplication before the tide meant
nothing, but the knowledge of how to
build a sea wall did. And graduaSy
(very g rad u ally ), m an lost kls
unreasoning fear of the natural world.
And replaced it with unreasoning fear
of himself.
It is a philosophical commonplace
that man now stands before hit own
creations the way he once faced
nature: bewildered and afraid of

G ro w in g

U C T \O N

W ENTW RONS

Alcoholism, Pollution, Health System Cited

Health O f Soviet People Declining For 15 Years
By NICK EBERSTADT
(Dr. Nick Eberstadt Is a visiting
fellow at the Harvard Center for
Population Studies.)
Ours is a century of revolutions, yet
ironically the revolution which has
affected the most people most directly
is also the one to attract the least at­
tention. This is the Health Revolution.
Since 1900 m an ’s lifespan has
doubled, and for the world as a whole
infant and child death rates have
dropped by about 75 percent. (Whole
forms of previously incurable direase
have been controlled, or even wiped
from the face of the earth, and despite
the dronings of Malthusian doomsayers, our species Is better fed and
better doctored than ever before. One
measure of the revolution in health,
Incidentally, is the "population ex­
plosion," which has been powered by a
lengthening of life, not an Increase offertility.
7he attracting pull of better health
has been so powerful that until now it
has drawn all nations up, regardless of
their culture, economic system, or
government.
But today there is an ominous ex­
ception: the Soviet Union. Conclusive
evidence suggests that the health of the
Soviet peoples has been steadily
worsening over the past fifteen years,
and the deterioration shows no signs of
bottoming out.

For the first half of this century,
Soviet health progress was outstanding,
life expectancy was only about 30 in
the days of the Czars; by 1863, the year
of Stalin's death, it was something like
63. At the end of the 1950s Soviet life
expectancy was nearly 69 — higher, it
seem s, than A m erica's. Then
something happened. According to
Soviet statistics death rates stopped
falling in the early 1960s, and by the
late 1960s they were heading up fo;
nearly every age group. For men and
women in their fifties, mortality rose 20
percent between 1965 and 1975, and by
more than 30 percent for those in their
forties. Infant mortality rates, which
measure the death of children under
one year of age, rose by more than a
third between 1970 and 1975 alone 1
In 1975 the Soviet Central Statistical
B ureau stopped publishing com­
prehensive death data: an indication
that things were not only bad, but
getting worse. From Isolated reports
and deliberately jumbled accounts it
has been inferred that the USSR's
mortality epidemic lias intensified.
Since 1965 life expectancy may have
dropped by as much os four years, for
men, and while life expectancy for
women is much higher, it too may have
(alien in recent years. The Soviet
lifespan may actually be shorter today
Ikon at the end of the 1960s.
Measured by the health of its people,

the Soviet Union today would no longer
be a developed nation. Infant mortality
rates in the USSR are probably three
times as high as in Western Europe or
the United States, but match those in
M alaysia or A rgentina. Life ex­
pectancy is lower than In any European
nation — Including Albania — and In
fact is even lower than in Jamaica,
Costa Rica, or Mongolia. Incredible
though it may sound, a boy Is now likely
to live longer if he is bom In a Mexican
village or an Indian city than a city or
village in the USSR. Clearly, something
Is going very, very wrong with the
internal workings of this superpower.

problem, but visitors say Soviet air
quality can be worse than Japan's.
Soviet authorities evidently make even
less of an effort to control the more
deadly poisons, which are unseen and
unsmelled: pesticides, industrial ef­
fluents and water-borne heavy metals,
and nuclear emissions from poorly
constructed
or only partially
safeguarded facilities. According to one
report, the incidence of birth defects
has been rising by five to six percent a
year for more than a decade. If this is a
reflection of some massive degradation
of the environment, adults will be
suffering from it as welL

What la happening? Those of us who
live and work in the West can only
guess, but we have some pretty good
dues. For one thing, alcoholism is
evidently pandemic. Urban families In
the USSR now devote about the same
proportion of their weekly budget to
alcohol that Americans devote to food.
Soviet per capita Intake of hard liquor
has been estimated to be twice as high
as Sweden's, and things have gotten to
the point where foremen will mark
their workers fit for duty if they can
stay on their feet. Alcoholism can cause
everything from heart disease to birth
defects, and thus may bear partial
responsibility for increases In death
rates for children as well as adults.

Accident rates seem to be unusually
high in the USSR, and rising. With only
a tenth as many motor vehicles as the
US, Soviet drivers experience just as
m any traffic fa ta lities Drunken
workers provide unsure hands for the
heavy,. dangerous, and often shoddym achinery of Soviet industry:
Christopher Davis and Murray Feshbach, two research ers who have
examined the Soviets' own statistics,
have noted that what Soviet authorities
call “ unhappy events" play an im­
portant role in raising nude death
rales.

Pollution may also be playing its
part. We think of this as a Western

Finally, there is evidence that the
health care system is breaking down.
Faced with a lack of decent equipment
and an Indifferent health bureaucracy,
"doctors" most are really paramedics

and patient alike have an incentive to
avoid the hospital. Corruption Is said to
run rampant throughout Soviet society,
with as much as 20 percent of the
nation's "economic turnover" passing
through the black market, and a
sophisticated system of bribes and
payoffs draws doctors and medicine
away from those who need them most,
the poor and the isolated rural
populations. And it seems that the
Politburo is devoting an ever smaller
proportion of the USSR's GNP to
m aintaining its peoples' health.
(Perhaps this is their response to
growing military demands, an in­
creasingly sluggish, Inefficient and
investment-hungry economic machine,
and the consuming public's desire for
goods that can be carted home and
called one’s own.
What are we to make of all this? Even
Bangladesh, where it is said that the
populace is desperate and demoralized
and the government inept and corrupt,
is managing to improve the health of its
people.
In some sense, then, prospects for the
Soviet peoples are even worse than for
the Bengalis. No modem nation would
be unable to maintain its national
health unless its society were in the
midst of a fundamental breakdown.
From what I can moke out, the USSR
is indeed In the midst of the social and
spiritual collapse the likes of which we

in the West have never seen, and In fact
can scarcely imagine. In essence, the
problem is this: the Soviet "ex­
periment" is widely viewed by those
who live under it to be a terrible failure,
but the sorts of meaningful reforms
which might improve the system would
also threaten the political elite, and
hence are out of the question.
Demoralization and breakdown, as a
consequence, are likely to continue.
Over the 1980s and the 1990s it seems
likely that Soviet society will continue
to w ear down: declining health,
economic slowdown or even negative
growth, heightened ethnic conflicts due
largely to the rapid growth of the
USSR's Muslim minority and a further
calcification of the bureaucracy are but
a few of the problems facing Moscow.
At the same time, the USSR's military
force is without equal — at least for the
time being.
Such a combination of the problems
facing Moscow. At the same time, the
USSR's military force is without equal
— at least for the time being.
Such a combination of short term
strength and long term weakness does
not encourage leaders to a rt with
patience and restraint l&gt;- tne in­
ternational arena,
.«edallv li their
intentions are basically expansionist.
As the 1980s progress the USSR's health
crisis may prove to be a tragedy not
only for the Soviet peoples, but for
others as well.

�* A - E v e n in g H e ra ld , S aniord, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 30, 1983

Presidential Hopefuls
Are Fleeing The^Senate

»

H e ra ld Photo by Tom V in cen t

NEW SCHOOL

The shell of Allan F. Keeth E lem entary School in
Winter Springs is completed and construction is
beginning on the building’s interior, said Robert
P ierce of Watson &amp; Co., the Orlando architect in

charge of the project. The school, being built by
G raham Construction Co. of Orlando, is scheduled
to be completed this su m m er and ready for occupancy when school opens on Aug. 29.

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The floodgates
have opened and the presidential candidates
are pouring through — leaving Capitol Hill a
barren desert. Well, not quite.
But It has long been common talk that every
senator who shaves in the morning secs a
president in the mirror.
And Sen. Russell Long, D-La„ once
estimated that about 70 of the 100 senators
have no difficulty picturing themselves behind
the desk in the Oval Office. He excluded
himself.
Nor are members of the House Immune
from this fantasy. Never considered any kind
of a stepplngstone for the White House, the
people's chamber has spawned its share of
presidential candidates in recent years.
The lOSt elections, to no one's surprise, has
drawn its quota of presidential aspirants from
Congress into the race and the campaigns are
in full swing two years befor the Iowa
caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.
Rep, Morris Udall of Arizona, announcing
last week he would not seek the Democratic
presidential nomination, said it was already to
late to gear up.
Udall, who ran in 1076 and Is nationally
known, may have been overstating the case as
it applies to him. But not to others who need
the early exposure.
As the year opens, there are already four
Senate Democrats actively seeking their
party's nomination.
In no particular order, they are Alan
Cranston of California, Gary Hart of Colorado,
Ernest Hollings of South Carolina and John
Glenn of Ohio. Dale Bumpers of Arkansas,
very highly regarded in the Senate, may also
take the plunge.
For all Intents and purposes, these four or
five — depending on what Bumpers finally
does — are now presidential candidates and,

at best, part-tlm\ senators.
Unquestionably^they will be on hand for the
major rollcall volAbut their travel schedules
will preclude attenton to the dally grind — in
committee and In tit chamber.
Missing four or fivesenntors does not pose a
calamity for the ScnalV but the problem could
become more difficult!! President Reagan
does not seek a secondterm.
Only the expcctatlon'.of Reagan running
again keeps a number of lepublieans chained
to the Senate and House. V Reagan takes off
the chains, there will be in exodus as GOP
senators and House m emters hit the cam­
paign trail.
\

COMMENTARY
Senate Republican leader Hiward Baker,
who has announced he will not seek reelectlon
in 1984 but does not hide his presidential
ambitions, is certain to go out.
So is Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, chairman
of the Senate Finance committee and the 1976
vice presidential candidate, who fared poorly
in his efforts to win the nomination in 1960.
Conservatives would certainly offer one of
their own for the party's perusal and the
strongest possibilities arc denizens of Capitol
Hill — Sens. Jesse Helms of North Carolina
and Paul Laxait of Nevada and Rep. Jack
Kemp of New York.
Although senators and, to a lesser degree,
House members, go after the big prize, Capitol
Hill is not really the best launching pad. A stint
or two as governor or the vice presidency
seem the best bet.
The last two presidential candidates from
the Senate — George McGovern in 1972 and
Barry Goldwater In 1964 — were humiliated In
the elections.

Ray Charles
And His
10,000 Eyes
By MARK SCHWED
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — In Rio, a false rumor spread
that Ray Charles, the godfather of v . ul, wanted to buy a pair of
eyes to replace his own slghtlessones.
Soon, 10,000 pairs were offered. Some wanted to donate one.
Others wanted to give both.
Charles, 52, was forced to call a news conference to explain a
transplant would not restore the sight glaucoma took from him
at age 7.
“ Remember this ain't like somebody saying, ‘Hey, pay me.’
They wanted to give them to me. You talk about blowing your
mind," Charles said.
At one concert, women flung so many long-stemmed roses on
the piano that the soundboard was muffled and he looked up in
astonishment, thinking it was collapsing.
"I just hope that at one point I was able to make these people
happy, make them feel warm. It has to be that, man, because
they obviously didn’t know me. It had to be some way that I
made their life better, even if it was just a little bit. That little
* bit must have been very valuable to them.”
Charles is the sold man who rocked with John Belushi in the
"Blues Brothers” movie.

Zayre new low p ric e ___
minus mfr. mail-in rebate*

I

Ray Charles Robinson was not bom blind, only poor.
One of his most vivid memories is seeing his only brother
drown in a washtub basin.
He was bom in Albany, Ga., during the Depression, and
raised in Greenville, Fla., where railroad tracks separated
white from black and where being poor meant you’re so
hungry that your "stomach is next to your backbone." A town
Jukebox filled his ears with the music of bluesmen Tampa Red,
Big Joe Turner and Blind Boy Fuller. Revival meetings ex­
posed him to gospel. The Grand Ole Opry turned him on to
country.
"I guess what I'm trying to say is that I’ve always loved any
kind of music, as long as it was good."
Charles parents' died when he was 15, leaving him alone at
the St. Augustine, Fla., School for the Deaf and Blind, a place
that gave him his first taste of prejudice.
"It was strange. It was only strange because all the kids
were blind. But that's the way it was. It was the way the
Southern environment dictated it be at the time, which goes to
show you how times can change. Now I feel the South is one of
the best areas in the country to live.
"Times change and yet even today there are still problems.
I've come to one conclusion: in this world, you're always going
to have racial this, or national this, or creed this, or religious
that. It's always going to be that way.
*
"Everybody has a right to be prejudiced if that's what they
want to do. But they don't have a right to tell me I don’t have
the same rights as they do.”
Pain chiseled his soul. Blindness enabled him to really see.
His color made him strong.
Charles takes songs like "Georgia on My Mind,” "Hit the
Road, Jack,” "You Don’t Know Me," and turns them into
works of art. It's his art, shaped by the "soul m an” that Frank
Sinatra dubbed "the genius of our profession."
His medicine is rock, jazz, blues, soul, country, pop, folk,
gospel, swing and easy listening.
"In roy singing and in my playing, what I feel is for real,"
says Charles, rocking back and forth in an easy chair at a
Nashville hotel room. " I don’t put on any a lrt.”
Charles has just signed a recording contract with a Nashville
record company and recorded his first album, "Wish You
Were Here Tonight." He's recorded country songs for 24 years,
but this Is the first time he's recorded country songs in the
original style.
When he came to Nashville, singer George Jones told his
boos, " I want to have my picture taken with him.”
Rick Blackburn, senior vt?« president and general manager
of CBS Records In Nashville, blocked off a comer of a
restaurant and haggled with Chai tea over his price. Charles, a
shrewd businessman, negotiates without a lawyer.
"I gave away the shop,” Blackburn says. "He likes me
because I gave him a lot of money.
“ Ray Is the Idol of our supentars — Merle Haggard, Willie
Nelson, George Jones, Ricky Skaggs—and when they heard of
Ray’s signing, they all wanted to sing on his first album. Right
now, we want this to be Ray's album.”
Charles and Blackburn sorted through 100 songs before
deciding on the album cuts. Choosing a song is serious stuff for
Charles.

" It's not that you can't always find a good song. It's a
of when you do find a good song, can I put me Into the
song,” says Charles. ‘It’s a script where I can get into it like
an actor.
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Dice Have Use In Primary Grades
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Education Editor
In this computerised era In grade school, there’s a place for
dice, of all things.
" N o tth e gam bler's dice but foam rubber or styrofoam cubes
made by teacher and marked all sorts of ways to help meet
some learning goals in arithmetic.
The report in the February Issue of Arithmetic Teacher,
Journal of The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics is
sandwiched between articles on microcomputers In instruction
and problem solving and developing computer literacy.
• "Dice can be used to develop geometry concepts and to help
children see spatial relationships," write Virginia M. and
Willis J. Horak, College of Education, University of Arizona at
Tucson.
"The prim ary advantage of dice as Instructional aids is that
teachers can adapt them to the ability levels of the students
and to the subject m atter content.
"Additionally, children enjoy working with foam-rubber
dice and often are willing to spend extra time doing the related
mathematical activities."

/
4 ;

The educators recommend teachers make large, inex­
pensive dice from foam rubber available at hardware or
variety stores.
"Styrofoam can also be used," they said. "The figures on the
faces can be made with permanent felt-tip m arkers in various
colors.”

they said.
"It is better, too, if 10 of the dice are marked in red and ten
are marked in blue.
"Each child rolls all ten dice of one color. They then compare the number of X’s and O's each has rolled. They will say
such things as, " I have more X's than you have," or, 'We both
have the same number of O's,' or 'All together there were
fewer X's rolled than O’s.’
"The accuracy of these statements is then checked out
concretely by pairing the X’s or O's of different colors."

The dice arc quiet. "A few children can be using them
without distrublng the rest of the class," the Horaks said. "The
dice also are easy for young children to hold and manipulate.
Since the foam rubber is relatively Inexpensive, teachers and
schools can make many dice to fit numerous activities."
Game plans using dice include those teaching early number
concepts, addition and subtraction.
Under early number concepts, a dice activity was described
as follows:
"Very early In their mathematics experiences, young
children should have opportunities to set up a one-to-one
correspondence between two or more sets. This can be done
easily by using blank dice as counters.
"Two children are each given some dice. The children are
then Instructed to match their dice by putting them, one by
one, in the center of the table in pairs.
"They are to pair their dice this way until both sets are used
up or until one child no longer has any dice left to match.
"This activity not only stresses one-to-one correspondence
but also gives children a method for determining ‘more than'
and ‘less than’ relationships.
"Children will soon begin to realize they have more of
something when the other child can no longer match their
objects."
For an extension of that activity, the Horaks suggest that
teachers m ark the faces of the dice with large X's and O’s.
"You will need to m ark twenty dice so that three faces of
each did have an X on them and the other three have an 0 ,"

Here's one way the Horaks suggested the foam rubber or
styrofoam dice be used to teach addition and subtraction:
"Dice with blank faces can be used, or you may want to draw
figures on the faces. For example, you can put blue stars on all
fac&amp; of some dice and red stars on all faces of other dice.
"The children then work with, say, a set of four blue-star
dice and a set of three red-star dice.
“ By jolng these sets, the children form a set of seven-star
dice. By using marked dice in this way, when the new set is
formed the children can see not only the new set but also the
original sets.
There’s nothing to stop Mom and Dad from picking up on
some of these ideas by making foam rubber or styrofoam dice
— then putting some fun into helping teach the offspring about
numbers, addition and subtraction at home even before kin­
dergarten starts.

Kids In Atlanta Take International Studies Seriously
Ruth Ashby shows her ribbons won a t the state
fa ir for clothing which she m ade and exhibited.

ATLANTA (UPI) - North Fulton High
School, taking a cue from former President
Jimmy Carter, has become a leader in the
field of international studies on the secondary
level of education.
North Fulton look seriously C a rte r's
directive to the nation's educators that they
upgrade the quality of education about other

countries.
In 1979, C arter's Commission on Foreign
Languages and International Studies con­
demned what it saw as a scandalous neglect of
foreign language study and a narrowness of
viewpoint on the part of U.S. students about
other nations and cultures.
So, North Fulton recruited 20 students in the

spring of 1981 to begin the program that was to
become the North Fulton Center for Inter­
national Studies. Students chosen for the
center must take four years of a foreign
language, as well as international com­
munications, technology and diplomacy as
part of their regular courses.
Ann Goellner, instructional coordinator,

Turpentine Operations
In Panhandle Ending

Missy W arner displays h e r aw ards for horse
judging th a t she won at the Florida State F a ir.

4-H'ers Win j
At State Fair
L aurie Lee Viiuglm . 17-year-old Oviedo High School
Junior, w as th e w in n er o f a 8 5 0 0 college sch o larsh ip at
th e Florida S tate Fnlr held In T am pa. T he first Sem inole
C om ity 4*H’c r to e n te r a ste e r In th e Florida S la te Fair,
sh e w as first In th e education division w ith h er record
hook a n d h er 17-ironth-old L im ousin-A ngus C ross steer
cam e In th ird In th e h eavy weight division.
Her prim e g rade A I.l9 5 |x n n u l slecr brought SI.35 a
p o u n d at a u c tio n . T h e
sc h o la rs h ip a w a rd w as
d eterm in ed by th e top |&gt;olnts in class, points tow ard
h erd sm a n , p o in ts tow ard th e record book an d an
Interview . A total of 70 boys a n d girls were en lercd in
th e steer show .
Miss V aughn had previously show ed ca ttle for o th e rs
in th e open cattle show , but tills w as th e first tim e she
had en tered h er ow n ste e r at the state level.
T h is w as also th e Hist y e a r S em inole h as en tered a
horse Judging team In the sta te fair. T he team consisting
of Kim S u d a n . Missy W arner an d Darbl Edison, coached
by K aren Berk, ra ttle In fifth out o f 31 co u n ties a n d 36
team s en tered .
Missy W arn er ca m e In sixth In actu al Judging, third
for com bined an sw e rs an d scoring a n d w as first In the
state w ith th e hig h est overall score for oral reaso n s out
of 146 p erso n s com peting.
A n o th e r S em in o le C o u n ty 4 -H 'er. R u th A shby,
received two blue an d four red aw ard s for clothing
w hlrli sh e m ade for Judging. S he earn ed S37 In prize
m oney.
A busload of co u n ty 4-H 'ers an d E xtension H om em ak­
ers w ent to th e sta te fair S atu rd ay to support the county
in y o u th an d ad u lt S ta te F air F ashion Show . G eneva
E xtension H o m em ak er C orlnne Slid won th ird place in
th e "S ew ing for O th ers" category. F ranclnc H uggins
a n d Allison C nium uck received record place rib lw n s In
th eir respective categories an d R uth A shby a n d Tiffany
M o o re r e c e iv e d t h i r d p la c e r ib b o n s .

LYNN HAVEN (UPI) - The last of the
the base to collect the gum and a shallow gash
is cut in the tree to let sap drip. Sulfuric acid
turpentine operations in the F lorida
paste is sprayed on the bare wood to keep the
Panhandle are styittlng down and Joe Batson
has no place to work "chipping and dipping,"
gash from healing.
Every two weeks, the workers dip the gum
the trade he's practiced for 50 years.
from the cups into barrels and cut a new gash
Without a job, Batson, 63, spends his days in
at higher spots on the trees.
a weatherbeaten cabin deep in the pine forests
After two years, the worker raises the cup
near Lynn Haven, where he lives without elec­
four feel up the trunk and begins the process
tricity, plumbing or a telephone.
again. In four years, the gashes are as high as
" I can't say it is easy work," the thin, bald
the man can reach.
man said. "It's the hardest work there is, next
The collected gum Is sent to distilleries
to paper wood work. But that’s the work me
where it is refined for manufacturing
and my brother were raised on so we owed to
adhesives, paint thlnners, varnishes, wood
It. And we could make some money at it."
Batson's brother Arthur and John Ray run , fillers, polishes, crayons and p h a r­
maceuticals.
the final two turpentine operations in the
In the 1930s and 1940s, Batson worked with
Panhandle. Ray said he will shut down his
his father at four different turpentine
operation near Ebro in Washington County
operations In Bay and Washington counties.
this week while Arthur BaUouStruggles alone,
E ach, operation m ain tain ed its own "quar­
collecting turpentine gum .Irom some 6,000
ters" for workers, complete wllh a con*
trees near Callaway In BayCbunty.
Joe Batson worked with his brother until last
miasary.
year when the two had a disagreement over
Woods riders, supervisors on horseback,
the business.
watched over the workers to make sure they
Since he dipped his first barrel of turpentine
finished the cutting of the trees and the dipping
on schedule.
gum at the age of "10 or 11" along with his
brother, it had been the only work Batson ever
Batson recalled that the owners often gave
their workers only food, clothing and trinkets
did.
from the company commissary in exchange
“ I thought that was something else when our
for their labor.
daddy told us wc could do it to sec how well we
"You had to buy at the commissary. If you
could dip," he said. "We had all day to dip a
barrel and we finished it by 11, about din­ made over what it took to keep you, some
owners, they’d pay off," he said. "Others, they
nertime. Wc had to stand on tiptoe to see if it
didn't care what they owed you. You just had
was full."
To collect the turpentine gum from pine to trade for what you got."
"I ate my first bread out of his com­
trees, workers first shave the bark from the
m issary," he said.
face of a tree. A gutter and cup are attached at

Dr. Herb Bowdoln and his Methodist Hour International
team will be in charge of 9:30,11 a jn . and 7 p.m. services
this Sunday at Community United Methodist Church,
Casselberry. There will be spedal music by the Rev.
Whitney Dough, associate evangelist end crusade music
director, musicians Bobbie and Gene Moore, and Jane
White, pianist-vocalist.
These services will serve to kick-off the annual Victorious
Life Conference to be held Monday night through Thursday
night at ta k e Yale near Eustis. For information call 6300235.

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5. Lower back p ala hip pain, pain down legs
F R E E SPIN A L E X A M
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The Seminole Heights Baptist Church will observe the
Lord's Supper in the 11 a.m. service this Sunday. Laurel
Elimore, music director, will sing the "Communion
Hymn."

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Lord's Supper O b served

- JANE CASSELBERRY.

Dr. Jam es L Monroe, pastor of the First Baptist Church,
Ft. Walton Beach, will lead a revival at Pinecrest Baptist
Church, 119 W. Airport Blvd., Sanford, Feb. 27 at 11 a.m.
through Wednesday, March 2. Services will commence
each evening at 7:30 p.m.
Dr. Monroe haa a Master of Divinity degree from
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Ky. He
has pastored churches for more than 40 years in Alabama,
Florida, and Kentucky and additionally has assumed
positions of leadership in the Southern Baptist Convention,
the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and other
Baptist institutions.
International preaching missions have been a m ajor
activity area for Dr. Monroe. Over a 26-year period he haa
participated in nine preaching missions to Alaska, Ger­
many, Israel, Uganda, Hawaii and several Caribbean
nations.

said the center has served as a training ground
for 600 students since its Inception.
"They must become fluent In a foreign
language," said Mrs. Goellner, "and they
most maintain their grade-point average In
order to remain with the program."
Students who do not maintain a 2.5 minimum
average are allowed one quarter to regain it-

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for abused and ln|ured animals. We must raise
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receive the matching grant from Edyth Bush
Charitable Found. &amp; the shelter must be,completed
by 10-83.
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» A — E ve n in g H e ra ld , S in io rd , P I.

Sunday, Feb. JO, USJ

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Savings A nd Loan Board
Elects N e w CEO
Empire of America FSA has announced the election
of Paul A. Willax, president, to the additional post of
chief executive officer of the association. He assumed
his new position Wednesday.
Willax succeeds Howard T. Ford, who announced his
retirement last week as an officer and employee of the
Big E, effective March 1. Ford will remain as board
chairman and of its executive committee.
Willax has achieved national prominence for his
leadership within the financial industry.
Under his leadership, Erie Savings Bank grew
rapidly. In a one-year period the Big E grew from a
seven-county federally-chartered savings bank with 19
offices and assets of $2.8 billion to a national thrift
network with 119 branches in four states and $6.3 billion
in assets.
Willax was the chief architect of the Big E ’s complex
interstate merger expansion. On July 30, 1982, the
former American Federal Savings and Loan
Association of Southfield, Mich., merged with the
former Erie Savings Bank of Buffalo to form the
Empire of America FSA.
Simultaneously, First Federal Savings and Loan
Association of Mid-Florida at DeLand and Sanford
merged with Harris County Savings and Loan
Association of Baytown, Texas. All of the outstanding
stock of the association formed by this merger was
acquired by the Michigan-New York Big E. Both
associations adopted the corporate title of Empire of
America FSA.

SSL P rom otes Lyon
F irst
F ederal
of
Seminole has announced
the promotion of Thomas
E. Lyon to vice president consumer loans, according
to Gib Edmonds, president.
Joining the association in
August 1979, Lyon was
in s tru m e n ta l
in
establishing the Consumer
Lending D epartm ent at
First of Seminole. "His
knowledge and experience
in the areas of consumer
lending have been a great
benefit to us and the
custom ers we serv e,"

VORWERK U.S. HEADQUARTERS
The new home for Vorwcrk USA, Inc., is the 30,000-s qua re-foot Altamonte
Springs headquarters building at 500 Northlake Blvd. In 1982, the com pany

had 600 people in its national sales force. President E ric Levine projects an
increase from 600 to 3,500 sales advisors by the end of 1985.

Evans Group Wins Parade Of Home Honors
The Evans Group, recognized nationwide for
its award winning architectural design and
environmental planning, continued to impress
design critics close to home by earning three
firsts and two seconds in the 30th annual Home
Builders Association of Mid-Florida Parade of
Homes which runs through Sunday.
Evans Group designs, which notched first
place awards in both attached and detached
housing categories, scored one-two in the
$70,000-$99,999 attached housing category with

its Derbyshire duplex model for Olin
American Homes of Florida at Branch Tree in
C asselberry and Us Governor Evans
townhouse model for Florida Residential
Communities (FRC) at Governors Point In
Longwood.
Also earning a first place in attached
housing for the Evans Group was its design of
the Plantation Oaks townhomes in Orlando in
the $100,000 and up category by The Harkins
Corporation.

the 11 categories, including five in detached
housing. Four of the five were award winners.
“ The emphasis on attached housing in this
year's parade (40 percent of the entries) is
testimony to the fact that builders and
developers are seeking alternatives to the
traditional detached single-family homes that
are functional, practical and offer an ap­
pealing and affordable living environment,'*
says Don Evans, president of The Evans
Group which earned 14 national design and
planning awards in 1982.

The firm also captured a first in the $150,000$199,999 detached housing category for its
design of a single-family golf villa for Saba!
Point Properties ai Sabal Green In Ixtngwood.
The fifth and final award was a runner-up in
the $49,999 and under attached housing
category for the Adm iral model by
Rollingwood Homes at Southport in
Casselberry.
Of the 60 entries in the parade, the Evans
Group designed 14 and had designs in seven of

Economic Rebound
Seen For Florida
4

THOMAS LYON
Edmonds said.

Kids Eat Free A t Season's
In order to encourage families to get acquainted with
Season’s Friendly Ealing, the new restaurant is letting
kids under 12 years eat for free through March 31. With
every adult entree ordered, youngsters can have their
choice ot any entree on Season's special children's
menu—on the house.
Since the beginning of December, more than 500
Season's Friendly Eating Restaurants have been put
into operation nationwide. Located on sites formerly
occupied by Sam bo’s R estaurants. Season's
restaurants include ones at 2565 French Ave. (UJS.
Highway 17-92) in Sanford and at Casselberry,
Maitland and other area locations.

G e n e ra l Business M o ves
Larry J. Nadrowski, General Business Services
business counselor, has announced the relocation of his
office to 320 South U.S. Highway 17-92, Suite 106, in
Casselberry.
Nadrowski, 39, has been providing professional
services to independent business owners in Seminole
and Orange counties since 1979 as a business counselor
with GBS, a leading national organization specializing
in financial management and tax services for small
business owners and professional people.
His wife, Connie, is a teacher at Winter Springs
Elementary School and occasionally works with her
husband. The Nadrowskls live in the Tuscawilla area
of Winter Springs.

Florida has managed to escape the worst consequences of
the recent nationwide economic downturn because its basic
economic structure is less vulnerable to the effects of high
interest rates, says Mickey D. l&gt;cvy, vice president and cor­
porate economist for Southeast Bank, N.A.
“ An upturn in Florida’s economy still hinges on a national
economic recovery," Levy says, and “the recent expansion of
residential construction may be the first true sign of an
economic rebound in Florida and the nation." The Improved
housing market is directly linked to mortgage interest rates,
which have declined from 16.5 percent to 13.6 percent since
July 1982.
Florida'! economy has a service end consumption orien­
tation, explained Levy. Service industries continued to grow
during the recession, and partially offset the poor performance
of the interest rate sensitive sectors of the Florida economy. In
addition, non-wage Income accounts for an unusually large
proportion of total Florida Income. Heavy reliance on income
from interest, dividends, transfer payments and social
security benefits has buttressed total persona] income so that
consumption has not suffered as much as it would otherwise.
“ Many factors are now in place for the recovery nation­
wide," says Levy, "including the 4.6 percent rate of inflation
for 1982, lower interest rates and lower unit labor costs. Unit
labor costs may recede further and business productivity
should Improve In 1983.

SANFORD
LA N D IN G

Construction of the Sanford Landing is moving on schedule. The 264-unit
ap artm en t developm ent just west of Sanford on State Itoad 46 just west of
Central Florida Regional Hospital, is m ore than half com pleted. A total of 80
ap artm en ts wit!) one or two bedroom s a re completed and most arc occupied.
Also com pleted are the swim m ing pool, clubhouse, racquet ball, tennis
courts and volleyball courts, on-site lake. The general contractor is Con­
current Construction, Inc. The developm ent will be completed by this
sum m er.

[ A H ® L IQ U O R 2
m as

HWY. 17-92 South City Limits
Liquor Dept. Store &amp; Lounge
HAPPY HOUR . T . B O '

[•

X

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S outheast M e e tin g Set
Following a meeting of the Southeast Banking
Corporation board, Southeast has announced the board
has scheduled the annual meeting of Stockholders (or
Friday, April 22, at 2 p.m. in the Southeast Bank
Downtown Banking Center, 100 South B’scayne
Boulevard in Miami.
Southeast's board also established Feb. 25 as the
record date for stockholder eligibility to vote at the
Annual Meeting.
Southeast Banking Corporation is Florida's largest
banking organization with total assets of $7.3 billion
and total deposits of $5.5 billion. Southeast Bank, N.A.,
a banking subsidiary, is Florida's largest consolidated
bank and now operates from 134 banking center
locations statewide.

MINDY'S
Everybody had a good tim e, obviously, at the
recently grand opening of Mindy's* R estau ran t at
Thirst Street and P a rk Avenue in Sanford, which
Jac k ie Bee, Bud Lowe and Guy VanDer Laag
recently opened. Among p articip an ts iu the
ribbon cutting cerem ony, front row from left, are
City Com m issioner Milton Sm ith; G re ater San­

i

ford C ham ber of C om m erce representative
Deborah Stiles; C ham ber
board C hairm an
Dennis Cuursun; Mindy Strubie, restau ran t
em ployee; M artha Yancey cham ber goodwill
am b assad o r; City Com m issioner Eddie K eith;
Ms. Bee; M ark Strubie, re sta u ra n t em ployee;
and Lowe.

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Harvey’s Bristol Cream 6.49
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Tia Maria Liqueur
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Bailey’s Irish Cream 11.79
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Gilbey’s Gin
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Black Velvet Canadian 6.79
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Jim Beam Brb.
£ 10.49
Old Thompson Blend £ 9.29
Stag
1.49
Black Label
1.69,
Red, White A Blue i i - 1.79,
Konigsbacher s s r c 3.99,
ABC Wine livnam*vwiouscMUjrn 4.99
M ilk
JZ'ZXL.1.85,
Sw eet

Area residents with house or property damage from
the rains and flood probably can deduct the loss on the
federal Income tax return. However, it is important to
document losses now in order to substantiate deduc­
tions of uninsured losses on income tax returns.
According to Jackie Richards, HAR Block manager,
damage to a house, trees, shrubbery and landscaping
around the house Is treated differently from damage to
a car, appliances, rugs, and other personal property
when estimating loss and preparing income tax
returns itemizing the losses.
A loss caused by the flood on the value of real estate
— damage to the house and what is around it — can be
deducted on the federal income tax return.
However, what can be deducted Is not the cost of
repairing a house or replacing whatever landscaping
the flood wiped out, Ms. Richards said.

The Pioneer House open pit restaurant has reopened
in Geneva.
Viola West, manager, said the family-style eatery
offers a wide range of food selections. TTu* Western
setting restaurant seats 60.
The restaurant recently reopened on Avenue C. It is
owned by Amanda Ensor.

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�E vening H e ra ld , S anford, FI.

ByBRENTSMARTT
Herald Sporta Writer
After allowing a 16-polnt, second
quarter lead to disappear before they
eyes, Coach Chris Marlctle's Fighting
Semlnoles pulled out a 66-64 Five-Star
Conference triumph on two William
Wynn free throws with :02 remaining.
The homecoming and Senior Parents
Night victory raises the ’Noles to 22-9 and
13-3 (second to Dolrand) in the Five Star,
while Seabreeze slips to 14-13.
After the pre-gam e homecoming
festivities, Marlette’s 'Noles got out of
the box quick. The visiting Sandcrab’s
opened up In a 2-1-2 zone which Seminole
easily navigated. "Kiki” Bryant simply
shot over the 'Crabs for a Hkpoint
quarter. When TClki’i efforts were off

Sunday, Fab. 10, I t f t l —tA

course Willie Mitchell and Wynn came to
the rescue to bolt Marlette’s troops to a
24-11 gap heading Into the second
quarter.

Prep Basketball

The tide slowly changed as Marlette
summoned his bench into the contest for
most of the second. Seabreeze eased back
in on Clifford Reed Jumpers and Darryl
Robinson’s strong inside play.

The evenly-played third quarter saw
Seabreeze's quick-handed defense take
away many Seminole opportunities to
pull even closer at 5046 heading into the
final eight minutes.

Freezing the ball until the 1:26 marie,
Seminole received a 'Crab turnover
which Bryant converted Into two free
throws, pulling Seminole within 61-60.
After continuing to milk the clock, the
'Crabs Steve Hager hit 1 of 2 charity
tosses for a 62-60 edge. The ’Noles’
Mitchell pulled it even on the next
possession with a 15-footer with 1:52 to
play.

Outscoring the 'Noles 22-15 In the
period, Reed (10 points in the quarter)
and company closed to 30-33 against the
Seminole subs at halftime.

The Sandcrabs completed the come­
back at 6:12 in the fourth, overtaking the
'Noles 55-54 on two Norman McCoy free
throws.

After another ’Crab turnover and a
Seminole time out, Bryant drilled two
more free throws for a 64-62 Seminole
edge a t : 41 to play.

While Seabreeze continued to dominate
the glass, the lead see-sawed the re­
mainder of the duel. Gaining a slight
edge of, 61-56, on two Reed buckets, the
'Crabs began to hold the ball at the 3:41
mark.

Working the ball through the Seabreeze
press, Marlette’s 'Noles set up a Bryant
baseline Jumper. “Klki’s” effort, though,
fell short but Bryant and Wynn scrapped
for the rebound. As Wynn gained control,
he was fouled and awarded a one-ln-one.

When asked why the starters sat so
long in the period Marlette responded,
“ Don’t ask me. I Just felt like we needed
a rest. I Just did a poor Job of coaching in
the first h alf/’ admitted the Seminole
boss.

After a Seabreeze timeout, the cool
Junior forward drilled both ends to pull
out the 'Note triumph, 664)4.
"There was a lot of pressure on Wynn
but we practice that everyday", Joked
M arlette
In
victory.
"T hey’re
(Seabreeze) a good team. They should
have beaten DeLand twice."
Bryant topped all scores with 22
Seminole points, closely followed by 21
from Mitchell. Wynn totalled 12. Reed
(21), Robinson (19) and Johnson (16)
carried Seabreeze’s balanced attack.
In the junior varsity battle coach Tom
Smith’s young 'Noles became the 21st
victim of Coach Joe Piggotte’s 21-0
Sandcrabs, 5441.
The ’Crabs Terry Johnson led all
scorers with 24, followed by Greg Jenkins
with 16. For Seminole, Kenny Gordon

Lady Rams Nip

In F rid a y 's second gam e, the
Jo n e s Tfgcrs sailed to their second
s tra ig h t to u rn a m e n t v icto ry by

Totals Fouls — Sem. — 20 S.B. — 21
Fouled out — None
Technicals — None

"I never considered it," Walker said
Friday. “ I’ve matured a great deal here
and I’ve learned a great deal and the
more I mature, the more I am going to be
a better football player. I have no need
(to play in the pros) this year.”

LAKE MARY (45)

Collins 3 6-8 12. Gibson 0 2-3 2.
G raham 8 2-5 18. R obinson 2 1-2 5.
Moore 1 2-4 4. Morcficld 1 0-0 2
Totals: 15 13-22 43.
Lake Mary 6 14 16 9 -4 5
E ustis 8 1112 12-43
Total fouls: Lake Mary 21. E ustis
18. Fouled out: P. Glass. Gibson.
T echnicals: none.

11 22 13 16-64
24 15 11 16-66

ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) - Helsman
Trophy winner Herschel Walker backed
out of a contract he signed with the New
Jersey Generals of the United States
Football League and could have rained
his chance3 of playing a final year at
Georgia, a newspaper reported sources
as saying Friday.
The Boston Globe, in its Saturday
editions, reported, according to two
sources "close to the negotiations,"
Walker signed a $5 million contract
Thursday night that included a 24-hour
grace period in which he could change his
mind.
The Globe's story reported that after
signing the contract, Walker left the
meeting with Generals' owner J. Walter
Duncan, apparently walked around the
Georgia campus for two hours and
returned to say he had changed his mind
and would stay with Coach Vince
Dooley's squad next season.
At a news conference Friday af­
ternoon, W alker adm itted he had
discussed the possibility of playing with
the Generals, but insisted he “ didn’t sign
a.osrtsw A .. , t ,_ .,-1, , \
" I met with Mr. Duncan. I think he's a
super person. He came down here
Wednesday night, we talked and that was
it," said Walker, who has led Georgia to
one national championship and three
Southeastern Conference titles since he
arrived in Athens three seasons ago.

the lead but com m itted a tu rn o v er
w ith 56 seconds left to play. W ith 38
seconds rem aining, Lake M ary’s
Andrea Jo h n so n w ent to th e charity
strip e for a cru cial one-and-one
s itu a tio n . J o h n s o n 's first sh o t
looked as though It w as well off the
m a rk , b u t th e b a ll h it th e
backlxiard. bounced aro u n d , and
fell in. Jo h n so n m issed the second
shot but Lake Mary led by two.
43-41.
Eustis fill one of two free throw s
with 28 seconds left to m ake It
4 3 -4 2 . th e n th e P a n th e rs s e n t
Gregory to the line for a one-andone. Gregory, one of Lake M ary's
best free throw shooters, calm ly
sank both sh o ts to give the Lady
Hams som e b re ath in g room . 45-42.
W ith 16 seco n d srem an ln g . E ustis
w ent track to th e line an d converted
one of two sh u ts to cut th e R am s'
lead to two points. 45-43.
W ith 13 seconds rem aining, th e
P an th ers sent Lake M ary's Michelle
S w artz, a n o th er of th e R am s' b etter
free throw shooters, to the line for u
o n e -a n d -o n e . S w a rtz , h o w e v e r,
m issed the front end and E ustis
grabbed (he reb o u n d a n d w ent
down court to try to tic the gam e.
The P an th ers’ m issed a shot with
five seconds left an d Lauru Gluss
grabbed the rebound. G lass w as
called for traveling, though, and
E ustis had two seconds to try and
send the gam e into overtim e.
Eustis d id n 't even get ofTa shot ns
the Inbounds pass w as throw n aw ay
and the Hams salvaged the victory.
L aura G lass led th e Ham s w ith 14
p ain ts while G regory added 12 and
Sw artz chipped In eight.

EUSTIS (43)

Seabreeze
Seminole

Then Balked,
Says Globe

Prep Basketball

Averlll 2 0-0 4. L. G lass 6 2-3 14.
P. G lass 1 2-2 4. G regory 5 2-3 12.
Sw artz 3 2-5 6. Stone 1 0-0 2.
J o h n s o n 0 1-2 1. Totals: 1 8 9 -1 5 4 5 .

SEABREEZE (64)
Irager 01-11, Reed 8 5-6 21, Robinson 6
7-11 19, Johnson 6 66 18, McCoy 0 3-5 3,
Bell 0 06 0, Curry 1 0-2 2, Totals 11 21-31
64.

W alker Signed,

Eustis... Barely
C H R IS FIST ER
H e ra ld S p o rta W r ite r
T he Lake Mary Hams, looking
ahead to a ch am p io n sh ip m atchup
w ith J o n e s , a lm o st got b u rn e d
Friday night by the E nslls l.ady
P an th ers In th e sem i-finals of the
3A-6 District T o u rn a m e n t at Lake
Mary High.
"W e were a lre a d y getting ready
for J o n e s a n d It h u rt u s .” Lake Mary
ro a ch Hill Moore said.
F o r tu n a te ly . I lie L ady H am s
w eren't looking loo far ahead and
pulled out a narrow -15-43 victory to
advance to S a tu rd a y 's H;30 p.m .
finals against Jo n es.
"W e co u ld n 't hit a n y th in g in the
first lialf from th e o u tsid e an d
E ustis w as clogging up the m iddle."
Moore said. "W e’re n b elter shooting
leant th an we show ed tonight and
we arc going to have to hit from the
outside against J o n e s ."
T he Hams hit only 3 of 14 sh o ts in
the first q u a rte r a n d E ustis took
nnfl 6 lead behind T ina G ra h a m 's
six points.
E ustts. 1 1-10. led by a s m uch as
three points on two different oc­
casions In the second q u arte r. Lake
M ary's Lisa Gregory then found her
shooting touch and hit h e r first
Jum p er to bring the Hams to w ithin
one point. 19-18. and th en cam e
back to hit a Ju m p er at the buzzer to
give Lake Mary the lead. 20-19. at
the end of th e first half.
Lake Mary hit only 9 of 30 shots
In th e first half for 30 percent while
Eustis m ade H of 19 sh o ts for 42
percent.
The Lady Hams. 20-6. cam e out
fast In the third q u a rte r and built a
seven-point lead. 30-23. on Laura
G lass' layup on n nice pass from
Kim Averlll. Lake Mary led by five.
36-31, at th e en d of the third
q uarter.
T he lead ch an g ed h an d s six tim es
in the fourth q u arte r, th e fifth tim e
cam e w hen th e P an th ers' 6*3 ce n te r
A nnette Gibson lilt two free throw s
to put E u stis ah ead .41-40. with
2:50 rem ain in g In the gam e. Gibson
w as fouled on th e play by Lake
M ary's Peggy Glass. It w as h er fifth
foul.
G ibson .how ever, foultd out of the
gam e 12 seconds later, opening the
Inside for L aura G luss to dom inate.
After th e R am s m issed three onean d -o n c
o p p o r t u n i t ie s . G la s s
grabbed an ollenslvc rebound and
dropped In th e lollow-up shot to put
the R am s ah e ad . 42-41.
E u stis hud u ch ance to take back

(17) and Jam es Rouse (12) turned In fine
efforts.
SEMINOLE (66)
Bryant 7M 22, Mitchell 101-121, Law 3
M 6, Gilchrist 0 M 0 , Wynn 5 2-212, Grey.
0 0-1 0, Clayton 0 2-2 2, Stiffey 0 06 0,
Franklin 104) 2, Walker 0 04) 0, Holloman
0 1-2 1, Alexander 0 06 0, Totals 26 14-19
66.

K t r i M P h o t* by T o m V incont

Lake M ary’s Michelle Sw artz pulls down a rebound while being closely-guarded by a Eustis
p lay er during District 3A-basketball action at
dousing Klaslmmce-Osceolo. 55-37.
Jo n e s. 24 -1 bu t unsccded because
It d id n 't play enough district gam es,
opened a 30-17 lead at halftim e
behind the court generalship of
g u a r d S h l c l a R ile y a n d t h e
boardw ork of Ja c k ie W ashington
an d Alecla Jo h n so n .
T he Lady Tigers* lead grew to 20

Lake M ary. The R am s slipped past Eustis by two
points and will play Jones Saturday night a t 8:30
In the cham pionship game.

points an d m ore In the second half 6. Caldwell 4. Love 0. Page 2.
as th e 5-9 W ashington and th e 5-11 J o h n s o n I I . M c G a r v I n 2 ,
Jo h n so n dom inated Osceola. 15-7. W ashington
gu 10. T otals 24 7-11 55.
O s c e oda
la (3 7 )
u n d ern eath .
Hen ton 14. M cCrtmmon 1. Word
R ogers, m eanw hile, paced th e
J o n e s ' attack w ith 14 points while 5. Wells 4. M crrigan 8. Brown 2.
Jo h n so n added II W ashington stu ck G ibbons 2. T otals 12 13-25 37.
Halftim e: J o n e s 30. Osceola 17.
In 10.
Total fouls: Osceola I I . Jo n e s 18.
J o n e s (5 5 )
Riley 14. W illiam s 4. Rogers 2. Ira no Fouled out: none. T echnical: none.

Officials at the Generals' training
camp In Orlando, Fla. refused comment.
Walker could not be reached for a
response to the story early Saturday, but
his attorney and personal adviser, Jack
Manton, who attended the meetings with
the Generals, said he had "no knowledge
Herschel Walker signed any contract."
"I was not present, or participated, or
advised, in the signing of any contract,"
Manton said. "Herschel Walker has
stated he did not sign a contract. I serve
Herschel as an attorney and adviser and
have acted in accordance with NCAA
guidelines. I will have no further com­
ment."
Dooley said he had asked Walker
Thursday night If he, In any way, had
Jeopardized his eligibility next season
and Walker reportedly told him "No,
absolutely not."
" I Just can't believe this is true,”
Dooley said.

Dickerson Doesn't Show For Fight
SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor

BILL PAYNE

RICKY SUTTON

LUIS PHELPS

KEITH WHITNEY

RAIDERS H O ST D A Y T O N A BEACH IN M ID -FLO R ID A CLASH
Coach Rill P ayne’s Seminole Community Col­
lege R aiders entertain D aytona Beach Com­
m unity College Saturday night a t 7:30. H ie
R aiders, 18-11, need a victory and a Florida
Ju n io r College loss to secure the host’s role In
the post-season tournam ent which determ ines
the other berth in the sta te tournam ent. SCC Is
paced by sophom ore Ricky Sutton and fresh­
m an Lnis Phelps — both who w ere recently

nam ed to th e M id-Florida All-Conference F irst
Team . Sutton, a 6-1 swingtnan. and Phelps, a 66 pow er center, a re joined by Sanford's Keith
W hitney, Jim m y Payton and eith er B ernard
M erthle or Delvin E v erett in th e startin g
lineup. The Scots of coach Ray Ridenour blew
SCC out of the gym nt D aytona. They have a
highly-cxploslve offensive squad paced by
guard Sam Sm ith.

O rlando's Rich Dombrowksi took
care of S anford’s Je rry Dickerson
Friday night w ithout laying a glove
on him . Make th at w ithout lacing
on a glove.
D ickerson, w ho looked so im ­
pressive while knocking DcLund's
Hrucc Morgan aro u n d th e ring In
T h u rsd ay n ig h t's Regional Golden
Gloves, w as a "n o show " Friday
n ig h t for th e featu re 165-pound
b attle at th e A m erican Legion Col-*
Iscunt at Orlando.
" 1 d o n 't k n o w w h e r e h e
(Dickerson) Is." said an Irate Kent
Foyer. Golden Gloves d irector and
to u rn am e n t m atch m ak er. "B u t he
pulled th e sam e crap last y ear after
he won (he first night, h e d id n 't
show the seco n d .”
D ickerson's m an ag er Vtc "T aco "
Perez w as at th e A m erican Legion
C o lise u m Friday but co u ld n 't be
reached for co m m ent. He ap p a r­
en tly left after D trkerson d id n ’t
show.
D om browskl. m eanw hile, sim ply
w a lk e d in to th e rin g a n d w as
a n n o u n c e d th e w in n e r by
" w a lk o v e r."
T h e s u p e r b ly conditioned form er U niversity of

Boxing

u p a su b stan tial lead In th e first tw o
ro u n d s to survive a two-knockdow n
barrage by A ltam onte S p rin g s Dan
Ftxl to claim a split-decision victory
In th eir 132-pound bout.

C e n t r a l F lo r i d a A ll-A m e r ic a n
w restler now ad v an ces to th e slate
In th e heavier w eights. D cL and's
t o u r n a m e n t M a r c h 9 - 1 2 In
Tim Collier won a u n an im o u s dcM e lb o u rn e .
M e l b o u r n e 's
clsionover M erritt Islan d 's Tim Doar
WMOD-TV. Channel 43. will televise
a n d O rla n d o 's R o b ert J o h n s o n
th e finals of the state to u rn am en t
pounded O rlan d o 's J o e B ym e of
live on M arch 11-12.
T h u rsd ay
Irabor Union 517 into su b m issio n
n ig h t's fights will be show n S a tu r­ at 1:58 of the second ro und.
day night at 8 w hile F rid ay 's b o u ts
In th e "K nockdow n A ttraction uf
will be aired next S atu rd ay at 8.
W hile D ickerson's no show w as a th e N ig h t." K is s im m e e 's J e r r y
disap p o in tm en t to th e 40 0 fans, he Nlcklc decked D cL und's Jeff C ooper
co u ld n 't upstage David S u rlier In twice In the th ird ro u n d en ro u te to
his 178-pound bout w ith O rlando s a u n an im o u s three-round decision
at 147 pounds.
Howard King.
In o th er bo u ts. J o h n Dixon (147)
S n eller. from Palm Bay. took
th ree sh o ts to th e face from King, dccisloned Darrell S im m ons. S ean
th en bolted out or th e ring an d Into C orcoran (147) bested Mike C aputo.
th e d ressin g room , wildly gesturlr*; M ark S c o tt (h e a v y w e ig h t) d ec ls ln n c d C h ris M eC lasky. M ike
w ith his h an d s th at he h ad “ ha
e n o u g h ." King w as aw arded the B aker (154) took a split decision
victory by " re tire m e n t." S n eller from R obert Doby. Ron Phllpot (178)
w as slapped w ith a 30 lay s u sp e n ­ m au led Carl Brown. J o h n M aher
(178) slopped Kelvin Brown In the
sion for his actions.
W hen two fighters did gel Into the first ro u n d . J o e A m brogto (1191
ring lor m ore th a n 20 M-eonds. sto pped G rant B ryant til th e second
nev erth eless, th ere w as som e good, ro u n d a n d Darrell From m 1154) won
by w alkover w h en J o h n LaKuc
h ard -h ittin g action
C asselb erry 's A rth u r Zacco built d id n 'l show.

�I
10A— E ve n in g H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. JO, 1f»J

G ibson Counts
p On Big N um bers
For Big Results
By CHRIS FISTER
Herald Sportj Writer
ta k e Mary track coach Mike Gibson
says the Rams already have the quality
to be good, now all they need is quantity. Gordon is the top sprinter as she holds
“ As soon a s the o th er sports the record in the 100,220,440 and the long
(basketball, soccer) end, we should have Jump. Gordon won the 100 and long jump
better depth in a lot of the events," at the ta k e Mary opener, was third in the
Gibson said. "We expect to have about 40 440 and third in the 220. Gordon ran the
to 45 people on the boys team and 25 to 30 best 220 of the meet (27.3) In the
on the girls."
preliminaries.
The boys proved they will be com­
petitive again this year as they finished
Junior Kathy Johnson and sophomore
in second place in last week's Lake Mary Mary Ann Ditucci are also good in the
Opener. The girls team finished in fifth sprints for the Rams. Shannon Weger,
place but had some notable per­ who went to the state meet a year ago, is
formances.
one of the best in the 440 and strong in the
For the boys, fleet-footed sophomore relays. Weger was sixth in the 440 at the
Patt Murray holds school records in the ta k e Mary Opener.
100-yard dash, the 220, the long Jump and
the triple Jump. Murray placed seventh
A pair of freshmen add depth in the
in the 100 in the rain at the ta k e Mary sprints. They are Anquenette Whack who
Opener, sixth in the 220, third in the long also competes in the long Jump and
Francina Wade who also does the high
jump and second in the triple jump.
Other sprinters who Gibson believes jump.
will do well include junior Keith Mandy
ta k e Mary's lop hurdlers arc Junior
who is the team ’s best 440 runner and
second best in the 220. Mandy was fourth 1Jsa Holt, and the Buggs' sisters, Mary
and Wilease.
in the 440 at the ta k e Mary Opener.
Sophomore Brian Cook was fourth in
The best distance runners include
the 330 and is also among the Rams’ best sophomore Andrea Bcardslee who holds
in the 440, the long jump and the high
the record in the 880, Kim Harrison, Amy
jump.
Maher and Kim Wager. Bcardslee was
Will taVelle and Charlie tacarelli also
third in the 880 in the ta k e Mary Opener
compete in the sprints and ore strong in
and tied for fifth in the high Jump.
the relays.
Sophomore Becky Durak also com­
tak e Mary’s top distance runner is
junior Derek Tangeman who, in his first petes in the high jump and holds the
year at ta k e Mary, holds the 880 and two- school record in the discus. Durak tied
mile records. Tangeman was a standout for fifth in the high Jump and was third in
on the cross country team and is ex­ the discus in the opener.
pected to be the Ranis' top mller, too.
Six of the members of tak e Mary's
Gary Schofield (680), Jim Shepherd girls basketball team are expected to
(mile) and Jim Schnell (1320) are also help out the track squad too.
strong distance runners.
Sophomore Kim Averill is one of the
The top hurdlers include Junior Mike
top
milers and two milers around as she
Rouse, Junior Derek Tumey and fresh­
man Robert Bowes. Rouse is also the went to state a year ago. ta u ra and
team 's best high jumper. He competed in Peggy Glass will Join the track team this
the National AAV-Junior Olympic Meet year and compete in Ihe shot put and
discus. Andrea Johnson is also strong In
in Colorado last summer.
In the pole vault both David Homyak the shot and discus. Courtney Hall, high
(sophomore) and Mike Wcippert (Junior) jump, and ta r r a Hall, 440, will also join
the team when basketball is over.
placed in the ta k e Mary opener.
Tops in the throwing events include
"We had nine girls and four boys reach
Jeff Hopkins and Ned Kolbjornsen. state last year," Gibson said. "We’re
Hopkins has the record in the discus and hoping for more this year."
Kolbjornsen in the shot put. Bill
The Lake Mary ooys team will com­
Caughell, a sophomore, will provide
pete
in the Lake Brantley Open on
depth in the throwing events as soon as
he is completely healed from a wrestling Saturday while the girls will be at Lake
Howell Open, also on Saturday. On
injury.
Tuesday,
ta k e Mary's girls will be in a
When basketball and soccer ends, the
triangle
meet
with Seminole and Oak
Rams will be joined by junior distance
runner Mark Blythe and two freshmen, Ridge at Seminole while the boys will be
Raym ond
H artsfield
and
Jose in a dual meet with Seminole.
The Rams next home meet will be the
Delrosario.
For the girls team, sophomore Fran ta k e Mary Relays on March 5.

PrepTrack

RAWLS, LIKENS
JUST 2 W INS
FROM TITLES
Lake M ary's Pin Twins, Jack
Likens (top) and Robert Rawls
w ill re a c h for 3A c h a m ­
pionships Saturday in the State
W re stlin g T o u rn am e n t in
Haines City. Likens, a 109pounder, and Rawls, unlimited,
each picked up victories in the
first and second rounds Friday
to advance to Saturday mor­
n in g 's
s e m i-fin a ls.
The
dynam ic duo needs just two
wins each to secure state titles.
Oviedo's fine sophomore Jerry
Jordan, meanwhile, is also two
wins aw ay. Jordan, a 102pounder, won two m atches
F riday to qualify for the sem i­
finals. See Monday’s Evening
H erald for a complete rundown
of the 3A state finals and the 4A
Region finals in Jacksonville at
Orange P a rk High School.
H tr a ld Photo by B rian L a P a ta r

Seminole's 4-Run Uprising
Knocks Out Lake Mary
By CHRIS FISTER
H e ra ld S p o rts W rite r
A four-run third inning explosion
backed by Ihe six-hil pitching of
Greg Hill carried the Seminole High
F ig h t i n g S e m in o te s to a 6 -0
w hitew ashing of Lake Mary s Ram s
Friday afternoon in the Sem inole
C ounty Baseball T ournam ent at
Sanford Memorial Stadium .
Jeff V anzura opened the third Indraw ing a walk off the R am s’ Barry
Hyscll an d V anzura moved to sec­
ond on Greg C arter's sacrifice bunt.
V anzura cam e aro u n d to score
when ta k e M ary's Ron Nalherson
liooted Steve Dennis' grounder to
second. Brian Rogers then drew a
walk and two ru n s scored when
Andy Griffith blasted a double to the
left field wall. Griffith cam e around
to score w hen Hill tripled to right
center as Sem inole took a 4-0 lead.
Lake Mary had a scoring threat
th w a rte d In th e fo u rth inning,
leaving Scott Underwood stranded
at th ird base. The lead-off hitter in
th e inning, Hysell. ripped a single
up th e m iddle. But Hyscll was
erased w hen Hill picked him off first
base. Underwood then drew a walk,
stole second an d went to third on an
erro r on the throw . But Rod Metz
an d Keith W allace couldn't plate
Underwood a s the Ram s cam e up
em pty.

Prep Baseball
Sem inole cam e b a rk w ith a ru n In
the fifth as Griffith lined a two-out
double to left, w ent to third on a
wild pitch an d scored a s th e c a tc h ­
e r's throw sailed over the third
b ase m a n ’s head.
Lake M ary’s leadoff h itte r In the
sixth. Kyle B rubaker, drew a w alk
but Ihe rally w as soon killed us the
Tribe tu rn ed one of th ree double
plays on th e day.
Sem inole picked up its six th ru n
in the top of the sev en th a s Griffith
reached on a fielder's choice a n d
scored w hen Hill cracked u double
deep to left field.
Rod Metz led olf ihe bottom of the
seventh w ith a double for t a k e
Mary, but he w as throw n out at
th ird on a co m e-b aek e r to th e
m ound. Hill th e n stru ck out the last
two Lake Mary h itte rs to pick u p the
victory.
Hill sca tte red six h its a n d nev er
gave up m ore th a n o n e hit in a n
Inning. T he big rig h t-h an d er stru c k
out six R am s an d w alked two.
Hysell pitched well In a losing
cause, giving u p ju st three h its
while strik in g out live a n d w alking
four. Of th e five ru n s Hysell gave up.
only two w ere earn ed .

ab r h bl
Seminole
2 10 0
Dennis, c
3 10 0
Rogers, ss
4 3 2 2
Griffith, lb
4 0 2 2
Hill.p
4 0 0 0
Smith, 2b
3 0 0 0
Russi, cf
2 0 0 0
Cox, 3b
2 10 0
Vanzura, If
2 0 0 0
Carter, rf
26 6 4 4
Totals
ab r h bl
ta k e Mary
3 0 10
Natherson, 2b
2 0 10
Hysell, p
10 10
Fontana, p
2 0 0 0
Underwood, cf
3 0 10
Metz.c
3 0 0 0
Wallace, If
3 0 0 0
Chasey.lb
3 0 10
Schmlt, ss
2 0 10
Hill,3b
10 0 0
Brubaker, rf
23 0 6 0
Totals
004 010 1 -6
Seminole
000 000 0 -0
ta k e Mary
E —Dennis, Nalherson 2, Schmlt, Metz
2. LOB—Seminole 6, ta k e Mary 4. DP —
Seminole 3 .2B - Griffith 2, Hill, Metz. 3B
- Hill. SB - Dennis 2, Griffith, Rusal.
SAC — Carter.
PITCHING
IP H R ER SO BB
Hill (w, 1*1)
7 6 0 0 6 2
Hysell, (1,0-1)
6 3 5 2 5 4
Fontana
1 1 1 1 0
1

Seminole'8 Jeff V anzura slides across with a run
as Lake M ary catch er Rod Metz w aits for a late
throw during Seminole County B aseball Tour-

H t r s M n w t o by Tern V in c e n t

nam ent action F rid ay . The Tribe blanked the
R am s, 6-0.

Golmont, Lake Howell Walk Past Lions In Tourney Opener, 5-2
first two innings, lost the strike zone in
the third. Walking 8 of I Hawk batten he
Herald Sparta Writer
faced in the Inning, the Oviedo lefty
A one-inning pitching lapse by the advanced coach Blrto Benjamin’s troops
Oviedo Uoru coat them a 5-2 decision to to a 3-0lead. All three tallies were walked
the take Howell Silver Hawka In the on and in.
opening round of the Seminole County
Oviedo lefty reliever Jeff Green held
baseball tournament at Sanford
the
1-3 Hawks In check until the sixth
Memorial Stadjasn. The Hawka played
when
winning pitcher Van Golmont
Seminole a frO winner over take Mary at
helped
his cause by igniting a twoout
2 pm. Saturday while the Uoru played
rally
with
a single to left. Third sacker
the Rams at 11 p m .
Billy Canfield followed with a three-base
Lion atari lag hurier Chris Restinger, shot to center to score Golmont. Second
after setting down the Hawka In order the baseman Mike Shields punctuated the
By BRENT SMART!*

Prep Baseball
Silver Hawk scoring wiui a rope double to
left scoring Canfield.
Junior hurier, Golmont held Coach
Howard Mabie's Lions in check through
the first five innings. In the sixth, Breen,
who had two hits on the day drilled a
double to center to lead off the inning.
After a ground out Keasinger erased
Oviedo's zero with a triple down the
right-iield Une to score Green,

Following another out, centerfield
Dave Butterfield completed the Lion's
scoring with a single to right. Second
basemen Skip Cooper also had two hits
for the Lion's, now 3-1, who outhlt ta k e
Huwell 7-5.
Golmont finished strongly, breezing
through the seventh for the victory.

Johnson, C
Green, P
Thayer, SS

Oviedo
AB R H Bi
4 o o o
4 12
0
4 0 1 0

K essinger.lB
Cast ley, 3B
Butterfield, CF
Cooper, 2b
Bowersox, LF
Boston, PR
Wood, RF

2 1 1
3 0 0

3 o

1

3
2
0
2

0
0
0
0

2
0
0
0

1 Golmont, P
0 Canfield, 3B
1 Shields, 2B
0 Totals
u
0
0

ta k e Howell
ta n g , LF
Tucker, C
Poindexter, SS
Gardner, IB
Deano.RF
RBradiey.CF

3
2
3
3
3
3

1
1
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
l
0
0

0
0
1
1
1
0

Laxe no wen,
E-Bradley, Golmont DP-Oviedo.
Oviedo 6, Lake Howell 6. 2B4
Shields. 3B-Canfield, Kessinger.
HBP-By Golmont (B ow ersos)
Golmont.

�E ve n in fl H erald, Sanford, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
B onnetf Has Best C ar
In D ayto n a's 'S ilver' 5 0 0
DAYTONA BEAD! — The silver anniversary race
at Daytona International Speedway will start at 12:15
p.m. Sunday with the first million dollar purse ever
given (or a stock car race. It will be a race sought after
by 42 drivers entered in the 500 mile event.
Ricky Rudd, of Chesapeake, Va. in the Piedmont
Airlines Chevrolet, is on the pole with an all-time
Daytona qualifying record of 198.864 mph. Geoff
Bodine the Chemung, New York ace will have the
Gatorade Pontiac on the outside pole with a speed of
197.920 mph.
Dole Earnhardt, winner of the first UNO 125 on
Thursday, and Neil Bonnelt who won the second UNO
125, will start on the second row. Buddy Baker,
Richard Petty, Kyle Petty, Cale Yarborough, A.J. .Foyt
and pick Brooks round out the top 10 starters.
Three of the lop drivers in the NASCAR Grand
National ranks ran into trouble during Thursdays
qualifiers and will start way back in the Reid. Darrell
Waltrip in the Pepsi Challenger Chevrolet had ignition
trouble and will start in 31st place. Bobby Allison In the
Miller High Life Chevrolet cut a tire and will start In
35th place.
Terry Labontc in the Budwelser Chevrolet had a
short in the wires going to the distributor and didn’t
even start his qualifier. Due to being high in points for
1982 he will be allowed to start in 41st place as an added
entry to the field.
Waltrip and Allison are expected to hook together
and work their way through the field. By the first
caution or pit stop both drivers along with Labonte
expect to have worked their way into contention.
Waltrip especially wants to win this race as the
Daytona 500 is the one big one he has not been able to
win in his career.
This race will be full of rookies with Bosco Lowe,
Dean Roper and Sterling Marlin leading the group.
Marlin is the son of famed driver “ Coo Coo’ Marlin.
Dean Roper was a top USCAC driver. Lowe is one of
the leading all-time sportsman winners.
Favorites to win arc Bonnetl, Baker, Petty, Ear­
nhardt, Allison and Waltrip. It is felt that Bonnett,
winner of this year’s Busch Clash and one of the 125
mllers, has the best car in the field. The winner of this
race could win as much as $200,000 from the Million
Dollar purse. - CARL VANZURA

K.C. Surprises Lakers
United Press International
The Kings played well enough to beat l/ts Angeles
but poorly enough to almost beat themselves.
Despite committing 18 turnovers and shooting 39 per
cent from the line, however, Kansas City hung a 124-118
victory on the Inkers.
"We could have won going away if we had made our
free throws," Kansas City Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons
said. "Wc gave them every opportunity to beat us."
Guards Ray Williams, Mike Woodson and Larry
Drew combined for 61 points to carry the Kings.
Williams, who also had 14 assists, had 25 points,
Woodson 19 and Drew 17, as Kansas City beat the
Inkers for the first time in four tries this season in
moving back to the .500 level at 26-26. Forward Eddie
Johnson also had 19 points for the Kings.

Kite Flying A t San D iego
LA JOL1JV. Calif. (UPI) — For Tom Kite, golf is
right up there with the best things in life. For the time
being.
Kite, brimming with confidence, blistered the Torrey
Pines Country Club with a 7-underpar 65 Friday for a
three-stroke lead midway through the $300,000 San
Diego Open.
And his 65 on the North course, combined with his
opening-round 68 on the much tougher South course,
gave him a 133, 11-under-par after two rounds.
•‘I’m Just having a lot of fun right now," Kite said. "I
feel like ... I’m riding a wave and I’d like the wave to
continue the rest of my life. But I’ll settle for the next
two rounds."
Ben Crenshaw, considered the tour’s brightest star
after winning the first tournament he entered 10 years
ago, continued his resurgence, carding a 2-under 70 on
the difficult South course.

B lackledge O pts For NFL
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) - With his name
etched in the record books as the first quaterback ever
to lead Penn State to a national championship, Todd
Blackledge feels it’s time to reach for new challenges.
Blackledge Friday announced he will forego his last
year of college eligibility and enter the NFL draft set
for April, ending five months of speculation about his
future.
"At this point of my career, I’m both mentally and
physically prepared to play professional football,” he
said. " I ’ve enjoyed a very successful year here at Penn
State. I can’t say I’ve accomplished every goal I’ve set
out to do, but I’m convinced at this time it’s time to
move on to new goals and challenges.
"I reached my final decision about five days ago. It
was something I went back and forth with a long tim e."

V eg as Rem ains U n b e a te n
United Press International
Second-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas is trying to prove
a point.
Sidney Green scored four of his 20 points during a 144 second-half surge and I^ rry Anderson had 28 points
Friday night, leading Nevada-Las Vegas, the only
m ajor unbeaten team in the nation, at 23-0, to an 84-31
Pacific Coast Athletic Association victory over San
Jose State.
No. 1 Indiana, now 19-3, lost to Iowa earlier this week
and the Runnin’ Rebels wanted to make sure San Jose
State couldn't pull off a similar upset.

M c D o n a ld Keys S abres' W in
United Press International
Lanny McDonald's 50th goal of the season Friday
night was not enough to spark the Flames.
Rlc Selling scored one goal and assisted on two
others and rookie Phil Housley added a goal and an
assist Friday night to lead Buffalo Sabres to a 5-1
victory over Calgary, despite McDonald's reaching the
50-goal plateau.
In other games, Winnipeg clipped Boston, 6-5, and
Washington nipped Vancouver, 2*1.

«

Twin 125 w inners Dale
E arn h ard t (left) and
Neil Bonnelt a re the
fa v o rite s S u n d ay to
battle it out for first
place in the Daytona
500.

Jacobi Crash Chills
Daytona 500 Field
DAYTONA BEACH
(UPI) The
starting field is set for Sunday's $1 million
Daytona 500, but activities leading up to the
pinnacle of stock car racing were chilled by an
Two-time defending NASCAR points
chilling accident that left driver Bruce Jacobi
cham pion D arrell W altrip had ignition
in critical condition.
problems Thursday and has starting position
No. 31 for Sunday.
Jacobi, a veteran racer making a comeback
Earnhardt's victory was his second of the
on the Grand National circuit, was injured
day. Earlier, NASCAR lightened a fine for
Thursday when his Pontiac spun down one of
ignoring a black flag during Monday's Busch
Daytona International Speedway's banked
turns and cartwheeled for several hundred
Gash. Earnhardt originally was slapped with
feet across a muddy infield.
a $10,000 fine - the largest in NASCAR history
— but the penalty was lowered to $5,000 and
The spectacular wreck occurred early in the
$2,000 is refundable if Earnhardt clears a 10first of two 50-lap qualifying races.
race probationary period cleanly.
Jacobi suffered head injuries and was listed
Earnhardt, averaging 154.746 mph in his
in criUcal condition in the intensive care unit
Ford, led for one lap midway through the race
at Halifax* H ospital, said a hospital
spokesman.
' but tucked in behind the leaders for most of the
affair. He zipped past Foyt on the back
On the track, Dale Earnhardt and Neil
straightaway of the 50th lap and edged the
Bonnett came up the big winners. Each
hard-charging Baker for the victory.
recorded dramatic finishes to capture the two
"I was in exactly the place I wanted to be,”
qualifying races and both will start on the
said Earnhardt, the 1979 Grand National
second row Sunday.
rookie of the year and the seasonal points
With the completion of the qualifying races,
the starting field for the 25th running of the 500 champion the next year. "I had no intention of
is set.
trying to make a move until the last lap."
Richard Petty led the second race for 20
Ricky Rudd, the pole-winner during
qualifying earlier this week, and Geoff Bodine laps. But Bonnetl, who won the 20-lap Busch
G ash Monday, outducled Petty and Yar­
have starting spots on the front row.
borough on Lap 50 for the victory.
Earnhardt and Bonnetl are on Row 2. Buddy
Four yellow caution flags slowed the pace —
Baker and seveiAlmc winner Richard Petty
will start from the third row. Kyle Petty, Cale 122.183 mph by Bonnett's Chevrolet — and kept
Yarborough, A.J. Foyt and Dick Brooks the field tight. Fifteen cars finished on the
complete the top 10 sturters.
same lap with Bonnett, but 10 in the field of 35
never made it to the end.
Defending champion Bobby Allison, who has
crashed two cars this week, suffered a flat tire
"It was running Just as fast as it would go,"
during Thursday’s second race and finished said Bonnett of his car on the last lap. "I
out of the top 15 — the cutoff point for the top 30 practiced with Richard (Wednesday) and I
starting positions. On the strength of previous knew he was strong, perhaps as strong as any
qualifying times, Allison will start from the car here. When I blew by him I was as sur­
35th spot in the 42-car field.
prised as anybody."

Auto Racing

Old Franchise Ain't
What It Used To Be
NEW YORK (UPI) - Franchises in sports
are like the old gray mare — they ain't what
they used (o be — and that's only part of the
reason so many operators are looking to
unload them now.
Some of those operators seeking to sell now
apparently never realized an ego trip could
cost so much, present so many problems and
pall so quickly.
This doesn’t necessarily mean everybody
who has one is that eager to get rid of his team.
Certainly not with cable television steadily
becoming more and more of an economic
factor.
Not too long ago, I asked George Steinbrenner if he had to do the whole thing all over
again, would he buy the Yankees, and he said
sure, but it's fairly obvious all his fellow
operators don’t feel quite the same way.
Had he been able to reach agreement with a
prospective purchaser who seems unable to
wait to give him his money, Ewing Kauffman
would've sold 49 percent of the Kansas City
Royals the other day. The deal came unglued
when Kauffman said the buyer, Michael
Shapiro, failed to meet the term s of the
ag reem en t although Shapiro insisted
negotiations were not finished.
Kauffman isn't the only one ready to sell.
The Galbreath family, which tirst bought into
the Pittsburgh Pirates 37 years ago, also has
taken steps to dispose of 49 percent of its
holdings to Warner Communications and there
are others outside of baseball who show signs
of wishing to get out as soon as they can, too.
After trying for some time, Ted Stepien, who
has had the NBA’s Geveland Cavaliers only
three years, Is on the verge of selling them to a
real-estate developer. Sam Schulman, owner
of the Seattle SuperSonics, is open to offers for
them as well. The San Diego Clippers are in
the throes of severe financial difficulties and
have been on the m arket for some time. Jerry
Buss will listen to offers for his not so suc­
cessful Kings hockey team. And any minute
now, you may hear the St. Louis Blues have
relocated in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Let’s take a closer look at some of the sales
of the big league baseball clubs in recent
years.
The Chicago Cubs were sold to the Chicago
Tribune Company in June of 1981 and the total
price was $20.5 million, of which the Wrlgley
Field was appraised at $10 million, the
"franchise and player contracts" at $8 million
and the balance for "other assets."
The key here is the lease to Wrigley Field,
which was taken over by the Tribune Company
as part of the deal. The Wrigley estate owns
the park and the land but the Cubs have a lease
through 2018 at a rental of approximately
$20,000 a year. You don’t get leases like that
anymore.
If in Uie next few years a domed or multi­
purpose stadium is built in Chicago to ac­
commodate both the Cubs and White Sox, the
Wrigley Field lease probably would be worth a

minimum of $10 million without a stadium. So
it could mean the Cubs went for $10 million
instead of twice that much. That wasn't a bad
deal.
A group headed by Bill Giles purchased the
Philadelphia Phillies for an estimated $30
million in October 1981. None of the partners
owns as much as 50 percent of the partnership.
But until figures on was how much was paid
for the "franchise," for the pre-paid radio-TV
monies and how much was considered "in­
terest," it is difficult to say whether the
Phillies were a good or bad buy.
The Seattle Mariners also were sold in 1981.
George Argyros paid $9,070,000 for 82 percent
of the club. Four of the original six men who
formed the Mariners in 1977 — Danny Kaye,
li s te r Smith, Walt Schoenfeld and Stan Golub
- remained in for 2 per cent each while a
friend of Argyros bought the other 10 percent.
Argyros got no land, but did get a lease on the
Kingdome — not comparable to leases ob­
tained by other clubs renting from municipal
county agencies. Argyros, it would seem,
didn’t make that good a deal.
In October of 1980, Jerry Relnsdorf and
Eddie Einhom bought the White Sox in what
was virtually a "twin" of the Cubs’ deal in
term s of dollars and concept. The only real
difference is The Tribune Company has a
leasehold interest while the White Sox fran­
chise had been assessed at $8 million and the
land that included Comlskey Park at f 12
million. la s t fall, Relnsdorf and Einhom sold
Comiskey Park for $12.5 to a consortium of
investors. All told, it wasn't a bad deal for
Relnsdorf and Einhom.
Shortly before they bought the White Sox,
the Walter Haas' family paid Charlie Finley
$12.7 million for the A’s. The d u b had a lot of
young talent, owed no money and enjoyed an
excellent lease on the Oakland Coliseum, and
it includes total control of all concessions. The
A's owners voice no unhappiness over their
investment and feel the du b will move up
again this year.
E dw ard B ennett Williams bought the
Baltimore Orioles for $12 million in October of
1979 and took three years to pay it out.
Included was one of the finest leases in
baseball. The Orioles control all concessions'
revenue and pay no percentage of ticket sales
until after the club has drawn 1 million.
Edward Bennett Williams doesn't make manybad deals and this certainly can not be con­
sidered one of them.

,

Sunday, Feb. 20I U 8 1 -1 1 A

S co re ca rd
K an C ity 114, Los Angeles I I I
M ilw a u k e e 121, In d ian a 94
P ortland 101, U la h 97
Seattle 115, W ashington 111
T o d a y’s O am os
(A ll T im es E S T )
D enver at New Y o rk , 7:30

Dog R acing
A t Sanlord-O r lands
F rid a y m a tln tt results
F irs t ra c e — J -t6, B: 11:04
5 H a z e l'K id s
7.10 4 40 1 4 0
7 Top R iv e r
10 40 3.60
• R K 't C utty S ark
7.40
O (5-7 70.00, P ( J-7&gt; 145 JO T (5-7I ) 711 10
Second rac e — 5-16, C: 31:31
4 D io n a
I9 60 6.40 3 60
1 Brando
3.30 3.40
3 Cute C heerleader
3.40
0 (1 -4 ) 31.60, P (4-1| 41.10, T (4 1 3) 331.00, D O (S-4) 75.10
T h ird r a c e - 5-14, M : 11:51
3 H ey N u t R
8 60 4 40 3 00
3 Shopper C h rli
5 40 3 40
5 M is ty M o ya
3.00
Q (13 1 31 00, P (1-1) 43.40, T (3 3.
5) 93.30
F o jr lh race — 5-14, 0 : 10.99
4 M usic M e lo d y
4 00 1 80 3.30
3 Croon wood Hope
7.00 3 30
5 H endry J
jg o
0 (1 -4 1 19.40, P (4 -J | 39.80, T (4 1 .
5) 83.80
F ifth rac e — 5-16. C: 11:13
4 R eliab le Raven 5 60 1 80 3 60
4 Space Princess
43.60 10 4 0
7 L aredo M o e
1 80
O (4 1) 75 40, P (4-8) 104 00. T (44-7) 411.40
Sixth race — 5-16, B: 10.94
7 Redhot R e a c tio n 36 60 6 40 5 00
3 P W T D o lla r B ill
I SO 7 40
4 Blue W a te r
7,40
0 13-SI 54.10, P (1-1) 131.40, T (21-4) 106.40
Seventh ra c e — 1-14, A: 30:47
3 M a n ate e T iffa n y 6 70 4 60 3 00
1 0k alo o sa Red
4 60 a 10
5 M u d H ole
5.6O
Q 41-5) 3140, P ( l l) 41.00, T (3 1 S) 111.40
E ig h th rac e — 5 14. C: 11:17
4 P W 5 Cum Chris 3 5 4 0 4 30 4 40
6 A utum n O rifte r
4 60 4.60
6 Wash A llen
5 40
Q (4 41 $4.40. P (4 4) 101.10, T (45 4 ) 709.00
N in lh ra c e — &gt;», D ; 34:44
3 Sand Shadow
20 00 13 30 7.00
a P e n s lo n F u n d
31 60 9.00
6 Tip Toe Sandy
4 40
O (1 41 40 00, P (3-4) 145 to. T (14-41 549.10
10th race — 5-14, D: 31:10
3 Jguared A w ay 17 4 0 7 60 3.70
5 JC-'s Doll
5 60 3 40
I SS F lu n ky
4 40
5) 17.40, P (1 3) 65.40, T (3-3It 417.00
llt h r a c e — 5-14, A : 31:35
3 M a ke O ur M o v e 33 60 6.40 5 00
I M y F a t F rie n d
3 30 1 40
6 Sea L a w y e r
3 80
0 (1 -2 )3 1 .4 0 , P ( M ) 44.00, T I M 4 1 135.10; pick Six (1-3-4-71-1) 4 Of 4
paid 7 w inners 127.00; lackpot
c a rry o v e r 737.30
ll t h race — 3 14, O : 31:11
4 Red Ken
6 00 4 00 1 00
7 Hot Dog H o lly
3 00 2 10
7 L a k e Ir a
3 60
O (7-4) 10.10, P (4-7) 11.40, T (4-7I I 169.40
l l t h rac e — &gt;1 , D : 34:7)
5 K itty Logan
46 00 13 40 9.40
7 Pistol P a lll
13 60 4 40
1 M o h a m m e d M e lv in
11.40
Q (5 7) 144 60, P (5 7 ) 317.00, T
(5 7 1) 1,119 60
A — 1179) H an d le 5111,401

an

B o w lin g
W F D N E IO A Y H f-N O O N E R S
Standings; C h arlies Angels, 4535; W O T M No. I, 64 34; Sfenstrom
R e a lly , 50 50; C lay C onstruction,
SO 50; Sanlord H ip . 6- A ir, 49 51;
A w n in g s
A
Tops,
44 54;
C hesapeake C rab House, 40 60;
W O T M N o 1. 3* 51.
H igh C a rn e t: A lic e H endricks
190. 157, 154, N o rm a W ag ner l i t .
Donna
A lle n
147.166, L ib ia
W hitehead 140. Pat Thom pson 179,
E v e Rogero 171, Jeannie Adam s
170. 167, Jeanette H ickcox 162,
Sam Bolton 161, H elen H arriso n
161, Id a B aker 1S9.
H igh Series: A lice H endricks
JOI, Donna A lle n 466. Jeannie
A dam s 474, N o rm a W agner 477,
P al Thom pson 434. R uth E v e 396,
A lice U lm e r 396
Converted Splits: E v a Capps 5 4
10. Jeanette H ickcox 5 7 9, Sam
Bolton S 6 10, 3 10, B a rb a ra K elley
5 6 10. 5 6, 3 10. Junelle Addison 4
10. M a r y E lm o re 3-10, E v e Rogero
57
O th e r H ig h lig h ts : T u rk e y s
N o rm a W ag ner A P a l Thompson
Queen ol Ih e W eek N o rm a W ag ner
4 96

NBA
N B A Standings
By U nited Press In ttrn a tio n a l
E as tern Conference
A tlan tic D ivision
W L Pet
OB
4S 7 165 Phila
Boston
39 13 .750 6
N ew Jersy
31 19 635 11
W shngln
24 27 .471 10' 1
N ew Y ork
1 ) IS .451 I l l y
C entral D ivision
M ilw a u k e
35 I I .640 —
75 16 .490 9
A tlan ta
D etroit
IS I I 471 10
t l 35 .340 17
Chicago
Indiana
14 37 301 19
13 40 745 11
C iev rln d
W estern C onlorcnc*
M id w est D ivision
W L Pet. C B
San Anton
17 77 .593 —
K an C ity
76 76 500 S
25 26 490 S’ l
D allas
D enver
76 78 481 6
U la h
19 IS .353 11
Houston
to 41 .189 21'»
P ac ific D ivision
Los A ng
19 t l .765 —
P ortland
11 I t 604 8
Phoenix
I t 71 .585 f
Seattle
29 74 547 I I
Golden St.
71 11 404 18' 1
San Diego
18 36 313 7 1 'y
F rid a y 's R as u tti
P h ilad e lp h ia 177, Houston 91

pm
Phoenix at D e tro it. 4:05 p m.
A tla n ta at D allas. 1:35 p m .
Boston at Golden State, 11:05

pm.
Sunday's O am es
N ew Y o rk at P h ila . a lt.
Los Angeles a t tnd., aft.
N ew Jersey a t M llw , a lt.
Houston a t K an C ity , aft.
A lia at San A ntonio, aft
Phoenix a t C leveland
D allas a t Chicago
Golden S late a t Seattle
U la h at San Diego
W ashington a t P ortland

B aseball
Ju nior College
M IA M I-O A D E S O U TH 7,
S E M IN O L E a
Sem inole
004 i t a 0 10 -4 7 t
M ia m i-D a d t S. Ota 001 l l i - l f •
Soyer. D unlap (7 ), P erkin s ( I )
and H o liw o rth ; W ebb, W illia m s
(41 and Leon. H itte rs — Sem inole.
P a rk e r 2 4, Duda 2 4 3 R B I,
Thigpen 7 4 3 R B l; M ia m i: O rtiz 3
70s, I R B I, D unham 7 1 , IB . H R , 1
R B ls . R e c o rd s S e m l/to le 1 5 .
M ia m i D a d e South 6 4.

J.C.
T e n n is

H ockey
N H L Standings
By U nited Press In te rn atio n al
W a lts Conference
P a tric k D ivision
W L T Pis.
P h ilad e lp h ia
37 14 7 41
N Y Islan d ers
3 1 70 9 71
W ashington
29 14 11 71
N Y R angers
25 15 4 54
N ew Jersey
t l 36 t l 34
Pittsburgh
13 40 7 33
A dam s D ivision
Boston
34 11 4 44
M o n tre a l
31 | | to 71
B uffalo
17 31 I t 65
Quebec
]7 U 9 63
H a rtfo rd
16 37 6 31
C am pbell Conference
N o rris D ivision
W L T Pis.
Chicago
37 16 7 I t
M m nesola
31 15 t l 75
St Louis
19 31 I t 49
D etroit
15 3) 13 43
Toronto
16 30 10 42
S m y th * Division
Edm onton
31 I I 10 72
C alg ary
34 77 9 57
W innipeg
24 79 7 55
Los Angeles
70 29 9 49
Vancouver
I I 79 | | 47
F rid a y 's Results
6 u lla lo 5. C a lg a ry I
W tnoipeg 6. Boston 5
W ashington 7, Vancouver I
Today's G am es
(A ll T im es E S T )
N Y Rangers at P hiladelphia,
1:35 p m,
M o n tre a l a t N Y
islanders.
5 05 p m
Chicago
al
H a rtfo rd .
7 35
p.m
Edm onton at P ittsburgh, 1 05
pm .
C alg ary at Toronto. I 05 p.m .
Quebec at St. Louis, 9 0 p m
Boston at M innesota. 9.05

Ju n io r College
5 E M IN O L E 7, P A L M B E A C H 2
Singles: P ern fo rs (S ) d. Fransson 6 0. 6 0; Sven son (S I d. H ak ka
son 6 4,4 7, 7 6; Svanfesson (S ) d.
Roper A t , I 6, 6 3; Suato (P D ) d.
B rum field 1 6 .6 2. A 3 ; Treen (S ) d.
N e g re te 6 0 , 1 6 , 7-6. M e r r itt (S ) d.
Slubbs 6 4, 1-6, 7 5.
Doubles:
P e rn fo rtS v an fe sso n
(S I d. H akkason R oper 4 1, A t ;
F ra n s s o n N e g re te
(P B )
d
Svenson M e r r it t A 4 , 5 7, 7 6;
Treen B ru m lle ld (S ) d StubbsV a n n a n a n 6 3. A 4 . R e c o rd s :
Sem inole 4 0, P a lm Beach S-t,

Prep T e n n is
G irls
T R IN IT Y P R E P S .L Y M A N 2
Singles: D inneen (T P ) d.
F a u lk n e r 1 0 ; R e e n ( T P ) d .
D ilracisco 8 0; M c N a m e ( L I d.
Flynn * 4 ; P o rte rfie ld ( T P ) d.
dappolia 8 1; C ra y to n (T P ) d.
Lister 8 5
,
Doubles: Om nenn Reen (T P ) d,
F a u lkn e r C appolla 8-0; M c N a m e
D iF rac isc o ( L I d P o rte rfie ld
C rayton 8 5
Boys
O rlando Oak Ridge 76. O rlando
Evans 60
O rlando E d g e w a ler 67. O rlando
Colonial 50
O rlando Boone 59. O rlando Jones
44

W inter P a rk 77, W in te r G arden

•

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I
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West Orange 67

’M e lb o u rn e F lo r id a A ir 67. j
O rlando T rin ity Prep 45
O rl4 n d o H e r ita g e tOA St.
P etersburg A d m ira l F a rra g u t 79
G ainesville 67. L iv e Oak 53
Santord Sem inole 66, D aytona
Beach Seabreeze 64
Long wood L y m a n 87, A ltam onte
Springs L a k e B ran tle y 83
Cocoa Beach 74, S atellite SS
Daytona Beach M a in la n d I ) ,
pm.
Apopka Sf
W ashington at Los Angeles.
E ato n ville W ym o re Tech 88.
10 35 p m
Lake M a r y 66
Sunday's G am es
Fros! proof 90, O rlando Lake
H a rtlo rd at D etro it
H ighland 66
Edm onton at B uffalo
G irls
W innipeg at N Y R angers
D is tric t 4A S
N ew Jersey at P h ila
Cham pionship
Los Ang a l V ancouver
O rlando E vans 67. Or U ndo
E d g e w a le r 62
Ju n io r v a rs ity fin a l
O rlando E v a n s 44. O rlando
Colonial
)t
Sports Tran sactions
D is tric t 1 * 4
B y U n ited P ro s * tm trn a tio n a l
P in e lla s P a rk 43, P in e lla s
F rid a y
Sem inole 47
B aseball
C le a rw a te r 67, D unedin 47
N e w Y o rk — Signed pitchers
D is tric t 4A-4
Jess* Orosco a n d T om G orm an
A t D aytona Beach M a in la n d
and In fle ld tr Ron G a rd e n h lre to
M a itla n d L a k e H o w ell 57,
1983 contracts.
Longwood L y m a n 51
Footb all
D e L a n d 65. D a y to n a B each
B uffalo — N a m e d M ille r M eM a in la n d 53
C a lm o n s p e c ia l te a m s an d
D is tric t ) A -4
assistant defensive coach.
A t Seabrooza
D enver — N a m e d C h a rlie West
D aytona Beach Seabreeze Si.
defensive ba ckfleld coach.
M id d ltb u rg 30
D e n v e r I U S F L ) — S ig n ed
St. A ugustine 5A P a la tk a 47
safeties Tom Sullivan and D a rre ll
D is tric t 3A-8
D a v is a n d lin e b a c k e r G re g
A t Lake M a rty
.
W estbrook.
L a ke M a r y 45. Eustis 41
Kansas C ity — N am ed W illie
O rlando Jones 55, K issim m ee
P e rte offensive backs coach and
Oseoia 37
&gt;
Rod H um enuik rushing olfense
D is tric t 1A -4
and offensive line coach.
O cala V an g u ard 97, L a ke W e ir
Philadelphia ( U S F U - Signed
11
Q u a rte rb a c k Steve P is a rk ie w ic i lo
D is tric t 1A-4
a series 01 oneyear c o n tra c ts .
A t D aytona Beach F a tlw r L o p ti
H ockey
F la g le r P alm Coast 57, SI.
N H L — Suspended Edm onton's
Augustine F lo rid a D eaf 50
Ken Linsem an and Los A ngeles'
P ie rs o n T a y lo r 51, D a y to n a
D ean Kennedy lor »our days each.
Beach F a lh e r Lopez 40
D is tric t 1A -I0
. M ount D ora 47, T avares 41
D is tric t IA-8
O rlando L u th e r 39, M o ntverde 34
M ount D ora Bible 57, Lake
H ighland 49
Collage Basket ball Results
By U nited Press In te rn a tio n a l
F rid a y
E ast
A ive rn ia 74, M ls tric o rd ia SI
Brown 66. Penn 67
Caslieton St 74, H aw th o rn e 46
C lark toe. Fitch b u rg Sf 75

D eals

College
Basketball

C o r tla n d S I 101. R o c h e s te r 90

Daem on S7, u tlc a Tech 52
D artm ou th 47. C ornell 44
D rexel 56. A llentow n 33
F rm n g h a m SI I I . B rd g w le r St
71. ot
Gordon 84, N yack Sf
H a rv a rd 66. C olum bia 62
H unter 17, B aruch 74
Low ell U. 16. M ass. Boston I I
New H aven 70. N e w H am p sh ire

68
Oswego St 69, Brock port St. 63
Princeton 51, Y a le SO
Purchase 65. M a r ilim e 51
Staten isi 77, P ace 17 (fo r fe it)
South
Bluetield St. K&gt;. W L ib e rty 68
Morehouse 70. Fisk 62
Union (K y ) 75, C linch V a il. 73
M idw est
B em id jl SI. 61. M in n M o rris 61
E K entucky 75. Youngstow n St,
69
E m p o ria St. 71. W ay n e St. 61
F ort H ays 56. P ittsburg 5!
Indiana Tech 105. N a za re th 69
Luther 97. Buena V is ta I I

NIGHTLY 7:30
MATINEES
MON.-WED.SAT.

1:00 P.M.
•
P L A Y T H E E X C IT IN G

PICK-SIX
W IN N E R S IX IN
AROW AND
W IN TH O U S A N D S
OF DOLLARS

'■ ■ ■ ■ ■ { E D U C T 1111111
DUN-RITE TRANSMISSION

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FULL SERVICE AUTO REPAIR
OPEN SATURDAYS

T R A N S M IS S IO N T U N i- U P

W it* £4
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FOR A FAIR
SHAKE ON
ALL WORK
US N. HIGHWAY 17 *2. LONOWOOD
&gt;« M IL E N O R T H O F OOG T R A C K R O A D

NEW HOURS: MON.FRI. 8 00-5:30 SAT. 8 3

T R IF E C T A ON
E V E R Y RACE
•
T H U R S D A Y A L L L A D IE S
A D M IT T E D F R E E !

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12A— E vening H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 20, 1»#3

Because

O f Federal Cutback

Educational Funding Pool May Dry Up
By P a t r ic ia McCo r m a c k
UPI Education Editor
Experts in financial aid for college students expect Presi­
dent Reagan to renew efforts to reduce the amount of money
available for education expenses in the 1984-85 school year.
But high school students aiming for college entry next fall —
the 1983-84 school year — should not be scared off by talk of
such efforts, says Dan Hall, dean of admissions and financial
aid at the University.of Chicago. He also is chairman of the
College Scholarship Service Assembly of the College Board.
One reason: the recommendations will not affect the school
year beginning in September, a year in which an estimated 116

billion Is available for help with college bills. Filing a Finan­
cial Aid Form as soon as possible helps a student to bid for a
share of that.
The forms, available at guidance offices in high schools and
colleges, are processed by the Board’s College Scholarship
Service.
•The funds are set for rail,’’ Hall said. "And there’s still time
to save them for subsequent years."
The Financial Aid Form, required as the initial bid for help
by most post-secondary schools nationwide, helps officials to
determine a student's eligibility for aid.
On the form students and parents provide Information about
such things as family size, income, assets, expenses. At the

LMHS Computer 'Dating'
Many different activities and events
are on Lake Mary’s calendar this week,
for example:
Band district solo and ensem ble
competition will be held at l*MHS Friday
and Saturday.

In keeping with the romantic mood of
the month of February, the I^ake Mary
High School student government recently
sponsored the "Heart to Heart” compatabllity match-up.
Each student filled out a questionnaire
consisting of approximately 25 questions.
The answers were then sent to a com­
puter laboratory for analysis, and they
were returned to LMHS about a week
ago.
For the price of only $1 pupils were
able to purchase a list of the 10 members
of the opposite sex at LMHS whose an­
swers most closely matched their own.
These lists were in descending order of
compatabllity, and the results spawned
both positive and negative reactions
from the members of the student body.

Currently, LMHS is attempting to aid
the Smeinole County Humane Society.
The Society is in need of money for its
building fund, and we are collecting SAH
Green Stamps for the society to redeem
as cash.
The society must meet an upcoming
deadline, so anyone wishing to help may
deposit any Green Stamps in the bins in
the LMHS front office, Publix super­
markets. or mail them directly to the
society.

A round
LMHS
Ry
Jolenc
Beckler

The second annual Lake Mary Science
Fair will take place this Wednesday.
Students in all grades have been nur­
turing their projects for weeks in hopes of
placing and advancing to county com­
petition.
A day of interesting browsing is an­
ticipated for all who attend.

Child Safety Seats Are Life Savers
United Press International
Safety officials in the South say child
restraint laws are taking some of the
heartache out of traffic accidents.
Tennessee, Florida, Virginia, North
Carolina, and Alabama are among 19
states that require youngsters to be
secured in heavily padded, portable
safety seats or with seat belts when
riding in cars.
Lawmakers in three other Southern
states — Georgia, South Carolina and
Mississippi — are expected to consider
child restraint bills this year.
Safety officials say the devices save
young lives. But others claim restraint
laws, which usually require fines for
violators, are unenforceable.
"These devices are very effective and
the law has been effective in getting
people to use them," said Lt. William
Henry of the Tennessee Highway Patrol.
In 1977, Tennessee became the first
state in the nation to adopt a child
restraint law.
Virginia Tech clinical psychologist
Scott Geller, who has studied seat belt
use, is skeptical about Virginia’s child
restraint law which took effect Jan. 1.
"Police officers aren’t sold on the idea
of safety belts," he said.
Proponents of child safety seals say
statistics prove the device* work.
Since July, seven deaths were reported
in 1,000 accidents in North Carolina that
involved children who were not in
restraint seats, said B.J. Campbell,
director of the University of North
Carolina Highway Safety R esearch
Center.
He said no deaths were reported in
about 800 other accidents in which
youngsters were in child restrain t
devices.
"Research has already proved these

seats are highly effective in preventing
deaths," Campbell said.
Tennessee officials say the best
example of a safety seat's effectiveness
did not come in an auto mishap.
In September, John and Helen Johnson
of Chicago were killed in the crash of
their Cessna 172 airplane near Gallatin,
Tenn. 11161118-month-old son, who was
strapped in a safety seat, survived the
crash.
"That shows how these things can
work,” said Henry.
Even before Virginia adopted a child
restraint law, the state nearly halved its
highway death rate for children under
age 4. Eight died in 1982-down from 15
the previous year.
"We'd like to think that more people
are using safety Kata," said Janet
Halstead of the Virginia Department of
Transportation Safety.
The child restraint laws in the South
are similar.
Tennessee’s requires children under
age 4 to ride In a restraint device while
traveling in a motor vehicle. Fines run
from |2 to $10, but can approach |40 with
court costs.
In North Carolina, children under age 1
must travel in a safety seat and those
under 2 can use a restraint or seat belt.
The law, which will expire in 1985 unless
renewed, applies to youngsters ac­
companying their parents. It carries no
penalty for violation until 1985.
Florida's law, which takes effect in
July, requires children 3 and under to
ride in federally approved safety seals
and 4 and 5-years-old to use seat belts.
Violators face $15 fines, but can avoid
them by buying safety seats or pledging
to buckle up their youngsters.
Alabama’s law, which took effect last
June, applies to children under 3 and

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

I V ET ER A N S j

*
*
*

Revised booklet of Voteran benefits recently published by the
Veterans Administration now available to honorary discharged
Veterans at no c o s t

*

*
*
*
*

*

* * * * * * * * **y * * * * * * * * * * £ £ . , * £ ^ a * * * * *
FM tm i awil t« :__________

OAKLAWN’S VETERANS DIVISION
Route 4 , Box 244
Sanford, Florida 3 2 771
Name _

Ph.

Address
C ity___

State

Zip

I For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1,19 5 5 [ j
[For Veterans with military service since Jan. 3 1,19 5 5
Year of Discharge__________________A g e ______

\J

carries a maximum fine of 110.
In Virginia, parents and guardians
driving vehicles made after Jan. 1,1968,
are required to put children under 4 in
restraint devices. A child weighing more
than 40 pounds can use a seat belt. The
maximum fine in Virginia Is |25.
Most of the laws do not apply to school
buses, taxicabs or farm vehicles.
Georgia state Rep. Dorothy Felton
plans to push this year for a child
restraint la"’ that, If passed, would lake
effect Jan. 1, 1984.
G eorgia,
however,
encourages
residents to use the safety seats and
spent $60,000 last year promoting child
restraint devices, officials said. Some
counties have loaner programs for
people who can't affort seats.
A proposed child restraint law In
Mississippi died three years because
police said it could not be enforced. This
time, the idea is backed by the Gover­
nor’s Highway Safety Program.
"The main reason we support the bill is
because 90 percent of the needless deaths
would be eliminated," said program
coordinator Carolyn Evans.
The Mississippi proposal would apply
to children under 3 and provides for a $10
fine if the tot is not in a safety seat. A fine
would be waived if a driver goes to court
and shows he has bought a seat.

CSS office the financial circumstances of a family are slied up
and the need for aid determined. A qualified student, based on
that, can be considered for aid from the federal government,
state student aid programs, colleges themselves and hundreds
of private student aid programs.
As far ns choice of a college is concerned, Hall said he Is
concerned that students not rule out any college that interests
them on the basis of cost alone.
"Costs ought not to defeat any applicant at this stage of the
game," he said, “ ...money is available to help students defray
tuition and living expenses while at college.”
He said, however, a major battle lies ahead if federal
financial aid to needy students is to continue at a sufficient
level for the academic year beginning in 1984-85 and for sub­
sequent years.
"To students and families, we say, when the
Administration's budget proposals are finally sent to the Hill
(Capitol Hill or Congress), react but don't overreact.
"Thank your representatives in Congress for all they’ve
done so far to preserve equal educational opportunity, and let
them know that as voters, you stand prepared to support them
in keeping adequate funding levels for student aid programs."
Programs for post-secondary education Include:
-P E L L GRANT PROGRAM. Provides grants based on
need to undergraduate students. Congress annually sets the
dollar range. The College Board said in a recent year the
grants ranged from $200 to $1,670 per year.
-SU PPL E M E N T A L EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY
GRANTS. The SEOG payouts range from $200 to $2,000 a year.
This federal program is administered by the colleges to
provide need-based aid to undergrads.

-COLLEGE WORK-STUDY PROGRAM. Typically, the
CWSP students work 10 to 15 hours a week during the school
year and more during vacation. They earn at least the federal
minimum wage. Needy students picked for this program work
In the college or for public and private nonprofit organizations.
-NATIONAL DIRECT STUDENT LOAN PROGRAM. The
NDSL provides loans of up to $3,000 for the first two un­
dergraduate years and up to $6,000 for the total undergraduate
program. Repayment doesn't start until education Is com­
pleted or limited periods of service in the military; Peace
Corps, ACTION, or comparable organizations are completed.
Repayment also may be waived, partially or wholly, for
certain kinds of employment.
STATE STUDENT INCENTIVE GRANTS. Funds awarded
by the federal government or state governments to encourage
establishment and for expansion of state grant programs.
-GUARANTEED STUDENT LOANS. This program lets
students borrow money for education expenses directly from
banks and other lending Institutions. Dependent students may
borrow up to $2,500 an academic year and up to $7,500 for the
total undergraduate program. Students from families with an
adjusted gross Income In excess of $30,000 per year must
demonstrate need to qualify. The federal government pays
Interest while student Is In college. Repayment need not begin
until completion of education.
For the current academic year, Federal programs are
funded as follows: PELL, $2.4 billion; SEOG, $355 million;
CWS, $528 million; NDSL, $179 million; SSIG, $74 million;
GSL, $3.1 billion.

Prom Benefits From Faculty Follies
Helping the Junior class raise money for the prom, the
Faculty Follies was held last Monday. Hie Masters of
Ceremonies were Mrs. Epps and Mr. Richardson, with other
members of the (acuity exhibiting their talents with the help of
some junior class officers.
The Faculty Sweethearts, chosen by all of the students, were
Mr. Williams and Mrs. Stokes. Mr. Williams teaches American
History and sponsors the Chess Gub. Mrs. Stokes teaches
English II and is the sponsor of the Anchor Gub.
Congratulations!

A roun d
SHS
By
Jill
Janak
varsity; wrestling, Lyman Stat, vanity, 10 a.m.; boys track at
Winter Park, TBA; girls track at I-ake Brantley, 1 p.m.

The 1983 Junior-Senior Prom will be held at the Orlando
Marriott on April 9. Further details about the prom will be
announced in the near future.
This week's Tribe members are Sam Lake, a Junior, and
Toai Doan, a senior. Sam is in Mr. Alpha Theta and Interact
Gub. He is on the weight lifting team and is business manager
of Yearbook. Toai is president of National Honor Society and
treasurer of Mu Alpha Theta. He is also a member of chess
team, tennis team and the scholastic team.
This week’s activities include:
Tuesday — Boys soccer regional tournament; track, here,
with Lake Mary, Oak Ridge, 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday — Boys basketball district tournament, JV and
v an ity ; baseball at Winter Park, 3:30 p.m.; weightlifting at
Lake Brantley, 2:30 p.m.; golf at Deland, 3:30 p.m.
Thursday — Boys basketball tournament, JV and v anity;
golf, home, with Spruce Creek, 3:30 p.m.
Friday — Boys basketball tournament, JV and vanity, 1
p.m.; boys soccer sectional tournament.
Saturday — Boys basketball district tournament, JV and

IMV/ITATIOM

And in South Carolina, state Sen. John
Land is predicting "quick passage" of a
child restraint law, although a similar
measure failed last year.
The proposed South Carolina law would
require safety seats for children under 4.
If a child over age 1 is riding in the back
seat, a conventional seat belt is ac­
ceptable. Violators would face a fine of
$25 that could be suspended with proof of
purchase of a safety seat.

AREA
DEATH
EARL M, FISH
Earl Mortimer Fish, 81, of
Twelve Oaks Campgrounds
in Sanford died Tuesday night
at his home. Bom March 30,
1901, at Mt. Kisco, N.Y., he
was a retired civil engineer
and came to Sanford from Mt.
Dora where he had lived since
1962. He was a member of the
First Presbyterian Church in
Mt. Dora and the Elks Club in
E ustis. He was a p ast
member of the Mt. Dora
R otary Club. He was
p reparing to move to
California to Join his wife at
the time of his death.
He is survived by his wife,
Alice L and a daughter, Mrs.
Arden Pierce, both of Palo
Alto, C alif.; five g ran d ­
children and one g reatgranddaughter.
Gnunkow Funeral Home jy
in charge of arrangements.
Hunt M onum ent Co.
D isplay Y ard
Nwy. 17-92— Fam Park
F ti.a u fM
Cana Hunt, Owner
•rawsa, Marine A Oranite.

It's a party.
Bring th e family.
Florida Hospltal/Altamonte
Is ten years old. And to help
celebrate this special
anniversary, we're inviting all
our friends to a unique family
Fun fit 5afety Day this 5unday,
February 20, from 2 - 4 p.m.
Spend the afternoon experi­
encing new concepts in
family entertainment and
safety awareness.
Joining us In the fun will be:

displays, and a blue grass
band. So come, dress for fun,

enjoy the refreshments, and
learn how Florida hospital/
Altamonte is playing a vital
role in your family^ well-being.
Drop In this 5unday, from
2 - 4 p.m. For more informa­
tion, call Florida Hospital^
Public Relations Dept at
897-1917.

Central Florida Zoo animals,
Smokey the Bear, drug
detecting K-9s, the Audubon
Society &lt;5"Birds o f Prey0
exhibit, Altamonte Springs
police and fire departments,
emergency service vehicle

Florida Hospital
"\Vs notjust the quality of our care.

Ife the quality of our caring."
|Type of Discharge _______

�A

PEOPLE
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

Sunday, Feb. 20, 1»IJ—IB

J o h n M . W h ita k e r

H e Cam e,
i

H e Saw ed,
■t

H e Sta y ed
Photo* by L o ri D row

Krnie W hitaker, learning the tool trad e from his father, will som eday carry
on the family business.
By LORI DREW
Special To The Herald
Only a small, wooden sign, faded with age, directs
seekers of saw sharpeners to John M. Whitaker’s "hobby”
shop.
That Upsala Road sign in Sanford and a one-timedesigned business card "have been my only forms of
advertising," since he started offering his tool-care hobby
to fellow Sanfordites 11 years ago, explained an energetic
80-ycar-old man.
His name is John M. Whitaker—a Sanford resident since
1924 with his wife, Annie, three sons and one daughter. It
is the third of those sons, now 51 years old, who Whitaker
expects to take over the business so that he "can get bock
to his garden."
A barren "garden" of soil awaits the nimble hands of
this eldest saw sharpener in the family. Fathers before
him did not pass along the tricks of the tool trade; yet,
something inside Whitaker, he says, has towed him
toward tools.
"All my active life, I've taken care of tools," said the
gray-haired man. "Whenever I go shopping with my wife,
I always head for the tool section (of the store), no m atter •
where she goes.”
Consequently, it Is not difficult to understand his chosen
profession. "I worked tool care for 30 years," he said, first
with Chase and Co. (now SunnUand) in Sanford and then
for A. Duda and Sons in Oviedo. "I was crazy about tools,

““

John M. W hitaker, 80, says he can handle any hand tool th at needs
repairing. •

especially carpentry. I’d be working in orange groves in
the winter and carpentry work in the summer, always tool
happy."
Whitaker said he retired in 1968, "thinking of going into
it (saw sharpening business) then." But he spent some
time helping his son, Ernie, in the Virgin Islands, doing
mechanical work together. The eldest Whitaker returned
to Sanford in 1972 and opened up shop full time. Now he is
looking to that same son for help on his end now.
Inside the Whitaker’s backyard shop are what owner
and operator refers to as "modern sharpening equipment.
It’s not the latest," he admits. "But 1 really don't know
anyone who has the complete setup I have."
The setup has grown in the past 11 years with sections of
the concrete floor revealing the additions to the garagetype structure. Whitaker said the latest walls, floor and
ceiling on the cast side of the small building were added on
to accommodate his son's small machine repair en­
terprise to be incorporated into the hand tool repair
business begun by Whitaker.
"I can handle any hand tool that needs repairing. That's
my motto," he said firmly. And with the combination of 10
machines and 10 coordinated fingers, Whitaker says he
gets the Job done "very satisfactorily and at a reasonable
price."
He insists it is the only way to do business, making
friends at the same time. Even at his age of 80, Whitaker's
craft, requiring "good eyesight and coordination," con­
tinues to bring the customers in

"I thought I was just going to have a hobby," Whitaker
said about when he started. "But I built a saw business,
and now it’s almost more than I can handle by myself."
He sharpens three-inch to 30-lnch saws, carbide saws,
combination and plywood saws. He sharpens scissors,
mower blades, knives, axes, hatchets and chisels, and
“anything that comes in here."
The average saw needing a razor’s edge requires ap­
proximately 15 to 20 minutes of Whitaker’s day, he said,
but only if re-toothing is not necessary. "You pay $20 for a
good saw. It could last a long time." Whitaker especially
believes that statement when the owner allows this saw
sharpener to “ monkey around."
"I average working 10 hours a day," explained
Whitaker, admitting, "But that includes Just monkeying
around." He said he tries to put in as much time as he
wants to at the shop. “ I worked sometimes till 2 or 3 in the
morning."
At times like those, his tools arc his companions and
sources of satisfaction as well. Within the structure large
enough to garage your 1977 Cadillac Eldorado, Whitaker
grinds away on his collection of sharpening machines he
says are six to seven years old. His hand saw filer, carbide
saw grinders, 24-lnch planer blade grinder, hand saw retoother, scissors and pinking shear grinder, Osier blade
sharpener, combination blade saw grinder, chain saw
grinding machine and bel saw grind-all-sharp-all keep
this elder In sharp shape.
" I’ve seen some saws in here older than l am ."

remembered Whitaker. "But a lot of good tools go down
the drain because of the ego a guy has for his work."
The Atlanta-born man said he charges only $3 to file a
saw in average condition, tacking on $1.50 more if it needs
new teeth. "That’s a fair price for someone who needj it to
make a living."
That same tone of generosity arose once more when
Whitaker said, "I bought that (hand saw filer) machine
for the purpose of saving people money." It was his first
business tool—nearly a dozen years ago.
In those days, he marketed saw filing at $1.
In those days, tools were made better, according to
Whitaker.
He elaborated, “There are some new tools that I believe
are better. But as a rule, an old tool is the best tool. The
workmanship was better. They were tempered. The metal
was better. They’d hold an edge much better."
But whether it’s an old tool or a new tool Whitaker is
working on, he says he believes in keeping busy. "I came
to Sanford to work," he added. "In them days, it was hard
to get a Job." Until he was hired by Chase and Co.,
Whitaker said he worked on the first stage of the Florida
Power and Light plant and In public work/, helping to
build the ice company plant. "I worked odds and ends—so
many different things. "But I didn’t loaf. I always kept
busy.
Now he works with the saws, waiting until his son is
ready to take on the business, simply so that he can get to
work on his garden.

hters O f Am erican

Students Awarded For Service,
Dependability And Patriotism
Five outstanding high school seniors
representing Seminole County high
schools were honored Feb. 11 at the
monthly meeting of Sallle Harrison
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution.
The honorees and their parents were
Invited to Join DAR chapter members In
the Sunshine Room of the Florida Power
&amp; Light Co. building.
The students were named by their
respective schools as the annual Good
Citizen winner. Selection was based on
four criteria: leadership, dependability,
service and patriotism.
E ach Good Citizen com pleted a
questionnaire related to high school
activities, awards and offices held;
service given at home, at church, and in
the community; plans for the future;
special Interests; and specific instances
exemplifying the four criteria used in
selection.
Presented Good Citizen pins were;
K ristin B lair (L ake Brantley High
School), the daughter of Mary Ann Blair,
Altamonte Springs; Duncan Steams
(Lake Howell High School), son of Nancy
Steams, Fern Park; Charles M. Jones

(Lyman High School), the son of
Lawrence and Alice Jones, Ixtngwood;
E dw ard D ullm eyer (Oviedo High
School), the son of Joan and Galen
Dullmeyer, Winter Springs; and Laurie
Blades (Seminole High School), the
daughter of Guy and Charlotte Blades,
Sanford.
A panel of Judges selected Lyman’s
Charles Jones as Seminole County's
representative in state competition. The
State winner will receive a $100
E ducational Awardr Each Division
winner will be presented a $250
Educational Award. The National DAR
Good Citizen Award is a $1000 scholar­
ship to the college of the winner’s choice.
The national winner is also presented to
the Continental Congress and is given a
sterling silver bowl engraved "National
DAR Good Citizen - 1983.
Awards were also presented to the
winners of the American History Essay
Contest and to the outstanding American
History Teacher.
This year's essay contest drew more
entries than in several years. Excellent
essays were received from 62 students in
nine schools in Seminole County.

Ha Vang, a student at Longwood
Elementary School was the fifth grade
winner for her essay on home life In
colonial America.
Beth Brooks won the eighth grade
award for her essay entitled "Travel in
Early America." Beth is a student at
Sanford Middle School.
These winning essays have been en­
tered in the contest to select a state
winner. Parents and teachers of each
winner were invited to attend the
meeting at which the awards were
presented. Each student who entered an
essay in the contest will receive a Cer­
tificate of Appreciation.
Jam es Elliott, coordinator of the Social
Studies curriculum of the Seminole
County School District, assisted the DAR
with the event.
This year the Sallie Harrison Chapter
has honored an outstanding American
history teacher. From among the many
teach ers with im pressive recom ­
m endations, Donald Bates, Jackson
Heights Middle School, has been selected
to receive the award. His resume has
been submitted in the state contest,
according to Elisabeth Boyd.

Mrs. Paul Mikler, DAR chapter chairm an of the
Good Citizen com m ittee, from left, nresents

Elisabeth Boyd, American History
Month chairman of the Sanford
DAR chapter, presents the
chapter's Teacher of the Year
award to Donald Bates,
right photo, and the
eighth grade essay winner
award to Beth Brooks,
left photo.
H e ra ld Photo* by T om Vlncanl

aw ards to Charles Jones, Seminole County win­
ner. Laurie Blades and Duncan Stearns.

�■» -Lr

1 B -E v &gt; n ln g H a ra ld , S a n fo rd . F I.

Sunday. Feb. JO, 1983

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
Students Receive A cad em ic
Honors A t Rollins C ollege
The following Seminole County students have
achieved academic honors at Rollins College in Winter
Park.
The students listed have been named either to the
President’s List (A- or better grade average) or the
Dean's List (B-f- to A- grade average) for the Fall
Term, 1982.
Students on the President's List include: Zachary
Dunbar, Sanford; Mary Ann McDaniel and David H.
Seligson, Altamonte Springs; Jeffrey Hartmann
Purvis, Denise Louise Renton, Matthew E. West and
Karen Chalker, Longwood and Ireanne M. Wawrzaszek
and Edward D. Wirth III, Winter Springs.
Dean’s List students include: Patricia J. Mergo,
Sanford; Carolyn Cray and Christine Des Islets,
Altamonte Springs; Lisa Rae Armour and Kim A.
Richards, Casselberry; and Melanie Rachel Moody,
Barbara Lyn Renaldo and Glenn W. Stambaugh,
Longwood.

Mr. and Mrs. William C. Fraasa, 204 Krider Road,
Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Christy Lyn, to Ernest Ralph Gabler II, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest R. Gabler Sr., 882 Helm Road, Ml. Dora.
Bom in Sanford, the bride-elect is the maternal grand­
daughter of Howard H. Smith, Cincinnati, Ohio, and the
paternal granddaughter of Mrs. Charles F. Fraasa,
Arlington, Va.
Miss Fraasa is a 1980 graduate of Seminole High School
where she was a member of Keyettes, Chez Nous and
FCA. She Is employed by Scotty's Inc.
Her fiance, Born in Parsons, W. Va., is the maternal
grandson of A. Smith Hockman Sr., Ml. Dora, and the
paternal grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Gabler,
Tangerine.
Mr. Gabler is a 1979 graduate of Tucker County High
School, Hambleton, W. Va., where he played football and
baseball. He is in the U.S. Navy, stationed aboard the
Cape Cod, San Diego, Calif.
The wedding will be an event of April 16, at 2 p.m., at the
Altamonte Chapel, Altamonte Springs.

BRUCE E. W ALTO N, M .D .

Jones - Jenkins
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Wayne Johnson, Lake Geneva
Drive, Geneva, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Barbara Jean, to Alan Lane Jenkins, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Levi Cecil Jenkins Jr. of Sallis, Miss.
Bom in Coral Gables, the bride-elect is the maternal
granddaughter of Mrs. Charles M. Reynolds of Geneva
and the late Mr. Reynolds.
She is a 1978 graduate of Oviedo High School where she
was president of Student Govenment and on the yearbook
staff, among other school activities. She reigned as "Miss
Oviedo" in 1977-78
Miss Johnson attended Stetson University School of
Music, Palm Beach Atlantic College and the University of
Central Florida as a voice and music major. She is a
gospel singer, recording artist and president of B.J.
Ministries Inc.
Her fiance, bom in Natchez, Miss., is the paternal
grandson of L.C. Jenkins Sr., Sallis, and the late Mrs.
Gertrude Jenkins.
Mr. Jenkins is a 1973 graduate of East Holmes
Academy, West., Miss., where he played basketball and
football. He is a 1973 graduate of Holmes Junior College,
Goodman, Miss., and a 1975 graduate of Mississippi State
University and Mississippi State Law' Enforcement
Academy, Starkeville. He is employed by the state of
Mississippi as a highway patrolman.
The wedding will be an event of Feb. 26, at 8 p.m., at the
First United Methodist Church, Oviedo. Friends are in­
vited.

'W ho's W h o ' A t Stetson

if• youmtrow* Vawfl**
A 9*4hx* FjiflJi
•**&gt; nrujrWic *w-*»o**w,
t*vat

*+a $ 6 jc c do t

*hJ *9

BARBARA JEA N JOHNSON

twffiFA#

*ooolorlotsof

T h i s a m i o ilie r
g m v u s , p le n sa fit­
ly p ric e d !
211-220 E. F irst St,
■j
Sanford
■1 PH. 222-3S24 [

whose practice is limited to plastic and
reconstructive surgery. Visits by ap­
pointment only, telephone 323-2340,
Lakeview Professional Center, Suite 1
and 2. 819 E. First St., Sanford.

Birthday Is A Time For Grief
DEAR ABBY: Two months
ago, after a very long battle
against cancer, my beloved
father died. My mother and I
were with him until the last
moment. When it became
apparent that this might
happen near my birthday, I
quietly and respectfully asked and auger. Sbe may be able to
my mother not to bury Dad on justify h er decision. And
my birthday. And although there's a possibility that in
this could easily have been her grief she was not thinking
avoided, that's exactly what
clearly. Don't bear this awful
she did!
burden alone in silence. Share
The
thought
of it with someone who counsels
"celebrating" my birthday on the grieving and depressed.
the an n iv ersary of my And write again to let me
father's funeral depresses me know if you’ve been helped. I
beyond my ability to describe.
care.
The normal process of grief
DEAR ABBY: I am a 42doesn’t capsize me. At 52, this
year-old divorced woman
isn't a new emotion. But never with a great job and two
again will I be able to enjoy a
wonderful children. The only
birthday knowing it also is the
thing I lack in my life is a nice
day of my father's funeraj.
man.
I cannot imagine why my
Men are attracted to me,
m other did this to m e, but I shy away from them.
knowing how I felt. Whatever Why? Because I wear a wig.
I’ve done to her, she has My own hair is baby fine and
certainly evened the score — hard to manage, and wearing
and it wouldn't bother me one a wig has been the answer to
bit if I never had another my prayers. It’s very natural
birthday to " c e le b ra te ." looking and has given me a
Perhaps some Insight from new appearance and new
read ers with a sim ilar confidence. People who
problem might help.
haven't seen me in a long time
TEARS FOR MY BIRTHDAY marvel at how "beautiful"
DEAR TEARS: I think it’s I've become.
Abby, I am so afraid a man
Important for you to confront
your mother with your pain will be turned off if he ever

H o o p -ltt-ln !

The offices of Largen and Clontz,
Surgical Associates, P. A., announce the
addition of

CHRISTY LYN FRAASA,
ERN EST RALPH GABLER II

Two hundred and sixty-four outstanding artists and
craftsmen from all over the United States have been
selected to participate in the 24th Annual Winter Park
Sidewalk Art Festival. The artists were chosen from
among a field of 1500 applicants, screened by a panel of
distinguished judges.
Winter Park artists who will participate are: Bonnie
Brown, Grady Kimsey, Fran Price, Ralph Rankin,
Martin Schiff, Stephanie Schrampf, Char Vogel, and
Dot Booth.
Other area artists accepted are: Michael Gilbert,
Pete Lindberg, Jane Plante, Mark Ritter, and Thomas
Wilkes, Altamonte Springs; Ann Jones and Timothy
O'Keefe, Maitland; Howard Mabie, Oviedo; and Ed
Bookhardt and Jone Porter, Sanford.

W H O 'S C A U S I N G /
THE

XI EPSILON SIGMA
Xi Epsilon Sigma Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi honored its
Valentine Girl Karen Hittell with a cake and ice cream social
at the Mullet U k e home of Millie Gilbert. The chapter
presented Karen with a. heart shaped necklace.
Those attending were Karen, Margo Shiver, Ginger
Brumley, Usa Porzig, Terry Owens, June Portig, Melanie
Hittell, Millie Gilbert and guest Phyllis Miller, Karen's
mother.
ZETA XI
Zeta Xi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi welcomed two new
members, Maureen Haig and Frances McAdams, into the
chapter with a "Ritual of Jewels" ceremony in the home of
Donna Thomason. The candlelight ritual was conducted by
President Myra Michels.
Collections of canned goods were taken for the Christian
Sharing Center and members were asked for their continued
support of Seminole Mutual Concert Association.
Attending were: Wava Barrett, Myrt Clark, Maureen Haig,
Genic Haynes, Judy Jett, Bonnie Jones, Frances McAdams,
Myra Michels, Deborah Partlow, Donna Thomason and her
mother. Faith Bender.

Fraasa - Gabler

A rtists S elected For Show

Thirty-five Stetson University students have been
approved for inclusion in the 1983 edition of "Who’s
Who Among Students In American Universities and
Colleges," according to a spokesman for the
publication's national office.
The annual publication lists outstanding collegelevel students from 1,300 institutions throughout the 50
states, the District of Columbia and several foreign
countries.
Stetson students from Seminole County chosen for
inclusion in the 1983 "Who’s Who" are Russell D.
Crumley, senior from Sanford; and Gale Grindle and
Eric C. Lopea, both seniors from Altamonte Springs.

Beta Sigma Phi

Engagements

Moving Clearance Sale

sees me without a wig. I get
perm an en ts reg u larly and
keep my own h a ir wellgroomed, but I'm so con­
cerned about being "found
out" I seldom date.
I suppose the only solution
is to take my chances, but so
fur I haven’t been able to.
I’VE GOT A SECRET
DEAR SECRET: Go ahead
and date, and give a man the
chance to know you and ap­
preciate you as a person — not
a thing of beauty. After that's
accomplished, you can share
your secret with him. If he's a
man with mature judgment, it
won't matter.
1 urge you to learn to accept
yourself as you are. It may
take some psychological
counseling, but it will be well
worth IL It's not fthat's on
your head, but what's In it
that is truly Important.
DEAR ABBY: My husband
is a sav er. He saves
newspapers and magazines,
insisting he will read them
"someday" when he has more
tim e. Our g arag e and
basem ent have this stuff
stacked to the ceiling. Now
he's started to clutter up our
guest room.

break him
habit?

of the

saving

COLLECTOR’S WIFE
DEAR WIFE: You can’t
It’s more than a h ab it It’s an
obsession. It's also a fire
hazard. Give him a time lim it
and tell him if he doesn’t clean
house — you wllL Then do I t

He refuses to throw this
stuff away. Some of it is 10
years old! How can I get him
to get rid of this collection and

Y t -V

&lt;53

2 5 % to 5 0 % off

JHchbiug jSilbs
(Custom floral Resign

Selected Giftware
and
Selected Hallmark Items
TO BETTER SERVE YO U,
AFTER M A R C H 1, WE WILL BE
LOCATED N EXT TO
FORMERLY D O N 'S SHOE STORE
•
CLOSED FEB. 2 8 FOR M O V IN G

SfauHU'i Cards and Gifts
\

N O W AVAILABLE TH R O U G H
P.O. Box 669

221-0780

220 E. 1st St.

SANFORD

W e specialize In com plete
flo ral a rran g em en ts for:
• W ED D IN G S • RECEPTIONS
• ARRANGEMENTS FOR H O M E
A N D OFFICE
C om e In and see our sam ples
You'll Like O u r Personal Touch I

Left To Right: Laurie Brown • Lynda Behrens - Bonne Fitzgerald - Monica
Willard.
H eadliners, The award-w inning salon located on French Avenue has once again stolen ih e showl
Tne Florida Sunshine Trade Show lor 1BB3 co sponsored by A ce knd F L S A in St Petersburg where
H esdliners ow ner Lynda B eh re n t end hairstylist B onn* Fingere&gt;d took 'irs l and second prizes
Lynda's m odel. Laune Brown, wore * gorgeous Victorian s '* ted d-ess adorned w nn w hite rose* w hile
B o n n * s m odel. M o nica W iliard. wss m essed to poMrey tne B otooue period H«r dress, designed and
m ade by Virginia Slrad ig. wss H aiw iian purple accented w ith w hite satin and lace
The audience was captivated by both the costum es and Ihe outstanding talents o l Lynda and Bonna
These artistic ladiec will be trying their hands at it once again In Jacksonville on Feb 20th and 2 ls l
G O O D LUCK. G IR LS '

"Let O ur Reputation G o To Vour Head"

Charyl Tabscott 6 9 9 -0 1 3 6

SANFORD PLAZA

Cindy V ines 6 7 8 -40 4 8

\

PHONE 321-5851
2303 French Avo.

Sanford

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 30, I983-3B

A M E R IC A S FAMILY D $ U G STORE

In And Around Lake Mary

School Sets Flea Market
The U k c Mary Elementary School is
planning a spring Flea Market, ac­
cording to Barbara Warman of the
school’s advisory board.
Students' faculty and area residents
will be able to rent tables to sell their
items.
Mrs. Lowery’s fifth graders are
making plans to have a bake sale at the
Flea Market.
Barbara, coordinator for this fund­
raiser, says they are planning to have
games, refreshments and entertainment.
More information will be released as
the plans are finalized.
For the rest of the school year, the
l-ake Mary Elementary School will be
collecting and saving all Campbell’s
Soup and Franco-American Spaghetti
labels.
The proceeds raised from this event
will be used to purchase equipment for
the Physical Education Department.
Area residents arc asked to help by
saving these labels and then giving them
to the school.
Also planned is a "Chuck E Cheese”
pizza night. The children and their
families will receive points for each visit
they make to the restaurant, and these
points will be credited to the school. If
enough points are raised the school will
win a new "APPI.E" computer.
Other school news is o field trip
planned by the fifth graders to Sea World
later this month, and on Feb. 28, the
entire school will be entertained by the
Travis Marionettes.
On Feb. 17, lak e Mary High School had
a "Pre-Registration Orientation Day."
Students from lakevlew and Rock lak e
middle schools arrived via bus for a
morning of “ getting acquainted" with
the school's rules, regulations and
proceed ures.
Included was special entertainment by
the Ijike Mar)* Concert Band, Odyssey
Choir, R.O.T.C., the Flag Corps,
Cheerleaders, la k e Marionettes.
Also, the school's staff and faculty
addressed the students explaining the

assistant fire chief, over 2,000 pounds of
chicken were served, along with baked
beans and cole slaw.

Lake Marylangwood
Correspondent
323-9034

Although the official tally is not in yet,
an estimated $2,100 was raised for the
Volunteer Fire department.

Karen
W arner
curriculum listed in the booklets they
distributed.
On Feb. 24, the lak e Mary Woman’s
Club will be making plans for their fall
bazaar. Each of the members will be
taking turns doing a "show and tell" of
the craft items they have made in the last
year.
A workshop will be set up so the
members can teach each other the dif­
ferent crafts. In turn the crafts will be
made to sell at the bazaar. The workshop
will be every other Saturday morning in
city hall.
The Feb. 24 meeting will be held at
Season’s Restaurant on French Avenue,
Sanford, at 10 a.m., with a luncheon
following.

During the Feb. 7 meeting of the Ijk e
Mary Chamber of Commerce, plans were
being made for their upcoming May 14
60th Anniversary Parade. The theme
voted on for the parade will be "60 Years
of Service."
A slide presentation on the "Bay
Queen" dinner cruises was presented by
Terri Bourque, Mary Terry and Eloise
lxKllngham of Bob Ball Really, spon­
sored and served the refreshments. Door
prizes were donated by ComBank and
Mrs. Aiken won the Am-Fm radio, while
Vem Feddersen won a ComBank T-shirt.
The Feb. 12 "Firemen’s Bar-B-Que”
chicken dinner was a great success.
Since there was an indoor dining area the
rains didn't seem to put a damper on
things.
According to Bob Stoddard, the

Among many volunteers who worked
to make the day a success, were: Molly
King, Shannon and Sandy Ramsey,
Susan Stoddard, Angela Orioles, Cindy
Dale, Elmo Colvenbach, Marlon Spain,
Richard E ickler, Alice and Bud
Moughton who started working on
chopping slaw Friday evening, and Ric
Stanley and his wife delivered over ISO
dinners in their van.

Schick

Super Chromium

Former fire chief Lewis "Zip" Schweickert was the head cook. Also on hand
were delights from the woman's club and
garden club. Ellen Olszewski, Margaret
Ulmer, and Barbara Warman of the
garden club made and sold camellia
corsages, while the wom an's club
members, including Kathleen Beale,
DeLores I.ash, Helen Glatt, Avis Ray,
Jenny Olson, baked and served cakes and
cupcakes for dessert.

SCHICK

M &amp; M ’s

D O U B L E EDG E

P L A IN o r P E A N U T

BLADES

CANDIES
4

According to Sally Dykes, Project
Director of the Senior Citizens Gubs of
Seminole County, the Lake Mary
Congregate Meal Site is no longer located
in the fire hall. As of Feb. I, it is now
located In the Lakevlew Baptist Church,
Lakeview Avenue behind city hall.

4
W

In observance of Washington’s Bir­
thday, ComBank and Flagship Bank will
be closed on Monday, Feb. 21, along with
the post office.

Q

R»g°Z' .88
L im it 2

SCOPE
M O UTHW ASH

The Lake Mary School Advisory
Committee has a meeting planned on
Feb. 22, to gain more Information con­
cerning class content, services and
future school growth.

F R A N K ’S

The information obtained from this
meeting along with the results of the
recent survey, will be released later in
the spring. Parents are encouraged to
attend. The meeting is set for 7:30 p.m. in
the media center.

BLACK
PEPPER

'Sweethearts ' Honored
By Eas t-Wes t Kiwanis Club
Kiwanls Gub of East-West Sanford observed its annua]
Valentine Day with the members honoring their sweethearts
at their special Valentine Breakfast last Saturday.

M a rv a
Haw kins

Special program speakers on "Love and Togetherness”
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thomas Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Merthie Sr. who have been married for 42 years.
Each sweetheart was presented a Valentine and a red
carnation by chairman Earl E. Minott and club president
Taylor G. Roundtree. Miss Gladys Ramson was crowned
Valentine queen by president Roundtree. She will reign for the
1983 year.
The Kiwanls Gub of East-West Sanford has launched its
fund-raising drive for the support of the scholarship fund in
memory of H.L Douglas and Jack Weible.
To help with the driver the club will sponsor a fashion show
at Goldsboro Elementary School, 1301 West 16th St. Sanford, on
March 4, at 8 p.m. A donation of $2 is asked.

We give special thanks to Mrs. Sallye F. Bentley and the
members of Friendship and Union Society and to the volun­
teers for their outstanding service in helping to make this
event a success.
Happy birthday in February to Mrs. Thelma Franklin, Mrs.
Sallye Bentley, Mrs. Mable McGain, Mrs. Rebecca Hen­
derson, Ralph Tillman, Renlce Tillman and Mrs. Virginia H.
Jenkins

On March 5, a barbecue will be held from 9 a.m. to 6 pm . at
1310 West 13th St., Sanford. On March 13, at St. James AME
Giurch, the club will give recognition to outstanding young
ladies of Sanford, Seminole County and Central Florida at 3
pm .
To culminate the fund-raising drive for the H.L. Douglas and
Jack Weible Scholarship Fund, a musical banquet and the
crowning of the Kiwanls Gub of East-West Sanford's queen
will be held March 19 at 8 p.m. at the Skyport Lounge and
Banquet Room, Sanford Airport. Tickets may be purchased
from Kiwanls members.
Over 200 happy cruisers gathered last Saturday to board the
Bay Queen for a cruise luncheon, sponsored by Friendship and
Union Society and First Shiloh. Many of those attending are
looking forward to another trip aboard the cruise ship soon.

STAYFREE
M AXI PADS

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in lid . H a s fo o d tra y

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16291

"The way you look

9

Is as Important to
us as It Is to you."

0

f t CHOICE OF
r f COLORS
Reg. 2.88

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5Q3FRENCHAVE

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TREES
SHRUBS
PLANTS
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FERTILIZER

"TOP QUALITY NURSERY
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AZALEAS

IN 8100U AND
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BASF BLANK
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BD-MIN. Bog. 4.89

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COLD HEARTY
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AND
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T X m
rR p A fl

VJRibOU'S
PETUNIAS
AND OMRS

.
7 J r m S

* Pack

Im lm

OPEN TDAYS A WEEK
H tr a ld Phato toy M a r y # H aw fcin*

Kiwanis Club of East-W est Sanford president
Taylor K oundtree crowns Gladys Hainson as
Kiwanls Valentine Queen.

2 speeds &amp; 4 heats

m

PICK-UP YOUR FREE GAME CARD AT YOUR NEAREST ECKERD
You'f# G onna 8 * u \M n n « f. . .
lA
We'rw G onna M ake Sur*
.

RHODES t SON NURSERY l TREf LOT
(W ethide U.S. 17-91 Between Dog Track Rd. A SR 434)

longwood

831-1^45 319-2731

No P u cn o » o N e c e u a iy

V

N .

CRUISE AWAY GIVEAWAY ^

OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 ,
SUNDAY 9 to 6 .
Sale Prices good thru
Wed. Fob. 23 rd.
W o r e s e rv e th e rig h t
to lim it q u a n titie s .

|SBBh b | J M k .
1 i

I

w m

�P 4»

4B— E vening H e ra ld , S a nlord, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 20, 1983

M

Adventist
THE SEVENTH DAY
ADVENTISTCHURCH
CarntralTthEEIm

■ tv . K rn n yth B r u n t

Spru~J
~ *S trv lc ts
itu r d iy
Sabbath School
W orship S trv ic t
W H n ts d e y Night
P ra y e r S trv ic t

HOPE OF OUR COMMUNITY,

p , ,i o r

I l i t m.
i i te a m .

II

T iM p .m

v '*X

Assembly O f God

\\yr

vX%

F IB IT A S S E M B L Y O F O O D
e a rn e r IT th B E lm
D iv id Bohonnon
F a ila r
tu n d a v School
IS M a m .
H u rs try t v » am g r e a t
W arship Str y tea
H iM t.m .
S t r v it l* in Espanal .
ItiM a .m .
Evening W p rth lp
l:H p .m .
W t * . F a m ily N ig h t
T iM p m .
W t * . Lighthouse Yauth
iM p n .
R aya) R a n p a ri A
M im o n r ttts
IN p m

The
Church...

R H E M A A S S E M B L Y O F O OD
Corner a l C autery Clab Raad
and W ilb u r Avtnwo
L a b i M a ry

*;&gt;!&gt;
v *X

OUR NATION!

m am
R asta Pa wan
M orning S trv lc a
E r a n ln t Sarvlca

Pastor
II am .
tp .m .

Baptist
C E N T R A L B A P T IS T C H U R C H
i l l l Oas A va .S an lo rd

snitia

F ra d d it Sm ith
Sunday School
M a r n in f W orship
Chwrch Tyainlnp
E y a n in * W arship
Wad P ra y a r Sarv

Pastor
I H o rn
II. M a m
iN p m .
to o p m
l.-M p m

C O U N T R Y S ID E B A P T IS T C H U R L H
Country Club R aad. Laba M a ry
A vary M L e n t
Pastor
SundayS thoal
t H in t
P ra a rh irif A w o rth , p in t
li lt a m
Blbta Study
t iM p .m .
S h a rin g 4 Proclaim ing
S ilt p m
W ad P r a y r r M a r t
T in p m.
N ursery P ra y .dad
F IR S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
S it P arh A vtn w *. Sanford
Ray Pau l E M u r p h » .jr
Pastor
Sunday School
t lla m
M a rn in tW o rs h ip
IIN a m
C hurch T rain in g
to o p m
E yan,np W arship
T :M p m .
W ad P ra y a r Sarylca
l,M p m

T h e T h in k e r •••
a n d B e lie v e r

Baptist
RAVENNAPARK
B A P T IS T C H U R C H
1T4T Country Club Read
R a v .O a ry D a B u s b
Pastor
Sunday School
t. tla m .
M a r n in t W orship
I I a m.
Church T r a ln ln t
T iM p m .
E v e n in t W orship
T iM p .m .
W ad. Pyayer Sarvlca
t iM p .m .
N E W M O U N T CALVARY
M IS S IO N A R Y B A P T IS T C H U R C H
1111 W est ITth St
Rev. Gaorpe W . W arren
Sunday School
t:M a m
M a r n in t Sarvlca
II M im .
E v e n in t Service
tiM p .m .

soulptnr wus rljjllt. Our nhllUy In iliiuk — our ilcUTiiilmitlou in
ililnk — this Is tin* key in liiiimus
[ingress.

W ednesday Services al
Covenant Presbyterian Church
P ra y a r A Bible Study
T iM p m
A dult Chair
T :4 ]p m

Catholic

s r a ttiia r s ta -ifti

1Indapandant)
t
Rda. D onald H trc h tn ro d e r
Pastor
A L L SOULS C A T H O L IC C H U R C H
• a u B arnard P ath
Asst. Paster
TiaO ab A va., Sanlord
O r. W .C . Collins
Asst. Pastor
F r . W illia m Ennis
P a tte r
M r . J a ttray K arla y
Youth D ir.
Set.
V
l
t
l
l
M au
tp .m .
M an's P ra y a r
Sun.
M
a
t
t
A
lliJ
O
. IS M
..F a llao rsh ip
I beam
Confessions. Sat.
41pm
AAarninf W orship
I M A II M a m .
Sunday School
t at a m
C h lld ran ’s Church
It,M am .
C hurch T ra ln ln t
supm
■ uanln« W arship
T iM p .m .
W ednesday P ra y a r A
B i b * Study
T iM p .m .
F IR S T C H R IS T IA N
N ursery and Bus S trvlca
t a i l s . Sanlord Ava.
1, E d w a rd John son
M in is ter
Sunday School
tit la .m .
J O R D A N B A P T IS T C H U R C H
M e m in f W orship
It M a m.
t M U p ia ie Rd.
E l|&gt; t Hornsby
Pastor
Sunday School
tliM a m
S A N F O R D C H R IS T IA N C H U R C H
M a rn in t S ervice
IliH a .m .
l i t A irp o rt Blvd
E v e n in t Service
T iT Ip m .
Phono l i t M M
W ednesday Sarvlca
T iM p m
Joe
Johnson
M in ister
r»ld T ruths le r a N ew D ay
Sunday School
t uam
W orship Service
ll.ltim
L A K E V IE W B A P T IS T C H U R C H
E vanin p Service
IL M p m
111 L e b tv ie w Laba M a ry 111 t i l l
P ra y a r M e e tm t W ad
I Np m
Sunday School
1 :4 1 * m
W orship Sarvlca
lliM a m
E v e n in t W orship
T iM p m .
W ed P ra y a r Sarv
T iM p m
N ursery Provided

Christian

PALM ETTO AVENUE
B A P T IS T C H U R C H
I l i a P alm etto Ava
R ev. R aym ond C rasher
Pastor
SundayS thoal
l: 4 S a m
M a r n in t W arship
It.M a m .
E v a n te littic S ervlets
4 :M p m .
W ad P ra y a r A B ible Study T i M p m
Independent M issionary
P IN E C R E S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
l i t W . A irp o rt B lvd., Sanlord
JT1-1TIT
M a rk p. w eaver
Pastor
B ib s tltu d y
tit le .m .
M e r n in t W orship
llitt m a m
E v e n in t W arship
T iM p m .*
Wednesday
P el lew-ship Supper
O iM p .m .
N ursery Provided F ar
AU Services

111-AM4

T u e sd a y
Lu ke

C H R IS T IA N S C IE N C E S O C IE T Y
c-o Sw eetw ater Academ y
E a tt ta k e E ra n tle y Delve

1:1-13

1:5-25

2:22-38

it.M a m
IP M a m.
M Spm

W ednesday
M a tth e w

18:1-14

•

T h u rs d a y
G a la tia n s

F rid a y
H e b re w s

3:21
4:7

8:1-13

C H U R C H O F C H R IS T
IS tlP e r b Avan ua
E vangelist
F re d B aber
10:00a m
B ible Study
M a r n in t w arsh ip
II. M a m.
I M p m.
E v r n ih t Sarvlca
Ladies Bible C last
10 M o m
W ednesday
IM p m .
W ednesday Bible Class
W ersbip Sarvlca lor
l l : M a m.
the D e a l
SMpm

H e b re w s

Episcopal
H O L Y CBOSS
4 |l P erb Aye
The Rev L tr e y D. Seper
R ac ier
Holy C am m unien
I M l m.
Holy Com m union
l liM a m.
Church School
II M a m
H aly Com m union
t liM a m.

W IN T E R IP O S C O M M U N IT Y
S V A N O IL IC A L
C O N O R I O A T IO N A L
T i l W ade S ire n
R tv . R obert Burns
F ester
Sunday Ic h e e l
IIM e m
W orship
IIM a m
T IB S T H A T B IN D
■ V A N O E L IIT IC C E N T E R
R aa rd all A va. So. of SR 4 4 1
F u ll Oaspal • In tr r la ith
Sun. W arship A
C hristian Oraurth I I : M a m . A T p .m .
P ra y a r A B ible
Study W ednesday
Tp.m.
O iM p .m .
C O R N E R S T O N E C H R IS T IA N
CENTRE
M l D riftw ood V l ll p f l
W . Lake M e ry Blvd.
P ull Gospel ■lis ttrfp ith
M orn ing w orship
I t M o ns.
E venin g W orship
T iM p .m .
H ip lla e School, T h u rt.
T iM p .m .

Lutheran
L U T M B B A N C H U B C H OP
TH E RBOBBMBR
" T h e Lu th eran M euf •• end
T V ’ This I I The L ite "
ISIS O ek Ave.
B ev. t i m e r A B tu tc h e r
Pester
Sunday Scheel
lilSem
W arship Service
IIM em
K ln d o re erlo n end N ursery

S a tu rd a y

Church O f Christ

Scriptures srvird by The American Bern Society

O B A C E U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U B C H
A lrp u rt E lY *. A W auB tan* D r.
W IIIK m J . B a y tr
P a tte r
C hurch Schaal
liM a m .
W arship Sarvlca
11:1* a .m .
Y outh Faitew shlp
1 :0 4 p .m .
Tuasday l i b i t Study
lliM i.m .
N ursery p rp v td td le r e lt services.

SA fl LANDS) U N IT E D
M B T H O O IS T C H U R C H
I t . R d. AM A 1-4
Longwaad. P ie .
Jem es I . U lm e r Sr.
Su r . School
l i M A 9:11
W orship
l : M , l : 4 l A 1 1 :M
UMYF
liM

F IR S T U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
a n p e r k A ve.
L ie P. H in t
" lite r
Jem es A th em es
O lr * tl* r * n B u s lc
M e r n ih f W arship
I M A It p m
Sunday Scheal
1:41 a.m
UMYF
IM p m
M a n 't P ra y a r B raab last
In d A 4th Thursday
liM am

T iM p m ._

Non•
Demonlnatlonal

The most exciting and promising
of m an's endow m ents is not bis
cupueitv fur tliou^lil . . . rather his
yearning fur Tail It. And lidth is never
enntciil willi hmmin progress. l:uith
is deternilned in euinmit tmr liitellldeuce to the aehievement of Divine
Hronress.
M onday
L u ke

Pester
Asse. P ester
T iM e .m .
IlillH im
ItiM e .m

B ev. F re d Neel
Be v. Edm ond L . W aber
Sunday School
Fallow ship
M orn ing W arship
W ad. P ra y e r M eelin «
B Bible Study

E P IS C O P A L C H U R C H O F
T H I NEW COVENANT
ITS Tusbaw illa R ead
W inter S p rin ts
Phene I I I tTTI
R r v O r r e e r y O B r t u .t r
V ic a r
Sunday B vc h arisl
I B te a m
Sunday School
la m

'Hie message nl'ChrisiianitY lias
always been direeted toward men
and women mid youth who have the
(itMl-Kiven zest liir thinking. Week id­
ler week in our elmrehes the thinker
is ehulletljjcd to Iteemni a believer.

Sunday
M a rk

SefM ay ScAe#t
T e ttlm e n y
M eeting

C O N O B E O A T IO H A L
C H B IIT IA N C H U B C H
I t e i * . P erh Ave.

o M W i iijms S rn s p o p f' F o o te rs S yr^ c a la Inc

PO Bos 8024 Charlottesville Va 22906

C M B IS T U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U B C H
T u t h o t D rlv t, S unlan* E stairs
B tv B a k rrt W . M lllt r
Paster
SwnBty School
U itit.m ,
M a rn in g w arsh ip
■ liM a .m .
Sun. E vanin g
W arship
Tib* p m .

Congregational

Cocyiigm 1983 Kaisia' Advertising Sc'nce

Dm i Iil* same O ihI wlm ciulmml
mini with the alilllly in think ulssi
Kwve him the sense of spiritual des­
tiny. To Itc thinkers is only a ItcuiuninU in the (piest liirnttr pttr)&gt;nse.imr
inisshin. the meaning u fo itr existenee.

Christian Science

Stffttav Sewtee

.W .
Cy,;

'J V

S E M IN O L E H E IG H T S
B A P T IS T C H U R C H
D r. Jay T. C es m ito
P o tio r
Sunday Services In th i
Laba M a ry H u h School
A uditcrium
B ib lt Study
title m
W orship
II M a m
Youth Choir
SMpm
Church T ra in m f
iM p m
W orship
T iM p m

F IR S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
OF DCLTONA
I tea P ratld an c e B led,

F IR S T B A P T IS T C H U R C H
O F LO H O W O O O
t Bib. W astes IT IT an H w yasa
(S euth ernl
R ev Jam as w H am m ock
Pastor
Sunday School
liM a m.
M a r n in t W arship
I ; IS A 11:41a.m .
C hildren's Church
1 1 .4 1 a m
C hurch T r a ln ln t
S 1 4S p m
E v e n in t W arship
T .M p m
W ad Evanlnp
. ♦ r a r e r Service
T iM p .m .

m
m
M

Methodist

9 1-22

C O M M U N IT Y U N IT E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
H w f . IT t l a t P inay R ld fa Rd.
CasselboTry
R ev. H, W Ip M K lr t lr y
Pastor
R ev. D av id h h edges
A m . P a tte r
M e r n ln i W orship
tiM -lla .m .
C hurch School
l:M -n i n .
S ervlets w ith classes le r a ll apot
F o U aw thip Cattae katw oan servlets
J Y F ’ars
IM p m
UMYF
SMpm.
I vo n ln * W orship
T iM p .m .
w a d . B lbta Study
T iM p .m .

Naxarene
F IR S T C H U R C H
O F T H E N A IA R E N I
T i l l la n ia r d A ve.
J e h n J .H ie te n
Pistes
Sundoy Scheel
f:4 S e .m .
M e r n in t W arship
IS :41a m .
Y ou fb H our
IM p m .
■ vo n p o lltl Sorvlco
SMpm
M id w o e b S te v ie * ( W r * I
T iM p .r
N u rsery P rovided le r e ll S ervlets

Eastern
Orthodox
it s . P r io r A pout
O rtho te a P aris h
“ Ita ta • ■ y ia n tin a "
t i l l M e e n e iie A ve.
R ev. P r. Anthony O f ant
Paster
D iv ln * L itu rg y
lliM am
R ectory
M -T 1 T T

Pentecostal
FI RST PEN TEC OSTA L
CHURCH OF LOHOW OOO
SOI O ranpa S treet. Long wood
Rov. I . R uth G re a t
Poster
Sundoy School
u.M om
M e r n ln i w o r th * *
S Ii m M S
Sunday B y n a ln t
I,M o w .
W ed B ik li Study
TiMpm
C a a g u ara rt M oating Sunday a M e m

Presbyterian
GOOD SH EPH ER D
lutherahchurch

T IIT O rlando D r. IT I I
I Luthoron Church In A m tr ic e l
R rv . R alph I L u m in
P as la r
Sunday Scheal
M lp m.
W arship
I 8 i M P .N I.
N ursery Prevlded

Church O f God
IT . L U K E ’S L U TH E R A N CHURCH
SR 114 A Rod t u t Rd.
Oviedo ( ll o v l a l
E d w in J. R e n e w
Poster
Sunday School
t iiS a .m .
W orship Services
B iM A IIiN e .m .
We m a in ta in e Christian Sctsael
K in derportan through E lphth O ra d a

CHUBCH OF GOD
M l W . JInd Street
R ev B ill Thom pson
Paster
Sunday School
f:4 S a m .
M a m in a w o rsh ip
I li M a . f f l.
E v a n te littic Sarv
IM p m
F a m ily Enrichm ent
Service
T iM p .m .

F IR S T P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H
O ak A va B i r d St.
B av. V i r f lI L B ry a n t, F aster
Phene T T 1 IM T
M o rn in g W orship
(M am
Church Scheel
til) a m.
M orning W arship
ItiM i.m .
N ursery

T H I L A K E M A R Y U N IT E D
P B E S IY T E B IA N C H U R C H
W ilb u r A ve ., Lake M e r y
B ev . A .P . Stevens
M in is ter
Sunday C hurch Scheel
9 :41 e m .
M orn ing w a rs h ip
I t i M p .m .
Youth O rpyp
TiMpm.
W ed. C hair P ractic e
I Mp m

■The Following Sponsors M a k e This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible1
A T L A N T IC N A T IO N A L B AN K
Sanford, F la .
H ow ard H. Hodges and Staff

C E L E R Y C IT Y
P R IN T IN G CO., IN C .

C O L O N IA L RO O M
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East F irs t St.
B ill &amp; Dot P ain ter

ASSEM BLY OP OOD
F irs t A ts e m M r a l OeB. IT th A E lm
B h aa m A ts u m M y •« G ab. C o m er a t Country Club B p p B and
W ilb u r A va . L ak e M a rv
F r ooPom A asem M y Of G ad. i l i s w t t h l l . , la n ia rd
B A P liil
A nt lack B aptist Church. O vtaB t
C a lv a ry B a p tiii C hurch. C ry sta l L ak e A S ri, L a k e M a ry
C lS M lb e rry B ap tis t Church. Tig Sam inala B lv *
C en tra l B aptist C hurch. 1211 O ak A h
Ch uiupla F irs t B aptist
C le a r w itp r M is sisn ary B aptist C hurch. S au tkw a it a a .
C nw htrrviPa B ap tist Church. C auntry C luh B o a *. L a k e M a ry
V ic ta ry B aptist C hurch, O l&lt; O rlpiM o B * . a t H ester Ava
F irs t B a p tiii C hurch, SIT P a rk A vk
F irs t B ap tis t C hurch a t A lt* m anta SprinBS. E t. 4 M . A ltern an t*
S p rin g t F irs t B aptist C hurch a t F a r m D ly
F irs t B ap tis t C hurch s i G eneva
F irs t B aptist C hurch a t L ak e M a r y
F irs t B aptist C hurch a t Lah e M earuo
F irs t B aptist C hurch at L a ng w a i t . 1 Bib. w e s t k t IT-W an H w y
«M
F irs t B aptist Pl OvtsAc
F irs t B aptist C hurch a t SanlanBa S pringt
F irs t B S F til* C hurch a t W K tp r S pring * TVS B aham a a * .
F irs t Ih iis h M m w n a r y B a p tx t C hurch, 1 K I w . n t h I t .
F ftps I B ap tis t C hurch a t O M «
i,n H u p * '
—
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Grace BtBK enuren. teat I . tauter* Art
___ B aptist C hurch. C b F N t l
• a r y B ap tis t C hurch. H a rm t * . E n ter p r, u
B M p M s s ten B a p ttit Church. O ak HIM B * . Ostkan
&gt; f Q te ry B aptist C hurch. G tn a v a Nary,
a ria h P rlm H iv a B ap tis t. I H I Lacusl A y * . ta u te r *
4ve M ilS te tK ry B ap tis t C hurch. SamanPa S p rin g ! B * .
tt M m t e r a r y B a p lia l C h u r l* . ISM Je rry Ava
i M ,tite n a r y B ap tis t. U p as A va
h a t M iiit e a e r y C h u r c h .m S t A H ic k a ry Ava.
te n e t B a p tiii M i n C&gt;vic Laagva B u g L e n g w p t*
ip tttl C hurch. F a /n s l C ity C arnm naity C anter. F a r m
C a tte r y M ie s M a e ry B ap tis t. H M W . l i t * SI.
im F fM U U y * B ap tis t C hurch. IS M W ITth SI
Jam ant B ap tis t C hurch. O M tlty In n . k a r t * Lnngwuu*
{ te n B ap tist C h u rch . IT N F u a r Ava

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OF S E M IN O L E and Staff
200 W. F irst St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.
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Sanford Plaza
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Mike A Connie Smith
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H erb Stenstrom and Staff
t

W IL S O N E IC H E L B E R G E R
M O RTUARY
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SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY1
N ew L i t * Fellow ship. I t t l ■ Lake O riva. C ats e ih e rry . F I. 11TM
B a v tn a a P a rk B e a t,it Church. STtl w JSib si
F tkp la'S B a p tiii Chapel. I N I W F irs t S tra it. S en io r*
P in e c r tll B aptist Church, l i t W A lrp u rt B lv *
P r a ir ie Lab a B aptist, B l* * a B * . F ern P ark
PrpB rosi M illte n a r y B aptist Church. M tew oy
fa c s n * Slulah M issionary B aptist Church W a ll te n te r*
la m ln u tg N a lM B i « * N S it Churgh. Sarvicaa te L B h P h te ry H t*B
Ic h M t A u tB te rtu a
S m yrna B e p tiit Church. IS * O varpraab D r . CassalBayry
Suntan* B aptist Church, t a i l P alm etto
SI. Jam as M is ite n e ry B a p lu t Church, SI. B * t i l . Oslaan
l l L u k * M m tenary B a p tiii Church ul C am aran O ly , in r
I t . Paul B aptist Church. I l l F in e Ava
t l . M atth ew s B aptist Church. C anaan H gts
tp rtn g fte l* M illte n a ry B a p tiii. ITth B C tP er
St. John's M illte n a r y B ap tis t Church, f i t Cypress t l
T em p le B a p tiii Church. P a lm Spring t a * . A ltam onte springs
w illia m Chop*! M issionary B aptist Church. M a rk t W illia m l l .
A ltam onte Springs
lin n H e p * B aptist Church, l i t O ranpa A va.
C A T H O L IC
C hurch a t the N a tiv ity , Labs M a ry
A ll Saul* C ith p lK Church. T il O ak A n . , la n lg r *
O ur L a * r Q v a n n u t P a a ta Catholic Chapel. I l l I M agnolia A re .,
St. Ann's C atholic Church, Dug area* T r a il, D o B ary
St. A u g v ttu w C atholic Church. Suasat D r., n ea r Button ■ * ,
Cassatharry
St. M a r y M a g a *a ta n a Catholic Church, M a itla n * A n . ,
A ll am enta Springs
O ur L a * v U&lt; the L ak es Catholic Church. 1)11 M a a im iU a n . Dal tuna
C H B IIT IA N
C h ristian Sctenca Society. C O Sw aatw atar A c a *a m y . E as t Lake
B ra n tle y O r . L a m w a a *
F its ! C h ristian C hurch. IM T S S a n te r* A n
S a a te r* C h ristian Church. I l l W A lrp u rt B lr *
N a rih s K e C h r is 'K * Church. F t e r i* * H u n * O r.. M a illa n *
Lab aviuw C V tS tin * C hurch B u ir l a t a B « . a t Jam isan
C N U B C N O F C M B IS T
C hurch 1 C hrist. H D S P a rk A n .
C Ita rc B a l C h rist a t L a k e E n a * U S i f Ul. N . Casselberry
South Sam inala C hurch at C hrist. M IS L ak e H aw aii B«
C hurch gt C h ris t. UM P a lm lu rin g s O r.. A ittm u n tu Sags

Church ul C hrist. O anu ru
Church ut C hrist. Longwuu* '
Church ut C hrist. W ITth l l
H u rth sK u Church uf C hrist. F la H a n n O r.. M a itla n *
CHUBCH OF OOD
Church nt G o *. Sat H ickory
C hurch a l O u *. M l W T in * SI
Church at O a *. O vte*o
Church a l G o * H e lin tts . L a k e M a tv e i
Church a l G o * M ission. E n te rp ris e
C hurch al G » * . D l l W u t h St
Church at G o * in C hrist. O y ia *a
Church al G o * at P raphecy. IS M S E lm A n
T k u rc h at G o * at P rophecy. D M I Persim m on Art.
E tscu a C h u rc h H O a * . D M W . l i t * t l . . S an ter*
Tru# C hurch O t On*L STM B K g a w a n * A n . , S a n te r*
EASTBEN O b T H u M *
B as larn OrttmBna C h u rc h . Sts P rio r A P au l, t i l l M ag n o lia A n . ,
l a n le r * . P l* .
E as tern Or m o Out Church. SI O aarga. **» th a rw a c * c t „
A iia m a n ta Springs
E a tla rn O rth u B ia Church. I t S ta n n 's at O C A . H I South S I..
P a r * P ark
E astern O r t h u M i Church. St John chrysn stam Chapel, U S
H w y I T t t . F a n P ark
CO n O B IG A T IO N A L
C en g rtg alian al C h ristian Church, 1 M I I . F a r t A v p i, S a n te r*
E P IS C O P A L
EpucnpBl C hurch kt Ik * Near C o n n ant. ITS T u th ew ilJ e B a a *,
W inter Springs
T k r C hurch * t m e O u e * In r p h u r * M a itla n * . U t L a k e A n
U t Saints B p m u p a t Church. ( O n B try A .a . In ta rp r is a
C hrist Episcopal Church. L a n fw p a *
H oly Cross Episcpppl P ara A n . a t am S t , S a a la r*
SI. B ic h a r*'s Church. S ilt L a b * H aw aii ■ * . W inter P a rk
J E W IS H
B am A m S y n a ta fu * m eetin g a l in te rstate M a ll. A ttam eufe
Springs
LUTHCBAN
a tc rn s ip n l u t h a r m Church O n r b rp c k O r . C a ts K k a rry
G a a * S h e p h ar* U m la u L u m n ran . H U I O rlanBa O r.
L u tkn raa Church a t Providence, Deltona
Lu th eran C hurch at She B e * t * m e r . I I , w D in P lace
M essiah L u th er a a C hurch. O aM en Days O r. B .H w y I I - t L
C assatharry
St L u k rs L u m a r a * Church, B t. it s . S ilv ia

SI Stephen L u th er an Church. 4 H lust W est a t M . Lan g w aa*
M E T H O D IS T
B arn ett U n it * * M a m a rla l Church. I . D aB ary A v a , E n ter prise
B ear L ake U n ite * M * t k * * is t Church
Bathai A M I . Church, C anaan H yts.
C is s r lk rrr y C om m unity U n it * * M a th p *is t Church. H w y . I M t . ,
Pinay B i* g t B * ,. Cassatharry
C hrist U n ite * M a th a d iil Church, Tuc ker D r.. S u n itn * Bstalas
D aB ary C o m m unity M athaBist Church. W . H igh bank I B * .
D aB ary
F irs t U n it* * M athaBist Church, t t t F * r k A y * .
F irs t M athaBist C hurch *1 O naB a
F irs t Skutharn M * t h * * i i l Church, 14M S in te r * A y *.
P r * * M athaBist Church, SM W . «m St
F irs t U n it* * M athaBist Church at Banova. O an a v*
G a n * v i M athaB ist Church, O an a v*
O ra c * U n it * * M a m u B iil Church, A lrp M I B lv *
O ra n t C hap*i A M I . Church, O vteB *
O ik g ra v * M athadTti Church. O viaB*
Ostaan M athaB ist Church
F a i l * W asiayan M athaB ist, B t. 44 W * t P p a i*
St Jam as a m i . am a t C r a m s
St. Luka M B. C hurch a l C am aran C ity , m e , B a a rB a iia tt S B . 44
B.
SI. M a ry 's A M . * . Church, S I. B t. I l l , Ostaan
SI. P au l's M a th M ia t Church, D stran B * , In ta r p r is *
S la t la r * M a n o r ia l Church, S. D aB ary
SaaianB * U n it* * M *th p *is l Church, SB * M a n * M , L s n g w iH
Ostaan U n it * * M athaB ist Church, C ar. at Car pant or t M u rr a y St.,
Ostaan
N A 1A B EN I
F irs t C hurch a t Iha N asarana, 1181 S a n te r* Ava
G a n a v t Church *1 fh * N asarana, I . B . at- G eneva
Lab a M a r y Church a t th * N as ara n a. i l l | . c ry s ta l L a b * Avk..
L ab s M a ry
M a rk h a m W **B s C hurch at th * N asarana, SB-44. |Vy M ilts W . at
1-4 a t m * W akiva B ivur
L a n *w a a * Church * t Us* N asarana. w a y m a n A Jtssup A v a ,
F B IS B Y T IB IA N
D aitana P rrs k y ta ria n Church, H all a n * B lv * B A ustin A v a ,
D a lia n *
L ak e M a r y U n it * * P ra s h y ltria n Church
F irs t P rasB vten a n C hurch O ak A va. A Sr* St.
F irs t P rasb y terla n C hurch at D a B a ry , * . H ifh la n *
Canvpnant P r ts k y ta rla n C hurch. T IM S O rla n d * D r.

St. AnBrtws Fraskytarion Church, n i l Bear Laky B*
t l. Sharks Frasbytarlan Church, i t t l Palm Springs B * .
AlUm anti Sprints
Upsala Community PrpsBylauan Church, Upsaia ■ *.
w astm iM ittr Frashytarii* Church. Ba* Bug B * , Cassatharry
Winter Sprints PrtsByterltn C hant, TthBay A«v*ntlsl Church.
Mass B *.. Winter Sprtn*l
SEVENTH DAY AOVBNTIST
F a rm Lake Seventh Day Alvaatist Church, Hwy. 434. Farvsl
City
Seventh Day ABvtMist Church. M aitlan* Ava , Aiiamanta Sm &gt;
Santer* Savantk Day ABvantist Church. Tth A a im
W iM tr Spring! Savtnth Day ABvantist Church. | | I . Mass * * ,
SSars Mill Savanth Day A«vtntist Church, BBS I . In * SI.. Sa«l«r«.
OTHBB CHUBCHBS
SHan’s A M I Church. Oliva A Dlh
All Faith C hant. Camp Sammals. w tk lv t Park B *.
B tpr*ail Avtnu* Htiintss C hant. Baarw it Ava.
Chutnta Cammuhity Church
Church *1 Jaws Christ at Later Day Saints, t i l l F a r* Ava.
Labe Monro* Chop*. Ortngo B lv * . L *k * Morn or
Kingaam Hall at Jahavah's Witness, Laba M aw a* unit, m i W.
Thlr* S tru t
First Barn Church at th* Lvlrtg 0 *4 . Mteway
First Church t l Christ. Sclantlsl. Ilp sm Blv* an* Van vs I t ,
Fantanttal O n * BIM* Taharnacit. B i*nw aa&lt; A h . Oil till
appoxt* Saminala Hlgn Ic h n i
First Pantacaital Church * | Langwaa*
First Panlacaital Church at Saater*
FM I Oaspal Churgh at O n I* Christ, t u t Jerry Ava . Santer*
Full O w n t TaM raacit. It ; * Cautery Civ*
M l. O ilra H a tin s t Church, Oak HOI a * ., Ostaan
S tater* AlUanc* Church 1«B1 I . Park A h .
Santer* Bite* Church. 1444 Senior* A h .
S inter* CangraS4tl**al *1 Jthpvah'i W.lmssas, 1144 W 4th SI
T h i S 4iH ti4* Army, t l* W. 14m SI.
Ballm* Hilts M a rtv ita Church. SB 4S4. Langwaa*
B rdacmar Moravian church. I l l TuscawiU* B * . Winter Spring
UMtg* Church at Christ. Attamanta Cammuaity C h a n
o n iiM flfi i i r m f i

Haly Trinity Church pt Oa* In Christ. Ills M v k a u tlm * A h .
Th* FuU Gassal ^Church al Our Lar* Jtsus C hrlil. waiAintea
Winter Springs Cammutely C vangalicol Cangrrgaltenal. Wmt*
Springs, Btemgntpry Schaal

�RELIGION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FJ.

Briefly
Robert Schuller To Speak
A t Rolling Hills Church
“ Dr, Robert Schuller, seen each Sunday on nationally
televised 'The Hour of Power,' will visit his only daughter’s
church In Florida, the Rolling Hills Community Church In
Zellwood, Wednesday," reports its pastor, Rev. Harold De
Roo. Dr. Schuller's coming climaxes a month-long series of
celebrations marking the fifth anniversary of the Zellwood*
based church.
"Dr. Schuller comes to celebrate with the church family
the work he started In 1977 and which has grown to such
proportions that the church serves members stretching
from Ocala to Kissimmee, from Cape Canaveral to Winter
Haven." Dr. Schuller Is the founder of the Crystal
Cathedral ministries In Garden Grove, Calif., and the
auUior of several books including "Move Ahead with
Possibility Thinking." The television minister will receive a
class of new members, RHCC’s largest group to date.
The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the beautiful
sanctuary which Dr. Schuller dedicated three years ago.
Because of the nature of the event, a birthday celebration of
the church Itself, admission is limited to those holding
tickets, Dr. Schuller's “ Hour of Power" ministry can be
seen in Central Florida each Sunday morning at 7 a.m. over
Channel 6.

Sunday, Feb. 30, 19H-SB

Prayer: Everyone Does It Differently
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UPI Religion Writer
Prayer, says Lutheran theologian
and University of Chicago professor
Martin E. Marty, is not only belief
but behavior.
In an Interfaith Features article
published in U.S. Catholic and eight
other religious magazines, Marty
found that most people think most
other people pray the same way they
do.
But there arc differences, he
notes.
"You can stand, sit, kneel, grovel,
lie down, walk, run or dig in to
pray," Marty notes. "You may
fold your hands or raise hands.

Some prefer to pray in the morning
or in the evening, while others let it
erupt whenever."
Marty’s reflections were promp­
ted by a survey of the readers of U.S.
Catholic
and
eight
other
denominational magazines — an
admittedly non-scientific sample.
According to the survey, not a
single respondent said he never
prayed.
“And however much modernity
has torn up personal and family
schedules, more than half of these
believers said they set aside specific
times for prayer," Marty said.
P erhaps m ost su rp rising, the
larg est percen tag es of those

reporting a somewhat disciplined
prayer life came from the religious
denominations most often suspected
of being undisciplined and rather
liberal, with 62 percent of the United
Church of Christ respondents, 58
percent of the United Presbyterian
and 53 percent of the Presbyterian
Church in the U.S. families repor­
ting they set asid e specific periods of
time for prayer.
Home was the favorite spot for
people to pray and the workplace the
least favorite, Marty found.
Only 6 percent — mostly in the
United Church of Christ and the
United Presbyterian Church — said
work is their favorite place to pray

and for everyone but Catholics and to have "some communal sense in
Episcopalians, home was listed as this age of the very private" with
the best spot to pray.
"only" 79 percent of them saying
they preferred to pray alone.
For Catholics home tied with
M arty
also
found
some
church and for E piscopalians
church won over home. At the other denom inational differences the
end of the scale, members of the postures people prefer for prayer.
Church of the Brethren were least
M embers of the American
likely to favor church as a place to Lutheran Church, he said, tend to
pray.
like to pray lying down and more of
them choose nighttime for prayer
As religion has become more
than any other group while 40 per­
p rivate over the last several
cent of the Episcopalians preferred
generations, so too has prayer.
kneeling.
Although corporate worship in
Among all but Catholic respon­
dents, 85 p ercen t said they most Christian traditions calls for
preferred to p ray alone while prayer while standing, Marty said
the Catholics, said Marty, continue almost nn one liked that position.

C e n tral Baptist
A c q u ire s N e w Site
Central Baptist Church of 1311 Oak Ave. has voted to
relocate on West First Street, Sanford. The church has pur­
chased 17.5 acres to build the new facilities. This weekend,
Central Baptist will set a goal to pay off the property in 12
months.
Saturday there will be a gigantic prayer service on the
property. Sunday morning.at the 11 o'clock service there will
be commitment by the members.

H a n d b e ll C hoir To P erfo rm
The next program of the music series of the First United
Methodist Church, 419 Park Ave., Sanford, to be held in the
church sanctuary this Sunday at 7 p.m. will feature the
Handbell Choir from Florida Southern College in Lakeland.
Director of the choir is Mary Ruth Galloway. The program
will consist of all types of music for handbells. The program
is free and open to the public.

The pastor, Dr. Freddie Smith, has spoken of the tremen­
dous undertaking and glorious believabliity of the people of
God. Central is feeling the opportunities to witness and
minister for Jesus Christ in Sanford and Central Florida.

Passion Play O pens Season
The Black Hills Passion Play opened its 31st Florida
season Sunday in Lake Wales. It will continue through
Sunday, April 17, with performances in the outdoor am­
phitheater on Alt. U.S. Highway 27 two miles south of la k e
Wales, every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday performances begin at 6 p.m.
There will be five Wednesday matinees in February and
March ct 3 p.m. The Good Friday performance will begin at
7:30 p.m. on April 1.
The main cast of the drama, produced and directed by
Josef Meier, plus costumes and camels, come from
Spearfish, S.D. each year. Hundreds of extras from the
Central Florida area are involved in each performance. For
reservations call 813-676*1495.

Youth To Ice Skate
The Youth Alive Fellowship of Trinity Assembly of God
accompanied by youth pastor Mike Modica and his wife,
Renee, will go ice skating on Feb. 20. They will leave the
church grounds at 3:15 p.m. and return at 0:15 p.m.

Puppets A n d P aul
A puppet show will be presented at 6:30 p.m. this Sunday
at Trinity Assembly of God, 075 Elkcam Boulevard,
Deltona, by the leaders of the Children's Church. The
program is open to all ages and afterward a film, "I, Paul"
will be shown, based on II Timothy.

Evangelist To S peak
Evangelist David Walker and his family will be speaking
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the sanctuary of Trinity
Assembly of God. Healed of blindness at the age of 5, he has
ministered in Russia, Vietnam and other countries.

Film To Be Shown
The full-length color film, "Shelfey," will be shown at
Victory Baptist Church on Friday at 7 p m .
"Sheffey," a screenplay written by Tim Rogers, is based
on the book "The Saint of the Wilderness" by Jess Carr and
deals with the life of an itinerant preacher, Robert Sayers
Sheffey. Living in the 1800s, Sheffey ministered to the
mountain folk of the Virginias, Carolina, and parts of
Tennessee and Kentucky.

Circles To M e e t
The Circles of the DeBary United Methodist Women will
meet Tuesday at the following places and times: Esther,
1:30 p.m. at 211 Eldorado St.; Mary, 1:30 p.m., at the
church parlor; Martha, 9:30 a.m., church parlor; and Ruth,
1:30 p.m., 120 Chateau Circle, Highland Country Estates.

C h ristian W o m en 's Brunch
The Altamonte-Maltland Christian Women’s Club will
bold a Heart Friends Brunch Feb. 24, Thursday, 9:30-11:30
a.m. at the Maitland Civic Center. Speaker will be David
Fletcher of St. Petersburg; and special music by S.A.
Llewellyn.
For reservations call Ruth at 862-7816.

M e n 's D a y A t St. Jam es
St. Jam es AME Church, Ninth and Cypress Avenue,
Sanford, will hold a Men’s Day at 11 a.m. this Sunday with
State Rep. Alio Reddick (D-Orlando) as speaker. There will
be music by the Men's Community Chorus. At 5 p.m. St.
Jam es AME Church, Eustls, trill be in charge and the Rev.
J.O. Morris, pastor trill speak. Harvey Leeks is chairman
and the Rev. Bernard Lemon is pastor.

W om en 's D a y O b served
Women’s Day will be observed at New Salem Primitive
Baptist Church 12th Street this Sunday on the theme
"Christian Women Working In Unity." Mrs. Frankie Glover
will be the speaker at 11 a m . and the guest choir will be
from Macedonia Primitive Baptist Church, Sanford. Donna
Burke is chairman and the Rev. O.W. Williams is pastor.

Film Focuses O n Fam ily
First Baptist Church, Sanford, will observe Baptist Men’s
Day this Sunday beginning with a Men's Prayer Breakfast
at 6 a.m. Church layman Clay Simmons will bring the
message at the 11 a.m. service. He received his law degree
from University of Florida and a m asters in counseling
psychology. He is an attorney with the law firm of Stenstrom, McIntosh, Julian, Colbert and Whlgham. There will
be special music by the Men’s Chorus.

. v

The pastor, Dr. Freddie Smith said, "The church is
outgrowing its present facilities and there is not room for
expansion. The new location will enable us to expand our
ministry."

, 1
i if

Associate P asto r David Hodges and his wife Laverne and new daughter Amy
Michelle, are presented gift from C asselberry Community United Methodist
Church Lay L eader Glen From on behalf of the congregation at a farewell
dinner for the Hodges Sunday night. They left Wednesday for Micanopy
_________________________where they will be serving a four-church circuit.

H O D G ES
H O N O R ED

The Finance Committee, chaired by Ken McIntosh, is
composed of Dr. Jim Edgemon, Ross Hamilton, Mrs. Bilie
Coggon, Mrs. Virginia Williams, Jack Benton, Jr. The com­
mittee has chosen the statement from Joshua 14:12 for the
challenge of the campaign, "Lord, give us the mountain."
For two years Central has had a Vision Committee to give
over-all leadership In the relocation. Ted Barker is chairman,
with Mack LaZenby, Worth Yales, Boyd Arp, Garnet High
serving on the committee.

Scientists' Imperfect Plan For 'Perfect' People
The story of the surrogate mother in Michigan who gave
birth to a deformed baby has again raised the question of
whether it is right to tam per with "God’s way" in m atters
dealing with reproduction and the human body.
(Actually, the mother may not have been a surrogate at all.
The baby appears to have been fathered by the woman's
husband. But the woman had agreed, for $10,000, to be in­
seminated by a man who was not her husband.)
An official of the Catholic Bishops' Committee for Pro-Life
Activities calls surrogate motherhood "a kind of technical
adultery, nothing more than renting a woman's womb."
It has been estimated there have been 75 surrogate births so
far in the United Stales with hundreds more expected within
the next few years.
Surrogate births with their attendant risks may not be the
worst thing we can look forward to as scientists prepare to
manipulate us with genetic engineering and behavior
modification.
Vance Packard, author of "The People Shapers," foresees
the day when embryos will be for sale on the "seed m arket."
He envisions someone like Arnold Schwarzenegger (five times
Mr. Universe) being induced to supply semen.
“ He has been credited with having the world's most perfect
male body," says Packard. "Certainly semen from such a
person would command a premium on the seed m arket."
An egg from a celebrity similar to Sophia Ijoren — “that is
someone not only spectacularly beautiful bui having an
engaging personality — might well command a premium of at
least 11,500 above the base price."
Scientists and technologists are right now experimenting
with new ways to reshape man that read like the science fiction
of 25 years ago.
“ This remaking of m an," writes Packard, "can occur within
the next few decades. Some of the projects make your skin
crawl."

Saints
And
Sinners
George Plagenz

There has been serious talk, says Packard, of using genetic
engineering to produce women without breasts.
Packard says he first heard the idea advanced at a con­
ference on medical ethics. More than 50 scientist, physicians
and philosophers were present — both men and women.
"Nobody rose to shout their consternation," says Packard.
The medical doctor proposing the idea pointed out that
millions of women are or will be victims of breast cancer.
Enormous sums of money are spent on research and treatment
of the disease.
The doctor said the whole problem could be eliminated
simply by nipping off a bit of breast tissue at birth. The
operation would be as uncomplicated as circumcision on baby
boys.
He went on to say that for modem liberated women, breasts
are often a hindrance on the job — "certainly if they are
foresters, Jockeys, soldiers and mechanics. And they are also
an encumbrance in sports."
Packard suggests that, as far as "Breasts to attract men are
concerned, padded bras and synthetic breasts held in place by
suction could perhaps be substituted until the world got used to
women without breasts."
Packard even goes on to say that a poll of women on the
subject of breastlessness might find a substantial number
responding with a hesitant yes. Why hesitant? It would be

Temptation attacks the powerful urges of
our physical bodies. When Adam and Eve
were in the Garden of Eden, God told them
they were not to eat of the tree of good and evil,
or they would surely die. The tem pter came
and suggested to Eve — "No, you shall not
surely die." Eve kept thinking about the
m atter, about the desirability of tasting the
forbidden fruit, and the temptation became
stronger and stronger. Temptation then led to
the act of sin: "She look the fruit thereof and
did eat."
She did the deed, no one else did it for her.
The deed was her own personal, individual,
willful, responsible Bet.
Temptation gained an entrance into Eve's
soul through sense perception. She "saw " that

First United Methodist
Church of Sanford

the tree was good. It can be fatal to let the
mind dwell on the attractiveness of something
that is wrong.

Evil has a way of taking what it can get. If it
cannot get all of a m an's devotion, it will en­
deavor to get a little. Consider the man who
has experienced the heartache of drinking too
much. The tem pter does not urge him to get
drunk; he knows that approach will not work.
He simply says, "Take one drink, what harm
can that do?"
God has made ui so we have a freedom of
choice. We can choose to accept his help and
through it we can overcome the temptations
that crowd in upon us. Paul, said; “God will
with the temptation also make a .way to
escape, that you m ay be able to bear it."

M e rc e r
Shaw ,
a
preacher
and
m usician, will present
a c o n c e rt a t F ir s t
Baptist
Church,
Sanford, at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
A
recording a rtist and
past m em ber of the
Baptist Hour Q uartet,
he holds a Doctor of
M u s k D eg ree from
Florida State Christian
College.

Ground
breaking
cerem onies for the new
million dollar San Pedro
Center Building Project will
be held at 10 a.m. Monday at
the building site on the San
Pedro Center Grounds on
Dike Road in Maitland.
Bishop Thomas Grady will
be on hand to initially break
ground with the traditional
gold shovel.
The complex will consist of

By LEO F. KING,
Pastor,

Consider the sex Instinct, for example; it is
one of the most powerful urges of life. To live
by the philosophy that it must be completely
satisfied on our own term s will ruin
civilization and bring the soul to moral chaos.
This desire, like many other desires, must be
kept under constant guard and wise super­
vision.

TO SING

Groundbreaking Set
At San Pedro Center

Stand Up To Temptation
During the days of Lent many people think
more about their personal dedication to God.
Our sins are seen more clearly as we con­
template the compassion and sacrifice of
Christ upon a cross.
One facet of our dally lives that provides a
difficulty in living is that of overcoming
temptation. Just what do we mean when we
pray: "And lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil?" The word “tem pt"
means to entice. We must dismiss the idea at
once that God would entice or induce us to sin.
Jam es tells us definitely that “God cannot be
tempted with evil, neither tempteth He any
man; but every man is tempted when he is
drawn away of his own lust and enticed.”

based on the condition that all women be breastless.
An attractive woman once suggested to George Bernard
Shaw that they h are a baby together. "With m y body and
your brains," she said, “imagine what an extraordinary child
it would be."
“ Yes," replied the Irish wit, "but what if the child should
have my body and your brains?"
That might have been a worry once but no longer, say
today’s genetic engineers. If a genious like Shaw and a
beautiful woman decide to have a baby, the "best genes" will
be selected from the sperm of the genius and will be united
with the "best genes" from the woman.
They will then be Implanted in the woman and, If everything
turns out like the scientists predict, the baby will grow up to be
an intellectual with a great body.
Are our worries over then? Or Just beginning?

TO SPEAK
Tlie Rev. Neal Frey,
A sse m b lie s uf God
m issionary to Okinawa
will he guest speaker
a t 10 a.m . Sunday at
F irst Assembly of God,
304 W. 27th St. Mr. and
M rs. F rey have been
a ss ig n e d to p a s to r
Neighborhood Assem­
bly of God, a church
com prised or English
speaking Okinawans
and U.S. m ilitary per­
sonnel. He will also be
the principal of a day
sch o o l.

three buildings that, in all,
will house 36 motel-like rooms
and offices for the functions
sponsored by the Center.
San Pedro Center Is host to
many of the renewal and
retreat weekends sponsored
by the organizations of the
Orlando Diocese.
The center Is staffed by the
Rev. Guy Noonan, the Rcc.
Donald Malnardl, and the
Rev. Nino La Estella.

B aptist M e n 's D a y
The film aeries, "Focus on the Family,’’ with Dr. Jam es
Dobson, continues in the Parish Hall at 7:30 p.m. on
Thursday nights at Holy Cross Episcopal Church, Sanford,
as a special Lenten focus.

^C u b e's

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Highway 43* a Red Bug Road. Oviedo n JU

SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES

1:30 A.M. and H :00AM.
SUNDAY SCHOOL-9:45 A M

�B L O N D IE

*B—tvem gg Herald, Sanlord, H.

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Sunday, Feb. 20, 19IJ

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TO G O P L A C E S
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14 Pronunciation
mark
15 Acquiesce
16 Tips
17 C onditionally
18 W eather
bureau (abbr)
19 Young man
20 Levitate
24 Rebellious
dem onstration
26 A postle
27 Definite
article
30 Sketch
through thin
paper
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eye
33 Possessive
pronoun
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35 Health resort U
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31 Dainty
37 Senses w ith
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39 Lots
41 Fend
43 Fold in cloth
44 Jobs
45 Uses chair
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48 First-rate
(comp w d )
49 Astronaut's
ferry
50 Singleton
51 Trojan
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53 Make beloved
54 Steals
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56 Eipenments
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Answer to Previous Punle

Hindu
incarnation
Cod (L it.)
Noun suffix
Graphic
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8 New York
state city
9 Mr Van
W inkle
10 lo n g fish
11 Sere
12 Ancient
m usical
instrum ent
17 Of swim ming
19 Folk
knowledge
21 Demons
22 Oore
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by Larry W right

H O RO SCO PE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Sunday, February 20, 1983
YOURRIRTHDA Y
February to, 1983
In the year following your
birthday you'll have more
than your sh are of op­
portunities to better your lot
In life. However, nothing will
be handed to you on a silver
platter. You'll have to develop
those opportunities.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Unless you definitely plan to
complete them, It may be best
not to begin things today.
False starts could result in a
lot of projects hanging fire.
1983 predictions for Ptsceans
are now ready. Send 81 to
Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure lo stale your zodiac sign,
Send an additional 82 for the
NEW Astro-Graph M at­
chmaker wheel and booklet.
R eveals rom antic com ­
binations and compatibilities
for all signs.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
It’s Important to think before
you speak today, or you might
u n i n t e n t io n a l ly
b lu rt
something out which another
could find offensive.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
If possible, try to steer clear
of business or financial In­
volvem ents with friends
today. Enjoy yourself with
pals without letting money
become an Issue.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Conditions may not permit
you to o p erate as in­
dependently as you'd like
today. Don’t buck develop­
ments. Try to make com­
promises and adjustments.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

If you try to take on more than
you can handle today you
could be overwhelmed and
end up In a state of confusion.
Tackle one Job at a lime.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Steer
clear of risky ventures today
in areas where you lack know­
how or expertise. You could
get Involved In something
over your head.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. V \
Your Image will suffer today
if others see you as being too
self-serving. Look out for the
welfare of associates, as well
as your own.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Rather than tell others what
they should do or not do today,
first set the proper example.
Words without deeds may
have little effect.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Be optimistic today but also
be re alistic, especially
money-wise. Spending funds
you've not received could be a
big mistake.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Confusion will reign
in the household today If you
and your m ate disagree
regarding ways to manage
the youngsters. Be sup­
portive, not contradictory.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Normally you organize
your work efficiently, but
today your good habits could
desert you and you may make
big tasks out of little ones.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Have fun and enjoy
yourself today, but be careful
not to overindulge or to be
ex trag av an t. Both present
possible problems.

For M onday, February 21, 1983

N O R TH

P R IS C IL L A 'S POP
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YOUR ACCOUNT IS
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Opening lead: #9

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

C02RSCT T H A T .

Here is a tough problem
hand from C alifornia’s
’Popular Bridge” magazine.
South starts with three
losers, but West opens the
nine of diamonds.
Now let’s follow the

magazine's reasoning. West
has surely opened a singleton. He probably holds acejack of clubs.’ With acequeen he would almost
surely have doubled and led
a spade. It appears that he
hoped to underlead the
spade ace later. Until dum­
my appeared West had good
reason to mark East with
the king.
Now is there any way to
come to 11 tricks?
There is one if West holds
7-3-1-2 distribution. Not like­
ly. but worth a try. You win
the diamond with your ace.
Lead to dummy's ace-king of
hearts to get rid of your
spade !0 and ruff a third
heart.
Now for the kev play. Put
down your king of clubs. You
can’t afford to let East in
with the queen you have
decided that he holds. That
would give him a chance to
lead a spade and there
would be no end play. So you
lead the club king
West takes his ace and
jack. Then he has to lead a
spade. If he leads low you
play dummy's king. If he
leads the ace you ruff, enter
dummy with the king of dia­
monds and discard your last
diamond on the king of
spades.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN &gt;

YOUR BIRTHDAY
February 21,1983
This will be an Interesting
year for you where romance
Is concerned. The accent will
be on strengthening a present
relationship or seeking a new
one.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Take a moment today to stop
and think about whal's really
of value to you. Be sure the
goals you're striving for are
not full empty promises. 1983
predictions for Pisces are now
ready. Send |1 to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign. Send
an additional 82 for the NEW
Astro-Graph,
matchmaker
wheel and booklet. Reveals
romantic combinations and
compatibilities for all signs.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You could be a trifle
vulnerable when dealing with
others today, especially If you
let your feelings cloud your
Judgment. See things (or what
they are.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You could experience a Utile
disappointment today In one
with whom you have dose
ties. Don't let what may occur
be blown out of proportion.
GEMINI (May tl-June 20)
Strive to get along with others
today, but don't base
agreements on what appears
to be th e easiest " o u t."
Sometimes the most com­
fortable route Is not the
wisest.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Before finding excuses to set
aside responsibilities today,
ask yourself honestly if you

The U .S. D e p a rtm e n t of E nergy predlcti that
our there of total free world oil consumption will
d ecrease by a b o u t five p e rc e n t by 1 9 9 0 .

G A R F IE L D
FRANK AND ERNEST

X A$\t£D MY MOTHE/2 W H/*T t
^ SHE'D SfiX IF I ToLO H E * Tf&gt;,
/

really tnlend to gei back lo
them later.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
could be susceptible to flat­
tery today, and one who is
, aware of this might use this
tool to serve his or her ends by
laying it on thick.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22) In
situations outside of the home
you are likely to conduct
yourself well today, but you
might lose your poise over
emotional Issues with your
mate.
&gt;JBRA (Sept 23-OcL 23)
Don’t be overly complacent
about Im portant m atters
today. When you’re not
looking, they m ight s ta rt
drifting off in the wrong
direction.
SCORPIO (O ct 24-Nov. 22)
Manage your resources wise­
ly today. Try to keep In mind
that what you spend for
gratification now will even­
tually have to be paid for.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Be sure to present
your most attractive profile to
asso ciates today. Your
behavior will be closely
scrutinized. Don’t leave the
wrong impression.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Be sm art enough to
recognize the signals today if
co-workers try to Involve you
In office politics. Instead of
dealing In intrigues, do what
you're paid to do.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Try not lo give too much
time to frivolous Interests at
present, or they may cut down
your momentum for your
m ore Im portant projects.
Budget your time wisely.

by Jim Davis

by Bob Thaves
L,

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FHe

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rue Fia s t

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TUMBLEWEEDS

by T. K. Ryan

A N N IE

by Ltonard Starr
THAT WAS JACK CALLIN'
FROM TH'LANPIN'STRIP/
KARWCKS' PLANE JUST
LANPEP/- WITH A R060T
AT Tli'CONTIIOLSf

HEAR THAT?
HE5 EVEN
TAKIN'HORK
AWAY FROM

PILOTS,W !

WHAT ARE I MY SUPERINTENDENT IN
WF
rH&amp;nnc n r tulc
WE WAITIN'
WAITIN »—
CHARGE OF THIS
FOR, w r ?
OPERATION,/^
MJTMLlNONPEfl
WATS KEEPING HIM.

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�Sunday, F«b. 2 0 ,1 9 1 1 -7 B 1

E vanlng H erald, S in lo rd , FI.

TONIGHTS TV
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON

6:00

2:00

O ® (5 ) O NEWS
(3S )K U N Q F U
(1 0 ) S U R V IV A L '"B alloon
Sated” Alan and Joan Root's Bight
over Africa's Ssrsngetl Plsm In a
hoi air balloon Is documented,
Dsvid Niven ns,rates (R)

K J S n J S K ? 1 0 CHAMPIONSHIP
KICK BOXING
(I) O
N C A A B A SK ETB A LL
Dayton at Old Dominion
5 1 (M ) M O VIE "The Budget At
Toko-Fir (1854) William Holden.
Qraca Kelly The personal lives oi
men who struggle to survive In I ha
dangerous batUefleldi of the Kore­
an W ar are as lortuout as the war
Itself
CD (10) IT S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
2 :3 0
( 7 ) 0 WRESTLING
CD (10) r r s EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
NESS
3 :0 0

0Florida
a)al Tennessee
N C A A B A SK ETB A LL
® O

8 PORT 8 BEAT
CD (10) SIM PLE TREASURES
Classical gullartst Ruben Romero
performs musical selections from
1 he Renaissance, Baroque, Roman­
tic and contemporary periods
3 :0 5
( D (17) MOVIE
"Casablanca "
(1843) Ingrid Bergman. Humphrey
Bogart. A gambling casino owner
holds the key to the escape of a
French Resistance leader and his
wife, who are fleeing from I he N u ll
3 :3 0
CD O PBA BOWLING Live coverage of the 1125.000 Roialdt Open
(from Dick W eber Lanes in 8 t. Lou­
is, M o )
CD (10) TONY BROWN -8 JOURNAL
"Jim Crow's Graveyard" Tony
Brown traces the growth of the all­
black fighting unh from a support
and bomber escort command lo a
fighting unit (Part 3)
4 :0 0
(J ) O AUTO RACINQ Live cover­
age of the NASCAR Busch Clash
(from Daytona International Speed­
way. F la )
() I; (15) INCREDIBLE HULK
CD (10) FREEDOM TO SPEAK
(Premiere) "The American Dream"
William F Buckley Jr hosts an
overview of what some of America's
greatest thinkers have believed
about the promise of this nation q
4 :3 0
Cl) O
S P O R TS SA TU R D A Y
Scheduled coverage ol the John­
ny Bumphui I Larry Shields 12round USBA Junior Welterweighl
Championship bout, coverage of
the Women's World Speed Skating
Championships (from East Germs-

3 (10) ENTERPRISE Chef s Spe­
cial'' Chef David Qaro Sokilch Is
followed as he arranges and over­
sees every com plei detail that
precedes the opening of his new
San Francisco restaurant. q

r

5 :0 0
O (3 ) PGA GOLF "Ituzu-Andy
Williams San Diego Open" Live
coverage of the third round (from
the Torrey Pines Goil Course In La
Jolla. C a k f)
CD O WIDE W ORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled kve coverage of the
Indoor Dream Mile (from Rich held.
Ohio), coverage ol the International
Toboggan Championships (trom 81
M ortti. Switzerland)
( I t (15) DANIEL BOONE
a ‘ w(10) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
R SVK W
5 :3 0
CD (10) W ALL STREET WEEK
"W han The Chips Are Up" Quest
William Hambrecht, preaidant of,
Hambrecht A Oulst
5 :3 5

Legal 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 O IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
CASE N O . I2-24I2-C A-01-L
O A O E S A V IN G S A N D L O A N
A S S O C IA T IO N ,
P la in tiff,
vs.
S H E R W O O D K . H A R R IS and
K A T H L E E N M . H A R R IS , M l
w ife ,
SANDLEW OO D
CON
D O M IN IU M , IN C ., end SO U TH
E R N D IS C O U N T C O M P A N Y ,
D efendants
N O T IC E O F S A L I
N O T IC E Is h a re b y given th at the
re a l p ro p e rly situated in Sem inole
County, F lo rid a , described as
tot lows i
U nit J l , S A N D L E W O O D , a
Condom inium , according lo the
D e c la r a tio n ol C o n d o m in iu m ,
recorded In O ffic ia l R sc o rd t Book
n s , P a g e 0100 0 *4 1 , P u b lic
R e c o rd s o f S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo rid a ,
w ill be sold fo r cash In hand fo the
highest en d best b id d er a l the w est
front door of lh e aSem lnole County
Courthouse, In Sanford, F lo rid a , at
the hour of 11:00 A .M . on M a rc h 14,
11(1, by A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H ,
J R „ (he C le rk ol Ib e C ircu it Court
of th e E ig h te en th Ju d icial C ircu it,
In e n d fo r S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo rid a , pursuant fo a F in a l
Judgm ent of Foreclosure entered
by ibe C irc u it Court of the
Eigh teenth J u d icial C ircu it, In and
for Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a , In
the case of D A D E S A V IN G S A N D
L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N v e rs u s
S H E R W O O D K . H A R R IS end
K A T H L E E N M . H A R R IS , his
W itt,
SANDLEW OOO
CON
D O M IN IU M ,
IN C ..
and
S O U T H E R N D IS C O U N T C O M
P A N Y , w hich b e a n Case No. 12*
M l CA-01 L , In Ih e D ocket of said
Court.
O A T E O th is U l h d a y o f
F e b ru a ry , 1183.
(C ourt Seal)
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , JR .
C le rk or th e C ircu it C ourt
8 y : C a rrie E . B uettner
As O eputy C lerk
P ublish: F e b . 20, 27, I N I
D E E 121
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N otice It h e re b y given lh a l I a m
e n g a g e d in b u s in es s a t 11$
Ridgewood D r . Long wood, F lo rid a
12)30 Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a
u n d e r th e fic titio u s n a m e of
W IN D O W S C A P E S , end th a t I
Inland lo re g is te r said n a m e w ith
the C le rk o f Ih e C irc u it C ourt,
Sem inole C ounty, F lo rid a In ac­
cordance w ith the provisions ol the
F ic titio u s N a m e Statutes, T o W H :
Section 145.01 F lo rid a Statutes
!1J7.
Signature
A nne B. S p a ll*
Publish: Jan . 30, F e b .4 ,1 3 .2 0 . IM 1
OED lit

(

52) (17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­
ED
EVENING

-F L O R ID A -

ARRIVEALIVE
,s u r m n t

state

m

B

*6 :0 5
53) (17) WRESTLING
6 :3 0
Q ® NBC NEWS Frank Bourghollier presents a special rsporl
on " 2 0 th -C s n lu r y C o m p u ter
Pirates"
(DO CBS NEWS
(DO NEWS
7 :0 0
0 ( 3 ) IN SEARCH OF.„
I D O H EEH A W
(D O MEMORIES W ITH LAW­
RENCE WELK
5 X (18) THE JEFFERSONS
CD (10) NATIONAL QEOQRAPHtC
SPECIAL "The Thames ’ A trip tak­
en along the Themes River docu­
ments the massive dean-up lhal
has restored Its walers to a new
vitality, q
7 :3 0
0 ( 3 ) PUBLIC AFFAIRS
(U! (W ) BARNEY MILLER

6:00
O

(I)

DtF T RENT STROKES
BRING 'E M BACK AU VE
T J . HOOKER
51) (35) THE ROCKFORO FILES
ED (10) MOVIE
"M y Favor!!#
Brunette" (1847) Bob Hope. Doro­
thy Lamour A mysterious woman
persuades a baby photographer to
become ■ super-sleuth.

(D O
(D O

O

(3 )

0 '3 O
SILVER SPOONS

8 :3 5
5 3 (17) NBA BA 8 K ETUAU. Atlanta
Hawks vs Dallas Mavericks
S .0 0
O (3 ) GLEN CAMPBELL MUSIC
SHOW
(D O M O VIE "The Fighter"
(P re m ie rs ) G reg o ry H arriso n.
Gtynrus O'Connor. An unemployed
mill worker |eopardizes Ms m ar­
riage and Ms Ufa whan ha enters the
rise y world ol amateur boalng
(D O LOVE BOAT
(U) ( U ) GUNS MOKE
6 :3 0
O (3 ) TEACHERS ONLY
ED (10) TO NORWAY: HOME OF
G IA N TS Monty Python's John
Cleese dons a reporter's cap m
search of Ms Norwegian roots and
lo Investigate the great Viking spirit
and tradition

10:00
0

®

THE FAMILY TREE
(D O FANTASY ISLAND
dD (36) INDCPENOCNT NETWORK
NEWS
ED (10) FAWLTY TOWERS
1 0 :3 0
5D (35) 818KEL A EBERT AT THE
MOVIES
ED (10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
1 0 :5 0
5 3 (17) NEWS

11:00

Q IQ
®D
&lt; 3( D O ( D O n e w s
)M 7 4 N Y H IU .
) ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRE­
SENTS
1 1 :3 0
O ® SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Hoat: Howard Heeaeman. Gueat:
Marvin Gaya.
(D O MOVIE "Devil Dog: The
Hound Ol Hen"

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N odes is hereby given th at I am
engaged In business a f 105 2nd St.
A ttam o n ta Springs, F la . 37701.
Sem lnola C ounty, F lo rid a under
Ihe lld lt lo u t nam e of (S E A L A V E N T PRO DUCT OF O RLAN
D O ), and th at I Intend to reg ister
said n a m a w ith the C lark of tha
C ircuit C ourt, Sem lnola C ounty,
F lo rid a In accordance w ith the
provisions of Ih e F ictitious N a m e
Statutes, To W it: Section 145.01
F lo rid a Statutes 1157.
SIq . Joe P erez
Publish: Feb. 4. 13. 20. 27, 11(1
D E E -21
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 S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL D IV IS IO N
CASE N O . 12 14SJ-CA01K
S U B U R B A N C O A STA L C O R P ., a
N e w J e r s e y c o r p o r a tio n .

(1078) Rlchzrd
Crenna, Yvette Mlm teui.

1 2 :3 0
O ® MEET THE PRE 8 B
0 . 0 WALL STREET JOURNAL
REPORT
f D (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING

1 1 :5 0
5 3 (17) TUSNI "M oney" Guest:
James Brown
1 2 :5 0
5 3 (17) MOVtE "The Prince And
The Showgirl" (1BS7) Laurence Oli­
vier. Marilyn Monroe.

1:00
0

®
N C A A B A SK ETB A LL
DsPaul vs. St John's |!rom M adi­
son Square Garden)
C D Q DISCUSSION
fD (10) MAGIC O F OIL PAINTING

1:00
0 ( 3 ) LAUGH TRAX
1 :1 5
CUD (38) MOVIE "House Of Frankan tialn" (1845) Boris Karlott, Lon
Chaney Jr.

1 :0 5
5 3 (17) PORTRAIT OF AMERICA
Nevada, a land of rugged snow­
capped mountains, grassy valleys
and formidable d e te n t la profiled

2:00
NEWS

7 :0 5
5 3 (IT ) WRESTLING

8:00
O ® CHIPS
fD O ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE
CD O M A TT HOUSTON
5D (3 5 ) H E A L T H M A T T E R S
"Kidney Transplant"
f D (10) LIFE ON EARTH "Invasion
Of The Land" D s.'d Attenborough
looks at Ihe ancestors ol amphibi­
ans. and the capture of a coatscan:h - ■ fish thought lo be eattnet
until 1838 - It recorded on trim for
the first time |R )q

1 :3 0
CD a BILL DANCE OUTDOORS
fD (10) FLORIOA HOM E GROWN
"Propagation"

2 :3 0
( D O M O VIE "First To Fight"
(1867) Chad Everett, Marilyn Devin.
3 :2 0
5 3 (17) MOVIE "Tha Italian Job"
(1868) Michael Caine, Noel Coward

2:00
. ® O THE SUPERSTARS "The
Superteem a" Ten-m an squads
trom Super Bowl Champions Wash­
ington Redskins and *82 World
Series Champions SI. Louis Cardi­
nals compels (live from Key Bisceyne, Fla.).
51) (38) M O VIE "A Step Out Ot
Lina" (1870) Vic Morrow. Paler
Falk. In order to solve I heir financial
problems, three Korean W ar bud­
dies plan a miilion-doMsr robbery
f D (10) TENNIS "U S. National
Indoor Championships" Coverage
of tha finals of this S315,000 tour­
nament from the Racquet Club in
Memphis. Tennessee

su n dayL
MORNING
7 :0 0
0 ® 2 ' 8 COM PANY
(D n ROBERT SCHULLER
( D O TODAY'S BLACK WOMAN
5£ (3 S )B E N H A D E N
7 :0 5
1 3 (17) THE W ORLD TOMORROW
7 :3 0
C l ® 5Ji (38) E J DANIELS
®
O FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO

8 :0 5
5 3 (17) NASHVILLE ALIVEI

8:00
0

® VOICE OF VICTORY
REX HUMBARO
BOB JONES
5 1 (38) JONNY QUEST
f D (10) 8 E 8 A M E STREET (R) q

(D O
(7 )0

MOVIE "Rage Ol Angels "
(Part I I (Premiere) Jadyn Smith.
Ken Howard. Based on the novel by
Sidney Sheldon Altar nearly being
disbarred on her first day In court, a
fledgling lawyer salt up her own
practice and becomes romantic ally
Involved with a politically ambitious,
married allomey.
(D
O THE JE F F E R 80N B
CD O MOVIE "Star Trek - Tha
Molion Picture' (1878) WMtam
Shatner. Leonard Ntmoy. Admire!
Kirk d a ih e e with Ihe new com­
mander ol the starship Enterprise
on e mission to find a huge, uniden­
tified vessel that Is carving a
destructive p ath through the
g s lsiy q
fD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
•'Winston ChurchiM The Wilder­
ness Years" Despite opposition
trom many ot Ms colleagues.
Churchill urges the government io
take Ms warnings about Hitler seri­
ously (Pari 6) q

2 :1 5
( D O MOVIE "Outrage" (1873)
Robert Culp, Martyn Mason. Teen­
agers terrorize a man and his family
to tha point where their lives are
threatened

8 :0 5
5 3 (17) CARTOONS
8 :3 0
O ® SUNDAY MASS
CDO DAY OF DISCOVERY
O ORAL ROBERTS
(38) JOSIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS

3 :0 0
®
S P O R T8W ORLO
Scheduled: coverage of Ihe World
Pro Figure Skating Championships
(from Lendover, Md ), coverage ol
the Arlberg Kandahar Downhill ski­
ing event (trom St Anton, Austria).

0

0:00
O ® THE WORLO TOMORROW
( D O SUNDAY MORNING
( D O SPEAK EASY
(ID (3 8 ) BU G S B U N N Y AND
FRIENDS
f D (1 0 ) M O V IE
"N s p lu n s 's
Daughter" (1848) Red Skelton.
Esther Williams A South American
romance develops between a beau­
tiful designer and her paramour, a
polo star.

3 :3 0
(£ ) O AMATEUR BOXING "U S A.
vs Yugoslavia" (Irom Rijeka. Yugo­
slavia)

0 :0 5
5 3 (17) WEEK IN REVIEW

10:00

( D O TRAPPER JOHN. M D.
f D (10) THE OOOO NEIGHBORS

4 :0 0
OLD (36) INCREDIBLE HULK
fD (10) BIG BAND CAVALCADE
Bob Crosby, Frankie Carle. M ar­
garet Whiling. Freddy Marlin and
other great big band performers
ere featured In filmed highlights ot a
'3 0 t and '40a music revival

0 :0 5
5 3 (17) LOST IN SPACE
0 :3 0
®
MONTAGE: THE B U C K
PRESS
( D O DIRECTIONS
51) (38) THE JETSONS

O

O ® HEALTH BEAT
CD Q FISHING WITH ROLAND
MARTIN
5D (38) M O VIE "Blondie Knows
Bast" (1847) Penny 8lng!eton.
Arthur Lake. Dagwood la Itrad when
h e 'le~'caught Im pereon atlntf'T W 1 0 4 )8
5 3 (1 7 ) LIGHTER 8IO €
1 0 :3 0
EMERGENCY
(D O BLACK AWARENESS
(7) O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
8 3 (10) AMERICA TO THE MOON
0 ®

1 1 :3 0
0 (4 ) NORM SLOAN
( D O FACE THE NATION
(7 ) Q THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRINKLEY
) U U f l £ L AND HARDY
0 1 £ 6)1
(10) C O O K IN 'C A JU N
®(10)(
AFTERNOON

ID O CD O

O ® OUTDOOR LJFE
( D O M O VIE "Tha Return Of Tha
Pink Panther" (1875) Peter Sellars.
Christopher Plummer. Accidentprone Inspector Clouseeu disguises
himself as a bellhop and a pool
repairman In order lo Irap an elu­
sive diamond thief.
5 1 (38) M O VIE "The Impossible
Years" (1888) David Niven. Lola
Albright. A teen-age girl grows up
overnight much lo her father s che-

1 2 :0 5
5 3 (17) OPEN UP Guesls Roy
Psllerson. president ol the National
Association ot Black Journalists;
Paulyne While, president ol Ihe
Naltonel Association ol Madia •
Women.
1 2 :3 0
O
®
M O V IE
‘‘Indianapolis
Speedwsy" (1838) Gala Page. Pal
O'Brien.

ANNE BONNIE S
TAVERN
AND
CRABBAR

new s

C r s b H o u r S iM -S ilO
G arlic C rab l i t E a rn
’ R o a tttd O ysters Ilk Each

OUR HAPPY HOURS
tl:M A M T t S r M P M
IS P M . ‘ Til C laim s
1 F a r I A ll M ifk k a lls
Ana M ast Cacktaits

6 :3 5
(Q) (17) NICE PEOPLE Guests car­
toonist. Morris Turner; Philadelphia
Dance Company founder, Joan
Myers Drown; The Peanut Butler
Press

S a n d w ic h

®

R a u in

★

H a m b u rg e r

i

lb .

o r

FO R

( I V

W h e a t

&amp;

G n n a m o n

o r

1 2 :3 0
0 ® NEW 8
( I ) O THE YOUNG AND THE
RE 8 TLES 8
® Q RYAN'S HOPE

O ® TOOAY
( 5 ) O MORNINO NEWS
O OOOO MORNINO AMERICA
(35) NEWS
fD (IO )T O U F E )

1:00

7 :0 5
5 3 (17) FUNTIME

0 ® DAYS OF OUF) LIVES
C D Q ALL M Y CHILDREN
aiJ (35) MOVIE
fD &lt;10) MOVIE (M O N, TUE)
f D (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WEO)
fD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
f D (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

7 :1 5
f D {10) A.M . WEATHER
7 :3 0
51) (38) WOODY WOODPECKER
f D (10) SESAME STREET q
7 :3 5
5 3 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

1 :0 5

6.00

1 :3 0
® O AS THE WORLO TURNS
f D &lt;10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

8 :0 5
5 3 (17) MY THREE SONS

2:00

6 :3 0
a lj (36) GREAT SPACE COASTER
fD {10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

O ®

2

4 :0 0
® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
® O HOUR MAGAZINE
CD a MERV GRIFFIN (M O N-THU)
® O LOVE IN THE AFTERNOON
(FRO
OX (35) TOM ANO JERRY
f D (10) SESAME STREET g

o

4 4 )5
5 3 (IT ) THE MUN 8 TERS
4 :3 0
OX (35) BCOOflY DOO
4 :3 5

53 (IT ) LEAVE r r TO BEAVER
5 :0 0
0 ® LA VERNE A SHIRLEY I
COM PANY
( I ) O THREE'S COMPANY
® Q ALL M THE FAMILY
a t (35) EIGHT IS ENOUGH
f D ( W ) MISTER ROGERS (R)

ANOTHER WORLD

5 :3 0
0 ® P E O P L F 8 COURT
O IQ M 'A 'I'H
® O NEWS
fD (TO) POSTSCRIPTS

835
9 :0 0
O ® RICHARD SIM MO NS
( 1 ) 0 DONAHUE
(7 ) O MOVIE
5 f! (38) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
fD (10) 8ESAM E STREET q

Bring Your Family l Friends To

*}

Anne Bonnies Tavern
Sunday Crab
&amp; Oyster Feast

6 :0 5
a

® THE FACTS OF UFE (R)

Garik Crab 25*
Roasted Oysters 10* e a c h
Smoked MuBet
45* Ice Cream Sundaes &amp;
*1.00 Hamburgers For The Kids

Mm

2 For 1 All Hi Balls
&amp; M ost Cocktails
'i

EX

qi .

Giams of Tea or Coke 45*
Imported Beer *1.00
Domestic Beer 75*
LOCATED INSIDE

E x t r a -Te r r e s t r ia l

JakiflA g Jo# „

Hny i r s z t 1ZZIZIS
EA R LY B IR O N IT E I N •
PE fikO N 4:14 7:00 O NLY
7 » HOUSE ON SORORITY ROW
1:V&gt; DON'T GO IN TH E HOUSE

2508 F rench Ave. (Hwy. 17-92)
Sanford

**■-

PUBLIC NOTICE

O PEN TO THE PU BLIC
F RI DAY 9 A.M. - TO 9 P.M. SATU R DAY 9 A M. TO S P.M.
SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M . F E B . 1S-19-20
• C h im e L o u n g e s * K in q L o u n g e s
• L o v e S e a ls
&gt; 0 ,i i M o o ls • S w n t q S e l s
O c c a s i o n s I T a b le s • O t t o m a n s

5 P C PATIO SET

0NLT

U ” Tab It With 4 Dining Chairs

lag. &gt;319

.............. 7 9 *

S w i r l • • • • " • • 1 L B L 0 A F ........................................... * 1 . 2 9

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M A IN T E N A N C E F R E E - W IL L N O T C R A C K . C H IP , P E E L O R R U S T

Pound Gake 2 hr *1.95
A ngel
Bar

IN. HWY. 11-91 • I Btocfcs N. 01434
N e x t T o S o b ik i R o i t .

2

OLD DUTCH BAKERY

EVERY TU ESD AY...
B U Y O N E - GET O N E FREE!
Longwood, FI. 32758

3 :3 5
53 &lt; 17)T H E F U N T S T O N E S

S A V E 3 3 % TO 5 0 %

* 1 .5 5

lo a f

3 :3 0
OX (2 8 ) BUGS BU NN Y A N D '
FRIENDS
f 0 &lt; 10) ELECTRIC COM PANY &lt;R&gt; i

SALE

l b s . ) ................................. * 1 . 3 9

P u m p e m i c f c l e ........... « &lt; * .

0

ASSORTED U R G E
S W E E T ROLLS, I PACK

i

3 4 )5
5 3 (17) FUNTIME

5 :0 5
(J3 (17) THE BRADY BUNCH

5 3 (17) MOVtE

SD (38) FREO FUNTSTONE AND
FRIENDS

I H W Y 11*11

B r e a d s ................................. 2

BOXED CARE DONUTS
1 D O Z -Ills O Z .

1 2 :0 5
5 3 (17) PEOPLE NOW

V O Y A G E R S ) A ta m a le In te l-

W h ite

R y e

★

6 :3 0
0 ® EARLY TODAY
(D O CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
( 7 J O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

IU I Franck a vt

F R E S H B R E A D L . O U R B R E A D IS F R E S H L . F R E S H B R E A D !

★G r o s s in g e r

NEWS
® O SUNRISE
Q l (38) JIM BAKKER
5 3 (17) NEWS

3 :0 0
0 ® FANTASY
m o g u id in g LIGHT
CD O GENERAL HOSPITAL
5 X (38) CASPER
f D (W ) FRENCH C H f f (M O N)
f D &lt;10) COO KIN' CAJUN (TUE)
f D ( 10) ENTERPRISE (WED)
f D (10) BETWEEN U FE AND
DEATH (THU)
f D (10) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

PVC Pipe Furniture

Lassist lasiea

WlMre you Sm 19 H 50% m Ttp QuiMy feutf i Caki

l V

(D O

1 2 4 )0
0 ® SOAP WORLO
(J) O
CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
® a NEWS
Q|) (38) BK1 VALLEY
f D (10) MYSTERY (MON)
f D (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
_ ) (10)
CD
(10! LIFE ON EARTH (WED)
f D (10) THE COUSTEAU ODYSSEY
(THU)
f D (10) ROSEMARY CLOONEY.
W ITH LOVE (FRI)

COUNTRY
CBS EARLY MORNINO

7 :0 0
O

A s s o rte d

0 ® r8

AFTERNOON

6:00

2 :3 0
® a CAPITOL
f f i (10) ERICA / MAKING THINGS
W ORK (M O N)
f D (10) P48IOE BUSINESS TOOAY
(WEO)
f D (10) M AG IC O F DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

F A C T O R Y D IR E C T

^BaheiSrCnirift§hop)

★

5 :3 5
5 3 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUETHU)

( D O new s
5J) (38) W.V. GRANT

D O LLY M A D ISO N

i a n t

1 1 :3 0
O ® H IT MAN
OX (38) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
f D (10) POSTSCRIPTS

12:00

6 :3 0
0 ( 3 ) NEWS
( D O CBS NEWS
(7 ) 0 A B C N E W S

1 2 4 )1

★ G

5 :3 0
5 Z (17) IT S YOUR BUSINESS
(MON)

( D O SOLID GOLD
51) (38) IT S YOUR BUSINESS

6:00

6 D (1 0 ) THE G OOD NEIGHBORS

1 1 :0 5
5 3 (17) PERRY MASON

1 1 4 )5
5 3 (17) JERRY FALWELL
1 1 :3 0
O
(D ENTERTAINMENT THIS

51) (38 )K U N G F U
fD (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "The Thames" A trip tak­
en along the Thames River docu­
ments Ihe massive dean-up that
h a t restored lie waters to a new
vitality, q

12:00

5 :2 0
5 3 ( IT ) WORLD AT LARGE (MON)

10:00

0 ® ( D O NEWS
fD (10) SNEAK PREVIEWS Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons review
"The Pirates Of Penzance." "The
Sling II" end "Hunger.”

5 :3 5
5 3 (17) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACOUES COUSTEAU
EVENING

( D O THIRTY MINUTES
f D (10) AMERICA TO THE MOON

0 ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(J ) O THE PRICE 18 RIGHT
(TJ O LOVE BOAT (R)
5 J) (35) 35 UVE
f D ( 10) OVER EASY

0

11:00

5 :0 0
51) (35) DANIEL BOONE
fD &lt; 10) FIRING LINE

11:00

11:00

5 :0 0
O ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
(TUE-FRI)
5 3 (17) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE
(FRf)

6 :3 0
O ® IN SEARCH OF...
5lJ (38) FAMILY AFFAIR

1
1 0 :3 0
5 1, (38) JIM BAKKER
f D (10) FAWLTY TOWERS

4 :3 5
5 3 (17) DEAR LOVEYHEART A girl
causes serious problems tor her sell
and others when th e undertakes
writing her high school newspaper's
advice column

1 0 :3 5
5 3 (17) MOVIE
"Von Ryan’s
Eipress" (1865) Frank Sinatra, Tre­
vor Howard. An American leads a
prisoners* revolt against the Nazis
leklng them to Austria

MORNING

5 3 (IT ) M O VIE

1 0 :0 5
5 3 (17) NEWS

4 :3 0
0
®
PGA GOLF "Ituzu-Andy
Williams Sen Diego Open" Live
coverage of the line! round (Irom
the Torrey Pines God Course In La
Jolla Calif I
CD O WKJ® W ORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled Kve coverage el the
Ruben CestiKo / Juan La Pone 12round WBC Featherweight Cham­
pionship bout (Irom San Juan,
Puerto Rico), coverage of Ihe World
Motor cycles On Ice Championships
(Irom Inzeit. West Germany).

10:00

MONDAY

0 0 ONE U FE TO UVE
1 SURVIVAL (THU)
(_____
D i l i -----------------------------f D (10)
fD
(1 M AG IC O F OIL PAINTING
(FRO

5 3 (17) THAT GIRL

0 :3 0
( D O ONE DAY AT A TIME
51! (38) JIMM Y SWAGGART

3 :4 5
CD O N C A A B A SK ETB A LL
Missouri vs Virginia (Irom The
Meadowtanda. East Rutherford.
NJ)

1 0 :3 0
O ® SALE OF THE CENTURY
® 0 CHILD'S PLAY
(38) DORIS DAY
(10) S-2-1 CONTACT (R )Q

7 :0 0

0:00

o ®

f J) O MORE REAL PEOPLE
5D (36) ANDY GRIFFITH
f D (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

® O MOVIE "Le Mens” (1871)
Steve McQueen, Siegfried Rauch
( D 0 JACK ANDERSON CONFI­
DENTIAL

6 :4 5
( D O NEWS
f D (10) A M . WEATHER

6 :3 0
( D O GLORIA
51) (38) JERRY FALWELL

2 :0 5
5 3 &lt;IT ) MOVIE "To Sir With lo v e "
(1867) Sidney Poitter, Judy Geeson
A black man teaches his students
mors than what tha I t i l book a have
to otter attar accepting a )ob in an
East End London school

7 :3 5
5 3 (17) IT IS WRITTEN

P la in tiff,
vs.
C H R IS T O P H E R A . J E K E L , a
sin g le
m an;
and
LAKE
KATHRYN
V IL L A G E
CON
D O M IN IU M A S S O C IA T IO N , IN C .,
D efendants.
N O T IC E O F S A LE
N otice is hereby given thet
pursuant to tha F in a l Judgm ent ol
Foreclosure end Sale entered In
the cause pending In the C ircu it
Court of the Eigh teenth Ju dicial
C ir c u it, in a n d lo r S tm ln o le
C ounty, F lo rid a , C ivil A ction No.
(2 2453 CA 01K ; tha undersigned
C la r k w ill s e ll th a p r o p e r ly
s le e te d m said C ounty, described
as:
U n it N u m b e r L -4 , L A K E
K A T H R Y N V IL L A G E , a Con
d o m in iu m a c c o rd in g to Ih e
D ec laratio n of C ondom inium ol
Lake K a th ry n V illa g e , a Con
dom inium and E ih lb lts annased
thereto, file d Ih e 21th d a y
ol
August. 1180. in O ffic ia l Records
Book 1712. P a g e t &gt;012 through
)041, P ublic Records o l Sem inole
C ounty, F lo rid a , together w ith an
undivided interest In Ih e com m on
elem ents and lim ite d com m on
e le m e n ts d e c la re d
In s a id
D ec laratio n of C ondom inium to ba
an ap purtenance to th e above
condom inium U n it,
at public ta la , to th e highest and
best bidd er lo r cash a l IliOO a .m .
on th a IM h day o f M a rc h , l t d , a t
tha W aal Fro n t D oor o l the
S e m ln o la C o u n ty C o u rth o u to ,
Sanford. F lo rid a .
O A T E O th is 14th d a y of
Ja n u a ry . 1112
(C ourt Seal)
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR .
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B y: C a r r ‘a E . B uettner
D eputy C lerk
JO H N M M C C O R M IC K , E sq u ire
SOI E ast C hurch Street
O rlendo. F lo rid a 22101
A llo m e y lo' P la in tiff
publish: Fkb- 20. 27, 11(2
D E E 131

NOTE: 6-M INUTE DAYTONA
800 REPORTS W ILL BE BROAD­
CAST U V E APPROXIMATELY EVE­
RY HALF HOUR DURING THE
12-00 NOON MOVIE.

( D O MOVIE "South Pacific"
51) (38) MOVtE "Castle Of Fu
Manchu" (1072) Christopher Let.
Marla Perschy.

O®

Ugenca officer complicates Phineet
and Jaflrey'a attempts to oet Gan.
Douglas MacArthur ewsy from
Pearl Harbor before Ihe Japanese
attack.
) O » 0 MINUTES
8 ' O RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR
NOTI Featured: the strange tale of
Ihe "man who never was"; the
world's only real flea circus; amaz­
ing performing animals; bizarre leethrsls; oddities In American cities,
the remains ot lost civilizations
l l (35) WILD, WILD WEST
.
( D O 0 ) AUSTIN CITY LIM ITS " B 0
King" The "King of the Blues” pre­
sents a special ml« of country and
blues In e performance featuring his
classic hit. "The Thrift Is Gone ”

(D O

p

J O T -O T T O

—

2* * 1 *
ON S E L E C T E D

CAKE
IT F MS
HOURS
M o n - F r i - I A - M . - 4 P .M .
S a t u r d a y - * ' 3 0 A .M . - I P .M .

^ C O U N TR Y S ID E
1-4 AT

STATE ROAD 44 - SANFORD 3 2 3 4 0 M

Taka Horn* Or Delivery Arranged - Everyone Welcome
Including Dealers . Terms; Cath, Personal Checks

Ns MiddbaaBl Bay Direct 8 Sami

We Make It — We Sell It

%

�I B — E vening H e ra ld , S anford. F I.

Sunday. Feb. 20, 19SJ

Legal Notice

Legol Notice

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T O F
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T . IN
T H E E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
A N D F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
C IR C U IT S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
F L O R ID A
CASE N O . U -S 4I-C A CMC
C IV IL D IV IS IO N
D O U G LA SS P L U M B IN G . a sole
C A SE N O . I3 -S 4I CA 09 E
proprietorship.
S U B U R B A N C O A STA L C O R P . a
P la in tiff
N ew Jersey corporation,
vs.
P la in tiff,
R IC H A R D D H A N D Y .
vs.
D efendant
ANDREW
J.
M IL A M
and
TO R IC H A R D D. H A N D Y
A U T U M N L. M IL A M , his w ife ,
Last K now n address
D efendants
1137* Chula V ltta Avenue
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
San Jose, CA t s m
TO : A N D R E W J. M IL A M
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
Address U nknown
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
LA ST K N O W N A O D R E S S A N D
N O T IF IE D th at a N otice ot Lis R E S ID E N C E :
P en d en s a n d C o m p la in )
In
104 D re w Street
foreclosure has been file d in this
Sanford, F lo rid a 32771
C ourt, against you. and that you
A U T U M N L . M IL A M
are req u ired to serve a copy of
Address: U nknown
your w ritte n defenses, if an y, on
LA S T K N O W N A D D R E S S A N D
p la in tiff's a tto rn e y , C A R M IN E M
R E S ID E N C E :
B R A VO . P .A ., IS O SR 414, Suite
KM D re w Street
105. LOngwood, F I 31750. on or
Sanford, F lo rid a 32771
before the 24th day of M a rc h . 1911
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y notified
original to be file d w ith C lerk of that a C om plaint to foreclose
this Court before se rvic e upon the m o rtg a g e
e n c u m b e rin g
th e
attorney to r the P la in tiff, o r Im
following re a l property:
m e d iately th e re a fte r, o r a default
Lo t
12.
B lo c k
"C *
w ill be entered against you for the W A S H IN G T O N O AK S. S E C T IO N
relief sought in the C om plaint or TW O. according to the P lat thereof
Petition
as Recorded in P lat Book 14. pages
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal this S4 and 47, of the Public Records of
17th day ot F eb., 1913
Sem inole County, F lo rid a,
A rth u r H . B eckw ith, J r.
has been file d against you and you
C lerk, C ircu it Court
a re requ ired to serve a copy of
C atherine M . Evans
your w ritte n defenses, If any, lo it
D eputy C lerk
on JO H N M . M c C O R M IC K , at
Publish: Feb. 20. 77, M a rc h 4. 11. torney tor P la in tiff, whose address
1913
is Post O ffice Box 3323 , 501 East
D E E 133
Church S treet. O rlando, F lo rid a
12 M t, an d file the original w ith Ihe
Clerk of the above styled Court on
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
o r before M a rc h 24, 1911; other
H E A R IN G
w ile a d e fa u lt m a y be entered
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
against you for relief dem anded in
BY T H E C IT Y O F LO N G W O O D .
the C om plaint.
F L O R ID A lhat the Board of Ad
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal of
lu ilm e n t w ill h old a P u b lic
said Court on F e b ru a ry 17, 1911.
H earing on M a rc h 7, 19*3, to
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H . JR.
co n sld e ra V A R IA N C E R E Q U E S T
C lerk of the C ircu it Court
subm itted by O rlando Foods, Ltd.
Sem inole County, F lo rid a
tor a va rian c e to Sign regulations
By C aih erin e M . Evans
pertaining to sq uare footage on the
D eputy C lerk
fo llo w in g
le g a lly
d e s c rib e d
P u b llth : Feb. 20. 27. M a rc h 4, 13,
property:
1913
Begin a t the Northeast c o m e r of
D E E 134
Lot 6. according to the p i*t of
T rla n g led ale as recorded in Plat
Book 6. Page 21. Public Records of IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T , IN
Sem inole County. F lo rid a , thence A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
S 05 degrees OS' 29" W along the
East line of said Lot 6 said line CASE NO. I1-1J4-CA 09 P
being the W esterly rig h t of w ay of S O U TH E A S T B A N K , N A . etc.
P la in tiff,
U S H ig h w ay 17 92 a distance of
104 42 fre t, thence N 90 degrees 00' vs
00" W p a ra lle l w ith the N orth line L E O N A R D R. F R A Z IE R a k a L.
of said Lot a a dis'ance of 777.07 R U S S E L L F R A Z IE R , and SYL
V IA C F R A Z IE R a k a S Y L V A N
feet, thence N 0 0 degrees001 59" W
IA C . F R A Z IE R , his w ilt ; JO H N
104 00 feet lo a point on the N orth
and P R IS C IL L A
line of said Lot 4; thence N 90 M M E R C E R
degrees0 0 -00 " E along said N orth M E R C E R , his w ife d b e JO H N
line a distance of 2(4 54 feet m ore M E R C E R &amp; CO . and L IB E R T Y
L IF E IN S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y
or less to the Point of Beginning
D efendants
Being m ore g e n erally described
as lying south of Albertson's,
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
ap p ro xim ately 700 feet north of
TO L E O N A R D R F R A Z IE R a
W lid m ere Avenue, on Ihe West k a L . R U S S E L L F R A Z IE R , and
side of U .S H ighw ay 17 92.
S Y L V IA C
F R A Z IE R a k a
A Public H earing w ill be held on Sv L V A N IA C. F R A Z IE R . hlS w ife
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
M onday, M a rc h 7,1913 at 7:30 PM
by the Board ot Adjustm ent ol Ihe a c tio n lo fo re c lo s e m o rtg a g e
pursuant to a prom issory note and
City Of Longwood in the Longwood
City Com m ission Cham bers, City
m ortgage has been filed against
H alt, 175 W . W a rre n Avenue, you. and you a re requ ired to serve
Longwood. F lo rid a, or as soon a copy ol your w ritte n defenses, if
thereafter as possible A t this any, to It on P laint il l ’s A ttorney,
m eeting, all interested parties Raym ond J R o tella, whose ad
m ay appear lo be heard w ith dress is Post O tltca Box 113.
respect to V a ria n c e R equest. This O rtendo, F lo rid a . 12*02. on or
h e a r in g m a y b e c o m t r u e d i n
before M a rc h 11. 1 9 0 . and to H it
lim e to tim e until fin a l action is the o rig in al w ith the C lerk o l this
taken by the C ity Commission. A Court e ith e r before service on
copy of the V aria n ce Request Is on P la in t if f 's A tto r n e y o r im
file w ith the C ity C lerk and m a y b t
m ediately th e re a fte r, otherw ise a
inspected by the public.
default w ill be entered against you
A taped record of this m eeting is for the re lie f dem anded In the
m ade by the Clf y of Longwood for C om plaint.
its convenience This record m a y
W IT N E S S M Y H A N D A N D
not consfifuta an adequate record
SEA L OF T H IS C O U R T , on the 3rd
for m e purposes of appeal fro m a day ol F e b ru a ry , 1913
decision m ade by the Board ot
(Seal)
Adjustm ent w ith respect lo the
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H , JR.
foregoing m a tte r
Any person
C lerk of the Court
wishing to ensure m at an adequate
BY: E v e C rabtree
re c o rd of th e p ro c eed in g s is
as Deputy C lerk
m aintained for ap pellate purposes
P u b lish :Feb. a. 13. 20. 27. 19(3
is advised to m a ke the necessary
D E E 43
arran gem ents at th e ir own ex
p e n t*
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T IN A N D
D ated this 15m day F e b ru ary, F O R
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY,
1915 C IT Y O F L O N G W O O D . F L O R ID A
F L O R ID A
CASE N O .: (1-204I-CA-49-P
D L TERRY,
ST. C L E M E N T S H O L D IN G CO.,
C IT Y C L E R K
L I M I T E D , a c o rp o ra tio n of
City of Longwood. Florida
C aym an Islands.
Publish F e b 20. M a rc h t, 1911
P la in tiff,
D E E 115
VS
ogale e . r a y .
Defendant.
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T OF
N O T IC E O F SA LE
T H E E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
C IR C U IT S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . that A rth u r H. B eckw ith, J r , as
F L O R ID A
C lerk ol the C ircu it C ourt, in and
C ivil Action NO. I I 1441CA 09 K tor S em inolt C ounty, F lo rid a ,
F IR S T F ID E L IT Y S A V IN G S A N O under and by v irtu e of a F in a l
LO A N A S S O C IA T IO N , etc .
Judgment issued out ol the aboveP laintiff, em itted co urt, In m e above styled
vs
cause, dated Ih e 10th day ot
JO H N F K U R Z O N , IN C . etc . f t F e b ru ary, 19t3. w ill sell at public
al.
auction to the highest bidder the
Defendants fo llo w in g d e s c rib e d p ro p e rty
N O T IC E O F SA LE
lo c a te d In S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Notice is hereby given that Florida to w it:
pursuant to the F in a l Judgm ent of
L ot ( l , n o RT h W O O D , a c ­
Foreclosure and Sale entered in cording to the P la t thereof as
the cause pending in m e C ircuit recorded in P ie t Book 17, Pages 41
Court of th e E ighteenth Judicial
• I and 47 of the P u b lic Records ot
C ir c u it, in an d fo r S em in a l
Sem inole County, F lo rid a
County, F lo rid a , C iv il Action No
as the p roperty ot the above
(2 2443 C A O f K . the undersigned nam ed D efendant, on lh a 17th day
C le rk w ill s e ll th e p ro p e rty ot M a rc h , 1 9 tl. a t 11:00 a m .,
situated in s a d Count y, described J before th e W e ll F rom door ol Ih e
as:
Sem inole County Courthouse, in
Lot 2. V E S T A V IA . according to I Sanford. F lo rid a Said s a lt w ill be
the P la t thereof a s recorded in i to the highest bidd er tor cash in
P la t Book 25. Pape 59, Public h a n d ,
th e
a b o v e d e s c rib e d
R e c o rd s o l S e m in o le C o u n ty , property as th e p ro p e rty ot the
F lo rid a
said D efendant, to satisfy said
at public sale, to the highest and judgm ent.
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H
best bidd er tor ea rn a t H . 00
C lerk o l m e C ircu it Court
o’clock A M on the I4fh day ol
B Y ; C a rrie E . B uettner
M a rc h . 19(3. a t th e W est Front
D eputy C lerk
door ol the Sem inole County
B o rn s fe ln . P e tr e e . C o o p e r A
Courthouse. Sanford. F lo rid a .
M a rk s
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H , j k .
115 South C ourt Avenue
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
O rlando. F lo rid a 12*01
COURT
(305 ) 475 773)
B y: C a rrie E . B uettner
A ttorneys tor P la in tiff.
D eputy C lerk
Publish F e b ru a ry I I , 70. 19*1
P ublish F e b 70. 27. 19(3
D E E -91
D E E 137

?,

S T A T E O F F L O R IO A
S T A T E O F F L O R IO A
O f P A R T M E N T O F STATE
O f P A R T M E N T OF STATS
I
c e r t if y
th a t
GARDEN
I c e rtify th at R ID G E W O O D , T E R R A C E
APARTM ENTS,
L T D - , a L im ite d P a r tn e r s h ip
L T D ., e L im it e d P a r tn e r s h ip
fo rm e d u n d e r C h ap ter *20, F lo rid a fo rm ed under C h ap ter 470. F lo rid a
S ta tu te s ,h a v in g it* p rin c ip a l place S ta tis ts , having its p rin c ip al place
e l businesa in Sanford, F torida w a t of business In Sanford, F lo r id * w as
can celled fo r fa ilu re te file it* If t 2
cancel led for ta liu ra lo fiiv i t * 19*2
A nnual R e p o rt. Pursuant to the A n ry o l R e p o rt. P ursu ant lo the
p ro v is io n s o f S e c tio n 421.31, p ro v is io n s 04 ta c tio n 4 2 S .2 I,
F lo rid a S tatu te s. I h e re b y give F lo rid a S tatutes. I h e re b y give
N O T IC E IP th is new spaper, w hich N O T IC E in th is new spaper, w hich
is p u b lished in Sem inole County, is published In Sam -nol* C ounty.
F lo rid a , th a t s a id lim ite d p a rt
F lo rid a , th a t said lim ite d p a rt
n a rs h ip has W e d a ll rep o rts and narship has M e d all repo rts
paid a ll to e * re q u ire d w id e r lew . paid a ll fees re q u ire d under lew
G rven u n d e r m y han d an d the
G iven under m y hand a n d the
G re a t S eal d th e S tate o f F lo rid a , G reet Seel o l Ih e Stele of F lo rid a ,
a t T a lla h a s s e e . th e C a p ita l, this
at T e M a h e is te . the C a p ife l. m is
the 10th d a y (9 F e b ru a ry , 19*3
the 9th d a y ot F e b ru a ry , 1N 3
G eo rg e F ire s to n e
G eorge Firestone
S e c re ta ry d S tate
Secrefery of State
P ublish F e b . 3C 19*3
P ublish: F e b 20. 19*3
D C I-1 2 9
D E E 130

18—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED A D S
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando • W inter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M. — 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY th ru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Noon

RATES

Itim e
54c
3 c o n s e c u tive lim e s 54c
7 c o n secu tive t i m e t . . 44c
10 c o n s e c u tive lim e s 42c
SJ.OO M in im u m
3 L in es M in im u m

a
a
a
a

lin e
lin e
lin e
lin e

D E A D L IN E S
Noon The Day Before P ublication
Sunday - Noon F rid a y
M onday - 5:30 P.M. F rid a y

18—Help Wanted

4—Personals
IM P R O V E Y O U R F U N L IF E
Companions to r a ll occasions
C all 311 9337

• A B O R TIO N *
1st T rim e s te r abortion 7 17 w hs.,
*150 - M e d ic aid *120; 13 14
wks. *200 - M e d ic aid *1 *5 ;
G yn Services *25; Pregnancy
la s t;
Ir e e
c o u n s e lin g .
Professional ca re supportive
atm osphere, confidential.
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
W O M E N 'S H E A L T H
O R G A N IZ A T IO N
N E W L O C A T IO N
1700 W . C olonial D r., O rlando
305 99 ( 0921
I (00 221 2541

BRAKE AND FRONT END
Exp erien ced m echanic w ith r e l.
and loots. H igh incom e, paid
vacation benefits, phone C a rl
at M r . M u ld e r 371 3(11

LONGWOOD HEALTH
CARE CENTER
A ccepting ap plications lor a ll
nursing positions. A ll Shills.
R .N ., L .P .N ., A ides. F u ll and
p a ri lim e . E xc ellen t benefits
1520 G ra n t S t., Longwood
F e m a le Models
N E W L in g e rie Shop opening.
C all 33 1 9327 F o r Appts.
LA B O R JOBS F u ll lim e w ork,
w ith or w ithout experience.
Im m e d ia te . 429 4091.
MAKE MONEY

5— Lost &amp; Found
LOST 2 H earing Aids In sm all
beige le ath e r case. V ic in ity of
Sanford P la ta . M edco o r W inn
D ix ie (2 5 th A F r e n c h ).
R ew ard 322 04(3
LOST w h ile fem ale M a lm u te
w earing a brow n co llar. An
sw e rs to F r o s ty . C o n ta c t
H um ane Society R ew ard.
_____________ 322- M O I.
H ave some cam ping equipm ent
you no longer use? Sell It all
w ith a C lassified Ad In The
H erald C all 122 2*11 or (11
9993 and a frien d ly ad visor
w ill help y o u __________________

6—C hild Care
B A B Y S IT T IN G - m y h o m e .
H rs A days. Ile x . R ales neg
G all 331 1177__________
I A M A M a tu re tady who gives
excellent child c a re in my
home. 123 (3 5 9 _______________
W IL L babysit in m y hom e days,
eves, and weekends
321 5(15
Looking tor a job? The Classified
Ads w ill help you lind that job

9—Good Things to Eat

W ith an a ll lO O -.netural w eigh t
loss p r o g r a m w ith h e rb ,
vitam in s &amp; m in erals. Ph 395
323 1159 o r 305 333 9274________

WORK FINDERS INC.
T E L E P H O N E S A LE S
C A S H IE R
E X E C U T IV E S E C R E T A R Y
C O N S T R U C T IO N
S E C U R IT Y G U A R D
D E L IV E R Y D R IV E R
34J5FR ENC H A V E N U E
(In Sobiks B uilding)
371-5743
5700 to S900 A M O N T H . E X T R A
IN C O M E
P T DAY
OR
N IG H T . A P P L Y
110 W .
A IR P O R T B L V D A4 SAN
O LEW OOD CONDO II AM
ONLY
_________ __________
G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S . No experience
needed. F u ll d m * w ith good
sta rlin g pay. 429 4094
C a s a M ia P in e r ia
W aitress w anted A pply in
person 371 3004
C H R IS T IA N C hildren H om e has
im m e d ia te need o l a m a tu re
individu al lo r a re lie f house
parent. L iv e In position Hours
12 m idnight to ( a m . W ed B
Thurs 12 noon lo 17 m idnight
Sat B Sun. O il M o n., Tucs 4
F rid a y . C A L L 149 5099

SW EET ORANGES
1 V a rie tie s *4 a Bushel
127 1047

6AiHealfh&amp; Beauty
TRY
D A V IS Q u ic k r e lie f
lin im e n t for your aches and
pains. None better. (3 0 5494
D O N 'T S T O R E IT , S E L L IT w ith
a low cost C lassified Ad

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E O IV IS IO N
F ile N u m b e r I7-44SC P
D ivision P R O B A T E
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
W IL L A M A E P R O K O SC M ,
Deceased
N O T IC E T O C R E D IT O R S
(S u m m a ry A d m in istratio n )
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN O
C L A IM S
OR
DEMANDS
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E :
P le as* be advised that an O rd er
ot S u m m ary A d m in istratio n has
bean entered by the above styled
Court and th a t the to tal v a lu e ot
the above estate Is 124,977.4*
consisting ot a (10,000 00 C er
lific a ta ot Deposit, tw elv e shares
Ot IB M
stock, a 1977 Buick
autom obile and a one h a ll (Vy)
interest to c e rta in m ortgages held
by John L. Sauls, S r , as T r u ita *
and th at said assets have been
assigned to
E X H IB IT " A "
B arb ara Jean R obare
J a m e s w illi a m P ro k o s c h , Indiv(dually an d as g u a rd ia n ot three
(3 ) ol th e Decedent's gran d
children
K a th le e n A n n M a i l a r i , in .
d iv ld u e lly an d as g u a rd ia n ot th ree
( I t ot th e Decedent's grandchildren
K im b e rly Jo N e im a n , In d ivid u ally
end as g u ard ian ot th re e (1 ) qI the
Decedent's g ran dchildren
John W illia m Prokosch
W ith in th re e m onths fro m the
lim a ot m e t i n t publication of this
notice you a re req u ired to tile w ith
the c le rk of the C ircu it Court of
S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u rth o u s e ,
Sanford, F lo rid a . 32771, a w ritte n
statem ent o f an y c la im o r dem and
you m a y h a v e against the estate of
W IL L A
MAE
PROKOSCH,
deceased.
E ach c la im m ust be In w ritin g
and m ust in d ica te the basis for the
c la im , th e n a m e and address at the
c re d ito r o r his agent o r atto rn e y,
and th e am ount c laim ed . It the
c la im is not yet due. th e d a ta w han
It w ill becom e due shall be stated.
If the c la im I* contingent or
i l l i q u i d * ted, th e n a tu re o f the
w c t r U In ly shall be stated, it the
c la im i t secured. Ih e se cu rity sh all
be described T h e c la im a n t (h a il
d e liv e r a copy ot lh a c la im to ttw
d a r k w ho sh all se rve Ih e copy on
m e personal rep re sen tative .
A L L C L A IM S A N D D E M A N D S
N O T SO F I L E D W IL L B E
FO R EVER BARRED.
F ir s t O a fe o f P u b lic a tio n ,
F e b ru a ry 11, 1 9 0
D ated Ja n u a ry A 19*3
M IC H A E L E C R A Y ,
E S Q U IR E ot
C L E V E L A N D A B R ID G E S
Post O tf-ce D ra w e r l
Sanford. F lo rid a 22771
Telephone ( M l 322 1214
Publish F e b ru a ry 13. 25. 1953
D E E 91

G O V E R N M E N T JOBS
V a r io u s p o s itio n s a v a ila b le
th ro u g h lo c a l g o v e rn m e n t
agencies. 120,000 lo S50.000
potential. C all (re fu n d a b le ) 1
(419 ) 549 (104 dept. F L I2 I for
your )9«3 d ire c to ry . 24 hrs.
It

you ore having d iffic u lty
finding a place to liv e , ca r lo
d riv e, a job, o r some s e rvic e
you have need of, re a d a ll o u r
w arn ads ev ery day.

ATTENTION
20 POSITIONS
NEW LOCATION
N ew A ppliance Co. now ex
panding In C entral F I., San
ford, D el.an d . A ll. Springs,
needs people In all d e p li.E a r n
w h ile le a r n in g . R a p id ad
vancem ents. C A L L 17 1 3020,
A lt. (11-2111. D eLand 73( 4(53
R E C E P T IO N A P P O IN T M E N T
S E T T E R S . W ill tra in , lu ll
lim e S tart rig h t aw a y.

439 4094

CLERK TE LLE R
Typing, tilin g , answ ering phone.
W ork on C R T te rm in a l, w ith
fig u re s . S a la r y n e g o tla b la .
S tart F eb 7* It possible. Send
resum e w ith references to 2701
$ Fren ch A ve. Suite No. 5.
Sanlord, F la ., 37771
S E C R E T A R Y R ecepllonisl.
E xperienced to r busy Sanford
office. H eavy typing, using
W ang
w o rd
p ro c e s s in g
eq uipm ent, tilin g , and olher
general otflce duties E qual
O pportunity E m p lo y e r. Phone
13 7 4441 or furnish resum e to
P O. D ra w e r 1974 Sanford,
F la 37771,____________________
P A R T T IM E P ressm an, ex
perlenced on a m 13S0W, r a il
R alph Jenson 327 0074 lo r app
B U S IN E S S Is g ro a n W e need 4
e x p e r ie n c e d
re a l
e s ta te
associates to help us m a rk e t
our m a n y saleable listings.
Top c o m m is s io n s .
W ith
N u m b e r t C entury 31, yo u're
ahead a ll the w ay . L et's ta lk !
C all June P o rilg at C en tu ry 21
June P o ritg R ea lty
372 (4 7 *
R ea lto r
B A B Y S IT T E R w anted. M o n F r l.
in m y hom e. R e l. 12I-4649 o r
431 1717. Ask lo r F ra n k .
J O IN N u m b e r t beauty com ­
p a n y . S a il A v o n In open
te rrito rie s . 172-04*9; 1 1 M 0 1 4 ;
111-1910
P A R T T IM E W ork Ir o m hom e
Phone P ro g ram E 3 / n i2 S * l0 0
per w eek. F le x ib le hrs F u lle r
Brush
C all (94 7704 or (31 1097

A

A

A

9 OFFICES TO SERVE
YOU
O V E R IM L IS T IN G ON F IL E

No Selling
Part Time Work
incom e w ill a v e ra g e above top
union wages to be considered
ap plicant must be established
residenl w ith good references
and ap p earan ce ha ve a room
s lle w ork a re a to assem ble
p ro d u c t an d a v a n to r
d e live ries products are sold
through leading d epartm ent
stores B sp ecialty shops

D R A FT PERSON
SIS
P o rt (o lio
needed.
M ech
d raw in g E xp erien ce wins.

— S3600 IN V E S TM E N T—

M A IN T E N A N C E M E C H .
SSS
H yd ra u lic exp needed F u ll L in a
M vch.
E x c e lle n t
O ppt

For personal in te rv ie w send
ohone n u m b er and general
in fo rm atio n about y o u rs*It to

W ELDER
SIS
Meg * Tig E x p req u ired . A lu m l
w elding. Needs Now
A C C O U N T IN O C L E R K 200W k.
A cc u rate typ in g . 10 ke y by
touch College H elp fu l, Raisas.
Benefits.
SA LES R E F .
S M JW k.
/.•tra c tiv e . People oriented, w ill
t r a in E x c e lle n t c o m m . B
Expense Aect Needs Now
O E N E R A L O F F IC E
(IM W k
Light Typing G en e ral ledger
bookkeeping experience, som a
p a y r o ll.
B ank
R ec o n c iIlla tio n s . E x c e lle n t C om pany. Needs Now.
D IS C O U N T F I E - T E R M *
1W E E K S SALARY
11.M R E G IS T R A T IO N F E E
F R A N C H IS E E A V A IL A B L E

TOO M A N Y
TO LIST
1917 FRENCH AVE
333-5178

G IL D E D CAGE
2100 N . A tla n tic A ve. Suita I I
DAYTONA BEACH. FL lid *

25—Loans
C R E D il P R O B L E M S ?
R eceiva a M a s te rc a rd or V isa,
G uaranteed , even If you hava
bad c re d it, No c re d it o r have
b e tn b a n k r u p t. F o r tr e e
brochure, send sell addressed
stam ped envelope to House of
C red it, Box 2*0575, D allas. T * .
7522* or c a ll: 314 124 5944

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
C O U N T R Y H om e lo s h a re , non
sm okers, relerences. Split u til.
B ren t. 105 444 4014
2 B drm , 1 B ath apt to share ' ,
ra n t, ' t u tilitie s . C all 12 1 597t
o r 113 3571.

TE LEPH O N E WORK
F u ll an d p a rt lim e *5 h r. p lu s
lib e r a l c o m m is s io n p a id .
L a r g e s o u th e a s te rn C o r .
poration based in Sanford.
Y o u r c o m m itm e n t b e tid e s
opportunity.

M R. SANDERS
(305)321-6000
P R O F E S S IO N A L Basket M a k e r
tor J a i A la i C astas. 2 y r t exp.
requ ired. C a ll O S J a i-A la i fo r
in te rvie w .______________________
E A R N E x tr a m oney lo r
yo ur g ro c e ry rec eip ts
C elH ? fc l30 2 or 3210*41
F U R N I T U R E d e liv e r y m a n
w a n te d .
E x p e r ie n c e
p re fe rre d C h auffeur Hearts*
re q u ire d 333*373
D R IV E R S O E L IV E R Y L o c al o r
over th e ro ad . Good p a y , s ta rt
rig h t a w a y . 429 4004
W A R E H O U S E S TO C K
WORK
I m m e d ia l* openings, lu ll rim e ,
good pay. 419 4094

29—Rooms
F U R N IS H E D
R m , p r iv e t *
en trance, kitchen fa c ilitie s *50
w k ly . L s d y p re fe rre d 377
7129
S A N F O R D . Reas, w eekly B
m on thly rate s U til inc e ll S0C
O ak Adutts I (41 7 ( ( !
S A N F O R D furnished room s by
the w eek R easonable rates
M a id s e r v ic e , c a te r in g lo
w orking people. U nfurnished
a p artm en ts I an d 3 bedroom *.
?31 4507, 500 P a lm e tto A v e.
C O M F O R T A B L E 1 b d rm . no
pets, 170 w k plus u til. 1100 te c .
dep C a ll 3214947.

28—Apts, ft Houses
To Share
W IL L S hare m y duplex. 1175 M o
o r *45 p e r w k . pays a ll.
32M M 05

D IE S E L M E C H A N IC S no ax
p e rie n t* necessary F o r in
fo r m a tio n C all 919 227 0 5 3 *
M o n d ay th ru F rid a y . A d am s
E nte rp rises In c ., 9 9.
O L A N M itts Studio noxtH te rn
per a r y help lo r m a tu re se lf
m o tiv a te d people w ith stro n g ,
pieasent telephone y o k e . E a r n
ah th e m o n ey you need F o r
blits and etc. A lso, person w ith
s m a ll c a r fo r lig ht d a liv a ry .
F o r in te rv ie w c a ll 3 D 4504 o r
I D 4J0*. beginning M o n d a y .
Ftto- 71 a lt. 9 a m

30-A partm ents U nfurnished
A A H I Z F o rm ap t. c a rp ete d ,
drap ed, fu lly equipped k it
c7-tn W a te r, g a rb a g e , sew er
lees included 1245 m o on
discount tease (31 4013
M a r.n e r s V illa g e on L a k e A d a. I
b d rm iro m *2 *5 , 7 b d rm Iro m
*100 Located 17 *2 lust south
of A irp o rt B tvd in S an ford A il
A dults. M 3 1 4 7 0

D A N IE L A N D W O H L W E N D E R
P R O F E S S IO N A L O ffic e space
lor Lease, on 1792. Id e a l
location lo dow ntow n a re a 705
S Fren ch A v * . or c a ll M 3 1170.

Open 9 10 4 173 7920
GENEVA GARDEN*
I B d rm . A pts *2*5 Mo.
M on. th ru F r l, 9 a .m ., o i P " V
IM S W. 35th St.
332 2090
lu x u r y

G E O R G IA A R M S A P T * .
Applications now being taken for
beautiful, new 1 and J b d rm
ap t* C entral heat and a ir. w all
to w a ll c a r p e tin g , c o lo r
coordinated ap pl-. stove and
trosl tre e re frig , and custom
drapes A pplications a v a ila b le
at site 7400 G eorgia A v a ,
near Sem inole H igh School
R ental Assistance A va ila b le .
E qual Housing O pportunity.
B A V B O Q C O V E A PTS
100 E A -rport Blvd
1 B 7 B drm s
F rom *710 m o
Phone 123 4420

8 6 9 -4 6 0 0 or 349-5698

F IV E p o ln ti a r e a -in d u s tr ia l
to n in g b e h in d
P r e s t ig e
L u m b e r , N e w w a re h o u s e
ip a c e a v a ila b le Iro m 1500 sq
ft to 15.000 sq ft D ays 123
5442, evenings 111 2359.

40— Condominiums

you a r e h a vin g d tlftc u tty
finding a place, to liv t , c a r H
d riv e , a lob. o r som e service
you have need ot, re a d m it o u r
w an t ads e v e ry d ay.

LO N G W O O D 1 b d rm . kids, pets,
carpet 1775. Fee 339 7700
Sav On R e n ta il. In c ., R e a d e r

W onder w h a t to do w nn T w 'iT
Sell O ne — The quick, easy
W a n t A d w a y . T h e m a g ic
num ber it 337 7 411 or (31 9991
HAL C O LBERT REALTY
REALTOR
707 E . 25lh S I.
1317(31
3 B D R M , 1 B alh convenient to
schools, shopping. *42.000 Bill
M a llc to w s k l 122 79(1

1 B D R M . 2 Story condo. *400 m o ,
1st B last Includes m ain
te n a n c e , pool a n d te n n is
courts. 177*311.
if

G E N E V A 3 S to ry 4 1 n e ar Lake
H a rn e y . N e w paint, siding,
and roof, la m lly room , targe
g a ra g e, fenced y a rd , reduced
lo *50.000
S A N D Y W IS D O M

37 D- Industrial
for Rent

a p a r t m e n t s

F a m ily B A d u lts se ctio n
Poolside. 2 B drm s, M aster
Cove Apts 173 7900 Open on
weekends

L A K E F R O N T B rick 1 b d rm . 2
bath Enclosed patio, with
e x tr a
w o rk s h o p .
t(9 .0 0 0
assum able C i N L a ke M a ry.
122 1155 o r 130 4931.

'41—H ouses

HARO LD

HALL

N E W ) B 2 Bedroom s. A d |* c *n t
lo Lake M o nroe. H e a lth Club,
R acquetball B M o ra l Sanlord
L a n d in g ■ S R 44, 121 4270

REALTY, IN C |
323-5774

realtor

11 Y E A R S E X P E R IE N C E

31_Apartments Furnished

JU N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y
SANFORD
Lovely I B drm . In tow n.
1 144 4(71
B D R M . kids, porch, a ir,
carpet S80 wk Fee 139 7 700
Sav On R entals, Inc. R e a lto r
-.•m ished ap artm en ts tor Senk»f
t .tu rn s I K P a lm e tto A ve . J
Cowan No phone calls

N E W L IS T IN G !
Spacious, 2 b d rm , 7 b ath hom e
In the c o u n try , yet close to
e v e ry th in g ! Id y ltw ild e school
for the kids 7 plus acres, plus
v e ry Ig. w orkshop A re a l buy
at 147,S00.

C O U N T R Y C LU B S P E C IA L !
E n e rg y e ffic ie n t 2 B d rm ,
concrete block hom e. Large
y a rd w ith trees. (1104 dawn
and (111 a m o. P rin c ip al and
In te rest. 12*«M years F H A or
V A . O n ly (11.500
T H A T 'S IN C R E D IB L E !

REALTOR
(07 5 F re n c h A ve

W O U L D Y O U B E L IE V E ! Al
most new 3 story " B E A U T Y " .
4 b d rm . 2 bath. C H A , kitchen
eq u ip p e d p lu s m ic r o w a v e ,
p riv acy fenced. U n b tlle v ta b ly
h u g e b e d ro o m s an d w o rk
shop! E xc ellen t term s. Only
*54,900.

31 A — Duplexes
S A N F O R D . 2 b d rm , kids, fenc
« 1, 1250 F e e 337 7200
Sav O n R en ta ls. In c R e a lto r
L A K E M A R Y 7 B d im , W W C ,
A ir, M eat, W D Hook up, N o
pets *315 M o 315 SEC. Just
P ainted 371 2947

IN D E L T O N A
•
L A R G E L a k e fro n t hom e, 1 B R .
2' j b ath , o tlic e . fo rm a l O R ,
L R . F a m . R m huge g a ra g e
S M A L L E R la m lly hom e. 1 b r. 7
bath. L R , D R . dbie g a ra g e
7 Tow nnom es, 7 BR. IV , b a th .
L R , dining a re a , screened
porch
D A Y S 574 1414
E V E S 7(9 4251
S P O T L E S S 1 1. Good lease,
te rm s , no pets N e a r Hosp
__________ (3 0 5473______________
DELTO NA
1 B d rm ., porch,
separate la u n d ry ro o m , la rg e
corner lot, w a ll a ir , 1795, 1st.
last, 1100 s e c u rity . N o pels.

MLS

322-8678

4 Room F u lly F u rn .
C hild or pet O K . S250 m o., 1100
D ep , 321 0(21

32— Houses Unfurnished
P lum bing. H a rd w a re , D IY . Bus.
W w o R e a l E s ta te , W m .
M a llc to w s k l R e a lto r, 122 79*3

N E E D A S E R V IC E M A N ? Y o u 'll
find h im listed in our Business
Service D ire c to ry

E N J O Y country living? 2 B drm ,
D u p le * A p ts , O lym p.c S t
pool S h e n a n d o a h V illa g e

24— Business Opportunities

DISTRIBUTORSHIP

— E M P L O Y M E A IT ..

P a rk A ve ., 3 b d rm . g a ra g e, pets,
k id *. 1750 F e e 319 7700.
$ a v On p enta i l . Inc. B a a ' l l

BY O W N E R 3 b d rm . scr porch,
u til shed. • c itru s , in Sunland
E states L o w *40*. 322 4079.

Pv A C R E o l land, a v a ila b le for
M o b ile H om e set up. H igh and
d ry . w a te r I* included In the
lease 349 5*44. O r Pioneer
House R estaurant In G eneva.
See M a n a g e r ________________

2 B D R M . on qu iet SI (770 Mo.
plus *270 se cu rity Dep. No
pets. 372 9402 o r 349 S (M .
I, 7 A N D 1 B D R M F ro m *770
R id g e w o o d A rm s A pt
2500
R id g e w o o d A ve. 373*«20

41—Houses

37CFor Lease

30-Apartments Unfurnished

K IS H R E A L E STATE
3,1 0041
REALTO R
A tle r H rs . 371 744* B 173 4953
M o d e rn i/in q your H om e &lt; Sell no
longer needed but useful item s
w ith a C lassified Ad

BATEM AN REALTY
L ie . R e a l E s ta le B ro k e '
7440 Sanford A ve.
D O N 'T H E S IT A T E C all today
M a k e o tte r on these
C O U N T R Y 1 2 w ith ac reag e
asking *59.900
C IT Y nice neighborhood, 3 -U e
B L K . F a m ily room , Cent H A ,
enclosed g a ra g e , fenced back.
F ru it tre e *, asking *44.900
P A O L A 5 A cres high and d ry
L E A S E O ption 4 7 la re e la m lly
room , ca rp e te d , C H A , fenced
b a c k , n ic e n e ig h b o rh o o d
IS4.900
H A N D Y M A N 'S N ig h tm a r e
C o u n try, 3 stories, 4 BR. (
firep lac es, plus 1 acres Best
O tte r

321-0759

EVE

322-7643

574-1040
W A S H IN G T O N O A K S spacious 4
b d rm . 7 b a th , in good neigh
borhood. C e n tra l H e a t, a ll
a p p l. *175 m o (3B 440I o r 194
1943. A sk lo r M r Jess.
A V A IL M a r 1, 7 Bd . (b u ilt In
chests), I b th ., screen porch,
st. r m ., c a rp o rt, w w c a rp e t, ac. com p fenced y a rd . N ew
fro s t Ir e e e le c , r a l r l g . B
n a tu ra l gas h e a te r B ra n g *.
R eal c re a m p u ff. S2IS m o. (ISO
dep No p re s c h o o l kids. N o
pets. L e ase B local ra t. raq
1271415
N IC E 1 b d rm . 1 b a lh . hom e *175
mo
J U N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y
REALTO R
C E N T U R Y 21
122 (4 7 (
S U N L A N D A v a ila b le Feb. (4, 1
b d rm c a r p o r t c o rn e r lo t,
convenient to e v e ry th in g . *400
mo 122 4 n ( .

33—Houses Furnished
.D E L T O N A , L G . t b d rm . L R ,
dining a re a , kitch en , screen
p o rc h , la n d s c a p e d
y a rd ,
a v a ila b le now . *240. l i t , last,
1100 Sec. D e p , N o Pats.

_________574-1040
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T Ih
BOAROS A RE
GREATC L A S S IF IE D
ADS
ARE
EVEN BETTER

34—Mobile Homes
C A S S E L B E R R Y 2 b d rm ., turn,
k id *, pats, y a rd , p rie . lot. ( j i j
F a t 139 7200
Sae-O n R en ta ls, m e ., R e n te r

37—Business Property
O F F IC E S PA C E and or
re ta il best location
7544 F re n c h A ve. M 2 4 « J .

37- B—Rental Offices
P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE
P r o v id e n c e B lv d ., D e lto n a
1 I U Sa. F t. C * n d D ivid ed
W N h P a rk in g . Days M S *74
1*54 Evenings B W eekend*
»0* 7 *9 *3 5 1

1400 Sq I I o tlic e . IIS M a p le
A v e . Sanfo.-d A v a il, im m td
B roker O w n er 122 720*

V A L E N T IN E S S P E C IA L - Stone
llre p la c e "S ets the m ood" lo r
this 3 b d rm , 2 bath gem I D en,
C H A . separate sentrance to I
b d rm and b a lh H uge lot and
m a jes tic free st O nly *55.000
CUSTOM
B U IL T
CEDAR
HOME
E n e rg y
e ffic ie n t
custom throughout. T e rrific
o w n e r fin a n c in g . P o te n tia l
guest hom e In r e a r. 17 citrus
Ir e * * . Leads of i t * r * g * . Ta ka
44A E a s t I * le ft on R l. 4TI, 3
houses on rig h t past Osteen
post O ffice . O nly 449,***.

W E H E E D LISTINGS!
CALLUS N O W IIII

323-5774
7404 H W Y . 17-91
LAKE M A R Y
5 B R , 1 B alh
H om e on 17 acres, L a kefro n t
Zoned A g ric u ltu re w lfh h u p B arn. Shop B Kennels. ♦ f
O w n e r fin a n c in g
P r iv e t *
E sta te w ith lots of Trees in ihe
path w ay of progress. P a rtia lly
p la ited for fu tu re develop
m m l O wne. 122 4417 a ll 4

d B lk R O B BIE’S

REALTY

■ (*#

R E A L T O R . M LS

W A m S /jS » • ' 1 F'* nth

^

*u
i,t 4
Sanlord. Fla

STENSTROM
24 HOUR IB 322-9283
REALTY - REALTORS
S a n fo r d 's Sa le s Leader
W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O RE HOMES THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y I
J U S T L I S T E D 1 B d rm . I Bath

hom e w ith a a n * B d rm .,
g a ra g e a p t.I M a n y a x lra s l
N t w root, lust p a in ted , w as h er
and d r v a f, m ic ro w a v e and
fu rn itu re nag. I 4 S . M 0 I
J U S T F O R Y O U 1 B d rm . 1 B alh
b ric k hom e an a b e au tifu l let.
C ent. H A . w a ll to w a ll ca rp at,
eat in K itch e n , screen porch,
p a d d l* Ia n s , a n d m o r a l
(44,9*0.
E X T R A S G A L O R E I 1 B d rm . 1
b a lh h a m a in Sunland E s ta te *,
w ith sp eclau* liv in g and dining
room s, la rg e la m lly re a m ,
dan.
k itc h e n
and
b a lh
rad a ca ra tad fenced y a rd , and
lats m o re l (41,909.
B E A U T IF U L 1 B d rm . 1 B alh
L a k a lr e n t h a m * an L a k e
H ayes n e ar O v ia d o l E v e ry
ta a tu r a im a g in a b le ! R n |a y
tith in g , beatin g and s w im ­
m ing. ( I l l , 509.
R E A L T O R A S S O C IA T E S
N E IO IO I

On* R asM anllal — Tw o Cant
m a rtia l In m t m e n tI I I ytsi
honestly w ant a lu tc e ttlw l
C a r te r , la in the H o . ' I
Pralasslonal Sales T e a m l A ll
ih la r y le w t I t r i c l l y
CanIldanH ali
R E A L E S TA TE C A R E B R I
C all la sto 11 you quality i t r our
F ra * Tuition P rtg re m i B a ­
ttlin g A Rewarding!
M A Y F A I R V I L L A i l 1 4 I B a rm ,
1 B a t h C e n d * V i ll a s , n a i l la
M a y l a t r C o u n t r y C lu b l a l a d
r a u r le t . flo o r p la n B i n l i n e #
d e t e r l Q u a lity c a n l t r v l t t d b y
l * « t t n a h t r l o r s e t te s B u g l

CALLANYTIMC

37C For Lease

7541
P erk

O F F IC E S P A C E
FO R LEA SE
007721

W ANT

322-2420
ADS

OVERP

ARE

BLACK

B

AN° KeA° *U

Be Ufoe

CM Keyed
fo r a llyo u r

R E A L ESTA TE NEEDS

323-3200
O P E N H O U S E Sal- » * * » • ' • *
549 P IN E N E E D L E COURT
THE FO REST. LAKE M ARY.
Super 1 B d rm ., 7 Bath custom
M o d u la r . E n e rg y * l l l c l * « | F lo rid a ro am s w ith Faddle
Ians. L a rg e u tility w ith w ork­
bench. M A N Y E X T R A S NOT
FOUND
IN
STANDARD
M O D E L S . O w n er sa y* * • 11
A sking * * * , 909. C all to r d etail*
S a n d ra
S w ill R a a lla r
Associate E va s. * * M « 1 *
*49 W . L a k a M a r y Blvd.
S u it* B
L a k e M a r y , F la 1174*
3131701
H O M E W IT H IN C O M E
L a rg e m o d ern 1 B r la m lly home
w ith C H A . e a t In k lic h tn ,
la m lly ro o m , o v e rs lie d d o u tif
g a ra g e P l i t * lu lly * q o 'P P «
green houses going b u tln ***
lo r fa m ily o r ra tlre d couple
O w n er w ilt tr a m and fln o n t*
*1 1 0 ,0 0 0

C allB art
R E A L ESTATE
N E A L T O R , 111 »•»*
tta v * som e ca m p in g aqulpn
you no long er use? Sell 11
w ith « C lassified A d In
H e ra ld C a ll 122 M i l or
9*91 and g trie n d ty ad v
w ill h e lp you.
1 B D R M , 7 Bath. Fireplace« » l g a ra g e . 100x150 F I. lot
Cloae in *49.900 :sS W Udm ere

�41—Houses

m

42—Mobile Homes

Equal
Professional
Service

•fA itO H
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY
BOARD OF
R EA LTO RS

S R M N rB «
Whiter
* r Serines, Fie. &gt;1TM

mm
IT
R E A L T O R S *

R E N O V A T E D — U p g ra d e d
throughout, tw o c a r garago lo r
w o rk s h o p , L g U v ln g r o o m .
F ir e p la c e , en c lo s e d p o rc h ,
now k ltc h o n , m a n y t r o o i,
S IM M .
P R IM E C o m m ercia l Location
now u io d a * p a ln l A body shop.
Includes land A building w ith
necessary eq u ip m e n t A two
b d rm . A p t lo r re n ta l, 599,000.
L A W N M O W E R Sales A S e rv le t
Business. Located neat to 1
m illio n d o lla r shopping center,
site In Sanford.
E X E C U T IV E Neighborhood, S-!
c o m e r lot, stone fire p la c e ,
C H A F a n s, W a llp a p e r. Cony.
F H A V A . Super H ornet M ust
See, I y r. w a rra n ty , ttt.s e e .

D R 1P TW P O D V IL L A G E
Lake M a ry , Florida 1174*
OHICO: (M S I S IM M S
U N D E R 11.000 D O W N
3 b d rm , doll house A ffo rd a b le
m o n th ly
p a y m e n ts .
C a ll
O w ner B ro ker 331 1*11.
W E L L m a in ta in e d , 3 b d rm .,
c a r p e t, d r a p e s , a p p lia n c e s ,
new
ro o f,
new
p a in t
throughout, priced rig h t to sell
Im m e d la le ly , 313 4744.
Y O U N G 3 B d rm hom e. Can be
used as res id en ed o r professional
offices or c o m m e rc ia l. O nly
SI7.000 down. 1413 M o n tn iy. C all
B roker. O w n er 331 1t i t
FO R S A L E by o w n er — 2 b d rm .
1 b a th , F la . ro o m , scr. porch,
lanced y a rd , a s s u m a b lt » £
m o rtg a g e. 534,900 333 4122.
V A L U E ) 3 1 Cash to m rtg or
O W H . W re a s d o w n . M id
130'S. 131 1416 O w n er Assoc
W H Y S A V E IT . . . S E L L IT
Q U IC K L Y w ith a F a s t A cting ,
Low Cost C las sllied A d .
LG . 3 b d rm , 3W b ath in Sanford
Lg. fenced y e rd , fr u it frees,
m a n y o lh a r ex tras. M S dow n,
ow ner fin a n ce ba lan c e l i e ,*00
3310330.
SANFORD R E A LTY
m -s n e
A lt H r * . 1134*14, S IM M S

realtor

N E W L IS T IN O ! S b d rm , S bath,
la m room , n lc t cand. Includes
w a s h e r a n d d r y a r . B e lo w
m a rk e t va lu e . IIS ,s o t.
LO TS O F E X T R A S ! G o w ith this
p re tty s b d rm , s b a th hom e In
firs t class te n d . 141,000.
S alesm an noadad.

STEM PE R AG ENCY INC.
s s u tti

MOO M O B IL E H o m e 14’xao’ set
up In a d u lt section o* m o b ile
p a rk . O ay 111 7471
E v e n in g * *31 i l i a
BY O W N E R O B L M o b ile w ith
p e rm A dd. A L O T . A d u lt P a rk .
G o o d ie s to o n u m e ro u s to
m ention Low 30s 123 te w

M L W t Unbelievable is il
14x40 • fenced yard • carport
sprinkler system fem ily
sec I Ion . reduced to f 11,500.
M L 410 G reat buy 34x40
w ith all the extras. Only
Stl.OOO.
M L 440 Fantastic oppor
ty 34x443 bedroom 7 bath
split plan

like new

lem lly

section.
M L 441 Once in a lift lim e
yes, when you see this
beauty 74x40 1 bedroom 7
bath w ith m any extras In
fam ily section • only 113.*00
cham pion
14x44 screen
porch spill bedroom
"B T o T T E o ro u like peaches ’
This IM I peechlree - 34i M
fa m ily
section
w ith
c a th e d ra l
ce ilin g s
unbelievable value.
■ (M a r n u w o a c

FOREMOST*
HOME BROKERS •
3131 S. Geldenrod Rd.
Orlande. F I. 11*07
C A LL CO LLEC T

3 0 5 /2 8 2 -0 2 8 0
tOEi I ar*mott Mt&gt;m*

&amp;
JP

JM PEVEL0P1N6

JUST THE KINO OF

? o tn m

fo r w a r d

rA P E t?5

71-17x40 A rlin g to n 3 B d rm .,
V e ry G ood Condition, 55,500.
377 308? A lte r 4 p m .

43—Lois-A creage
ST. JO H N S R iv e r Iro n fa g e , ivy
a c re p a rc e ls , also in te rio r par
cels w ith r iv e r accaaa «13,goo.
Public w a te r, 30 m in. to A lla
m o n te M a ll 17 4* 30 y r .
fin a n c in g , no q u a lify in g .
B roker *28 4813.
10 A C R E S N ice high pasture In
leed grasses, p a rtia lly fenced.
P riv a te ro ad e n lra n c a . 440 F t.
o il M a y to w n R d ., O s te a n .
Good w a te r, a t about 80 and
1M It. H o m rs ite o r M o b il*
h o rn *
ap p ro v e d .
T e rm s
a v a ila b le . IS y r t. at I0&lt;* In ­
terest. 54,000 down. 5157.90 per
m o P ric e 530.000 371 9040.
• SA N FO R O M A 44*
S' i a c re plus-m inus, country
hom e site.
0 4 k .p in e , som e cleared ■ paved,
to '.d o w n , 10 y r s .a t l l \
5TE N 5TR O M R E A LTY REALTORS
C all •

1771410 •

A n ytim e.

5 — 50x177. Some Iru lt
57700 each S m iles
Sanford 415 90 4 9717 o r
Box 1517, M a r y v ille ,
37801

trees.
S. ol
PO
Tenn

44 B— Investment
Property
D U P L E X E S E igh t to be b u ilt. 3
B drm . 1 b ath each side. Good
r e n ta l a r e a . 1 0 * . In v e s to r
financin g P ositive cash How.
F H A and V A fin a n cin g also
a v a ila b le . 149,900. F lo r id a
A m e ric a n R e a lly 105 447 1 0 1

47

R eal E state W anted

W E B U Y eq u ity in Houses,
a p a rim e n ts , vacant land and
a c re a g e
LUCKY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 7500.
Sanford, F la 17771 377 4741
N E E D to s a il y o u r h o u s *
q u ic k ty t
we
can
o tte r
g u a r a n te e d s a le w it h in 10
d e y t. C a ll 111-1*11.

47-A—Mortgages Bought
A Sold
W E P A Y cash tor 1st 4 }nd
m ortgages R ay Legg. Lie
M o rtg ag e B roker 781 7599

49-B—Water Front
Property

BUY S E L L -T R A D E
F lo r id * T ra d e r A uction
Longwood, F la . 13* 3)1?
If you don't ta ll people, how a r t
thay going lo know ? T a ll them
w ith a classified ad , by callin g
3717411 or 111 0992.
B U IL D yo u r ow n • cypress clock
- wood - clock w orks • finishes.
F re e Info. I l l 4713.
W H E E L C H A IR .
w a te r bed, etc.
333 3133____________
U ‘ F IB E R G L A S S boat end tilt
tr a ile r good cond. 5375. 3 w heel
b ic yc le 57S. IS m m c a m e ra 510.
337 4431.
L E V I Jaans and Jackals.
A R M Y N A VY SURPLUS
310 Sanford A v * .
1 1 1 5 7 ft
S E A R S R o to tlller Ilk a n e w 8
h o rs e p o w e r w ith p lo w s A
c u ltiv a to rs . 377 5711.___________
IS " C O N S O L E C olor Zen ith TV
good cohditionSIOO.
331-97)4.
B E A U T IF U L 80“ ta il
G ra n d fa th e r C lo c *.
5950. C a ll 377 740'.
19B2 C A R E F R E E 31 ft. ta ll
co ntained, tw in beds, a ir , p atio
door, ro ll out aw n in g , la rg e
re fg , tw in holding tanka and
m ore
Tyson L a n a M o b il*
P a rk , R ts. N o. 17-91, South
D eL a n d

IBMWait First Itraaf —laniard, Florida 33771 —(385)3214338
SUN.
SAT.
ItiM ’ SiM ____ UiOO'StM
—.

S O M A -M A C K S N A V I
fSr

1 a n d 2 b d rm . a p ts ,
aubhpuM w-hMlth club, on Silt Lake
Ttratis, Recquttbill, Volleyball, Joflflinfl Trail,

ao-r-Autos for Sate

80—Autos for Sale
’75 G R A N A O A.4 CVI .
S79 down w ith cre d it.
M a rlin M o tors i l l 7814.
1977 L T D F O R O n e w pclnl
|ob. good cond, a ir.
51850 3214775

41 M E R C U R Y , 7 d r. hardtop,
elec, r e a r w indow , V 8, runs
fine. 1 jw n e r, 1450. 111 1704.
77 D O D G E R am C h arg e r
P S P B , excellen t condition
54,000 3 71 4878.

D e B ary Auto * M a rin e Sales
across the riv e r loo o l h ill 174
H w y 17 97 D e B a ry 848 8X44

‘48 W agoneer Jeep
4x4 R uns Good, 5700 o r best
o ffer. E v e * lt e r S : 3 0 371 4449

7 7 C H R Y S L E R Station W agon,
PS, PB tilt w h ee l. A C . A M F M
• tr a c k 5750 . 373 8714.

IS IT T R U E Y O U C A N B U Y
J E E P S FO R 544 T H R O U G H
T H E U .S. G O V E R N M E N T ?
G E T T H E F A C TS T O O A Y I
C A L L (1171 747 1147 E X T . 414
(O P E N S U N D A Y )

1*10 Chevy pickup C 10 A m F m ,
a ir , a u to , ps e x c . co nd.
w holesale p ric e c a ll 377 5544.

E v e n in g H e r a l d , S a n fo r d , F I.

Sunday, Feb. 20, I98J-9B

80—Autos for Sale

88—Autos for Sale

B ad C red it?
N o C ra tflt?
W E F IN A N C E
No C red it Check E as y T e rm s
N A T IO N A L A U T O SA LES
1170 Sanford A v t.
171-407S

' O A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
?twy 97, 1 m il* w est of Speed,
w r r . M y t o n a Beach w ill hole
a public A U T O A U C T IO N
every M o n d ay t W ednesday a t
7:30 p .m . If* * the only one In
F lo rid a . Y o u sef In * reserved
p ric e C a ll 9 0 4 1 S 5 8 1 II for
fu rth e r details.

D O D G E O m n i 1980, 31,000 M iles.
4 D r. H atch Back. F M tape
stereo A C P S E x . cond. (M u st
salt) C a ll 349 590*.
7 5 Lincoln Cont.
A ll pow er, cassette pla ye r,
5900 311 *449
77 D A T S U N F I0 , 5 speed, a ir , 4
c y lin d e r s p o rt c o u p * . 899
down. Cash o r tra d e , 319
9t00 834 4405.__________________
7* D O D G E pickup. 318 Auto,
good condition, 599 dn. Cash o r
tr a d *. 339 9100. 8 3 **4 05 .

CONSULT OUR
'H E C A U T IC N F L A O 15 O U T =

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
N A N N Y goat 575, 1 kids. 1 m a le,
I fe m a le , 535 e a . R ab b its 53 ea.
Osteen a re a 377 0008.

Big Man's belts
S ites To 60 F R E E B uckle w ith
a ll belts 58 00 o r over. V illa g e
F le a m rk t., Sat. A Sunday.

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

45— Pets-Supplies
W llco $ 4 l*S H w y . 44 W . 331-4178
B aled shavings 54.50. S traw
11.50. Q u a lity n a m e c » t and
dag foods. Includin g A .N .F .
A v ia ry Supplies.

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

F R E E Siberian H uskey m a te, 3
yrs. old. Good w ith children
177 9409
A K.C R eg A Ird a le Pups
8 w ks shols * w orm ed
C all (30S) 333-1159

50*A—Jewelry
B E A U T IF U L Vi c a ra t M a rq u is
S o lita ir e v a lu e d a t 57,000.
A sking 51.000. C all b e fo re 4
p.m . 173 4134.
I I you d o r ', b e liev e th a t w an t ads
bring results, tr y one, and
listen to your phone rin g . D ial
373 3411 o r 111 9993

Alteration &amp; Tailoring
A M E R IC A N S ta n d a rd B re d
M a re . 15.3 n e g a tiv e cogg and
all shots. 47 1 3708.

EXPERT
d r e s s m a k in g ,
alteration s A slan C leaners.
1844 H w y 17 93, L a k e M a ry
Blvd . 331 4996

Auto CB Stereo

51-A — F u rn itu re
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
X I 315 E F IR S T ST
____________ 3*7 5477______________
L A R R Y 'S F u rn itu re M a r t,
715 5anford A vc , 177 4133.
S e ll a n d S e rv ic e v e r y best
portab le kc 'o s cn e heaters
i O t A blue contem p. 93" good
cond 5100
C all 37 /01 64
M O V IN G
K ing Cx-d headboard, lin ers, &amp;
spread C ulfee ta b le , hide a
bed. 7 Chairs, dining b a rre l set.
S eeing m a ch in e and cabinet.
373 0714

K enm ore p a rts , service, used
w ashers 1710697
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
M a k e room In your a ttic , g arag e.
S a il Id le Ite m s w ith a
C lassllied Ad. C all a Irle n d ly
ad ta k e r a t 337 7611 or *11 9991.

53—TV- Radio- Stereo
W E POSSESS
C O L O R TVS
W * t a l l re p o s s e s s e d c o lo r
televisions, a ll n a m e brands,
* c o n so le s, a n d
p o rta b le s .
E X A M P L E : 1 R C A IS " color
console o rig in a l p ric e over
5700 b a lan c e due 5177 cash o r
p aym ents 517 m o 1 Zenith
color p o rta b le . S1S5 cash or
p a y m e n ts .
NO
MONEY
D O W N . S till In w a rra n ty . F re e
hom e tr ia l, no obligatio n. C all
BIST C en tu ry Sales. 847 5394
day o r n il* .
T E L E V IS IO N
25" C olor Console
1?" C olor P o rta b le
847 1196

H A Y 53 50 p e r bale,
3 5 o r m o re tre e del.
O th e r feeds av a il. 34 9 5194.
Sw

W a n t e d to B u y

N eed E x tr a Cash?
K O K O M O Tool Co . at *18 W
F irs t S t., Sanford, Is now
buying glass, new spaper, bi
m e ta l steel and alu m in u m
cans along w ith a ll other kinds
of non ferro u s m etals. W hy not
tu rn this Idle c lu tte r into e x tra
dollars? W e a ll benefit Iro m
recyclin g F o r details c a ll:
373 t 100
W A N T E D lo buy.
G e rm a n S p iti Dog
127 1794.

52—Appliances

S tlS
512S

S 50x127. Som tru ll tree s 52700
M C h . S sm iles S. o l Sanlord,
41S 914 9717 o r P .O . Box 1512.
M a r y v llla , Tenn. 17101.
Good Used T V 's 5 2 5 1 up
M IL L E R S
7419 O rlan d o Dr
Ph 3110151

54—Garage Sales
M O V IN G S a lt
S a l.a n d S u n .* ‘till
7471 Chase A ve
E S T A T E Sale 407 W . tlt h St.,
Sat. 1 5 , Sun 9 5. tools n u ll,
bolts, plum bing eq u ip m en t.

72— Auction
FO R E S T A T E . C o m m ercia l or
R esid en tial Auctions A Ap
pra'Sals C all D e ll's A uction
373 5670________________________

AUCTION

*t ‘ l i t r i

l i i i . l ! jlL ,

SAT. FEB. 1? 6:30 P.M.
F U R N IT U R E
Bedroom . U v ln g ro o m * D ining
Room sets, solas A sleepers,
la m p s , p a in tin g s , d re s s e rs ,
la d e s , and m ore.
O ver 3U0 Hem s each w eek
W e have becom e one at O rlan
d o 's o u ts ta n d in g A u c tio n
Houses T ry lo atten d lo r
yourself and see w hat w e o ile r
each w eek.

The Florida Trader
Auction Palace North
490 Bay Meadows Rd.
Longwood, Fla. 339-3119
D ir IV , M ile s N o rth ol M w y 414
on H w y 437

INVENTO RY
LIQ UIDA TIO N
AUCTION
MONDAY,
FEB. 21st 7 p.m.
Furniture, bedding, tools,
reproductions,
brass,
item s, something fo r
everyone.
SANFORD AUCTION
1215 S. FRENCH AVE
323-7340
76—Auto Parts

55—Boa is &amp; Accessories
15' x I " 7 * L u c ra tt, 70 H p
Johnson, P .T .T ., H a w g T .M .,
D e p th t in d e r , a H a r d in g
G a lv a n iitd 111) tr a ile r . 51,000.
3113171.

59—Musical Merchandise
S T E IN W A Y G ra n d P iano
good condition 55.000
371 0770
H O B A R T M . Cabel piano and
bench. Ebony color, v e ry good
cond. 5450 fir m . C all a lte r 4
p .m , 373 1000.

42—Lawn-Garden

M E C H A N IC A L P low E d d y Boy
pow er w h ea l. N ever used. 5150.
C a ll 313 7014 a lta r 5 p .m .
S T O R iN G IT M A K E S W A S T E ­
S E L L IN G IT M A K E S C A SH .
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A D
N O W . C a ll 377 7411 o r 111 9991.

65— Pets Supplies
C O C K E R Spaniai puppies, fu ll
braad. no papers, asking 5100
C a li 373 4875 a lt e r 4.
P U R E B re d t.l w k i. old Poodle
Puppy. F e m e l* A p ric o t, 575,
373 5014 o r 17 1 9471.

Ceramic Tile

Home Improvement

67—Livestock-Poultry

67 A — F o o d

&lt;2-A—Farm Equipment

*300-4:00

i W IT H \
( HOPPLE

FOR R E D dlE
S T p * T t6 Y WE NEED. * HELPING.
5PENPER Cfi THE
MAJOR.’AS PARTY 5 P E N P E R
KEY ISSUES! WE'LL CHAIRMAN, I'LL
WILL RUN
T A P e x is t in g
SEE THAT RE661E
L IH E A
VOTER SENTIMENT 5P E N P E R RUNS
BLO W N
AJ4D FR EE2E &lt;?UT A DISCIPLINED &lt;o E N G IN E
OUR O PPO NEN T
CAMPAIGN! r f k i

F IL L D I R T * T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAND
C la rk A H lr l 373 7540,1133173

M O N .F R I.

t h in k in g

l» l l S K Y L IN E M o b ile Hom e.
74x53 f t . s c re e n e n c lo s u re
porch, u tility shed. Cent. H A . 1
B d rm , 7 B ath. Lot s ite is
50x100 C an be seen a t 174
Leisure D r. N o rth D e B a ry ,
F lo rid a In the M e ad o w lee on
the R iv e r M o b ile H om e Com.
m u n lly . P lease contact Tom
Lvon at 377 1747 lo r ad ditional
in fo rm atio n .

50—Miscellaneous for Sale

Thai# are only e lew of
m a n y hem es w e have
available In area perks.
C all ter a showing

with Major Hoople

S P R IN G
H O U S E C L E A N IN G ?
S E L L T H O S E NO L O N G E R
N E E D E D IT E M S W IT H A
Cl A &amp; S IF IE D A D

L A K E F R O N T B rick 1 b d rm , 3
bath . Enclosed p a tio , w ith
e x tr a
w o rk s h o p .
519,000
assum able 8W % L a k e M a r y .
177 1155 o r 8104911.

C I f • l f OfaonOMMom® IVoami ire

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

71 Dodge C oll engine, 74 Chevy
en gine 150. Toyota engine
____________ 333 4063____________
H U B C A PS odd * over SO asst,
se t* new 1 used W elder w ith
hose, gauges, tanks, c a r l. C ar
Radios 371 7545.

CB. Stereo In s ta lla tio n R e p a ir
A C / * A u,° Sound C enter
A j L 7109 F re n c h A ve
377 4836

Additions &amp;
R em odeling
B A TH S kitchens, roofing, block,
c o n c re te , w in d o w s a d d a
ro o m -fre e estim ates 373 8443

3 U Y JU N K C A R S * T R U C K S
From S IO IoSSO or m ore
C all 377 1474
TOP D o lla r P a id for Junk *
Usvd ca rs, tru cks * h e a v y
equipm ent 377 5990

79—Trucks-Trailers
73 F O R D R A N G E R
P iC k U p . 5700.
131*843.
O N E P H O N E C A LL STARTS A
C L A S S IF IE D A O O N IT S
R E SU LTFU L EN D . THE
N U M B E R IS 372 7411.

KH-Autos for Sale
A B O V E a v e ra g e p ric es paid tar
d e a n c a rs , tru cks and tra v e l
tra ile rs J a c k M a r tin 3117900

ms

Let a C lassified A d help you lln d
m o re ro o m lo r s to ra g e .
C lassified Ads lln d buyers
fast.

A LL TYPES C A R PEN TR Y
Custom B u ilt ad ditions. P atios,
screen room s, c a rp o rt, Door
lo cks, p a n e llin g , s h in g le s ,
rerooling F o r fast service,

tan 323-4917,365-2371
R O O M additions, g a ra g e cgn
v e r s io n s
F IR E P L A C E
S P E C IA L IS T .
Q u a lity
8.
dependable A low est prices.
Ask for D aw son 331 *960

A lum inum Siding &amp;
S creen Room s

C leaning S ervices

A M . K elly clean ing service.
Specialising in re s ta u ra n t A
office buildings. 4 3 1 -tlM .

W IN D O W S , doors, ca rp e n try .
Concrete slobs, c e ra m ic A floor
tile . M in o r re p a irs , firep laces.
Insulation. L ie . Bond 3 2 2 -IU I.

• W E CARE A T *
S E M IN O L E C H IL D C A R E
789 Sem inole D r. L a k e M a r y .
C hildren a re our s p e c ia lly i W e
a re State licensed and c e r­
tifie d lo r teaching and c a rin g .
Low fa m ily rate s. C all 377 1950
lor In fo rm a tio n .
HAPPY ELVES
Q u ality C hild C a ra A P ro S ch o o l..
P a rt lim a and fu ll lim e . In ­
d iv id u a l a tte n tio n , T L C A
In te n ts a s p e c ia lty . S la t *
licenced, iso E . C ry s ta l L a k e
A ve ., L a k e M e r y 11).7384.

C o tte r id P W o r k
B E A L C oncrete l m a n q u a lity
operation p a '-m d riv ew ay s
D a y * l i t 7311 Eves 377 1171
S W IF T C O N C R E T E w orn a ll
ty p e s F o o le r s , d r iv e w a y s ,
pad*, floors, pools, com plete.
F re e est. 322 7103

D rap eries
D R A P E S B Y D E B B IE
Reasonable rates
111-5790
C U S T O M M A D E D R A P E R IE S
T r a v e rs * Rods In s talled .
^ D o ro th ^ H U J J M O ^ ^

L ittle w ani ads bring big, big
results. Just tr y one. 3711411
or 131 9991.

Drywall Repairs
DRYW ALL
P la ster A C elling
rep a irs. " A ll w ork gu aran
te e d " L ie . A Ins. D ry w a ll
Specialty S erv., In c . 788*112.

Electrical
M ASTER
E le c tr ic ia n .
R egislered c o n tra cto r. C om m .
A Res Q u a lity hom e s e rv le t.
F re e ESI. Jam as P au l 23J7S59.

W an t Ads G et People Together
— Those B uying A nd Those
Sailing 177 3411 o r 81I 9993.

Excavating Services
v i mo

k t c a v a t in q

480 Case B ec kh o * L o a d e r wextender hoe. 9 yd . d u m p ,
tru c k low bed serv 333. 5571,

D eG arm e au Bookkeeping Ser
17 7 3 707
Personal In co m e Taxes, open
evenings.

P IA Z Z A M A S O N R Y
Q u a lity W o rk A t R easonable
P rices F re e E illm a tv * .
Ph. 349 5500 A ft. S p .m .

Fencing
F E N C E in s tallatio n . C h ain lin k,
wood post A r a il, A te r m fence.
License A insured. 333 4191.

It

you a r e having d iffic u lty
lin dm g a place lo liv e, ca r to
d riv e , a lob, or som e se rvic e
you have need ol. read a ll our
w an t ao s ev ery day

M a in te n an c e ot a ll types
C arp en try, pain tin g , plum bing
A e lectric 331*031________
P A IN T IN G and repaTr^Jalio and
s c re e n p o rc h b u m
c a ll
a n y tim e )?1 9481

Income Tax
D B F .5. Inc. 1908 F ren ch , Bust
ness A in d iv id u a l incom e la x
9 9 M F . 9 12 S a l. 331-1912.

L Ifto n L a w n S ervice
C o m m ercia l an d R esldantlal.
W M a r C lean up. 331-SS48.

*A 4 L A W N S E R V IC E *
M o w , w re d ir lm . h a u l. R e g u la r
Service. I tim e clean up. I 4&lt;
J»r*. best r j i u ^ t f i A a i * .

Lawn Mowers
M IS T fc R , F ix It JO* M c A d am s
w ill re p a ir your m ow ers et
your hom e C all 377 7055

M ajor Appliance
_______ Repair________
A p p lia n c e s , w *
service re frig e ra to r*, w ash
ers. dryers, rang es. Reas,
rale s 17 1 8334.

j o h n n ie s

Nursinq Center
OUR R ATES A R E LO W ER
L a s e v ifw N ursm g Center
719 E Second S t . Sanlord
_____________377 *707_____________
L O V IN G P R IV A T E H O M E .
E x c e lle n t 74 h r . c a r t A
c o m p a n io n s h ip lo r a ld a r ly .
Reasonable. 3714105

P ainlm g
H O U SE painting 1500
a house. A n y s lit .
473 1014. 0 5 4009
B IL L 'S P A IN T IN G
In te rio r E x te rio r pain tin g . Lig h t
carp en try. Hom es pressure
c le a n e d B u sin ess 8 1 1 3 *2 1 .
H om e 8115114 B ill Steiner.

Pest Control
SPENCER PESTC O N TRO L
C om m ., R ead., L a w n . T e rm ite
W o rk. 111-8845. A sk lo r Cham p.

Ptaitadng

Carpentry
Handyman
C A R P E N T E R re p a irs and
additions. 30 yrs exp
C all 177 1357.

C A R P E N T E R 3S yrs exp Sm all
rem odeling tobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 171 9445

H A N D Y M A N Services P ain tin g ,
r e p a ir s , e tc . R e a s o n a b le
g u a r w o rk . 4384851, 873-4781,

Carpet Cleaning

A LL
Phases of P lasterin g
P lasterin g re p a ir, stucco, h a rd
rrite, s im u la te d b n c k i l l 599)

Piano Lessons
Home Improvement

• T R IP L E A *
W P ric e sp ecial. 514.95 for
F a m ily o r L iv in g R tn . 841 77*0

A &amp; D ROOFIN
7) y rs . experience, Licensed A
Insured.
F re e E s tim a te *o n Rooting.
R e-R ooting and R epairs.
Shingles, B u ilt U p e n d T ile .

JAMES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON
3 2 2 * 9 4 1 7
M o rrison Roofing Co.
S p r c la lltln g in s h in g le s and
build up. Low Low Rates, 34
h r. service. 7 M H 7 1 .__________
N E W reroofing, end
re p a irs . IS Y rs . E xp .
1771914

Built up and Shingle rooty
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAMES E. L E E INC.
*af

Secretariat Services

TO W E R S B E A U T Y SA LO N
F O R M E R L Y H a rrie tt s Beauty
Nook 519 E 1st SI . 377 5747

Brick &amp; Block
Stonework

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

Lawn Service

B eauty C ite

Bookkeeping

W e H an d le The
W hole B ail O l W ax

Rooting

C L A R E N C E 'S
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
We se rvic e a ll m a jo r brands
Reas rate s IS yrs exp 373 0131.

A N IM A L H aven BoardlnQ and
G ro o m in g K e n n e ls h e a te d ,
insulated, screened, fly proof
inside, outside tu n s . Fans.
Also AC cages. W e c a ter to
your p e t* P h 332 5757

Remodeling Specialist

P O R C H E S , b a th ro o m flo o rs ,
rotlen wood rep lace m e n t, all
sm all jobs w elcom e. 37I O t7t.
C O L L IE R 'S H o m e R e p a irs
c a rp en try , roofing, painting,
w indow re p a ir j ) t a ij j

15 years R eliab le S ervice.
R ep a ir A c , ra frlg s ., Ira e ie rs ,
ranges, d-w, w ash d rye rs,
111- 8449 3)1-8767.

Boarding &amp; Grooming

Home Repairs

FO R efficien t and re lia b le H om e
Cleaning C all P a tty ’s H om e
P am p erin g Service 331 35*6.

A L U M IN U M Siding, v in y l siding
so llit A fascia. A lu m in u m
gutters and down spouts.
F r E st. 305 16 5 5343.

Appliance Services

C a rp e n try by " B IL L "
W O O D A rte s ia n G en e ral c a r ­
p entry, screened ro o m d o o rs
etc. R eas. R a t t f . 127 2420.

Financing A v a ila b le

Child Caro

77—Junk Cars Removed
W E P A Y top d o lla r for
Junk C a r* and Trucks
CBS AulO P a rts 79 3 4 505

t .C

C O O D r A SONS
Tile C ontractors
171 015?

R em odeling

1*77 V W B e e !I*. R uns w ell,
r e b u ill e n g in e a n d Ir a n
s m lis io n 5150 A lt 4 1710415

C eram ic Tile

R O O M A dditions, rem o d elin g ,
d r y w a ll
hung,
c e ilin g s
sp rayed, fire p la c e *, rooting
113 4811.

D on’t D es p air O r P u ll Y o u r H a ir
- U se A W an t A d . 371 2411 o r
811 t m

M E IN T Z E R T IL E E &gt; p sm ee
1953 N ew A old w ork co m m 1
resid F ree e s tim a te 1498341

S EA M LESS alum inum gutters,
cover these ev e rh a n g s walum inum sotlit A fascia. (984)
7/17174 c e lle d . Free est.

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S of m erchandise
ev ery d a y .

P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
Continuing s e c re ta ria l services
a v a ila b le in o u r office
172 5849.

Sprinkler Systems
And Repairs
SANFORD
ir r ig a t io n
A
S p rin k ler System s Inc. F re e
est. 321 0747 . 75 yrs. exp.

Steam and
S T E A M and Reassure C leaning
(M o b ile H em es, H ouse* and
R eefs) H ouse painting, and
m in o r ca rp en te r rep a irs. A ll
w o rk
g u a r a n te e d .
F ra *
estim ates. 333-4384 c r 83M T71

stonework
A L L B rick , B lock and Slone
w ork D riv e w a y s and patio
F IR E P L A C E
S P E C IA L IS T
Q u ality A D ep en d an t* and
lowest prices. A sk to r D aw son
3314*40

Temporary Services
Kids o u tgrow the sw ing set o r
s m a ll bicycle? S ell these Idle
item s w ith a w an t ad. T o p la ce
your ad , c a ll your frie n d ly
C lassified gal a t Tha H erald ,
1721411, o r 831 99*1.

TV Repair
Sun T V I t r v k * Center
Service ch arg e 57.95 plus p a rts
a m m akes. 7ia 175*

T ree Service
T R I County T re e Service. T rim
re m o v e ,
tr a s h ,
h a u lin g ,
firew ood. F r . E st. 321-9410.
S T U M P 5 ground out.
R easonable, fre e estim ates.
78841841
JO H N A L L E N Y A R U A T R E E
S E R V IC E . W e 'll re m o v e p in *
trees. R eas, p ric e 31I-S380.

U gly Tree SlumpT
Remove 51 inch-diam eter
R *m Tree Service II M 1 9 1

Upholstery

Pump Spits Serv.

'.O R E N E 'S U p h o ls tery. F r o *
pick up. del i est. C ar A boat
seats Fuen 3 7 M T 1 *

SANFORD
ir r ig a t io n
A
S p rin k ler System s. In c 24 h r.
Serv IS yr». ex p 37107*7.

G E T T H O S E L U X U R Y IT E M S
FO R A F R A C T IO N O F T H E IR
COST F R O M T O D A Y 'S W A N T
AOSI

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10B— E vening H e ra ld , S a nlord, FI.

Sunday, F»b. &gt; 0 ,1»M

WINUPTO*2.000 INCASH!

ALL THE FUN&amp;EXCITEMENT BEGINSTODAY

OVER«490.000INPRIZES AVAILABLE!
,

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SU PER B O N U S
CLAUSSKN REFRIOtRATID (WHOLC OR
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SUNLIGHT (LIQUID)

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IE EE BONELESS DELMONICO

W-D BRANO U&amp;OA CHOICE W HOlf
BONELESS (EILET MJGNON) 7 U S (CUT
A WRAPPED!

HICKORY SWEET BONELESS SMOKED
HALT FULLY COOKED (7/4 I I AVO.)

W-D BRAND PURE
HAND!PACKS

Tenderloin . . . u *3 "

S A V E 19
S A V E 10

SAVE 70

SAVE 34

CAN

SAVE 30

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Evening Herald
Sunday, Feb. 20, 1983
. *

Thursday, Feb. 24, 1983
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�7— E ve n in g H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.
J— H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r, S anlord, FI.

Sunday, Feb. JO, l»SJ
T h ursday, F e b .28, m ?

New Sanford Hospital In Full Operation
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
The ultra modem $26 million Central Florida Regional
Hospital off U.S. 17-92 and Mangoustlne Avenue in Sanford
opened its doors June 2, moving its patients from the old
Seminole Memorial Hospital to the new facility.
In its first six months of operation, the hospital admitted
5,026 adults and pediatric patients and had 393 new babies bom
In the facility. Over 10,000 people were processed through the
emergency room as emergency patients or outpatients.
And usage warranted the opening of a six-bed intensive care
unit as phase one of the projected plan of having an eight bed
coronary care unit and eight bed Intensive care unit. The two
had been combined.
An additional 12-member staff was trained to man the units.
Aside from the rise in census, separating the units provides
coronary care patients an atmosphere where they will not be
disturbed by the equipment associated with a surgical in­
tensive care unit.
And construction for the Sanford Medical Center, located
southwest of the hospital on a 13.3-acre tract, was initiated in
mid-October by Hospital Corporation of America, owners-

operators of the hospital.
The two-story, 32,000-square-foot facility is expected to be
completed in July. Spaces in the building, which features
energy-saving construction, are being sold on a condominium
basis.
The facility will be convenient for many patients, who in
connection with their visits to physicians use the testing ser­
vices at the hospital.
Since the Central Florida Regional Hospital opened, use of
its computerized tomography scanner (CAT Scan) has In­
creased by more than 30 percent. Forty-five percent of the
total scans were done for outpatients and 15 percent are
referrals from other area hospitals, which do not have CAT
capabilities. In August when radiology expanded its hours,
usage rose some 20 percent.
Most of the hospital administration’s energies have been
spent organizing after the move, refining systems and
generally settling In.
Each department has come up with Internal refinements
which will help patient service through better support
systems. Materials management established an exchange cart
system — a 24-hour supply of items needed by nursing units

on a mobile cart ready for Instant use and replenished each
morning.
The hospital business office has established a patient
counselor service which provides personal contact with
patients for their accounts. A family will permanently be
assigned to a certain counselor, thereby providing continuity
and personal Interest.
Maintenance has trained personnel to repair and maintain
the phone system and to repair patient television on premises
(television Is free for patient use). The department also has
modified thermostats In most patient rooms, allowing patients
or nurses to adjust to patient's Individual needs and has in­
creased Inventories on parts providing quick turn-around on
many types of repairs.
The hospital administration ran Into few problems with the
new facility after opening. Onty the normal problems that
could be expected in any new construction were seen.
However, two things become apparent immediately and
were corrected as quickly as possible. Those were the need for
more parking space and automatic doors for the front en­
trance.
A new paved parking lot providing spaces for employees was

T e sa r B elieves Position M u c h M o re Than Job

built southwest of the hospital. A double set of automatic doors
replaced the entrance doors which proved too heavy for
elderly patients and guests to open with ease.
Traffic Dow in the ambulatory section of the emergency
room Is being studied and solutions are sought. This applies to
outpatients as well as emergency patients.
Dr. Franklin D. Clontz, former hospital chief of staff, said
with the expanded equipment at the facility many patients will
no longer have to be transferred to other fadlitles for
diagnostic workup or definitive therapy for their illnesses.
For a year before the hospital opened, a recruitment
program was undertaken to attract additional quality doctors
in anticipation of the new facility.
"We now have ome 50 doctors who are working here," Dr.
Clontz said. These Include an anesthesiologist and, other
specialists. "We’ve brought on board a gastroenterologist who
specializes in Internal examinations to detect diseases of the
GI tract, for example,^’ Dr. Clontz said.
"AU in all, we have a highly skilled professional team of
doctors and nurses to provide the best quaUty health care," he
said.

It Takes More Than A Good Secretory To Run An Efficient Office

Hospital Reflection Of Administrator
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The $26 million Central Florida
Regional Hospital situated on a spacious
tract north of Lake Monroe Is completing
its first year of operation.
The gleaming new and ultra modern
medical facility, although a part of the
Hospital Corporation of America's chain
cf m edical facilities, is operated
autonomously and exudes a personality
of its own.
The hospital's personality to a large
degree reflects the ch aracter and
bearing of its administrator, James
"Jim ' Tesar.
The hustle and bustle of the hospital is
no more alive and active than its ad­
ministrator. To him, the position he holds
is more than Just a Job, it’s a way of life
or at least the focal point around which
his life revolves.
It's not Just a 9 to 5 job, but a position
requiring 24 hours a day dedication to
match the hospital activities for which he
Is responsible.
Tesar has no normal or average day.
On any given day at 7 a.m. he could be in
his office or walking from department to
department in the hospital or giving a
speech at a breakfast meeting.
And personnel at the hospital greet him
aa a familiar face, a "nice guy", almost a
.personal and concerned friend as he
intakes hU rounds, keeping his finger on
'th e pulse of the hospital.A career in hospital administration
didn’t Just happen to Tesar. It’s
something that required hard work, and
a dedication to education — in fact eight
long y ean of going to night school to gain
his bachelor's degree.
The 42-year-old man, born in East St.
Louis, 111., right across the Mississippi
River from Missouri, worked during his
high school years at night, holidays and
weekends in a bank clearing operation.
After high school In 1958, Tesar got
Involved in medical work by accident.
There weren’t too many jobs to be had in
the St. Louis area. Friends of the family
were studying X-ray technology. And
Tesar with their encouragement began
training in that line at the local hospital.
After a year, he Joined the U.S. Navy
where he served for five years — 19591964 — after Korea and before Vietnam.

He was a corpsman and finished his Xray technician training while in the
Navy, becoming a chief X-ray
technician.
After the Navy he worked in various
areas of a hospital before becoming a
pharmaceutical salesman.
And Tesar began his college training at
nights under the G.I. Bill. After eight
years of r'ght school, he graduated from
Southern Illinois University In Edwardsville with a bachelor of science degree In
business administration.
In graduate school, he pursued a
m aster’s degree in health care ad­
ministration and took a year off from
work to give it his full time. He received
his m aster’s from Washington University
of St. Louis.
With his graduate school degree In
hand, Tesar went to work as
administrator at Oklahoma Children's
Memorial Hospital. Four years later, he
felt it was time to make a change and
afte r looking at the opportunities
available, Tesar got Interested In HCA.
He was administrator of the Lawnwood
Medical Center at Ft. Pierce for 18
months before becoming administrator
at the Sanford hospital almost three
years ago.
T esa r's wife, Janice, a full-time
homemaker, Is a devoted worker for the
.Seminole County Humane Society.
.Tesar'a favorite off-duty leisure around
the home In Cardinal Oaks, Lajce Mary,
is gardening, especially caring for his
array of azaleas. He also likes to fish and
play tennis, but has little time for these.
Another favorite pastim e was a
vegetable garden, but that heavier
gardening was squeezed out in the time
crunch.
The Tesars have two dogs, a part
German Shepherd named Kava, and a
full German Shepherd named Samantha.
He is a member of Klwanls and Rotary,
and on the board of directors of the
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
and the Migrant Health Center.
Tesar, as hospital administrator, must
attend various hospital-related meetings
and speaks before civic and fraternal
groups in Volusia and Seminole counties
about hospital or health-related Issues.
Aside from all the meetings and
speeches, Tesar sees his major role as a

provider of patient care and this Involves
different tasks and duties.
After his daUy morning meeting, he
tours the hospital to visit with patients
and employees "to keep in touch" and to
"get a feel of what's going on." If a
patient or an employee has a particular
problem they feel he can help with, there
is always time.
For patients who want to talk to him by
telephone, he has left instructions with
his secretary to put them right through to
his office.
"I keep the communication links
open," he said. To get further Input from
patients, they are asked to fill out
questionnaires on the hospital service
after discharge on what they Uke and
what they didn’t like.
And for the benefit of the employees
and the hospital, round table discussions
are held with employees once monthly.
At that time the employees may talk
about anything they desire. They are not
only made to feel that their recom­
mendations arc essential to hospital
operations, but the recommendations are
seriously considered, he noted.
What qualities does a good hospital
administrator possess? "He must like to
work with people," Tesar said, adding an
administrator realizes the hospital sells a
service and that service Is patient care.
"And a hospital Js labor Intensive. There
are a lot of employees here and they must
be considered."
Each hospital is unique, Tesar said,
and what makes it unique is the com­
munity it serves. "A hospital Is a com­
munity affair, a community service, with
a lot of influence unto itself through the
makeup of the medical staff with its ratio
of family practitioners to specialists."
And Tesar notes that quality care is
HCAs specific mission in hospital
management.
Educational programs for patients are
also a necessity. Current programs in­
clude teaching cancer patients how to
live with their illness and another
teaching diabetics how to live with their
disease. The program for diabetics ex­
plains the appropriate diet for their
needs and the medication necessary for
survival.
For the woman and her husband, who
are expecting a new baby, is pre-natal
classes and postpartum care classes.

WILLIAM L. ORAMKOW
LFD

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&gt;

FILES

P H O N E 3 6 5 -6 6 3 2

O V I E D O . F L O R ID A

�E ve n in g H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.
H e ra ld A d v e r tlu r , S anford, FI.

For T h e C o m m u n ity In 1983

Sunday, Feb. 20,1981—J
T h u n d a y , Feb. 24, &gt;911—3

Sanford M ayor 'Sees' Great Things
By DONNA ESTES

resolution of the double taxation battle
Herald Staff Writer
will do much to smooth over countyAccording to Mayor Lee P. Moore’s municipal relationships.
crystal ball, Sanford will see new In­
And he looked for a resolution of the
dustry coming to Sanford In 1983 - In­ downtown development lawsuit. The
dustry that will provide Jobs.
lawsuit, currently, in the district court of
Hopefully this prediction will be real appeal at Daytona Beach has been
tills year," he said.
holding up renovation in the downtown
"It also looks like Seminole’s cities business district for several years.
and county governments are going to
The only cloudy area In Knowles’
resolve their differences over double predictions was w hether the state
taxation rather than cutting each others’ Legislature will continue to pass laws
throats."
detrimental to city government Interests.
And Moore is especially optimistic the
"The best thing would be for the
nationally recognized biologist Dr. Legislature to decide not to help us
Donald O’Connor will tell the city how to anymore," said Knowles.
resolve its problem with the state
The most Important happening In the
D epartm ent
of
Environm ental Sanford city government In 1982 was the
Regulation over Sanford's sewer system. Florida Legislature’s raising of the sales
DER has refused to Issue the city a tax which should result in nearly $500,000
permit to continue dumping its treated in new money being pumped Into the
. sewage from the Poplar Avenue plant, city’s coffers in the 1982-83 fiscal year.
1 Insisting Instead that the city go to the This anticipated new revenue enabled
' almost prohibitively expensive, from the Sanford to reduce property taxes by 11.58
city's point of view, method of sewage per $1,000 assessed valuation for city
i disposal.
residents.
• In Sanford's continuing battle with the
At least this is Knowles's view from a
; state agency, the City Commission has purely governmental standpoint.
; retained Dr. O’Connor’s services. Dr.
Knowles said the funds from sales tax
O’Connor was a consultant to the DER receipts helped relieve the tax burden on
and taught many members of the property owners.
department about sewage treatment and
"The Florida tax structure has been so
how it would Judge whether a treatment manipulated by the State Legislature
plant is polluting a waterway. He also with the high rate of exemptions that
assisted the agency in writing its rules property taxes are no longer a viable
and regulations.
means of supporting local government
Meanwhile, City M anager W.E. services," Knowles said.
“ Pete" Knowles’ crystal ball showed the
Moore, however, believes the April 8
expansion of industrial and non- twin hall storms interspersed with what
residential properties to broaden the tax may have been a tornado and the
base. His crystal ball also showed damage left in Its aftermath was the

%\t

Boaters and fisherm en use the launching facilities a t Sanford’s
Monroe H arbour M arina, one of the com m unity's strongest a d ­
vantages.
most Important event of the year.
“The storm certainly had a lot of effect
on the people — some devastating and
some good," Moore said. He noted
homeowners who lost the roofs to their
houses, others who saw their automobile
bodies damaged with numerous pits from
huge hail stones and business people who

NURSING
CENTER
W here your friends are

have used the old Seminole Memorial
Hospital over the 26 years It liad fur­
nished medical treatment to the area
were delighted when the new $26 million
C entral F lo rid a Regional Hospital
opened its doors to patients on June 2.
While half of the 1 cent increase in
sales tax was slated to come back to local
governments — cities and counties —
Moore at public hearings on the city’s
1982-83 budget said Sanford may not
receive all of the $500,000 it has been
promised in revenue from that source.
He pointed to cuts in state government
ordered by Gov. Bob Graham because
state revenues, including those from
sales taxes, are not coming in as ex­
pected.
The city took the safer route in its
budget and noted an expectation of
$467,762 from that source.
The city adopted an $8.5 million budget
for this fiscal year with a tax rate of $4.37
per $1,000 assessed valuation. Despite the
reduction in the tax rate, property
owners saw little difference in their tax
bills from last year because Seminole
Count Property Appraiser Bill Suber
completed a county wide reappraisal of
real property.

Countywide, property values were
boosted by 15 to 35 percent for an average
suffered the loss of plate glass windows of 20 percent per property. Sanford
and the resulting water damage saw the property owners received slight
storms as a disaster.
reductions in city and county taxes, but
However, Independent roofers around generally saw increases in School Board
the city, automobile body repairmen and taxes. Actual savings were slight.
glass people may have seen the storm as
For months after the April 8 hail storm
a financial boon, he said.
that showered the Sanford area with
The medical community and those who stones as large as golf balls, clean up and

repair to city government facilities and
vehicles took place.
Damage to city property, facilities and
vehicles was estimated at $300,000.
The list of damage to city property and
equipment filled six legal-sized sheets.
The civic center had to be reroofed and
repaired to the tune of nearly $90,000; the
city sewer plant's sewage sludge bed
covers had to be replaced; broken plateglass windows at city hall and the dvic
center had lo be replaced along with the
civic center’s sun shades; 16 traffic lights
were replaced with new ones; some 64
traffic signs were missing and had to be
replaced.
During the year, the city spent some
$100,000 to resurface portions of 36 streets
in the city.
New sodium vapor street lights cast a
yellowish glow over many thoroughfares
in the community as the new more in­
tense lights were replacing the old
mercury vapor street lights.
By mid-November, 383 new high
pressure sodium vapor lights owned by
the city were installed.
Meanwhile, Florida Power and Light
Co. in a cooperative effort had converted
900 of the 1,500 street lights it owns in the
city to the new sodium vapor.
The new more intense lights brighten
larger areas than the old-fashioned ones
and they cost less to operate. While the
mercury vapor lights give off 4,500
lumens of light, the sodium vapor lamps
give off 5,800 lumens.

TONY
RUSSI
INSURANCE AGENCY
t

Wm

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FOR PRIVATE PATIENTS
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PH (90S) 322-6707

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TONY RUSSI

Voh Gum, Wtuwgw ot Kwgld'a Shoe Sirnl
RICHARD RUSSI

INSURANCE
SPECIALISTS
When it comes to insurance, the Tony
Russi Team has the edge. Our specialists
don't just sell you a policy. We study your
Individual needs and recommend the exact
coverage you need with one of the 14
companies we represent. It doesn't cost
more to deal with the best!
D o n G r e e n W it h W if e D o n n a 8 S on D a r r o n
Don Knight Is proud to announce
that Don Green Is manager of
Knight's Shoes. Donnie Is a native
of Sanford, twenty-four years old,
and has a wife and son, Donna and
Darron Green. He has lived in
Virginia for the past four years
where he has successfully
managed a family shoe store tor 3

years in Richmond. Donnie
received a diploma in Professional
Shoe Counseling in 1910. He
returned to Sanford in July of 1982
to continue his career with
Knight's Shoe Store. Please
welcome Donnie and family back
home,

A ll Forms of insurance and Bonds

COMMERCIAL • A U TO • BOAT
HOMEOW NERS • A V IA T IO N
STARR COCKRELL

TmmT O N Y

RU SSI

IN S U R A N C E A G E N C Y
S in c e

322-0204

1968

Phone 322-0285
2575 S. French Ave.
Sanford

irts u y w t remember things better if we learn them jutt before going to bed
learn them in the morning. Fewer events interfere with the memory, they say.

1

�4— E ve n in g H e ra ld , S anford, FI.
Sunday, Feb. JO, 1WJ
4— H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r, S anford, FI. T h ru sd a y, Feb. 2 4 ,1»B3

YOU CAN COUNT ON KADER

Sanford Parks, Recreation
Attractions A re For All A ge s
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
The words "parks and recreation" may spark
fond memories of childhood play In the minds of
most Sanford residents, but to those people who
work in the city’s Parks and Recreation Depart­
ment, the words mean "service.”
"It is our Job to perform a service with a smile for
the residents of Sanford," Jam es Jemigan, parks
and recreation director, says. “ We operate under
the philosophy that the people come first and the
city is second. We aren’t confused about that, like
the chicken-and-cgg question. We know who comes
first."
The Parks and Recreation Department, with a
fiscal budget of $494,622 is composed of 20 staff
members, including the director, two superin­
tendents (one in parks and one in recreation), 11
parks workers and eight recreation workers (in­
cluding two clerical and two maintenance per­
sonnel). The department also employs a person
part-time to serve as curator for the city’s museumlibrary.
Jem igan, who has worked for the city 22 years,
receives a salary’ of about $32,000 annually. He says
a new man coming into his position could expect to
make about $19,000 a year, but because of his 22
years of service his salary has gone up with
longevity increases.
"We have some excellent people working for us
right now," Jem igan comments.
Of the 20 people employed in the department, 11
are black and nine are white: there are IB men in

the department, with two women who serve as
clerical personnel; and the curator of the city
museum-library Is a woman, Jemigan notes.
"We’ve had black, white, Chinese and Korean
workers in the department," Jemigan says. "It
makes no difference to me as long os you have
qualified people for qualified Jobs. You can’t
legislate social comfort."
But what, exactly, do all these people do?
"We ore charged with maintaining 104 acres of
parkland; providing recreational programs for the
com m unity, adm inistration of the m unicipal
cemetery, the Sanford Civic Center and museumlibrary," Jemigan says. "Each one has its own
problems to be solved."
"One of our current goals for the department and
the city is to acquire large sections of land for
natural parks," he notes. "Some of our parks are
developed with equipment, athletic fields and tennis
courts, and we have two recreation centers. We
want to develop some natural parks with more open
space. I think people enjoy getting away from
telephones, mechanical equipment, and even other
people, and that’s the goal of these parks. The
major obstacle to acquiring the land is the ex­
tremely high cost of property."
Jemigan says the goal of the recreation section of
the department is to be an “ innovative force in the
community by getting citizen groups more involved
in planning and financing programs."
"We hope to evolve to the philosophy of ‘Those
who play must pay," ’ he 3ays. "With the rising
costs, we just can’t continue to ask every taxpayer

THE JE W E L E R S WITH
A REPUTATION FOR
INTEGRITY AND
E X P E R IE N C E

to foot the bill for something they may never use.
"We’re going to have to withdraw from patting
Johnny on the head, which we’ll miss very much,
but we’ll serve as organizers, allowing the com­
munity to get more Involved,” he adds.
The department received a $12,000 grant from the
federal government to develop the Marshall Avenue
Park, Jemigan says.
"Since 1977, about $200,000 in grant money has
been brought into the city for park development,"
he notes. " I’m afraid this trend won’t continue,
because we arc looking for a real shutdown in
grants because of President Reagan's cutback in
aid.

Im m e diately upon entering Kader's you w ill ap­
preciate the w a rm and frie n d ly atm osphere. You're
free to browse around 'III your heart’s content, or If you
w ant Im m ediate service any one of our experienced
sta ff of 7 w ill be pleased to assist you.
You’ ll be pleased w ith the excellent selection of fin s
gems, delicate crysta l, etc., china and s ilv e r fro m
fla tw e a r to the most ornate s ilv e r pieces. E arrings,
p in s, c u fflin k s , n e ckla ce s, w ill dazzle y o u r
Im agination. In addition, you w ill fin d novelty g ifts and
a nice selection of Item s fo r Infants and teens.

KADER JEWELERS
112 SOUTH PARK AVENUE
DOWNTOWN SANFORD 322-2363

American Gem Society
) Registered Jeweler

Included in the development of Marshall Avenue
Park will open park area for the children, tennis
courts, handball, a picnic table or two, jogging
trails and parking," he adds.

SERVING YOU FOR 40YEARS!

The Parks and Recreation Department, in ad­
dition to developing and maintaining the city’s
parks and providing recreational programs, also
makes reservations for the Civic Center, the Youth
and Westside Recreation Centers, and weddings in
the parks, especially in the gazebo at Centennial
Park, located at Fifth Street and Park Avenue.

O F F IC E

"As I said before, we are public servants, and the
people of this community are our Number One
priority," he adds. “If they have a problem we can
handle, we are more than happy to talk to them. I
have an open-door policy in this office. No one
screens my calls. If someone wants to talk to me,
I'm here."

EQUIPMENT

Each Park In Sanford Offers Much To Do
By DONNA ESTES
from Tuesday through Friday
from 7 to 9 p.m.
Herald Staff Writer
For adult participation, the
For recreation in Sanford,
Recreation Department, co­
one need go no farther than
sponsors the ShufBcboard and
the
c ity ’s
P arks
and
Tourist Club, which offers
Recreation Department.
many varied club activities.
{ P a r k s and Recreation
H ere's a breakdown of
D irector Jim Jcrnigan,
where the action is in San­
Recreation
Superintendent
ford:
jfeff Monson and Parks
Fort Mellon Park, Seminole
S u p e rin te n d e n t H ow ard
Boulevard, 26 acres — lighted
Jeffries offer various ac ­
softball field, lighted Little
tivities throughout the year
League Field; Tourist Club
for all age groups.
building with 12 illuminated
In the Spring and Summer,
shuffleboard courts, four
(he following activities are in
u n lig h te d
sh u ffle b o a rd
swing: arts and crafts for
courts; children's playground
children 6 to 12 years old; teen
with swings, slides, sand­
ceramics, sixth grade and up;
boxes;
picnic shelters,
adult ceramics; Pee Wee
climbing bars and inerry-gobaseball, B-9 years, Midget,
round; concession stand with
10-12, and Junior League, 13
broadcasting booth, barbecue
and 14 years old; Girls' Lassie
league softball, 9-12; Girls’ stands, picnic tables and lake.
Civic Center, near Seminole
Junior League softball, 13-15;
Boulevard — auditorium for
^om en's softball and men’s
1,200, youth wing, and patio
softball league; sum m er
for dancing and roller
playground, 6-12 y ears;
skating; basketball complex.
tennis, children and film hour,
Lake Gem Park, 24th Street
(-12 y ears; Sanford road
and Lake Drive — lake with
races in conjunction with the
playground, eight swings and
Kiwanis Club. Sum m er
picnic area.
boating and boating class, 8-14
French Avenue and 4th
years old, and adult exercise
S treet— Jaycee information
classes.
center; four picnic tables and
In the fall and winter, the
benches; night lighting.
following activities are
W estside
C enter,
919
available; weight-lifting for
Avenue
—
boys 14-18 years old; baton, G Persim m on
years
and
up;
g irls’ recreation center, Little
league field, indoor gym­
basketball 10-15; Junior boys'
nasium for basketball, one set
basketball, 10-12; punt, pass
of swings and one climber.
and kick contest, 8-12 years;
Bay Avenue Park, — IJttle
teen ceramics, sixth grade
League baseball field, eight
and up; adult ceramics; boys'
swings in playground area.
Bag football, 10-12 years old,
Centennial Park,
Park
and Santa’s Calling.
Avenue — gazebo and heavy
The Sanford Civic Center,
floral plantings; nice for
Youth.Wlng, and the Westside
concerts, weddings or small
recreation Center are open
gatherings; ball playing
d^ily during the school term
for students from 2:30 to 5 discouraged.
Cultural Arts Building,
fc tn .
West Fifth Street and Oak
At Westside, other activities
Avenue — ceramics lab and
(delude an occasional dance
art
association.
oh F rid ay and S aturday
Washington Oaks, Sterling
nights. The center is open

Avenue — basketball court,
playground area, swings,
climbing bar.
Pinehurst Park, West 24th
and Marshall — softball and
youth baseball field, lighted;
tennis court, lighted; two
slides, playground area,
shoot-to-shoot, acrobat bars,
merry-go-round, baby swings,
adult swings.
Speer Park, Mellonville and
18th Street — playground
area, slide and eight swings,
picnic tables.
Jlnklns C ircle Park,
Jinkins Circle and P ark
Avenue —
tennis court,
unlightcd; basketball court;
playground with swings,
slides and play barrells.
W'ynnewood Park,
Sum­
merlin Avenue and 24th Street
— slide, swings, climbers and
park benches.
South P lnecrest P ark,
Shannon Drive and French
Avenue — playground area,
swings, climbing bar and
merry-go-round and unlighted
tennis court.
Magnolia Avenue at 30lh
Street — playground area,
castle walk, for small swings.
George Starke Park, 4.5
acres, end of West Fifth Street
— floral and natural area;
exercise area; picnic tables,
basketball court, covered
shelter for gatherings of 20-25
persons.

ches; fishing.
Rands Mel), (Next to
G a rre tt’s Shoe Store) —
slated for future develop­
ment.
Coastline P ark, Eighth
Street and Poplar Avenue, 7.4
acres — two lighted tennis

*

courts, lighted five basketball
courts, park benches.
M arshal) Avenue P ark,
M arshall Avenue at 25th
Street — tennis, handball
courts and multi-use ball field
and n atu re tra il, under
construction.

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110 P a rk Avenue, Banford, FL
Phone 323-2631

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�Evening herald, Sanford, FI.
Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Sanford

Seminole County Pori Authority Executive Director Dennis Dolgner presides
over an active industrial complex as well as river port for boat and barge
traffic coming up the St. Johns from Jacksonville.

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AIRPORT
INDUSTRIES
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T ogether We Are
Now One Of The
G reatest G eneral
Aviation And Industrial
A irports In The Southeast

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Sanford, Seminole County’s largest
and oldest city, Is In the heart of
Central Florida on the St. Johns River
and I^ake Monroe.
The city celebrated the centennial
of its founding in 1977, Although it has
a population exceeding 25,000, Sanford
has been able to retain its casual
lifestyle and the city's residents are
able to enjoy the amenities of a large
city with the charms of a smaller
town.
Sanford, situated In one of the
nation’s fastest growing areas, is
within easy access to Orlando, Walt
Disney World, Epcot, Sea World,
beaches both on the Atlantic Ocean
and the Gulf of Mexico and major
shopping malls.
The county seat of Seminole County,
Sanford is the headquarters of the
county’s public school system and the
county’s government.
Sanford boasts of having six public
elementary schools — Pine Crest on
27th Street with kindergarten through
third grade paired with Goldsboro
Elementary's fourth and fifth grade
at 1301 W. 16th St.; Sanford Grammar
School, first through fifth grade,
between Seventh Street and Myrtle
Ave.; Hopper Elementary at 1101 Bay
Ave.; Idyllwllde, 43Q Vihlen Ave., and
Southside at 1401 S. Magnolia. There
arc also two middle schools located in
the city — Lakevicw Middle on
takeview Drive and Sanford Middle

Rich In History
School on French Avenue (U.S, High­
way 17-92).
Sanford's high school students
attend ninth grade at Crooms High
School, 2200 W. 13th St., while 10th to
12th grade students go to Seminole
High School at 2701 Georgia Ave.
Seminole Community. College In
Sanford with its 21,000 annual
enrollment, is a fully accredited twoyear college, offering a complete
vocational-technical and academic
program.
In addition, the University of
Central Florida, a state institution,
and two private institutions of higher
learning, Stetson and Rollins, are
within easy commuting distance.
Adult education and vocational
training are both available at
Seminole Community College.
Light industry is the primary source
of economic productivity in Sanford
with agribusiness also of major im­
portance in the community.
Sanford has a variety of financial
institutions offering complete service
to meet the needs of the public and
large and sm all businesses.
Industrial financing is readily
available and there are several
sources of Industrial revenue bonds in
the Sanford area.
Sanford’s central location makes it
a convenient operations base to major
markets within the state as well as to
such other important markets as
Atlanta, New Orleans, Mobile, Bir­
mingham, Savnnnah and Charleston.

Sanford Port
Authority Is
On Its Own
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
This is a banner year for the Seminole County Port Authority
because for the first time in its 17-year history, the port is selfsupporting and off the county tax rolls, according to
Administrator Dennis Dolgncr.
The authority has a budget of $426,653 for the 1962-63 fiscal
year.
Any excess revenues will go into site improvements, such as
drainage, he added. In five to six years, Dolgncr hopes to turn
in excess funds to the county's general fund.
"After all," said Dolgner, “the county and the taxpayers
have been subsidizing the Port of Sanford, It's only fair that It
should."
Dolgner saida new 16,000-square-foot multi-tenant facility is
scheduled to be completed at the port by late spring.
Warehouse facilities at the port are 100 percent occupied, he
said, and there has been an increase In inquiries concerning
barge traffic into the terminal.
St. Johns Petroleum Terminals, Inc., an oil distribution firm
incorporated in Florida about a year ago, took over the Saxon
Petroleum Co. lease at the port's tank farm storage facility.
The firm pays a base annual rental fee of $26,000, which allows
it to distribute 10.5 million gallons of oil from the port without
on added tariff. After the 10.5 million-gallon mark is achieved,
a 25 cents a gallon tariff is levied up to the 15 million gallon
point. After that the tariff is lessened as an incentive to in­
crease distribution.
Due to the declining petroleum market, the petroleum barge
traffic was off this past year, Dolgner said.
There are a total of 16 tenants at the port facilities.
Formitex, Inc., which employs 40 persons in cabinet
manufacturing, outgrew its 4,000-square-foot space in less than
two years and moved Into a new 20,000-square-foot building.
New to the port is a manufacturing firm that makes cypress
gazebos for Shed's America, and Mid-Continental Co., a
consulting firm that leases three offices.
The chairman of the Port Authority is Wallace Schoettclkottei. CTaire Fite is vice chairman, J. Wcndail Agee |s
secretary and Jim Rowe is treasurer. Commissioner Bill
Kirchhoff served as liaison with the Board of County Com­
missioners for 1982.
Ceramic Tiles Unlimited of lakeland leased 4,000 square
feet in November, bringing the terminal’s lease space to full
capacity. The space is used for storage for distribution to the
firm 's four sales locations in the state.
Design Industries Corp. of I^kland, a manufacturer of
extruded aluminum products, signed a one year lease for 2,500
square feet for the operation of a manufacturing plant in
August.

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It is also accessible to the new
markets opening in the Caribbean and
Latin America.
It Is a multi transportation center
with quick access to Interstate 4,
m ajor ra il services for both
passengers and freight, Sanford
Airport and Industrial complex and
the Port of Sanford with direct access
to the St. Johns River and Jackson­
ville.
Sanford’s unemployment rate is
generally lower than the state and
national averages.
Sanford has an average tem ­
perature year round of 72 degrees.
Among the activities available arc
ballet and the arts; hunting and
fishing, bowling, golf and tennis. The
city has numerous parks and its
recreation department sponsors a
variety of activities year round.
An especially popular attraction for
both Sanfordites and visitors is the
Central Florida Zoo with its nature
trails and picnicking areas.
The city has a city manager-city
commission type government with an
elected m ayor and four elected
commissioners. Lee P. Moore has
been the city’s mayor and com­
missioner for 14 years.
Other members of the commission
are: Eddie Keith, David Farr, Ned
Yancey and Milton Smith.
W. E. “Pete" Knowles has been
Sanford’s city manager for nearly 30
years.
Among the industries in the city

arc— Cardinal Industries, which
manufactures pre-asscmbled apart­
ments and homes.
— Daxki, Inc., a computer firm.
— Harcar which has expanded its
operation from a 10,000-square-foot
plant over the years to Its present
325,000 square feet of manufacturing
facilities and another 150,000 square
feet of distribution facilities located
around the state. Harcar began in
Sanford 26 years ago.
— Rush-Hampton Industries is
opening its new $6 million in­
ternational headquarters In Sanford
with a 175,000-square-foot facility with
ample room to expand to 400,000
square feet in the future.
— Cobia Boat Co. has operated In
Sanford since 1965.
— United Home Services of Florida
distributes Its products throughout the
state of Florida from its Sanford base.
— Florida Extrusions has been in
operation in Sanford for the past six
years.
— Shoemaker Construction Co., a
contracting and development film,
has been in business in the city for
more than a quarter-century.
Industrial sites are available in the
city at the Sanford Industrial Park,
Sanford Municipal Airport, the Port of
Sanford and the Interstate 4 Industrial
Park.
A dinner ship, the Bay Oueen, has
been operating cruises down the St,
Johns River since December.

The M cK ibbin A gen cy

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�4— E ve n in g H e ra ld , Senford, FI.
t — H ere Id A d v e rtH e r, Sanford, FI.

Sondey, Feb. JO, 1*13
T h u rsd a y, Feb. 24, 1981

In the Country Estates project, sites
range in size from three to six acres
each.
At the same time, the Forest mobile
home community off I^akc Mary
Boulevard Is creating new home sites
and com pleting
its
original
development.
Permits are being issued for three
sites per month, according to city
building officials.
Officials say the developers of the
Forest are also looking for additional
property In the city on which to build a
similar type mobile home community.
The original Forest has 320 mobile
home sites. Persons in the develop­
ment buy the property for their
mobile homes and park them there
permanently.
The 1982 year in Lake Mary saw the
resignations of two councllmen, the
loss of the Heathrow annexation
lawsuit, the passage of a new charter,
the firing of one city attorney and the
appointment of a new one.
The resignations of Councllmen
Gene McDonald and Vic Olvera, both
in their third years on the governing
body, concerned city officials in
October. The G ty Council would have
had to function for the remainder of
the year with only three members.
The response from the three
members and Sorenson was an in­
novative solution. Hie decision was
made to appoint to the vacancies
experienced former council members
who could take up the slack for the
remaining two months in the year.
Named were former councllmen
Cliff Nelson and Pat Southward. Both

ByDONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The long anticipated explosion of
growth will be seen in Lake Mary this
year, Mayor Walter A. Sorenson
predicts.
“ It will get to the point where it is a
boom," Sorenson said. He expects
new construction in the residential
and commercial fields and even some
additional industrial development.
" It’s going to be '/title , bar the
door,"’ he said.
Millions of dollars worth of new
housing is already underway.
Construction was started on three
new housing developments early in
the year.
Dorchester, the apartment and
townhouse development being built by
Paulucci Enterprises, began moving
in early January.
This construction project, expected
to cost $1.6 million in construction
alone, will have 80 apartment units
and 20 townhouses on a tract off State
Road 46A and Rantoul Lane. Before
the end of the year, the project is
expected to be completed.
Ed Koch, developer of the second
project, Feather’s Edge, off Rinehart
Road and Sun Drive, has begun site
work for his 30 unit townhouse con­
dominium.
And Larry Dale, who developed the
original Cardinal Oaks In the city, has
created 79 parcels for Cardinal Oaks
II, south of Main Road and east of
Country Gub Road, and has his
Country Estates off County Road 427
and east of Country Gub Road under
construction.

agreed to serve and neither was in­
terested in running for election. The
two participated in a total of four
Council meetings.
McDonald resigned to accept a new
job for the Motorola Corp. In Ten­
nessee while Olvera resigned to run
for mayor. He was unsuccessful.
I-ast Spring, McDonald pulled a
surprise at a council meeting by
urging Sorenson to dismiss long-time
City Attorney Gary Massey, saying
Massey had become complacent in
the job. McDonald's move got the
support of two other council members
and within a few weeks after
reviewing num erous applications
Sorenson appointed Robert G. Petree,
a resident of the community.
Sorenson said the most negative
event in ta k e Mary city government
in 1982 was the loss of the lawsuit to
the county on the annexation of the
Heathrow planned unit development’s
1,200 acres.
The county filed suit against Lake
Mary’s annexation of the property
north of Lake Mar}' Boulevard and
west of Interstate 4 in 1977. Hie city
appealed to the Fifth District Court of
Appeal the three-judge circuit court
panel's decision overturning the
annexation.
While the appellate court In
Daytona Beach left the city a slight
opening to appeal the case to the state
Supreme Court, Petree told the board
it didn't have a chance of winning and
the council let the matter die.
If the annexation had stood, the
city's geographical size would have
increased by one-third and its

population would have quadrupled in
this decade.
Sorenson sees as a major positive
happening In Lake Mary the voter
approval of a new charter. "That will
be felt In a million little ways over the
years," Sorenson said.
The new charter to become ef­
fective when certified by Secretary of
State George Firestone calls for a
number of changes In the city
government.
Among those changes are the
renaming of the council as the city
commission; making the city election
time in September to coincide with the
first p rim ary , ra th e r than in
December; the elimination of runoff
elections, candidates will be elected
by plurality rather than majority; the
council may now fire charter officials
—the city manager, city clerk, city
treasurer, city attorney — by a simple
majority vote. Previously, the city
manager could be fired only with four
positive votes of the five-member
Council.
Four councllmen — two persons
new to the Lake Mary city area, a
man who had previously served six
years and an Incumbent were elected
to the council.
The new council will be made up of
Ray Fox, senior member of the board
with three years completed; Kenneth
King, who Is beginning his third year
In office with unopposed re-election;
Burt Perlnchlef, who has returned to
the council afte r a two-year
retirement from city politics; and two
newcomers, Russ Megonegal and
Charlie Lytle.

Great Place To Live
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SANFO RD-PARK AV E N U E A OAK AVEN U E

The g re atest place in
Seminole County for a family
to live is the city of tak e
Mary, in the view of Dick
Fess, president of the com­
munity's Chamber of Com­
merce.
A former member of the
tak e Mary City Council and
currently president of the
Community Im provem ent
Association (CIA) In the city,
F css
tells
prospective
residents about the Lake
Mary's friendly people and its
small town atmosphere.
“ Lake Mery Is still a small
town that has a lot of green
space. It does not have wallto-wall housing or concrete,"
he said. "And as far as
educational facilities are
concerned, it has the best in
the state."
Noting that young people
can go from elem entary
school through the second
year of college without
leaving the area, Fess said
ta k e
Mary E lem entary
School has one of the finest
records in the county, " ta k e
Mary High School has
probably the best facility in
the slate and Seminole
Community College is right
here.
“Centrally located, tak e
Mary is the growing com­
munity in Seminole County,"
Fess said. "If one Is looking at
property values and what

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they will be in the future,
tak e Mary has some of the
best potential. It Is not highly
com m ercialized
or
In­
dustrialized, yet we have a
good mix of commercial and
Industrial development.
"Roadwise, the city has
been able to do long range
planning. By the time the
pressure Is there, the city
should have the problem
under control of moving
traffic Into and through tak e
Mary," Fess said.

l O a m m x m m x x m i i X j u u x i m n i i x . n x n y n n x x y y x a x j i o x y y x x Trinr

Lake Mary Is Expecting 1983
To Be Long-Awaited Boom Year

Jerry &amp; M arg urette Sullivan
This year we are especially happy and proud th at
you loyal Sanford and surrounding area custom ers
have made it possible fo r us to serve you fro m our
new co u ntry fa rm house style chicken restaurant.
A ll the employees w orked very hard d u rin g our
grand opening week and your little ole Sanford
Famous Recipe was No. 2 in the nation, w here over
225 Famous Recipe units operate.
M a rg u re tte &amp; J e rry S ullivan thank a ll the fine
construction crews and Shoem aker C onstruction
Co. fo r th e ir high perform ance In b u ild in g o u r new
restaurant.
F or those who v is it o u r C asselberry Famous
Recipe re sta u ra n t you w ill note some changes,
p ainting and inside im provem ents.
Thanks fo r allow ing us to m ake you Famous
Sanford.

1amousj(ecipe
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HWY. 17-92 Sanford
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�Programs Go
AH Year Here
For Seniors
One of the most popular gatherings of senior citizens in
Sanford can be seen every Wednesday from 2:30 to 4:30
p.m., when the Over 50's Club sponsors a dance to the accompanlmcnt of the Sanford Serenaders.
Some 500 seniors participated in a recent dance.
Admission is free of charge.
The Over 50's Club Is only one of three senior groups
operating in the city, while a fourth-the Central Seminole
Senior C lub-is available for those living in the Lake Mary
area.
Sam Kaminsky, 323*1940, will be happy to talk to any
senior who would like to participate in the club's hap­
penings or anyone who would like information.
The Sanford-based American Association of Retired
Persons (AARP) meets the second Thursday of the month
at noon at the Sanford Civic Center with a covered dish
luncheon and program.
Currently this club has a membership of 64 and has been
adding about 10 new members each year.
An income tax service, under the auspices of AARP, is
available every Monday and Friday at the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce building on First Street at Sanford
Avenue from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. until the tax season ends April

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Ninth Event Set For This Year

Sunday, Feb. JO, 1IIJ—7
Thursday, Feb. 24,1*81—7

2,000 Take Part In Golden Age Games
i

t

By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
More than 2,000 men and women over 55
from all over the United State3, as well as
other countries, competed in the eighth annual
Post Fun 'n' Fitness Golden Age Games held
Nov. 6-13 In Sanford.
They added up to 3,000 separate entries in
the various events which ranged from knitting
to the decathlon.
Keeping fit and active paid off for these spry
senior citizens.
For many, it meant the thrill of victory and
having an Olympic-style medal hung around
their neck.
For others, it meant the fun and excitement
of competition as they gave it their best shot.
Demonstrating you're never too old was 98-

year-old Fred Broadwell of St. Petersburg, the
oldest participant In this year’s Games. He
entered in the football and softball throws, and
softball hitting.
Also in track and field again last year was a
father-son
com bination, C harles
C.
I&gt;cichtenberger, 64, of Winter Park, and
Charles W., 60, of Altamonte Springs. They
competed in the 50- and 100-yard dash, running
long Jump, and softball throw.
Both competed In the bowling tournament
nnd the elder Lcichtenberger also entered the
horseshoe contest. The son entered his arts
and crafts in the hobby show.
The track and field events were sponsored
by the Kiwanis Club of Sanford.
There were 122 entries in the shuffleboard
tournament, 50 in horseshoes and eight in

i

-

croquet. Entries were accepted up until
starting time for the final two events.
Many of the Golden Age Games competitors
train all year for events such as swimming,
bicycle racing, and running. Since its humble
beginnings nine years ago, the senior citizen
event has grown each year in both the number
of events and participants. The Games were
co-sponsored by the Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce and General Foods’ Post
Cereals. Individual events were sponsored by
local organizations, making it a community­
wide event.
Growing popularity of the Games is due in
part to the nationwide publicity the event has
received and the fact that once they have
experienced It, the Golden Agers go home and
talk It up to their friends.
One of the most enthusiastic supporters was

1982 honorary chairperson, Dorothy Franey
Ungkop of Dallas, Texas. An Olympic gold
medalist speed skater, she is on the U.S. ’
Olympics Board and was chairman of the *982
Texas Senior Games, patterned after San­
ford's Games.
Another avid supporter was Kay Oettlin of
Zcllwood Station who sparked a drive to get
everyone In her mobile home community to
enter. She succeeded in getting 125 of her
neighbors to enter 17 different events.
New events in 1982 included one and threemeter competitive diving and a 6-mile leisure
walk and a 3,000-meler race walk.
Plans are now underway for the ninth an­
nual Golden Age Games scheduled for Nov. 712. For a schedule or entry forms, persons
may contact the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce.

The Sanford Seniors, with 266 members registered, meets
the first and third Tuesday of each month at noon at the
Sanford Civic Center.
The Central Seminole Senior Citizens hold meetings twice
monthly. On the second Thursday they meet at noon and on
the fourth Thursday they meet at 10 a.m. at the Church of
the Nativity on the south side of County Road 427, near U.S.
Highway 17-92.
The clubs hold various activities monthly, ranging from
luncheon cruises up the St. Johns River and bus tours to
Disney World or Epcot to covered dish dinners.
Information on all the clubs can be obtained by calling
the Federation of Senior Citizens headquarters at 831*1631.
- DONNA ESTES

H o m e r A lw a y s
!eady To Talk

Experience, qualify and success are in all of Shoemaker Construction
Co. Inc. Residential and Commercial Buildings

b o u t Sanford
r

ByDONNA ESTES
&gt;
Her al d SUff Writer
1When Jack Homer, president of the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce, is asked by prospective new residents
Vlial it means to live and work in the city of Sanford, he's not at
a 'to » for words.
"Most people have to work, but what beautiful surroundings
c finds in Sanford to work in," Homer said.
"A new business or industry receives the support of neighrs, the community as a whole and the city government," he
said. "Business people say they haven't seen a really closeknit community like this before, and Sanford has retained
these qualities in spite of its growth.*
“As president of the chamber, I have no trouble whatsoever
selling Sanford, its beauty, its people and lifestyle. I don’t think
anyone would have any difficulty promoting our community
from the cost of living standpoint to the beautiful settings may
homes have, to an abundance of trees and lakes.
“ It's more than Just a place to work. It’s also a place to
live," Horner said.
From the chamber president's point of view, Sanford's
reatest asset is Lake Monroe and its beautiful lakefront. "As
ime goes on it will be carefully developed for its best use," he
id, citing the new Central Florida Regional Hospital, the city
all and the Seminole County Courthouse as indicative of the
use of land.
Another plus is the city government which is cooperative in
helping people locate here, Homer said, from the mayor,
commissioners and city manager to department heads.
Homer said the city is developing a fine light manufacturing
base and seeing an increase In medically-oriented business,
such as radiation therapy, new doctors and kidney dialysis.
And recently a pharmaceutical company indicated an Interest
in moving In Sanford.
First Street also is coming into its own, the chamber
president noted, with the beautiful Sanford Landing apartment
complex. With the construction of the railroad overpass on
First Street, there will be a tremendous buildup to the west of
the city, he said.
At the same time, a lot of things are on the drawing boards,
Homer said. "Several very nice extensive Industrial prospects
are just about ready to announce. Three new industries are
right on the brink and a couple of relocations with expansion
into Sanford are In the wind," he said.
Meanwhile, thousands of people from surrounding or nearby
communities as well as tourists from out of state have been
introduced to the Sanford lakefront by the dinner cruise ship
Bay Queen, which is docked at Monroe Harbor tor dally
cruises on the St. Johns River.
Homer noted plans are underway to build 80 new slips for
boats at the Sanford Marina and the Holiday Inn at Marina Isle
is also beginning a modernization program.

Famous Recipe
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M a y fa ir Villas
Sanford

Agency Helps M an y
Seminole Community Action, the anti-poverty agency which
assists low-income families of the county, has added the
distribution of surplus food commodities to its list of services.
On a monthly basis, SCA distributes food supplied by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture to nearly 1,400 poor and
elderly families.
In late January, a total of 1,341 families received 3,3*8
pounds of butter, 6,600 pounds of processed cheese and 10,728
pounds of dry milk.
Recipients ranged from young adults to senior citizens.
While this Is the newest program, SCA continues to offer the
Headstart program, and offers the services of a nutrition
specialist, a food co-op, housing advice, and works with per­
sons seeking employment and job training and helps with the
development of saleable skills as well as Information and
referral.
Of particular assistance to the low-income families is the
services of SCA's cannery, which operates at 5W Celery
Avenue.
Here, Mrs. Annie Mae Jackson and her staff teach the art of
canning foods, freezing goods and baking to more than 700
families per year.
Mrs. Ruthla Hester operates SCA's food co^p from the
cannery. For a fee of 910, a family can Join the co-op and take
advantage of the savings ou food purchased in large lots.
Anyone can take advantage of the cannery’s operations and
the fees charged depends upon their Income.
Mrs. Jackoon said those participating bring the foods they
wish to can, the jars and other seasonings they need.
Almost anything which can be preserved is canned a t the
plant. - DONNA ESTES

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�•—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
• —Hera Id Adverllter, Sanford,

Sunday, Feb. 20,111)
T h u rs d a y , Fe b . 2 4 ,1VI]

Lake Mary

We M ay Be Sm all
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a showcase but said it’s the faculty, not the facility, that makes
the school unique.
"Starting a brand new school enabled us to bring in the
faculty and set the curriculum we wanted," he said.
The school is the prototype for future high schools in
Seminole County and the school board took care to make the
&gt;3.5 million facility something special. Several design concepts
were built into the school to aid teachers.
The two-story building puts 64 acres under roof. Gassrooms
are grouped according to subjects with teachers sharing a
common office areas.

Building something from scratch always seems to instill
ride in people.
That’s the feeling the faculty at tak e Mary High School has.
"We want our school to be the best,” Principal Don Reynolds
.;sald.
Reynolds said the administration and faculty had an ad­
vantage when the school began in 1981 because there weren’t
any bad habits or traditions to perpetuate.
Reynolds said students attending the school have the op­
portunity to create tradition.
"Everything we do here is a first for the school, a new
record," he said. "Our football team scored a ♦"uchdown
against Bishop Moore. We were getting beaten bad but you'd
have thought we’d won the game the way people were
cheering."
They’ve tried to build from there.
“ We try to build confidence in the student by building pride
in them and their school,” he said.
Reynolds said he’s started an honorary group, the Order of
the Golden Fleece, as a reward for students who do out­
standing work.
Entrance requirements for the group are at least a Caverage, participation in school events and a love for the
school.
"Kids who’ve done wrong, like selling dope, are bonded
together by their d im es.’’ Reynolds said. "We want to give the
good kids something to bring them together.”
Reynolds adm its be teris pressure to make ta k e Mary High

“ That way, teachers can synchronize their lessons and
exchange ideas easily," Reynolds said.
Another feature is restrooms without doors.
"We were kind of skeptical about that at first but it’s worked
out real well. They Just go in and do their business and come
back out instead of hanging around in there,” Assistant
Principal John Reichert said.
Reichert said the building still has several classrooms that
are unused because the school hasn’t reached its full student
capacity. About 1,500 students In the 9th, 10th and 11th grades
now attend the school. This year a 12th grade will be added.
The school has all the music rooms in one section, reducing
the noise to other classrooms. There’s a rehearsal hall for the
band, a piano laboratory where students can play and listen to
their performance through earphones, and a dance room
which doubles as a wrestling room.

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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Lake Mary Is Known For Its
Many Stair Step Type Parks
By DONNA ESTES
• Herald Staff Writer
In the original design of Lake Mary when it was
developed early In the century, several stair step typo
parks were included from the hotel and casino to the train
station.
The Idea was to give persons walking along the route
from the hotel between Crystal Lake Avenue and Wilbur, to
the train station off Crystal Lake Avenue areas where they
could rest.
The hotel and casino as well as the railroad station fell to
the demands of progress years ago. But the stair step parks
of .38 acres each remain. In addition, the city of U k e Mary
has added more park lands over the years.
The city parks Include:
— Crystal U k e Park, bounded by Alma, Country Club
Road and Grand Bend, encompasses 3.47 acres. It has
picnic areas and a swimming beach.
— Tot Lot, .38 acres on the northwest side of Country Club

#

Road and U k e Mary Avenue, has rides, slides and merrygo-rounds to intrigue small children. Benches also are
located at the park.
— Hess House Park, .38 acres, on the southeast comer of
Lake Mary Avenue and Country Club Road, has a shuffleboard court.
— Park No. 4, Wilbur Avenue near Country Club Road, .38
acre, for softball and other games.
— Park No. 5, on the south side of Wilbur near Second
Street, .38 acre, sand lot ball.
— Park No. 6, on northwest comer of Crystal and Second
Street, .38 acre, benches and picnic tables.
— Park No. 7, southeast comer of Crystal U k e and
Second, 1.14 acre, sand lot ball playing.
— Park No. 8, Park Place off Lakeview Avenue, .57 acre,
beach area, swimming allowed.
— Triangle Park, south of the railroad tracks has .22
acres and will be beautified.
— Estella and Galrmont Park abuts a small pond and is
slated for development into a picnic area.

O

The Library, a memorial to the founder
(Henry S. Sanford), of the city of San­
ford, is more than Just a memory.
The contents, some dating back
several centuries, reveal a preservation
of culture existing long before the birth of
Gen. Henry S. Sanford and the com­
munity that bears his name.
The library look more than a half
century to establish.
Records Indicate that plans for the
present Museum-Library date to 1891
when Gen. Sanford died in Derby, Conn.
At that time, Mrs. Sanford was inspired
to bequeath her husband's library of
more than 5,000 volumes to the City of
Sanford as a memorial.
Mrs. Sanford's proposal was outlined
to her family, the City of Sanford, and in
her will at the time of her death in 1901.
However, negotiations for the memorial
were not initiated until the early 1950s.
At that lime Gen. and Mrs. Sanford's
only surviving daughter, Carola Sanford
Dow, began extensive correspondence
with Mrs. Frederick T. Williams of
Sanford in an attempt to execute the
terms of her mother's will.
In the interest of the proposed
m em orial lib rary , Mrs. Hortense
Roumlllat and her late husband, Eugene,
traveled to Derby during two summers
where they visited the Sanford Home,
made sketches and took measurements
of the library at Homestead.
An exact duplicate of the original home
library was Intended (or the Sanford
memorial, which was elected under the
direction of Elton J. Moughton, Sanford
architect.
Sanford Attorney George A. Speer

KARN S
INSURANCE
A © IE INI&lt;SYu*,

Do your troubles
come in bunches?
Never fear.

Museum And Library Are More
Than Memorial To Gen. Sanford
By DORIS DIETRICH
People Editor
The quaint gray building on East First
Street across from Sanford's only highrise residential complex, Bram Towers,
might possibly remain unnoticed by a
visitor to the dty.
But behind the brilliant crimson door of
the Henry Shelton Sanford MuseumLibrary lies a wealth of history relating
to the founder of the dty and its struggle
to become today’s bustling community.
Not to be confused with a lending
library, the books in the museum are
from General Sanford's personal library.
The museum is under the Jurisdiction
of the d ty of Sanford with a board of
diredors and board of trustees.
According to Mildred M. Caskey,
curator, the building is painted a soft
gray and white. “ The bright red door
makes it more noticeable," she said.
One of the most interesting exltlblts in
the museum’s history generated con­
siderable enthusiasm . The colorful
exhibit, “ 100 Years of Fashion," was
under the diredion of Dr. Genevieve
Richardson, who headed the theater
department of the University of Illinois
for 30 years.
Other exhibits at the museum have
been photographs by Sanford City
Manager Warren E. "Pete" Knowles and
"Egyptology," artlfada dating back to
1500 B.C.
The museum Is open free to the public
from 2 * 5 p.m. on Sunday, Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday. Mias Caskey said
children must be accompanied by an
adult.
How did the museum get its start?

9

Sunday, Feb. Jo, t m —4
Thursday, Feb. 24, t m —9

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consulted with family legal counsel in
New York. When arrangements with the
family and the City of Sanford were
completed, construction began on the
present site, 520 E. First St.
Mrs. Dow lived to see her mother’s
dream become reality. Although ill and
in her late 70s, she attended the
dedication ceremonies on Feb. 8, 1957.
The library collection included books
written in five languages and on every
subject ranging from how to run a
household to how to run a government.
The books' publishing dates are traced
from the early 1600s to the late 1800s and
include many first editions.
S tu d y 's, writers and history buffs
from various global points retreat to the
quaint library for research material. The
film library contains microfilm of some
50,000 pieces of correspondence from
world wide statesm en, patriots,
politicians and historians.
Another dimension was added to the
original library' concept at Mrs. Dow's
death. Valuable family paintings, fur­
niture and personal effects soon arrived
in Sanford.
The two new wings were dedicated on
Feb. 8,1974. Sanford Mayor Ijee P. Moore
and. City
Commissioners
A.A.
MeClanahan, John M orris, Julian
Stenstrom and Gordon Meyer officiated
at the ceremony.
The west room of the facility houses the
Sanford family’s personal effects, in­
cluding m em orabilia, a rtifa cts and
furnishings from their residences at
Castle Malllard and Castle deGlngelon
near Brussels, Belgium, where Sanford
was the U-S. Minister.

Serving Sanford Since 1949

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trouble. And we're
available day and
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Sanford, Florida
Dial 322-5762

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Robert t ’’Bob” Kum

m m n H. "BH" W i t C.P.CAL
VICE PRESIDENT

PR ESIDENT

Lake M ary Biggest City
In Area In Seminole
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
The city of Lake Mary claims three superlative titles In
Seminole County.
According to City Manager Phi) Kulbes, it Is the largest In
land area — 26 square miles —, the smallest In population with
3,029 people, and the newest in number of years incorporated.
In July, Lake Mary will celebrate the 10th year of Its In­
corporation.
Settled In the late 1800s, Lake Mary residents a decade ago
banded together to seek a state charter. The Seminole
Legislative delegation told the community leaders at that time
that a city charter adopted by the Legislature would require
that more than half of the registered voters In the community
not only vote on the issue but also approve the Incorporation.
Although the task seemed impossible at the time, the
residents handily secured voter approval. The Community
feared without Incorporation that it would lose Its Identity.
Lake Mary continues to retain its small town atmosphere.
The people of the community participate in City Commission
meetings and continue to have the record of the highest voter
turnout In d ty elections In the county.
Lake Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson was elected to a fifth
consecutive term In December. Members of the City Com­
mission are: Raymond Fox, serving his fourth year on the
board; Kenneth King, beginning his third year In office; and
Burt Perlnchlef, who served sis years previously, is beginning
a new term in office. Brand new commissioners, elected in
December, are Russ Megonega) and Charlie Lytle.
The d ty has 22.6 miles of roads, about six miles paved and
the remainder clay.
While the d ty operates a city wide water system, it has only a
small sewer system that serves only The Forest, mobile home
community. Lake Mary has a nine-member police force ineluding Chief Harry Benson and four full-time police dispat­
chers.
Lake Mary is the only community In Seminole County served
by an entirely volunteer fire department. The department has
a 126-member roster and 30 or more respond to fire or
emergency calls.
A large number of the etty residents are retired. Per capita
Incline In the d ty Is |7,7B2.
All of the dwellings in the d ty have been single family
residences or duplexes. However, construction Is underway on
an 10-unit apartment complex by Paulucd Enterprises on
Rantoul Lane.
The city has a developed Industrial area off Rinehart Road
and Lake Emma Road.
The Industries indude Numa Corp. on Rinehart and Calfaron
and Coroputergraphlcs on U k e Emma Road. These Industries
are geared to manufacturing or assembling electronic
equipment.
The two major industries In U k e Mary are NCR Cor­
poration and Stromberg-Carlaon.
The NCR Corporation as it rtands fat the d ty of U k e Mary
began as Scott Electronics Corporation In 1964 In Orlando.
Sfntt
a subsidiary in 1971 and by 1975 Scott was
dissolved to become an operating division of NCR.
Stromherg-Csrlson, one of the county’s largest employers
rtunfpanrtu worldwide sales of complete digital telephone
networks.

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10— Evening Hera Id, Sanford, FI.
1 0 -H e ra ld A d v e r tim , Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 1 0 ,19IJ
Thursday, F e b .» , 1 W

FLORIDA'S BEST
KEPT SECRET

S A N F O R D — Close to everything y o u *
out of Florida.
The coupty seat of Seminole Cou
Sanford Is located in the heart of Cenl
Florida. M idw ay between Orlando ___
Daytona Beach, Sanford is one of the!
nation's fast growing locales.

S ettling on the shores of Lake M onroe and I
the St. Johns R ive r distinguished SanfordJ
as a tra n sp ora tlon center, and l)i
tra d itio n survives today. We a re s e rv e d jj
a netw ork o f highways, including In­
te rsta te 4, U.S. 17-92, and the Seaboard
Coastline R ailroad. O ur a irp o rt serves all
m anner of p riv a te and co m m e rcia l p la n e i
Our navigable w aterw ays a llow fo r easy
w a te r tra nsportation, and the M onroe '
H arbour Atorina serves as p ort for both
pleasure and business.

L e t P . M o o r*, M * y o r
President, Sunnllend C orp.
The N ation al Recession has not been felt
lo an y g rea t extent in Sanford, and plans
and co m m itm en ts h a ve been m ada which
indicate ra p id and exciting expansion in
our near future. Y e t. In sp ile of this
g ro w th a n d d e v e lo p m e n t, S a n to rd
m a in tain s a q u a lity ol life unequaled by
most developing cities
H ere is w hat some ol our co m m un ity
leaders have to say about Santord

In d u s tria l sites include Sanford In du stria l
P ark, S anford M u n ic ip a l A irp o rt, The P ort
of Sanford, and the 1-4 In d u s tria l Park.
Come grow with us!

D r. E a rl W eldon
P residen t, Sem inole C o m m u n ity College
T o d a y 's s o p h is tic a te d o c c u p a tio n a l
p ro g ra m s re q u ire s p e c la llle d tra in in g .
Sem m ole C o m m u n ity C ollege has w orked
in close cooperation w ith th e businesses
and industries e n te rin g this a re a to
d e te rm in e th eir em p lo y m en t needs and to
provide the tra in in g they req u ire.
W .E . A dam son
™
P res id en t, U n ited H om e ie r v ic e i of F lo rid a
"S a n fo rd . F lo rid a la Ideally located for •
w i n and d is trib u tio n throughout the
e n tire S tate ot F lo rid a . This and the tact
that w e a re so close to the O rlando
m a rk e t and enough aw a y w h e re the coat
of doing business it to m e w tia l lets m a k e *
Sanford p erfect for our C om pany'*
n e ed *."

Jam es M . B ridges
P residen t, S tre m b e rg -C a rtio n
The G re a te r Santord a re a has
provided an excellen t atm osph ere
lor our em ployees and to r our
custom ers, res u ltin g In strong
g row th for our business, w hich
to d a y is th e secon d la rg e s t
m an u fac tu rin g op eratio n in the
are a

J . A . W ells
O en e ral M a n a g e r, N .C .R .

E d w a rd N . A lch ley
P res id en t, Coble Boat C om pany
"S antord has been the hom e ot
Coble Boat Co since 1**5 and we
a re v e ry proud to be a p a ri of this
grow ing business c o m m u n ity ."

John W e ll

P resid en t. F lo rid a E x fn itlo n t

A ustin O u lr lin ger
P residen t, C ard in al Indu stries
"B ecau se of Its ce n tra l location in
the state and Its p ro x im ity to the I
a co rrid o r, Sanford w as a n ideal
s it* to establish C ard in al In
d u ttr le t," says Austin G u frlln g e r,
owner and president of C a rd in a l, a
2 1 -y e a r.o ld m o d u la r b u ild in g
com pany th at has been a c tiv e In
F lo rid a tor 7 years. "S a n fo rd i t an
e x p an d in g 'c ity and w e at C ard in al
look fo rw a rd to takin g p a rt in ,
c o n tin u e d g ro w th In c o m in g
y e a rs ," P u lr lln je r says.

C. R .S c h llk e P residen t, H a rc a r
F ro m the firs t 10,000 sq uare teet plant w e have
grow n to 325,000 sq uare feet of m a n u fac tu rin g
fa c ilitie s and an other 150.000 sq uare teet of
distrib u tio n ta c ilitie t located around the sta le ot
F lo rid a W f leel b a te d on our i t years ex
penance th at Santord otters a most excellent
business c lim a te . W e had to c a ll up the C ity In
connection w ith our expansion and found tham
just as w illin g and helpful in 1911 1912 as they
w ere In 1957 w hen w * began.

NCR In d u s tria l System s has tound
over the years th at Its location in the
G re a te r Santord a re a has proven to
be stra te g ic to the developm ent and
m a n u fac tu re ol com puter system s
The general atm osph ere In Sem inole
County seem s to coincide w elt w ith
N C R ’S business philosophy
The
NCR in d u s tria l System s O peration
h a t and w ill continue to grow in the
G re a te r Santord a re a

JO H N W A L L : "B e fo re locating in Sanford I looked a t the business en vironm ent In m a n y
co m m un ities. I found Sanford to h e v * the best in d u s tria l c lim a te end most enthusiastic
cooperation fro m the business co m m un ity and c ity o ffic ials . N ow . tlx years la le r, I know m y
decision was co rre ct.

j . r « i* M e n " R u » it" S a lle y
President, R u th H am pton

Sanford, F lo rid a w as chosen a t the site of Rush
H am p to n in d u stries new U m illio n interna tio n al h ta d q u a rte rs because it had a land
m a t t la rg e enough to accom m odate a 115,000
sq uare foot fa c ility w ith a m p lt room lo r e *
pension to *00,000 sq uare feet, according to
P resid en t J R u th to n " R u th " B ailey. In ad
difio n , Sanford o ffers good in terstate highw ay
accost an d a re a d ily a v a ila b le source ol la b o r. "

A K . S hoem aker
P residen t, S hoem aker C onstruct Ion
A. K. S H O E M A K E R : " I ’v e been doing
business, in Sanford a t a de velo p er end
co n tracto r tln c o tfS t. The cooperation of
city- o ffic ia ls , an d the a v a ila b ility ol
services such as w a te r and sew age h a v e
helped lo m a k e us successlul In our on
d te v o r lo b ring a ffo rd a b le housing and
c o m m e r c ia l f a c ilit ie s to S e n fo rd
res id en ts ."

O g tle E . " R a n d y " K e y
P res id en t, D e s k e , Inc.
R A N D Y R A Y : " T h e S tart up costs
of doing business in Sanford w ere
such th af l w as a b le to develop a
fa c ility lo m eet m y co m p an y’s
present needs, as w ell e s to ac
co m o d a l* fu tu re g ro w th . Senford
&gt;S e c ity th at i t lust beginning to
boom , an d I see this m ove a t a
w it# In v e s tm e n t."

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
D e n n i s H. Courso n, C h a i r m a n of the B o a r d
ft

The G r e a t e r S a n f o r d C h a m b e r O f C o m m e r c e
In d u stria l Action Com m ittee
P .O . D r a w e r CC. S a n f o r d , F l o r i d a 32771
P h o n e (3 0 5 ) 3 2 2 -2 2 1 2

Home of
W
G olden A g e G a m e s

�Evening Herald
Sunday, Feb. 20, 1983

Herald Advertiser
Thursday, Feb. 24, 1983

Color Herald Photographs By Tommy Vincent

f

l l l l i

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:{ f " !

■"9*0L

B oating Is popular on Lake M o n ro e and other lakes. See Pages f , 7 and IX

7 and 11

55th Annual
“

•

*

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4

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\

1—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.
J—Herald A dvertiier, Sanlord, FI.

Sunday* Feb. 30,1913
Thursday, Feb. 14,1913

On SAT Tests
Seminole Kids
Outscore U.S.

With 36,000 Students, 3,500 Employees

Schools Big Business
The School Board of Seminole County is the
county’s largest employer, with approximately
3,500 full-Ume employees.
Although the county Is fourth from the smallest in
land area, the student enrollment of almost 37,000
makes Seminole the 11th largest in the state in
student population. The students attend school in 7
high schools (grades 9-12) accredited by the
Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, 8
middle schools (grades 6-8), 26 elementary schools
(K-5), and an exceptional-child center.
The system is governed by a policy-making board
of five elected board members and administered by
an elected superintendent. School board meetings
are held twice a month on Wednesdays at the ad­
ministrative offices at 1211 Mellonville Ave.,
Sanford. The meetings are open to the public.
All students, grades K-12, who have never been
enrolled in Florida schools, and are transferring
into Seminole County schools from out of state must
present the school with a current Florida im­
munization certificate (obtainable from county
health office) and with a signed physician’s
statement that the student has had a physical
examination within the past year of date of entry.
Parents from out of state should bring such
evidence with them to facilitate entry.
Transfer students from other Florida counties
should bring with them a current Florida im­
munization certificate.
All students must have successfully completed
kindergarten before enrollment into first grade.
The county schools encourage community in­
volvement in the schools through the Dividends
School Volunteer Program. In the school year 198081, over 1600 volunteers donated 81,000 hours to the
schools. Dividends work with students in grades K12 helping them in all areas of the curriculum. By
providing an "extra pair of hands” for a busy
teacher, schools are better able to meet some of the
very personal needs of every child's education. In

addition, the Community Resource File has over
450 volunteers who are willing to share with
students their skills, talents, experiences, interests
and hobbies on request of the teacher. Dividends, by
sharing their time and talent, help enrich the
curriculum and expand the horizons of young
people.
Seminole County operates 182 school buses, which
transport approximately 22,500 students over a
distance of more than 14,500 miles dally, Safety is
the primary concern of all drivers and staff
members. Drivers receive 24 hours of in-service
training yearly. Buses are given a monthly safety
check in addition to a preventative maintenance
program 51 of the 187 buses are used exclusively for
the transportation of 1150 handicapped and special
education students to 42 school centers offering a
variety of 11 different special programs.
A nutritionally balanced lunch is available at all
schools. Milk and orange Juice may also be pur­
chased by elementary students. Middle and senior
high schools are offered a choice of menu items. In
addition, middle and senior high students may
purchase any menu item ala carte.
Students in the county school district consistently
score high on state and national normed tests. The
latest statewide results show that Seminole County
third graders were tied for third, fifth graders tied
for first, eighth graders tied for second, and 11th
graders tied for fourth on State Student Assessment
Test — Part 1 and tied for sixth on Part II. For the
last three years in a row, Seminole was one of the
very few large school districts in the state with no
identified program deficiencies on State Student
Assessment Testing.
On college entrance examinations, both the SAT
and ACT, college-bound students' averages ex­
ceeded the state and national averages.
Student sendees include guidance, counseling,
psychological evaluation, career education, social
work, occupational and placement services, at­

tendance and district wide standardized testing.
The staff presently includes 68 counselors, 11
psychologists, 8 social workers, 3 attendance
assistants, a career education coordinator and
curriculum specialist, a district wide testing
assistant and 8 occupational specialists. There is
district-wide coordination of student follow-up.
Exceptional-student programs are geared to
serve all identified exceptional students K-12. The
educable retarded are served in classes located In
various elementary and middle schools with a
vocationally oriented program at Lake Mary High.
There arc small classes and students usually Join
regular students for music, art and physical
education.
. .
Trainable and profoundly retarded students are
served at Rosenwald Exceptional Student Center.
All schools have programs for students with specific
learning disabilities and all schools have services
for speech, language and hearing disabled. There
are centers for students with severe specific
learning disabilities and severe language
disabilities. Emotionally handicapped and students
with emotional problems are served in resource
rooms and self-contained classes depending on the
severity of the problem. Deaf and physically
disabled students are transported to well-developed
programs in Orange County. There arc two
programs for autistic students. Vision-impaired
students are served in resource rooms at elemen­
tary, middle and high schools. Three-to-five-yearolds arc also served by an itinerant teacher.
All elementary students classified as gifted have
programs either in their school of at a center
nearby. Most middle and high schools served gifted
students also. There are pre-school programs
available for language disabled trainable and
profound students. Children up to three years old
who are severely physically handicapped, deaf,
blind and retarded are served at home or in small
cluster centers by the Homebound Program.

Superintendent Strives For
Quality Education In Seminole
By MICHEAL BEHA
Herald SUff Writer
When Robert Hughes was elected
Seminole County superintendent of
schools in 1980 he established goals of
improved planning and better com­
munication for the school system.
Two years later, Hughes feels he’s
made a start on meeting those goals,
but there is still a long way to go.
The school district has established a
planning group to work with county
officials in determining where future
schools should be located, a
reorganization of management duties
is under way and a comprehensive
study of the county’s food service
needs has Just been com pleted,
Hughes explained.
A consultant’s report in 1979 showed
the county needed $55 million in new
construction to meet the county’s
current needs.
A report compiled in 1982 by a group
of county school officials revealed
serious deficiencies in the satellite
food service system currently in use
at most county schools.
But those studies have really Just
identified problems and set the goals,
he said.

ROBERT HUGHES

took over. But he did not criticize his
predecessor and previous school
board members. “They coped with
growth as well as possible under the
circumstances.”
The explosive growth that hit
Seminole County in the 1970s caused
"We needed to do a better Job of school officials to close kitchens and
planning,” Hughes said of the cafeterias in some schools and ex­
situation in the school district when he &lt; clude those facilities from new

Special Program Helps
Immigrant Students
As immigrants from the F ar Blast, the Caribbean and other
places have come to Central Florida in increasingly large
numbers, so has the need for special educational services for
them.
One of the places they can turn for help is to Seminole County
School District, where a special program exists to assimilate
foreign students into the community.
Kathle Schwelzer, foreign student registrar, said the
program uses individualized instruction from teachers and
volunteers to help foreign students become proficient in
English.
The program has helped 400 foreign students from 34
countries over the past two years, Assistant School Superin­
tendent Dan Dagg said. In 1980, the first year the county had an
organized program, 149 students went through the English for
Speakers of a Foreign Language program. In 1981241 students
went through the program. In 1981 241 students went through
the program.
But the county has not always had the organized program it
now operates.
Mt«« Schwelzer, who has been with the program since it
started in 1980, said the county had volunteers helping foreign
students but no organized program existed.
Tbe Individualized Development English Activities program
operates in the elementary and middle schools. The IDEA
program
volunteers who help with oral language
programs, picture cards and other activities. This year, the
program incorporates written English as well.
The students are tested before they enter the program to
determine how proficient they are in English, Miss Schwelzer
said.
lh e program is designed to allots a foreign student two years
before he must be mainstreamed into the regular student
population. “ But so far we haven't had any who have needed
the entire two years."
In 1961, Longwood Elementary School, Sterling Park
Elementary School in Casselberry and Lake Brantley High
School had the largest foreign student populations, Miss Schweizer said.
Tbe majority of tbe students are Spanish, Miss Schwelzer
said. Sixty-five percent of the foreign students are Immigrants
from Haiti, Cuba and Puerto Rico.
— MICHEALBEHA

schools.
A satellite food service program,
with meals prepared at nine kitchens
in the county and delivered to the
schools, was instituted and lunch
rooms were converted into class
space.
The school board is now trying to
dism antle the satellite system
because It Is inefficient. Many
students complain about the quality, of
the food and the number of students
participating in the school lunch
program has been dropping.
"It’s a case of over-extending the
system," Hughes said. "It worked
well when they first instituted it but
it’s goticn too large.”
All new schools are being built with
kitchen and dining room facilities and
many of the older schools are being
converted back into their original
uses.
Priorities have been set for the
district' to deal with the $55 million
worth of new buildings, Hughes said
the district needs.
Lake Mary High School opened two
years ago even though the district had
to borrow $12 million from the state.
That loan has tied up all state funds
for construction to the district,
Hughes explained, leaving additional
tax levies as the only way to finance
additional construction.
Those projects are being handled

one or two at a time, with construction
of new facilities and upgrading of
existing ones going hand in hand,
Hughes explained.
For example, taxpayers in the
district are paying an additional levy
this year for repairs at Lawton
Elementary School in Oviedo and
construction ot a new elementary
school In Sanford.
Additionally, a new elementary
school is now on the drawing board for
Tuskawilla and should be ready for
occupancy by September.
Hughes explained "trad itio n ally
what happens with growth is you build
where the growth is without ad­
dressing the existing needs.”
That’s not fair to people living in
a reas which a re n 't growing as
rapidly, he said. Because of that, the
school board is trying to meet the
growth needs of the southern part of
Seminole County while upgrading the
existing facilities in the Sanford area.
But Hughes feels there is a long way
to go before the district, now the 11th
largest in the state, catches up with
the growth.
"Classes are still being held in
converted lunch rooms and gyms,” he
said.
Despite the temporary facilities,
Hughes contends the quality of in­
structional programs in the county is
high.

averages were 467 and 426, and officials
said that was the first national upswing fn
scores since 1963.
Florida seniors who took the test between
the summer of 1981 and last spring scored
an average of 426, the same as the national
average, on the verbal section. That's a
two-point increase over two years ago.
In math, however, Floridians scored 463,
four points below the national average but
the same as college-bound high schoolers
did two years ago.
For the last five years, the average
Florida score remained in a five-point
spread in both the math and verbal sec­
tions. Average math scores ranged from
461 to 464 and verbal scores from 424 to 428
in that period.
Ralph Turlington, state education
commissioner, said he was not happy with
Florida’s mid-level rank among the 50
stales and “ would like to see a larger in­
crease" in test scores.
But Turlington was pleased 38.7 percent
of all Florida seniors took the test com­
pared to the national average of 33 percent.
The greater the number of students taking
the test in a state, the lower the average
score in that state, College Board officials
said.
Even though Florida educators strive to
be among the top 13 states by 1986, they set
no goals for the average SAT score,
Turlington said.
Instead, they want to see more students
score better than 700 on at least one section
of the exam.
Turlington said he does not want to see
poor performers not take the test Just
because they pull down the state average.
Urging more people to take the test might
encourage them to Improve their studies,
he said.

Bv MICHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Seminole County students who took the
Scholastic Aptitude Test in 1982 were
significantly above the state and national
averages.
Dan Dagg, assistant .superintendent of
Seminole County schools, said students
increased their score In the verbal portion
of the test from 434 in 1981 to 435 this year.
In the math portion of the test, the county
average in 1981 was 475. This year's math
average is 481.
Overall, the county average climbed
from 909 in 1981 to 916 this.year.
Florida students averaged 426 on the
verbal part of the test and 463 on the math
portion. The state average, overall, is 889.
The national average for the verbal part
of the test is 426. The national average for
the math Is 467. The overall average is 893.
Officials of College Board, a non-profit
New York group that sponsors the exam,
said Florida students improved their score
at the SAT this year, part of the first
nationwide up-swing in scores in 19 years.
"This year’s rise, however slight, is a
welcome sign for educators, parents and
students that serious efforts by the nation's
schools and their students to improve the
quality of education are taking effect," said
George Hanford, College Board president.
The 24-hour SAT exam, administered
several times yearly to college-bound high
school seniors, is a multiple-choice test and
is scored on a scale of 200 to 800. Several
prestigious colleges and universities admit
few students with a score of less than 550 or
600 on either the math or verbal sections.
In 1963, the national average score on
math or section was 502 and 478 on the
verbal section. In 1981, the national

A CLOSE
LOOK AT
SEMINOLE
COUNTY
SCHOOLS
The system Is governed by a policy­
making board of five elected board
members and administered by an
elected superintendent. School board
meetings are held twice a month on
Wednesdays at the administrative
offices at 1211 Mellonville Ave.,
Sanford. The meetings are open to the
public. Current Seminole County
School Board members are Roland V.
Williams, Chairman, Nancy Warren,
Vice-C hairm an, • Jean
Bryant,
William J. Kroll, and Pat Telson.
Superintendent of Schools is Robert
W. Hughes.

The School Board of Seminole County
Is the county's largest employer, with
approximately 3,700 full-time em ­
ployees. Although the county Is fourth
from the smallest In land area, the
student enrollment of over 36,000
daces Seminole eleventh from the
argest In student (K-12) population.
The students attend school in 7 high
schools, (grades 9-12) accredited by
the Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools, eight middle schools
(grades 6-8), tw enty six (26)
elementary schools (K-5), and an
exceptional child center.

f

FOR A D D ITIO N A L IN FO R M A TIO N CONTACT:
The School Board ot Seminole County, Office of Public Information, 1211 Mellonville Ave.,
Sanford, FL 31771.

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1101 H IG H W A Y 436
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S
HT. 8:30-4:30
IH H
9:00-5:30 H
M O NH
.-F R I.H• SA

„
III

IH H I

outdoors

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
Herald Advtrflitr, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Fab. 10, 1 *02—3
Thursday, Feb.If, 1 * 12 —3

M any Departments Serve Seminole County
The legislative and prim ary ad ­
ministrative powers of county govern­
ment In Seminole County lie with the
County Commission.
All administrative departments other
than those of constitutional officers are
under the direction of the commission.
The County Commission is composed
of five members elected from five
d istricts within the county. Com­
missioners are elected at large to
staggered four-year terms.
The commission Is the combined
legislative-executive branch of county
government and oversees the activities
of all advisory boards, commissions and
county departments.
The commission meets every Tuesday
at 9:30 a.m. and holds public hearings on
zoning changes at 7 p.m. on alternating
Tuesdays.
The commission also meets regularly
on Monday and Tuesday afternoons for

scheduled workshop sessions.
Among those departments under the
commission’s supervision which serve
county residents are:
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL
The Personnel Office Is under the
supervision of Lois Martin. General
responsibilities of the Personnel Office
are to assist the county administrator,
a ssistan t county adm inistrator, the
Board of County Commissioners and its
various offices, departm ents, and
divisions In the recruitment and reten­
tion of qualified employees; to develop
personnel policies and procedures; to
maintain a classification and com­
pensation plan for employees; to assist in
labor relations; and to administer em­
ployees’ programs, benefits, and per­
formance review program.
OFFICE OF PLANNING
The Planning Office is under the
supervision of Woody Price. Respon­

sibilities include providing recom ­
mendations concerning the physical
development of the county In order to
improve the quality of life for residents of
Seminole County. These activities in­
clude updating the comprehensive plan,
assistance In current and long-range
planning, as well as graphics and base
map maintenance. The Planning Office
shall also provide long-range planning
assistance to all Board of County Com­
m issioners offices, departm ents,
divisions, and such other Constitutional
officers, as may be appropriate.
OFFICE OF COMPUTER SERVICES
The Computer Services Office is under
the supervision of Jack Harward. This
office provides retrieval and Information
processing for all Board of County
Com missioners offices, departm ents,
divisions, and such other Constitutional
officers, as may be appropriate, through
acquisition of computer hardware and

developm ent and m aintenance of
computer software. Work also includes
analyses of office and departmental work
flows In order to achieve efficient
operations.
OFFICE OF CENTRAL SERVICES
The Central Services Office is under
the supervision of Dave Hotary. The
function of this office is to provide ad­
ministrative and support services to all
Board of County Commissioners offices,
departments, divisions, and such other
Constitutional officers, as may be ap­
propriate.
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
The Department of Public Safety is
under the supervision of Gary Kaiser.
The primary objective of this depart­
ment is the safety of the citizens of
Seminole County either through
preventive measures or in the form of
emergency sendees. The Director of

Public Safety is also responsible for
emergency medical services, fire and
rescue service, civil defense and motor
vehicle inspection, when applicable.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
AND HUMAN SERVICES
The Department of Health and Human
Services Is under the supervision of Dr.
Jorge Deju. The overall mission is to
protect the public health and safety while
enabling individuals and families In
Seminole County to improve their basic
living conditions by providing assistance
with regard to lawful veterans benefits,
tem porary w elfare assistance, and
community service programs.
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC
SERVICES AND DEVELOPMENT
The Department of Public Services and
Development Is under the supervision of
John Percy. The department’s primary

objective Is to provide for orderly growth
and development lor redevelopment) of
Seminole County and to provide desired
public services to county citizens. The
D irector of Public Services and
Development is also responsible for land
management, building services, library
services, parks and recreation and
agricultural extension services.
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
The Department of Public Works is
under the supervision of Jack Schuder.
The department deals primarily with
direct field services to the citizens of the
County in order to provide reasonable
environm ental protection and basic
public facilities. The Department of
Public Works is also responsible for
engineering services, refuse and
disposal,
road
service,
traffic
engineering, vehicle maintenance and
environmental services.

5 Cities Have Active Year; Plan For Growth
A lta m o nte Sp ring s
By MICHEAL BEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Altamonte Springs was a resort community in the early part
of the century. Knuwn as Snow Junction, the town had a
miniscule permanent population.
But the sleepy community, which had a population of about
4,000 in 1970, has become a burgeoning city of 22,000 and Is
bursting at its seams.
i

Two of the area’s major transportation arteries, State Road
436 and Interstate 4, cut through the city. Businesses have
taken advantage of the good location and SR 436 is lined with
re sta u ran ts, m alls, office complexes and corporate
headquarters.

SR 436 is scheduled for major renovations this year with two
more lanes planned for construction along the highway's
busiest portion but long range plans also arc being developed
to alleviate traffic on the county’s busiest highway.
The Seminole County Expressway Authority was created
recently to develop plans for toll highways in the county in­
cluding an elevated expressway along a portion of SR 436.
The expressway would be a limited access road ana speed
traffic through the area to Orlando during peak rush hours.
Altamonte Springs also may be the terminus for a light rail
monorail system to connect the area with Orlando, the Orlando
International Airport and Disney World. That system, still lr.
the talking stages, could be developed within the next 20 years.
Altamonte Springs City Commissioners approved an $18.6
million budget for the fiscal year. The budget Included a
reduction In property taxes for d ty residents. The tax rate
dropped from $3.78 per $1,000 assessed valuation to $3.1$ per
: 11,000 mmenmi valuation.

Longwood
I.ong wood’s City Hall got a facelift In 1982 but the faces In the
building are the same ones.
The original City Hall, 175 West Warren Ave., was con­
structed In 1963 and not only functioned as the seat of the d ty
government, but home for the d ty 's fire department as well.
But with the city's population growing at an average 11
percent per vear, office space and room for the City Com­
mission to properly fundion has been at a premium.
City Administrator Dave Chacey began spearheading a
drive to expand City Hall in 1981. The commission approved a
$15,000 expenditure to cover costs of construding walls and the
outer shell work in the bay areas behind City Hall that for­
merly housed three fire trucks and a small office.
Uncxpeded savings from unspent funds gave the city a
budget surplus in 1982 and the commission moved to channel
the extra money Into the City Hall expansion project, bringing
the total construdion package to $43,614.
“ It's probably one of the most inexpensive City Hall ad­
ditions per square foot that's been built In a long time," says
City Clerk Donald Terry.
Terry said construdion, including carpeting, paneling, air
conditioning and a new audio system for the commission’s
public hearing fadlity Is running about $12.65 per square foot.
The renovation includes construdion of an enlarged city
commission meeting room.
The new room seats 112 on a permanent basis and has room
for another 20 or so temporary seats.
And a new $2,000 audio system was also installed. Each
commissioner has an individual microphone that is hooked
into the speaker system,’’ TerTy said.
Several experienced hands will continue to dired the d ty 's
government operations.
June Lormann was re-eleded as mayor following the
December election. The voters returned City Commissioners
Bill Mitchell and Russell Grant for another two-year term.
Grant, 57, a rancher who owns a heavy equipment sales and
service business, won re-election by a 2-1 margin for a fifth
two-year term over his perennial opponent, Robert Daves, 55,
an Insurance loss control specialist. The vote was 681 for Grant
and 345 for Daves.
Grant attributed his victory to the people recognizing that “I
have done a good job and tried to be fair about everything. I
had a lot of good people helping m e," he said.
Daves said the 27 percent turnout showed that a lot of people
obviously “hated to vote." He said the voters he expected to go
to the polls after work from 6 pm . on didn’t materialize.
Daves, who had run unsuccessfully three times previously,
noted that he received five votes less Tuesday than two years
ago.
"I guess my popularity Is declining," he said. “ I guess it’s
time to hang up the gloves. I don’t see any future In running
anymore." Noting that he walked door to door during his
csm pslgn, Daves said he was disappointed In his loss. “Hie
good responses I got didn’t convert Into votes," he said.
In the second CUy Commission race, Mitchell, 54, a dlKrict
m anager for Handleman Co., defeated former CUy Com­
missioner Larry Goldberg, 43, by a vote of 612 to 428.
Mitchell previously served 16 months on the CUy Com­
mission before being defeated two years ago.
Longwood is the oldest d ty in south Seminole County, dating
from 1875. Like Altamonte Springs, Longwood started with a
winter resort hotel. Some of the past nature of the d ty has been
preserved and restored along with the designation of an
Historical Distrirt.
Longwood’* population has more than doubled since 1970,
when there were 3,203 residents, to 9,397 in 1980 The city
continues to be essentially residential In nature with com­
development primarily along State Road 434 and Stale

mercial

Road 427.

W in te r Sp ring s
Winter Springs is the second newest municipality in
Seminole County.
When incorporated in 1959, the city was called the Village of
North Orlando but the name was changed in 1972 in a
referendum.
Winter Springs has experienced an almost 800 percent in­
crease In population since 1970. The city has grown from 1,161
in 1970 to about 13,000 in 1980.
For a lime in 1962 the city was controlled by women, Three of
the city’s five commissioners were women following the
November election, but 30-ycar-old Maureen Boyd resigned
from her commission post in December to become a Winter
Park police officer.
Lcanne Grove and Inez Linville remain on the city com­
mission.
Winter Springs is the largest rity in the county in terms of
area but it only recently began to attract industry and the
city's first shopping center opened in 198C.
The city is largely a bedroom community, The TuskawlUa
subdivision, which makes up about half of the city, is one of the
largest in the countv.
It continues to attract new developments and a new school,
the Allan F. Keeth Elementary School, is expected to open in
September to accommodate the continued growth in the city.
The $3 million school will house about 600 students.
But the city Is looking to grow larger. Annexation
proceedings have begun to bring another parcel Into the rity.
That area Is seen aB prime residential and Industrial property.
County commissioners have opposed the annexation but
negotiations am now underway between the two bodies to Iran
out the differences.
The d ty passed Its largesf budget ever for fiscal 1962-83. The
$2.3 million budget Included a 42 percent rax cut for city
residents.
This fiscal year, d ty employees got 5 percent cost-of-living
and 2 percent longevity raises.
Additionally, the d ty is spending $35,000 to start an em­
ployees pension plan. Without the plan, Winter Springs would
be the only city in Seminole County without an employees
pension program.
Three employees each were added to the police, fire and
public works departments. Commissioners also have ex­
pressed interest in hiring a recreation director — possibly Just
part time — but have not acted. •
They have, however, allocated $13,000 to upgrade recreation
facilities, nearly $72,000 in road capital Improvements also
has been included in the new budget, but not the new municipal

building that commissioners have been dreaming about for
years.
The budget reflects an 11 percent Increase in overall spen­
ding. Two out of every three dollars — roughly $1.3 million —
will pay for salary and insurance benefits for city employees,
utilities, legal fees and telephone bills.

Oviedo

"Running the city in a business-like manner" was Oviedo
Mayor Robert Whittier's pledge during the political campaign
that won him the office in October 1981. Whittier said he has
“ no intentions of changing that platform now" that he is in
office.
"I believe the people of Oviedo want things done orderly and
Casselberry
professionally," Whittier said. He added the city has had a
policy of slow, controlled, planned growth, “and I support it.”
Casselberry city offices have a new home with a landlord
Whittier, 74, serves a constituency of approximately 3,050
who won’t cut off the water if the bill Isn't paid.
persons, utilizing a staff of 21 people including supervisors.
The new City Hall, completed In August, is owned by the
The city budget for 1961-82 totals slightly more than $1 million.
city's utility department.
According to Whittier, the most pressing need in the city is to
The building is located at 95 Lake Triplett Drive, next door to
improve
substandard housing.
the old city building, and also housed the utility department's
“ We will be looking, during the coming year, at ways to
offices.
eliminate the substandard housing and replace U with better
The building, constructed by Southland Construction, Inc., of
homes,"
he said. "However, we have to move slowly and
Orlando, cost $1,082,390 and was funded by stabilization fees,
carefully,
because we have to consider there are people living
construction fees and a bond issue. The city will reimburse the
in these houses."
utility department from the general fund by leasing the space,
Whittier said the upgrading of housing is necessary for the
said Ed Keuling, utility director. Keuling said the utility
city
to elevate its tax base. He said the reason the city's tax
department will be reimbursed by next year.
base
is not broad is directly related to the poor housing con­
All city offices are located in the 23,000-square-foot building
ditions.
except for the police and fire departments which now occupy
“ About 30 percent of our population is in what I call sub­
the old city hall building next door. That building also was
standard
housing—providing no tax base whatsoever,” he
renovated in the contract with Southland.
said.
"We
have gone to a user fee for services provided by the
The council chamber In the old building has been renovated
rity
because
we cannot put the burden on the backs of the 25 to
for police and fire department offices along with a community
30
percent
of
the people who pay for the services."
meeting room.
Whittier
said
that “ as a last resort" the rity will seek federal
As part of the renovation, the utility, police and fire
relief for the housing problem, but “ we don’t want to get
departments were equipped with 24-hour radio dispatch units.
ainymore aid than we have to."
Dispatchers are on duty 24 hours a day.
Another Issue faring W hittier’s adm inistration Is the topic of
The city’s water and sewage treatment plants also are
double
taxation. Ha aald he h a t been looking into the dual
hooked Inlo the dispatch system so that mall unctions there can
taxation Uaua with regard to w rrtcas dupUcatad tn Vh* d ty by
be responded to Immediately. *'
the county but where d ty residents are forced to pay for both
Construction on the building began in November 1961 and
services while prim arily receiving only d ty service.
d ty offices were moved into the fadlity in September.
"W earvaam aU d ty and don’t have the money to Join larger
The city U basically a residential community with 15,239
citJes like Casselberry and Altamonte Springs against
residents, according to the latest census figures.
Seminole County in their dual-taxation suits, so we will have to
In addition to the new City Hall, there Is also Seminole
continue as In the past to try to work with the county under a
County’s only senior citizen multi-purpose center. Built in
mutual aid agreem ent," he said.
Secret ta k e Park, the center Is administered by a board of
directors named by Casselberry and Seminole County of­
Whittier said the d ty currently enjoys a mutual-aid
ficials. Completed in 1981, it Is the home of many programs and
agreement with the county and neighboring fire and police
departments.
activities for senior citizens administered by various groups in
"I'm not saying anything against the sheriff’s office," he
the county.
said. "They have been very good to us and very responsive
Mayor Owen Sheppard serves as the rity administrator.
whenever the support is not readily available In-house."
Five council members are elected for two-year terms.
Whittier said he Is "quite proud" of the Job his city depart­
Casselberry, named for Hibbard Casselberry who came to
the area in 1926 and acquired 3,000 acres of land, more than
ments are doing and under his administration “ we will con­
tinue to guide this d ty into responsive and business-like ser­
doubled Us population between 1970 and 1980. The rity had just
vice to the people".
over 6,000 residents in 1970.

r

DON’T YOU HAVE
BETTER THINGS TO DO
THAN GO FOOD SHOPPING?

One uf our
G m ilrr, doing
thru shopping

SVe let \u u lik e advantage u f where
you Iiu- Why pul yourself through
Turn) Umpiring lurlure every week
when you can hare the fined food*
available d e lim it! In your door
with substantial benefit* u m those
you’re getting for &gt;uur tnune&gt; n o *
there are other food plain, hut
there is only one Rich Food Plan,
and we'se been in Florida lo r thirtysis sears
H e guarantee quality, convenience
and satisfaction with our U S D A
Prime ami Choice m idwcslem cornfed heel, and Grade-A I ancy I m i Is
and vegetables

IS
WATER
WET?
Alsu for your cunscnienee * e carry
lup-of-llvc-litvc cuntmcrcial freezers
and microwave ovens
Hhv not call today'1 You might
want lu go to the (reach tom orrow!

PHONE
W .E. ADAMSON, P R ESIO ENT
(MS) 322-344)
Or
TOLL F R E E 1409-432-0125

Since t

J

�4— Evening Hurald, Sanford, Ft.
&lt;— Herald Advertiser. Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 10, 1»*3
Thursday, Feb. 14,1411

Bradlee-Mclntyre House Saved
From Fire Is Historic Landmark
longwood sprang up around a winter resort
hotel.
That hotel, the longwood Village Inn has
been restored and along with Christ Episcopal
Church, the Inside-Outside House and the
Bradlee-Mclntyre House, developed into the
longwood Historical District.
The Bradlee-Mclntyre House was moved to
Longwood from Altamonte Springs in 1973 by
the Central Florida Society for Historic

Preservation.

ELEANOR ANDERSON

She Knows Where
Every Cent Is
Spent In County
By MICHEAL BERA
Herald Staff Writer
As director of Seminole County's Office of Management and
Budget, Eleanor Anderson Is one of the county's most in­
fluential appointed officials.
But it hasn’t been an easy road to success for Ms. Anderson.
Her career in county government began at the lowest levels in
1962. After 20 years of hard work, drive, determination and
achievement, she has become an active participant in every
financial decision facing the county.
Her rise through the ranks of county government coincides
with the explosive growth of government in the county. And
she has carried the added burden of mothering two children
and pursuing a college degree.
One quality which has remained a constant throughout her
career has been a love of her work.
" I ’ve always enjoyed my work here," Ms. Anderson said.
"The people in this county have always been good to work for.
There have always been opportunities."
Ms. Anderson was the county's first budget analyst, working
with a consultant when the county first instituted an office of
management analysis and evaluation in 1975. She remained in
the office when it became OMB and in 1980 she was promoted
to director.
She’s proud of the performance record which allowed her to
be promoted.
"The county commission and other officials have always
been good about giving people within the system a chance,"
Ms. Anderson said. "Roger (Neiswender, former county
administrator) started out as planning director."
Her entrance into OMB was one of several major promotions
received by women in county government in the mid 1970s but
she refuses to believe the pressures of the women’s movement
had anything to do with her success or the success of several
others who were moved into management positions.
»"There were several women who came up through the ranks
like I did who became department heads right before I went
into OMB," she said.
"We’ve been lucky enough to have some very progressive
people in county government who were willing to give women a
chance. They weren’t looking at whether you were a man or a
woman, just whether you could do a job."
Ms. Anderson’s professional success has not been without
some personal problems. The long hours spent working for the
county combined with the pressures of being a wife, mother
and student broke up her marriage.
"I worked in a lot of aspects of county government, raised
two children and went to school at night. I'm divorced and my
career played a large part in it."
Ms. Anderson's position carries with it a lot of responsibility.
"When I first started working for the county back in 1962, there
was something like a J6 million budget. This year we’ve got $63
million in the budget."
The responsibility of compiling the budget figures falls upon
OMB and the office oversees the overall figures but has day-today communication with the departments to manage the
figures they submit.
But working on the budget is only a small part of OMB's
overall responsibility. The OMB staff spends six months a year
working on the county’s comprehensive management program
to analyze the needs of the county in coming years. The office
also analyzes the county's programs to ensure their cost ef­
fectiveness and is beginning to perform management analyses
as well.
"Most people feel the OMB's duty is to prepare the budget,"
she said. "That’s true, but it's only part of the job.
"We’re not a finance office. I don’t like to be called finance
director. We have one of those and it’s not m e," she said.
"We’re a budget office. We develop a program and then figure
out how we're going to get there from here."

Handy County
Numbers Listed
SEMINOLE COUNTY PHONE NUMBERS
Animal Shelter........................................................... 322-7000
Community Action...................................................... 322-0060
Community Coordinated Child C a r e .........................628-3020
C ourthouse.......................................................
.323-4330
District School B o a rd ................................................. 322-1252
Drug Action Committee ‘The G ro v e'.........................834-1221
Federation of Senior Citizens C lubs...........................831-4241
Florida Department of HRS............. ICasselberry') 339-8200
(Sanford) 322-1661
G eriatrics Center ........................................................ 834-8131
Health Department Clinics ................. &lt;Longwood) 831-4117
(Sanford &gt;322-2724
Information and R e fe rra l.......................................... 894-1441
League of Women Voters .......
869-5881 or 339-0449
Legal A id ...................................................................... 834-1660
Mental Health C e n te r............ (AltamonteSprings) 831-2411
(Sanford 1323-7450
Parka and Recreation .........
323-2500
Property Appraiser .......... , .................................. 323-4330
Public S a fe ty ............................................................... 323-2500
R5VP ............................................................................834-6550
Social Security Administration
.................
322-2711
Supervisor of Elections........................................... 323-4330
Veterans S erv ices................. . . .
323-1171 or 323-1330
We C a r e ........................................................................ 626-1222
Welfare O ffice............................................................. 32248. J
Youth Program s, I n c ................................................ 834-5169

In 1971, as "progress" moved Into the
Altamonte Springs area, the city considered
burning the Bradlee-Mclntyre House for fire
practice.
The Broyhill Company donated the BradleeMclntyre House and Stauffer-Green Realty
donated the Inside-Oulside House to the
Society.
In April 1973 both were moved to I-ongwocd.
To move along quickly with restoration, the
Inside-Outside House was leased on a long
term basis to individuals and private funds
were used for its restoration.
The Bradlee-Mclntyre House was one of the
summer cottages built alongside Altamonte

Springs’ hotel.
Most early Florida towns took a typical
form. The heart was a rambling frame hotel
with many verandahs. Near the hotel were
winter “ cottages" of the most well-to-do
visitors.
Not far away would be a railroad and depot
with a horse drawn wagon to run between the
depot and hotel. On the fringes would be a few
small houses for permanent residents, and a
few stores and a church.
Today, progress and fire have destroyed
nearly all evidence of this early pattern,
longwood is one exception.
The Bradlee-Mclntyre House was built
about 1885. It is the only surviving "cottage" in
Orange and Seminole counties. It is typical of
the flamboyant houses of the Victorian period.
The exterior rises to three floors and
features the octagonal tower and "ginger­
bread" verandah. The basic shape is called
Greek Cross which featu res interesting
masses on the exterior.
The first floor is dominated by a Grand
Salon, some 35 feet lung. It features a carved
cornice and fireplace. A trio of gingerbread

arches separate this room from the graceful
stairway. This room features wainscoating, a
pier m irror and French windows.
Opening off the salon are two sets of double
doors into the once "Blue Parlor" for the
ladies and the library for the gentlemen.
Upstairs there is a hall and four bedrooms.
The large hallways served as sitting rooms
and also provided ventilation. The third floor
was a large hall and three bedrooms, used
sometimes for servants.

A director of many corporations, railroads
and financial institutions, he was trustee for
more than 50 estates having assets of more
than 100 million dollars.
In the 1880s, Bradlee and a group of friends
becam e Interested in developing reso rt
property in Florida. They founded the
Altam onte Land, Hotel and Navigation
Company. They built a hotel which burned in
1954. They also built a number of winter cot­
tages adjacent to the hotel, the BradleeMclntyre House being one of them.

The house contains eight fireplaces. The
mantels were made of cypress. The basic
structure is heart pine. Mortar in the chim­
neys has decomposed so the fireplaces are no
longer used.

S. Maxwell McIntyre became the proprietor
of the house in 1904. It is said McIntyre bought
most of the town of Altamonte from the Land,
Hotel and Navigation Company.

The man responsible for building the house,
Nathaniel J. Bradlee was a member of a
Boston fam ily. His m atern al g re a t­
grandfather, Caleb Davis, was the first
speaker of the Massachusetts House of
Representatives. His paternal grandfather,
also Nathaniel J., was a builder and his father,
Samuel, pioneered in hardware.

McIntyre died in 1914 and the property went
to his wife, Annie K. McIntyre, who was
chairman of the board for the chapel. In 1942
she suggested she be succeeded as chairman
and the chapel and property were deeded to
the board forever.
Mrs. McIntyre lived In the BradleeMclntyre House until she died In 1946.

Seminole County Offers A Little For Every Taste
By DORIS DIETRICH
PEOPLE Editor
Once considered a sleepy agricultural county, Seminole has
awakened with more than a long yawn and outstretched arms.
Busy minds and bodies have created a peaceful, yet bustling
community that is literally a little bit of heaven on earth.
In the heart of the Citrus Belt, Seminole County has an
abundance of fresh fruits and flowers year-round. For those
who so desire, it is also possible to indulge in water sports
during the entire year.
Lifestyles vary from rustic and quainl pictures of early
America to the sophistication reflected in concrete jungles
springing up in numerous sections.
The countryside is dotted with all styles of homes.

Places of worship throughout the area represent ail the
world religions. Beautiful churches with exceptional a r­
chitectural designs have open-door policies to visitors
traveling through Seminole.

Culture comes in a variety of packages. Seminole Mutual
Concert Association, which is nearly 50 years old, sponsors
high calibre concerts during the winter and spring months.

nearly 25 years. The artists conduct several shows annually.
The General Henry S. Sanford Museum — Library contains a
wealth of history and artifacts surrounding the founder of the
city of Sanford — including his library.
Seminole is within 30 minutes of the nation's most popular
attraction — Walt Disney World and Epcot. Major tourist
attractions are nearby and beaches are about 45 minutes
away.
Nighclubsand lounges are plentiful. Take your choice. There
are theatre groups, community choirs and a community band.

Ballet Guild of Sanford—Seminole, now in its 15th season, is
a dance company sustained entirely by community support.
Sanford — Seminole Art Association has been in existence

And now something new has been added to the Seminole
scene. The Sanford Bay Queen is docked in Sanford for cruises
on the St. Johns R iv er.

Seminole County can boast that there are restaurants
representing perhaps every culture.

N ClR
W E ARE A PART OF
YOUR COMMUNITY
Com m unity involvem ent has been a tradition at NCR for
m any decades.
The NCR Industrial Systems' facility, located in Lake
M a ry , carries on the NCR responsibility to support
program s that im prove the quality of life in the com­
m unity. Key activities encompass:
E D U C A T IO N :
In 1980, NCR received the annual Com m unity Service
Aw ard from Seminole Junior College for Its
educational activities which include sponsoring J.A.
Companies, teaching classes of local high schools
under the Project Business Program , conducting
ongoing high school Student Job Shadow Program s,
participating as m em bers of local College Advisory
Boards.
C O M M U N I T Y S E R V IC E :
N C R has p ro v id e d ongoing
leadership to the United W ay
organization In Seminole County.
As m em bers of local Cham ber of
C o m m e rc e , N C R becom es in ­
volved in promoting and assisting
growth of the business sector. The
C e n tra l F lo rid a Blood M o b ile
receives 210 to 250 pints of blood each year
from Its visits to the plant. NCR provides
fin a n c ia l c o n trib u tio n s and support
organizations such as the Florida CouncilC rim e and D e lin q u e n c y , the A r th r itis
Foundation, Kidney Foundation, Epilepsy
Association, United Negro Fund, League of
Women Voters, etc.
The NCR Em ployee Recreation Association donated
nearly S I,000 to the Lake M a ry Police Benevolent
Drive.
Y O U T H SPORTS;
NCR continues to sponsor team s In the Sem inole
Soccer League and the S em inole Y outh Sports
A ssociation.

M ATCHING GIFTS:
N C R 's M a tc h in g G ifts P ro g ra m m atche s em ployee
c o n trib u tio n s (d o lla r fo r d o lla r) to e d u ca tio n a l in ­
s titu tio n s and a rts p ro g ra m s. T h is su ppo rt helps to
b rin g v ita lity and broadened d im e n sio n to a c o m ­
m u n ity .

NC R
NCR CORPORATION
INDUSTRIAL SYSTEMS
584 S. Lake Em m a Rd.
Lake M a ry , F L 32746
(305) 323-9250

�Evening herald, Sanford, FI.
Herald Advertiier, Sanford, FI,

Sheriff, Fire Departments

Sunday, F e b .3 0 ,im -5
Thursday, Feb. 24, I W H

W ork To Protect Residents
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Their number one priority is to make sure Seminole County
residents are protected. Although crime, fires, rescue calls
and other emergency-relAted problems are on the Increase,
county law enforcement officers and fire officials are working
to meet the needs.
According to Sheriff John Polk, the county’s elected chief
law enforcement officer, his department receives about 6,500
complaints per month, totalling about 70,000 calls since
January 1902. Polk said that figure has Increased from 30,445
calls In 1976 and 66,346 calls in 1980 to the current figure
because of the Influx of people In the cuunty and the upward
trend In crime In general.
Yet Polk says his department of 129 swom law enforcement
officers are working to meet the rising needs of the community
and " I’m extremely proud of their success."
Polk, who runs his department under a budget of $7,232,619
for fiscal 198243, says he is also proud of the services his
department provides to the community.
"While we haven’t started any new programs this year we
feel very strongly about continuing and improving current
programs which are of the most benefit to the most people In
the county," he said.
"For Instance, Florida now has one of the strictest DUI
(driving under the influence of alcoholic beverages or drugs)
laws in the country," he continues. "The people of Florida feel
strongly about ridding our highways of these menaces. Our
department has six officers assigned to a DUI, squad and
although the grant which funded that project has expired, we
are conlinaing the program because of the success it has had in
combating the drunk-driving problem.
"Also, drug-related crimes are also of much concern to this
office as we have seen an increase of problems in that area,"
Polk said. "Much of which may be attributed to south Florida's
drug traffic moving into our area find throughout the state."
Polk said he organiied the Seminole County Drug Task
Force, which is made up of three deputies, one Longwood and
one Sanfird officer to combat the growing drug problem.
"We expect Altamonte Springs and Casselberry to come into
the program soon and encourage other cities to participate,"
he said. "The program has been highly successful.
"Also, according to a report by our Special Investigations
Unit which works to combat the drug-related crimes here,
from Jan. 1 to Oct. 0, 1982, we arrested 111 people, seized a
street value of $324,239 worth of drugs, seized 145,883 in cash in
drug transactions and cleared 107 cases by arrests or other
means," Polk said.
In addition, Polk said his department will continue the
Lifeline program, a system which provides instant emergency
help to some 250 elderly county residents.
"At no charge to the resident — who must be a senior citizen
with a medical or physical handicap and a telephone to be
eligible to participate in the program — we hook up a line from
their home to our communications center which allows them to
summon for help at the touch of a button, if necessary,” Polk
explains.
Polk said the Lifeline units arc distributed by the Visiting
Nurses Association of Seminole and Osceola counties.
"We were the first In the United States to offer this program
as a regular service," he adds.
" I’m alio pretty proud of our Neighborhood Crime Watch
program and Officer In the School program," Polk continues.
*“The nel^iborhood program has been a very affective means
of getting community assistance and support In fighting crime
and solving cases which happen In the resident's own neigh­
borhood.
"We are expanding the Offlcer-ln-the-SchooI program from
two officers to four officers who teach and counsel students at
Lake Brantley High School, Lake Howell High School, Mil wee
Middle School and Tusca wills Middle School," Polk said. "The
program allows the students to get to know the deputies, un­
derstand what his job is and hopefully achieve a better un­
derstanding of what crime Is and the consequences of it."
Polk also Is charged with managing the Seminole County Jail

which Is located at Five Points off U.S. 17-92 and Is ad­
ministered by Steve Saunders.
The $5 million Jail houses 210 Inmates and since its official
opening in July 1900 has provided such programs for the
prisoners as a GED program, weekly Alcoholics Anonymous
m eetings, m ental-health counseling, lib rary services,
religious counseling and sendees, drug-abuse and alcoholabuse programs, work programs and other programs of
community service.
But while Polk and his officers are "out there" combatting
crime, sending help to the elderly and educating county
children about law enforcement, who is protecting area
residents against fires, providing civil defense and ensuring
they receive emergency medical care when needed?
"Under the division of fire protection, the county employs
102 people, Including support personnel such as clerks and
typists," said Gary E. Kaiser, director of public safety. "In
that group, we have three chiefs who heed their individual
battalions which are headed by two district commanders each.
Each commander has six lieutenants, who supervise 22 fire
service technicians each."
Kaiser said his office also employs two training officers and
an emergency medical services coordinator.
"Also Included in the fire protection division are Fire
Marshal Joe McCluan, Chief Fire Investigator Ray Pippin, as
well as a fire protection inspector and investigator," Kaiser
said. "The board (county commissioners) also has approved
an additional fire investigator which we desperately needed
and that position will be filled soon, I hope.
"We operate nine fire stations throughout the county,"
Kaiser says. “ However, the locations of three of those stations
will change this year.
"We will be closing the Sanlando station when the new
station at Sable Point along Weklva Springs Road Is con­
structed," he said. "Once the new two-story Altamonte
Springs station Is built along Westmonte Drive and Douglas
Road, they’ll move the city fire personnel there to better serve
that area of the city and county. By making that move,
Altamonte Springs can avoid having to build a third station of
their own, thus also saving them money."
Kaiser said there also will be stations constructed in
Chuluota and Fern Park to replace "trailers which are
currently parked there to house fire personnel who provide fire
service in those areas."
"This is probably one of the most significant programs we
are Involved In now," Kaiser says. "The people of Seminole
County will realize about a million dollars in savings and by
that I mean, city residents will see a $ ^-million savings."
Kaiser said he will continue efforts to work with other cities
including Sanford, Lake Mary and Winter Springs to get them
Involved with the “ first-response program that we’ve been
able to use in Longwood and Altamonte Springs. "Altamonte
Springs didn’t lose a fire station or personnel In the project of
building the new fire station. They saved money and are en­
suring greater response for fire emergencies In that area," he
said.
Kaiser Is also charged with heading up what he calls "one of
the most sophisticated communications systems around.
"Our communications and civil defense center looks like the
bridge of the Starship Enterprise on Star Trek. If ET (the
extraterrestrial of the Steven Spielberg-produced movie by the
same name) had landed here, he definitely could have phoned
home, Kaiser boasted.
"We employ about 21 people In the communications
division," Kaiser explained. “These people are responsible for
taking calls for fire notifications and dispatching a unit to the
scene. They handle almost every emergency and non­
emergency call for the county and have the capacity to handle
the area of Central Florida because of the strength of our
communications signal.”
Kaiser said he plans to expand the county’s microwave
project which will Increase the effectiveness of fire and
sheriffs department telephone systems as well as other
communications.

Senior citizens can come to six locations in
Seminole County to get free hot meals and be with
other seniors. These people take advantage of the

program at the Knights of Columbus Hall In
Sanford,

Senior Citizens Have
Much They Can Do Here
. Knights of Columbus Hall, 2504 Oak Ave.,
By MICHEAL BEHA
Sanford.
Herald Staff Writer
A spokesman for the program said
Seminole County has a variety of
programs to provide services to the meals will be served In Lake Mary as
well but no site has yet been determined.
elderly.
Through
the
m eals-on-wheels
The primary service for the elderly Is
provided by the Federation of Senior program, lunch Is delivered to shut-ins
Citizens Clubs of Seminole County with and Invalids.
The agency’s Information and referral
offices in Altamonte Springs.
Another program, the Retired Senior service Is a catch-all service, the
Volunleer Program, gives senior citizens spokesman said. "I've been asked about
an outlet through which they can help Just about everything," she said. “ People
others in the community.
can call us when they don't know where
Tiie Federation of Senior Citizens to look for something."
Gubs provides a full range of activities,
The agency also provides volunteers to
from congregate sit-down meals to meals help senior citizens with housekeeping
on wheels, an information and referral
chores.
service, housecleaning, legal aid and an
“They'll come in and do light
employment service.
housekeeping, clean house, dust, wash
The biggest program is the congregate dishes, do the laundry and help with
meal program which provides meals for shopping," she said.
am bulatory senior citizens at five
The agency also has three attorneys to
locations in the county.
Lunch and dinner are served at provide free advice for senior citizens.
Williams Chapel at the intersection of "They won't do litigations but can give
M arket and Williams streets In them help with wills, estate planning,
Altamonte Springs; The Multi-purpose landlord-tenant relationships and other
Center, 200 N. Lake Triplett Drive in problems faced by senior citizens."
Casselberry; Grant Chapel, 387 Franklin
A clearinghouse for job opportunities Is
Ave., in Oviedo; St. Paul's Baptist also maintained by the group. Most of the
Church, 813 Pine Ave., Sanford, and the Jobs are part-Ume and provide senior
‘ *1

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both locally and those from
far aw ayl I
Come sleep with us under the
stars nestled In an oak forest.

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Another well-used service is free
transportation. Four vans are on the road
every day, picking up seniors anywhere
in the county and taking them shopping,
to the doctors’ office, to the congregate
meal locations or any other place in the
county. Two of the vans are equipped
with wheelchair lifts and other special
medical equipment.
There Is no charge for any of the ser­
vices provided by the federation of senior
citizens clubs. The group is funded by the
federal and county governments and Is a
United Way agency. Donations are ac­
cepted.
People desiring any of the services
may call 831-1631.
RSVP provides about .350 volunteers
w'.io work approximately 7,000 hours per
month at 49 Seminole County public
service agencies.
Joan Madison, executive director of
RSVP, said the oldest volunteer In the
county is 89 and several more are In their
80s. Anyone over 55 y e a n of age can
participate.
Information on RSVP can be obtained
by calling 8344560.
• ; •' :

*

T ffE R E CAN
NO (jR O W T fl
W ITH O U T A STRO N q bA SE
At Central Florida Regional
Hospital, caring hands form
the base of our progress a continual growth toward

Salutes all of our Patronage

citizens with a supplementary income.

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SPORTS

* — Eve nlng Hsrald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 10, m i

Lyman Footballers,
Netters Rule Preps
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
The prep sports year was Just one-third
complete In November, but already the
I.yman Greyhounds had captured four of
six possible championships.
In football, Lyman, which was a
miserable 0-10 two yeras ago, put

Flve Star Conference
together its finest campaign by going 7-4
Final Standings Overall
and winning the District 4A-9 and Five
Star Conference championships.
WL T
W.L.T
Coach Bill Scott's hoys had an Im­ Lyman
6 1 0
7 3 0
6 1 0
pressive 6-1 conference and district Apopka
7 3
record which tied them with Apopka, but Lake Howell 4 3 0
4 3 0
a victory over the Blue Darters In head- Mainland
to-head competition gave Lyman the title Spruce Creek 4 3 0
D etand
3 4 0
nod.
tak e Brantley 1 0 6
Quarterback Jerry Alley, offensive
Seminole
0 ^ 0
linemen Chris Tschieder and Dirk Smith,
wldeout Todd M arriott, defensive
lineman Gene Allen and all-Central tensive lineman Dan Rae and Bill Nor­
Florida linebacker Mike Hill were all ton, quarterback Troy Quackenbush and
named to the Five Star Conference First fullback Jay Robey, who rushed for 1,003
Team.
yards and was selected the Burger King
Jam es Pilot, Willis Perry, John Poor, Offensive player of the Year. Lyman's
Vince Presley and Graham Mays were Hill won the defensive honor and
Oviedo's Blanton was the top coach.
accorded second team spots.
The rest of the county had losing
While Lyman was taking care of the 4A
competition, the 3A Oviedo Lions, under records. Coach Jerry Posey’s Seminole
first-year coach Jack Blanton had the club went 0-10 for the first time in the
school's history. Lake Mary, In its first
best record in the county at 8-3.
Oviedo started slowly, compiling a 1-3 varsity season, went 1-9. Lake Brantley
m ark before running off seven wins in a finished 2-8, beating Lake Mary and
row. The last one — a victory over Lake Seminole.
Howell in the Rotary Bowl — was one the
Turning to volleyball, coach Karren
Lions really savored since the two
Newman's Lady Greyhounds posted an
schools used to share one facility and a awesome 21-2 record which Included an
strong rivalry still exists.
unbeaten Five Star Conference cham­
pionship.
Oviedo’s top perform ers were
linebacker Tommy Johnson, linemen
David Wilson, David Butterfield and Eric
Putm an, nose guard Kevin Yentz,
halfbacks J.W. Yarborough and Barry
Williams, wideout Kenny Ashe and
quarterback Jodie Huggins.

down

pass

for

Lyman.

Lake Howell also bounced back from
a mediocre 1981 year to finish at 6-5.
Coach Mike Blsceglia's Silver Hawks
challenged for the Five Star lead most of
the year before dropping tough games to
Lyman and Apopka.
The Hawks had several outstanding
performers led by safety Bill Iang, of-

Lynn Lugering, Amy Babcock, Carol
Rogers, Wynne Wycoff, Pam Stambaugh, Ronda Tempest a and Vikki
M cM urrer were the m ainstays for
Lyman. Coach Jo Luciano's juniororiented Lake Howell girls were second.
Semirole, despite losing all six starters
to graduation, finished third behind
coach Beth Corso.

H tr a td Photo oy ip n n i* w io b o ld l

Lym an's volleyball team rejoices after winning
the district tournam ent. Ronda Tem pesta, Carol
Rogers, Pam Stam baugh. Amy Babcock, Lynn
Five Star for coach David Huggins.
Brantley, under coach Jim Marshall,
was ranked as high as fourth In the state
and proved it was up to the task by taking
sixth in a grueling state meet at Detand.
The Hayward sisters — Kathryn and
Joanne — along with senior Ellen Stern
were the Patriots’ leaders. The Lady
Pats breezed to the conference and Five
Star titles along with winning their own
invitational and the Seabreeze Beach
Run.

In cross country, Lyman’s boys shared
the limelight with Lake Brantley’s girls.
The Greyhounds, behind the determined
efforts of Doug MeBroom and Brian
Hunter, won the county meet and the

Lake Howell's girls, paced by senior
K erry R ytcr, and L ym an's ladles,

Lugering and Wynne Wycoff were the key
m em bers.

headed by junior Schowanda Williams,
gave the Patriots stiff competition most
of the year.
Seminole’s boys, after being almost
nonexistent for years, had a strong year
behind the leadership of coach Ted
Tombros. Senior Mike Wooten was the
Tribe's top runner.
Lake Mary, in Its second year with
coach Mike Gibson, has a strong boys
team paced by Junior Derek Tangeman
who did well in the district and regional.
Kim Averill was the top runner for the
girls.

In swimming, coach Bob Goff’s Lyman
boys shared honors with the Lake Howell
girls.
Lyman won the county meet as Greg
Thayer paced the winning effort. Lake
Howell, meanwhile, has another banner
year behind the strong strokes of Karen
Acre and Susan Aspinwall for coach
Dwaln Picou.
Seminole also made good strides In
swimming as coach Donalyn Knight took
over the program. Sophomore Chuck
Rugress won a district champion in the
100 fly and Lisa Polgar was a consistent
big winner for the girls.

Golf Courses, Tennis C ourts B la n k e t S e m in o le
|

.

An aerial overview of Seminole County
gives you lakes, lakes, lakes, lakes and
lakes.
Next in abundance are golf courses.
You can't buzz the county from 10,000
feet without seeing greens and greens
and more greens. And of course you see a
few water hazards.
Every' city in Seminole County offers
golfing facilities to its residents. In
Sanford, the Mayfair Country Club has
recently been renovated and la in good
condition. Up the road a bit in Winter
Springs Is the Big Cypress while west of
there Is the Seminole Golf Club In
Longwood. East of Winter Springs near
Oviedo is Tuskawilla, one of the best in
the area. West of Seminole la Rolling
Hills in Altamonte Springs and Weldva in
Longwood. The Deer Run course recently
had a grand opening for Its beautiful new
course

Although the Swallows in DeBary and
the Osteen Golf Course in Osteen aren't
In Seminole County, they are in easy
driving distance. Both clubs offer
specials during the week.
If golf isn’t your bag, Seminole County
offers many places to play tennis. Just
about every apartment complex you
move into has one. In Altamonte Springs,
the Altamonte Springs Racket Gub has
an abundance of courts. Seminole Com­
munity College also has several courts as
did Red Bug Park, Ft. Mellon Park and
Chase Park In Sanford, Eastmonte and
Westmonte In Altamonte Springs and
Secret Lake in Casselberry. Most have
lights for your night time enjoyment.
More than enough lakes are available
for fishing and skliing. Lake Monroe in
Sanford Is available for both purposes.
Lake Jessup In Oviedo, Lake Destiny in
Altamonte Springs and Lake Ortenta in

f" t(?

*

Altamonte has facilities for both. I,ake
Hamey In Geneva is another spot. The
Osteen Bridge Fish Camp on the St.
Johns River is another spot to catch
bream, catfish and blue gills.
Here’s a breakdown of the area parks:
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS AREA;
— Hermits Trail, 1 acre, playground,
garden area (city)
—ta k e Lotus nature area (city)
—Eastmonte, 15 acres, baseball field,
tennis courts, water access, picnic
tables, bike trails (city)
ta k e Orlenta public boat ramp
—Westmonte, 11 acres, two softball
fields, handball, basketball, tennis
courts, and swimming pool (city)
—Merrill Park, nature trails, bike
paths (city)
CASSELBERRRY AREA:
—Red Bug tak e, 50 acres, handball
courts, shuffleboard, tennis, baseball

\

• i ••

’

••h H IK f

fields, basketball courts, beach (county)
—Wlrz, 7 acres, baseball, basketball,
swimming pool, playground, picnic
tables (city)
—Secret take, 23 acres, water access,
tennis, Senior Gtizen Center (city)
CHULUOTAAREA:
—ta k e Mills, 50 acres, picnic tables
and shelters, nature trails, fishing dock,
beach, amphitheatre, grills, tent cam­
ping, playground (county)
FOREST CITY AREA:
—Bear tak e, 4 acres, water access
(county)
—Weklva Springs, 6300 acres, swim­
ming, boat ramp, picnic areas, canoeing,
nature trails, playground (state)
GENEVAAREA:
—C.S. Lee, 20 acres, boat ramp, water
access, picnic area, grills (county)
LAKE MARY AREA:
—Crystal tak e, 3 acres, water access,

picnic tables, grills (city)
LONGWOOD AREA
—West Church at Markham, 3 acres,
baseball (city)
—West Warren at Wilma, 2 acres,
shuffleboard (city)
—Big Tree, The Senator, 11 acres,
picnic tables, nature trails (county)
—Sanlando Park, 40 acres, tennis,
basketball and handball courts,
playground (county)
—Big Tree E ast, E nvironm ental
Center, ball fields and water (county)

acres, boat ramp, swimming, picnic
tables (county)
—Suniand, 15 acres, playground,
tennis, baseball, basketball (county)
—Mullet Lake, 185 acres, boat ramp,
tent camping, picnic tables (county)
-C am eron Wight, 3 acres, boat ramp,
picnic tables (county)
—ta k e Monroe West, 104 acres, home
of the Central Florida Zoo, which has
exotic animals displayed In a tropical
Jungle-like atmosphere, abounding in
trees and native plants. Admission is
charged and the Zoo Is open from 9:30
PAOLAAREA:
—ta k e Sylvan, 120 acres, tent cam­ a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday.
The Zoo Is supported .by members of the
ping, fishing, boating (county)
Central Florida Zoological Society, and
SANFORD AREA:
by public and private donations. About 80
—Fort Mellon, 24 acres, playground, acres of this park have been developed
baseball, basketball, tennis, shuf- into picnic areas and nature trails, and
fleboard, picnic areas (city)
the other 20 acres comprise the Zoo.
—Sanford Avenue (ta k e Jessup), 6 (county)

P ari-m utuels
Dog Racing, Jai-Alai
Within Walking Distance
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Have you been a little down on your
luck? Are your favorite numbers coming
in fourth and fifth and sixth? 'Have your
funds been depleted by this losing
streak?
Then drive, don't walk, to the
Casselberry Country Gub in south
Seminole County. Then sell your car.
With the money procured, make your
fortune at anyone of three pari-mutuel
plants in the area within' walking
distance.
From this precise vantage point, you
are within two miles of the SanfordOrlando Kennel Gub (SOKC), the
Orlando-Seminole Jai-Alai Fronton and
the Super Seminole Greyhound Park.
Who needs a car? Besides, with the
added finances you save on gas, you'll
have any of the three places crying for
mercy in a couple of hours.
Sanford-Ortando Kennel Chib
Ml D*f Track Road
Loagwood
Jerry Collins, the self-proclaimed
"Father of Greyhound Racing In
Florida," has one of the state’s oldest
tracks. His racing dates run from just
after Christmas to early May.
SOKC la open six days a week (ex­
cluding Sunday) with post time at 8 every
night. Matinees are Monday, Wednesday
and Saturday at 1:18 p m.
Win, Place and Show, Daily Double
(first and second race), Quiniela, Per­
fects and Trifecta tickets are avilable for
82. Boxing (selecting three numbers! is
available for $6. A “ Pick 6" was In-

slituted this season where If a bettor
picks the first six winners he wins big.
All races are televised in color
throughout the building. Food, ranging
from a buffet line in the Finish Line Gub
to steaks made to order in the clubhouse,
is available at each performance.

Enrique II returns a shot during
Jai-Alai action. The fast-paced
game from the South American
Basque region runs from the
middle of August to the end of
Decem ber in the OrlandoSeminole Jai-Alai Fronton in
Fern Park. It is just one of three
pari-mutual establishments in
the Longwood-Casselberry-Fern
Park area.

Call (305) 831*1600 for reservations.
Orlando-Seminole Jai-Alai Fronton
U.8. Highway 17-82 at State Read 431
FeraParfc
Santi Echaniz, Orlando-Seminole
Fronton Players manager, has upgraded
bis roster in the past few years, bringing
in performers from throughout Florida.
Jai-Alai (Hi-Ue) offers tingles and
doublet competition which resembles
racket ball, but Is played with nets
(cestas) and a hard ball slightly smaller
than a tennis ball. The players are very
skilled at throwing the receiving the ball
against a rock-hard wall which sends the
bad hurtling back at Ua players.
Win, Place and Show, Quiniela and
Trifecta tickets are available for 82.
Dally Double and Perfects tickets cost
$3. Quiniela and Trifecta boxing are
available for 88Performances are nightly except
Sunday at 7. Matinees are Monday,
Wednesday and Saturday at 12 noon. The
season runs from the middle of August to
the end of December.
Call 231-8191 for reservations.
Super Seminole Greyhound Park
2000 Semlnola Boulevard
Casselberry
Super Seminole Greyhound Park ia
entering jts third year with racing from

early May until early September.
Super Seminole is open every night
except Sunday with evening per­
formances starting at 8. Matinees are
Monday, Wednesday and Saturday at

1:15 p.m.
Win, place unj Shot*, Quiniela, Perfecta, Trifecta, Dai*) Double (first and
second races) and Big Q (last two races)
are available.

Steaks, prime rib and assorted seafood
t^ es are avail:hie in the clubhouse,
Color P avilion sets carry the race and
lta replay for non-rallblrds.
Cat! ^305 ) 831-1140 for reservations.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
Herald A d v e rtlu r, Sanford, FI.

*

Sunday, Feb. 30, m s —7
Thurtday, Feb. 34. 1 W - 7

*

Activities A re Endless
By DORIS DIETRICH
Herald Staff Writer
•
Seminole County Is bustling with ac­
tivity year-round. Some of the annual
events are as follows:
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
The South Seminole Jaycecttes sponsor
the annual “ Little Miss Firecracker
Pageant" each Fourth of July, which is
hel.! at the Altamonte Mall.
They alio sponsor the annual Seminole
County Junior Miss Pageant in the fall of
each year.
The South Seminole Jaycees sponsor a
Haunted House at Halloween, located off
436 on Park Ave. They also have a
Christmas tree sale at Brantley Square,
also their drop-off center for toys for
their "Operation Santa" project.
Thr Jayceettes will hold a telethon
from the Altamonte Mall on March 5 for
the Neonatal Unit of the Orlando
Regional Medical Center which they plan
to have as an annual event.
An E aster Egg Hunt is held each
Saturday before Easter, at the Eastmonte Civic Center.
"Die city has a United Nations Day at
Hermit Trail Park in October.
WINTER SPRINGS
Winter Springs held its first annual
Christmas Parade Nov. 20, 1982.
The Sertoma Club sponsors "A Day in
the Park" each spring.
OVIEDO
The Oviedo Woman’s Club sponsors a
"Great Day ill the County," a Judged arts
and crafts festival, entertainment and
food, in April.
In October the club holds a "Tasting
Luncheon." Bach member of the dub

prepares a new dish. The public can buy
tickets to the event and taste the different
foods. Each year the club publishes a
cookbook with all the recipes from the
Tasting luncheon in it, which can be
purchased throughout the year.
Oviedo held the second annual Tree
Lighting Ceremony in December when
bands and choral groups from local
schools performed. Refreshments were
served to the crowd.
SANFORD
hi December, Sanford has a Christmas
parade with a high school king and queen
crowned resulting from a popularity
contest.
The largest single event in the county is
the Golden Age Games held every
November when senior citizens from
across the nation gather for frolic, fun
and medals.
The Sanford-Scminolc Art Association
holds a "Fall for Art" show every
October in downtown Sanford.
The Sanford Kiwanis Club holds an all­
day "Pancake Day” In the spring when
home-grown produce is sold along with
an auction.
The Junior Woman's Club of Sanford
sponsors the Miss Sanford Pageant, the
preliminary to Miss Florida and Miss
America pageants.
A fireworks display and "Fourth of
July In the P ark" herald Independence
Day annually.
Ballet Guild of Sanford-Scminole, a 16year-old, non-profit dance company, has
an annual perform ance and other
festivities during the year.
LAKE MARY
The
Lake
Mary
Community

Improvements Association has a Go-Cart
Street Race in January.
In July there Is a gala Fourth of July
festivity at Crystal Lake Beach.
The chamber of commerce sponsors an
Arts and Crafts Show at the Driftwood
Village in December.
The fire department has an annual
barbeque in February.
The Lake Mary Rotary Gub has a 6mile road run open to the public in
March.
The Longwood-Lake Mary Uons Gub
has an annual gold tournament each fall,
usually in October.
CASSELBERRY
November is the month for the Arts
and Crafts Show, held at the Multipur­
pose Senior Citizens Center.
Each Christmas there is a party for all
youths in the area at Winz Park.
There is a Fourth cf July Celebraliwi at
Winz Park and there are plans in the
making to have an annual celebration at
Secret Park also.
LONGWOOD
The annual Arts and Crafts Festival is
held in November.
VFW Post 8207 has a barbeque each
year to celebrate the Fourth of July.
The Longwood Gvic Women's Gub
hosts an "Old Timers" reunion In April.
The R etired Senior
Volunteer
Program (RSVP) has a Christmas Store
in December, held at the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce. First graders
from several schools are Invited to do
their Christmas shopping. The child can
buy a gift for each member of his family
for $1. Approximately 600 children attend
annually. - DEE GATRELL

O ffice s N e w c o m e rs N e e d
Residency requirements for newcomers in Orange and
Seminole counties arc listed as follows per GTE Directories
Corporation:
Homestead Exemption: For Florida Homeowners there is a
property tax exemption on the first $5,000 valuation of your
home. You must register between January 1st and March 1st.
A copy of your deed 1s necessary to show the appraiser.
Orange County: Property Apraiser, 420-3566
Seminole County: Property Appraiser, 323-4330
Properly Taxes: Bills are mailed in November with a 4
percent discount offered for bills paid by the end of the month,
3 percent in December, 2 percent in January, 1 percent in
February, no discount in March and bills become delinquent in
March.
Orange County: Election Supervisor's Office 420-3451
Seminole County: Election Supervisor's Office 323-4330
Voter Registration: You must be 18. There Is no residency
requirement.
Orange Comity: School Offices 432-9300
Seminole County: School Offices 322-1252
School Registration: To find out what school your child must
attend, ask for the Pupil Placement Office at your county
school administrative offices. Parents must have proof of
residence (driver's license or voter registration). Students
must show proof of immunization and birth certificate.
Orange County: School Offices 422-3200
Seminole County: School Offices 322-1252
Sewer and Water Service: Public and private sewer and
water service is available depending on where you live.
Deposits and service fees vary.
Seminole County: Sewer and Water Information, 323-2500
Orange County: Sewer and Water Information, 420-3221
Electric and Gas Service: Deposits are usually based on the
amount of your monthly bill. Orlando Utilities Commission
Connect or Disconnect 423-9018. Emergency 423-9150. Florida
Power Corporation Connect, Disconnect or Emergencies 629-

1010. Peopjes Gas System Inc. Connect, Disconnect or
Emergencies 425-4661.
Boat Registration, Hunting &amp; Fishing Licenses: All are
issued by the county tax collector's office and expire on June
30th of each year.
Orange County: Tax Collector’s Office 420-3214
Seminole County: Tax Collector's Office 830-5363
Garage Sale Perm its: Orange County residents are required
to purchase the two day permit for fl. No more than one
permit every six months can be issued. Seminole County
requires $2 for a three day permit.
Orange County: Zoning Department 420-3283
Orange County: Planning Department 420-3457
Seminole County: Building Department B30-S919
Pet Registration: Every dog and cat (over four months old)
must be vaccinated for rabies and registered every year. Pets
can be registered at any one of three locations In Orange
County; local veterinarians, the County Courthouse or the
Animal Control Office. Seminole County residents can register
their pets at their veterinarian's office or the Animal Shelter.
Orange County: Animal Control Office 299-1800
Seminole County: Animal Control Office 323-2500
Driver's Licenses: You are considered a Florida resident
and must have a Florida driver's license if you have enrolled
your child in school, claimed a homestead exemption or
registered to vote.
Driver License Examining Offices:
Orlando 894-1411
Sanford: 323-0161
Winter Parti: 647-5511
Winter Garden: 656-2393
Vehicle License Plates: If you have a Florida driver's
license, plates will be required if you take a Job in the state;
enroll your children in school or claim a homestead exemption.
The one year plate expires at midnight on your birthdate.
Orange County: Auto Tag Office 420-3214
Seminole County: Auto Tag Office 339-5363

Serving Seminole County Since 1961

Hunting, Fishing Great
By CLIFF NELSON
Special To The Herald
Seminole County is twice
blest for fishermen, having
both numerous fresh water
lakes and the St. Johns River
with its many tributaries,
where anglers pit their skill
against a wide variety of fish
the year around. The crystal
pure, spring-fed waters of the
Wekiva River forms almost
the entire western bo undry of
the county and the St. Johns
R iver m ark s th e entire
northern and eastern borders.
The St. Johns River flows
through two major lakes,
Lake Harney to the east and
Lake Monroe to the north, and
also privides small boat ac­
cess to Lake Jessup In the
north-central portion of the
county. These three lakes and
the St. Johns River dominate
the fresh water fishing In the
county, although countless
smaller lakes provide ex­
cellent fishing for nearly
every neighborhood.
Even though It is possible to
successfully fiah many areas,
such as Lake Monroe, from
the bank, most fishermen
prefer the convenience and
mobility of boats to navigate
the many miles of streams
and lakes bordering the
county. A number of free
public boat launching areas
ate located along the major
lakes and waterways and are
supplemented by the private
Facilities of fish camps where
boats can be launched for a
nominal fee. These camps
also offer guides, rental boats
and m olon, and a variety of
bait and tackle.
Fish camp operators are
also great sources of in­
formation on fishing activity,

V

and offer helpful advice on
where to go and what to use
for bait during a particular
season. A few of the launch
areas also offer overnight
camping facilities. Visitors
are urged to call or visit a
particular site for first hand
information on exact facilities
available and make reser­
vations for particular dates to
avoid disappointment.
In addition to the wide

variety of panfish, sum
Bream, Speckled Perch or
C rappie, S hellcracker and
Warmouth, the waters of the
county abound with larger
game fish such as Black Bass,
Guiin Pickerel and Sunshine
Bass. Although not classified
as a game fish, the succulent
catfish is plentiful and
provides both sport fishing
and a source of income for
many commercial fishermen.

S e rv ic e v
Is o u r
Business
M
l

• Sales • Service
• Supplies
• Boat Storage
• W et &amp; Dry
Dock

I,

All
C E N T U IW

b0A TS

. S P IN D R IF T W

s AH B O A «

* .c . •

voivo saies a
service

D ire c to rs

j f . Left to Right: John Tithken, Larry P arry, “ Luka" Luc* roll, Don Howard, Dannli La tow,

M IR IA M W R IG H T — V A L E R IE W E L D

“A Wonderful World
of Dance ”

for lit Very litf in Deuce Treking
C A L L 323-1900
2560 E L M A V E .

SANFORD

P H O N E 322-2910 O R 131-0433
DOW NTOW N O N TH E LA K E FR O N T- SA NFO RD

�•— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
8— Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 20, I N I
Thursday, Feb. 24, m i

SCC Offers Varied Curriculum
ByDONNA ESTES
was appointed president of the institution. He still
Herald Staff Writer
holds that office.
More than 150,000 students have attended
R.T. Mllwee, who was superintendent of public
Seminole Community College since its doors opened
schools at that time, Joined the school staff after his
for the fall term in 1966.
retirement from the public schools and Is an
The 1965 Legislature authorized the establish­
assistant to Weldon.
ment of a state-supported Junior college in Seminole
Leisure time activities available at modest fees
County. Some 170 acres of softly rolling land was
range from jazz dancing and cake decoration to
acquired for the two-year institution of higher
sewing and the operation of office equipment.
learning.
Over the years, the school has awarded 6,077
While 500 students were expected that first day,
associate of art degrees, and 60 to 65 percent of
733 showed up to begin their higher educations.
those graduates have gone on to complete their
More than 21,000 students go through the school
baccalaureate requirements at a four-year in­
each year now, working toward an associate of arts,
stitution to obtain their bachelor degrees. Some 653
or associate of science degree, occupational
students have been awarded associate of science
training or enrichment of their lives.
degrees in various fields, training them to work at
Adult high school classes are offered for those
technical Jobs.
who wish to complete their high school graduation
The majority of Seminole Community College
requirements and those who feel that they have
graduates — 75 to 80 percent — choose the
learned enough through life experiences may lake a
University of Central Florida to complete their
battery of tests to receive a state-recognized high
baccalaureate work.
school diploma.
In 1969, the Criminal Justice Program began at
Centrally located in Seminole County, the school
the college, training aspiring men and women
is in the extreme south end of the city of Sanford
toward a Job in law enforcement and fulfilling the
and can be reached by wav of U.S. Highway 17-92
requirements for state certification atLlxdi&amp;i.&amp;L..
' near F ive Poinls or fr&amp;m La8iT^fary via Broadmoor
fleers.""
Avenue.
Since then 1,300 to 1,400 students have graduated
Among the vocational programs available are:
from the program. At the same time those students
criminal justice, which leads to a state certification
in addition to state certification arc awarded 17
for police officers; fire control training which also
hours of college credit toward an A.S. degree in
leads to a state certificate for firefighters; auto
criminal Justice and nine hours credit toward an
body repair, light marine mechanics, welding, air
A.A. degree.
conditioning and many others.
Hundreds of graduates of this program are ser­
Before the school opened, its construction and
ving on police and sheriff's departments In all the
development were under the dirertlnn nf Hip
Central Florida counties.
Seminole County School Board. Dr. Earl Weldon
The 24th class in the program Is now underway.

Zoo
H ir t ld Photo by Tom V ln c tn t

Renovations to the Sanford branch of the Seminole County library were
completed In Septem ber, The library was reopened in Septem ber and will be
enlarged later this year.

Library Construction
Expected This Year
Bonds are expected to be sold this spring to
finance Seminole County’s $7 million library*
construction program.
The program, approved by county voters in
October, calls for construction of new libraries
in the Wekiva-Forest City area, Oviedo, Lake
Mary and the I^ake Howell-Tuskawilla area.
In addition, plans call for building a main
library in Casselberry, giving up the space at
the Seminole Plaza costing $37,000 annually in
rent and quadrupling the size of the Sanford
library from 3,000 square le d to 12,000.
The bond issue is to pay not only for land
acquisition and the new structures, but also for
furnishings and some 50,000 new books. The
Sanford library is to be expanded onto the
Sanford city-owned vacant lot immediately
adjacent which Is to be given to the coirnty by
the city.
The library system currently has a hard
cover book collection of 126,000 volumes which
is being expanded at the rate of 1,500 to 2,000
hard covers monthly. The hard covers are In
addition to thousands of soft cover books.
Ms. Rhein says the ideal number of books In
a county wide system Is 2.5 volumes per capita.
But, realistically, she said, the system is
looking at 1.5 volumes per capita. The county’s

population is 180,000.
About 51,000 Seminole residents hold library
cards, including 42,240 adults and 8,769
juveniles.
Ms. Rhein said several thousand books to be
placed in the collections of the new branches
are already on hand.
The county library system's annual budget
for operation in the 1982-83 fiscal year is $1.2
million, requiring a tax levy of about 31 cents
per $1,000 assessed value of real properly.
About $539,000 o! the $13 million Is allocated
for salaries. Operating costs are expected to
climb by 14 cents per $1,000 beginning in the
1983-84 fiscal year and to continue rising until
hitting a high of 31 cents per $1,000 In the 198788 fiscal year.
The total tax levy for the system by then
could be 29 cents for the bond issue, and 62
cents per $1,000 for operating costs for a total
of 91 cents per $1,000 for overall library
operation.
Seminole County has had a county-wide
library program since 1975 when com­
missioners contracted with the Orlando Public
Library. In 1978, Seminole County took over its
own library system and soon after a long
range plan for expanded services was formed.

Advanced degree programs for which Seminole
Community College offers the required foundation
courses, as part of the Associate of ArtJ Degree
program includes: accounting, advertising,
agriculture, agronomy, American studies, animal
science, anthropology, architecture, art, Asian
studies, biology, botany, broadcasting, business,
chemistry, civil engineering, criminal Justice,
com puter sciences, economics, electrical
engineering, education, English, finance, food
science, forestry, French, geography, geology,
German, history, home economics, Journalism,
language a rts, m athem atics, m echanical
engineering, pre-medicine, microbiology, music,
nuclear engineering sciences, pre-nursing, or­
namental horticulture, physical education, physics,
plant science, political science, psychology, public
relations, religion, sociology, Spanish, speech,
statistics, theatre, zoology.
Associate of Science degrees are offered in: agri­
business mid-management; allied health and
medical services technology; child development;
construction technology, crim inal justice
technology, data processing technology,
distributive
m id-m anagem ent,
financial
management, marketing management, hotel-motel
m anagem ent, retailing m anagem ent, sm all
business management, wholesaling management,
electronic technology, fashion, fire science, food
service management, Industrial mid-management,
interiors, manufacturing technology, nursing and
secretarial science.
In the leisure time program applied art, arts and
crafts, communications, parapsychology, hobbles,
physical exercise, residential and pet care classes
are taught.

Here Delights Young, Old

By BRITTSMITH
And
DONNA ESTES
The Sanford Zoo, started in 1923
when a carnival went broke here, was
in financial straits in the late 1960s.
The Sanford City Commission
decided it could not adequately take
care of and fund the zoo.
The Cham ber of Commerce
spearheaded an effort, as a result of
public outcry, to relocate the zoo,
raising money and turning over plans
for the move to the city for im­
plementation.
And
Sanford
businessm en
organized in an effort to save the zoo.
In July 1970, land at Fulton Avenue
and Sem inole Boulevard was
designated for the zoo’s new home. It
had been where City Hall is today. But
plans did not work out. Under
pressure from the state and federal
government, the Sanford City Com­
mission voted In October 1971 to phase
out the zoo.
But at the same time the Seminole
County Commission was placing on
the ballot a parks bond issue. That
issue got the county voters’ approval
and plans were made to acquire park
lands.
John Alexander, chairman of the
County Commission then, suggested
that one of the parcels acquired be
leased on a long-term b asl3 at $1 per
year for a new zoo.
And he urged that the county either
take over the zoo's operation or at
least budget an annual subsidy for the
operation, he recalls.

Louis Dellarco, an auctioneer In
Sanford for more than 20 years,
pinpointed the U.S. 17-92 site as ideal
for the zoo. And his idea prevailed.
Val Colbert was one of 'he original
four Sanford businesswomen who
founded SISTERs (Sanford Interested
Sarahs to Encourage Rejuvenation of
the Zoo.), remembers the core group
startin g the Central Florida
Zoological Society. The new
organization started moving forward
in late 1971 to acquire a site for a new
zoo.
The site selected was off U.S. 17-92
where the zoo operates today.
Tlie school children from Seminole,
Orange and Volusia counties raised
some $67,000 in pennies, nickels,
dimes, quarters and a few green­
backs.
The drive for donations was on and
m any contributed. Some 1,600
memberships In the zoo society were
purchased and civic groups, govern­
mental units and private citizens
responded.
In the meantime, revenues received
from gate receipts at the zoo, still
operating at P ark Avenue and
Seminole Boulevard, and from the old
zoo's concession stands were paying
the expenses to keep the old zoo
operating.
Among contributors from local
governments were: Sanford, $67,000
In cash and a truck and all the old zoo
animals valued at $100,000 plus the use
of the old facility rent-free; the city of
Orlando, $10,000 and a tiger worth
$5,000 to $10,000; the city of Altamonte

Springs, $1,000; the Volusia County
Council, $5,000; the city of Winter
Park, $2,000.
The use of this money was pledged
to the operation of the new zoo on the
county-owned lakefront property. And
the zoo society still needed that
$100,000 in matching funds.
Three of Sanford’s banking in­
stitutions, Flagship Bank, Atlantic
Bank and First Federal Savings and
Iz)an Association, agreed to jointly
lend the money.
And a large group of Sanford's
leading citizens, some from other
areas of the county and fewer still
from outside the county stepped
forward to sign notes, personally
guaranteeing repaym ent of the
money.
Among them was John Fitzpatrick
and Clifford McKibbln, who have
since died. But the others including
law yers, businessm en and some
private citizens to this day are still
personally guaranteeing repayment
of that debt. The principal now Is
$30,000, said A1 Rozon, executive
director of the zoo.
County commissioners of that day
— Greg Drummond and Sidney L
Vihlen Jr. — discussed the use of the
county-owned parkland for the new
zoo.
Sanford City Commission David
F arr, then county planner, worked
with the zoo group as they were
looking for a site. He remembers, as
does Drummond, that a bald eagle’s
nest was also believed to be there. And
this made it even more enticing.

After those dozens of persons
guaranteed repayment of the $100,000
loan, the federal matching funds
became available.
As part of the development of the
park, a road was constructed Into the
site from U.S. 17-92, which also helped
the zoo site.
The park portion of the property
was developed for picnicking, nature
trails and passive recreation.
"We get nearly all of our money
from priv ate donations, m em ­
berships, admissions, concessions,
and fund-raisers like model airplane
shows, auctions, special film
showings, and contests in the
schools," Rozon said. The zoo's
current annual budget is $630,000.
During the early days of the zoo’s
construction, money trickled In slowly
and state and federal authorities,
acting under a new animal welfare
act, threatened to lock the zoo’s gates
and sell some of the anim als to relieve
overcrowding In what was described
as an "animal ghetto," Rozon said.
Finally, despite all the problems
and brushes with extinction, the
current zoo opened on July 4, 1975,
with a m odern anim al exhibit
building, a children's park develop­
ment and could not be used for the zoo.
And the grant required $100,000 In
local matching funds and had to be
administered by a governing body.
Finally, despite all the problems
and brushes with extinction, the
current zoo opened on July 4, 1975.

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�Evening Hirald, Sanford, FI.
Harakl Advartlitr, Sanford, FI.

%

Sunday, Fab.» , m &gt; -9
Thunday, Fab. 14, m j —a

P

We salute these leading business firms who have served Central Florida over
the years...today...and into tomorrow. We proudly welcome them to our

Progress Honor Roll
1886
NELSON AND COMPANY
AND
W H E E L E R F E R T IL IZ E R
O viedo. T h is fir m w as
started by three brothers
fro m Sweden and called
N elson B ro th e rs P a ckin g
Company. They shipped fru it
under . "P rid e of Oviedo”
label and in those years they
were the largest shipping
center of oranges In a ll of
F lorida In 1917 M r. B.F.
W heeler Sr becam e a
partner and the firm became
N elson
and
C om pany.
Nelson and Co branched into
the fe rtiliz e r business and
th a t co m p a ny becam e
Wheeler F e rtilize r In 1931,
fu lfillin g a need in the area.
M r. W illia m H. M a rlin now
heads the fe rtiliz e r part of
the business. These com ­
panies have a fu ll tim e staff
of fifty (50) and during the
packing season they employ
about two hundred (200).
Nelson and Company ships
under the W hite Rose brand.
M r. and M rs. Wheeler are
n a tiv e s o l F lo rid a . M r.
A rth u r Evans Is secretarytreasurer of the companies.
We a re proud to salute tw o of
the oldest firm s in Seminole
County and wish tham the
best In,' th e fo rth c o m in g
yean.

1894
5TROM8ERG-CARLSON
In 1894 A lfre d Strom berg and
Androv Carlson form ed a
p a rtn e rs h ip th a t was to
develop Into one of the
nation's leading sources of
h ig h q u a lity , te c h n ic a lly
advanced, reliable and af
fo rd a b le telephone e q u ip
menf. F rom the meager
b e g in n in g s in a C hicago
m a c h in e shop b u ild in g .
S tro m b e rg C a rls o n has
g ro w n and b u ilt on its
reputation of q ua lity in both
te c h n o lo g y and p ro d u c t.
W h ile
m uch
of
the
te le c o m m u n ic a tio n s
in
d ustry was struggling to
sustain electronics fo r the
te le p h o n e
in d u s tr y ,
S tro m b e rg C a rlso n
was
p e rfe c tin g the " D ig it a l
S olution" to meet the needs
of the industry. Now, more
than 300 d ig ita l switches are
solving telecom m unications
p ro b le m s w h e re v e r they
e xist in the w orld. F ro m the
c o m p a n y 's h e a d q u a rte rs
in L a k e M a ry , F lo rid a ,
Strom berg Carlson engages
in w o rld wide sales of d ig ita l
te lep h on e s w itc h in g n e t­
works. There are m ore than
2,000 employees a t plant
lo c a tio n s In L a ke M a ry ,
F lo r id a ,
A rd m o re ,
Oklahom a. Rochester, New
Y o rk as w e ll as the
Engineering and Develop
m ent Center In Longwood,
F lorida, and sales offices In
Chicago, Illinois, A tlanta.
G e o rg ia , K ansas C ity ,
M issouri and Federal Way,
W ashington.

1908
E V E N IN O H E R A LD
300 N. F re n c h A venue,
S a n fo rd .
The
E ve n in g
Herald, Seminole County's
only focal d a lly and Sunday
new spaper
has
been
published fo r 74 consecutive
years. F o rm e rly The San­
fo rd H erald, the newspaper
became the Evening Herald,
In J u ly 1974. The Evening
H erald also publishes the
H erald A d ve rtise r, and the
newest addition called the
M oney Saver, a tabloid size
Shoppers Guide. Both are
w eekly editions w hich are
c ir c u la t e d
th r o u g h o u t
Seminole and South Volusia
counties. A dvertisers purchase space In these papers
through a com bination buy
w ith The Evening H erald to
reach a combined to ta l of
42,000 homes In Seminole and
V o lu s ia
c o u n tie s.
The
H erald's p la n t, situated on a
b e a u tifu lly landscaped lot
n e a r th e la k e tro n t has
become
a Sanford land­

\

m ark. The Herald's p rin ting
fa c ility is a modern, com ­
p u te r iz e d , p h o to o ffs e t
operation. The paper has Its
own color presses and a color
separation unit adding living
color photos to the d a lly and
Sunday
p a p e r.
The
new spa p er is p u b lish e d
Monday through F rid a y and
on Sunday. The H erald is
p o litic a lly independent and
reports the news of the
county, state, national and
w o rld w ith p ro fe s s io n a l
competence

1910
M IR A C LE CONCRETE CO.
309 E lm Ave., Santord, firs t
opened fo r business In 1910
by M r. J.E . T e rw illtg e r Sr.,
and Is now ow ned and
operated by his son. J.E.
T e tw llllg e r Jr., who took
over the business In 1944. He
and his w ife. M a ry Nancy,
have fo u r sons: Jam es,
John. David and W illia m .
For Sale. Ready M ix Con
crete M achinery or business.
W ith or w ithout real estate.
M ira cle Concrete Company,
a company that continues to
serve this com m unity and
help It grow.

1917
P H ILIP S DEC O RATINO
DEN ft CLEANERS
319 West 13th Street, San­
ford, F lorid a. This firm was
opened as Royal Cleaners In
1917. M r. W hlddon changed
Its n am e to C o lo n ia l
Cleaners. M r. W.M. Philips
has
owned the business
since 1951. They moved Into
th e ir present location In 1964.
They take pride In having the
firs t and only fu r storage
vault In Seminole County.
For your d rapery cleaning
they specialize In Ad|usta
drape finishing, guaranteed
perfect pleats, hemlines and
square corners. They offer a
to ta l d e c o ra tin g s e rv ic e
directed toward a beautiful
In te rio r fo r y o u r hom e
featuring a complete line of
custom draperies. And have
c o o rd in a tin g bedspreads,
w oven woods, d e c o ra tiv e
ishades and Venetian blinds.
W ind o w designs a re a
specialty a t Decorating Den,
a lo n g w ith c a rp e t, v in y l
flooring and w a ll covering.
P h ilip s is th e S anitone
C e rtifie d
M a s te r
D ry
Cleaner of Seminole County.
M r. P hilips' fa m ily is one of
the oldest in Sanford and
dates back to 1870. A salute
to this pioneer firm that has
grow n and progressed w ith
the times.

1919
SANFORD
DRY CLEANERS
113 South Palm etto Avenue.
S a n fo rd .
S anford
D ry
Cleaners opened for business
In 1919, and since thaf tim e
has had only three operators,
including the cu rre n t owners
M rs. M arge Jernlgan and
her son, Ron. M rs. Jernlgan
and her husband. Je rry,
p u rc h a s e d S a nford D ry
Cleaners in 1960. Since that
tim e they have purchased
and
In c o rp o ra te d
In to
S a nford
D ry
C le an e rs
several local laundries and
d ry cleaners Including the
D e lu xe L a u n d ry , L a n e y 's
C le a n e r s ,
B a g w e ll's
Laundry, Raborn's Down­
town Cleaners and Seminole
County Laundry. In 1976. the
J e rn lg a n s p urch ase d the
Sanford F ire Station a t 107
South P a lm e tto A venue,
Installed a num ber of pieces
of the la te s t la u n d ry
p ro ce ssin g e q u ip m e n t In ­
cluding a six ro ll fla t work
Ironer and autom atic folder.
O ther recent additions In ­
clude a com plete alterations
departm ent providing such
diverse services as hem m ing
of tro u s e rs , ta ilo r in g of
m en's and ladles' garm ents
a nd m o n o g ra m m ln g . The
m ost re c e n t re n o v a tio n ,
completed in December 1982,
not only included the ad
d itlo n of several pieces of

new equipm ent on the inside,
but also won the Chamber of
Commerce
beautification
aw ard fo r the appearance of
the outside of the building.
Sanford Dry Cleaners offers
the follow ing fa m ily ser­
vices; complete laundry and
d ry cleaning, home pickup
and d e liv e ry , d ra p e rie s ,
taken down, cleaned, and
re hu ng (fre e e s tim a te s ),
alterations, m onogram m lng
and they act as agents fo r
LaBelle Furs In Orlando.
S a nford D ry C le a n e rs'
C o m m e rc ia l D e p a rtm e n t
has two divisions. The Linen
R e n ta l D iv is io n
o ffe rs
complete linen rental ser
vice, catering to some ot the
fin e s t re s ta u ra n ts and
m otels in Central Florida.
The U n ifo rm Rental Division
offers not only a complete
line of uniform s, but also
everything to keep your shop
or office clean, fro m shop
towels fo dust mops. Sanford
D ry Cleaners is open six
days a week. 7:30 a m. to
5:30 p m Telephone 322 B700

26, 1928 a fte r only 5 months
ot the opening of the then
Sanford A tla n tic National
Bank. A group of local
businessmen of the Chamber
of C om m erce co n vince d
E d w a rd W . Lane S r.,
P re s id e n t
of
A tla n tic
N a tio n a l
Bank
of
Jacksonville, to enter the
Sanford m arket. The bank
was firs t located at the
southeast corner of Magnolia
and F irs t Street. It was later
m oved to th e ir p rese nt
location in the e a rly 1930s. At
that tim e A tla n tic employed
only 6 persons and was the
only bank In Sanford which
could boast of the fact that it
did not go broke like m any of
its predecessors. President
and Chairm an of the Board,
Howard H. Hodges, has been
w ith A tla n tic fo r 40 years.
Being a native F loridian
hailing from Jacksonville, he
a rrive d in Sanford assuming
his present position w ith the
bank 20 years ago. In order
to serve th e ir customers
better A tla n tic has gone
th ro u g h s e v e ra l changes
throughout the years, a ll the
w h ile g ro w in g and e x ­
panding th e ir services to
m eet th e needs of the
Celery City
com m unity. For over 25
P rin tin g Company Inc.
years the bank has had
221 M a g n o lia
A venue,
d rive -in fa c ilitie s and in 1974
Sanford. F lorid a Is 63 years
a 5 lane m otor bank was
young th is y e e r l The
Com pany's Present lo ca tio n '' opened at taoi South French
Avenue. A tla n tic was the
- new 11 years ago • is now
firs t fin an cia l In stitution to
"h u rs tln g a t the seam s," as
have
In te re s t
b e a rin g
business reflects custom er
checking accounts and Is
confidence and satisfaction,
looking fo rw a rd to fu rth e r
as w ell as the q u a lity and
aiding the com m unity w ith
perform ance of the staff.
th e ir
new
In d iv id u a l
Celery C ity P rin tin g is proud
Retirem ent Accounts (IR A )
of Its e x c e lle n t, m o d e rn
program . In December 1980,
plant, and is now Installing
a new A tla n tic branch was
com puterized pricing and
opened in A ltam onte Springs
estim ating ■ one of the few
at the Gooding's Shopping
p rin tin g
co m p a nie s
In
Plaza. This branch offers a ll
Central Florida to do this.
of the m any services the
And has now added the latest
M ain Bank in Sanford has as
equipm ent fo r Computerized
w e ll as th e e x tra co n ­
typesetting complete w ith
ve nien ce of being open
Floppy Disk M em ory. It is
S a tu rd a y s . The new est
just one m ore tool to serve
m em ber of A tla n tic F a m ily
th e ir c u sto m e rs b e tte r,
Bank Is the Longwood Lakes
faster and m ore accurately.
branch It opened October
C e lery
C ity
P rin tin g
13. 1982. It is located on the
produces general p rin ting .
corner of 17 92 and 434 In
offset and letterpress - In
Longwood, Fta. This Is a fu ll
e lu d in g co m p le te d esign ,
service bank and also has
la y o u t and ty p e s e ttin g
ATM . Other branches are
Celery C ity welcomes school
planned fo r Seminole County
g ro u p s
and
o th e r
as a means to serve the
organizations to tour th e ir
e ntire com m unity. The most
fa c ilitie s • by appointm ent.
in n o v a tiv e and e x c itin g
A m on g
our
le a d in g
change in A tla n tic occurred
businesses, this firm ranks
in J u ly 1981. By uniting
at the top for s ta b ility ,
n e a rly
100
s ta te w id e
p ro g re s s iv e n e s s a nd Its
lo c a tio n s In to one bank,
m any contributions to the
A tla n tic became Florid a's
g row th and developm ent of
firs t and only consolidated
the area, and pledges to
s ta te w id e b an k. To you,
continue this role In the
consolidation brings greater
future.
banking convenience. Every
A tla n tic Bank and every 24hour Bankaround autom atic
te lle r in the state is able to
serve you just like your own
M A Y F A IR COUNTRY
h om e to w n b an k. So no
CLUB
m a tte r where you are or
Country Club Road has been
where you go, you can cash a
a Santord landm ark since
check, m ake a deposit, or
1921. Since June 1981 the
lake care of any banking
owner has been M r. Jack
needs. And the consolidated
Daniels. There Is an eighteen
$2,000,000,000 assets of the
hole golf course, d rivin g
whole system provide In­
ra n g e , s w im m in g pool,
crea se d le n d in g p ow er.
clubhouse, bar and pro shop.
A tla n tic Bank's statewide
They cater parties, large and
consolidation Is leadership In
sm all. M r. B ill Addison Is
service.
employed as golf pro, M r.
Rudy Seller Is em ployed as
golf d ire cto r and them a re 16
o th e r
e m p lo y e e *.
M r,
Daniels has been a longtim e
resident of Longwood. This
TH E LA K E M ONROE IN N
c lu b boasts one o f the
N o rth S e m in ole B tv d .,
lo v e lie s t g o lf courses in
S a n fo rd , has been an
Central F lorid a, b ea u tifu lly
e s ta b lis h e d la n d m a rk fo r
landscaped and It a ttra c ts
fiv e decades and has been
golfers fro m a ll over the
owned by Tony and Louise
c o u n try . The M A Y F A IR
Constantino fo r the past IV
OPEN Is held here every
years. This Inn features a
year as w e ll as various other
re s ta u ra n t, lounge and
popular tournam ents. The
package store decorated in
M a y fa ir Country Club Is
nautical type atmosphere.
tru ly an outstanding asset to
They have delicious food and
the area and we take this
are known fo r having the
space to invite you out to see
best c a ttis h , p rim e r ib ,
It, g olfe r or not l
seafood, steaks ft fro g legs In
town. They a re now open
days and o ffe r you a breakfast b uffe t plus th e ir re g u la r
menu. There Is live ente rta in m e nt every night by
A T L A N T IC N A T IO N A L
"T h e In m a te s." This Is a
B A N K O F F LO R ID A
sw inging country western
SAN FO R D O FFIC E
101 East F irs t Street, San*
group. They are now open six
(6) days a week Tuesday
ford. "C ity 's Newest Bank
Has Had Rapid G ro w th ..."
through Sunday 6 a.m . to 2
This headline appeared In
a .m . Tuesday Tee S h irt
Night. Also being featured Is
the Sanford H erald on M ay

1920

1921

1930

1928

a delicious salad bar. Food is
served 'til 12 each night.
Tony Is a native of Central
Florida and Louise is fro m
Alabam a. They are parents
of tw o sons and th ree
daughters. There Is no better
way to spend an evening
than at the Lake Monroe inn,
enjoying th e ir good food,
excellent m usic and per
sonalized attention.

1939
CRYSTAL LA K E
NURSERY
240 Lakeview Avenue, Lake
M ary, was established In
1939 by M r. and M rs. E.W.
Sm ith and son, Don. Don and
his daughter. Piper, now
head this th riv in g business
at the same location and w ith
the sam e q u a lity and
dependability that has been
the fa m ily tradem ark fo r
over 40 years. C rystal Lake
N ursery features the very
finest In a ll types of o r­
nam ental plants, fru it trees
and specializes in personal
service landscaping. M r. and
M rs. Sm ith reside In Lake
M a ry , and a lo n g w ith
daughter, Piper, also have a
son, D onnie, d a u g h te r-in law. K im , and grandson,
B rant, w ho live In Longwood.
No m a tte r w hat your landscaping need m ay be, you
can depend on the S m ith's at
C rystal Lake N ursery fo r
th e ir prom pt and courteous
s e rv ic e s e rv in g S e m ln cle
and the surrounding counties. The oldest business In
Lake M ary.

1945
SANFORD AUTO PARTS,
INC.
115 W. F irs t Street. Down
town Sanford, was founded
by F.D. Scott In 1945. Sanford
Auto Parts was o rig in a lly
loca te d In the W elaka
B uilding and was called
Orlando Parts ft Gear. It was
renamed by M r. Scott In 1945
to Sanford Auto Parts when
he became a NAPA |obber.
W hen th e old P rin ce ss
Theater across the street
came up fo r sale M r. Scott
purchased It and moved in.
Santord Auto parts has been
at 115 West F irs t Street ever
since. Ralph Larson |oined
the business as manager in
August 1971 a fte r 20 years In
the United States A ir Force.
He purchased the company
in Ju ly 1973 when M r. Scott
re tire d . Ralph and his w ife,
Anne, have four ch ildre n :
Scott, E ric, Kathleen, and
Lincoln. Scott and Lincoln
are em ployed a t the store. In
addition to the fa m ily , M r.
Kyle "W h lte y " M cM Illlan
has served w ith the company
as counter m anager since
A ug. 1968. S a nford A uto
Parts has become known as
"Y o u r one stop store In
D o w ntow n S a n fo rd ," fo r
your autom otive and ind u s tria l needs.
S E N K A R IK GLASS ft
P A IN T COMPANY
210 M agnolia Ave., Sanford.
This com pany was founded
by the late John Senkarik in
1945 and started as a one
m an o p e ra tio n , h is o n ly
helper being his w ife. The
business is now run by his
sons. J e rr y and E ddie
Senkarik, and there are eight
re gu la r employees. There Is
a n o th e r business by the
sam e n am e In S c o rin g ,
operated by another brother,
John
M.
T h is
fir m
m anufacturers a complete
line of paints under the label
of P E N P A IN T S . T h e ir
plant. PEN PAIN TS, INC.. Is
located at F ive Points. They
a re
a ls o
th e
C ounty
D is trib u to r fo r the popular
B e n ia m in M o o re p a in ts .
They c a rry a com plete line
of a ll types of m irro rs and
they Install every type of
glass anywhere. They do
c u sto m
fr a m in g
(c e r­
tificates. p ortra its, photos,
etc ). A ll w ork Is done In the
shop. You can purchase m at
board In a p p ro xim a te ly SO
colors Including black ft

white. They stock over 300
fin is h e d wood m o ld in g s .
Most area a rtis ts purchase
th e ir supplies here • a crylic
o ils ,
b rush es,
canvas,
boards, a rt sets - everything
for Ihe a rtis t. This company
began its operation at 114 W.
Second St. and moved to
th e ir present location In 1960.
For 35 years SE N K A R IK
Glass ft Paint has grow n and
progressed w ith Sanford and
Its citizens are proud of this
most reputable firm .

1946
K A RN SINSU RAN CE
AGENCY, INC.
ItO East C om m ercial Slreel,
Sanford, founded In 1946 by
M r. Robert E. "B o b " Karns.
The firm was firs t located In
the Edwards Building, then
the Melsch Building, since
1959 a t th e ir present location
In Suite 1 and 2 K irk Plaza
fo r the convenience of th e ir
customers. M r. Karns and
his staff Invite you to stop by
fo r
co ffe e
and
the
professional answer to your
In s u ra n c e needs. K a rn s
Insurance deals in complete
service life, accident, group,
auto, casualty, M arine, fire
and bonds. Bob Karns Is
alw ays available to help you
w ith personal p ro p e rly In­
surance and survey your
present Insurance fo r ac­
curacy and adequacy. Bob
m oved to S a n fo rd fro m
DeLand in 1946, m a rry in g
Dottle Pope in 1947, who is
“ the lady behind this suc­
cessful m a n ." In October of
1977, B ill W ight moved back
to Sanford and joined the
sales sta ff of this Agency.
M r. W ig h t re c e iv e d his
C.P.C.U. designation, fro m
the A m erican Institute of
Casualty ft P roperty Un­
d erw rite rs In August of 1978.
Sanford Is Indeed proud to
have the Karns and W ights
among Its leading citizens
and our best wishes to this
most reputable firm now In
Its 37th year of continuous
service to the Sanford area.
M ELSG U LF
started on 101 South French
In 1946 and moved to 2518
French Avenue In 1957 and
was there fo r 24' i years.
Now we are back at 101
French w ith fu ll service
station, lube, oil. tune-up,
road service, also a car
wash. We now have diesel fo r
autos. We have an a ir con­
ditioned w aiting room . M y
d a u g h te r, Susan, and I
welcom e you to v is it us.

1947
W ILS O N -M A IER
FU R N IT U R E CO., INC.
3)1 East F irs t Street, San­
ford founded by M r. A.L.
W ilson in 1947. M r. Wilson,
w ho se rve d th e c ity of
S a nford Ih re e tim e s as
m ayor and served thirteen
years on the c ity comm ission
died on October 4, 1979. The
corporate officers of the
company a re Fred W ilson,
p re s id e n t and g e n e ra l
m a n a g e r and A rlh u re n e
Cook, secretary-treasurer.
This w ell established firm
features a ll types and brands
of home furnishings jn many
styles a t popular prices.
They specialize In courteous
service, fa ir dealing, con­
v e n ie n t In s t a llm e n t
paym ents and free set-up
and delive ry. W hether you
a re
n e w lyw e d s
or
celebrating m any years of
m a rria g e you are sure to
fin d just w hat you desire fo r
your home. You are assured

m

=G P
jrft» f* ■
M r*/»
tF#

of courteous, frie n d ly ser­
vice every tim e you enter the
W ilson M aie r F u rnitu re Co.
showroom.

1948
RADIO 1400 AM
WWJZ
A FTE R 35 YEARS WTRR
M AKES BIG CHANGE TO
WWJZ
A fte r 35 years, Sanford’s
radio station (1400 on your
AM d ia l) made the big
switch. January 14. from
country m usic to become
C e n tra l F lo rid a 's O N LY
Solid Golden Oldie station,
playing the orig in a l h it songs
that made the top on the
charts fro m 1955 through
yesterday. Along w ith the
new a ll h it m illio n sellers
fo rm at, there is a new name WWJZ or Radio 14. WWJZ
w ill operate w ith an ex­
panded schedule fro m 5:00
a m to 12:00 m idnight to
b e tte r se rve S em inole
County. And by Ihe way,
WWJZ in the only radio
station In Seminole County.
G e n era l M a n a g e r
B ill
Burgess, fo rm er manager of
O rlando's successful oldies
station W H H L, states that
W W JZ w ill become a m usic
and In fo rm atio n station 7
days a week C urrent Sunday
m orning program m ing w ill
change as of A p ril 1st. fo a ll
m usic. This is in keeping
w ith m aking WWJZ a better
station, since It w ill be one of
the few stations offering
regular m usic on Sunday
m o rn in g s .
W W JZ
w ill
fe a tu re co ntests and a ll
types of special prom otions
and local a ctivities each
hour, alonq w ith 20 20 ac­
c u ra te
up to -lh e m in u te
weather fro m W W JZ's own
m eterologist. B ill K orbell.
The weather w ill be at 20 till,
20 past, and on top of the
h o u r. F lo rid a news Is
featured at the bottom of the
hour, local at top. O ur goal is
to m ake all our listeners a
part of the station. We hope
WWJZ never becomes too
big to rem em ber to thank Its
listeners, each and every one
of them.
TOW ER'S BE A U TY SALON
B ram Towers Apartm ents,
Sanford, fo rm e rly H a rrie tt's
Beauty Nook, a well known
name in the field of beauty
since 1948, owned solely by
M rs. Betty Weber, a Sanford
native. M rs. Weber p u r­
chased Ihe shop 17 years ago
fro m H a rrie tt Slawter, the
firs t owner. M rs. Weber feels
indeed fo rtu n a te h a vin g
Jewell, Jess ft M a rty , who
a re e x c e lle n t In th e ir
p ro fe s s io n w o rk in g
at
Tower's Beauty Salon. They
perform a ll the usual ser­
vices that a top rated salon
does. The shop has lovely
d e c o r and the best of
equipm ent. They are open
M o n d a y and T h u rs d a y
evenings by appointm ent.
W hen you v is it T ow ers
B e au ty Salon, you a re
assured of com ing away
lo o k in g lo v e lie r, m ore
g la m o ro u s and w ith a
deligh tfu l feeling.

1950
FRANCIS PEZOLD
LA W N S E R V IC E
DeBary. owned and operated
by M r. Francis Pezold, was
started In 1950. M r. Pezold
has a ll the latest equipm ent
to c u ltiv a te and m aintain
beautiful lawns and grounds.
H is s e rv ic e keeps the
grounds of m any of the local
businesses looking (heir very
loveliest including those at
The Evening H erald and The
H e ra ld A d v e rtis e r. He
provides law n service fo r
com m ercial properties. M r.
Pezold was born and reared
In Sanford and moved to
DeBary in 1958. where he
lives w ith , his w ife. Hazel.
His a im fo r each job con
tra cte d is th a t the law n be
one o t d is tin c tio n and
beauty. The results are eye
appealing to the com m unity
and business owners feel a
proud glow.

1951
LA R R Y 'S M A R T
215 South Sanford Avenue.
.This store opened a t 321 East
F irs t Street in June 1951 w ith
M r. and M rs. Lawrence J.
Pivec, as owners. O ver the
years, the business outgrew
the building and was moved
fo th e ir present location In
I960. L a rry 's M a rt buys a
s in g le ite m o r e n tire
h ou sefuls. S ince L a r r y 's
death In 1977, his w ife and
sons, George and Raymond,
decided
to
co n tin u e
o p e ra tin g th is su cce ssfu l
fa m ily business. A complete
tine o t new re a s o n a b ly
priced fu rn itu re Is available.
A complete line of portable
kerosene heaters w ith a c­
cessories,
even
wood
heaters, to help customers
combat heating costs - w ith
experienced help to service
these heaters, Is sold. Even
the bookworm Is welcom e in
the large book exchange.
M any customers deal w ith
the store because of the
a m a z in g , e v e r c h a n g in g ,
va rie ty of merchandise.
COOK'S CORNER
2617 O rlando D rive, Sanford,
Is owned and managed by
D ic k ft Joanne S w a r lt:
Cook's Corner h a i been an
established business in the
Sanford area fo r m ore than
30 years. Dick ft Joanne
purchased this business In
Ju ly '78. COOK'S CORNER
offers a v a rie ty o f Items on
its menu Sandwiches - such
as stacked ham, stacked
roast beef and m ore are on
the menu along w ith the
specialties of the house. The
s p e c ia ltie s
a re
p izza ,
burrltos, hot roast beef, ch ill,
T-bone and steaks w hich are
ca rrie d continuously. Boiled
or frie d shrim p complete
your choice of superb meals.
The SUPERB meals are
prepared by Bessie P at­
terson who is celebrating her
29th A N N IV E R S A R Y w ith
Cook's Corner this year!
Bessie has out cooked 10
d iffe re n t owners! "O w ners
come and owners go, but
Bessie Patterson COOK'S
on." Cook's Corner is open
from 11 a.m . u n til ? 7 days a
week. Sun. 1 't il ? F rid a y 't il
? a.m . F or a lunch or dinner
In an a tm o sp h e re , we
suggest you and your fa m ily
stop by COOK'S CORNER.
The shutfleboard is one of
the focal points of the Cook's
Corner. Dick and Joanne
invite you fo come to lunch or
dinner or just come In to say
"H E L L O ."

1953
T H E B IG D IP
2439 French Avenue, San­
ford. Now In Its X th year,
The Big Dip Is one of the
most popular Independent
re s ta u ra n ts in S a n fo rd .
Proprietors, Joel and Jane
K ru s e have ow ned the
business fo r over 12 years.
One of the reasons w hy
people keep com ing back fo r
th e ir fa v o rite ham burgers,
hotdogs, subs, seafood
dinners, french fries, onion
rings, etc.. Is the m ere fa ct
that Joel and Jane w o n 't put
a n y fo o d o ut to th e ir
c u s to m e rs
th a t
th e y
themselves would not eat.
A sid e fro m the v a rio u s
cooked Items. The Big Dip
also o ffe rs Ice cream , and
a lm o s t
any
fla v o r
m ilkshake. You cz,n come In
and sit In the closed in dining
area or rush by and pick up
an order to go. The Big D ip's
success is based not only on
Its fine food, but also on Its
e x c e p tio n a l s e rv ic e and
atm osphere. Joel and Jane
take m uch pride in th e ir staff
and th e ir business. Anyone
who has seen Joel and Jane
and a ll th e ir "g irts " in action
w ill surely te ll you th a t they
are a ll one big happy fa m ily .
There's a special ciosenecs
among them a ll w hich they
pass on to th e ir custom ers.
People keep com ing back
because..It's a FU N place to
be

«

�t

10— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
10— Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 10, 1913
Thursday, Feb. 24. I 111

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We salute these leading business firms who have served Central Florida over
the years...today...and into tomorrow. We proudly welcome them to our

Progress Honor Roll
1953
CARROLL'S FU R N ITU R E
Located a l 104 1st Street,
Sanford, opened for business
In February of 1953. A t that
tim e If was known as the
F u rnitu re Center. The store
had tw o employees then. In
June 1959, M R . B.R.
CARROLL became the sole
owner and the name changed
to C arroll's Furniture. The
store employs five. It has
grow n both In size and
volume over the 30 years he
has been In business. The
volume now doubles the
e a rlie r
y e a rs '
sales.
C arroll's carries a complete
line of q ua lity fu rn itu re , TVs
and appliances. Although a
native of Alabam a, MR.
CARROLL has spent most of
his adult life here. He and his
w ife , F A Y , have six
children. This fine furniture
s to re Is
s till a n o th e r
exam ple of central F lorida's
continued progress. Please
note that C arroll's F u rnitu re
was fo rm e rly located at 116
West F irs t Street, Sanford.
However th e ir new location
is 104 East 1st Street, San­
ford and they welcom e you to
v isit them a t th e ir new ad
dress.

1956

SHO EM AKER
CONSTRUCTION
CO M PANY,
INCORPORATED
A K.
S hoem aker,
J r.,
President, has been In the
construction fie ld fo r a total
of tw en ty.five (25) years. His
experience Is easily seen In
the q u a lity of custom homes
and com m ercial buildings
completed by his firm . In the
past " K a y " developed such
1954
areas as Ravenna Park,
td y llw ild e and M a y ta lr
Villas. We are planning to
M A R Y ESTHER'S
develop "K a yw o o d " In the
200 N. Park Avenue, San­
n ea r fu tu re . S hoem aker
fo rd .
T h is
e x c lu s iv e
Construction w ill o ffe r only
wom an's apparel shop was
one k in d of hom e to
opened In November 1954 by
p ro s p e c tiv e hom e ow ners
Mrs. M a ry Whelchel and
and that Is that throughout It
M rs. Esther Ridge. M rs.
contains only the finest and
Ridge was born In Sanford
most careful construction,
and M rs. Whelchel moved
the highest q ua lity m aterials
here as a child and the two
and the utm ost In design. In
partners have been friends
recent years we have been
since childhood. They are
very busy in com m ercial
semi re tire d and have left
b u ild in g s such as F irs t
management of the shop to
F e d e ra l of M id F lo rid a ,
Betty Stokes, assisted by
Tropic Bank of Seminole,
M rs. Sam Day and M artha
Flagship Bank ot Seminole,
Jennings. This lovely shop
A tla n tic Bank Branch, First
features line q ua lity m e r­
Federal of Seminole, F irst
chandise including hosiery
F a m ily Savings &amp; Loan,
and lingerie. They c a rry the
State Bank of Forest City
very best of designers fo r all
Branch. Numa Corporation,
occasions, including sport­
Longwood M edical Building,
swear and a lte r 5. For the
U rg e n t M e d ic a l C enter
finest In ladies wear and
T u s k a w llla
P ro fe s s io n a l
accessories v is it M a ry
Building, ComBank Sanford
Esther's and choose your
B ra n c h ,
S m lt h - D u n n
new w a rd ro b e fro m a
M edical Bldg., and New
selection of the latest and
Famous Recipe Bldg. Our
lo v e lie s t fa sh io ns found
move into new offices at 2701
anywhere.
W 25th Street emphasizes
the progress " K a y " has
m ade o v e r th e y e a rs .
M em bers of the Shoemaker
Construction s ta ff a re as
E V E LY N 'S BEAUTY
follow s: A .K . Shoemaker,
SALON
Jr.. President, W illia m S.
300 S. M agnolia Ave., San
B ru m le y , J r ., E x e c u tiv e
ford, is owned by Evelyn
Vice President, P a tric ia A.
Peacock. Evelyn came to
Scott, S ecretary-Treasurer,
S a nford In 1944 fro m
M a rg a re t A. G ra n t, A d ­
Philadelphia where she was
m in is t r a t iv e A s s is ta n t,
also a beautician. She has
T a m m y L . S h oe m ake r,
two grandchildren she is
Assistant Secretary, George
m ighty proud of. Evelyn
F u h rm a n n ,
S u p e rv is o r,
em p loys one o th e r h a ir ­
Ralph P h illip s, Supervisor,
dresser. She has been In the
J im G r iffis , S u p e rv is o r.
beauty business so long she
Presently we have a to ta l of
can't rem em ber the num ber
th irty (30) fu ll tim e em
of years. A f this fine beauty
ployees to c o m p le te the
salon, a la d y can fin d
m an y p ro je c ts we have
anything In the way of ex­
u n d e r c o n s tru c tio n fro m
citin g orig in a l styles. She
s in g le fa m ily hom es to
does high styling, cuts, sets,
co m m e rcia l buildings. We
m anicures, frosts, tints, etc.
are equipped to assist our
For a special evening out or
c u s to m e rs In p la n n in g ,
a re g u la r cut and set we can
w orking draw ings, p e rm it
th ink of no fin e r place to go
d ra w in g s
and
In te rio r
than E velyn’s Beauty Salon.
selections on a custom home
Her creative a b ility and
or co m m e rcia l building.
years of experience c e r­
tainly have been popular
w ith her satisfied clientele
LaR O YC . ROBB
the past tw enty-five years.
CONSTRUCTION
2000 S. Sanford Ave., San­
N IX B E D D IN G A
fo rd , F la . L e R o y Robb
UPH O LSTERIN G CO.
Construction was founded In
709 Celery Avenue, Sanford,
1956 In Sanford, Fla. The
was established by Bertha
Company has established a
and the late M r. S. Nix In
fine reputation throughout
1955 and was firs t located at
the C entral F lo rid a area fo r
1301 Sanford Avenue. This
th e ir q u a lity construction of
firm employs * five, one of
co m m ercial and In d ustria l
whom Is th e ir daughter, M rs.
buildings. They are one of
K itty C o rle y . N ix 's a re
the o rig in a l fra n c h is e d
p e r fe c tio n is ts
at
d e a le rs
fo r
A m e ric a n
re u p h o ls te rin g y o u r old
B u ild in g s
C o m p an y of
fu rn itu re so you can enjoy It
Eufauia, A labam a, {one of
fo r m any m ore years, and
th e b est m e ta l b u ild in g
the c a t is v e ry reasonable.
m anufacturers In the United
C ustom d ra p e rie s is an
States.) The com pany m otto
added feature of this very
is "O u r reputation is our
p r o fe s s io n a l c o m p a n y .
m a t valuable asset and a
K a re n
C o rle y ,
g ra n d ­
satisfied custom er is our
d a u g h te r a n d d a u g h te r,
best a d v e rtis e m e n t." The

1955

x

offers her expert decorating
advice to all who desire help
coordinating their rooms.
She w ill be happy to help you
choose the rig h t style In
drapery, bedspreads, woven
woods, ve rtica l and m ini
blinds. They also have a
la rg e s e le c tio n o f used
fu rn itu re fo r sale. M rs. Nix
Is a native of Sanford and
e njo ys
s e rv in g
her
cu stom e rs
and
m any
friends. We a ttrib u te her
success w ith her custom er's
satisfaction utm ost in mind
always Nix features free
e s tim a te s , p ic k -u p and
delivery w ithout obligation
or extra charge. Remember,
if you need expert upholstery
a t re a s o n a b le p rice s be
SURE TO C A L L N IX
UPHOLSTERY COMPANY,
AT 322 2117.

C om pany s ta ff in c lu d e s :
K u rt
M.
G u m bm a nn ,
President; Tom Freem an,
Vice President; Deborah J.
W ade,
R e c e p t io n is t S e c re ta ry ; R ic h a rd W.
S ta llin g s .
D e sign e r-Jo b
C o o rd in a to r; W illia m J.
D o rto n , S u p e rin te n d e n t.
W hatever your com m ercial
or In d u s tria l c o n s tru c tio n
needs m ay be, LeRoy Robb
Construction stands ready to
help. They can h andle
a n y th in g fro m concept
through com pletion of your
next building project.
W. G AR N ETT W H ITE
Reg Real Estate Broker, W.
G arnett W hite has been In
the real estate business since
1956. and his office Is located
a t 107 C o m m e rc ia l St.,
d o w ntow n S a nford . M r.
W h ite s p e c ia liz e s in In
d u s tria l and c o m m e rc ia l
real estate. There are six
associates in th is fir m .
G a rn e tt- and h is w ife ,
Paulette, both born &amp; reared
in Sanlord are parents ot two
sons and one daughter. M r.
W hile and his associates are
w ell known by area residents
as a business that w ill search
u ntil they have found the
property you are looking tor
at the price you can afford.
GREGORY L U M B E R
TR U EVALU E
HARDW ARE
500 M aple. Sanford, was
founded by R.K. Gregory,
DeLand in September, 1956.
The com pany was fo rm e rly
Truluck Lum ber Co. In 1972
G regory Lum ber Joined the
T rue V a lu e team and
becam e G re g o ry L u m b e r
True Value Hardware. In
order to serve Sanford and
the
s u rro u n d in g
com
m u n ltle s w ith a w ide
s e le c tio n o t h a rd w a re ,
lum ber, and home center
needs. Gregory expanded its
fa c ilitie s in 1970 and again in
1973. In 1979 the sales floor
was again expanded to Its
present 12,000 square teet.
R.K. G regory, chairm an ot
the board, expresses his
appreciation to the Sanford
com m unity for supporting
this grow ing and progressive
business. Building m aterials
can be bought m any places,
but G regory's business Is
based on high q u a lity and
excellent service. Under the
leadership of th e ir manager.
E ugene G re g o ry , th e 20
d e d ic a te d e m p loye e s of
G regory Lum ber True Value
H ardw are are ready to meet
y o u r p re s e n t and fu tu re
h a rd w a re and b u ild in g
m a te ria l needs.
SANFORD FLOW ER SHOP
209 E. C om m ercial, opened
at 200 N. Park In 1956. Six
y e a rs la te r th e y had
outgrow n th e ir quarters and
moved to 324 E. F irs t Street,
S till
se eking a la rg e r
building they moved to th e ir
present location 9’ » years
ago This flow er shop is
ow ned a nd m an a ge d by
C h a rlo tte
and
F ra n k
Dona hoe, who came here
fro m Front Royal, V irg in ia
24 years ago. T h eir son, Tim
D onahoe, is the H E A D
DESIG NER and g rad ua lly
taking over a great deal of
responsibility fo r running
this business. They have 4
fu ll tim e and 3 p art tim e
employees Because of the
volum e of business, they are
able to fu rnish the freshest
flow ers a vailable and they
d e liv e r a n y w h e re In the
county. They are m em ber of
F lo r is t
T r a n s - W o r ld
D e liv e ry and T e le -flo ra
D e live ry Service. Flow ers
alw ays say, " I C a re ," so let
that someone know th a t you
care w ith a v is it to Sanford
F low er Shop, "O ne of The
F in e r C e n tra l F lo rid a
F lo ris ts ." 323-1123.

1957
STENSTROM R EA LTY
S te n stro m
R e a lty
w as
founded on F e bru a ry 7, 1957,
by H e rb e rt S te n stro m ,
Realtor Owner of the firm .
They
I m m e d la l e l y
established themselves as

S a n fo rd 's
and
N o rth
S e m in ole C o u n ty 's sales
le a d e rs , p ro v id in g th e ir
clients a fu ll service "one
sto p " Real Estate office. In
addition to bolh new and
resale homes, as w e ll as
custom b u ilt homes, Sten
stro m R ealty Is recognized
throughout Central F lorid a
as a leader In Com m ercial,
In d u stria l and Investm ent
sales. A lso th e ir services
Include rentals, appraisals,
and land planning. Sten
strom Realty Isa m em ber of
both th e O rla n d o W in te r
Park and Seminole County
Board of Realtors, also a
m e m b e r of th e V o lu s ia
County Board of Realtors
and M u ltip le Listing Ser­
vices. Slenstrom R ealty is
a lso a m e m b e r of the
Electronic
Realty
Associates, Inc., the fastest
grow ing m u ltip le listin g and
photo w irin g services In the
co un try, w ith o ver 4,500 and
50,000
R e a lto rs R e a lto r
Associates Nationw ide As
an E R A m em ber, they offer
both the Seller and Buyer
home w a rra n ty program s,
a vaila b le only to ERA otflces
Nationw ide. In addition to
th e ir hom e office located at
2565 P a rk D rive. Sanford,
F lo rid a , (322 2420), Sten
strom R ealty has an ad
m tn ls tra tlv e s ta ll ot four
s u p p o rte d
by
fifte e n
p r o fe s s io n a lly
tr a in e d
R ealtor Associates.
D IC K 'S A P P LIA N C E S
S A LE S A S E R V IC E
2617 S. French Ave.. Is one of
S a n fo rd 's
o ld e r,
w e ll
e s ta b lis h e d fir m s . They
opened fo r business In 1957.
M R. R A LP H BETTS and
M R. D IC K CO VELL a re the
owners. M r. Betts, a Sanlord
n a tiv e , and his w ife ,
Carolyn, have 3 children.
M r Coveil, who comes fro m
Brocton, Massachusetts, and
his w ife. Barbara, have 2
c h ild re n .
D IC K 'S
AP
PLIAFJCES ca rrie s a ll the
m a jo r
a p p lia n c e s
by
H O T P O I N T
AND
CROSLEY. SPEED Q U E E N
A D M IR A L P A N A S O N IC .
For re lia b le products and
d e p e n d a b le - s e rv ic e
at
re a s o n a b le p ric e s shop
DICK'S
APPLIANCE
S A LE S A N D S E R V IC E .
Y o u 'll be glad you did.

1960
R ESTH AVEN
K IN D E R G A R T E N
Opened Its doors some 24
years ago to those children
who had no place to go. Its
founder- Ms. Ruby W ilson,
concerned that there was no
f a t e r program fo r children
here In Sanford, except the
lallhouse, obtained a loan
fro m a local fudge and a
local bank In order th a t she
m ig h t ca re fo r such children.
Ms. Ruby W ilson, deceased,
has le ft her m a rk on this
area. The love, devotion &amp;
hard w o rk she made her life
Is know n fa r and wide. The
Rest
H aven
f a c ilit y
presently has the ca pa city to
care fo r 47 ch ildre n although
there are only 40 residing
there now. In the recent past,
an u n k n o w n b e n e fa c to r
bequeathed enough funds to
m odernize and expand the
b uildings and |ust m ake
things easier a ll around.
M any of the homes' children
have le ft over the past 24
years and a ll have been quite
s u c ce s s fu l In th e ir e n ­
deavors. A fo rm e r resident
of R E 5T H A V E N went on to
get his PhD and Is now liv in g
in St. Louis, Mo. Others have
re turn e d to th e ir fa m ilie s,
stronger and better able to
cope w ith th e ir problem s.
The s p irit of REST H A V E N
K IN D E R G A R T E N Is being
ca rrie d on through the un ­
s e lfis h e ffo r ts o f M r.
T im o th y W ilson and Ms.
Betty Donaldson, Directress.
C om pleting the s ta ff a re ten
other dedicated persons.
T H E RIC H P U N
O F FLO R ID A
The R ich P lan of F lo rid a was
sta rte d in 1960 by K eith J.
Bauder and was known as

supply shop has been added
Bauder Associates Inc. In
fo r the c u s to m e r's c o n ­
1977 the business was p u r­
venience. Good food and
chased by M r. W .E. "D u k e "
care are provided fo r the
Adamson, who is cu rre n tly
pets who come fo r a weekend
President and C hairm an of
or a m onth. M r. Rowe's
the B o ard . In 1980 M r.
d a u g h te r,
F a ye
Rowe
Adam son changed the name
W arren, and her husband,
ot th is ra p id ly g ro w in g
Roger, continue to provide
corporation to United Home
the courteous and depen
Services of F lo rid a , Inc. The
dable service c a rrie d on by
Rich P la n o t F lorid a now has
M r. Rowe In his life tim e .
plant fa c ilitie s at 401 W. 13th
They in v ite you to come by
Street and Executive Offices
and let them care fo r your
located at the corner of
pet when you are aw ay fo r a
M agnolia &amp; T h ird Street In
few days o r an extended
d o w n to w n S a n fo rd . R ich
period of tim e.
Plan employs alm ost 100
people at the Home Office,
S O U T H E R N A IR
and has sales offices in a ll
OF SANFORD INC.
p rin cip a l F lorid a cities. The
George and S hirley M ills,
Rich Plan of F lorid a Is a
w ell-know n In Sanlord for
d ire c t lo the hom e
food
th e ir a ctive p articip a tio n In
service w hich offers Its m ore
c ivic and social a ffa irs , b u ilt
than 10,000 custom ers the
a strong, respected business
u ltim a te In q u a lity, con
since 1961; Southern A ir ot
venlence and services. Rich
Sanford. When Chris L illie
Plan features corn fed beef
took over ownership, he was
fro m the m idw est w hich is
fo rtu na te to re tain two long
aged at the Sanford plant,
tim e employees, Lester and
then trim m e d of a ll excess
E rnie, w ho know personally
bone and fa t, s p e c ia lly
m a n y o f th e c o m p a n y 's
wrapped then blasl frozen at
custom ers and enjoy their
60 degrees below zero. Ad
c o n fid e n c e .
N u m e ro u s
d ltlo n a lly , the Rich Plan
custom ers have dealt w ith
p ro v id e s the fin e s t fis h ,
this com pany fo r 20 or more
p o u ltry , g ra d e A fa n c y
years. Southern A ir has been
fru its , vegetables and |uices
the a rea's C a rrie r dealer fo r
that money can buy. A ll this,
m any years, and strives to
d e liv e re d d ire c t to y o u r
m a in ta in the level of ex­
home and put away In your
cellence consistent w ith that
own freezer. Is guaranteed In
name. C hris Is proud of the
w ritin g by one ot the most
34-hour em ergency service
c o m p re h e n s iv e c u s to m e r
provided by the enlarged
service program s offered by
service departm ent and the
the frozen food Industry.
service trucks a re a ll radio
W hile the emphasis at Rich
dispatched now fo r better
Plan Is on the q u a lity of the
service. He has added such
food and th e s e rv ic e
in n o v a tio n s as a s e n io r
provided, they also make
citizens’ discount. He brings
a vailable to th e ir customers
to the business, m any years'
top of the line freezers, and
experience, especially In the
m ic ro w a v e ovens. W ith
a re a of c o m m e rc ia l ap
business booming
nearly
p lic a tio n .
The s e rv ic e
400 new c u s to m e rs p e r
departm ent personnel are
m onth
the Rich Plan of
qua lifie d lo service m a t
F lorid a looks fo rw a rd to
makes of heating and a ir
w elcom ing you to the Rich
conditioning equipm ent, and
Plan fa m ily very soon, so
s e r v ic in g
c o m m e r c ia l
that you too can en|oy the
re frig e ra tio n in m any of the
finest food In A m erica, and
areas restaurants &amp; other
e x p e rie n c e u n p a ra lle le d
businesses. The construction
convenience and service.
d ivision offers engineering
design, as w e ll as expert
In s ta lla tio n ,
-fo r
both
resid en tia l and com m ercial
buildings. The physical plant
AUTO GLASS A
includes 5,000 square feet of
SEAT COVER CO.
shop
space, fu lly equipped
315 S. French Ave., Sanford.
fo
r
sheet
m e ta l
and
This fir m was established by
fiberglass w ork. The fresh
M r. Bobby M oore In 1961 and
w h ite Southern A ir trucks,
was purchased In 1965 by M r.
sporting C a rrie r's fa m ilia r
L e w is
C h ild e rs .
M r.
red and blue logo, a re on the
C h ild e rs ,
an A la b a m a
road
d a ily, to give fast,
native, Is m a rrie d and has
courteous service.
two children. This reputable
firm em ploys six. They deal
e x c lu s iv e ly
w ith
the
autom otive glass, v in y l tops,
D E L L 'S AUCTION
c o n v e rtib le tops, tr lm lln e
SERVIC E
seat belts and seat covers ot
West F irs t Street, Sanford.
all types. Their expert In
The owner and auctioneer,
sta llation, courteous service
M
r.
L e w is
DeM arco,
and la ir prices have been
"D E L L ,"
opened
his
co ntrib utin g fa clors to th e ir
business a t the old F a rm e r's
grow th In business over the
A uction B arn on A irp o rt
years. To M r. Childers and
Blvd. and 17 92 In 1963. Ten
his staff, our best wishes lo r
years ago he moved lo the
m a n y m o re su cce ssfu l
present location where he
years.
has the m a t m odern auction
b a rn In a ll o t F lo rid a .
A N IM A L H A V E N
A uction Is held every F rid a y
K E N N E LS
night at 7 o'clock, but the
is located on Kennel Road
barn Is open d a lly fro m 10 to
just o ff Hwy. 46 between
5 fo r consignm ents and re ta il
downtown Sanford and 1-4. It
sales o r fo r just browsing.
was established by Randall
Dell deals in everything
H. Rowe In 1961 as a B oar­
fro m needles and antiques to
ding Kennel and a tra in in g
"y o u nam e It ." He also buys
fa c ility fo r b ird dogs. One of
m e rc h a n d is e
fro m
In ­
the dogs he tra in e d was used
dividuals, hotels, m otels and
by
P re s id e n t
D w ig h t
e s ta te liq u id a tio n s . M r.
Elsenhower. It began as a
D eM arco Is a n a tiv e of
p a rt-tim e venture fo r M r.
Rowe who af th a t tim e was
w o rkin g as an e le c tric a l high
line construction forem an.
Ttie business grew and It was
not long before he could
devote fu ll tim e to providing
co m fo rt and care lo anim ats
when th e ir m asters were
aw ay. F ro m tim e to tim e he
added m ore com partm ents
designed fo r the co m fort of
the pet. Some w ere b u ilt
especially fo r cats and sm all
dogs who lik e the se curity of
Indoor q ua rte rs. He b u ilt
some of the la rg e r screened
com partm ents fo r dogs who
enjoy the protection of the
b u ild in g b u t d e s ire the
outside as w ell. The dogs are
exercised tw ice d a lly , the
fa c ilitie s a re kept clean and
special services such as
b athing and groom ing are
a vaila b le fo r the pels. A pet

1961

1963

Youngstown, Ohio. F o r an
evening that is tru ly unique
and d eligh tfu l, and easy on
your purse, too, v is it D ell's
A uction this week. Home ot
the la rg e s t M U R A L In
ce ntra l F lo rid a painted by a
w ell known a rtis t. Come in
a nytim e to see! Y o u 'll find
yourself re turn ing often.

1964
NCR
NCR + E n g in e e rin g A
M an u fa ctu rin g - Orlando,
began as Scott E lectronics
C orporation In 1964. The
fa c ility was firs t located on
Shader Road, O rla n d o ,
where m agnetic devices and
p ow er
s u p p lie s
w e re
p ro d u c e d .
D u rin g
the
Com pany's e a rly years, its
products w ere to ta lly In the
m ilita ry aerospace Industry,
in 1971, Scott E lectronics
became a su bsidiary ot NCR
C orporation and became a
s u p p lie r of c o m m e rc ia l
power supplies to NCR on a
sm all basis. As NCR Cor
poration began converting
from m echanical system s to
electronics, the volum e ot
S cott E le c tro n ic s NCR
power supply ‘ business In
creased In January, 1975,
the Scott E lectronics C or­
poration was dissolved and
becam e
an
o p e ra tin g
d ivisio n ot NCR. In Sep
tem ber, 1975, the com pany
m ove d in to the c u rre n t
building located at 584 South
Lake E m m a Road. Lake
M a ry In M arch ot 1981, the
NCR C orporation announced
the c o n s o lid a tio n of tw o
o p e ra tio n s . A p la n t In
Sunnyvale, C a lifo rn ia was
closed w ith the operations
being moved to the Lake
M a ry fa c ility . The NCR
Engineering
and
M a n u fa c tu rin g f a c ility in
Lake M a ry is located on a 45
a c re
tr a c t
w ith
ap­
p ro x im a te ly 150.000 square
feet of space. As a result of
this consolidation, the plant
designs,
develops,
m anufactures, and m arkets
com puter systems fo r In ­
d u s tria l applications to NCR
custom ers on a w orldw ide
basis. A d d itio n a lly, the plant
continues to have product
developm ent
and
m a n u fa c tu r in g r e s p o n ­
s ib ility to r a w ide range of
power modules. These power
modules a re used In a ll NCR
products on a w orldw ide
b asis.
The
In d u s tria l
Systems portio n of the plant
provides a com plete data
collection system fo r some of
the largest m anufacturing
concerns in the w orld. The
s y s te m
In clu d e s
d a ta
c o lle c tio n te rm in a ls , con
tro lle rs, processors, printers
and CRT's.

1969
DIC K JOYCE
W E L L D R IL L IN G INC.
Located on E. Hwy. 46 and
Junction 415 &amp; 46, Sanford, Is
ow ned and o p e ra te d by
D IC K JO YC E. Operations
began In 1969. DICK and his
w ife , J O Y . b oth F lo rid a
natives, are the parents ot
eight children. D rillin g a
good, long producing w ater
w ell is a job that requires a
lot of know how and e x­
perience and DIC K JOYCE
Is |ust the m an to do It. He
has late model equipm ent

and well tra in e d assistants to
assure you of the best a t the
least expense. He o ffe rs you
'round the clock service. If
you need a new w e ll, w hether
It's a 1 " or a 14" or if your
present w ell needs some
repair, call DICK JOYCE
W E L L D R IL L IN G INC., 322
4610, the best In the business
anyw here
U N IT E D S O LV E N T S
OF A M E R IC A INC.
1107 A ir p o r t B o u le v a rd ,
Sanford. Founded In 1969 by
Dudley B. Blake, President.
The corporation packages
and d istrib utes solvents and
c h e m ic a ls fo r
Texaco,
Exxon, A llied , Corp., E th yl
and other m a jo r suppliers.
E xecutive Vice President is
M a r ily n L B la k e . Sales
M anager is Vice President
R ichard A M ackey. United
Solvents packages custom
th inn e r blends under th e ir
Label and p riva te label. Also
packaqes M in e ra l S pirits.
A ceton e ,
e tc ..
In
Lithographed cans, Trade
Sales d ivision sells K m art,
S c o tty 's
B ld g .
S upply
w h o le s a le d is tr ib u to r s of
paint, hardw are, autom obile
body supplies and m arine
supplies. Chem ical D ivision
offers a w ide selection of
In d u s tria l so lv e n ts and
chem icals to M anufacturers
o! b o a ts, c o a tin g * , a le ctropics etc., in tank cars to
d ru m q u a n titie s . U n ite d
Solvents has 30 employees a l
the Sanford F a c ility plus 12
S a le s
R e p r e s e n ta tiv e s
covering the E astern and
M idw estern United States.
T H E C H IN A B E R R Y T R E E
A N T IQ U E SHOP
1106 W. F irs t St. in Sanford,
has been there a long tim e.
M a rie R ichter, the owner
loves antiques, the arts, a ll
c ritte rs and m a t ot a ll
people, who v is it once and
alw ays come back. The shop
c a rrie s b e a u tifu l c h in a ,
glass, books, p rim itiv e s and
even old ship's lantern fro m
an O k la w a h a r iv e r boat
w hich is 100 years old. M rs.
R ichter is an a rtis t, m em ber
ot the F lorid a W atercolor
S o cie ty, A r tis t League,
S a nford
S e m in ole
A rt
Association. A ppraisals ot
antiques are p a rt of the
services ot The Chinaberry
Tree, also o riginal w atercolors painted to order. The
shop ca rrie s lovely old dolls,
a Bylo doll made In 1923 by
G ra ce
S to ry
P u tn a m
m odeled fro m a re a l
newborn boy. Other dolls
include an A rm and M ar
sellle doll made In G erm any,
an ancient Teddy Bear and
even a C harlie M cC arthy
puppet. Two life size hun
dred year old stocking dolls
a re m asco ts of M a rie
R ichter's business. She's had
them a ll her years of selling
antiques. The C hinaberry
Tree has precious g ifts lo r
A ll occasions. Something to
cherish and love.
M IX O N AUTO PARTS
Located a t 3rd and M agnolia
Avenue. Sanlord opened to r
business In July ot 1969. It Is
owned and operated by Lee
M ixon. Lee's fa m ily are
S a n fo rd n a tiv e s . M ix o n
AUTO PARTS c u rre n tly has
tw o fu ll- tim e m a c h in is ts .
They
p ro v id e
th e ir
custom ers w ith services that
range fro m valve jobs, to
* n0 ,rw overhauls.
r l o o l i ^ 1 0 PARTS A L S 0
£ C O M P LE TE
f f i K O F BRAND N A M E
S J fJ S
w h ic h
In c lu d e
H
t GASKETS' W IX
n ' L/ / RS A N D B E N D IX
B R A K E PARTS. There is no
ond to the lis t of services
’ ney can p ro v id e th e ir
custom ers w ith . W hether It's
tu rnin g cran k shafts, tu rnin g
drum s o r just doing (heir
c u s to m e rs a good tu rn .
M ixon A uto P arts has one ot
Jhe finest reputations In the
buiiness. No m a tte r what
your autom otive needs, we
* ^ g e s t you stop In and see
A u .E V

3*5.rt&gt; and k n o l l s

A v e , Sanford. T H E Y A R F
NOW 0 P EN S U N D A ? 6,
to 2 P.M. fo r your
convenience. 322 oeoe

�A

Evening Her*Id,Sanford, PI.
Herald Advartliar, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Fab.30,19JJ— It
Thuriday, Fab.34, t m - 1 1

P

______________

“

- a ' •■&amp;

&lt; x ° ’ ' i z t o ‘ f r J x - c t 0 ^&amp;
o

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^

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^

We salute these leading business firms who have served’ Central Florida over
the years...today...and into tomorrow. We proudly welcome them to our

Progress Honor Roll
nursing home today and
o fte n . You a re a lw a y s
welcome.

■

K N IG H T'S SHOE
STORE
K night's Shoe Store located
at 208 East F irs t St. down
town Sanlord, Is owned and
operated by K night's Shoe
Stores Inc , a fa m ily owned
c o rp o ra tio n . T h is fa m ily
operated business features
the best and most complete
line of nam e brand shoes In
Sanford For men there are
A llen Edmonds. Nunn Bush,
F re e m a n . Bass. D e x te r
Rand, Hush Puppies, Out
doors m an W ork shoes and
Boots, A cm e and D ingo
W e ste rn boots. F o r the
sophisticated lady there are
N a t u r a liz e d , P e n e ljo s
Candies, 9 West, Dexter,
Bass. Old M aine Trotters,
P e rs o n a lity
and
Hush
Puppies as w ell as a good
selection of nurses shoes and
w ork shoes by Clinic, Velvet
Step
and
N a tu ra llz e r.
K n ig h t's Shoe S tore has
a nice selection of houseshoes by D a n ie l G reen
and
W e llc o
fo r
the
whole fa m ily . K night's Shoe
S tore ta ke s
p rid e
In
fittin g ch ild re n ’s shoes. They
guarantee that the shoes are
fitte d c o rr e c tly . B ra n d s
Include Poll P a rro t, Child
Life, Hush Puppies, Keds,
Nike shoes. A th le tic fo o t­
w ear by Nike, Pro-Keds t .
Converse fo r the fa m ily is
a vaila b le Ladles beautiful
le a th e r
handbags
a re
a vaila b le at K night's Shoe
Store by B orelll. B urlington.
Toni as w ell as other makes
In fa b rics to m atch those
beautiful shoes to a " T . "
Q eallty hosiery and shoe
c a re p ro d u c ts a re also
a v a ila b le . K n ig h t's Shoe
Store, Sanford, Is managed
by Donnie Green. Donnie Is a
Sanford native. 24 years old,
m a rrie d to w ife, Donna, and
has one son. Darron. He has
lived In V irg in ia fo r the past
four years where he has
s u c c e s s fu lly m an a ge d a
fa m ily shoe store (or three
years in Richmond. Donnie
re c e iv e d a d ip lo m a In
P ro fe s s io n a l Shoe C oun­
seling In 1980 and returned to
Sanford In Ju ly 1982 to
c o n tin u e h is c a re e r a t
K n ig h t's Shoe Store. Please
come In and welcom e Donnie
back home. 11
O ther m em bers of the
f itt in g s ta ff a re Ju d y
P alm er, Troy Schake (part
tim e ), R ichard Clukey, Don
K n ig h t
and
M a rg a re t
K night, owners. M r. Knight
Is a c tive In Church and C ivic
offices, general aviation, and
s e rve s as P re s id e n t of
Sanford Developm ent Corp.
K n ig ht's Shoe Stores Inc.
also owns and operates The
Shoe P a ra d e , 137 N.
Woodland B lvd., DeLand.
G re g o ry K n ig h t m anages
this store and offers the
same high q u a lity footwear.
We suggest that when your
fa m ily needs q u a lity foot­
wear, v is it K night Shoe Store
dow ntow n Sanford and Shoe
Parade downtown DeLand.
Y o u 'll be glad you d ld ll

1970
L A K E V IE W N U R S IN G
C E N TE R
919 E ast Second St., Sanford.
M rs. V irg in ia M lcholonski
and M iss Susan Castrlonnl
a re the a d m in is tr a tiv e
d ire cto rs of Seminole's finest
nursing center. The spacious
grounds and b rig h t, cheery
In te rio r lend themselves fo a
hom elike atm osphere. You
m ay have your choice of
room s ra ng in g fro m p rivate,
sem i-priva te , o r three bed.
The v a rie d a c tiv ity program
offers am ong other things,
m o v ie s , c e ra m ic s , hand
c r a fts , b in g o a n d shutfleboard. M any of the Item s
fo r the A nnual C hristm as
Bazaar a re made throughout
the y e a r b y the residents.
S killed nursing care Is o f­
fered w ith tw enty-four hour
a day care by tra in e d nurses
and s ta ff. Physio Therapy Is
also a vaila b le . Rem em ber "L o v e Is A g e le ss!" V is it the

fit

fi-jjpvpi

1971
SE M IN O LE P A IN T
AN D BODY SHOP
2540 M y rtle Ave., Sanford,
was opened In F ebruary,
1971, by M R . D A V ID
R E D W IN E ,
a c e n tra l
F lorid a native. This shop
specializes In the repairs of
heavy«wrecks but w ill also
re p a ir the slightest dented
fender w ith the same expert
s k ill M R. R E D W IN E has a
staff of twelve (12) of the
most qualified body and
paint men In the autom otive
business a n y w h e re . They
guarantee th e ir w ork to your
s a tis fa c tio n and to the
s a tis fa c tio n o f y o u r in
su ra n ce a d ju s to r. M R .
R E D W IN E c o n tin u e s to
Im prove his fa c ilitie s to keep
up w ith the changing tim es
and the new designs of
autom obiles each year. They
have a com plete 24 hour
w recker service w ith the
latest add itio n of a h ydraulic
w recker w h ich Is not only tor
h a n d lin g a u to m o b ile s but
has the capacity to serve as a
sm all crane picking up and
m o v in g e q u ip m e n t and
hanging signs up to 17 feet In
the a ir. W ith the m o b ility
and econom y of this NEW
h y d ra u lic w re c k e r, the
custom ers charge Is kept to a
m in im u m . M R. R ED W IN E
is a m ost personable young
man and a delight to know.
He and his w ife, D E E , have
tw o (2) sons and reside on
O range B lv d ., In P aola.
S E M IN O L E P A IN T A N D
BO D Y SHOP Is a n o th e r
exam ple of what a young
business headed b y a
d ynam ic honest m an w lth a n
expert crew can accom plish
In our area in |ust a few short
years.
PLEASAN T H AVEN
PET C E M E T E R Y
Was established In 1971 by
Alice and W arren Mewes.
The p roperty, 5 acres of land
and a lovely pond, on 1370
E.E W illiam son Road In
Longwood. Is an Ideal spot as
a fin a l resting place fo r a
devoted pet. "W h y did you
open a pet ce m e te ry? " the
Mewes are often asked. The
re ply fro m this fa m ily of pet
lovers (owners of 2 dogs and
2 cats) would have to be. " A
great desire fo do the most
we can to honor a pet, even
at
d e a th ."
Choo-Choo
Elwees, a Chihuahua, was
the firs t b u ria l In 1971. Since
then there have been m ore
than 3,000 b urials which
Includes dogs, cats, birds,
guinea pigs, turtles, h a m ­
sters and an ocelot. Request
(or the b u ria l of horses are
made constantly but they are
not equipped to handle such
large a nim als. For someone
looking fo r a place to put that
friend, Pleasant Haven Pet
Cem etery Is just the spot.
Prices are m oderate and In
line w ith the service w hich
In c lu d e s p ic k u p , c a s k e t,
Interm ent and a m a rke r. The
Mewes fa m ily welcom es the
o pp o rtun ity to show you the
cem etery and to discuss your
p a rtic u la r needs.
BOBORW IG
PHO TOGRAPHER
W hat sta rte d out to be a
hobby fo r Bob O rw lg, 2425
L a u re l A v e n u e , S a n fo rd ,
developed in to a business
venture In 1971. Bob's studio
is In his home, and as a
co m m ercial photographer,
he specializes In weddings,
ID 's, Passports, and Photos
fo r special occasions. He
a tte n d e d W ino n a
Lake
• School o f Photography In
Indiana and attends as m any
sem inars on the subject as
possible. M r. O rw lg Is an
energetic fellow , fo r he also
has w o rk e d fo r F lo rid a
Power Corp. fo r 28 years. He
and his w ife. M artha, are
natives o l West V irg in ia and
moved to Sanford 29 years
ago. They are parents o l two
daughters, Susan, teaching
at A ltam o n te E lem entary

School and Sandra, now In
her 3rd year of college. Fla.
State, Tallahassee. Bob and
M a rth a e n |o y liv in g In
Sanford and are so pleased
w ith th e ir decision to settle
here. P h o to g ra p h y as a
hobby Is fun as business it is
both fun and lucra tive. Next
tim e the occasion calls for
photographs call Bob. Y ou'll
tre a s u re those m e m o rie s
fo reve r through the eyes of
the skilled &amp; talented M r.
O rwlg.

Bram Towers. Ms. Boyd
finds the Sanford area quite
a g re e a b le
and
enjo ys
m eeting newcomers to the
area. Located close to Lake
Monroe and I he Downtown
S a nford sh op p in g d is tr ic t
Bram Towers affords you an
ideal location in which to live
at a price you can afford.
The pleasant people at B ram
Towers, Invite you to visit
them today. It m ay be just
the p la ce y o u 'v e been
looking fo r or call 323 4430.

1972

1973

FAMOUS R E C IP E
F o rm e rly 1809 S. French
Avenue. Sanford, owned and
m anaged by J e rr y &amp;
M arg u re tte Sullivan. In Oct.
1982, they opened the newest
Country F ried Im age Store
in Fla a t 1905 S. French
A ve ., S a n fo rd . F am ous
Recipe firs t opened Its doors
In Sanford February 14, 1972.
A fte r only eight months of
o p e ra tio n , the S a nford
restaurant was ranked 4th in
a c h a in of 110 sto res
throughout the Southeast. In
1973, 1974, and 1975 this fine
e a tin g
e m p o riu m
was
ranked among the top ten
stores, and No. 2 in the
Nation In Nov. 1982 because
of its consistent q u a lity of
food a n d r is in g sales.
A nother Famous Recipe Is
lo c a te d
on
17-92
in
Casselberry where Ihe menu
Includes good old Famous
Recipe Honey Dipped Fried
C h icken . T h e ir d a u g h te r,
Carla Is c u rre n tly w orking
the Cassleberry store. Scott
Sullivan, oldest son of the
Sullivans has the M e rritt
Is la n d
and
T itu s v ille
Famous Store. The Sullivans
have 3 other children. Pam,
livin g in T itu sville , Greg In
W a ycro ss, G e o rg ia , and
K e v in ,
Set
D e s ig n e r,
w orking at Sea W orld at the
new Shamu Stadium . The
Sullivans have been chosen
and listed in "T h e Per
sonalltles of the South," fo r
Awards achieved. In con
frlb u flo n to th e ir Nation.
J e rr y
and
M a rg u re tte
Sullivan a re proud ot th e ir
business and they point to
th e ir fine s ta ff as the reason
for th e ir grow ing success.
They Invite you to v is it them
at e ithe r store for q u a lity
food and s e rv ic e w ith
pleasant sm iling faces. They
say, "C om e V isit Usl We
also thank a ll the good &amp;
loyal patrons fo r m aking this
p o s s ib le ." T h ere a re 2
Famous Recipes in Seminole
County and 2 In Georgia.
O th e r re s ta u ra n ts
a re
opening soon In the F lorid a
area. W atch fo r them !

GLASS SHOW
C ELEBR ATE S
T E N C E N IA L "
Ten years ago af F lorid a's
firs t Depression Glass Show
held af Sanford, Florida, the
firs t show of this Kind in Fla.,
th e re w e re tw e n ty -fo u r
booths fille d w ith a ll pattern
Depression Glass. One booth
s p e c ia liz e d In H e lsey &amp;
Cam bridge. Needless to say,
the collectors w ere delighted
w ith that m uch glass to
choose tro m . S a n fo rd ,
F lo rid a ’sannual show is held
the last weekend In January.
The show has grow n fro m
tw enty fiv e booths to th irty three, using every available
spot In the C ivic Center In­
cluding th e ' Youth W ing.
Collectors who w ere af the
firs t show have grow n along
w ith the show In knowledge
and a p p re c ia tio n o f the
glass. The show now by
p o p u la r d e m a n d by the
c o lle c to rs , fe a tu re s gla ss
made by a ll the A m erican
G lass C om panies b efore ,
during, and a fte r the great
depression. Today the glass
companies are faced w ith
higher cost production and
only a scant few are left. We
are seeing m ore glass Im
ported Into the U niied States
because it sim ply can be
made cheaper. Therefore,
the glass fo r the most part
being made today cannot
com pare to the glassware
made In the th irtie s and
forties. Three of the glass
companies who no longer
exist are Hlescy, Cam bridge
8. Duncan M ille r. A ll th e ir
q la s s w a re w as th e best
q u a lity and collectors are
eager to find it. M uch of this
is a vailable a t Ihe shows.
China and P ottery on a sm all
scale w ill be added to the
show, such as H all, Blue
Ridge. Fiesta, Stangl, and
etc The Sanford Show has
been named "one of the best
In th e c o u n tr y " by the
national
magazine
"R arelties."
Eight
exhibitin g dealers including
Nora Kock fro m fhe "D a z e "
newspaper w ill be honored
fo r p a rticip a tin g every year
since the firs t show began.
Be sure to attend this once a
year event. For browsers
there are free newspapers
and o th e r v a lu a b le in ­
form ation. M any books are
on sale that ca n 't be bought
In re g u la r book stores. M ore
Inform ation can be obtained
by contacting Sara M yers,
Owner- Ma nager Prom oter
of the Florida Depression
Glass Club a t 322 6599.

B R A M TO W ER 5
is located at 519 E. 1st Street,
Sanford. This rental a p a rt­
m ent complex has 158 units
and boasts a beauty p a rlo r
and la u n d ry fa c ilitie s .
Sponsored by A ll S a in ts
Episcopal Church and Holy
Cross Episcopal Church, this
com plex opened Its doors In
August of 1972. Though this Is
e xclusively an apartm ent
b u ild in g fo r th e e ld e rly ,
there Is no end to the ac.
tlv ltle s th a t go on here.
There Is $ingo on each and
every M onday night. M ovies
a re r e g u la r ly sch eduled.
C h u rch
S e rvice s
a re
p ro v id e d e v e ry T h u rs d a y
m orning fo r those who desire
to attend and yo u 'll alw ays
fin d a gam e of cards going on
fo r (hose of you who love to
p lay bridge and canasta.
Arlene Boyd is m anager of

1974
SAN FORD AUC TIO N
1215 French Avenue, San­
ford, opened August 1974, by
W ayne H. and Linda M.
Blecha. The lure of F lo rid a 's
su n s h in e
b ro u g h t
the
Blechas fro m Wisconsin to
Sanford In 1972. W ayne Is a
self-taught auctioneer and a

m em ber ot both the Florida
and th e N a tio n a l A u c ­
tio n e e r 's
A s s o c ia tio n .
A u c tio n s a rc h eld e v e ry
Monday night, Their top
q ua lity merchandise, a lot of
which comes fro m New York
and upper Eastern stales
fe a tu re s cle a n , m od e rn
fu r n itu r e , a p p lia n c e s , an'tlq u e s , all household Items
and TVs. They are licensed
to handle guns and c a rry an
Inventory of a ll types of
fire a rm s and accessories
also h a v in g re g u la r gun
a u c tio n s th ro u g h o u t the
year The Auction House and
Gun Shop are open Monday
through Saturday fro m 10 til
5 fo r browsing or buying. The
B lechas employ tw o fu ll
tim e employees. A grow ing
num ber of citizens are fin ­
ding that Sanford Auction Is
a good place fo beat the high
cost of Inflation w ith m e r­
chandise that they can be
proud lo own and a ffo rd to
buy This w ill be the last
year the Blechas w ill own
Sanford Auction as they have
since purchased an Indoor
gun range In Apopka, Fla.,
and are scheduled to open on
M arch 1 as Shoot Straight
Pawn and Auction com pany.

1975
H ALC O LBER TR EALTY
INC.
207 E, 25th St., Sanford,
opened fo r business August
1, 1975. Hal Colbert is sole
owner and manager. He has
24 years in the real estate
profession. Born and reared
in Sanford. Hal and his w ife,
the fo rm e r L illia n Cameron,
s till live In the home where
L illia n was born on South
Cameron Ave. They are
parents o t two sons. W illia m
L is a c ity attorney w ith the
firm of Stensfrom, M cIntosh,
J u lia n ,
C o lb e rt
and
W hlgham , and Hal Edward
w ho w o rk s In. the Tax
Assessor's O ffice handling
com m ercial appraisals. Hal
C o lb e rt
R e a lty
se lls
re s id e n tia l, a cre a ge and
com m ercial property. He is
a m em ber of the Seminole
County Board of Realtors
and M u ltip le Listing Service.
W ith lis tin g s In C e n tra l
Florida, Volusia, Orange and
Seminole counties, this firm
w ill w ork tirelessly fo satisfy
your every real estate need.

1976
A A A E M P LO Y M E N T
1917 French Ave., Sanford
opened In January, 1976. The
organization has been In
business fo r over 20 years in
F lorida and In Sanford fo r 6
years. Carol Quetschenbach
and Louise O liver are now
co owners to glveeven better
service lo the Sanford area.
Agencies are In DAYTO NA,
A LTA M O N TE
SPRINGS,
O R L A N D O and W IN T E R
PARK The SANFORD and
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S ,
offices are w orking close
together to expand our range
of jobs available fo r people
In the Sanford area. AAA
E M P LO Y M E N T is a LOW
F E E p riv a te em ploym ent
a g e n cy, w h ic h ch arg es
O N LY tw o (2) weeks salary
for the service of uniting
em ployer and employee in
the perfect job w ith NO
CHARGE to the em ployer.
For fhe firs t tim e In Its
h is to ry , S a nford has a
p riva te em ploym ent agency
w ith a b le , e x p e rie n c e d
personnel who care about
each ind ividual |ob seeker's
needs and are competent in
u niting employee and e m ­
p lo y e r. M a n a g e r B e v e rly
Ohalek, Is o rig in a lly fro m
New Jersey, She and her
fa m ily relocated to Lake
M a ry 10 yrs. ago. She has
been w ith AAA Em ploym ent
to r I I months, and has
managed the Sanford Office
fo r 1 year. So, be you an
em ployer in the need of help
or an ind ividual in need of
w o rk , fe e l c o n fid e n t in
d ia lin g
AAA
EM
P L O Y M E N T a t 333 5176:
Answ ering the phone w ill be
people who are exper1-meed

In finding the solution to your
needs. L e t A A A
EM
P LO Y M E N T help you.

1978
J K L ENTERPRISES
129 W. A irp o rt Blvd., San
ford, owned and operated by
Joanne
L a rso n ,
a re
d istrib u to rs of data supplies.
In itia lly offered was a mod
est line of Hems fo r data
processing users fro m a
downtown Sanford office In
September, 1978. They now
re p re s e n t
over
16
m anufacturers of various
d ata p ro d u c ts In c lu d in g
co n tin u o u s lab e ls, p ap e r,
cards and fo rm s; as well as
binders, ribbons, diskettes,
program m ing aids and other
accessories. Their personal
service, prom pt deliveries,
top q u a lity and com petitive
p ric e s have m ade J K L
known to city, state and
county
government
fa c ilitie s , co lleg e s and
universities,
accountants,
d o c to rs , boo kkee p in g and
d ata p ro ce ssin g s e rv ic e
companies, large and sm all
businesses as w ell as the
Individual home computer
u sers. A n a s s o rtm e n t of
sam ple products is displayed
at th e ir office. Call 323 4416
PR IO R TO V IS IT ._________
S E M IN O LE C H ILD CARE
CEN TER
289 Seminole D rive, Lake
M ary, 322-1950. The owners
and employees of Seminote
Child Care Center re a lly
c a re a b o u t y o u r c h ild 's
grow th and developm ent. In
addition to tender loving
care, the school specializes
In a c a d e m ic p ro g ra m s .
Toddler, Pre Kindergarten
and p riv a te , a c c re d ite d
K in d e rg a rte n classes are
o ffe re d .
A
lim ite d
enrollm ent is m aintained in
a ll classes in order to meet
y o u r c h ild 's in d iv id u a l
needs A program Is also
a v a ila b le to school age
children w ith transportation
provided toand fro m various
S em inole C ounty p u b lic
schools. Seminole Child Care
was founded In 1978 and was
p re v io u s ly nam ed M iss
Penny's Petites and Tender
Loving Care, respectively.
The present owners, Glen
and Pat Richardson, have
been S em inole C ounty
residents fo r approxim ately
eighteen years. Their goal Is
to m ain ta in a loving, home
atm osphere w ith individual
attention (or every child.
"O u r children's needs come
firs t and always w ill," states
Cheryl W hitw orth, D irector
of the school and the
Richardson's
oldest
d a u g h te r. S em inole C h ild
Care Center Is conveniently
lo c a te d o ff Lake M a ry
Boulevard three blocks west
of Lake M a ry Elem entary
School. The c e n te r is
situated on a quiet, tree lined
s tre e t a t th e c o rn e r of
Seventh Street and Seminole
Drive. The location Is easily
accessible, yet safely tucked
away fro m heavy tra ffic for
your ch ild's safety and your
own peace of m ind. The
c e n te r is open M on d ay
through F rid a y from 6:00
a m. to 6:00 p.m. and is State
licensed and ce rtifie d . You
are c o rd ia lly invited to tour
the center and make a
personal Inspection of the
fa c ilitie s and program s In
progress Also, feel free to
contact the center fo r In ­
fo rm a tio n and to discuss
th e ir low fa m ily rates.

Most of the structures sold
have been year-round homes
ranging fro m a modest 2bed roo m to n e a rly 4,000
square feet of livin g area. A
church of 10,400 square feet
was b u ilt at the Life for
Youth Ranch In Vero Beach.
The company has Its own
design departm ent to assist
custom ers in the design of
s in g le and m u lti- fa m ily
dwellings as w ell as com ­
m e rc ia l b u ild in g s . The
energy saving aspect of the
solid tim ber w alls is causing
more and more interest In
this type of structure. J e rry
B row n , p re s id e n t, was
fo rm e rly a ssociated w ith
another log company In this
area before establishing his
own company. P rio r to his
coming to the area, he was
Northwest Division Manager
for Colorado Log Homes In
Spokane,
W a s h in g to n .
Before that he hod been in
construction and sales fo r
some 20 years Because ol
Brown's construction
knowledge he can and does
a d vise
his
c u sto m e rs
regarding the construction of
th e ir
b u ild in g s .
Joyce
Brown, se c-clary treasurer,
w orks w ith her husband in
the business. P rio r lo coming
to the area, she was a high
school teacher and office
m a n a g e r. A son, C h ris ,
completes the Brown fa m ily.
He is a salesman In the
business.
PAC N ' SEND
714 W. 1st St. has been
located In Sanford fo r two
years and is now under the
ownership of Charles and
Deann B aird of Sanford.
C h a rle s is in package
engineering w ith NCR In
Lake M a ry and a p p lie s
e x p e rtis e fo h is new
business. Their son, Greg,
helps out In the evenings
a fte r school. Pac N’ Send is
available to serve you a ll
year long. They are open 10
a m . to 5 p.m ., Monday
through Friday. They w ill be
glad to give you pointers on
packaging. B ring your Items
(la rg e or sm all) and they
w ill package and w rap them
to the correct specifications
so that they w ill a rriv e safely
at
th e ir
d e s tin a tio n
anywhere in the country or
internationally. If you have a
package lo send, why waste
tim e standlnq In line or
g a so lin e d r iv in g a long
distance when Pac N' Send
can do it fo r you It is con
venlently located and there
Is am ple parking. For a
m inim um service charge,
they w ill ship your pre
packaged Items by United
P a rc e l S e rvice , F e d e ra l
Express, air. bus, truck or
parcel post. Of, If you prefer,
they w ill provide onestop
service They w ill package
your item fo r you. This
elim inates your having to
fin d c a rto n s , tape and
packaging m aterials. They
also sell packaging supplies.
They offer a g ift w rapping
service and have a selection
of greeting cards to r various
occasions you can enclose
w ith your package. Pac N'
Send also provides other
special services fo r unusual
shapes or hard to ship Items.
They w ill do special design
p a c k a g in g , la rg e
Ite m
cra tin g and packaging for
fra g ile Items. D uring c itru s
season they w ill ship fr u it to
your relatives and friends. A
w e lco m e a d d itio n to the
area.

1980
LOO STRUCTURESO F
TH E SOUTH
LOG S T R U C T U R E S OF
TH E SOUTH has had its log
m illin g operation a t the P o rt
of Sanford since 1980. In
January 1981 the o ffice was
moved t&gt; the P ort fa c ility .
Plans are being made to
open a sales office closer to
Ihe M e tro p o lita n a re a .
P re v io u s ly , the co m p a ny
was based in A ltam onte
Springs. Log Structures of
the South Is a local company
engaged In the m anufacture
and sale of log buildings

m
= ( D =

n db
PERSONNEL U N L IM IT E D
P e -s o n n e l
U n lim ite d ,
established in 1982. is a
Tem porary Service Center
and Secretarial Service. The
office was previously located
at 206 East F irs t Street,

Sanford, but has recently
moved to 2200 South French
Avenue, Sulfe A-2, Sanford.
They affectionately refer to
the te m p o ra ry s e rv ic e
d iv is io n
of
P ersonnel
U n lim ite d as the " M A D
H O U R S " d iv is io n . T h a t's
because th e y know .how
"M A D " If can get when
someone Isn’ t able to come to
work or to get a lt the
necessary w o rk done on
tim e. They o ffe r tem porary
services in m any d iffe re n t
areas w hich m ay v a ry fro m
tim e to tim e as they receive
new applicants w ith special
tra in in g o r e x p e rie n c e .
There are advantages to this
type of service which should
be explored by anyone who
finds they need e xtra help,
whether it's on a one tim e
basis or on a regular basis.
S e c re ta ria l s e rv ic e s are
available a t the office of
P ersonnel U n lim ite d fo r
Individuals and businesses
alike. A free client con­
ference enables them to
a s c e rta in y o u r p a r tic u la r
need so they can set up a
program that's rig h t for you.
They are available to type
le tte rs , re p o rts , re su m e s'
and papers as w ell as han­
d ling complete secretarial
s e rv ic e s . A ll c lie n ts ot
P e rso n ne l U n lim ite d e re
ensured s tric t conttdenttettty
fo r any w o rk perform ed by
them. M a ry Ann D uxbury is
the o w n e r and w o rk in g
m a n a g e r o f P e rsonnel
U n lim ited and fakes per­
sonal p rid e In p ro v id in g
co m p e te n t and re lia b le
services to each client. M ary
Ann has been a resident of
Sanford since 1964 and Is
proud fo have joined fhe
business com m unity of such
a fine city.

1981
KISH R E A L ESTATE
2523 South French Ave. This
business is headed by
Lawana F. Kish. Lawana is a
native of Charlotte, Ten
nessee, b ut roam ed the
w orld w hile connected w ith
the Service — fin a lly settling
In Sanford In 1967. W hile In
Tokyo. Japan, she taught
A m e ric a n C ustom s and
Etiquette, Geography and
H is to ry to th e Japanese
Ground Self Defense Forces.
She was awarded by the
Japanese Governm ent, fhe
highest aw ard ever given a
foreign fem ale fo r her e f­
fo rts .
L aw an a has a
daughter. T e rri Stuart, and a
son. Paul, who works for
Conoco O il C om pany in
Texas, a grandson. M ichael
and a g ra n d d a u g h te r.
Heather. This busy lady has
se rve d m a n y c o m m itte e s
and held positions on the
Board of D irectors of Ihe
Seminole County Board of
Realtors. In 1977, she was
a w a rd e d by h er fe llo w
realtors, "T h e R ealtor of the
Year A w a rd ." In 1980 the
served as president of the
SCBR. D uring this year the
board purchased Its new
hom e on S hepard R oad,
W inter Springs. This was a
banner year fo r Lawana and
the e n tire b o a rd . Sha
received the "P e rso n a litie s
of the S outh" a w ard in 1980
and she is m entioned In
"W ho's Who In Women In
R eal E s ta te ." She i t a
m e m b e r of th e F lo rid a
Association of Realtors and
a lso a m e m b e r o f the
N a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n of
Realtors. In 1982 she served
as H is to ria n
fo r th «
SCBR and w ill also (each a
class In O rientation fo r new
m em bers ol the SCBA. M rs.
K ish and her staff, w ith th e ir
m otto, "S e rvice Beyond tha
C o n tra ct" s triv e to g ive the
very best to the custom er,
and th a t's the fu ll measure of
success. Lawana Is alw ays
a! w o rk, alw ays frie n d ly and
alw ays has the coffee on. So
go by 2523 South French
Ave.. have a cup of coffae,
lis t to sell o r let her fin d the
property you e r e ' In the
m arke t to purchase They
appreciate your business,
you w ille p p re c la te a |ub w e ll
done by Lawana and her
professional staff.

�T*

IJ—Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.
» —Hera Id A dvertiser, Sanlord, F|.

Sunday, Feb. JO, 1983
Thursday, Feb. J&lt;, 1983

The Rest Of The Year?

What's The Weather
By DORIS DIETRICH
Herald Staff Writer
The weather In Seminole County and, in general. Central
Florida, ranges from hot and humid to below freezing during
the year. The average annual rainfall is 51.21 inches.
The rainy season is June, July, August and two weeks in
October. The hurricane season is June through November.
The first seven months of 1982 recorded rainfall of 17.81
inches. During the next three months, 33.40 inches were
recorded by the U.S. Weather Bureau in Orlando.
Temperatures may go down to 20 degrees during January
and February and up to 103 degrees in July and August. During
the Summer and Fall rainy season, scattered daily showers
cause a drop in temperature to make the climate more
berable. Temperatures above 95 degrees are rare.
Rainfall is light in the winter. The temperature can be
freezing in the morning and rise to a comfortably warm af­
ternoon.
Freezing precipitation in the Central Florida area is rare.
Hall sometimes accompanies a thunderstorm.
Central Florida has on abundance of lakes, causing a
relative high humidity of 90 percent during the night, 40 to 50
percent during the afternoon and 20 percent in the Winter.
Hurricanes are not a great threat to Central Florida since
they lose much of their punch before reaching this inland area.
According to the weather bureau, Central Florida’s most
devasting hurricane — Donna (I960) — reached wind velocity
of only 45 mph as opposed to the normal hurricane winds — 70
mph.
The following emergency weather terms have been com­
piled by GTE Directories Corporation:
EMERGENCY WEATHER TERMS
By international agreement, tropical cyclone is the general
term for all cyclone circulations originating over tropical
waters, classified by form and intensity as follows:

Tropical disturbances
A moving area of thunderstorms in the Tropics that main­
tains its identity for 24-hours or more. A common phenomenon
in the tropics.
Tropical depression
Rotary circulation at surface, highest constant wind speed 38
miles per hour (33 knots.).
Tropical storm
Distinct rotary circulation, constant wind speed ranges 39-73
miles per hour (34-63 knots).
Hurricane
Pronounced rotary circulation, constant wind speed of 74
miles per hour (64 knots) or more.
Small craft cautionary statements
When a tropical cyclone threatens a coastal area, small
craft operators are advised to remain in port or not to venture
into the open sea.
Gale Warnings
It may be issued when winds of 39-54 miles an hour (34-47
knots) are expected.
Storm Warnings
It may be Issued when winds of 55-73 miles an hour (48413
knots) are expected. If a hurricane is expected to strike a
coastal area, gale or storm warnings will not usually precede
hurricane warnings.
A Hurricane Watch
It is issued for a coastal area when there Is a threat of
hurricane conditions within 24-36 hours.
A Hurricane Warning
It is issued when hurricane conditions are expected in a
specified coastal area in 24 hours or less. Hurricane conditions
include winds of 74 miles an hour (64 knots) and-or
dangerously high tides and waves. Actions for protection of life
and property should begin immediately when the warning is
issued.

Many Retirees Serve
In Volunteer Roles
This spring, the Retired Scmior Volunteer
Program will celebrate a decade of service in
Seminole County.
Defying the notion that age brings inac­
tivity, \*olunteers in the RSVP program spend
several hours a week working on a wide
variety of tasks that enhance the quality of life
in Seminole County. laist year, 72.000 hours
were donated by 350 RSVP volunteers.
The primary focus of the program is on the
needs and interests of older persons serving as
senior volunteers. th e worth of their service in
Seminole County is inestimable (even at
minimum wage the yearly contribution is
nearly $250,000). But the interest of Congress
when it established RSVP in 1971 was to
provide older persons opportunities to give of
themselves in order that they again may be

and consider themselves productive, needed
members of society.
RSVP volunteers serve in nonprofit com­
munity agencies, schools, health care
facilities and governmental agencies.
Tlie volunteers range in age from 60 (the
lower limit) to 91 (there is no upper limit).
RSVP is inherently a community program.
While some funds are provided by the federal
agency ACTION, support is given by the
Seminole County Commission, the school
board. United Way, Seminole County South
and Casselberry Rotary clubs and other
sources.
The RSVP Office is located in Longwood on
Lakeview between Church and Orange. The
mailing address is Box 936, Ixngwood, 32750.
-JO A N MADISON

When a Hurricane Watch is
Issued for Your Area
Check often for official bulletins on radio and TV.
• Fuel car
Check mobile home tie-downs
Moor small craft or move to safe shelter
Stock up on canned provisions ■
Check supplies of special medicines and drugs
Check batteries for radio and flashlights
Secure lawn furniture and other loose material outdoors ■
Tape, board, or shutter windows to prevent shattering
Wedge sliding glass doors to prevent their lifting from their
tracks •
When a Hurricane Warning Is
Issued For Your Area
Stay tuned to radio or TV for official bulletins
Stay home if sturdy and on high ground
Board up garage and porch doors
Move valuables to upper floor
Bring In pets
Fill containers (bathtub) with several days supply of
In General:
drinking water
If you live on ihe coastline or offshore islands, plan to leave.
Turn up refrigerator to maximum cold and don t open unless
If you live in a mobile home, plan to leave.
necessary
If you live near a river or in a flood plain, plan to leave.
Use phone only for emergencies
If you live on high ground, away from coastal beaches,
Stay indoors on the downwind side of house away from
consider staying. In any case, the ultimate decision to stay or
windows
leave will be yours. Study the following list and carefully
Beware of the eye of the hurricane
consider the factors involved-especially the items pertaining
Leave mobile homes
to storm surge.
Leave areas which might be affected by storm tide or
At Beginning of Hurricane Season
stream flooding
(June) Make Plans for Action
Leave early — in daylight if possible
Learn the storm surge history* and elevation of your area.
Shut off water and electricity at main stations
Learn safe routes inland
Take small valuables and papers but travel light
l^ a m location of official shelters.
Lock up house
Determine where to move your boat in an emergency.
Drive carefully to nearest designated shelter using
Trim back dead wood from trees.
recommended evacuation routes
R ash Flood Watch
It means a flash flood Is possible in the area; stay alert.
Flash Flood Warning
It means a flash flood is imminent; take immediate action.
Tornadoes
Are spawned by hurricanes which sometimes produce
severe damage and casualties. If a tornado is reported in your
area, a warning will be issued.
HURRICANE ACTION CHECKLIST
Here is a list of the many things to consider before, during
and after a hurricane. Some of the safety rules will make
things easier for you during a hurricane. All are Important and
could help save your life and the lives of others.
Stay or Leave
When a hurricane threatens your area, you will have to
make the decision whether you should evacuate or whether
you can ride out the storm in safety at home.
If local authorities recommend evacuation, you should leave!
Their advice is based on knowledge of the strength of the
storm and its potential for death and destruction.

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Option No.1: The Basic
M o n e y M a rk e t Account.
This is j super savings account
that can be opened with a minimum
S2.5O0 deposit. It pays money market
rates, offers limited checking access
and allows unlimited personal with­
drawals at the hank or at our 24-hour
Atlantic Hankaround automated tellers.

P R O G R E S S IS F O R
PEOPLE

A T S E M IN O L E F O R D W E A R E P L E A S E D TO BE A P A R T O F A P R O ­
G R E S S IV E C O M M U N IT Y .P ro g re s s is (or people, and at our dealership (ha)
m eans a continued etfo rt to (Ind m ore and better w ays to serve our custom ers.

Atlantic now offers discount bro­
kerage service for purchasing stocks
and corporate bonds at a commission
discount up to fit 1% less than a fullservice brokers fee. This service will
allow you to centralize your invest­
ments in one convenient location.

Option No.4* The Money
Market Management
Account.

__

’i ■

Call our Hotline.
1 -8 0 0 -3 4 2 -2 7 0 5
For current rates and account
information call our toll-free Financial
Hotline today. Or see your Atlantic
Hanker. Because when it comes to new
comprehensive banking services that
meet your personal and business needs
- you can’t do better than The Hest
Hank Around."

Hither Atlantic’s Money Market
Account or Money Market Checking
Option N o.2* The Money Account can be used as a basic
building block lor Atlantic’s Money
Market Checking
Market Management Account. It
Account.
Atlantic National Hank of Florida
combines high-yield earnings and
Banking Locations Statewide
checking
access
with
optional
Dis­
With a S2.5INI minimum deposit,
Member FDIC
count
Brokerage
Service.
Your
account
we offer a new Money Market Checking
will include free checking and a com­
"’" ’"'v Account which is like a
prehensive monthly financial state­
ment of all your accounts including
checking, savings, loans, brokerage
activity and earnings.
This account offers more value
for your money than any other bank
account or brokerage service.

We feel that we have taken a big step lo rw ard this year introducing our "M U C H
M O R E ” service concept. This "te a m e ffo rt" In our service d ep artm en t allows
us to o tter our custom ers low er prices, exa c t cost estim ates, and etf iclent, e x ­
pert w orkm an sh ip .
Such efficien cy, and lower costs follow through to the used car lot and into the
new c a r showroom too. We (cel that our new service concept, plus the high
q u a lity F O R D A U TO S we sell, m ak e your purchase fro m S E M IN O L E F O R D
a " M U C H M O R E " a ttra c tiv e buy.

P R O G R ES S IS A BETTER P R O D U C T
W e are pleased w ith the
progress m ad e in our
n e w car products this
year.
_________

F A IR M O N T
F U T U R A S 4 OR SEDAN

Sign up at
The Best Bank Around."
Yes, I’d like more information on Atlantic’s
E S C O R T L 4 DR H A T C H B A C K

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EXP
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T h t Best Bank A ro u n d *

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Evening Herald

Herald Advertiser
Thursday, Feb. 24, 1983

'w iH um g &amp; p r y e w i a s m

Business
&amp; Industry

■ #§•».

greefthouie flowers. See page S.

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7

Ruth Hampton hdustriot It building Its new plant In Sanford. See Page 2.

55th Annual

Progress Edition

�2— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
?— Herald Advertiter, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. JO, IfM
Thursday, Feb. J«, 1M3

Rush-Hampton AAoving To New Facility
Fiscal year 1982 was a year o! tran­
sition and change for Rush-Hampton
Industries.
The company established itself as a
major manufacturer and m arketer in the
housewares industry by meeting the
challenge of more than 20 companies who
entered the air treatment category.
Sales for the 12 months ended June 30,
1982, reached $32,728,B28 as compared to
$14,M2,910 for the nine months ended
June 30,1981, (a 9-month report because
the fiscal year was changed). The net
income was $2,287,660.
The year’s accomplishments were
significant.
A m ajor recruiting effort ensured a
strong management support structure

and the best field sales force in the in­
dustry. Virtually all internal computer
systems were substantially upgraded.
TTie company now has a sophisticated
order entry system, a new inventory
control system and an im proved
financial reporting system.
The construction of the new $6 million
facility in Sanford is scheduled for
completion in early 1983. The new facility
will result in an improvement In
production costs and will put RushHampton's entire management under
one roof for the first time in recent
history.
Rush-Hampton, a major Seminole
County firm since 1969, will move its 600employee operation from Longwood to a

36-acre site in Sanford on Silver Lake
Drive. The single-level building will
contain 125,000 square feet.
The new Sanford facilities are aimed at
bringing all operations under one roof.
Company President J. Rushton Bailey
explained the Longwood operation en­
tailed nine separate buildings. “ We look
forward to pulling the entire operation
together,’’ Bailey said.
The new Sanford facility is expandable
to 400,000 square feet.
Rush-Hampton Industries was founded
in 1969 to determine the best use for the
now -patented CA-90 chem ical. The
Ductless Fan was introduced two years
later as an alternative to energy Inef­
ficient rtiirtwork, exhaust fans and
. . . . . .

C ard in al In d u stries h o m e s w e re o ften se e n ro llin g
d ow n h ig h w a y s in 1982, h e a d ed to s ite s throughout

,

much of the United Stales.

Sanford Plant Produces
Half Of Cardinal's Homes
Despite the grim economy of 1982 which battered the
building trades and the real estate market, Cardinal
Industries, Inc., the nation's largest modular apartment
builder and developer, continued its operations at a record
shattering pace by constructing and marketing some 5,000
apartment and motel units.
About one half of Cardinal's 1982 production was ac­
complished in the company's 125,000-square-foot plant in
Sanford and on its 490-foot-long assembly line. More than 2,250
units were removed from the line during 1982 and were used to
construct and develop 41 projects in what Is known as the
Florida region which Includes the entire state plus South
Georgia.
These 40 projects included a Knight's Inn motel in Brun­
swick, Ga., and another In Jacksonville, plus units which were
exported for the first time in the company's history. These
went to the Grand Turk Islands in the British West Indies.
During 1982 Cardinal also constructed an addition to its
administration building at the plant and an office building for
the West Volusia Memorial Hospital in DeLand.
Also, Cardinal began construction of its first condominium
project — Canterbury-at-The-Crossings in Lake Mary. In
addition, Cardinal sold and erected some 100 single-family
homes during 1982.
Thirty-five other multi-family projects were developed In
the Florida Region during the year. As of Dec. 31, it also had 10
other projects under construction, including apartment
complexes in Savannah, Thomasville and Valdosta, Ga.
Among the Florida developments during 1982 were five in
Tampa, two each in Fort Myers, Naples, Tallahassee,
Titusville and West Palm Beach, plus single projects in Avon
Park, Brandon, Brooksville, Cocoa, Daytona Beach, DeLand,
E ustis, E verglades City, F ort Pierce, Islam orado
(Matecumbe Key), Kissimmee, Lakeland, Marco Island,
Orlando, Palatka, Plant City, St. Augustine Beach, Sarasota,
Sebring, and Winter Springs.
Since Cardinal put its Sanford plant Into operation in October
1976, the factory has produced more than 7,000 apartment and
motel units plus close to 200 single family homes. The plant is

now operating at about 70 percent of its capacity and at this
rate can produce 10 one-bedroom apartments per day — one
every 46 minutes.
The Sanford plant Is one of four factories now operated by
Cardinal. There are two In Columbus, Ohio, and one In Atlanta,
Ga. The second Columbus plant and the Atlanta facility were
put into production about mid-1982. When all four reach
maximum output, Cardinal expects to have the ability to
manufacture approximately 20,000 apartment and motel units
per year.

venting.
The consum er Ecologizer airtreatment systems were introduced in
1977. The product has greatly added to
Rush-Hampton’s volume of business.
By the end of fiscal 1982, some 20 major
housewares manufacturers had entered
the air treatment field. Rush-Hampton
officials feel they met their challenge,
maintained a strong market share and
strengthened domestic distribution in all
major classes of trade.
Foreign sales grew at an un­
precedented rate. The firm established
new distribution in England and im­
portant contacts and relationships were
established in Europe.
As a result of iutunuliurial efforts,

Rush-Hampton was named Florida’s
most outstanding export company for
1982.
The company expanded its product
line with larger, more efficient air
treatment methods and introduced our
new Ecologizer water treatment system
during 1982. Shipments of the new
Ecologizer series 4000 and scries 8000 nlr
treatment systems began In the latter
part of the year and the newest addition,
the Ecologizer series 3000, was in
production in October.
New product introductions, together
with existing products — the Ecologizer
built-in (formerly known as the Ductless
Fan), the Ecologizer series 1000 and

series 2000 air treatment systems, and
the Ecologizer auto air treatment system
— give Rush-Hampton the broadest and
most sophisticated air treatment product
line in the industry.
Rush-Hampton has the broadest line
coupled with the best filtering system.
During the year, Dr. Stephen Frazier and
his staff made significant improvements
in the filtering system to include ab­
sorption of additional gas contaminants.
The company’s commitment to research
and development is strong.
Rush-Hampton pioneered the a ir
treatment industry and established Itself
as the leader in the industry.

3 Chambers Serve South Semmoie
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
There are three fast-growing cham­
bers of commerce active in South
Seminole County.
They are the Ixingwood-Winter Springs
Area, the Greater Seminole County and
the Maitland-South Seminole chambers.
The
Longwood-WInter
Springs
Chamber has 336 members, including
five lifetim e m em bers and one
organization. It meets on the fourth
Monday of each month for a noon lun­
cheon meeting at the Quality Inn North,
State Road 434 In Longwood. The board of
directors meet on the second Monday of
the month at 4:30 p.m. at the Qaulity Inn.
Officers for 1983, installed at the an­
nual banquet on Dec. 4, Include: William
Daucher, president; David Chacey, vice
president; Gary Bemiller, secretary;
and Richard Callahan, treasure!.
The board consists of Andy Amoroso,
B em iller, Carm ine Bravo, R ichard
Eggers, John Torcaso, Rick Owens,
Bruce Cox, David Chacey and Richard
Callahan.
Meta B urgess is the executive
secretary and the chamber office is
located In the historic Longwood Village
Inn. Office hours are 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. The chamber
has a Better Business Department for
inquiries or complaints about local
businesses. The chamber phone number
is 831-9991.
Other projects include the annual golf
tournament In September, a scholarship
program for one business student from
each of four area high schools,

recognition of four Business Students of
the Month, the Business Man of the
Month and Beautification Award and the
annual Business-Education Day.
The 675-member Greater Seminole
Chamber of Commerce has its office at
291 Maitland Ave. in Altamonte Springs
and its members hope to build their own
facilities by the end of this year. Hte
office is open Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sharon Morgan Will
is the chief administrative officer.
The general membership meeting is
held at 11:45 a.m. on the third Wed­
nesday of each month. Persons may call
the chamber at 834-4404. The board meets
on the second Tuesday at 7:30 a.m. in the
chamber office.
The 1983 officers include Clyde C. Rice
Jr., president; Jam es Stelling, president­
elect for 1984, Keith Sigmon, secretarytreasurer; Jam es Harper, vice president
in charge of community affairs; Dr. Joan
Sheppard, vice president of business
relations; Ken Low, vice president of
legislative affairs; and Dick Fess, vice
president of membership.
Also on the board are immediate past
president Bob Crockett, Jack Splllane,
Gary Garrand, Alan Rhodus, Gil Lewis
and Helen Keyser.
Chartered in 1974 as the Greater
Seminole Chamber of Commerce, the
organization operated as AltamonteCasselberry Chamber of Commerce until
1974. Membership comes from every city
in Seminole County as well as some from
Orange County.

The chamber printed a 30-page guide to
Seminole County in 1982 and copies are
available at the office. Some of last
year’s successful projects included Small
Business R oundtables, a golf to u r­
nament, a St. Patrick's Day Luncheon
and a business beautification award.
The
Longwood-Winter
Springs
Chamber of Commerce has its offices in
the historic Longwood Village Inn. The
office is open Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. with Meta Burgess
in charge.
The ch am b er holds its general
meetings the fourth Monday of each
month at the Quality Inn North on State
Roc'&lt; 434 at Interstate 4. Originally the
Longwood Area Chamber of Commerce,
it officially Included the growing Winter
Springs area three years ago to become
the Longwood-Winter Springs chamber.
Membership has tripled.
It provides a Better Business Bureau
so that people can call and check on
businesses and register complaints.
The
M aitland-South
Seminole
Chamber of Commerce office la located
at 110 N. Maitland Ave. in Maitland. The
office Is open 9-5, Monday through
Friday.
The 1983 officers Include Less White,
president; George Tucker, first vice
president; Kenneth Osborne, second vice
president; Sid Cash, treasurer; Phyllis
Green, secretary and executive director.
New members of the board of directors
are Barnabas P. Toth, Kenneth W.
Osborne, Charles H. Schmitt, Sid Cash,
George W. Foster and Sandra Lotzia.

MAKE YOURSELF AT HOME

When the “ Professional Builder" magazine'announced its
annual ratings of the country's "giant" housing construction
companies it listed Cardinal as the 14th largest manufacturer
or conventional builder In the United States based on a dollar
volumn of Income amounting to $238 million during 1981. This
figure represented an Increase of 38 percent over 1980's income
of $148 million. When the 1982 figures are available, company
officials anticipate they will reveal an increase of at least 20
percent over 1981.
Although Cardinal subs out its land clearing, land
preparation, construction of foundations, concrete work,
asphalt paving, the erection and installation of television cable
and central antenna systems and landscaping, it still has more
than 400 employees in Sanford plus nearly 1,000 other em­
ployees throughout the state.
The company also maintains branch offices in Lakeland,
Miami and Tampa.
Since starting production in the Sanford plant, Cardinal has '
completed and opened 144 apartment complexes In the Florida
legion. Among the 10 other developments now under con­
struction are two more Knights Inn motels — one in
Gainesville and another Just west of the main entrance to
Disney World on U.S. 192.
During 1983, Cardinal will construct 20 new Knights Inns —
six in the Florida Region, two In Georgia and 12 in the Midwest.
The company is owned by Austin Guirlinger, a native of
Detroit who now Uvea in Dcl,and.

Unique Extras In Apartment Living
• 13 Energy S a v e r s

► Dead Bolt L o c k and
D o o r Privacy Viewer

• S m o k e D etector

► Color Coordinated
Appliances

• Private Entrance
• No One Living A b o v e
or Below You

► Fenced Patio for Privacy
► Off-Street Parking

• Floored Attic Sto ra g e
• Full Wall Built-In
Bookcase
• W ash ab le Fabric
C ove re d Walls

*

Cardinal ap a rtm e n t! feature a number of
extras designed to help you "m a ke yourself a f
hom e."

U N IT S A D A P T A B LE FO R
H A N D IC A P P E D PER SO NS

Call (305) 323 -33 1 0 (or the name and loca­
tion of the Cardinal apartment* neareit you.

E xpertly landscaped and ca refully m ain­
ta in e d by tra in e d p ro fe ss io n a l re s id e n t
m a nag ers, C a rd ln a i's a ttra c tiv e garden
apartm ents are designed to appeal to the
resident who appreciates care free livin g in a
peaceful and com fortable setting.
With over ten years experience in the
construction, development and management
ot rental protects, Cardinal has more than 130
projects throughout the state.

CARDINAL
INDUSTRIES INCORPORATED

�Evanlng Hara W, Sanford, FI.
Harold Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Fab 30
Thursday. Fab!u . i S T ?

Flea Markets Big Hit In Seminole County
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
The Marche aux Puces Is nothing new
In Paris, but In this country the flea
market Is a more recent phenomenon
that has continued to sweep the country
especially In Florida where the weather
lends itself to year-round operation.
■file flea market concept began with a
few tables set up in an empty field, but
has evolved into the present trend of
more perm anent and sophisticated
facilities.
In Seminole County the granddaddy of
flea markets was the Maitland Flea
Market which has been operating since
1966. The Sanford Village Super Market
was opened in February, 1976. But the
newcomer, Flea World, is the first to be
entirely under one roof in the county.
Flea World, which opened May 20,1982,

is already expanding on 21 acres ad­
jacent to its original 12 acres on U.S.
Highway 17-92 across from the county's
Five Points complex in South Sanford.
Built by developer Syd Levy, Flea
World attracts 30,000 to 35,000 persons
each wekend. It cost $1 million to build
and includes 75,000 square feet of sales
space. There are 425 booths with twothirds of them occupied by permanent
dealers. The spaces are sold out almost
every weekend, Levy said. There are
parking facilities for more than 800 cars.
The expansion project Includes five 60
by 2^0-feet metal buildings that are
completely enclosed. Levy said they will
provide 100,000 more square feet when
completed and will be a complete Flea
World Mall.
The new buildings will be adjoined to
the existing flea market by a covered

promenade 700 feet long. There will be
parking space for 900 more vehicles.
Flea World provides free admission
and free parking and owns its own food
concessions with a variety of foods from
hot dogs and pizza to ice cream, popcorn
and cotton candy.
In addition there is occasional en­
tertainment, such as clogging and square
dancing and pony rides for children. Flea
World is open Friday, Saturday and
Sunday.
In fact the outdoor carnival at­
mosphere at flea markets is part of the
attraction. You can find Just about
anything at flea markets — antiques,
collector's Items, pets, plants, fresh
produce, clothing, tools, arts and crafts,
seafood, sporting goods and just plain
junk.
They are sort of a people's mall, and

everybody is looking for a bargain.
The 19-acre Sanford Village Super Flea
Market at 1500 S. French Ave. is owned
and operated by J.W. "Red" Jones and
his wife, Edna. It was the first and only
established flea market in Sanford's city
limits. It has grown in seven years from
two mini-merchant buildings, 40 tables
and parking for 50 cars.
There is free parking for 2,000 cars and
each dealer has a place to park. There is
no admission charge and the market is
open Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday.
Recently new facilities were added and
improvements made, such as the rolldown locked metal doors on buildings for
permanent dealers. The cafe, a deli,
bakery and meat and fish market, which
were formerly under an open shed, have
now been modernized. They are enclosed

with concrete block walls and plate glass p.m., Saturday and Sunday only.
windows. There are now four concrete
There are 450 dealer tables and about
buildings divided into stalls.
50 permanent shops. There is no charge
“ It’s still a real (lea market. It hasn't for parking, but there is a 25 cent ad­
lost its flavor," commented Mrs. Jones. mission fee for adults. The owner is Dale
“Mr. Jones is a down-home person and Tucker.
we treat the people courteously. They
Two of the more unusual dealers at the
come here because the prices are fair Maitland market are a man who custom
and they can bargain with the dealers. carves axe handles and other Items and a
It's a pleasant way to spend time in a handicapped young woman who makes
relaxed atmosphere."
old-fashioned rag rugs to order. Among
Perm anent dealers have their the hundreds of other items to be found
specialties, such as big men’s clothing, are collectables, antiques, produce,
antique furniture, children's clothing, meats and crafts. There are seven food
fresh produce, wheels or sports equip­ concessions within the market.
ment.
Have the newer flea markets hurt
The Maitland Flea Market is located on Maitland's business?
U.S. Highway 17-92 In South Seminole
“ When they first open, our business is
County on a 12-acre site. It attracts
between 12,000 and 15,000 persons each generally off for a weekend. But then it
weekend. It is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 goes back to normal," a spokesman said.

Ma/or Part
O f Development In County
ByfKA.NKJ.JASA
County Extension Director
Agriculture has played a dominant role in the economic
development of Seminole County. With the rapid urban and
industrial development since 1970, agriculture's Impact has
not been as dramatic but is still a major industry. Agricultural
production has maintained an even pace during the past
several years and has served as a stabilizing factor during the
economic recession, providing a constant employment base.
Even though agricultural production has remained
relatively constant during the past 10 years, the number, size,
and type of farms have significantly changed. Contrary to
national trends, the number of fanfcs has increased, with the
last census showing 490 farms, with the only decrease being
those over 1,000 acres. The average size of farm decreased by
30 percent since the 1974 agricultural census. Of the 490 farms,
83 are considered commercial, with gross income of $40,000 or
more.
The primary reason for this trend is the increasing number
of part-time farm ers who now make up over two-thirds of the
total.
Urban expansion, along with other factors such as energy
costs and market demand* have resulted in considerable
change In agricultural pursuits. Citrus and vegetables are still
leaders in food production. In the 1980-81 season, the on-farm
value of vegetables sold was $9 million, harvested from 4,500
acres. Cabbage and cucumbers were the primary crops, with
celery, green beans, peppers, eggplant, squash, onions,
southern peas and watercress along with small acreages of
miscellaneous vegetables making up the remainder. There is a
trend to producing a greater variety of different vegetables,
both for the local market and for speciality markets in other
states. In addition to watercress, some of the lesser known
crops grown are roquette, Korean radish, spaghetti squash,
mint, corrtander and various oriental vegetables.
Hard freezes In three of the last four years, along with a
damaging hall storm reduced the 1961-82 citrus crop to 1.3
million boxes from the normal 2 million, with an on-farm value
of |6.S million from 6,700 acres. Since a considerable acreage
of citrus is produced on prime development land, the acreage
is expected to show some decline during the next several
years, however newly planted acreage and replanted groves
are offsetting most of the urban loss. Barring additional freeze
damage, the production is expected to move back to at least 2
million box level.
Livestock and livestock products which Include poultry,
beef, dairy, swine, goats, sheep and rabbits, brought in over $4
million. Most of the livestock operations are located in the
eastern portion of the county in the predominantly rural areas.
Since this is the area of least development, the livestock en­
terprises are not likely to be displaced in the near future.
The crop with the greatest value and continuing to increase
in Importance is ornamentals. Although not a food or fiber
crop, it is an agricultural enterprise that brings in the greatest
return to the county, with a wholesale value in excess of 616
million. Because of the much higher per-acre return, or-

namcntal plant production is compatible with urban and in­
dustrial areas as well as the more rural areas.
The continually expanding home building provides a ready
market for woody ornamental plants where as the foliage
plants are grown primarily for out-of-state markets. There are
currently nearly 200 plant nurseries in Seminole County and
the number as well as total production are expected to in­
crease.
The total on-farm value of products sold in Seminole County
during the last year was in excess of 637 million. In addition to
products already mentioned, this value also included honey,
forestry products, field crops and sod. Approximately 60,000
acres is devoted to agricultural production.
In determining the value of agriculture, the term
agribusiness is more appropriate. The total income generated
provides for an agribusiness value of over 6100 million to
Seminole County.

• ■■■■■—

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State Farmers
Market Is Busy
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
An estimated 633,637,000 in produce passed through the
Sanford Florida State Fanners Market in 1980 (the latest
figure available) according to Wendell Moore, who took over
as manager in January 1982.
He hopes to top that this year.
Opened in 1934 at 1300 S. French Ave. it was the first Such
farmers market in the state. Disaster has struck more than
once, but it is still going strong. In 1957 much of the market was
destroyed by fire, but it was later rebuilt.
The destructive tornado and hailstorm that struck Sanford in.
April 1962 caused a large amount of.damage such as broken
skylights and windows, Moore said. The market underwent
many renovations and Improvements during the past year,
such as the 30,000-square-yard parking area, a new roof and a
paint Job. Now it Is all spruced up, he added, thanks to a
9225,000 state allocation.
Located on the 20-acre site of the State Farmers Market
includes 40 rental stalls for brokers, a retail produce market
and a cafe. Building No. 1 is 60 by 481 feet and includes the
scales and main office.
November through March are the busiest months for the
Sanford market when local crops such as citrus, cabbage, egg­
plants, cucumbers and peppers are marketed. “Sanford has
been known for shipping more different kinds of produce than
any other market in the state," Moore said.
The slack time for shipping Is June through August when
some of the brokers move their operation north for the sum­
mer harvetf, Moore said. Some operate year-round, however,
“DeBuryn, a large international produce broker has moved its
headquarters to the Sanford market and we're looking for
great things this year," he said. “They expect to ship a million
containers of produce through here. They buy, sell and help
farmers with their produce.
‘My whole Job as manager la to get the market to serve
fanners, brokers, and produce buyers and coordinate it all,"
he added.
The market is one of 13 owned by the state and operated by
the state Department of Agriculture, serves the agricultural
community, both small farmers and brokers of agricultural
products. The market Is administered by Moore and four
assistants.

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4— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.
4— Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Feb. 20,1*1)
Thursday, Feb. 2 4 ,1M3

Central Florida Attracts M a n y Firms
Recent newspaper and magazine articles from coast to coast
across the United States have told the story many times —
Central Florida is becoming known as a “ hot market city," one
that is defying the national recession and continuing to make a
name for Itself as a climate conducive to business.
Two national surveys have even ranked Florida tops in the
past year as the place companies would most like to do
bus incss... and the Florida Department of Commerce has, for
the second year in a row, ranked Central Florida tops among
all the cities in the state.
The Industrial Development Commission of Mid-Florida,
charged with the responsibility of attracting and assisting new
companies looking to move into Orange or Seminole county,
reports more companies than ever are locating within the
Seminole County borders. Moreover, many additional com­
panies both large and small are announcing projects for
surrounding areas that will draw employees from the
Seminole County labor pool.
"One of the reasons it’s so important for the IDC to represent
all of Mid-Florida is that here, we’re very homogenized. Our
efforts are strengthened by working with Orange and Seminole
counties because we have more sites to show a prospect, we
have a larger labor pool to draw from, and we have a greater
diversity of la/osi'ig and these are very important factors that
site locators consider," said Roy Harris, IDC executive vice
president.
The IDC formally began serving Seminole County in October
1981. Prior to that, the Commission served solely Orange
County. The IDC was formed in 1977 as a membership-based
organization, and has grown to nearly 800 members
representing every facet of the business community in the
area. Not only does the IDC work with Fortune 1,000 com­
panies considering the area as a site for a new headquarters or
other facility, the IDC also is extensively Involved with issues
affecting the growth of the area, Including wastewater
management, transportation, energy, and quality of life
factors like education, culture, environment, and more.
Well-known Seminole County residents Rush Bailey and
Seminole County Commissioner Robert G. "Bud" Feather
serve on the IDC Board of Directors with 11 other Central
Florida business leaders.
Some of the projects announced in Fiscal Year 1981-82 are as
follows:
J.C. PENNEY CO.
J.C. Penney Co. is building a new credit office in Sabal
Center that will handle credit billings for J.C. Penney
customers in the Eastern U.S. The new office will be located in
a one-level 68,000-squarc-foot building and is expected to open
in the Spring.

The IDC, as well as the Seminole County Commissioners,
were instrumental in bringing the project to fruition in
Seminole County, as many sites in other areas were under
consideration. The facility will eventually handle billings for
about 6 million J.C. Penney customers. An initial work force of
more than 100 full and part-time employees will expand to os
many as 400 by 1986.
Ted Spurlock, J.C. Penney vice president and director of
credit for the national retailer, explained that the Seminole
County site was chosen over several eastern cities due to its
favorable climate, good transportation, competitive energy
costs, taxes, and a strong work force.
"Last, but not least, was the excellent cooperation we
received from the business, civic and governmental leaders,"
Spurlock said.
SUN WORLD CIRCUITS
After only a year in operation, Sun World Circuits, located on
Sunshine l.ane in Altamonte Springs, reached $8 million in
annualized sales and had a total employment of 90 people.
Canadian Marconi had acquired SWC and will build an ad­
ditional 30,000-square-foot plant on a two-acre site adjacent to
the existing property. Some 40 to 60 employees were initially
added and atvdhtr V to 75 should be added in early I96J.
Canadian Marconi manufacturers multi-layer printed
circuit boards. SWC will supply these boards for the company,
but also will continue to supply U.S. and local firms primarily.
According to the company's three to four-year plan, SWC’s
projected annua] sales will be $30 million and employment will
be 525 people — more than five times its 1982 status.
FLORIDA COMPUTER GRAPHICS
Florida Computer Graphics had 22 engineers and
technicians working on the color graphics terminals it manu­
factured at the Kirkman Commerce Center when they an­
nounced plans for a 70,000-square-foot manufacturing facility
in Lake Mary. The firm plans employment will reach 100
manufacturing, technical and support personnel.
“ Mid-Florida has all sorts of good things going for it, par­
ticularly an adequate supply of labor," said Mike Coffman,
president and chief executive officer of the firm. Beginning
production in January 1982, the company hopes to take a
sizeable share of the anticipated $4 billion computer graphics
market.
CFS CONTINENTAL
The second largest supplier to the food sendee industry, CFS
Continental expanded its Sanford sales and distribution center
in 1982. At the time of the announcement in April, the firm
employed about 100 people at the facility, which has been in
operation since 1974. The $1.5 million expansion will result in
the creation of 30 new jobs over a five-year period.

New Billet Plant Opens
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Shower Manufacturing Co. and its anodizing
division.
Herald Staff Writer
A major addition to the John Krider
In his speech at the opening, Graham said
Industrial Park on Jewett fane in Sanford this
this is the type of industry he is trying to at­
year was the opening on June 14, 1982, of
tract to the stale: "A company that is large
Florida Billet Co.'s new aluminum foundry.
enough to be competitive, but small enougli to
Many dignitaries including Florida Gov.
Innovative."
Bob Graham, who arrived by helicopter, were
Art Grindle, local entrepreneur and now
on hand for the opening ceremonies.
The new plant has 15,000 square feet of state rep resen tativ e, was m aster of
manufacturing space, plus concrete open air ceremonies. He recounted the history of Wall,
storage areas. It was financed by the sale of a who had sold a successful tool and die com­
81,400,000 revenue bond. It has the capacity tor pany in Detroit In 1963 and moved to Florida to
casting 60 million pounds of aluminum a year. retire, but was enticed to Sanford to go into
Florida Billet not only supplies the extrusion business once more in 1976.
billets for Florida Extrusion, Inc., also located
Grindle said the late John S. Krider, civic
at the John Krider Industrial Park, but also leader for whom the 15-acre park was named,
sells to other companies. Prior to the opening and current Greater Sanford Chamber of
of the new foundry, Florida Extrusion bought 8 Commerce president Jack Homer were inmillion pounds of aluminum a year from other stumental in bringing the company to Sanford.
companies.
“ In 1977, Florida Extrusions had one ex­
Florida Billet was formed by John Wall and
trusion
machine and 25 employees," Grindle
his partner, Sam Taubman, to meet a need of
said, "and now it has 30 employees and 125,000
their growing Florida Extrusion operation.
square feet."
The complex includes Florida Extrusion's
aluminum-extrusions manufacture; its parts
The company expanded into fabrication in
division for extruded aluminum parts and 1979 and now ships all over the United Stales
assemblies; Plastic Profiles, Inc., operated by as well as exporting its products. Wall expects
Wall's son, David, which manufactures rigid to have a total of 235 employees working in all
and flexible vinyl extrusions and National of his local operations by June of this year.

United Way

CFS Continental Senior Vice President Stanley Owens said
date, the location was chosen because of its potential for
that the expansion also meant an additional $200,000 worth of
growth and the heavy concentration of high technology
supplies, materials and services being purchased annually
companies here. The firm employs approximately 65 people
from local businesses.
nationally, providing service from three regional centers: San
The Sanford facility, located at 2100 Country Club Road, Is a
Diego, Gumee, III., and Orlando.
full-line distributor of CFS-manufactured and purchased
GOULD, INC.
The fifth largest electronic Instrument manufacturer in the
products and serves North and Central Florida.
“ We've found that Florida is an excellent location for
U.S., Gould, Inc., recently opened its Southeast District Sales
business growth in this industry. With the large amount of
Branch offices in Altamonte Springs, The district office,
tourism traffic here, people eat out more — so this location
located in North Lake office park, will serve eight Southeast
becomes important for CFS’s business," Owens said.
states, replacing the division's team of manufacturer’s
VORWERK USA, INC.
representatives. Headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, the
Mid-Florida was chosen for the U.S. headquarters for
Instruments Division manufactures a chart recorder for use in
Vorwerk, USA, the American sales arm of Vorwcrk &amp; Co., a
various electronic measurement systems employed in
Germun manufacturer of floor cleaners. The company moved
research and development in such industries as aerospace,
into its permanent headquarters at North Lake office park in
medicine, petrochemicals and metal fabricating.
Altamonte Springs in November. Vorwerk &amp; Co. has world­
Division Manager Richard Chambers said Gould chose
wide sales of $600 million, ranking among the world's largest
Orlando because it is the largest centrally located city in
privately owned companies.
Florida, with proximity to Tampa and Cape Canaveral.
Eric Levine, president of Vorwerk USA, said the company
AT&amp;T BUSINESS SERVICES
chose Central Florida because of its high growth rate and
Central Florida netted several AT&amp;T operations as a re su lt__ _
proximity to many ports. .Ry.the mid-1980s, 1.evLnoupMte&amp;g - “ '■JT'u'.l fei'tlu court-orderriliiVwtiTure. One A'Tii’r depart­
company to have JOCTto 500 employees in Orlando.
ment, Business Services, is located in 22,000 square feet of
SOIL* MATERIAL ENGINEERS
space in Executive Point Towers in Altamonte Springs.
A Raleigh, North Carolina-based company, Soil St Material
The 175 employees will be moved into other AT&amp;T operations
Engineers has 14 offices and 350 employees throughout the
throughout the country by the end of 1983, but permanent
Southeast and opened its first Florida office at North Lake
AT&amp;T offices are located in other areas throughout the area.
office park. One of the top 200 U.S. architectural and
The Data Systems Support group has approximately 285,000
engineering firms, the company performs soil investigations
square feet of space, primarily in Orlando Central Park, and
for new construction sites as well as quality control testing of
about 800 employees.
soil, concerete and steel.
FLORIDA ELECTRONICS AND
The eight-year-old company, which exceeds $10 million in
TRANSFORMER
annual billings, will employ three engineers and eight to 10
A manufacturer of electronic transformers and solid state
technicians initially. “We have a lot of confidence in the
power supplies used in computers, radar, electronic counter
growth potential of Central Florida’s construction industry,"
measures and related electronic equipment, FETCO is
said Jack Parker, Soil St Material Engineers' vice president.
building a 20,000-square-foot assembly plant in Sanford.
"We don't see it as Just a 'flash in the pan' this time around."
Employment is about 70 people, and the company expects to
AMERICAN ELECTRONIC
double that in the next four years. FETCO estimates that by
LABORATORIES
1985, its annual contribution to the economy will exceed $1
American Electronic Laboratories, Inc., the prime sub­
million.
sidiary of AEL Industries Inc., of Lauderdale, Penn., leased
GENERAL ELECTRIC
1,980-square-feet of office space at North lak e office park in
Though not located in Seminole County, the General Electric
Altamonte Springs. American Electronic laboratories is a
Automation Systems Department in Plymouth is expected to
high technology company specializing in the calibration and
draw a great number of Its employees from the Seminole
repair of electronic test and measuring equipment.
County labor pool. The planLshould be in full operation by midThe $60 million company, which currently has similar
1983, with 100 employees initially.
metrology operations in Washington, D.C. and in New Jersey,
The Department will manufacture industrial robots
will service an area within a 190-mile radius of Orlando.
designed to increase productivity and quality, as well as lower
According to Adolph Rosset, American E lectronic
costs. The bulk of the robots in the $170 million Industry are
laboratories advertising manager, the company chose
sold to the automotive industry', according to Jam es A.
Altamonte Springs because it sits "right in the middle of
Meehan, general manager of the Department.
electronic city, where there a lot of satellite activities going on
1,200 NEW JOBS
around Harris Corp., Martin Marietta and the rest."
"The companies that located in or expanded in Seminole
LASERAGE TECHNOLOGY CORP.
County alone in the past year resulted in a projected 1,200 new
Laseragc Technology Corp., a custom laser processing firm
jobs, 445,000 square feet of new construction and an investment
based in San Diego, Calif., began operations of its new
potential of more than $9 million," Harris said.
Southeast division at North I^ke office park in February 1982.
In total, the IDC reported in its year-end tally for 1981-82 that
Specializing in laser drilling, scribing and machining of
50
companies moved into or expanded in the area, involving
ceramic, glass, metals and plastics, l.userage contracts with
approx
iinolely 12,000 new Jobs, 4 million square feet in new
industries ranging from microelectronic and other high
construction
and a $400 million Investment potential.
technology manufacturers to defense contractors and medical
“ One of our brochures says there’s progress in our future,
supply companies.
and prosperity...which I feel is very true," Harris said.
According to lascrage (Southeast) President Joseph Sror*

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.

�Evening herald, Sanford, F|.
Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Suntiey, Feb. 30,1013—S
T hunder, Fab. 7*, 1013—5

I W ill
M
A n n iv e rs a ry

*

TJ

l i n k i n g forw ard to c e le b r a tin g S un n ilan d Cor­
p o ra tio n ’s 100th b irth d ay, firm P re sid en t L ee P .
M oore (le ft) and D elbert A bney (r ig h t), corp orate
s e c r e ta r y and co m tro ller, d isp la y th e new

co m p a n y b an n er. In th e g a z e b o , from left, are
co m p a n y e m p lo y e e s F a y C alvin , J o y c e W hitm an,
H elen C h a m b liss, C arole H ess, E nola K en nedy
and Sand i K a iser.

By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Sunniland Corporation with its roots
deepln Sanford is looking forward to its
centennial year celebration. With its
m anufacturing
facilities
and
headquarters at Five Points, the com­
pany will begin its 100th year of con­
tinuous operation here on Sept 23, 15S3,
and is again under local ownership.
In late 1981 the parent company,
Toronto-based Reichhoid Ltd., an­
nounced that because of a decrease in
sales and profitability it was divesting
itself of most of Its ' United States
operations. Included in the group were
two F lorida com panies, Sunniland
Corporation and Florida Feed &amp; Seed of
Ocala.
Reichhoid had been caught in the same
profitability squeeze that had caught

other, la rg e r com panies th a t are
dependent upon the construction in­
dustry, which has been experiencing a
slump.
As a result of this decision, Sunniland's
management spent a good part of the last
quarter of 1981 and the first quarter of
1982 trying to put together a package that
would keep Sunniland together as a going
organization. Many things were explored
and finally a plan began to take shape.
"Working with the Atlanta office of
Citicorp Industrial Credit Corporation,
F lagship Dank of Seminole and
Reichhoid lid ., an arrangement was
made for the financing that would keep
Sunniland viable and transfer ownership
back to Sanford, where it belonged,” said
Sanford Mayor Lee P. Moore, president
and general manager, who purchased
Sunniland. The deal was concluded

March 25, 1982, In Atlanta.
Sunniland, known throughout the state
for its fertilisers, pesticides, herbicides
and building m a te ria ls, d ates its
beginnings back to the founding of an
insurance company by the Chase family,
which also owned citrus groves and later
expanded to fanning Interests. The
manufacture of fertilizers goes back to
the early 1900a when it was begun in
order to supply the needs of Its own farms
and groves.
In 1979, Sydney O. Chase Jr., then
board chairman, retired from Chase A
Co. and most of the company's assets
were acquired by Reichhoid lid . and the
name was changed to Sunniland Cor­
poration.
"The year was interesting, exciting
and good to Sunniland," said Moore.

Home Builders Expect Good Year, Especially In Seminole
Members of the Home Builders Association (HBA) of MidFlorida are optimistic that the housing industry — particularly
in Seminole County — will continue to recover in 1983.
In fact, recent studies show that Seminole will be right in the
middle of a residential building boom during the next several
years, as continued industrial expansion and population
growth create a demand for more new housing in Central
Florida.
“Seminole Is going to explode," said Ron Schwartz, an HBA
member and executive vice president of First Southern Realty
Croup. "It’s near the 1-4 corridor, has excellent shopping and
medical facilities, and is convenient to the work centers."

Schwartz handles sales and marketing for several
residential construction projects In Seminole County. He also
keeps a watchful eye on home building activity all over Central
Florida through a monthly housing newsletter his company
publishes.
He pointed out that new residential permits issued In
Seminole County are on the upswing from a year ago, and that
all signs point toward a recovery — particularly if mortgage
rates decline another point or two.
The figures Schwartz cited show that residential permits
issued in Seminole increased to 224 in September of this year
— up from 170 in September of 1981. Value of the construction

jumped from 86,392,000 to 810,290,447.
“The sales action right now Is happening on homes that
qualify for FHA and VA financing," Schwartz said. "People
who have assumed that they couldn't afford to buy a new home
are finding that new home ownership Is not necessarily out of
reach."
HBA President Bob Thorton of Rosewood Builders agreed
with Schwartz that Seminole County is a likely housing "hot
spot" during the next several years.
"We're confident that the housing industry Is back on the
way up," Thornton said. "Many of our members have projects
underway in Seminole County, and the consensus seems to be

that housing needs in Seminole will pick up substantially in the
next year or two."
Thornton cautioned, however, that another upward trend in
mortgage Interest rates could dampen the situation, even in a
potential "boom area" like Seminole County.
"But barring anything unforeseen, we look for an excellent
1983 and beyond — both In Seminole County and throughout
Central Florida," Thornton said.
Another HBA member, Ken Levitt, is also bullish on
Seminole County. Levitt, President of Rollingwood Homes, is
the developer of Southport, a single-story condominium
project in Casselberry.

Realtors
Number

1,500
The Seminole County Board
of Realtors with headquarters
i t 1500 Shepard Road in
Winter Springs has a mem­
bership of 1,500 realtors and
associates and an office staff
of four.
Officers for 1983 include
Jim Burr, president; Jack
Me whirl er
president-elect;
Cosmo M antovani, vice
president; T erry Luckenbach, secretary; and Tom
Rltzie, treasurer.
Others on the Board of
D irectors
include
past
president Dick Dapore, and
- Dave Farr, Lou Ellen Bell,
Ray Plocki, Allen Reese and
associate director Jim Peery.
Membership meetings arc
held on the second Thursday
of each month at noon at
Duff's
R estaurant
in
Altamonte Springs.
For the benefit of Us
m em bers, the Board of
Realtors sponsors orientation
and induction of new mem­
bers each month, a Rookies
Club for new associates, a
continuous 14-week success
series and the annual
Legislative
Day
in
Tallahassee, which will be
held In May this year.
If a person has a problem
dealing with a realtor, he or
she may register a complaint
with the board office. —
JANE CASSELBERRY.

SUNNILAND
C O R P O R A T IO N

RIS Opens
Sanford
Facility

ROOFING PRODUCTS

RIS Irrigation Systems has
opened a new manufacturing
facility in Sanford-lts first in
the EAst Coast-according to
Tom Kimmell, vice president
of marketing.
The 14,000 square foot
facility
will
initially
manufacture various types of
irrigation tubing for shipment
east of the Rockies, including
the principal RIS sales cen­
te rs of Texas, Florida,
Michigan and the Caribbean.
"T he
newly-completed
plant is an Integral part of our
long range growth plans
which have also included
recent expansion of RIS' El
Cajon, CA, headquarters,"
Kimmell explained.
Kimmell said the Sanford
operation also will serve as an
RIS Eastern dealer service
center. There will be both
technical
and
sales
representatives to help meet
dealer's needs. Phil I&gt;eBlanc
will be the regional manager.
"This will enable us to
ensure the m ost efficient
possible service," Kimmell
added.

• BUILDING MATERIALS
• GARDEN SUPPLIES
• FERTILIZERS
• CHEMICALS

322-2421
Hwy. 17-92 ft SR 419
Sanford

LEE P. M O O RE

President &amp; General Manager

322-2421
Baardall Ava
Sanford

The new facility, located In
the Sanford Airport Industrial
Park, Is convenient for those
arriving by both automobile
and airline.

V

�. * . , IV- ri ‘'*»*

H PLANNING IS

us the
dvantage
cting the
of
industry that will keep
our area prosperous for years
to come!
Planning Helps CIs Keep
Our Balance!
We’re com m itted to maintaining our
balance. A balance o f industry with
environm ent... o f progress with
quality of life. The solicitation of clean,
desirable industry, coupled with
careful site planning and preparation,
reaffirms that com m itm ent We're
determined to keep Mid-Florida a
healthy place to live and work. So w e
intend to maintain a balance between
industrial development and our
quality of life... because it affects us
all. Our industrial developm ent then,
m ust be flexible... com prehensive...
and balanced to m eet the needs of
both life and progress in Mid-Florida.
A nd planning is the key.

We‘
adopted
a blueprint
for progress
in Mid-Florida.
It’s a five-year growth
plan that show s years o f planning and caring —about the future o f our
area. A nd your area. Growth b y plan
insures an expanding econom y
through industrial developm ent But
it’s also a balanced plan. It guarantees
the quality of life for all of us in MidFlorida. A nd for all our children.
Planning is Everyone’s Head Start!
Part of this five-year plan designates
special areas to be used specifically for
industrial developm ent Our industrial
parks are excellent Both existing and
projected parks include the m any
needed support services —access
roads and utilities, police and fire
protection. Planning insures there will
be room for industry to m ove in ... and
facilities for them to move forward!
That sam e planning gives

Industrial Development
Com m ission
of Mid-Florida, Inc.
RO. Box 2144, Orlando, FL 32802

Serving Orange and Seminole Counties.

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                    <text>School Board Balks Over Fee Hike R

State Gives
No Help To
Retirement
Pullout Plan

Glenn Stands
Alone On
Gas Tax Use

Free Cheese Will
Be Given Away On Friday
TODAY

��Senate Committee Approves
Tougher School Requirements

CALENDAR

�Errors Cost Rams
in District Lapse

Adcock Walks By Ford;
'The Cat' Strikes Again

On The
Broom
Boom

S3 Politics
j?S Require
;s Patience

A Hydropower Revival
t Y ear Forgotten, Lady Haw ks Paste Patriots

Justice Dragged Feet In Drug Case

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                    <text>Evening Herald— (U SPS 481-280)—P rice 20 C ents

75th Y ear, No. 13A -W ednesday, Ja n u a ry 24,1983—Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

County Approves One Exit Request

Market Competition Objects To Flea World Expansion
Ry MICIIEALBEHA
Herald Staff Writer
Debate over the planned expansion of Flea World along U.S.
Highway 17-92 near Sanford led to an angry confrontation
Tuesday between Flea World owner Syd Levy and the owner of
the Sanford Flea Market.
I^vy asked county commissioners Tuesday for permission
to change a site plan approved in September (or expansion of
the facility. He asked to keep open an exit onto County Home
Hoad the commissioners had ordered closed. He also asked not
to be required to construct a chain link fence partitioning off a
low section of the property.
Commissioners denied Levy's request to waive construction
of the fence and gave permission to keep the County Home

Hoad exit open only for trades workers between 7 and 9 a.m. on
days the flea m arket is open.
But Sanford Flea Market owner J. W. Jones took exception
to Levy's asking for the site plan modifications.
"I welcomed Mr. Levy when it (Flea World) opened. But it
has become the biggest disgrace in the county," Jones said.
"It has inadequate water, Inadequate sewer and now he
wants to double the size with the same services," Jones said.
He told commissioners they should not approve the changes
Levy sought.
"You people set the rules you have to stick by them ," Jones
said. "He’s thumbing his nose at you people."
Levy called comments by Jones and other spectators
slanderous and offered to withdraw the request.

pected. He said conversations with county land management
officials gave the impression the changes would be approved.
"The traffic division recommended leaving the Homes Road
exit open," Levy said.
Following the meeting Levy said Jones was upset because
the larger flea market is "running him out of business. We
didn't intend to but that's how it's working out."
Levy said he would go ahead with the expansion work A
second entrance off of U.S. 17-92 is expected to be completed
within two weeks he said.
A covered sales area will be completed a few weeks after
that with construction of a building and all other im­
provements on the 21-acre site expected to be finished by
September, Levy said.

"I don't feel I’m getting anything along the lines that I
wanted," he said "Do you want us to take trucks in on U.S. 17­
927"
"I do," Commission Chairman Sandra Glenn said.
But when Mrs. Glenn asked Levy if he wanted to withdraw
the request, he changed his mind and the request was defeated
3-2. Mrs. Glenn, who voted along with Commissioner Hobert G.
"B ud" Feather against the motion to leave the gate open for
tradesworkers, said she felt the exit should be closed per­
manently.
"A commitment we made to the people when we rezoned
that property was to close the exit on County Home Road,"
Mrs. Glenn said.
Levy said the opposition from commissioners was unex­
wammmmmxm

C r im e U p

O n The M e n d ?
Area Residents Expect Improvements
By JANE^CASSELBERRY
CASSELBERRY
Herald
id Staff Writer
Although many local residents
admitted to either missing President
Reagan's televised State of the Union
address Tuesday night or going to
sleep during it, those who did watch
were for the most part optimistic
about Reagan’s plan for the economy.
Only five persons out of more than a
dozen asked this morning at Sanford's
Post Office had viewed Reagan's
speech. Here is their reaction:
George L Zachos of New Smyrna
Beach, general manager of Pen
Paints at Five Points, said he thinks
the president’s plan will improve the
economy. He said the president is
doing enough to co rrect unem ­
ployment, "You get a bunch of
government programs in there and
you're going to really make it a lot
more expensive. Government can't
make jobs. Business has to make
jobs."
Zachos thinks the economy is on the
mend and believes a government
spending freexe will help. "Those
entitlement programs account for
over 50 percent of the budget," he
added. He thinks what this economy

O flll#
■

J A M E S C O V IN G T O N
needs most is a healthy economy and
would support a new tax if it was
reasonable, depending on where it
comes from. He thinks more can be
cut out of military spending by
making them operate more ef­
ficiently. He agrees with permitting
prayer In the schools, but feels some
teachers can abuse U.
The Rev. James Hagin, pastor of

JA M E S IIA G IN
Antioch Missionary Baptist Church in
Oviedo, said the president's plan
could succeed if it gets the
cooperation of Congress. But he
disagrees with some of the methods
proposed. "Unemployment is the real
problem, and I can't see that he's
doing enough about th at," Hagin said.
"His whole emphasis seems to be on
balancing the txidget, but people who

Reagan: U.S. Needs '
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan says
the U.S. economy is "on the mend" but still
dangerously Ul. His prescription is the "strong
medicine" of a freeze on non-military spending and
partisan politics, and, as a last resort, higher taxes.
The president, beset by soaring deficits and
unemployment and falling approval ratings in the
polls, offered his cure Tuesday night in his second
State of the Union address.
Reagan spoke on national television to a joint
session of Congress in the packed House chamber.
The Cabinet, the Supreme Court, the Pentagon high
command and the diplomatic corps joined the House
and Senate to listen to the constitutionally mandated
report on the national condition — an annual
ceremony of*American government.
The speech was heavily weighted toward domestic
problems, with emphasis on the federal deficits
t

need jobs can't help balance the
budget."
"There is only so much a president
can do, but I get the feeling it's an
annual show they put on,” said Hagin.
"If he can succeed In bringing them
together, he'll be able to do it. Politics
needs to be forgotten if something is
good for humanity and good for the
See SEMINOLE Page 12A

projected to reach or pass $200 billion this year and
unemployment, which hit a four-decade high of 12
million while inflation was dropping during his first
two years in office.
He also sketched new steps to improve education,
health care, law enforcement, foreign trade and
state-federal relations and pledged to continue the
search for arms reduction and peace abroad.
The rising tide of red ink and the lengthening rolls
of the jobless deficits were on his mind. He called the
deficits "a clear and present danger to the basic
health of the republic" and unemployment “ an or­
deal" government must bend every effort to end.
The speech also was an appeal for help from-the
same Democrats and the few Republicans Reagan
fought, no quarter asked or given, during 1961-82.
The president appealed* tor bipartisanship at least
half a dozen times, praising Democratic House
_

Medicine'
Speaker Thomas 0 Neill by name lor his part in the
recent Social S ecu rity financing com prom ise
agreement.
"Let us, in these next two years —men and women
of both parties and every political shade — con­
centrate on the long-range, bipartisan respon­
sibilities of government, not the short-term temp­
tations of partisan politics."
But the president in no way retreated from his
Insistence the supply side economic programs he
brought to Washington two years ago were working.
"We have a long way to go, but thanks to the
courage, patience and strength of our people,
America is on the mend," Reagan said. He made
clear, too, he would fight any effort to repeal the 10
percent tax cut and anti-inflation indexing reform
due to take effect this year and offered job proposals,
but came nowhere near the big government-financed
See REAGAN Page 12A

McCollum Happy , Chiles Skeptical
U.S. Rep. Bill McCollum praised
President Ronald Reagan's State of
the Union address today, calling it
"compassionate, upbeat and very
.realistic."
But U.S. Sen. Lawton Chiles, DLakeland, was somewhat sarcastic in
his comments.
"It was good to hear the president
say he recognizes the dangers of big
deficits and that he wants to do
something about it," said the ranking
Democrat on the Senate Budget
Committee.
" I think the proposals in broad
term s were very conciliatory and
seeking accom m odation with the

TODAY

Democratic Party," McCollum said.
“The effort he made to tell his views
about our need tor keeping free trade
going w u unusual for a state of the
union message."
Chiles, noting the president's ap­
parent recognition of the dangers of
big deficits, added, however, that to
"really make an appreciable dif­
ferences in deficits we have to look at
revenues. While the president said he
is willing to seek revenues, 1961-is
simply too late. Our national debt will
have grown another $800 billion by
then."
"I also question the prudence of
making a 10 percent tax cut in July

thereby adding again to the size of the
deficit. If the danger of the deficit is so
great, which I believe it is, we should
not add to it with a tax cut," Chiles
said.
McCollum lauded the president's
effort to establish a basis for main­
taining control on inflation while "still
helping the folks who have gotten hurt
in the economy."
The Seminole County Republican
said Reagan will have some trouble
with his defense spending plan,
predicting Congress will increase the
cuts even further.
McCollum did not like the "trigger

■

*

W

/

O

taxes" slated for 1966. "I don't agree
with the proposal to Increase taxes to
solve the problem with the deficit," he
said.
B ut McCollum does like the
proposal for educational savings
accounts whereby parents can put
aside money for their children’s
college education in tax-free ac­
counts. “ I hope this will be adopted
without much fanfare," he said.
U.S. Sen. Paula Hawkins, R-Winter
Park, who pushed a jobs bill through
the Congress, could not be reached for
comment today. E arlier, she in­
d ic a te d she favored R eag an 's
program. — DONNA ESTES

The c rim es of m urder, robbery,
assault, theft and auto theft were up in
Sanford in 1982, but dramalfb reductions
in the number of rapes and burglaries
were seen.
Overall, the crime index increased
only 1.6 percent in a year.
Police Chief Ben Butler said arrests
also were up and the department overall
has done a good job.
"Crime is hard to alleviate, but we are
staying on top of it," he said, noting
especially that the Neighborhood Crime
Watch Program , Instituted in 1982 was
very successful.
"It is one of the best programs we have
ever put on and it works," he said.
In the Sanford Police Department
annual report, it is noted that rapes are
d o m by W percent end burglaries are

down by 22.9 percent, compared to 1981.
During 1982, the Sanford department
received and responded to 33,923 calls for
service, an increase of 15.6 percent over
1981, and patrol mileage also increased
by 12.4 percent to 358,387 miles.
Index crimes — murder, rape, rob­
bery. assault, burglary, theft and auto
theft — reflected an overall increase of
1.6 perctnt over 1981.
The most significant increase was in
murder, which was up by 100 percent,
with one person murdered in 1981 and two
in 1982. Assaults were up by 29.9 percent
over 1981.
The d e p a rtm e n t’s Investigative
division, com prised of seven in­
vestigators, handled 2,576 cases during
1982, an increase of 11.5 percent over
1981. Of these 1,503 cases or 58.3 percent
were cleared by arrest or other means.
Clearance rate of the investigative
division is up 4.4 percent over last year's
statistics.
The activity of this division resulted in
392 felony arrests, up 18.1 percent; 72
misdemeanor arrests, up 111.7 percent;
and 259 juvenile arrests, up 137.6 percent.
The crim e scene technician responded
to 124 calls for service during 1982, an 11.4
percent Increase over 1981.
The technician also conducted 38
polygraph examinations.
The community relations officer held

105 presentations on various law en­
forcement and safety topics to an
estimated 3,500 citizens during 1982. The
presentations included neighborhood
watch meetings, bank and business
security program s, home security
checks, high school law classes, civic and
fraternal engagements.
The department's neighborhood watch
program has grown to encompass 19
geographical areas throughout the city
from its introductory stage this time last
year.
Nineteen neighborhood watch groups
have been organized and 234 neigh­
borhood watch signs have been erected.
Butler noted that with institution of the
program, the department saw a 22.9
percent reduction in burglaries com­
pared to 1SJ1.
During the year, motorcycle officers
were the primary response units in 13.9
percent of the total calls received for
service.
The motor squad investigated 35
percent of all traffic accidents reported
and conducted seven traffic homicide
investigations. The motorcycle units
issued 51.1 percent of the total traffic
citations written by the department.
The numbers of index crimes in 1982 in
Sanford includes: 2 murders (up from
1); 10 rapes, down from 22; 102 robberies,
up from 85; 272 assaults, up from 209; 575
burglaries, down from 745; 1,478 thefts,
up from 1,346; and 88 auto thefts, up from
79.
•
Traffic accidents increased from 1,071
in 1981 to 1,165 in 1982. Injuries from those
accidents totaled 317, compared to 266
the previous year and fatalities in those
accidents were up from two to 7.
The annual report also noted that an
officer has been on the campus of
Seminole High School weekly conducting
law study classes throughout the year.
"We are proud that we are reaching
out and getting involved with the people
through education and programs
designed to close the gap between un­
derstanding and misunderstanding the
police officers' roles within the com­
munity," Butler said.
— DONNA ESTES

Toll Road Financing Suggested

Action R eporta.......................................|A
Tollrondxnra the best way to flnanco contraction of limited
Around The Cloc k ................................«*
seceas expressway! and major access highways in Seminole
BrW6e ................................................... County, according to Public Works Director Jack Schuder.
Calendar
.................................. Schw kr, who doubles as director of the cow ly's expressway
Classified A d s.................................authority, said revenue currently available from state and
C o m ics.................................................. federal governments for a u n ty road projects is already being
----------------------------------

.......... County wants gas tax hike powar.
EiUorUi......... ...............J*

¥
M

A 0 /

In S a n f o r d

*

I

■

1

The expressway authority hopes to develop by its Feb. 22
meeting a scope of services for a consultant to examine the
a u n ty for potential expressway sites.
"We would want them to look at the various corridors,"
Schuder said.
And while existing highways will not be converted into toll
roads, major Improvements to those roads can be financed
with revenues from toll highways.
"There's no way we see the flaning or 8-lanlng of Lake Mary
Boulevard unless there is » major source of revenue," Schuder

Poo# 2 A story

Florida .................................................. _
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
H oroscope............................................."
H o sp ital..................................................M
"There is no exesaa for budding limited access ex­
S p o rts.!................. ......................... ii,U A ....... pressways," Schuder said.
Television
SB
For foe millions of dollars necessary to build expressways
W cithcr .............................................u
and other m ajor highways bonding is the only solution, he said.

He said those m ajor collectors are important to generating
enough traffic to make the toll roadi successful.
The OriandoOrange County Expressway Authority paid for
a number of improvements to roads in Orange County which
See ROAD Page 2A

VICTORY

H trald Phot* by Tom VliKtnt

Seminole High guard Vernon Law swipes a pass from Daytona
Beach Mainland's Issac • Bell during Five Star Conference
basketball action Tuesday night at Seminole High School. The
Fighting Seminoles ham m ered the Bucs, 73-48, to hold on to first
place in the Five Star with an 8-1 record, See Sports, Page 10A.

�a

2A—Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 24, 1W)

NATION
IN BRIEF
Six Arrested In Cyanide
W ater Poisoning Threats
NEW ORJ.EANS (UPI) — Officials arrested six
people in a string of cyanide poisoning threats against
dozens of lnuisiana water systems and said they were
close to more arrests today in the scare — not believed
part of an organized effort.
The anonymous phone threats, beginning last
Thursday In St. Gabriel and spreading to other com­
munities during the weekend, puzzled authorities and
deprived up to a quarter-million people of tap water
Monday, until the systems could be tested for poison.
On Tuesday, traces of the poison were detected in
initial tests on a sample from the Hammond water
system, but subsequent samples revealed none.

Plot Also Included W alesa
NEW YORK (UPI) — Polish Solidarity union leader
lech Walesa nearly became another target of the same
two men who allegedly plotted the assassination at­
tempt against Pope John Paul II, NBC news reports.
“But for whatever reason the attempt never took
place," Marvin Kalb, NBC diplomatic correspondent,
said Tuesday.
Kalb, in a report from Rome, said Mehmct Ali Agca,
the Turk Jailed for shooting the pope, and Sergei
Ivanov Antonov, who was head of the Bulgarian
Airlines office in Rome, once discussed assassinating
Walesa.
Their discussion in Rome reportedly coincided with
Walesa's visit to the Vatican in January 1981 — four
months after he led the August 1980 uprising In Gdansk,
Poland, that gave birth to the independent Solidarity
trade union.

Without Voter Approval

S e m in o le L o o k s T o L e v y P e n n y G a s T a x
By MICHEALBE1LA
future boards might not be so Judicious.
Herald Stall Writer
Commissioner Sandra Glenn supports the
Responding to advice from the county’s plan.
legislative delegation to help themselves,
“I’m willing to take the heat politically,"
Seminole County commissioners have asked a she said. "If we have a referendum, no one is
state association to help them do Just that.
going to vote to fix the roads."
County commissioners are asking the State
Robert Sturm agreed with Mrs. Glenn. "If
Association of County Commissioners to lobby that's what it takes, the guts and courage to do
for legislation to help Seminole generate more it, then let's do it."
funds.
By levying an additional one-penny gasoline
Commissioners are seeking to have the tax in the courty the commissioners could
referendum requirement removed for Im­ generate an additional 5600,000 annually.
plementation of a county one-cent gasoline
State lawmakers representing Seminole
tax. That would allow the commissioners to County have told commissioners twice in
levy an additional penny tax on gasoline recent weeks not to expect state help to solve
without voter approval.
county problems if commissioners are un­
But not all the commissioners support the willing to put referendums on the ballot.
idea. Robert G. "Bud" Feather says he is
Commissioners are also asking for an ex­
against giving commissioners the power to tension of the optional one-cent county sales
levy the tax without a referendum.
tax. According to Mrs. Gleftn, the commission
"I want the referendum. I don’t think does not Intend to put a one-cent sales tax on
government has the right to reach Into the ballot, but supports It so as to give aid to
people’s pockets," Feather said.
counties which need funding to construct
Feather said the current commission would correctional facilities, civic centers and other
not approve any tax measure frivolously, but public facilities.

WEATHER

ThM t quotation* provided by
member* ol th t
National
Attociatlon ot SKurlfle* Doatort
'•re representative In ta rd ta la r
price* at ot approximator noon
today- intar-D aalor m arkati
changa throughout t ha day. Price*
Ido not Include retail markupmarkdown.

Bid A *
Atlantic Bank.......... 31 31*

Flagship B anks....... 12* 31*
F lorida P ow ar A
lig h t....... ............ 37* 374k
Florida Progress .. I I * I I*
Hughes Supply....... 21* 21
M orrison's............ 17* 17*
NCR C orp............... 10* I t *
Plesaey................... 13* f t
Scotty’s .................. 37 37*
Southesst B an k . . . . I I * f t

HOSPITAL NOTES
Caatral Florida SeetoMl HeaptM
ADMISSIONS

Santord:
Linda N. Notion
Marlin L. McOenU;
Dawn B. P itre*
Lulu O. Ralgia
&gt;ra G. W alktr
Clifford M. Duncan, Dalton*
Apotonle Siamlal, Danone
Thttma If. Alters. Gantva
John G. Bauar, Otlaan

E v e n in g H e ra ld

DISC NABOB!

Santord:
v
Louie George
Ruth M. Selltbury
Ralph B. Thornet
Ruth R. Phillip*. DeBery
Theodore O. Roy, Dettone
AKrod Shackelford, Dolton*
Virginia V. Michael. Longwood
Virginia L. Young. Ottotn
Fay* M. Magyar, leveret
Cathy j . C lert end tefty girt.
Winter Springe

iw » « ' * *

Wednesday. January 2ft. im -V o l. 75, No. lift
PoMiited Dally and Sunday, eecegt Saturday By T k * laniard
Herald, me., W N . French A*e« laniard. F it. u n i .
Sacand Ctaas Pa &gt;la pa Paid a» S a t e r t Flartda W i t
Ham* Deliveryi Weak. t l- M j Meete, M .H i ft MUMBs. SM.Mi
rear, H i m. By M ailt “Week f tl-lli Mates, SS.ll; ft
SN-Mi Vaar. SIZ.M________________________________

1/ v

— Adjustment of the state's homestead
exemption. The state Supreme Court recently
ruled the five-year residency requirement for
the 125,000 exemption was unconstitutional.
That ruling will alter the tax rate in the county

Plans For M ore Buildings

LEW, Utah (UPI) — Investigators today sought the
cause of a blast at an explosives manufacturing plant
that killed four employees, rocked houses 20 miles
awuy and left nothing but a hole where a two-story
building once stood.

STOCKS

Among the other legislation the County
Commission Is seeking to have enacted by the
state Legislature Is:

to make up for income lost when residents who
had received a $5,000 exemption receive the
$25,000 exemption instead.
- Clarification of double taxation. Many
counties have faced lawsuits filed by
municipalities charging that they receive little
or no service for their county tax dollars. In
Seminole County '**$ county and cities came
to an *
-&gt;
which should resolve the
question, * egal definitions still need to be
clarified, commissioners said.
— Change in debt service for state roads.
Seminole County wants the state to take over
bond payments on State Road 434 which was
built with county funds and then accepted Into
the state road system . The county Is paying
about $400,000 annually in bond payments on
the road.
The commission also opposes a bill which
would reduce the Impact of county govern­
ments In dealing with public health Issues. The
health department Is currently funded through
state and county funds. Hie proposed changes
would limit the county’s funding and policy­
making decisions.

Port Authority To Review

Cause O f Blast Unknown

NATIONAL REPORT: Officials feared more heavy rains
and winds would start another round of mud slides and
flooding today in saturated northern California, where a
construction worker was swept to his death by a slide.
Freezing rain and snow stretched across the Northern Plains
and lower Great I ak es. The rapidly rising Guadalupe River in
downtown San Jose, Calif., forced authorities Tuesday to
evacuate about 60 Inhabitants of a tent city pitched on the river
banks. Churches and the Salvation Army provided temporary
housing. Forecasters.were calling for up to 5 inches more rain
in low-lying areas and up to a foot of rain in the Santa Cruz
mountains, 100 miles south of San Francisco, where heavy
rains a year ago caused massive mud slides. Winter weather
returned to the Northern Plains and Great Lakes region as
temperatures In Minnesota readied u high of 3 degrees.
Temperatures were expected to fall to minus 30 by da wn today
in northern Minnesota and North Dakota. Gale warnings were
up along the West Coast and workers shored up weakened
levees wllh sandbags in the Sacramcnto-San Joaquin River
Delta where a forecast of 9.6-foot tides put 500,000 acres of lowlying farmland in Jeopardy. Freexing rain and snow spread
across Oklahoma, through Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa. Up to
2 inches of snow covered Ihe Oklahoma Panhandle and up to 3
inches was reported In Iowa and Nebraska. Up to 8 Inches of
snow fell on Utah's mountains, and blinding fog clouded much
of northern Utah, including Salt Lake City. Forecasters
predicted another foot of snow would cap the Colorado
Rockies.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m.); temperature: 46; overnight
low: 39; Tuesday high: 65; barometric pressure: 30.15;
relative humidity: 97 percent; winds: north at 7 mph; rain:
none; sunrise 7:16 a.m., sunset 6 p.m.
THURSDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 6:36 a.m.,
6:55 p.m.; lows, 1:43 a.m., 12:40 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 6:28 a.m., 6:47 p.m.; Iowa, 1:34 a.m., 12:31 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 1:44 a.m., - p.m.; lows, 6:26 a.m., 5:17
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Wind variable near 10 knots today and tonight
becoming northwest or west 10 knots during Thursday. Seas 3
feet or less. Increasing cloudiness with a chance of showers
mainly north portion tonight.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly fair and cool today. Highs mid to
upper 60s. Variable light wind. Tonight becoming mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent chance of sltowers. Lows mid 40a to
around 50. Variable light wind. Thursday variable cloudiness
and a 30 percent chance of showers. Highs near 60 to mid 60s.

Also sought is support for a bill being in­
troduced by state Rep. Carl Selph, RC asselberry, which would give county
governments and school boards a refund of
gasoline taxes.
City governments already receive the
refund. Throughout the state about 12.5 million
was refunded last year.
Mrs. Glenn said the county would stand to
get about $11,000 a year. "It's only 311,000 but
311,000 th at we don't have now."
Also sought Is more state funding for
Judiciary costs. Many state-m andated
programs have forced the county to Increase
filing fees and other court-related fees over the
past two years, commissioners said.

,

HtreM Photo by Tom Vincent

SAY AAHHHHI
National School Nurse Day is a good time lor students to turn the tables on
nurses in Seminole County schools, ami Sara Wontenay, a student today at
Southside Elementary School in Sanford, did just that taking nurse Ann
Wilson's temperature. Mrs. Wilson is the nurse for Southside, Idyllwilde,
Lake view and Wilson Elem entary schools and Crooms and Seminole high
schools. She and the five other nurses who work in Seminole County schools
—Jo DiClemenle, Carol Kemp, P .J. Turner, Gail McQuaig and Joy F ag an —
are all registered nurses.

Power Bills Going Up
TALLAHASSEE!UPI) - Florida Power
Corp. residential customers will soon be
paying more for their electricity.
The Public Service Commission Tuesday
approved an $111 million rate hike for the
St. Petersburg-based utility. Of the total,
$33 million is already In effect as an interim
Increase.
PSC Chairman Gerald Gunter said the
typical residential monthly bill for 1,000
kilowatt hours will climb about $8 with the
award.
The company, which h as 800,000

customers, some of which are in south
Seminole County, had sought a $169 million
hike. The PSC staff had said $125 million
was warranted.
The three-member PSC panel undercut
both figures.
The company said the increase was
necessary to defray high interest charges
and the costs of a new $450 million coalfir ed plant at Crystal River that became
operational last month.
Florida Power officials were disap­
pointed with the award.

Plans to construct a $267,600 building at the
Port of Sanford will be the subject of a
Seminole County Port Authority meeting
today.
Authority mem b e n and a representative of
Clifton Construction Co. of Cocoa were
scheduled to discusa those plans at 4 p.m. In
the authority's office at the port complex west
of Sanford.
Port Authority Executive Director Dennis
Dolgner said last week the three buildings at
the complex a re totally occupied and ad­
ditional space Is needed for new industries
expected to move to the area within the next
few months.
Dolgner’s comments came at an unofficial
board meeting since only three of the six
voting members of the authority were present.
State law says a majority of the voting
members must be present to take official
action.
Dolgner outlined a plan to contract with
Clifton Construction to build a 16,000-squarefoot building for $267,000.
The authority has a contract with the Cocoa
firm to construct two more metal buildings at
the port facility. Clifton built the first building
and then sold It to the authority in exchange
for a contract to build four more buildings
there. Two of those buildings have been
erected.
Under th e arrangem ent between th e
authority and the contractor, Clifton is
responsible for financing on the building

projects. For the duration of the mortgage
period, Clifton assum es responsibility for the
payments while the authority and Clifton split
the profits on the buildings.
Dolgner said the package Is good for the
authority since it has been unable to procure
bank financing of Its own. He said local banks
have been reluctant to purcahse tax exempt
bonds and didn’t understand a financial
package proposed by a clothing manufacturer
who sought to locate a factory at the port
complex.
But not all authority members are as en­
thusiastic as Dolgner. Wendell Agee voiced
opposition to the proposal outlined by Dolgner.
He said a 10 percent construction profit,
supervisory costa which were itemized in the
estimate, $33,000 for site preparation and
$15,000 for paving are all too high.
Agee said few construction firms are
making a 10 percent profit under current
economic conditions. Additionally, th e
supervisory costs should be paid from the
firm’s profits, not as an outright charge to the
authority.
Dolgner said the cost of the building can be
limited by a clause In the contract which
allows the authority to audit the books. The
contractor also m ust have competitive bidding
on all subcontracting Jobs.
Construction lim e on the building is four
months so the authority must act soon to have
a facility ready for occupancy by summer.
Dolgner said.
-----MICHEAL BEHA

. . . Road Financing Eyed
Continued From Page 1A
provide access to the expressway.
Toll revenues could finance solutions to
problems on m any roads in the county,
Schuder said.
But the consultant’s work will be Important
In figuring the cost of toll roads and of Im­
provements to access roads.
Schuder said a mile of toll highway would
cost between $5 million ind $8 million. Toll
revenues have been targeted by citizen groups
which examined possible improvements to
Lake Mary Boulevard and State Road 436
through Altamonte Springs. Those projects
are estimated to coat from $300 million to $300
million.

Schuder said $1 million In revenues would
bond about $12 million in construction costs
but added that the county must pledge funds to
support the bond issue while the toll roads are
being constructed and during the early years
ot operation.
"The big thing to rem em ber is that takes an
Initial period of two to five years to build up the
traffic," Schuder said. "Can you finance the
initial construction and operation until the
traffic Is built up?"
But Schuder said county residents should not
expect to see expressways built in the next few
yean. It takes five years from the conception
of an expressway until the toll booths open.

Sanford Man Jailed In Rape O f Boy, 15
A 22-yeafald Sanford man was being held in the Seminole
County Jail without bend following his arrest in connection with
the kidnapping and sexual assault on a young boy.
Derry ‘Tiny’ Wilson, of 1309 7th St., is accused of abducting a
15-year-old Sanford boy about 6:30 p.m. on Jan. 21 by placing a
straight razor to his throat and forcing him to a wooded area
behind Sanford’s Goldsboro Elementary School.
Wilson allegedly tried to rape the boy, but was resisted,
according to a Seminole County sheriff’* report. Wilson
threatened to kill the defiant youth, cut him on the right leg
with the raxor and then sodomized him, the report said.
Wilaon also pulled out a handful of his victim's hair, the
report said, and demanded the boy's watch. However, the
youth threw It into the woods.
Wilson was arrested Tuesday near his home.
PURSE SNATCHED
A Longwood woman told deputies her purse was taken from
the trunk of her car while it was parked at Flea World Sunday
from 2 to 4 p.m.
Shirley Qaypool, 49, of 152 Magnolia Drive u ld $60 was in
the purse.
LONGWOOD TEEN INJURED
A Longwood teenager Is in good condition at Florida
Hospital, Altamonte Springs, today following a car wreck
Friday-night which killed an Orange County man.
Kim Valeourt, 19, of 109 Cherry Hill Circle, was In good
condition following surgery (or various broken bones and
lacerations, hospital personnel said.
K arin Speck, 18, ol Orlando, w u killed in the collision on
State Road 438 Friday at about 10:15 p.m. between his IN I
pickup truck and another truck, according to the Florida High­
way Patrol.
An FH P spokesman said Speck’s truck collided with a truck
driven by Michael Goff, 19, oil Apopka, in which M in Valeo urt
was a passenger. Speck w u dead on arrival at Florida
Hospltal-AltamonU. Golf w u treated and released from
Florida Hospital-Apopka.
ATTACKER NETS $19
A Daytona Beach man w u robbed of $10 oiixide a con­
venience store near Longwood Saturday by a man who struck
him in the mouth.
Mohtmed Abuahouiha, 27, told aheriffi deputies two men
approached him a* he left hi* c a r at the 7-11 Store on UB.
Highway. 17-92 near Longwood.
One man, about 5-foot 5-lnches tall, struck him In the mouth
and asked for his wallet. When Abushousha gave him the
wallet the man ran off, deputies said.

A c tio n R eports
★ Fires
•k Courts

TV TAKEN
A Sanford man w u charged with taking a television from
Z aire's In Sanford.
O arance Bishop, 31, of 401 Magnolia Ave. w u charged with
grand theft a t 9:31 p.m. Saturday after he allegedly placed a
television, valued at $349, In a shopping cart and left the store.
Bond w u act at $500.

* Police
TEENAGE RING BROKEN
A group of high school teenagers have been charged with
burglaries, auto theft, and grand theft which Involved more
than 50 separate Incidents In the Deer Run a r u near
Casselberry.
Seminole County Sheriff John Polk said eight juveniles have
been arrested through the combined efforts of his office and
the Casselberry Police Department. All of the students are
first-time offenders.
Sheriff's investigator William Morris and Casselberry Sgt.
Durbin Catch said the incidents began last summer and
continued through October of last year.
Those arrested were allegedly Involved in 40 burglaries —
mostly to automobiles, and three auto thefts in Deer Run, Polk
■aid. In Casselberry, these offenders a n suspected of com­
mitting 10 auto burglaries, and three auto thefts.
Polk pointed out th at In all of the auto burglarise, all of those
vehicles were left unlocked; end for tboee autoe f t f t , the
keys were left In the vehicles.
Conviction of these felony charges could result in prison
sentences of up to five years.
One of the students la In the Seminole County Juvenile
Detention Center, the othrs were booked a t the Caaelberry
Police Department and released to their parents.
A aheriffi department spokesman u l d six of the Juveniles
are IS years old. Two are 11 years old.
MAILBOX VANDALIZED
A Lake Mary m an wreftled with a youth who vandalised his
neighbor's mailbox but loet him before police arrived to a m *
him.
Charles Bourder, 55, of 217 Dublin Drive told deputies he
chased two youths who were beating the mailbox of bis neigh­
bor, Richard Milan, 27, of 212 Dublin Drive.
Bourder aaid he grabbed one of the youths and held him for
a time but lost him a s they w en w ilting back to Botrcfcr'a
bouse to wait lor police.

CAR THEFT THWARTED
An Oviedo man watched u his car w u stolen from his
driveway Saturday night and then apprehended the thief:
David Jones, ft, told Seminole County sheriffs deputies he
w u approaching his driveway in Blade Hammock near Oviedo
when he n v a man pull his wife’s car oqt of his driveway.

Joneeyelled sodtriedtoblockthe man's path but the driver,
drove through a neighbor’s lawn, knocking down a palm tree.
Jones went Inside to aik his wife If she had loaned the c a r to
anyone and after being told "no," pursued the map
After several blocks he headed off the thief, who ran the c ar
into a ditch and ran into nearby woods. Jones caught the m an
and turned him over to Oviedo police.
Joee Lopes, age and sd reu unknown, w u charged with auto
theft and Jailed.
DUI ARRESTS
The following people were arrested on charges of driving
under the influence of alcohol o r drugs.
- Thom uG onialex, ft, Orlando, w u arrested at 2:55 a.m .
S itard ay along U J. Highway 17-92 in Casselberry on a charge
of driving under the Influence of alcohoL Police u ld the c a r
G onsatii was driving crossed the center line of the road
M v m l tim es. Bond w u a e t at $500.
- Roxanne Young,ft, 14 N. F airfax S t , Winter Springs, w u
a m f to d f t 1 a.m. Saturday on a charge of driving under the
W h en ce of alcohol He w u observed weaving on UA High­
way In C iu d berry. Bond w u set f t $500.
- H erbert Faker, ft, 531 Walnut St., Altamonte Springs,
w o t m iw w u m
aa.iw
ft-Ul. on
UU S
JW
C Road
IWftQ 436
VO In
U1 AM
* U
:» a.m.
tate
Altamonte
Springs on a charge of driving under the Influence of a
Police said be tu n e d oft the road and into a ditch. Bond i
a t« M .
- Edw ard Hutchtia, ft, 2M S. Short St., lake Mai
arrefted for driving uniter the Influence of alcohol and 1
Ute secern of an accident shortly before midnight Set
Lake M ary police a rre te d him a t home following an ai
in which Hutchins w u allegedly Involved on US. Htehi
$1 and la k e of the Woods Road.

�Evening Herald, Sanford. Ft

Wednesday. Jan 76 1981

FLORIDA

Flu Could Mean M ajor Future Problen »

IN BRIEF

AT1.ANTA (UPI) — An attack of influenza
may be more than just a m atter of getting over
the original infection — it could mean lifethreatening medical problems years later,
medical scientists now say.
There is evidence that Type-A influenza
epidemics can leave in their wake widespread
cases of heart d isease, encephalitis,
Parkinson’s disease, and other nerve disor­
ders. Even some cases of schizophrenia and
manic depression may be the result of flu.
These theories on the possible longtime
consequences of a bout with Type-A influenza
were the subject of a research paper co­
authored by two medical scientists, Dr.
William Foege, director of the national Coo­
lers for Disease Control, and Dr. Rcimer
Ravenhoit, former head of the CDC’s world
health surveys, now with the federal Alcohol
and Drug Abuse agency in Washington.
The results of their study appeared last
October in lancet, a British medical journal.
In an article titled “ 1918 Influenza,
Encephalitis U thargcia, Parkinsonism."
Foege and Ravenhoit researched the 1918 flu
pandemic that killed 500,000 Americans and 20
million worldwide before it ran its course.
P art of their research included a study of
medical records for the years 1918-26 in
Seattle-Klng County, Wash., and similar
records of the Samoan Islands from 1918-30.

'Little Vietnam ' Q u iet
A fter Racial Violence
COCOA f ill'll — After three days of sporadic rockand bottle-throwing by black youths, the streets of
Cocoa’s troubled “ little Vietnam" section have
returned to normal, police said.
But police plan to beef up patrols for the next several
nights "Ju st to make sure things go okay," Cocoa
police spokesman Everett Parker said Tuesday.
Violence broke out in the predominantly-black
neighborhood Saturday night following a police drug
raid. Only minor disturbances were reported Sunday,
but more upheaval occurred Monday in the Ijowincoinc area when about 200 residents gathered.

Shuttle Flight D elayed
CAPE CANAVERAL lUPl) - Officials say there
definitely is a fuel leak in space shuttle Challenger's
main engine system, and detective work needed to find
the elusive leak may delay the c ra ft’s maiden flight
until late March.
That delay in turn, guarantees additional delays in
two subsequent shuttle flights and threatens plans for a
international Spacelab mission Sept. 30.

'Blue ' Cable

They found a close association between In­
fluenza and later cases of encephalitis
lethargica.
Their studies, they said, "dem onstrates the
extraordinary neuropathogenic qualities of
the causative agent — here identified as the
1918 (swine) influenza virus."
The evidence, according to Foege and
Havcnholt, indicates that many cases of
coronary' disease among the elderly may be
traceable to the destructive effects of the 1918
flu virus on nerves controlling heart action.
The significant decline of heart disease
deaths in the past 10 years may be due, in part,
to the fact that people who were exposed to the
1918 virus have died.
Although the 1918 virus was never identified
in the laboratory, scientists believe it was the
swine flu virus — a Type-A virus.
In 1976, Inoculation of Americans with a
vaccine containing swine flu antigen caused
cases of Guillain-Barre disease fa type of
paralysis), suggesting that this flu virus
produced a toxic effect on the nervous sy stem,
even in the killed state, they said.
Foege and Ravenhoit also believe that most
cases of Parkinson’s disease in the last 60
years or so may have been due to the 1918 flu
pandemic and to subsequent outbreaks of
Type-A flu.
In addition, they attribute a wave of manic-

depressive and schizophrenia cases from the
1920s through the 1940s to the 1918 epidemic, at
least In part. The prevalence of these mental
disorders, like heart disease, has been
declining in recent years, possibly as a result
of the dying-off of those exposed to the 1918 flu.

seven points higher than A m erican
youngsters. In the U S. flu shots are urged only
for those over 65 and the chronically ill.
All Type-A influenza viruses, according to
their study, probably have effects similar to
those of the 1918 flu. Only now, according to
Foege and Ravenhoit, are scientists beginning
to understand just how serious the influenza
problem is.
Ravenhoit theorizes that flu viruses may lie
dormant in an individual's brains and nervous
system, flaring up years after the Initial in­
fection to cause‘their most serious damage.

Another aspect of their investigation in­
dicates that influenza infections in American
children may be damaging their brains.
Ravanhoit notes that almost nil Japanese get
flu shots annually and that Japanese children
have, on average, an intelligence quotient

,

Fathers Love Your

,

M aybe They Won't Use Drugs
Judith S. Brook, an associate professor of
psychiatry at Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
conducted the studies with fellow researchers
and said research in the past often focused on
the mother because “of the assumption the
mother was all-import ant.
“A major finding of ours is that the father
plays a very important role and can have an
impact on the adolescent personality which, in
turn, is related to drug use," Miss Brook said.

LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Teenagers whose
parents are warm and affectionate are less
likely to use drugs than children whose
parents are cold and distant, studies by New
York researchers show.
Tnc studies, funded by the National Institute
on Drug Abuse, also pointed out the strong role
a father can play in heading off teenage drug
use.

Ban Opposed

OHLANDO illP I) — Orange County Commission
Chairman I aiu Treadway says he will oppose the ef­
forts of several commissioners who want a county wide
ban on nudity and pornography in cable television.
The ban is being pushed by commissioner Vera
Carter. She says she wants to include cable television
in a proposed adult entertainment code aimed at
regulating nude duncing, massage parlors and adult
movie theaters and bookstores.
The three cable television systems in Orange County
do not show X-raled movies yet, but Ms. Carter said
she (ears they will be added to the programming soon.
She says she wants to stop it before it starts.

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Barbie, Alleged N a zi
W ar Criminal, A rrested
1A PAZ, Bolivia i UPI) - Klaus Barbie, the form er.
Natl Gestapo chief known as the “ Butcher of l.ydn,1.'
faces possible extradition to be tried for war crimes in
West Germ any alter being arrested In Bolivia on an
unrelated charge. ”
’
-- ,
I^gal sources warned it also was possible the ailing •
Barbie, 69, would appeal the charges accusing him of
cheating a government mining company out of $10,000
and apply for bail.
If bail is granted, the legal sources said, they expect
him to flee Bolivia — which has an extradition treaty
with Bonn — for Paraguay, which does not.
He is held responsible for the deaths of thousands of
Jews, French resistance workers and children sent to
concentration camps while he served as Gestapo chief
in Lyon, France.

M u b arak Wants Troops Out
CAIRO, Egypt lUPIi — 1’resident Hosni Mubarak
wants a pledge this week during his visit to the White
House that President Reagan will put more pressure
on Israel to withdraw Its troops from I&gt;ebanon, a lop
Egyptian official said.
Mubarak also will advise Reagan, Egypt will, not
participate In overall Middle E ast peace talks unless
Jordan and the Palestinians have a role, Butros Ghali,
the Egyptian state minister for foreign affairs, said
Tuesday.
*
Flying to Washington today on his second trip to the
United States since the assassination of President
Anwar Sadat on Oct. 6,1981, Mubarak’s three-day visit
includes a meeting with Reagan Thursday.

A Dating Service
For Herpes Victims
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — 'Hie Responsible Dating Service
wants to help herpes sufferers "m eet that spedal person who
also has herpes.”
The new service Is the creation of John Williams, a 24-yearold herpes sufferer who laughingly calls himself a “victim of
the sexual revolution," and his best friend, Clement Mosseri,
22, who does not have herpes.
The aim of the service, Its brochure saya, Is to try to “help
other people In similar circumstances overcome the fear of
rejection, low self-esteem and self-imposed social alienation."
“We can help lessen the worry and bring new excitement
Into your social life by introducing you to new people who also
happen to be victims of herpes. These a n people who share
your concerns and your special needs.”
Williams says the service is based on the premise that most
herpes reoccur an ces result from "Intercourse traum a,"
anxiety over the prospect of having sex with someone who does
not suffer from the disease and giving it to them.
He reasons that if a herpes sufferer knows in advance a
prospective sex partner has the virus, then his or henaaiiety
level will dram atically be reduced as will the chance of a
reoccur an ce. It has not been established, he says, whether two
herpes sufferers having sex actually worsen each other’s
conditions.
Williams and Mosseri had difficulties getting the service off
the ground. Several newspapers rejected an advertisement an
grounds th at it was "too controversial," said Williams.
But an alternative weekly published the ad several weeks
ago, and th at quirked a good response. So far, about 70 people
have signed up, slightly more of them men than women.
Before they actually start matching people up however,
Williams and Mosseri want to establish a client base of about
200.
"We have people calling us saying, ’Wow, we think this is
great, keep up the good work,’” Williams said.

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�E ve n in g Herald
( u s p s 4 ii :» &gt;

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 303-322-2611 or 831-9993
W ed n esd ay , Ja n u a ry 26, 1983—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publlther
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.25'; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year, $57.00.

CorigTesiMust
Face Up To Reality
'Hie Reagan administration faced up to political
reality in its recent decision to trim $8 billion from
the proposed defense budget.
We hope Congress also will face reality—the
reality of Soviet m ilitary s tre n g th —before
pushing for further defense reductions.
With a projected $200 billion deficit and a mood
on Capital Hill to make the Pentagon share the
austerity forced on other program s, President
Reagan and Defense Secretary Caspar Wein­
berger had to do their own m ilitary cutting.
Otherwise, Congress would have done it for them.
In view of economic and political conditions, the
administration acted prudently in reducing
proposed defense spending by approximately 3
percent for the next fiscal year. Nevertheless, a
major congressional battle still lies ahead.
Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., a member of the
Senate Budget Committee, for example, said the
administration’s action “ is only the first step.
Congress is going to cut significantly more."
Fortunately, others in Congress will work hard
to block further reductions. Senate Armed Ser­
vices Committee Chariman John Tower, R-Tex.,
said Mr. Reagan “ responded to enormous
pressure” in making the cuts and “acted against
his basic instincts."
Who can doubt it? Mr. Reagan's instinct for a
strong defense arises from the Soviet Union’s
massive buildup of conventional and nuclear
forces and a military budget at least 40 percent
higher that that of the United States.
Although it may be politically expedient for
some m em bers of Congress to argue we can’t
afford the military spending sought by Mr.
Reagan, it would be more realistic if they asked
whether we can afford not to improve our armed
forces.
Tlie only alternative to keeping abreast of the
Soviet's m ilitary capacity is to negotiate
meaningful arm s reductions with them. And, to
negotiate except from a position of strength would
be foolhardy, ,.r
The Soviets* ‘‘yeftUvv '*fain' Hfrtttlc91 warfare
against the Afghans, their ftmiticlhg'bf terrorism,
and growing indications of KGB Involvement in
the attem pted assassination of the pope con­
vincingly argue against the misguided belief of a
peace-loving Moscow.
Moreover, Yuri Andropov’s offer of a non­
aggression pact is belied as propaganda by a new
study of Soviet nuclear weapons deployment in
Europe. The analysis by the U.S. Strategic In­
stitute show’s an integrated air and ground of­
fensive system of Soviet weapons.
With a six-to-one advantage in missile laun­
chers, a four-to-one advantage in numbers of
missiles, and a five-to-one advantage in warheads
and aggregate explosive power, the Soviets have
mobilized formidable forces more for attack.than
for defense.
Tliese accepted facts vividly warn that Soviet
intentions should no longer be ignored by those in
the United States who continually cry for less
spending on national security.
F ar from a military spending spree, current
defense expenditures and those proposed by Mr.
Reagan through 1986 would amount to only 16
percent of all public spending in tfie United States.
By comparison, 35 percent of all public spending
in 1955 went for defense.
The cuts announced by Weinberger would
reduce fiscal year 1984 defense spending to $273.4
billion from $284.7 billion.
Weinberger said the cuts do not involve major
weapons and were made possible by the decrease
in the ra te o f inflation, lower fuel cost estimates,
and planned savings in personnel expenditures.
Secretary Weinberger reportedly is counting on
a military pay freeze for the savings in personnel
expenditures. And military men and women, who
for too long were paid too little, would have to
forego a deserved pay increase.
Meanwhile, members of Congress, who have
not been reluctant to vote themselves healthy
salary and benefit increases, should acknowledge
they have forced enough defense cuts on the
administration.

BERRY'S WORLD

"This is really a lovely place, II you don't mind
Dioxin."

By JANE CASSELBERRY

There were parades and programs and
newspaper articles In observance of the Jan. 15
birthday of the late Martin Luther King Jr. His
birthday is marked on calendars.
There have been demands that his birthday be
made a national holiday. A great leader and
m artyr to the cause of civil rights, he certainly
deserves recognition.
But there is another American who was con­
sidered by many as the country's greatest
president who is getting a lot less recognition
than Dr. King these days.
The late Franklin Delano Roosevelt was
president from March 4, 1933, to April 12, 19(5,
longer than any other president. But his birthday
,JTarT o rrc ftm te ritia rtm •Jan.~Wr*,*~-------------Overcoming his physical handicaps, he cer­
tainly earned his place in history by virtue of
leading the nation through the Great Depression
and World War II, not to mention being the one
who approved the development of the atomic
bomb.
F a ir is fair. FDR certainly deserves
recognition, too. . _____
The Seminole County Mental Health Center’s

Substance Abuse Program will sponsor a twoweekend plant sale beginning Saturday, Feb. 5
and Feb. 12. The proceeds will benefit “The
Cottage." Central Florida’s only residential
rehabilitation facility for women with alcohol
problems.
The Community United Methodist Church on
U.S. Highway 17-92 in Casselberry has offered
the use of their parking lot for the plant sale. The
sale will begin at 10 a.m. and end at 5 p.m. each
day.
The Humane Society of Seminole County has
two fund raisers coming up to help raise m at­
ching funds to match the $50,000 challenge grant
“oTiered by the Edyth Bush' Charitable Foun­
dation.
The Humane Society has launched a special
S i l l Green Stamp collection project to raise
funds for completion of its new shelter. Everyone
can help by collecting green stamps, filling
books in turning them in to the head of their
group or mailing them to the shelter at 2001 E.
25th St. in Sanford. There also will be "wishing
wells" Iwated in the Publix Markets at Sanford

Plaza, Butler Plaza in Casselberry and
Altamonte Springs in which to deposit them,
according to society spokeswoman Joanne
Prager.
The goal is 5,000 books by the end of February.
These books of stam ps will be converted into
cash at $2 a book and S&amp;H will top it off with a
special bonus. The three groups or individuals
collecting the most books will receive special
recognition.
“ Many are unable to give large donations, but
inquire as to how they can help and we feel this
particular project offers an excellent op­
portunity for everyone to get involved," said Ms.
Prager. The officinl kick-off for the project will
be Wednesday, Feb. 2, at 10 a.m. at the Seminole
County Agri-Center on L'.S. Highway 17-92 in
Sanford.
The other project is the first annual Cupid’s
Critter Cabaret to be held 7-11 p.m. Feb. 13 at
fjord Giumley's Pub in Altamonte Springs
staring the Phyllis Dale Combo and special
guests. There will be entertainment and dancing
and all profits will benefit the Humane Society.

JEFFREY HART

A N TH O N Y HARRIGAN

Davis,
Bacon

Capital
Punishment
Again

Wasteful
When the 97th Congress approved a nlckela-galbn tax increase on gasoline, it refused to
exempt from provisions of the Davis-Bacon
Act the highway and road repairs and
rebuilding that will be funded by the tax.
This action could cost the taxpayers $600
million or more.
Davis-Bacon was enacted in 1931 when
unem ploym ent com pensation, minimum
wage laws, and other forms of labor
protection were non-existent. The act was
intended to discourage the use of cheap labor
from the south. With the passage of labor
laws that prevent discrimination against
labor since that time, Davis-Bacon has
outlived its usefulness to say the least.
U.S. Rep. Ken Kramer of Colorado has
noted that a study by the General Accounting
Office Indicates the Act contributes to the
nation's inflation rate. It also costs con­
tractors more than $100 million to comply
with the payroll reporting requirements.
The Durham Morning Herald published an
analysis of Davis-Bacon last October, ex­
plaining its undesirable effects. The Act
requires payment of the "prevailing wage" to
construction workers on projects financed
with government money. The prevailing
wage has been defined, said the Herald, as the
wage paid to the highest 30 percent of the
workers in an area. Thus, if only a third of the
workers in a given category are unionized and
paid union wages, the union wage becomes
the prevailing wage.
In practice, the Morning Herald added,
“the excessively high union rates have
prevented non-union wage competition; they
have effectively discriminated against less
skilled workers many of whom are black; and
they have driven up the price tag on federal
projects."
Davis-Bacon is an anachronism that should
have been scrapped long ago. Union pressure
on Congress has prevented reform.
Congressman Kramer has said that this is
"the kind of outmoded, counterproductive
government requirement which should be
eliminated."
Unfortunately, the Reagan administration
h as declined to confront the union
monopolists on this Issue.
The need now is for public pressure for
action *8889131 Davis-Bacon. The law drains
money that could be used for highways,
bridges and other needed Improvements.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. AU letter* must be signed,
with a mailing address and, li possible, n
telephone number to the identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening'
Herald will respect the wishes of writers
who do not want their names In print. The
Evening Herald also n a m e s the right to
edit letters to eliminate libel or to conform
.to space requirements.

,

-rut

'Just Give 'Em S o m e Beads, Trinkets A n d Fire-Water
A n d Send 'Em On Their W ayl'

ROBERT WALTERS

So Far, Politics As Usual
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (NEAl - Buried
within the torrent of conventional political
rhetoric flowing Irom those seeking next
year's Democratic presidential nomination
lies an intriguing and potentially powerful
theme.
The innovative approach to campaigning is
succinctly described by Sen. Ernest F.
Rollings, D-S.C., one of at least eight
Democrats considering a bid for the
presidency: "The best politics is no politics."
Rollings, one of the most articulate ad­
vocates of that radical concept, suggests that
"people who say they don't trust politicians
anymore are wailing, 1 am convinced, for
politicians to behave as though they trust the
people."
Throughout recent decades, the campaigns
of both Republican and Democratic can­
didates for public office, especially the
presidency, have em phasized sellpromotional oratory and promises which
cannot be fulfilled.
The pattern has persisted during three
relatively recent events which we part of
what Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz.,
characterizes as "the quadrennial oratorical
fest and cattle show."
On those three occasions, the Democrats
&gt; exploring the possibility of running for
president have been gathered together — at a
national conference sponsored by. the
D em ocratic National C om m ittee in
Philadelphia la^t June, at a meeting of
Democratic stale chairmen In New Orleans
last November and at the California
Democratic Party’s slate qonvention here In
mid-January.
Although the speakers at those events have
advanced a number of imaginative and
creative ideas on a variety of subjects, too
much of what was offered consisted of "electm e" sloganeering and verbal potshots at
President Reagan.
There are, however, some hopeful signs.
Noting Reagan’s mounting problems and
sagging popularity, Udall warned here: "We
had better not gloat over this GOP disaster..
We must not forget that it's been only two
years since the voters repudiated us — and we
should not take that lightly."
In an extraordinarily candid analysis,
Udall added:

"We better tell the painful truth: life holds
no 'freebies.' Some pain and sacrifice — and
yes, some sweat ami tears will be required . .
li

"With their insensitive suggestions on
Social Security, the GOP handed us a
beautiful club. But this critical system cannot
endure when every year we take in $15 billion
less than we pay out. Savings must be found,
revenue*rw-Ulmi’d
"Reducing $200 billion deficits to balance
budgets will require us to pass up some tax
cuts and expenditures we might otherwise
like to make.
"While we reach to help our unemployed we
must not drink from that powerful jug
marked *protectionism."’
Rollings has repeatedly articulated similar
themes in his proposals to reduce federal
spending by $175 billion to $200 billion during
the next three years through ‘a discipline ol
sacritice — a shared sacrifice across the
board."
'

Abandoning the discredited yet in­
destructible political tradition of promising
something to everybody, Rollings Is calling
for a one-year freeze on cost-of-living ad­
justments for federal pensions and Social
Security payments.
Several especially thoughtful Democratic
political consultants are espousing a similar
approach. Peter D. Hart, a leading public
opinion analyst, told the convention here that
the party must "develop a message and
theme for America that goes beyond ap­
pealing to simple constituencies.”
Added Hart: "Too much of Democratic
politics has been based on trying to appeal to
specific constituencies tb add up to 50.1
percent of the vote" Instead of presenting "a
vision of where we want to take the country."
Similarly Tom Mathews, a respected direct
mail expert, notes that years of unfulfilled
promises from candidates has produced an
electorate that is Increasingly cynical about
government and alienated from the political
process.
"The maverick candidate who doesn't
pander to the voters by telling them what he
thinks they want to hear will be the winner in
1984," he predicts. "The next president will be
someone who doesn’t care about winning,"

With more than a thousand m urderers on
death row in the United States, it is not sur­
prising that the debate about execution swirls
around us.
Time magazine has devoted its recent issue
to the subject, with a long cover story in­
cluding a historical survey.
I myself have never been an enthusiast for
Hie death penally, rather a reluctant sup­
porter, with strong and lingering memories of
one of Albert Camus’ great essays on the
subject, opposing execution. And. indeed, the
details can be revolting.
It has always seemed to me that there are
obvious cases in which, however reluctantly,
I had to favor the death penalty. For example,
suppose a prison inmate has a life sentence
which cannot be reduced. Suppose he mur­
ders a prison guard. Without the death
penalty, there is little you can do to him. You
cannot give him another redundant life
sentence. In one of the last executions carried
out in California, then Governor Reagan
argued on precisely those grounds, i.c., that
the state had to support the men who guarded
such dangerous prisoners, and refused
clemency.
However, in the tradition of Camus, I have
been moved by existential reality out of my
hesitations and sense of narroyv scope
regarding capital punishment, moved by a
single paragraph In the above mentioned
Time mugazinc. Theri^are some crim es so
heinous that life in prison is a grotesque
understatement, and even an insult to the
humanity of the criminal himself. For its full
evidential effect in the argument, the
paragraph must be quoted here In full:
"On the night of June 3, 1973, a Chevrolet
Caprice, driven by a woman, was forced off
Interstate 57, in southern Cook County, 111., by
a car carrying (our men. One ol them pointed
a 12-gauge pump shotgun at her, ordered her
to strip and then to climb through a barbed
wire fence at the side of the road. As she
begged for her life, her assailant thrust the
shotgun barrel into her vagina and fired.
After watching her agonies for several
minutes, he finished her off with a blast to the
throat. 14SS than an hour later, the
marauding motorists stopped another car and
told the man and woman inside to get out and
lie down on the shoulder ol the road. The
couple pleaded for mercy, saying that they
were engaged to be married In six months.
The man with the shotgun said, ‘Kiss your last
kiss,' then shot both of them In the back,
killing them. The total take from three
murders and two robberies: $54, two watches,
an engagement ring and a wedding band."
As it happens, this astonishing performance
did not earn Henry Brisbon, 28, a welldeserved execution. Illinois, at the time, had
no death penalty. The judge sentenced him to
1,000-3,000 years, clearly in Impotent rage.
During the first year in jail, Brisbon
m urdered a fellow inmate with the sharpened
handle of a soup ladle. By that time, Illinois
did have a death penalty, and Brisbon now
resides on death row.
He is unrepentant, and continues to doubt
that he will ever be executed.
The prosecutor in the original three m ur­
ders thinks otherwise. As quoted in Time:
"On the day he dies in the chair at Statcville, I
plan to be there to see U is done.”

JACK ANDERSON

Consul Cold-Shouldered U.S. Citizen
WASHINGTON— Rodney Dangerfleldgets
laughs by complaining that he gets "no
respect." When Americans living abroad
have the same complaint, tt'a no laughing
m atter.
Thanks to the timidity of some of our
consular officers, Americans who get in
trouble In a foreign country can no longer
count on the kind of help th at used to be given
routinely to U.S. c ttlie n s overseas.
Sometimes, In fact, they’re lucky If they can
even get the American consulate to recognize
that they have a problem.
The situation Is particularly touchy in
places Uke Saudi Arabia. Not only are the
Saudi legal and aortal systems unlike
anything Americans are accustomed to —
and some Saudis are eager to take advantage
of this Ignorance - but the United States haa
been slavishly wooing the Saudi regime over
the years.
In this atmosphere, our consular ofiidals
tend to be even more timorous about ruffling
Saudi sensibilities. They are more concerned

about maintaining their coxy relationships
with the Saudis than assisting itinerant
Americans who come to them for help.
“ The embassy is paranoid about main­
taining good relations with the Saudis, and
will stay out of such cases," a U.S. official
acknowledged to my reporter Sylvia Cahill.
Jim Westphal can testify to that. He’s a
C alifornia businessman who now faces
bankruptcy thanks to a $80,000 runaround In
Saudi Arabia. When he went to the U.S.
Embassy In fear (or his safety, he got the
brushoff. Here's what happened:
Wiwtphal is president of Intercontinental
Export Services. He flew with his accountant,
Ronald Hardy, to Saudi Arabia last June to
check into a possible business deal with the
Anbah Trading Co. of Jiddah. They figured
they’d be there a month or so.
Westphal and Hardy spent five weeks
studying the inform ation Anbah had
provided, and found to their dismay that 90
percent of it was inaccurate. Financial ex­
perts they consulted confirmed this. So

Westphal informed Anbah there would be no
deal; they were going home.
Unfortunately, the two Americans had
turned their passports over to Anbah for visa
renewal. The Anbah representative, Mansour
Gadh, told them they could have their
passports back on payment of a $50,000
"commission."
Astounded by the ransom demand, Westphal hired local lawyers to fight Anbah. The
company's response was to raise the ransom
tc $200,000, make veiled threats against
Westphal and accuse him of being an Israeli
spy.
Convinced that he and Hardy were in
personal danger, Westphal went to the em­
bassy for help. Alter all, he reasoned, that's
what consuls are paid for.
Both Westphal and his lawyers were ap­
palled al the reaction of consul David Sat­
terfield, to whom they explained the situation.
Satterfield stubbornly refused to entertain
any suggestion that the case involved ex­

tortion. He insisted It was merely a "com­
mercial contractual dispute" — and he would
not intervene.
•
Westphal's lawyers then drafted a petition
to the prince of Mecca. This alarm ed the
Anbah people, and they agreed in court to
lower the "commission" to $15,000.11 West­
phal would withdraw his appeal to the prince.
Rather than spend months watting for trial,
Wistphal agreed.
Friends and relatives in the United States
pooled their savings and got Westphal and
Hardy the money. The two men paid the
ransom, gut their passports and fled the
country.
T hanki to the prim, hands-off attitude of
consul Satterfield, Jim Westphal owes $60,000
in personal loans, legal fees and hotel ex­
penses — and Saudi swindlers can look for­
ward with confidence to the next American
businessman they decide to fleece.
Footnote: Consul Satterfield, reached in
Saudi Arabia, refused to comment.

�'■ i—
fcTiI» •

4/

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Coding Is Combating
Information Thefts
DALI A S (UPI | — Datotek Inc. operates
What makes it easier than ever to steal
In a cloak-and-dagger environment of
secrets is that so much information is
secret codes and sensitive messages, its
transmitted by phone lines, microwave and
customers largely governments but in­
satellite signal.
creasingly multinational mega-eompanies
For competing industries intent on
trying to keep information away from
stealing an idea, both the technology and
competitors.
the technicians are readily available to do
Datotek manufactures and sells coding
it — and at a price that is miniscule com­
devices that allow secret information to
pared to the millions of dollars that can be
pass from diplomat to government — or
m ade by pre-em pting another cor­
businessman to home office — via un­
poration’s plans.
secured telephone lines or easily inGindling said to the best of his knowledge
terceptible satellite signals.
no company officially sanctions the theft of
The company’s latest entry in the
another corporation’s communiques. He
clandestine information field is a portable
said, how ever, that some D atotek
case that passes for a stylish briefcase', but
customers had contacted it specifically
actually contains a small encoder with a
because they had reason to believe uncodcd
typewriter keyboard, a m iniature printer
information fell into a competitor's hands.
and telephone cups.
Gindling firmly believes there is cor­
The $4,000, battery-operated case allows porate theft going on globally, sometimes
its owner to type up to 25,000 characters,
encouraged and even financed by govern­
put them into a computer-generated ran­ ments.
dom code, connect the machine to a
“ Worldwide competition has become so
telephone and transmit the scrambled mes­ intense that economic stability of entire
sage to a receiving unit connected to countries could be based on (a home
company's) leadership in a specific field,”
another phone anywhere in the world.
he said. "The stakes are very high — for
Although the signal can be intercepted
both financial success and political
and fed into any similar Datotek machine,
unless the thief has the right 45-letter stability in some parts of the world."
A few years ago some financial
“ passw ord” the m essage cannot be
researchers predicted corporate coding
translated.
The odds of the interceptor figuring out would mushroom into a hundred-million
the password is one versus the number 10 dollar business, and although those
predictions have proved way too ex­
followed by 56 zeros.
The 15-year-old, $10 million company tra v a g a n t, Gindling says the future
does 85 percent of its business with remains good.
governments friendly to the United States,
He believes coding and scrambling
but. according to spokesman John Gindevices may someday be as fundamental to
dling, the other 15 percent is from private
corporations as the sprinkler systems and
industry and that share is growing..
burglar alarms they use to protect their
"The reason governments need to protect
buildings.
information is pretty obvious, but the
"You can fix the price of a building, or a
reason companies need to is much less so,"
piece
of equipment. If the building bums
Gindling said. "Until fairly recently, there
down
or
the equipment is stolen, you have a
hasn't been the risk there is today, and the
good idea of how much you've lost," he
stakes haven't been as high.
said. "But an idea could be worth millions
" T h e re ’s always been industrial
of
dollars to you. It could represent your
espionage, but it's never been so easy to
company's future."
steal secrets before."

Wednesday. Jan. 14, ) t » —SA

Televising Senate Sessions
M ay Be Cure For Filibuster
recently, "The filibuster was a grand thing."
leather-lunged, wily orators would stand on the
Senate floor all night reading newspapers and
dispensing charming, if irrelevant, folk wisdom,
such as gumbo recipes

WASHINGTON (UPI) — What makes the Senate are likely to be changed when the Senate lakes a
unique among the world's parliamentary bodies is coolerlook at the antics it went through in its lame
the rule that permits its members to speak as long duck session.
Any move to change the rules would require up 67
as they want.
When senators talk at inordinate length, they call votes, or two-thirds of the senators present. And it
it “extended debate." Everybody else calls it also would be subject to filibuster.
filibuster — from the Spanish "filibustero,"
The filibuster has its place in a body established
meaning a pirate, a freebooter.
to give smaller states equal voice with more
Only by the vote of 60 members can the Senate populous states that dominate in the House. Alaska,
stop a filibuster. That is called cloture.
for example, has as much clout in the Senate as
But since the late James Allen, D-Ala., was in his California, which outvotes it in the House 45-1.
prime, the "post-cloture filibuster" has been per­
In past years, Southerners used the filibuster to
fected. That involves submitting hundreds of
amendments, and requiring the Senate to deal and thwart the civil rights movement and protect
"state's rights," but recently, liberals have used it
vote on each one.
This type of filibuster came under such fierce also on behalf of their causes.
Once, Sen. Robert Dole, RKan., was saying
attack at the end of the 97th Congress that the rules

"Now everybody filibusters," Dole said.
One of the old-timers, 81-year-old John Stennis, D-:
Miss., said on the last day of the contentious Senate
session last week that filibusters are necessary
from time to lime, but not the irritating post-cloture
delays.
"In the old days," he said, "w e’d have battles that
lasted two or three weeks lasting all night." But
when cloture was Invoked, "all of us opposed to
d o tu re got our hats and coats and went home and
let the others vote."

Tips To Save On Telephone Installation Offered
When you're moving from one place
to another, telephone installation is
Just one of many things you need to
arrange. Southern Bell says there are
many ways to save both time and
money on the Installation of your
telephone.
"The best way to save money is to
give some thought to what you want
before you call the business office,”
says l,arry Strickler, Southern Bell

Area Manager. "Some things to
consider are how many telephones
you need, where they’ll be located and
which color and style of phone you
want."
With everyone w atching their
budget these d ays, Strickler
recom m ends some o ther moneysaving tips:
— You can save part of the in­
stallation costs by picking up your

phones at a store.
— If telephones have been left by
previous residents, you can save
money by using them instead of or­
dering other phones. Or bring the
phones y ou used at your old residence
and plug (hem in at your new place.
— Get all the service you want at the
same time since you pay for each
susequent order. When you place an
order, make sure you’ve considered

Triedman’s

all the different features you want
with your service.
— Charges for connections and
moves are now based on whether a
visit to the customer's location is
required. You can save this cost by
plugging in your own phones (if you
have modual jacks), installing or
adding modular jacks and even doing
your own pre-wiring.

fe

JEW ELERS

Computer Speeds Up
Matching Fingerprints
NEW YORK (UPI) The electronic
computer is being applied to take much of the
drudgery and high cost out of fingerprint
identification.
The ancient Babylonians realized that an
individual's fingerprints are unique and this
was accepted by the Chinese as early as the
eighth century; in Europe by the fourteenth
century.
Fingerprint identification, however, did not
become enough of a science to be accepted as
evidence in the courts until about the start of
this century and it remains a tedious and
expensive affair.
It is not so difficult to compare the complete
set of prints of someone who is arrested with
those of hundreds of thousands of known
criminals or suspects in the files of big police
libraries like that of the FBI.
The FBI has automatic fingerprint readers
developed by Rockwell International Corp.
that can use computerized d ata to speed this
process tremendously. So do the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police and some other
national police forces. The West German
government and Siemens AG are developing a
similar automatic system.
Now a subsidiary in Anaheim, Calif., of the
century-old Del jR u e security firm in London
is marketing a system called Printrak that
goes much farther.
Printrak can examine "laten t" or uniden­
tified fingerprints taken a t the scene of a
crime and classify them in such a way that the
computerized information can be used to
conduct in several hours a search for matches
in large flngerplnt laboratories that might
take weeks by ordinary methods if it can be
done at all.
In fact, said DeLaRue Printrak President
Richard Snyder, very few latent fingerprints
are even sent to the FBI now; the prospects of
getting a match are too remote. The chief
value of a latent print at present is as evidence
after someone is arrested and his or her prints

can be compared with the latent print.
DeLaRue acquired the basic technology
from Rockwell and then developed Printrak. It
has sold the system to police departments in
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Miami, San Jose and
Houston, to Sao Paulo and Bahia in Brazil and
to the Swiss national police.
Snyder said a Printrak system to cope with
the files In a city with a metropolitan area
population of about 754,000 will cost about $1.3
million. Its economic operation depends on
using the computer to make very rapidly the
stan d ard fingerprint m easurem ents and
minutiae,
The Minneapolis-St. Paul police force has
three million sets of fingerprints in its files and
even after reducing these by a classification
index the job of finding a match to a latent
print by ordinary search is impossible. The
only time such a match is found is when a
detective has a hunch about the possible
identity of a suspect within a small group and
he proves to be right.
The Twin Cities police found the Printrak
equipment cut the time needed to look for a
match for a latent print by at least two thirds
and increased the probability of finding a
match by some 30 percent.
Snyder said it took Rockwell about 10 years
to develop its automatic print readers and De
LaRue Printrak spent several more years
developing the hardware and software to
expand the system's capability to make
"cold" searches for matches for latent prints.
The system also is used to enter And store
information from ordinary 10-print cards
taken from persons who are arrested or
fingerprinted for other reasons, but Its great
advance la In encoding, classifying and storing
computer information about latent prints.
Fingerprint images, of course, are not
stored in the computer. They remain on
photocards and are scanned at high speed.
Only the coded measurements and minutiae
are put in the computer.

Legalized Immigrants
Lead Good Lives: Study
BALTIMORE (U PI) M exican im­
m igrants do not join the welfare rolls in large
numbers and have a lower unemployment rate
that the national average once they are legali­
zed, social scientists reported Tuesday.
"We discovered that the widespread fear
that if illegal, undocumented aliens are grant­
ed amnesty they would all go on welfare is
unfounded,” said Alejandrd Portes, professor
of social relations at Johns Hopkins Univer­
sity.
Portes said the six-year study undercut
allegations raised against the legalization of
the Immigration Control and Reform Act. The
measure, also known as the Simpson-Mazzoli
bill, passed the Senate in 1982. It failed in the
House and is expected to be reintroduced this
year.
A num b er of C ongressm en, including
several members of the Florida delegation,
have' attacked the amnesty provision on the
grounds that legalized aliens would quit their
low-wage jobs and go on welfare.
. "1 think this would hold true for migrant
groups other than Mexicans, although they
really are the bulk of unauthorized Im­
migration to this country,” Portes said.
The Hopkins study also contradicted claims
that the legalized immigrants would use their

new status to climb the job ladder and com­
pete with other Americans for better-paying
positions. Instead, they tended to occupy semi­
skilled or unskilled positions In small fac­
tories.
"Because of modest educational and oc­
cupational backgrounds, most immigrants
remain' in menial and poorly remunerated
jobs," said Portes. "This Is In line with their
own expectations at arrival."
Portes' research, conducted along with
State University of New York-Blnghamton
professor Robert L Bach, was based on
repeated Interviews with &gt;22 Mexican im­
migrants'between 1973 and 1979.
In 1979, the study showed that 4 percent of
Mexican Immigrants were out of work com­
pared to a national unemployment rate of 6.3
percent.
Portes pointed out that what makes the
figures even more significant is that between
1976 and 1979 approximately 40 percent of the
Mexicans found themselves unemployed. But
he said most got other jobs, even though it took
them two months on the average.
"These results indicate that the low
unemployment rate among the immigrants la
the result of an active effort on their part to
avoid being left out of work," said Portes.

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SANFORD PLAZA
321-4070
OuvKitas LintM-QuMity N^itt I

�*A— Evening Htnld, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jan. 24, tin

Senate Changes Needed

N O PA R K IN G
Traffic filling (lie roadway on llltli Street near its
Park Avenue intersection Illustrates the problems
which occur when motorists park cars on the
street. The county is slated to install “ no parking"

signs on n th from Sanford Avenue to U.S. High­
way 17-!»2 sometime in February at Sanford’s
request.

A M A H E R OF RECORD
REAL ESTATE
Danny R Webb 4 wt B illie to F
Charles Franta 4 wl M arcia. Lot
IS 4 E ’ » of U, Oil K Lake
W aym an Heights, Lake Add
147,000
Aetna Life Ins. Co lo National
Prop Investors Commence NW
c o r of N E ’ . ol NW'» ol Sec n i l
TV etc 1500.000
Palm Springs Road L td P tr to
National Prop Investors, Com
m enceal NW cor.ot NEVa ot N W '*
of Sec. 13 71 3? etc S4.VOO.OOO
A lb e rt
Leeberg to
Nash
F abricating Co. Inc. btk B, A F G.
Vegetable Tract. ST4a.TOO
A lbert L. Huskey 4 wt Nancy to
Russel Polak 4 wl Christine, Lot
14, Btk C, Sweetwater Oaks, Sec
13. ST 10,000
John M illonig 4 wl Kathleen etnl
to David J. Schulte 4 wf Rebecca,
Lot 34. Lake Sylvan Estates,
111,200
David K Dugan 4 wt Susan to
F ra n klin R Mellon 4 wl Ann K.,
Lot TO, Blk F, The Woodlands,
S100.000.
Bruce L Thompson, sgl lo
G ilbert E. Banks, sgl W 80 It. ot E*
TOO' ol N ISO- ot N F '. See Tt T i l t
110.300.
Saba! Puinl Prop Inc. lo A rlh u r
J. Olsen 4 w l Eleanor, Lot T, Saba I
Green at Sabal Point SIEO.OOO
E quity Realty Inc,, to A rtt E
Sfversen 4 Nanette Sill, both slg ,
Un 131. Destiny Springs. 156,too
Claude Dyer Sr., repr est Susan
Young to Claude E Oyer Sr , 1j
Int. 4 Delols Peck ty Int Beg SE
cor. blk 0, Lake Wayman Heights.
Lake Addn . SSI.000
(Q C D I Linda O K ittin g c r
(m a rr ) lo Robert B. K ittin g c r
(m a rr.) Lot IIV. Springs Landing
Un Four, S100
The Co« Corp to Robert O
K ittin g cr " Lt 119 Springs Lan
ding. Un. Four 1141,000
Maronda Homes Inc. Is C J
D ollar 4 w l Mary C Lot IV,
Harbour Ridge. I77.SOO
George L. Milam 4 wl Adrlanne
to John S. Ralston 4 wl F aith C .
Lot Tl, Blk F, Woodmere Park. Tnd
rep l 138.100
W illiam G McClelland 4 wf
Dorothy to LyleR Burk. Lot 4, Blk
C, Id yltw ild e o t Loch Arbor Sec t.
1*4,100
Dennis Meredith tnc. to Richard
E. Lessard 4 Charles dba Assoc
Auto Body, Lts V 4 10 Orange
Park. 158.500
John M Lydgn 1 wl Beatrice lo
Eugene J. Ferrettl 4 wt Joan, Lot
I, Blk W, The Woodlands Sec 3.
577.000
James Lee Jr., to Tamcka
Turner, s g l, Lot 90 M idway.

II .000

• •

James D. Lichty 4 wl Pamela lo
George |. Medley 4 wl E Lorrena.
Lot S4. Blk H. Camelol Un. Two.
1408.000
G all Kaplan, sgl lo Randy
Levine, sgl., Un, ITJ0 Midden
Ridge Corel. 141.000
Cleopatra Viahavas to Agoro
Karkatsungas, Lois 7 4 1. B lk I I ,
Bal A ir, Santord. 11,000.
F rank M cFaddtn 4 w l EIH to
Ronald D Lem Ire sgl. 4 Paul D
Lam ire 4 wt Ethel A , Lot 1, Bl 41,
T ow n tlle o l North Chuluola. 1st
Addn., 131,100
Derand Equity Grp Inc to M ary
E. Nation, sgl, 4 Richard A
Zadroiny, s g l. Lol I I , Oakland
VUI*9*&gt; Set Two, 114,500
Derand Equity Grp Inc to
Sandur Kaskin 4 wl Baklya. Lol 14.
Oakland Village Sec 2. SIS2.VOO.
Derartd Equity Grp Inc. lo
Douglas S. Manley, sgl Lol IT
Oakland Village Sec. Two, 1SI.V00.
Bel Aire Homos, Inc., to M arie
A. Wilson, sgl. Lot 30v Bel Airo
Hills, Un. 1, 111,400
Bel Aire Homes Inc. to Irw in B.
Wallace 4 wt Marilyn A , Lot 2V1.
Del Aire HUN, Un. lif.TOO.
U.S Home Corp. to Alyls A.
Williams 4 wt Kathlewv Lot SO,
S u tttr'i M ill Un. One, iiv.voo.
Lee Sinoberg. sgl. lo Stanley K.
Otle. »fll. Lol 23 Barclay Woods.
H I Adn, STS,tOO
Bobby E . Henderson 4 w l
Vernone lo J.B Steelman Jr. 4 wl
Diane, Lol J, t l * A. Highland
Hills, 140.000.
U.S. Home Corp. lo David E
Bernier Jr. 4 wt El#ln* O., Lol JT
Sutler's M ill, Un. One. STMOQ
Thornes R. Oellucd 4 w l Cecil la
4 Edwerd W. Schaltr 4 w l Ber
lo Reginald R. Cerkum 4
wt Janet L., Lots 12 4 W, Blk N,
Longwood Perk, S42.000.
(QCD) Lola Henry lo Sheila R
Holly, sgl. 4 Denise sgl, 4 Sharon
L. sgl., Lot M, Blk J, North
Orlando Terr., Sec L Un. t, H0Q
Community Homes Co. lo Eddie
L. Washington 4 wl Anile F ., Lol
S3, Fairway Oaks a) Deer Run.
SIT.300

Bela Corp lo Adel laraw ani.
sgl ,W 1141’ o1 Lot 10. a ll ot II 4 E
5 VI' ol IT. Blk 16, Sanlando The
Suburb Beautilul, P alm Springs
Sec 588,000Lk Howell A rm s Cond , Ltd , lo
George J Carter 4 w l Judith, Un
347. Lake Howell Arm s Cond.
156.700
Complete In te rio r s Inc
to
Chandu V Davda &amp; wt Tara &amp;
Stelan G Eriksson 4 wl Bindu. Lot
4, Blk t, Cedar R Idge Un I, 572,400
The Huskey Co to Kuht 4 Brink
m aninc . Lot 6, Blk A, Sweetwater
Oaks Sec U. S3V.V00
/Magnolia SVC Corp to Cos
Corp, Lot 76 W ekivo Club Esls ,
Sec t, SJ) 000
70th Century Homes lo Eric J
Erickum 4 wt Beverly J., Lot 80.
Tuscawllla, Un V, SU7.500
IQCDI PGW Holding Co to
Peninsula F e d . Un 105 A Ash
wood Cond . S100
Pemnsula Fed lo Juan Jose
Carroquino, sgl,, Un 105A Ash
wood Cond , S3V.V00
D lile Oil Co to Nlbroc In
vestments. Lots I t 4 IT, Blk I,
Dr earn wold, 175,000
IOCO) Carole J. Cook, sgl to
Stephen R Cook. Beg E (me ot
NE’ « ot SW’ e ol Sec. 37 21 31 etc
1100
Raymond J Samp 4 wt Pamela
J to Gollie M Bonner 4 Betty J
Lot It. Forest H ills. S76.000
Rustic Woods L td . Ptr. to
Brenda Garrison, s g l. Lol 6.
Cluster M . W ild w o o d . PUD.
SSI.500
(QCDI Sabal Point Prop inc to
Cobblestone Constr. Cor p , Part ot
Tr E, Sabal Point Tnd Rev , IKK)
(QCD) Sabal Point Prop Inc to
Group 3 Dcsiqn 4 Constr , Inc ,
Part ot Tr E. Sabal Worn! Jnd
Rev . 1100
Edwin L Prescott to Eugene E
Robison4wt Nancy Lots 7 104 77
IT, blk C. Midway Heights, 180.000
Stephen Cahill, tnd 4 Tr. to
Kelsey Mimes. Lot 16. 4 E' j of IS.
Blk A. 416. STS3,300
Tyrus E Hicks 4 w l Clara to
Tyrus E. Hicks 4 wl Clara, Lite
EsI lo Thelma C Harvey. Lot 30.
Ramblewood. 1100
Maronda Homes Inc . lo Michael
M. 5torm i 4 w l Karen H , Lot 37.
Blk 8. North Orlando Ranches.
Sec 10. StV.tOO
Osceola Land Dev. to M elvin L
M iller 4 wl V icto ria M , Lot 38,
Osceola fiiu tl N orth, 114.000
Osceola Land Dev. to Antonio F
Viegas, s g l. Lots TS 4 76. Osceola
Bluff north, 137.000
E Lee M u n irfi 4 Salvatore to
Terese E Sweeney E 6B5 14' ol Lot
I I , B Drew s F irst Addn Black
Hammock. 1IV.400
(QCD) Judy Foy (as l o ' j Inti lo
Wendy E n lr , Inc , N o ,64 H Hidden
Ridge Cond . 1100
{QCD) Dorothy D Littleton,
w id , 4 CB L ittle to n lo Janice
Gavaitoni, Lot S. Blk 14. Townsite
of North Chuluota. 1100
IQCDI D o roth y L ittle to n to
JaniceG avauonl" E 100' of N ' o t
S E 'a O fN E 'iO fS E 't Sec 4 Tl 31 4
W'&lt; Ol LOIS IT 4 18 Black Ham
mock, HOO
(QCD) Ja nice G a v a u o n l to
Dorothy D L ittle to n 4 C U Lit
lleton. E too ol N&lt; i of SE&gt;4 ol*
N E 'tO l 5 E 'r Sec 4 ] t I I etc , 1100
IQCDI Edward L Perry, to
Rosa K Perry, Lol 6 4 NE 5 It ol
S. Blk E. Lake O rirn ta Hills. Un 3.

stricter enforcement of “germaness,"
permitting only amendments relevant to
the bill under consideration. As matters
stand now, there is a no-holdsbarred rule,
which allows any and all proposals to
come before the Senate.

William L Rcdard 4 wt Christine
C , Lot TV, Deer Run, Un 8A,
575,700
John S Hirsekorn 4 wt Karen M
to Barbara A Bauersachs, Lot IT.
Blk E. Sterling Pk . Un 4. 164.000
Juan R Morales 4 wf M yrta to
W. Jeffrey Patterson i wf Valerie.
Lota, Blk E. Summerset Nn . sec
4, 1ST ,000
Alice G Carman, sgl to Russell
D L lckcy 4 wl Cynthia. Lot Tt.
The Colonnades. Tnd Set 137.000
Donald E 4 Leona M Stormer
Sr . lo Donald E 4 Janet B.
Stormer Jr , Lot I 4 vacated sl ,
adi to no . blk S, Crystal Heights,
170.000
C om plete In te rio rs . In c,, to
Antonio Lemus 4 wl Maria. Lot 44,
Huntington H ills, 174,400
James D Moye Jr 4 wl Vicki lo
Kenneth E Golden 4 wl Deana G .
S' j Ol N 549 S' ol S 1831 6' ot W T10'
ot Govt L t 4. Sec 6 70 30. 114.000
Joseph A Scarlata &amp; wl Car
mella lo Norris H Furay 4 w!
Agnes E,. Lol 65. Sunland E s ts ,
First Adn . 140,000
Unda Clark, Trustee etc to
Henry V Baltenline 4 wl Cynthia.
Lot 10. Ram blew ood Un It.
571.000
B illy H G lut! 4 wl Debra to
D e n n is!. Lane 4 wl Erna C . Lot
76. Rolling Lane, 168.000
M urphy Prop . Inc , to M ark A
Bloom 4 w l Karen Lol IT, Blk 8,
3rd Sec Dreamwotd. 563,000
M urphy Prop Inc . to M ark A
Bloom 4 wt Karen R , Lot II. Blk
Trd Sec, Dreamwotd. 563.000
Robert K rallinger 4 wt Patricia
to Elsie S Blrchwood 4 wl Jean
M , Lol IV, Blk B. Sweetwater
Oaks. Sec 13. 5740 (X»
(QCO) Sharon L Woody lo
Wayne K e lly Woody, Lot 10, Blk 60.
Sanlando The Suburb Beautilul.
Palm Springs Sec 1100
(QCD) Diane C Parrish, sgl to
Jay Judge, sgl Lol 19. Blk 14,
Suburban Homes. 1100
Ben Ward Agency Inc to John B
G ritlin 4 Helen E . Lot 5. Garden
Grove, 114,000
(QCD) R ita B Mor ley lo Rita B
Morley 4 Joes 4 Barbara Aqumo,
Lot 6, Blk E, Woodmere Park. Jnd
repl 1100
Vida Galloway to Frandne L
Gunn, sgl ,,SW'« ot blk 6. Tier 13,
E R Tratlords Map ol Santord,
117.000

Take another example. The two party
leaders appointed a panel on Jan. 3 lo
study ways to change the rules. The
bipartisan group has not yet met.
A serious "germ aness” rule would run
into heavy opposition from senators who
fear their pet projects may never get a
vote — except as a rider to a bill destined
for the White House.

COMMENTARY
A third recommendation calls for a
“total reform of the filibuster rules."
Any one of these changes recom­
mended by Pryor — excluding several
others he made —could bring some order
lo the Senate.
Hut change — any change — is painful
for Ihe Senate and far from easy to put
into effect.

Elimination of the "hold" provision —
especially on nominations — would run
counter to the gentlemens’ club at­
mosphere, a state of mind considered
very conducive to getting anything done
in the Senate. It did, however, get badly
frayed during the "lam e duck" session.
And any tinkering with the filibuster
rule — as the last 20 years has shown —
comes only at the expense of a bloodbath
on the Senate floor.

The House, on the other hand, has
But Pryor senses that the time for
already Instituted a partial limitation on
reform may now be at hand, noting, "!
non-germane amendments. But unless
have seldom seen our members as
the Senate does the same, it will have
sickened by the process that held us as Its
little impact.
prisoners.
To show jusl how slowly change comes
“The system has crumbled and fallen
to the Senate, lake the example of efforts
on lop of us," Pryor said. “As we crawl
to televise proceedings — an idea pushed
out of the rubble, wc must begin the
by both party leaders and backed by a
painful progress of rebuilding — if the
majority of the members.
Congress and the country are to sur­
Hut Sen. Husscll ljtmg of lxmisiana vive.”

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docs not like the idea. Long made it
abundantly clear that efforts to bypass
his opposition would mean trouble for the
Senate — in the form of dreaded delay.

Pryor also called for an absolute end to
the “ gentleman’s agreement" under
which one senator can put a "hold" on a
bill or a nomination and prevent it from
aiming up for consideration.

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Beg SE cor. ol Sec IS 21-32 etc .

WASHINGTON (DPI) - Sen. David
Pryor of Arkansas husbands his words
with great tare, which, just by itself,
makes them worthy of consideration.
As last year’s "lame duck" session
finally staggered toward a close, he
chose to unburden himself, putting'into
words a feeling that must have been
shared by most — if not all — of his
colleagues.
In effect, the first-term Arkansas
Democrat said the way the Senate
operates is an ungodly mess and the
"lame duck” session made the situation
even worse.
"Mr. President, shame, disgust and
ridicule have been visited upon this
body," Pryor declared.
“ A m ericans are bewildered and
sickened by the way we have made a
mockery of a once-revered institution."
he said. "We have no reason for pride as
we slink out of this city.*’
He blamed neither the Senate leaders
nor the Senate’s members but the
Senate’s "method of dome business.”
“In an age of high technology and
instant change, the Senate continues to
employ
obsolete
and
clumsy
procedures,” Pryor charged. "Instead of
lifting off like the space shuttle Colum­
bia, it pokes along at the pace of a onehorse shay."
Pryor did not limit himself to com­
plaint luil m ade specific recom ­
mendations that would enable the Senate
''to operate and escape what seems to be a
perpetual stalemate.
For a starter. Pryor recommended

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Evening Herald,Sanford, FI.

The Poison Lady'

Wednesday, Jan, i t , )H3—7A.

Widow's Investment A Toxic Nightmare
NASHUA, N.H. i NEAl — Wien Mary Charpentier bought 12
acres of land on the edge of this community in 19fi5, she did so
for investment purposes. She had just turned 65, her husband
had passed on, and she thought the suburban property might
provide for her future.
Now, 17 years later, she says she was wrong.
The only thing the property has provided is grief.
And therein lies a complicated and altogether unfortunate
story. Mrs. l’harpenlier tells it eagerly, almost in desperation.
She is 82 now, and her step is slowing: she says she wants to
make sure that everyone knows the details of the matter while
she Is still able to describe them.
The details, she goes on, began a few years after she pur­
chased the land. .She says she was looking for ways to use it fnr
profit when one of her relatives had an idea, liie relative, a
son-in-law named William Sylvester, suggested the property
be used as a commercial garbage dump.
Mrs. Charpenticr didn’t leap at the idea. She says she had
reservations about disturbing the land. Hut the son-in-law was
having financial difficulties at the time, and his daughter was
ailing, thus Mrs. Charpenticr lent him the land so that he could
start up the business.
The woman says the relative promised to do the job right.
The property was in a developing area, and Mrs. Charpenticr
did not want complaints from the multiplying neighbors. The
son-in-law said he would keep everything in order, and take
care of the land as if it were his own.
Apparently, however, he didn't. A few years ago state and
federal investigators discovered that the land was being used
for what they said was the dumping of illegal wastes. In other
words, harmful wastes. The officials said Mrs. Charpcnticr’s
12 acres had become a toxic dump.
Well, not just a toxic dump. The officials said the property
had become one of the deadliest parcels of land in the nation.
They said the soil had been saturated with hundreds of
thousands of gallons of noxious chemicals, industrial acids,
and waste tainted by radioactivity.

Naturally, the community was stunned. And charges and
countercharges began to fly. Environmentalists warned that
leaching of chemicals from the land might ruin Nashua's
ground water. Politicians vowed to clean up every drop of the
pollution. And William Sylvester, the son-in-law, was hauled
into court.
But the worst of the controversy fell on Mrs. Charpentier.
Because she was not only the owner of the land, she wns a bit of
a local personality. She was active in a variety of Nashua
activities, including politics; she was elected to the state
House of Representatives in 1980.
The woman says she tried to deny any involvement with the
illegal activities at the dump. She said she would "never in
God’s world doanvthing that was wrong."
And a lot of people believed her. Friends said Mrs. CTiarpenlier was too much a lady to be dishonest. Neighbors added
that she was too public spirited to put her reputation in
jeopardy. Even Sylvester admitted in public that his motherin-law "didn't know what in hell was going on."
But the authorities thought otherwise. They said the woman
was a profiteer in the matter. They suggested she may even
have purchased the land for chemical dumping. One official

said Mrs. Charpentier had endangered the well-being of
everyone in Nashua, apd called her the "Poison l«idy.”
And that was the dark view that eventually stuck. Mary
Charpentier says the government's actions have ruined her
life. Earlier this year, the government claimed the land by the
right of eminent domain; then last summer, Mrs. Charpenticr
lost a bid to be re-elected to the state house.
Worse, she has been hit with a staggering fine. A local jury
has decided that the principal parties connected with the toxic
dump must pay the various governments $14 million in en­
vironmental damages. A little over $1 million of that has been
assessed against Mrs. Charpenticr.
The woman has no chance of paying, of course. The
government attached a small trust fund from which she used
to draw, ami now she lives mainly on Social Security. She says
she also lives on hope. She hopes people will yet understand
that she is not a Poison Lady, she is innocent.
That’s why she tells her story with such desperation. She is
bright and still active, hut her health has been affected by the
claims against her. “ I just want people to know the truth," she
says, standing outside the security fence at her property. "I
don't want to die this way."

AIDS Linked To Haitian Religious Practices
BOSTON lU Pli — A mysterious and
deadly immune sy stem deficiency
plaguing gays, drug addicts and
hemophiliacs may be linked to voodoo in
Haiti and brought to the United States by
vacationing homosexuals, a study said
today.
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syn­
drome, AIDS, does not seem lo be en­
demic to this country and the large
number of cases also among Haitian
refugees indicates a need to look to Haiti

for clues on where the disease came irom
and how it is transmitted, said Dr Jef­
frey Vieira of Brooklyn Hospital.
Anthropologists should study various
factors in Haiti, including diet, drug use,
the toxic environment and sexual and
religious practices, which Include blood
transmission believed to be one way the
disease is passed on, he said.
Vieira headed a study published in the
New England Journal of Medicine today
that found 10 Haitians treated in

Brooklyn for AIDS reported no history of
homosexuality, drug abuse or blood
transfusions, the means by which the
disease is now believed to be tran­
smitted.
Six of those studied died of com­
plications from the infections, treatment
or surgery relating lo tne disease that
causes the immune system lo break
down, leaving the victim prey to a host of
scavenger diseases.

TW IC E T H E PRINTS
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In The South; Unions Say

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activities that, according to officials, turned a plot
of her land in New Hampshire into one of the
deadliest parcels of grpunil in the country. The
tra c t was supposed to provide for her in her old
age. Hut it has been untiling hut a source of yfrief
and sham e. Her neighbors shun her and she has
been reduced In living on Social Security a fte r the
governm ent slapped her with a $1 fin er

Federal Budget Cuts Have
Crippled Food Programs

E c k e r d 's S Y S T E M 2 P r o c e s s in g ...
r n o i o

M a ry Charpentier claim s she was not a w a re of

* cJ te m e m b e rcY o u r * S
* V a le n tin e o n f e b . 1 4

WASHINGTON &lt;UPl) - Two public em­
ployee unions have charged that cuts in
federal aid to state and local governments
have crippled school lunch programs and
other nutrition programs in most Southern
states.
The American Federation of Slate, County
and Municipal Employees Union and the AFIrCIO's Public Employees Department Union
charged in a 135-page study that the cuts by
the Reagan administration have left stale and
local governments in the region "near the
brink of disaster."
The study said more cuts would push the
governments "over the edge."
The unions claimed that over a three-year
period from fiscal 1982-84 federal assistance to
slate and local governments nationwide will
be slashed by $57 billion
"Tills bus led to a significant and substantial
decline in public services," said Gerald W.
McEnlce, president of the AFSCME. "Every
community in the country has been affected in
a very damaging way by reductions in federal
aid."
John F. Ixiyden, executive directnr of the
AFDCIO group, said the heaviest cuts have
fallen on the areas of the country that need
help the most.
"Nutrition programs were cut most severely
in the South," he said.
"In a predominately rural region which
needs to give better training and opportunities
lo its large poor population, these cuts are
particularly cruel and untimely," said the
report.
A four-state region composed of Alabama,

Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee placed
first in the nation in cuts to elementary and
secondary education, vocational eduction,
school lunch programs, food donations, health
resources and other health program s, the
study said
A second region including Florida, Georgia,
(he Carolinas and Virginia recorded a loss In
federal assistance of more than 1230 per
capita, the report said. That ranked it seventh
out of nine regions in cuts.
However, those states "suffered above
national average per capita cuts in fourteen
programs," said the report.
Education and nutrition program s,
Appalachian
Regional
Development
Assistance Programs and Community Ser­
vices Administration Programs were all cut
severely, the report said.
Stute-hy-stale highlights showed:
— Alabama ranked 35th In overall cuts, hut
third in cuts to child nutrition and fourth in
cuts to Appalachian Regional Programs. It
also lost m ore than $281 million in employment
and training funds.
— Mississippi ranked 20th overall, hut was
first in cuts to child nutrition,, second in
Women, Infant and Children program cuts and
third in per capita cuts In elem entary and
secondary education and rehabilitation ser­
vices.
— Florida ranked next to last among alt
stales in the size of per capita federal aid cuts
However, the Sunshine Stale ranked in the top
half in cuts to bilingual education, child nutri­
tion, health services, Airport T ru st Fund and
Urban Mass Transit.

James P. Costello, D.D.S.

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�8A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednexday, Jan. 36, ill ]

Amish Thrive But Old Ways Threatened
PARADISE, Pa. (1)PI) — The Amish reject the traditional
American Dream and cling to a simple life despite the in­
creasing threat of worldliness around them.
living by the Bible and close to the land, the estimated 85,000
Old Order Amish in the United States still travel by horse and
buggy and have no electricity in their homes. Far from
dwindling, the so-called Plain People have doubled in number
in the past 20 years because of their high birth rate.
All this has, of course, brought tourists in brightly colored
garb flocking to the “ Pennsylvania Dutch country" of Lan­
caster County to gawk at the Amish, who dress in dark clothes
similar to those worn by their ancestors — Swiss and German
Anabaptists who came to Pennsylvania in the 17th Century to
escape religious persecution.
The reason the Old Order Amish, the most orthodox of the
Christian Mcnnonile sects, have dropped out on the modem
world is their religious belief that salvation lies in detachment
from things of this world.
Detachment, members admit, is becoming increasingly dif­
ficult because the high price and scarcity of local farmland
means more of them must go outside their community for jobs
in shops and factories. That threatens the close-knit family
relationships the Amish consider crucial to their way of life,
also threatened by increasing contact with the tourist hordes.
Some Amish youngsters — who are educated in one-room
schools but slop after the eighth grade — are known to ex­
periment with the ways of the world before they are baptized
as young adults, get married and settle down in the church.
Some reject baptism, a serious step which means they must
give up forever the security of the Amish community.
Members who sow wild oats are likely to reap a bitter har­
vest, which often includes expulsion from the church and
shunning by the faithful.
John Fisher, an Amishman of 70, has suffered the heart­
break of seeing two of his children reject his faith.
"It did add some years to me," said Ffther, who believes in
the practice of shunning.
"The Bible tells us to shun the heretic," he said.
When one of his sons, staunch in the faith, took over his farm,
Fisher went to work as a carriage maker. No Social Security
for him — the Amish pay taxes but refuse all forms of
government assistance.
Some of the black and gray buggies Fisher builds require 200
man hours of work and sell for as high as $2,700. They often are
pulled by sleek trotters that cost even more.
Sgt. Joseph Monvillc of the Pennsylvania Highway Patrol
has for years watched Amish youngsters struggle against the
world.
“They go through a phase in their teens where thev want to
taste the gay life," said Monvillc, explaining that to tne Amish
the "gay life” encompasses all worldly activities prohibited by
the church.
Monvillc, a Roman Catholic, said Amish boys often secretly
own cars which they hide in cornfields or purk at service
stations with the permission of sympathetic owners.
"The Amish kids have their hoedowns," Monvillc said.
"They'll have their music and plenty of beer there. There's
also some private beer parties out in the woods."
Monvllle said Amish youngsters sometimes race their cars
on back roads and frequently there are accidents und arrests
for drunk and reckless driving.
"The wheels give them a chance to sec it all," Monville said.
"They’ve only got a couple of years before they know they
have to settle down. The pressure comes at the point where
they are about to join the church.
"Some of them have had a car, seen the life, seen some
television, seen some X-rated movies, picked up some girls.
Now comes D-Day — time to get married, Join the church, get
port of Dad's farm. It's the day to say 'I'm AmLsh and I'm
going to stay Amish.’"
Monville said he knows many who decided not to join the
church and were "ostracized "

Amish, like other Americans who live close to the soil, are hurt
by high Interest rates and low prices for farm products.
The Amish almost never vote.
" I ’ve never voted In my life," said 58-year-old Henry Esh
"Our way of looking at it is that it’s best to leave things like
that up to a higher hand.”
Esh raised 11 children on his farm before turning it over to
one of his sons. Now he makes and repairs chairs.
“ Business is slow this year," said Esh.
Amish young men will register for the draft but if called to
serve in the military they claim exemption as conscientious
objectors.
The Amish may read a local newspaper but, without elec­
tricity, do not have television.
"There's a lot of corrupt news in the papers," said Eli Stol.
30, an Amish father of five and cabinetmaker.
A typical family outing for the Stol family is to hitch up the
buggy and visit neighbors.
"Twenty-five miles is about as far as you want to go," Stol
said.
Although his church does not recruit members, Stol said he
believes members of other denominations "have the same
chance for salvation as I do."
Abner S. fapp, 30, a highly successful restorer of carriages
for collectors and museums, has fond memories of playing
softball before he settled down to join the church and marry
Becky, his Amish sweetheart.
Somewhat sheepishly he admits to a passing interest in
baseball’s Philadelphia Phillies, whose home games are 53
miles and a world away from his carriage shop in the hamlet of
Intercourse.
1.app, silting at a desk cluttered with papers, a stack of his
business cards and a calculator, said his business is booming.
When he travels on business, he said, he goes by has or train
because Amish do not travel by plane.
For recreation, Ijp p fishes and hunts deer.

Pat liurnley, who with her husband Bob operates a Ihriving
tourist attraction called Kitchen Kettle Village, lias employed
many Amish girls and women as waitresses and to prepare
delicious Pennsylvania Dutch food.
Mrs. Burnley, a Presbyterian, is high in praise for the Amish
as loyal and dedicated employees. She attended classes with
Amish children in the days before the church set up its own
one-room schools und says, "They’ve got a lot going (or them
in their education system."
It is a system that emphasizes the Three It's and employs the
the old Dick and Jane series of readers.
The Rev. l i s t e r Groves, minister of the United Methodist
Church in the hamlet of Bird in Hand, said the Amish are
exceptionally good neighbors.
Amish volunteer firemen in Bird in Hand wilt ride hut not
drive fire engines. When a barn hums down, Amish volunteers
replace it in a m atter of days.
"Die Amish help their non-Amish neighbors as well as each
other," Groves said.
Groves adm ires the Amish for their integrity and sympa­
thizes with them (or having to put up with the invasion of
tourists.
"It's annoying tothem ," Groves said. "Some of them just up
and leave the state. There was a case recently where some
Amish were having a church service in a home. Their buggies
were parked outside. Some tourists pulled up in cars and went
up on the porch and peered through the windows at them and
took pictures.
"That is extremely upsetting to the Amish," said Groves.
"They believe photographs are a graven image."
Groves has seen Amish youngsters park in his church's
parking lot, change their plain clothes for more modern dress
and venture out into “the world."
But the Methodist minister does not doubt that the Amish
who have no churches and hold services in their homes - are
growing in numbers while larger denominations are having

difficulty filling their pews.
The Plain People are plainly out of step.
During the worst unemployment since the Great Depression,
the Amish are hard at work.
In a time of battles over welfare, they do not want — or need
— government assistance. They take care of their own,
housing the aged and handicapped at home.
At a time when American products often cannot compete
with foreign imports, Amish craftsmanship still Ls held in high
esteem
In an industrialized society which rewards individualism
and competitiveness, they seek humility, obedience and social
conformity. Their schools attempt to insulate children from
materialism and consumerism.
Some futurologists even suggest the AmLsh could be a model
for people who have not learned how to avoid the pitfalls of an
increasingly industrialized society.
Centuries of interm arriage among the Amish, however,
have provided a dark side to their story. They have become so
inbred they share afflictions that arc rare outside their
communities exotic blood diseases and congenital sixfinger
dwarfism, for example.
Mrs. l.uettaZook of the Mennonite Information Ministry has
a deep respect for her Amish neighbors.
On a drive through the lush, rolling countryside Mrs. Zook
commented, "You don’t see their women out because this is
Monday — wash day. But they drive the buggies. They work
hard. They visit each other They carry their sewing along
with them."
She pointed to outside phone booths which resembled out­
houses.
"Amish don't have phones in their houses," she explained.
"They believe il disrupts home life. They feel that if they had
them the women might waste time. Time is a God-given
commodity. They don't waste it."

If you’ll have
ceilin g insulation
put up,we’ll put up
part of the cost.

Aaron Zook, an artist who produces three-dimensional works
with skills both as painter and woodcarver, said he was ex­
pelled from the church for his refusal to vote in favor of
shunning an errant member.
His twin brother, also an artist, left the church, too.
"My daddy never condemned us when we left," Zook
recalled, his voice breaking with emotion, “ but it did hurt
Mother and Dad."
Zook remembers his boyhood as a happy time when he and
his brother enjoyed the love of a close-knit family and the
support of Amish neighbors.
"We learned to paint by asing the feathers from a rooster's
tall," he said. "We made all our own toys."
In his blacksmith shop, Amishman Aaron F. Fisher,
pounding a red-hot horseshoe with a mallet as if to emphasize
his words, said, "This country is in trouble, economically and
morally."
Fisher, bearded like all adult Amlshmcn, explained that the

To Begin Feb. 1

Safe Boating
Course Set
A Safe Boating Course will be presented by the Seminole
Power Squadron beginning on Tuesday, Feb.
The 10-week course will provide a basic knowledge of safe
boating practices and procedures. It Is designed to help
boaters enjoy their outings and return home safely.
Hie Seminole Power Squadron encourages families to take
the course together. Anyone 12 years of age or older Is eligible
to enroll.
The instruction Is free; however, there is a nominal charge
of $6 for each set of instructional material.
The Spring 1983 course will be held on Tuesday nights from 7
to 9:30 at the Seminole County Agriculture Center, 3.9 miles
north of State Road 434 on U.S. Highway 17-92.

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, JANUARY 27
Quilt Guild meeting, 7:30 p.m., Patchwork Cottage,
222 E. First St., Sanford.
Seminole Rebekah Lodge 41, 8 p.m,, Odd Fellows
Hall, 107 W Magnolia Ave., Sanford.
Greater Seminole Toastmlatreu d ub, 7:30 p.m.,
Greater Seminole Chamber of Commerce, MalUand
Avenue, Altamonte Springs.
Lake Mary Rotary Club, 8 a.m., Lake Mary High
School.
FRIDAY, JANUARY »
West Volusia Stamp Club, 2 p.m., Jane Murray Hall,
United Congregational Church, W. University Avenue,
Orange City.
Seminole County Democratic Executive Committee,
7:30 p.m., Seminole County Agri-Center, 4300 S.
Orlando Drive, Sanford.

/ v

Our Wfctt-Wjse™ incentive will pay up
to $300 to help qualifying customers haw proper
ceiling insulation installed by a contractor. This could
reduce your air conditioning costs considerably.
If an FPL Home Energy Audit indicates that adding
insulation is beneficial, you’ll receive a Watt-Saver™
certificate.The certificate is redeemable with any par­
ticipating insulation contractor. FPL will verify that
the installation meets our specifications.

Willeveryone benefit fromUbtt-Wise incentives?
Yes.
These incentives are less costly than the oil necessary
to generate the electricity wasted by inefficient homes.
Every 600 kilowatt-hours of electricity not used is a
barrel of oil no one has to pay for. This also helps us
postpone the building of expensive power plants. The
less oil we use, and the less new building we have to
do, the more we can help hold the line on everyone’s
electric bill.

Fbr more information, or to arrange for a Home
Energ&gt;» Audit, send us the coupon or call the Watt-Wise
Line at 1-800-432-6563.
The Watt-Wise Products Program. Another way
weYe working hard at being the kind of power
company you want.
I” ---------------4_ —

--------------------------------- — — — --------------- ----

111 like more information on the following
Watt-Wise incentives:
□ Ceiling Insulation.
□ Water Heating.
□ Solar-Reflective Film.
□ Cooling and Heating.
□ I would like to haw an FPL Home Energy Audit.
N am e_____________________________
Address
Zip

Daytime Tel.

Mail to: Energy Conservation Department,
Florida Power &amp; Light,
P.O. Box 529100, Miami, FL 33152

FPLfffivP

�Evening Herald Sanford- FI

Wednesday *an 26 '783—

U.S. Prepares For Indefinite' W ar On Several Fronts
WASHINGTON til 1*1. — The Pentagon, nmcemedabout its ability to c a m out a sustained war.
has mapped far-reaching plans to pmvulf V S
forces with manpower and equipment t..fn:l i t.,r an
• indefinite period" on several fronts
It has directed the buildup of stoekpih^ t upjH g-i
combat operations b\ U.S, forces in r.umpt s uth
Korea and the Persian Gulf for fin daj
near .
triple the 21 da&gt;s of war reserve- now on hand
In contrast, the Soviet-led Warsaw P.ut i&gt; and In
t S intelligence sources to have stor kpiled enuueli
equipment in Kastcrn Kurupc t, fighl at i.
days
The underlying assumption for tfu loiildup.
outlined in a secret Pentagon diKunu-nl. i- t S
forces must be prepared for wat at am tin The 136-pagc document sets a priority n hieli
peacetime readiness to meet every eiintuineio ■.
and makes it clear the gnnls estalilislied h&gt;r eiu.it
branch of the armed forces may nut lie met \ ei tinnext five-year pl&amp;niimg period because, i a lack of
money and industrial capacity
Idled d ista l 1984-1088 Itefensi lliiiilan.e tfu
document sets forth policy, stralecy. pendine .md
planning priorities for that five-war period and
reflects the thinking of the Pentagon .-tint ..tin ml - t
the National Security Council within th« White
House
A coverimi meinoranduni dated Man h
l'W.'
sinned by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberuer
accompanies the document ft was made available
to United Press International by omrees famihat
with defense issues.
Department of Defense is currently fai short of
the sustaining capability in either manpower i
material to support, without unaeeeptable nsk. Hi.
polit y. strategy and force planning guidun. . fm .
NATO centered global conflict, a Korean eonflot

IN THE
SERVICE

ami a iiH D m Hapnl Deployment Joint lask Puree
oiub.'U operation," the document said
I ne liaptd Deploy tneiit Puree t an call on at least
' 'ini persunnel from all branches of the service and
' afiotis from aircraft carriers to land-based
nditers t' meet a crisis in the Persian Gull The
Pentagon refers to the HDP as the ItDJTP
Mthoui'f Weinberger often has said publicly be
1'insider' leadiness tor war the No I priority over
lb. pin chase of new weapons, the document
provides a clearer picture of the Pentagon's muds
fia irtueumt a peai ctum; posture poised for the
'iliac,ik
war
Dtir first priority t&gt; ty improve existing and
;'i ■. miiii i a 'or
' tfie dortiiiient said, referring
t -ti.itegn nut leai forces. P S troops overseas
and the Hillh Lives second priority to increasing the
teadim " "f fort es fm sell m the United Stales and.
third, to expanding the sire of the armed forces
Mii'iil 1 ! million men and women now are in
uniform
Die pone Planiiini! Guidance ’ section of the
lot miicnt deals chiefly with picpunng fm a con• u tin u i. mil lift ulthniiuh it touches on the need to
: sun a &gt;uige capability" t" speed up the J1HU
l | :i ri pr . ram m modemtre the stratcgi. nuclear
ha i es so they can survive a pr..longed nuclear war
It directs improv ements to the command, control,
' j 11an iniicat ion s and mtellii’encc apparatus
prevent then knockout during an initial nuclear
..Mat k and -ays those systems 'must have the
t&lt; qutsite endurance to support a controlled nuclear
exchange ovei a protracted period.
Die environment of future warfare is likelv to
differ greatly from any we have known hi the past."
the doriitnetil said
i 'ol ii ..gainst Soviet tones and nnssiblv

ABC. A M ER IC A 'S LARGEST

W IN E AND SPIRITS DEALER H A S TH E LOW ER

G IL B E Y ’S

BACARDI
LITER

RUM

99

1*1111-11* It. HOHNK
Pyf P h ilip tthQdtt Horni* son til
Mr And Mrs W illiam R ussell
Horne pi S56 Oiik C o u rt Winter
Springs, recently returned hnme
ort 12 d.iys Iravt* from Pam s
island h C after ^ompletm o II
weeks of recruit training
Dunnq training. Horne* received
♦orm.il instruction in first aid,
physical Illness, m arksmanship,
dose combat techniques. M arine
Corps history, custom s and
courtesy d r i l l and nuclear
toto i(Hi 11a l a nd t ti t*m i c a l w a r f a r e
t ciHowinq tus leave he w ill
report to MAT SO W Naval Air
Station Memphis
Tend
tor
form al instruction ip the aviation
baste electrical and electronics
course
Horne -s a IVS2 graduate of
Ovedo H«gh School

D O N A L D F . H V IU )
Tech Sgt Donald F
Byrd
sfepson oi Robert v Hell of «33
Wedge wood D rive N . W inter
Spring has bem decorated with
the u 5 A ir fo rce Comtnendaf *on
M edal at in u rliK A ir Base
Turkey
The A ir f orce Commendation
Medal i% awarded to those m
dividuals who demonstrate out
standing
achievem ent
or
mentortous servee In the per
form atter of fheir duties on behalf
of the Air f orce
Byrd is a fuels technician v^ifh
the IVth Supply Squadron

^ f l n i S E A G R A M ’ S V .O .
■ 6 Y R . C AN AD IAN
&gt;1.(11110"
yO

TONY R. TURNER
Tony Ray Turner, son of M r and
Mrs Carlton Ray Turner ot 106 Sir
Lawrence Drive. Sanlord
has
enlisted in the United States
M arine Corps
Turner will depart January 10
lor II weeks of recru il training at
the Marine Corps R ecruit Depot,
Parris island, S C Upon com
pletion ol recruit training. Turner
w ill be home lor a 10 day leave
b efore going Dn lo r fu rth e r
technical framing m a to tm a l
M arine Corps school
Turner enluted tor tour years
with a guaranteed assignment in
m ilit a r y
p o lic e c o r r e c t io n s
specialists
Me s a senior at Seminole M gh

School

s a f e
ft
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» 1 1 .9 9

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ROYAL DELUXE
L.TEii .V O D K A
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* SANFORD
H w y. 1 7 -9 2 S O U T H C IT Y L I M I T S

★ LONGWOOD

69

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★ * ALTAMONTE
Hwy. 436 ONE BLOCK

PHILLIPE FRENCH
BRANDY

CHRISTIAN
BROTHERS

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6 .7 9
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1.75 LTR

GALLO
C R EA M
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3 .6 9
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CARLO
ROSSI
CHABLIS

NICOLAS FRINCH

G O LD SEAL Chiblis
Moulin A Vint
CHABLIS
Ctiatiiuniul di Pspa

3 .9 9

3 .9 9

(0(0 WES.. JAM. 21

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BLEND 4 ”

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(OOP Wto. JAN Zt

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95*
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750 ML

6 .9 9

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1 1 .9 9

CARTON
AMERICA S OLDEST CORDIAL MAKIR

Cram. d . Cocao,
P.pp.rm lnt Schnappt,
Anll.tta, Sloa Oin

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MINIATURES
^StUCtON ^
VODKA. GIN. RUM. SEAGRAM S SCOTCH .49
CALVERT EXTRA
.70
SEAGRAM S V.O.
.90
GORDON S GIN
.62
DEWAR S SCOTCH
1.37
WOLFSCHMIOT VODKA
.63
JACK DANIELS BU C K
.95
BACARDI RUM
.65
SOUTHERN COMFORT
.75
PASSPORT SCOTCH
.50
CHRISTIAN BROS BRANDY
1.19

3 L IT E R A B C
C A L IF . W IN E

750 ML

BEER SPECIALS
^ 3STAG
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UNIT Oil n i CUStOMER W/COUPON
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ABC
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Macodamia Nuts 2 .5 9

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CARLO ROSSI
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CHEESE CURLS

a

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GLASSES

1

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or ton .9 9

6 .4 9

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3 *6 9

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5 .9 9

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5 .2 9

(OOD TUCS i l l l

6000 MOA JAN ]l

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RED ROSE

5 &gt; c b a s tia n i

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D O M A IN E
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6 .6 9

4 .9 9

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ALMADEN
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6 .4 9

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BUY10BOTTLES,(000
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/ MIX ANY 6-46.10

COCOiMUAS:. JAN. 27

LA BELLA &lt; 99
LA
I■ /750
ml
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nB
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A UVSdCwO
30 mi

69

6PK I/O Z HOOM TEMP -UOttLES

OIBMAN RHINE IITATIS 7 SO ML
'75 Rauenlhal Stiintsch Vaa Siramiri 4 .4 9
'75 Kitdrich Sitdgrab - Greaaistayi 4 .9 9
'80 RudtJhim Bischefshirg • Sluts S .3 9
'79 Giisihtia Fecks KibHFem h
4 .7 9
'76 Gcisnhtia M m r Spit H For sch 4 .9 9
79 Hochhsin Diabhias Spit Stiati 7 .4 9
'76 Winkalir Dicks Spat Alltndorf
4 .4 9
'76 Hatliakiia Pfsllii Spsl-Scksa
B .9 9
'76 Oeslrichcr Oats Spal Schoabora B.99
'76 Kicdricktr SaadgruB Spat Eltz
9 .9 5
'76 Winkslir Hitsispruf A u iE u r 9 .9 5
'76 Johaniis Voglsing AusGtr omont 1 1.95

Monla Carlo Bianco
Pinol Bianco Negroni
Rubinadi Altavilla
Slridi Chianti
Bacchus Lambrusco
Bicciro Limbruseo
Stridi Orvialo
Strada Virdicchio
Slridi Chianti Classico
Brini Chianti Classico
Prodis Asti Spuioante

W ILD TU R K EY

79

I 15 LTR

ITALIAN

101° 8 YR.

K O N IG S B A C H ER * 3 .6 9
PINK CHABLIS
1 .6 9
BURGUNDY . CLARET B L A T Z *
C A R LIN G ilk label* 1 .7 9
•OTUED IN CALK A!
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1 .5 9
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1 .8 9
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14.49EA. BY THE CASE 53.88

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5 .4 9

7 .8 9

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SCOTCH

1 .5

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2 .9 9
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3 .9 9

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LIQUOR

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EAST OF 1-4 - OPEN SUNDAY

6 9
LITER

C A SE 89 SO

W IL L IA M It. H A U S E R .lit.

Marine Ptc Michael K Blythe,
son ol Mack and Mas.i Blythe ot
151 Pme Tree Road, LaXc M ary,
has reported tor duty wnth Ird
Marine A ircrai! Wing, M arine
Cor os Air Facility Camp Pen
dtelon, Calil

BLACK
VELVET
CANADIAN

CASE OF 12 - 8 0 .2 5

C H O IC E

OouqlAV Prank Coudlioon, von
ol Mrs Eleanor Covsabooo o*
G olum rotl hav m l,v ie d in the
U n ite d State. M a rin e Corps
Cossaboon departed today tor II
weeks ot recruil lra ,m n p at the
M a rin e Corps P e c ru d Depot.
P arris IWand. S C Upon com
p le tio n ol re c ru it
tra in in g .
Cossaboon w ill be home lor a 10
day leave before qomu on tor
further trchmcal tra,n ,n q in a
lorm at Marine Corps school
Cossaboon enlisted to r tour
years with a guaranteed asvqn
ment n the Marine Corps combat
program

M IC H A E L K. B L Y T H E

6

o

DOUGLAS F. FOSSA BOON

Stall Sgt W illiam R Mauser Jr
son ol Wllham R and Ann.e M
Hauser ol 403 Cherokee Lane,
Sanlord. has arrived lo r duty at
F ort R,ley. Kan
Mauser, a microwave systems
repairer with the l? ls l Signal
Battalion, was previously assigned
in Karlsruhe, West Germany
Me iS a 1931 qraduate ot
Seminole High School

OLD C R O W
BOURBON

LITER

EARLY
T IM E S

C A S E O P 0 • 6 4.70

IT S 4 Y U S B ETTER

. . . SAVE U P T O 4 0 % . . . AS M UCH AS $3 A B O TTLE

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W IS ER ’ S 10 YR .
C A N A D IA N BOND

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(lie I S. It is p r i m a r i l y t h e s e s e r v i e e m e n a m i w o m e n o n w h o m w ill t a ll th e
b u r d e n o l r e p e l l i n g a h o s t ile a t t a c k a n y w h e r e in t h e w o r ld ( o n e e i tie d a lm u t
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VODKA

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Soviet-supplied forces, will be of higher intensity
and longer duration, with weapons of much greater
accuracy and possibly higher rates of fire and
mobility
It will feature intensive electronic warfare and
possible chemical, biological and nuclear weapons
Most Simula n o th . our principal adversary will
have acquired, a decade hence, the capabilities to
keepoiir land-based surface and naval forces under
near const apt surveillance, locale units and
facilities precisely throughout tile length and
breadth of the area of operations and engage those
tents amt facilities in near real-time."
Heal time ts Pentagon language to describe an
inslant when •something occurs
li e document makes these other points;
lie Army should maintain the commitment to
1 1 inf on e its b n divisions now deployed with NAT* •
fore's iii I urope with another six divisions,
tti.iiriuin ■'I. division m South Korea, and hold five
,thet divisions "at an appropriate level of
icadiness" for deployment with the HDD
llu \av v should plan fur a fleet of 14 an . rafti arrn-r. liatth ur.'Ups there now are 12 audio
provide Hire, . artier task forces to support a
lauding in the Persian Gulf
iht Mi Kon e should Is- able to provide P .
a mgs ..{ la. tu al fighters as part of the PDF
Special operations furies, a euphemism for
, mrriih.s, . ..mmatulos and other Itohind-lhe-liues
fnditei s. must lie revitalized 'to project F S (rowei
where the u&gt;e of eon vent tonal forces would he
premature, inappropriate or infeasible."
llu document directs such forces be "sued,
urn till ed and specially trained and equipped to be
able to exploit Sov iet and surrogate vulnerabilities
it. I uri'pi . Northeast Asia. Southwest Asia and
F.tin America

, ,

A N C IE N T
AG E 8 6 ° . V , 0 uua

iin ii one rtn custom n m coupon
6000 TUELfll. I
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BLUE
CHAMPAGNE Jm /bomi NUN
LIMIT ONE PEI CUSIOMil . COUPON
6 9

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SPORTS
I0A —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jcn.lt, m 3

T o n ig h t

G ood N ew s

B a s k e tb a ll
,

7:13 p.m.
ICC men at Daytona Beach
Conch B ill Payne'S Raiders put their
lour game winning streak on the line
tonight at Daytona Beach against coach
Ray Ridenour's Scots.
Daytona Beach, 16 5 and 11, has
stumbled lately, losing close games to
Valencia and Central Florida Despite the
losses, the Scots are stilt ranked seventh
in the state and are always a tough toe lo r
Seminote, especially in the Daytona
Beach gym.
The Scots ire a high scoring outfit
which can really Shoot the ball, according
to SCC assistant Terry Woods Two
DeLand graduates — Fred Hinson and
John Ramsey
are two ol the better
players.
The Raiders, meanwhile, are on a roll.
Luis Phelps, a 6 6 freshman, has been a
consistent inside threat along w ith Iresh
man Delvln Everett Rudy Kuiper, a 4 to
center, (lashed some ol his old fo rm while
sco rin g 16 points M onday. K u ip e r
severely inlured his ankle on Dec. IS and
has been slow to recuperate.
Keith Whitney, Ricky Sutton, David
Gallagher, Jim m y Payton and Jerry
Smith have given the Raiders excellent
guard play during the tour wins Whitney
tossed in 77 points Monday, Sutton plays a
steady game and is a good rebounder,
Gallagher and Payton are superb passers
and Smith does everything welt. He had
eight rebounds and sis assists Monday.
Tonight w ill be homecoming to r Smith
and Payton Smith played lo r M ainland's
super team of a lew years ago while
Payton was an all conference guard lo r
Spruce Creek's district, conference and
regional championship learn ol last year.
I p.m
Boone at Seminole boys
None ot Chris M arlettc's Fighting
Seminoles has lorgolten the opening
season overtim e loss to the Boone Braves.
The Tribe also lost to Boone In the Burger
King M etro Christmas Tournament at
Valencia
Coach Wayne Rickman b rings In a
im a rl team led by senior shooter Andrew
Hungerlord and leaper Lenny Grace.
Mungerlord tore up the Seminotes In
earlier games and Grace has given them
problems on the boards Craig M aleer ts a
good point guard
The 'Noles, nevertheless, are playing
their best basketball ot the season Calvin
" K ik l" Bryant is burning the nets Irom
the outside while Willie M itch e ll and
W illiam Wynn are controlling the back
boards Senior Vernon Law and junior
Bruce F ranklin are top assist men while
Jim m y G llchrisl has been tough o lt the
bench Just eligible Sieve Alexander'
should help against tones Junior varsity
action begins at 6 15 p m

6:10 p.m.
Oviedo vs. croom i at Seminole
The Crooms Panthers are closing in on
another unbeaten season Coach John
M cNam ara's unsellIsh crew has won 17
straight this year without a toss Over the
last ?'&gt; years, the Santord ninth grade
has won 51 consecutive games.
th e Panthers tromped Oviedo earlier
this year, but the Lions have picked up
Iwo good players since then and Lake
Brantley coach Fred L illie says Crooms
should he wary
Robert H ill tossed In a career high 79
points Monday when Crooms whipped
Bishop Moore He is joined in the starting
lineup by Alvin Jones. D aryl W illiam s.
M ike W right and Dexter F ra n klin Melvin
Brinson Is the top reserve

Soccer
l:Mp.m.
Seminole at Trinity Prep
Coach ’ Howard Hawkins' booters are
looking lo r their third win o l the season
today against Trinity Ptep, the nlthranked 3A team In the stale. Seminole has
lost nine
Seniors Ricky Nooney and Paul G riff in
provide the main ollcnslve spark lor the
Tribe while the best detenders are Robert
lannone, Stan Bacon and Scott Meek
I p.m.
Central Florida at Lake M ary
Coach L a rry McCorkle's Rams are the
hosts tonight In a game which was
switched Irom Sorrento to Lake mary.
Despite Its IA status, Florida Central is
usually a good soccer learn
Lake M ary, 7 6. has Joe D allon in the
net again and he turned In • good per.
torm ance in a narrow 2 I lo st to Lake
Brantley, one of the state’s lop &lt;A teams.
Andre Sanders hat lik e n over Ihe of
tensive burden since big scorer Donald
K elly has been slowed by mononucleosis.

W re s tlin g
ip.pt.
Lake Mary at Sprue* Creek
Coach Frank S chw arlt't Rams arc
coming o ff a loss lo powerful Bishop
Moore, but shouldn't have too much
trouble w ith Spruce Creek,
Lake M ary, 7 7 1, continues lo get
strong performances from Jack Likens
(lOP), Robert Rawls (UNL), Bob Olson
I U I ) , Ned Kolb|ornscn ( I l f ) . W illi*
Green (170) and Ed A d tt (721).

Raines Signs
Sanford's Tim Raines has agreed to
term s with the Montreal Expos for a oneyear contract for the same money and
incentive clauses which he earned last
year.
Raines, who batted .278 and stole 78
bases while making the starting outfield
of the National League All-Star team,
will earn a (280,000 base salary with
incentive clauses worth up to ( 100,000.
"I don't think I deserved a better
contract," Raines said Tuesday. "1 don't
feel like I had a very good year."
Raines admitted a dependency on
cocaine toward the end of the season last
year. He was admitted to a drug
rehabilitation center in Orange County
C alifornia and com pleted a 30-day
program.
"After going to the institution, I feel 111
be a better player," *aid Raines. 'T il
have better control of m y self."
Raines is currently residing in West
Palm Beach where he is working out with
a local high school. He is expected to
return for the Seminole County Sports
Hall of F$me induction ceremonies on
Feb. 2 during halftime of the Seminole
Community College-Lake City basketball
game. — SAM COOK

Howell Boys Snap Long Losing Streak
By BRENT SMARTT
Herald Sports Writer
Finally it’s over. All the jokes can
end. I-ako Howell has won n basketball
game.
An Efrem Brooks layup with 14
seconds to play complemented by a
desperation missed'jumpshot by take
Mary’s Reginald Mcdlock ended a
thirty-nine game skid over a threeseason period.
“ The key to the gome was our freethrow shooting," exclaimed an elated
Like Howell roach Greg Robinson.
“ Down the stretch we hit our free
throws and they missed their op­
portunities." Howell hit 16 of 25 while
the Rams converted 9 of 16.
Falling on hard tim es in the second
period after grabbing a 17-10 first
quarter edge, the Hawks trailed at the
half 27-23 to the young and quick Hams
of coach Willie Richardson.
After the half. Robinson’s Hawks
regained composure to rebound lo a
slight 37-35 lend to head into the final
stanza. Much of Howell's success was
in the steady play of junior guards
Brouks, Skip Gordon, and Ed Norton.
The Howell guards weren't the only
guards to shine as ta k e Mary’s
Mcdlock and Billy Dunn did some
dutch scoring while junior Darryl
M erlhie manned the boards for
Richardson's Rains.
Tlie fourth and final stanza was a
contest in itself. With the score sec-

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

V ernon L aw (le ft) S e m in o le g u a r d , d ro p s in tw o [m ints o v e r
M a in la n d 's D a v id H inson. T h e T r ib e ro c k e d th e H u e s. 7;MX T u e sd a y .

Tribe Trims Bucs
For Five Star Lead
U y SAM COOK

Herald Sporis Editor
Sanford’s Fighting Seminoles took a
convincing -slt-|&gt; toward the Five Slai
Conference championship Tuesday night
by overw helm ing Daytona Bench
Mainland, 73-48, al Seminole High
School.
The victory lips the Tribe record to 14-7
for the year and more importantly 8*1 in
the Five Star. Mainland fell to 6-4 in
conference and 0-8 overall. Delj i rid.
behind 10 Chase Brown free throws in the
last 1:05 of the game, turned hack Spruce
Creek, 07-452 Tuesday. Del-and Is 8-2 ami
Spruce Creek is 7-3. The Tribe plays at fi-4
l.yman Friday.
“I'm im pressed," said Mainland coach
DickToth. "People have been telling me
‘that Seminole would win the district' and
after seeing them twice iboth losses I, I
believe them ."
* Despite Toth's declaration, he wasn't a
believer in the first period. Mainland
jumped to a 7-2 lead over the sluggish
Seminoles before Calvin "Kiki" Bryant
tossed In a 25-foot bomb, point guard
Vernon "Pokle" taw hit a 10-fouter,
Bryant clicked again and Law hit two
more to pull Sanford within 13-12 at the
end of the quarter.
"We've got a 7*2 lead and a kid misses
a wide-open layup," moaned Toth. "It
wasn't a turning point, but we still should
have come out of the quarter with a
bigger lead."
Tlie first eight minutes were messy.
Both team s committed six turnovers and
the 'Noles were whistled lor four fouls.
It didn't take long for Sanford to
assume control, however. Bryant hit his
flrsi shot 10 seconds into the second
quarter, Steve Grey stole Ihe hall and
feed Willie Mitchell for a layup and
William Wynn dropped in a soft baseline
jumper fur an 18*13 lead.
The lead grew lo 10 points midway
through the quarter when ncwly-cligiblc
Steve Alexander popped off the bench
anil threw in a 22-footer for a 26-16 bulge.
Mainland didn't get its first field goal
until 1:44 rem ained in the half when Will
Anderson scored on a nice baseline move
to pull the Bucs within 28-20.
That m argin, however, would be the
closest Mainland would be the rest of the
game. Ironically, it was the usually high
scoring Anderson's only two points of the
game as foul trouble and a lough baseline
defense kept the wraps on the 6-2 senior.
“ We played excellent defense on
Anderson." confirmed Tribe coach Chris
Marletle. "The two limes we’ve played
them, we’ve been able to take them out of
their game plan."
Toth was the first to agree.. “ Ander­
son’s a baseline player," he said. "San­
ford's taken his game away both limes.
When the L um berjack (A nderson)
doesn’t score, there goes our inside
game."
Bryant tore the Bucs up just before lialf
with two free throws, a layup on a nice
feed from 1a w , and a pretty bank shot
from five feet with two seconds left for a

P re p B a s k e tb a ll
35-22 lead.
The6-1 sharpshooter Ml 14 of his gamehigh 23 points in the firsi 16 minutes.
Mainland didn’t help itself by missing ihe
front end of four one plus ones. The Bucs
lilt just 7 &lt;d 22 field goals for 32 percent
while the 'Noles converted 16 of 3) for 52
percent.
*
Marletle used his bench liberally
during the second half as second-learners
Grey, Alexander, Scott Clayton and
Jimmy Gilchrist turned in solid per­
formances.
"We have good depth al guard," said
Marlclte. "Grey and Clayton really work
hard in practice. 1 just told coach
(Waynei Talbot, ‘We're going lo use
these guys, I don't care what the score
is.’"
Grey combined for several steals on
the press while Gilchrist, a fi-i junior,
was intimidating underneath, blocking
four shots. Alexander chipped in eight
points.
Tlie lead grew to 15 al the end of Ihe
third period on a Bruce Franklin free
throw and when Alexander hit two more
free tosses with 1:18 to play, the Tribe
hud its first 25-polnl bulge, 71-46.
Seminole dropped 18 consecutive free
throws In the fourth quarter until
Alexander missed u technical foul shot.
For the game, Sanford was a scorching
27 of 33.
Law followed Bryant in the scoring
column with 15 points while Mitchell hud
eight. Mitchell controlled the boards with
12 rebounds. Bryant added 10 while
Gilchrist had nine.
David Hinson paced the Bucs with 13
points while Val Irick added 10, all in the
final quarter.
In the Junior varsity game. Mainland,
9-2, converted three free throws in the
final 21 seconds to hold off Seminole, 5551.
James Rouse and Eugene Nathan,
joining the JV from the varsity squad,
had 16 and nine points, respectively.
Terry Marshall added 10.
MAINLAND 148)
Morris 13-4 5, Burks 4 2-6 10, Anderson
10- 2 2, Bell 0 4-7 4, Hinson 5 3-713, Duhart
1 0-0 2, Harris 0 2-2 3, Irick 5 0-2 10,
Flowers 004)0, Scott 00-00, tawis 00-00,
Totals 17 14-30 48.
SEMINOLE (731
taw 4 7-715, Wynn 2 (Ml 4, Bryant 8 7-7
23, Mitchell 3 2-2 8, Franklin 0 545 5,
Clayton 02-5 2, Grey 11-13, Gilchrist 21-2
5, Alexander 3 2-3 8, Holloman 0 M 0,
Walker 0 0-0 0, Robinson 0 0-0 0, Totals 23
27-33 73.
Mainland
13 9 10 17—48
Seminole
12 23 12 28—73
Total fouls - Mainland 23, Seminole l l .
Fouled oul
Irick. Technical
Flowers.
See BASKETBALL, page UA

Prep Baskeiball

fly with a jumper, off the front of the
rim, Gordon grabbed the rebound and
the streak was history.

After the game, Robinson saw no
sawing back and forth all period, both problfin with a victory over a squad
clubs played a wide-open playground with no seniors. "1 Just wanted the kids
style. The Rams. KM, employing a zone to win, they (ta k e Mary) have a fine
press, got three straight buckets from team."
Mcdlock lo pull within one at 45-44 with
Topping the balanced Howell scoring
4:39 left. I-akc Howell, exchanging was Gordon with 13 followed by Norton
Ram buckets for free-throws, 11 of 12 in and Brooks with 12 apiece. John
the last six minutes, regained a 54-53 Hamrick contributed 11 with nine
lend with 1:30 remaining on a clutch rebounds while Fred McNeil had 10
Brook’s driving jumper.
boards in the team effort. Like Mary’s
From here the Rams worked the
Mcdlock topped all scorers with 17
dock to 42 seconds before calling time
followed by Dunn with 15.
out.
In junior varsity action, Crocket
After the break, the Rains worked the
Bohannon
i26| and Jcron Evans il2&gt;
ball inside for a nifty Jeff Reynolds turn
around jumper to retake a 55-54 Ram combined for 38 points in leading Like
lead at :25. Howell, now 1-15, promptly Howell over the JV Rams, 56-48, lo up
the Hawk’s record lo 6-8.
called a time out of its own.
Upon inbounding the ball, ta k e Mary
LAKE MAHY (55)
shifted into a hustling man-to-man
Counts 3 1-2 7. Merthie 4 0-1 8.
press to keep Howell from reaching its
Reynolds 2 0-4) 4, Grayson 2 0-1 4,
basket.
Mcdlock 7 3-3 17, Anderson 0 04) 0, Dunn
After an inbound pass and a return
5
5-9 15, Totals 23 9-1G 55.
pass to Gordon, he spotted a wide-open
Brooks, who bad slipped through the IAKE HOWELL (56|
Brooks 6 0-0 12. Gordon 6 1-4 13,
Bam press, under the Hawk bucket.
Hamrick
2 7-8 11, McNeil 3 0-2 6, Norton
After catching andconverting a Gordon
pass into a 56-55 lead Richardson's 3 6-912, Wood 0 2-2 2, Totals 20 16-25 56.
10 17 8 20 — 55
squad again used a time-out with just 14 take Mary
l-akc Howell
17 6 14 19 56
seconds left lo play,
When play returned, Medlock
Total fouls - Like Mary 16, ta k e
received the inbound pass and scurried Howell 14, Fouled out' - Counts,
down court lo the lop of the key. lotting Technicals — Brooks

Bad N ew s
Lady Hawks Will Forfeit 17 Victories
By CHRIS F1STER
Herald Sports Writer
While Ihe celebrating reached a
zenith Tuesday night when the Lake
Howell boys snapped a 39-game losing
streak by nipping la k e Mary, it only
told half the story at the Lake Howell
school.
There was no celebrating by coach
Dennis Codrey’s girls’ team after
standout junior forward Chiquita Miller
was found to be in violation of a
residency rule which will cost the Lady
Hawks 17 victories.
"I received a call from (Lake Howell
Principal) Dick E vans," said Fred
Rozelle, executive secretary of the
F lorida High School Activities
Association. “Evans said ‘he had an
eligibility problem and was removing
Ihe girl (Miller) from competition.
"I haven't received a forma) letter on
it yet, so 1 can't really comment on the
m atter, but It sounds like a residency
problem." Roiclle added.
Miller, who is averaging 21.7 points
and 15.3 rebounds, lived with her
parents last year In Cairo, Ga., ac­
cording to Codrey. She Is currently
living with her aunt in the Lake Howell
school district.
In order to be eligible for athletic

participation, a student must establish
a one-year residency in the school
district. The student is eligible the first
day after the year, according to
Rozelle.
Evans said Wednesday a Seminole
County administrator, "questioned her
(Miller's) eligibility." Evans refused to
reveal the administrator.
According to FHSAA bylaws, for
Miller to be eligible a hardship waiver
would have to be reviewed by the
FHSAA directors to determine if she
qualified. This hardship m ust be
submitted before the season. Miller
also played on the ta k e Howell
volleyball team this past fall, also a
violation of the rules.
Codrey, meanwhile, said, he didn't
know Miller was In violation of the
rules. The second-year coach said he
was not familiar with the eligibility
requirements.
“ The poor kid cried about eight hours
Monday," said Codrey. "She Just came
down here to live with her aunt. She left
a better basketball program up there
(Georgia). There wasn’t any recruiting
involved."
Miller was the first substitute on the
Cairo state championship team of last
year as a sophomore. She moved to the

(

M ,

E i

C H IQ U IT A M IL L E R
Lake Howell d istric t before the
beginning of the school year.
On Monday, the Lady Hawks played
Daytona Beach Seabreeze without
Miller and lost. It was their first set­
back after 10 consecutive victories
which had given them a 17-1 record a
seventh-place ranking in the 4A Prep
Poll.
“It was one of the toughest things I
ever had to do to tell the girls," said
Codrey. "They were broken-hearted.
They've worked for everything they've
accomplished. They’ve been through
some tough years here.
"But, I guess, that's the rule.”

Seminoles Hold Off Ridge; Brantley Tops Crabs
Mona Benton tossed in a game-high 19
points and Muxinc Campbell added 12 as
Seminole High’s Lady Seminoles claimed
a 55-48 victory over Oak Ridge Tuesday
night at Oak Ridge.
Oak Ridge got off to a fast start and
built a 26-23 lead by lialftime but
Seminole came back lo outscore the lady
Pioneers, 32-22 in the second half.
Seminole raised its record to 12-7 overall
and stands 7-3 in the Five Star Con­
ference.
Patricia Campbell and Diedre Hillery
chipped in wilh nine points apiece for the
Tribe who takes or Lyman Friday night
al l.yman.
SEMINOLE (5$)
Benton 19, Hillery 9, M. Campbell 12, P.

Prep Basketball
Campbell 9, Jones 4, Stallworth 2. Totals:
22 11-21 55.
OAK RIDGE (U)
Cox 4, tav y G, Martin 18, Maggi 2,
Reese 3, McKenna 2, Postell 4, Coats 9.
Totals: 22 4-9 48.
In other girls action, Rhonda Vazquez
poured in 22 points, grabbed seven
rebounds and handed out (our assists as
tak e Brantley slipped past Seabreeze,
39-34 at Daytona Beach.
Vazquez hit nine field goals and played
string music from the free throw line
hitting 4 of 4 shots. Linda Trimble added

12 points and six rebounds while Michell
Brown added four points and si
rebounds.
The I.ady Patriots are now 8-11 overa!
and are still in the running In the Fiv
Star Conference with a 6-5 conferenc
mark, ta k e Brantley hosts Mainlan
Friday night in another im portan
conference matchup.
LAKE BRANTLEY (19)
Vazquez 22, Trimble 12, Brown J
Pritchett 1. Totals; 17 5-9 39.
SEABREEZE (34)
Willis 9, Toliver 9, Dewberry 3, Wesle
10, Sehgal 3. Totals: 11 12-25 34.
Total fouls: Lake B rantley 21
Seabreeze 12. Fouled out: Nunez, Browr
Technicals: None.

Bishop Moore Sticks Greyhounds, 44-20
Bishop Moore's powerful Hornets ran
their consecutive dual meet victory
streak lo 20 in succession Wednesday
night, subduing Lyman, 44-20, at Lyman
High School. Tlie Hornets arc 12-0 this
year.
“ We had four ninth graders in the first
six weight classes and they're just too
strong there," said Lyman coach Skip
Pletzer whose squad continues to be hit
by injuries. The 'Hounds were without
Pat Bell GOB), Joey lockwood (129) and

Prep Wrestling
Jay Hunziker (115),
Four Greyhounds turned In victories,
the most impressive continued lo be
senior Dirk Smith who pinned John
Dekelva (189) in 3:18,
Other victories came from Mike Hill
1223) who pinned Don Brown in 3:30,
Robert "Tootle" Quesinberry &lt;158) who

l umed in a 7-2 decision over Mike
McDeed and Mike Wassetman who
rebounded from a 9-8 deficit in the fourth
period for a 13-9 victory over Greg
Gruesnmyer.
The Greyhounds, 3-5-2, host Satellite
Beach in a varsity only malch Saturday.
Lyman's Chris Battle 11011 was named
Red tab ster Wrestler of the Month for his
victory over Paul Cina of fak e Howell
last Friday.

Georgia Free Throws Skin Gators, 83-79
GAINESVILLE (UP1) - Georgia beat
Florida where it w asn't supposed to
Tuesday night — at the foul line.
The Bulldogs sank 19 of 23 charity shots
to down the Gators 83-79 in the only
Southeastern Conference action.
The victory pushed Georgia into a five­

way tie for second place in the SEC
standings, one game behind Kentucky,
which is 5-2 and 133 overall. Georgia,
also 13-3 overall, is deadlocked with
T ennessee, Auburn, M ississippi and
Vanderbilt at 4-3 in SEC play.
"The gam e was won at the foul line,"

r ••

- * *

said Georgia coach Hugh Durham. "
made 19 of 23 but more Important,
kept them off the line. They’ve tx
averaging between 25 and 30 a game (
they only went there 23 limes and mi
17. That was a factor."

�Wednesday,jlan. H. 1M1-I1A

Evening Herald,Sanford, FI.

S c o re c a rd

SPORTS

Dog Racing

IN BRIEF

Tip Top Coasts To Win;
Electric Crushes Feds
Tip Top Supermarket blared to a 34-6 halftime lead
and coasted to a $6-26 victory over Atlantic Bank In
Sanford Recreation D epartm ent Junior League
basketball action at Westside Center.
Tarrance Carr poured in a game-high 26 points,
Bobby Coefield tossed in 13 and Sammy Edwards
added 12 for Tip Top while Anthony Harris’ eight points
led Atlantic Bank.
In other action, Ondreus Redding connected for 16 o f .
his game-high 28 points in the third quarter as Sanford
Electric crushed First Federal, 68-18.
Sanford Electric outscored First Federal, 24-2 in the
third quarter after taking a 24-14 halftime advantage.
Behind Redding, George Irwin added 16 points,
Harrison Hampton 12 and “Steady" Eddie Charles
netted 10 for Sanford Electric.
In Intermediate League action, the Colts put up a
good fight despite playing with Just four players and
dropped a 64-55 decision to the Rams.
Darryl Williams led the Rams with 20 points while
Horace Knight and Richard Roberts added 14 apiece.
Charles Ruffin poured in 21 points for the Colts, Brian
Dcbose and Kerry Hunter tossed in 15 apiece.

G o o d Night For Lyman
Donald Monk scored the only goal of the night as
Lyman edged Oviedo, 1-0 Tuesday night in high school
soccer action. The Greyhounds now stand 8-1 for the
season while Oviedo fell to 4-4.
Lyman dominated most of the game but couldn't
m anage to slip in a goal until Monk did in the second
half. The Greyhounds took 32 shots on goal and 21 were
saved by the Lions' goalie. Oviedo look just nine shots
on goal.

0 0 -0
0 t- I

Oviedo
Longwood Lyman

O o a lt— Monk Shalt on goal — Oviedo*. Lyman 77 S a vtt —
Oviedo 71, Lyman 10. Corner k lc k t — Oviedo 1, Lyman 7.
Records — Oviedo « 4, Lym an S I

In girls soccer action, Lyman went into sudden death
and came away with a narrow 2-1 victory over Vero
Beach. Alyson Barnes scored twice in sudden death for
the l,ady Greyhounds and Dawn Boyeson added one os
Lyman improved its record jlo 6-1._______________
G oalt — Ranton. Lorenr. Sudden death: Vann. M ille r;
Boysen A Barnet 7 Shots on goal: Vero Beach 70. Lyman 30

Sox M ay

Choose Jenkins

CHICAGO lUI’I) — About the only player the
Chicago White Sox are certain not to choose in the
second go-round of their player compensation selection
is New York Yankees’ southpaw Rudy May.
The White Sox scheduled a news conference today to
announce their new pick after the American league
ruled Tuesday, May, their original pick, was not
eligible to be drafted because he had a no-trade con­
tract.
It was speculated the Sox may take the Chicago
Cubs’ leading pitcher last year, veteran Ferguson
Jenkins, who, surprisingly, was not protected by the
Sox’ crosstown rivals.

Flyers 'M aul' Devils,

5- ?

United Press International
What began as “sound, systematic hockey" by the
Philadelphia Flyers erupted into a free-for-all midway
through the second period.
But, in spite of it, the Flyers tied a 5-1 beating on the
New Jersey Devils Tuesday night in Philadelphia, as
rookie goalie Bob Frocse extended his winning streak
to seven straight in the game m arred by the ejection of
five players.
in other games, Detroit clipped Vancouver, 6-2,
Quebec belted Winnipeg, 6-3, St. Ixiuis and Minnesota
played to a 4-4 tie and Calgary topped Los Angeles, 8-6 .

Kam ikaze Press Lifts Rebels
United Press International
Sidney Green simply staled the obvious.
“ Everybody is up for us now that we're the only
unbeaten team around," the 6-(oot-9 forward said
Tuesday night, after No. 8 Nevada-1 j »s Vegas rallied
from a.l7-polnt second-half deficit for a 77-73 victory
over Cal-Santa Barbara. "We came too far to end It
here agaiftst Santa Barbara, although they did play
well."
Nearly well enough to knock off the Runnin' Rebels.
It took a kamikaze full-court press and the accurate
free-throw shooting of freshman Eldridge Hudson and
Danny Tarkanlan in the final minutes before Nevada1a s Vegas could celebrate its 17lh victory without a
loss.
At Gainesville, Fla., Vent Fleming scored 20 points,
including 7 straight midway through the first half, to
carry Georgia, 13-3.
In other games, Southwestern lauisiana shaded
Stetson, 71-69, Texas Christian topped Texas A&amp;M. 6750, Boston College dumped Pittsburgh, 6863, Mar­
quette beat Duquesne, 7263,

Hayes Benched, Rockets Win
United P ress Interaatioaal
l a s t weekend, Elvin Hayes was benched for failing
to carry out an assignment.
Then, when Rockets’ Coach Del Harris said he would
not be su itin g Tuesday night's game at Houston
against New Jersey, Hayes called the coach "petty,"
“ paranoid," and called for his resignation. He was
fined for his comments.
It was the first time in Hayes’ 15-year career he was
not in the suiting lineup, but the coach’s move may
have been beneficial.
In other games, Atlanta topped Phoenix, 96-94,
Dallas downed Indiana, 134-126, New York routed
Cleveland, 111-78, Philadelphia ripped Chicago, 116-99,
Denver beat Kansas City, 119-112, San Antonio outscored UUh, 116-106, Los Angeles defeated Portland.
125-120, and Milwaukee clipped San Diego, 115-102.

Bear Bryant Hospitalized
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI) - Alabama’s Bear
Bryant, who recently retired as the winningest college
football coach in NCAA history, has been hospitalized
after suffering chest pains.
Bryant, 69, was admitted to Druid City Hospital
about 6:15 p.m. CST(7:15 EST) Tuesday, according to
John Lucas, the assistant hospital administrator.
Hospital spokeswoman Lucy Jordan later said
Bry ant was resting comfortably and was in no danger.

Miami Dolphins (left to right) Don Strock, Vcrn Den Herder and Bob
Kuechenberg are the lone remaining members of the last Miami Super Bowl
team. The veteran trio tries to recapture that old Super Bowl magic Sunday
against the Washington Itedskins in Pasadena.

Laasko's Nod Lets Jets Know
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - You didn't see this
on television, because it happened on the field maybe they can stop anyone.
during one of those timeouts for a commercial.
"Are you guys starting to feel you’re in­
The New York Jets had kicked off to the vincible?" one radio man tried putting words
Miami Dolphins to sU rt Sunday’s rainsoaked, in the mouth of Don McNeal, one of the *
mud-caked contest in the Orange Bowl, and Dolphins' feather-footed aggressive corafter Fulton Walker, their speedy little punt- nerbacks.
return specialist from Martinsburg, W.Va.,
McNeal smiled. He's a relatively little fellow
brought the ball back to Miami's 23, the who makes the big play but doesn't talk big.
Dolphins’ offensive unit trooped out onto the
“ I'm the kind of guy who doesn't like to
field and went into a huddle.
brag, but we are getting to feel pretty good
Eric taakso, the Dolphins' fifth-year pro about ourselves," he said. "We feel we can
and only player in the NFL of Finnish descent, play with anybody."
stood up In the huddle so he could look over the
For the Dolphins, this will make their fourth
way the Jets were lining up defensively.
trip to the Super Bowl, their last one nine years
He and the rest of the Dolphins had heard ago, and only three veterans on this club —
some of the Jets' defenders, fellows like Joe Bob Kuechenberg, Vem den Herder and Don
Klecko, Marty Lyons and Greg Buttle, were Strock — were in that one.
still nursing injuries, and I^akso was trying to
What I especially like about the Dolphins is
see whether they were starting or not. Lyons the way they adjust to any situation. Nothing
and Buttle were, and Klecko would come in seems to get them unhinged, no matter what,
shortly afterward.
and the credit for that has to go to Don Shula
Then 1.aakso's eye caught Mark Gastineau, and his assistant coaches.
the Jets’ uninhibited defensive left end. As
Playing In the mud and grime Sunday in the
Miami's offensive right tackle, it would be Orange Bowl was anything but a day at the
Laakso's primary job to keep Gastineau off beach.
quarterback David Woodley’s back all day.
Jets' quarterback Richard Todd had his
Gastineau, who's like one of those big worst day ever, seeing five of his passes in­
friendly St. Bernards, noticed Iiiakso giving tercepted. Woodley had three of his tosses
him the once-ovcr through his facemask only a picked off as'w ell, but they didn’t prove
few yards away and nodded at him amiably,
anywhere near as damaging to the Dolphins as
taakso nodded back. He didn't say a word, but Todd's did to the Jets. Woodley seemed to
he was letting Gastineau know he was ready
adjust to the treacherous underfooting better.
for him.
"I don't want to say you get conservative
And he was.
when the conditions are like that; you just get
The Jets' highly emotional, inordinately careful," said the Dolphins’ scrambler.
strong extrovert did manage to sack Woodley
twice, but overall the doggedly determined
U akso contained him quite well.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - BUI Walsh had a
And like so many of his fellow Jets in the
replacement for himself as coach of the San
Dolphins' 14-0 triumph, Gastineau did not have
Francisco 49ers all lined up but after a series
one of his better days.
of conversations with club owner Eddie
Next Sunday, the Washington Redskins
DcBartolo he decided to keep the Job —at least
meet the Dolphins in Super Bowl XVII in for another season.
Pasadenaj, Calif. Many of the Redskins were
Monday, D cBartolo, in a prepared
watching the game in Miami Sunday on TV,
statem ent, announced Walsh would be
but none of them saw that little exchange reluming as coach in 1983, saying he didn't
between I-aakso and Gastineau, because of the
hold him responsible for the 49ers’ poor
commercial that came on during the timeout.
showing in 1982 after they won the Super Bowl
The Redskins are hot, maybe hotter than the the year before.
Dolphins. Of course, they've just taken care of
America’s Team, the Dallas Cowboys, and
seem capable of beating anyone, with Joe
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. (UPI) - Chuck
Thelsmann throwing the ball and John Riggins
Knox, wlm took the Buffalo Hills from disarray
carrying it.
They should take heed, though, of that silent to playoff contention in five years, has
message Eric Laakso was delivering to Mark abruptly resigned as head coach of the club in
Gastineau. The Dolphins are ready — not only a dispute over the extension of his contract.
Knox, however, Tuesday night said he may
for the Redskins, but for anybody. They’re on
have an announcement on his couching future
a roll.
Washington has an excellent defense, one of as early as today.,
“There are a couple of options and I have to
the best you’ll see, but it still can't compare
with Miami’s, which has less give in It than the make a decision," Knox said upon urrival in
Buffalo, following a four-hour meeting in
Great China Wall.
The Dolphins' defenders have a right to go Detroit with Bills’ owner Ralph C. Wilson Jr.,
around beating their chests and to think during which Knox luinded in his resignation.

PrO'Football

Walsh Will Remain

Knox Calls It Quits

...Cleveland leads Lyman
Continued from 16A
In other action Tuesday, coach Tom
Lawrence's Lyman Greyhounds reeled off
their third straight victory — a 7069 conquest
of Apopka — to set up a key battle Friday with
Seminole.
Alexis Cleveland led the way with a gamehigh 28 points while Rod Hillman, James Pilot
and Tom Felter all collected 12 apiece. Lyman
is 96 and 5-4.
Lyman went ahead by eight at halftime and
increased the margin by three more points the
second half. Apopka, 5-11 and 26, received 16
points from Lester Jones.

Seabreeze Clips Lake Brantley
e

In the other Five Star game involving a
county team, Seabreeze broke on top early
and rolled to a 84-63 win over Lake Brantley's
Patriots.

"We played basically without a point
guard," said Patriot coach Bob Peterson.
Mike Garriques was limited by injury while
Mike Evans is ill.
Paul Hoffman tossed in 26 points and
grabbed nine rebounds for Brantley which
also got 13 points from Eric Trombo and
four steals from Mark Shorey.
Seabreeze shot 61 percent In the first half as
Norman McCoy, Tony Bell and Clifford Reed
helped forge a 46-28 halftime bulge. McCoy
finished with 14 points while Bell and Reed had
11 each.
Lake Brantley cut the lead to 10 points In the
third quarter but couldn’t get any closer. “ We
played good defense in the second half,” said
Peterson. "We limited them to 10 points in the
third quarter."
Brantley, 4-14 and 26, plays on its new floor
for the first time Friday when it hosts
Mainland.

AtSanlerd Orlando
Tutvday night r t t u lt t
F in f r a c t — S-M. B: J t.tt
I White Oak Lynn 7 70 S TO 4 10
7 PC'! Golden Boy
7 40 3 40
I Morning Came
4 70
O (7 1) 31 M ; P (U-77 47.70; T (I7-11 951.44
Second race — &gt;t. C: 31 44
7FireQ uasar
7 40 4 40 7 40
3 Fay Bird
5 40 4 70
7 M K's Cricket
7 40
Q 17-11 77 00; P 13 3) 41 00; T (31-71 347 00. OD (1 7 ) 47.40
Third ra c e - S - 14. M: 3110
3 Kilm anjaro
1170 5 70 3 40
S Misty Moya
4 70 4 40
7 P'0 RiCO
10 00
O 11 5) SO 40; P (3 S3 41.70; T (3
S3) I.14S40
Fourthrace — 3-14, D: 3I.3S
3 M ister Mac
&gt;0 70 4 40 7 40
8 Ugo Dan
4 40 7 40
5 Beatln The Oflds
3 40
0 ( 3 4) I I 40; P (3 4) SO 40; T 13OS) 711.00
F ilth ra c e -S -I4 .C : 31.17
4 Reliable Raven 9 40 3 70 7 40
SUrgent
4 70 7 40
7 Villainous
7 80
0 IS 4) I t 40; P IIS ) 30 40; T IIS-7) 91 70
S iith r a c e - 5-14, C: 31.30
7 Ranger XLT
9 40 4 00 S 40
3 Dinky Dog
7 40 S 70
7 Tough F ell*
3 40
0 (7 3) 34.40; P ()-)) 40 40; T (13 7) $31 40
Seventh race — 3-14. A: 51.33
4 F abers Friend 31 00 14 40 4 00
1 Goldenrod Curl
13 70 7 40
7 T il So Sue
540
Q(1 4) 74 70; P (4-1) 434 00; T (41-71 1.04140
Eighth r i c e - 7-11. C: 41.11
7 M ill Je Nay
7 40 7 60 7 60
3 Viv's Buttons
4 00 3 60
8 RK Eve's Apple
3 40
O (3 3) 11.40; P (3 3) 74 30.-.T (73 4) 197 40
N inthrace — S-I4.D: 31.41
I B la c k ja c k Ilona 17 00 13 OO 4 40
SMissLeta
8 80 4 00
4 Sassafras T
5 00
Q I l-S) 31.40; P 11-3) 149.40; T (15 4) 1.439.40
1 0 t h r a c t - 7-14. B: 43 St
7 Manatee Wade 13 70 9 00 4 40
8 Evilene
5 40 4 00
i Ardent Break
4 40
*3 (7 4) I I 00; P 13-4) 44.00; T I I411 144 00
llth ra c o — S-14, A: 31.40
SIBOaPacfOla
14 40 8 40 4 40
I Precision Dancer
4 40 3 40
3 PW s Dollar B ill
3 40
0 (1-1) 44.30; P IS -II 145.00; T 151-3) 355.30; Pick S il: 13-4-7-1-3-5) 4
of 4 paid 314.00 (5 winners) "J a c k ­
pot'' carryover: 14,004
m h ra c e — 5-14,0: 31 49
7 Lake Ale*
9 70 4 80 5 00
1 Secret Squirrel
4 60 3 40
4 Royal Troubles
4 40
0(1-7) 14.30; P 17-1) 43 40; T (71-4) 445 40
IJthrace —5-14. D; 39.34
TCalunQuote
73 80 17 60 4 40
5 Space Shot
4.70 7 40
4 Broom’s M isty
7 60
O (3-5) 73.40; P (3-5) 149.40; T 4354) 515.40
A — 3,343; Handle 5739.401

CHAMPIONSHIP FINALS
(L ) d Harmon (0) 10 I
101 — C lir k (SI won by deloult over Streetman

Itl — Battle

NHL Standings
by United Press International
Wales Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pis
Philadelphia
37 13 6 70
NY Islanders
75 17 8 SI
Washington
77 14 11 S3
NY Rangers
77 71 6 so
Pittsburgh
17 79 7 31
New Jersey
10 30 11 31
Adams O ivition
Boston
37 10 7 71
Montreal
74 13 9 i t
Buffalo
73 14 9 ss
Quebec
33 70 6 37
Hartlord
17 37 S 79
Campbell Conference
N orris Division
W L T Ptt
Chicago
30 17 ; 67
Minnesota
75 14 10 40
St Louis
15 77 « 39
Toronlo
11 76 f 31
Detroit
17 76 11 3*
Smylhe Division
Edmonton
78 14 9 65
Calgary
70 74 7 17
Winnipeg
70 74 3 15
Vancouver
16 73 10 47
Los Angeles
16 73 7 39
Tuesday's Results
Detroit 6. Vancouver 3
Quebec 6. Winnipeg 3
Phila 5. New Jersey I
St Louis 4. M inn 4. tie
Calgary 4. Los Angeles 6
Today's Games
(A ll T im e t EST)
Montreal
at
Buffalo.
7 35
pm
Washington
at
Pittsburgh.
7 35 p m
Vancouver at Chicago. 8 35
pm
Toronto at Edmonton. 9 35
pm

Sports Transactions
By United Press International
Tuesday
Baseball
Am erican League
Voided
Chicago's acquisition ot pitcher
Rudy May from the New York
Yankees
Atlanta
Signed pitcher Pete
Falcone to a two year contract
Chicago IN L) * Announced the
formal Siqnmg ot third baseman
Ron Cey to a live year contract
Los Angeles
Signed pitcher
Bob Welch to a four year contract
Milwaukee
Signed inlielder
Juan Castillo, outlielder Marshall
Edwards, catcher Ned Yost and
pitchers Bob Gibson, Doug Jones.
Fred M a rtin e t and Chuck Porter.
Tommy Ferguson resigned as
traveling secretary
Minnesota
Signed catcher
Dave E n g le ’ and inf (elder Ron
Washington to one year contracts
M o n tre a l
O u tlie ld e r T im
Raines and pitcher Charlie Lea
agreed to contract terms
Pittsburgh — Signed pitchers
Larry M cW illiam s. Ross Baum
garlen and Lee Tunnell and m inor
league inlielder Rich Renteria
Si
L o u is — Signed t h i r d ;
baseman Ken Oberklell to a three
year contract
Basketball
Washington
Waived guard
John Lucas
College
UCLA
Signed lootball Coach
Terry Donahue to a live year
contract

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Tuesday
East
AIC 67 H artford 59
Amherst 70. Connecticut Coll 56
Assumption 103, Bryant 99. ot
Babson 44, Coast Guard 57
Binghamton St 74. Albany St 76
Boston Coll 68. Pittsburgh 63
Boston U 104. Northeastern 86
Bowden 41. Gordon 73
Bridgewater 80. W Conn St 69
ot
Central Conn 69. N H Coll 59
Colgate 64. RPI 35
Columbia 73. Manhattan 34
Concordia 68. Kings (Pa I 67
F Nararene 76. Barrington 64
Eastern 48. Nyack 47
Frank 4 Marsh 43. Lebanon
Valley 76
GlassboroSt 37, M ontclair SI 30
Hunter 97. Lehman 40
Lowell 79. St Anselm 67
Marquette 73. Duquesne S3

N IG H T L Y 7 :3 0
M A T IN E E S
M O N.-V4EO .-SAT.

1:00 P.M,
PLAY THE EXCITING

PICK-SIX

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Prep Wrestling
(LB)
IIS — Campbell (L I p Johnson (LM ) :70
1 3 3 - B a tes iL H Ip Litchenberger (LM ) I 10
1 3 9 - Broberg (LM ) p Orakd(LB) 1 40
133 — Busceni (0) d liner (L) 14 4
1 4 1 - R in ard lL B Id Perkins(L) I I 10
1 4 4 - Goslee (L M I d Breen (L )4 3
&gt;54 - Bradley (0) d Kolbiornten (LM ) I 5
174— Sandberg (LH ) p Swalina (LBI 17
149— Larson (0)p Connell (LM ) .50
733 - O w e n lL M ip Campbell (Oi J.4i
CONSOLATION FINALS
101 - Ferguson IS) p Johnson (LM ) 4:11
144- Williams (L ) p Evert (LM ) 1:13
I I S — No consolation
113— Risse(LB) won by default over Brand/el (L)
131 - Carutio (L I won by default oyer Navarro
(LH I
1)3 — Moran (LM ) only competitor
141 — Lavelle (LM ) only competitor
144 — Dicembre (L H ) only competitor
154 — Bodoh (LB I only competitor
7)3 - Hodges (LH ) only competitor

Deals

College
Basketball

NBA Standings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
OB
w L Pci
15 6 454 ■—
Phila
Boston
31 10 756 4
77 14 674 9
New Jersy
Wshngln
14 71 439 17
16 76 341 19* i
New York
Central Division
JO 14 68? —
Milwauke
Detroit
77 71 517 I'l
Atlanta
71 71 500 4
14 74 333 15
Chicago
13 74 317 IS' &gt;
Indiara
7 34 .171 3 l ' j
Cleveland
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pci. GB
San Anton
77 18 600 —
Kan City
73 II 961 7
Denver
71 74 467 6
19 77 443 6
Oallas
Utah
14 77 400 9
7 35 167 11'&gt;
Houston
Pacific O ivition
Los Ang
37 1 100 —
77 17 414 7
Phoeni*
74 17 603 7' i
Portland
74 ( I .571 9
Seattle
Golden SI
14 75 419 IS' i
San Diego
17 17 773 77
Tuesday's Results
New York I I I . Cleveland 74
Dallas 134. Indiana 176
Atlanta 94. Phoenl* 94
Philadelphia 114. Chicago 99
Houston 114. New Jersey 111
San Antonio 114, Utah 104

Lake M ary Frosh Claim Crown
Lake M ao 's freshman Rams successfully
defended their Seminole County wrestling
championship Monday night, outdistancing
the five other county teams in mat action at
Lyman High School
The Rams rolled up 132 points to 99 for
runnerup Lyman. Oviedo (76), lak e Brantley
(74), Lake Howell (60) and Seminole (31)
followed in order.
“We had a pretty good crowd," said Lyman
coach Skip Pletzer. "It was a good chance for
the freshmen to have their night in the
limelight."
Lake Mary, which brought 11 wrestlers to
the tournament, received first place finishes
from Matt Broberg (129), Mike Goslee (148)
and Paul Owen (223).
Seminole's Mike Clark (108) had the Tribe’s
lone championship.

Hockey

NBA

$ -|

Salem St 73. Westlield 47
Spnnglield 71. Ciumnip.ac 49
St
Joseph's
131.
M aine
Varitim e-80
Stonehill 47. Bentley 41
T rinity 73. Wesleyan 47
Utica 54. Cornell 53
WPI 71. N'CholS 41
South
Ala Birm ingham 48. Western
Ky 44
C Carolina 40. F Marion Jl
Center 54. M aryville 54
Covenant 74, Sewanee 77
Emory And Henry 40. Lynch
burg 39
F'a Southern 71 B'tcayne 44
Georgia 43. Fla 79

Denver 1)9, Kansas City 113
Los Ang 175. Portland 170
Milwaukee IIS. San Diego 107
Today's Games
(A ll T im e t EST)
Washington at Boston. 7 30
pm
Phoeni* at Philadelphia. 7 35
pm
Chicago at Cleveland. 8 p m
Seattle at Detroit. 8 05 p m
Dallas at Kansas City. 8 35
pm
Milwaukee at Los Angeles,
to 30 p m

*

9

3

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...Reagan Offers His 'Cure'
Continued From Page 1A
programs favored by the Democrats.
The first element of Reagan's plan would be a spending
freeie, with allowance for inflation, on a broad range of
domestic federal program s, including a six-month delay in
Social Security cost-of-living Increases and a one-year freeie
on federal worker and military pay and pension boosts.
Another point of the plan would promise $55 billion in
military spending "savings," but would not Include cuts in
Pentagon expansion plans.
Some of the reductions would be realized from what Reagan
described as “fraud and waste" in federal "entitlem ent" pro­
gram s that cannot be frozen, such as food stamps. "The truly
needy suffer, as funds intended for them are taken by the
greedy."
The final point was a three-year limited increase on Incomes
and crude oil, to take effect in 1986 "only if the Congress has
first approved our spending and budget control program ."
He said If the program is approved, “It will ensure a steady
decline in deficits, aiming toward a balanced budget by the end
of the decade."
At the same time, he made no promises of quick relief,
especially on Jobs.

Reagan Changing

A R M S A G A IN

"F or too many of our fellow citizens — this Is a painful
period," he said. "We must do everything in our power to bring
their ordeal to an end.”
Reagan said he would submit legislation "to get at the
special problems of the long-term unemployed as well as
young people trying to enter the Job m arket." He also called
for extending unemployment benefits, rewarding employers
who hire long-term unemployed workers, improving training
programs and setting up special "enterprise zones" to aid
business and workers in depressed areas.
He promised a foreign trade policy that would be "fairer to
America's farmers and workers" by providing adequate
export financing, seeking lowered barriers to American
products and improving U.S. ports.
Reagan called for a new emphasis on upgrading m ath­
ematics and science education to produce graduates able to
work in high technology industries and proposed tax Incentives
for parents who put away college money for their children. He
also asked for tax credits for tuition paid to private and
parochial schools and renewed his school prayer support.
But there was no mention of other controversial social issues
such as abortion and gave only brief mention to his stalled New
Federalism proposals to turn over many federal programs to
the states, announcing he would offer a new plan shortly.

Spending Plansi
at Issue

His Tune, Southern
Republicans Say

uftCf D e 'r w Depart*-*-"’

In his Stale of the Union message Tuesday night,
President Reagan promised to push for $55 billion
in savings over the next five years. The figures
shown are in current dollars without adjustment
for inflation.

...Seminole Residents React To State O f The Union Message
Continued From Page 1A
nation."
He approves a freeze "tf he comes up with one that is across
the board in a broad sense. It seems to me they are going to
add more to the person who can least afford it. I disagree with
taxing retiree's income. Many people have worked hard and
lived frugally to accumulate their savings and they should be
allowed to keep them."
Hagln thinks what this country needs most is sound, good
leadership. He Is against more taxes. He supports the
president's proposal to restore prayer in schools. "They do It In
Congress, where the chaplain opens with prayer," he added.
Jam es Covington, Sanford postmaster, didn’t listen to the
speech. But he read about it In a newspaper. "Frankly, I don't
think the president's plan will Improve the economy," he said.
"I think his basic philosophy is wroflg. I don't agree that tax
cuts are a good thing. I don't enjoy paying them anymore than
anyone else, but It Is the wrong thing to cut them at this time in
the economy."
Covington said he would go along with a government
spending freeze if it would be even handed and Include the

Defense Department. He doesn't think the president is doing
enough about unemployment, but he has mixed feelings about
jobs programs.
"I don’t believe In handouts, but It could be used ef­
fectively," he said. Covington does not think the economy will
improve as long as unemployment is like It is. "We here in
Florida don't understand, we can't imagine what It’s like in
other parts of the country," said Covington.
What this country needs most is new leadership in Congress
and the presidency. "They have to be willing to bite the bullet
and make hard choices and stop trying to satisfy everyone to
get re-elected," said Covington.
"I believe In prayer, but I think trying to legislate prayer
Into schools Is the wrong way to go about it," he added.
Ruth Eve of DeBary, who has a canvas and awning business,
said, "Frankly, I felt all along If they leave him alone things
will get better. I think they have got to make a change, we've
had too many handouts too long.
"Unemployment has been a problem for a long time and I
don't think he Is to blame," she said. "I hope the country Is on

the mend, we are showing signs of beginning, but It's a slow
recovery. Our business is beginning to pick up.
"There should definitely be a freeze in government spen­
ding. It should have come a long time ago. We can’t continue lo
spend money we don’t have," Eve said. "We need to get back
to the basics. We are too nationalized, we need to get back to
the states doing more with less federal control and to helping
our neighbors."
An additional tax? "I grumble about taxes, but If we could
cut a lot of programs that they are wasting money on we
wouldn't have to have a tax. I don't meaircutttng programs for
education or the elderly," said Mrs. Eve.
Mrs. Dorothy Herold of Deltona said she was very interested
In the president's speech. “ I think he is trying hard," she said.
"But I don’t think he is doing enough to lower unemployment. I
think we are going to come out of this gradually.’'
She does not support a government spending freeze. She
thinks what the country rfeeds most Is to "bring back some of
our own companies with all of the imports being in on
everything.” She thinks we have enough taxes and is in favor
of returning prayer to the schools.

Jury Considers Fate O f Convicted Murderer
After eight hours of deliberation, a 12-member Jury' has
convicted Cuban refugee Juan Ramos of first-degree murder
In the rape-slaying of a Cocoa housewife.
Ramos, 25, was accused of brutally killing Mary Sue Cobb
last April. He showed no reaction when the verdict was read
Tuesday at 11 p.m., but both his wife Danettc and his mother
sobbed in the courtroom.
The Jury was to consider arguments today to decide what
sentence to recommend for Ramos. The prosecution has asked
for the death penalty.
John Carpenter, Mrs. Cobb's father, said of the death
penalty: “I wouldn't wish that on anybody, 11only want
Justice."
The Jury had gone out at 3 p.m. Tuesday to consider the
evidence presented in Ramos' eight-day murder trial.

la s t week prosecutors showed the jury slides of Mrs. Cobb,
wanted to have sex with. Ramos had feigned an interest in
27, the day she was stabbed 17 times with an 11-inch butcher ■ Cobb and her husband as a ruse to gel into her home, he said.
knife that was left lodged In her chest.
Evidence experts who teslfied early in the trial said the
woman had been gagged, raped, and possibly was alive when
her assailant fled.
Assistant Stale Attorney Chris White said Cobb endured a
great deal of suffering before she dJcd. The knife (hat had been
Gov. Bob Graham today announced the appointment of
plunged into her chest was not the main murder weapon, and
Larry D. Blair to the Seminole County Housing Authority
was used to throw off police in what White characterized as
Board of Commissioners.
Ramos' "final touch."
Blair, 36, of Sanford is the owner of a pet store. He received
“It was as if when Juan Ramos did this he was looking at it
an associate’s degree from Daytona Beach Junior College In
as some piece of art," White said.
1967. Blair is a member of the Seminole County Board of
During closing arguments, White said Ramos killed the
Adjustment and the Sanford Board of Adjustment.
woman he was "obsessed with" and often told co-workers he
His term expires in September 1986.

Blair Named To Seminole
Housing Authority Board

Hastings, a 46-year-old Altamonte Springs
native, is acting as his own lawyer in defense
of the bribery conspiracy and obstruction of
Justice charges against him. He is Florida's
first black federal judge and the first-ever
federal judge to be tried on criminal charges
while still on the bench.
Prosecutors accuse him of scheming wilh
long-time friend William A. Borders Jr. to
solicit a $150,000 bribe to mediate the sen­
tences of two racketeers convicted in Has­
tin g s' court. Borders, a prominent
Washington, D.C., attorney, was convicted of

absent, presiding U.S. District Judge Edward
Gignoux of Maine ruled Tuesday that his
testimony was inadmissible.
The defense wanted to show the jury' with
Gunn's testimony how a judge's good name
can be used without his knowledge to solicit
bribes. Hastings claims he is the unwitting
victim of a noted influence peddler.

AREA DEATHS
MRS. REBECCA KRIEBEL
Mrs. Rebecca J. Krlebel, 37,
of 1037 Forest C ircle in
Casselberry died Monday at
Orlando Regional Medical
Center. Born March 6,1945, in
Anderson, Ind., she moved to
Casselberry from Pensacola
in 1981. She was a homemaker
and a m em ber of the
Tuscawilla United Methodist
Church.
She Is survived by her
husband, Timothy L ; two
daughters, Denise M. O'Boyle
and Kathryn A. O'Boyle, both
of C asselberry; a step­
d au g h ter, Audra L., of
C asielb erry ; a stepson,
Tim othy
L.
J r .,
of
C asselberry; two siste rs,
E lisab eth A. Owens, of
Everett, Wash., and Mary
Kay Snyder, of La Habra,
Calif; and her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert F. Handy, of
Tavares.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
H om e, Goldenrod, is in
charge of im uigem enti.
MRS. GERTRUDE H
LEACH
Mr*. Gertrude Mary Leach,
84, off 14 Sleepy Hollow Cove In
Longwood died Monday s'.
Orlando Ooovakacent Center.
Bom Nov. O , I M , In Pitt­
sb u rg h , she m oved to
Longwood from Detroit in
19M. She was a re tire d
departm ent store clerk and a
Presbyterian.
S urvivors Includa th re e
daughters, Mrs. Patricia A.
Brubaker, of Longwood; Mrs.
B a rb a ra Ji T hurston, of
F arm in g to n , M ich., M rs.
Dorothy E. Duyck, of Center
Line, Mich.; a sister, Mrs.
E lvira Burkes, of T a r a tu m ,
P a.; nine grandchildren; and
one graat-grandchUd.
Baldwin Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, la
In charge of trrangem enU .

MRS. MARY ANN
.CAMPBELL

Service On Your

bribery’ conspiracy charges in the case last
summer and sentenced to five years in prison.
Gunn, who says he now is a legitimate
businessman who has never been convicted of.
a felony, detailed for the Judge Tuesday how
he earned $1,500 to $2,000 a week about 15
years ago by conning criminal defendants into
thinking he had influence with corrupt judges.
The con game he operated Is called “ rain­
making," Gunn said.
“ Ninety 90 percent of the bondsmen do this.
Ten percent of the (defense) lawyers do it,"
Gunn said.

there tn 1982. He was a service
station
owner and a
Mrs. Mary Ann Campbell, P resbyterian. He was a
47, of 251 N. Third St. In Mason. Survivors Include his
Winter Springs died Tuesday wife, Jean Harriette; a son,
near 25lh Street.
The Sanford City Com­
of cancer at her home after a Jeffery D., of Rochester,
long illness. Bom May 16, N.Y.; a daughter, Barbara J. mission Monday night upheld
Nearby property owners
1935, In Washington, D.C.. she Bird, of Rochester; and a a decision of the Sanford
protested the request, saying
moved to O rlando from brother, George W., of Buf­ Planning and Zoning Com­
they wanted lo retain the
mission and denied a request
Baltimore In 1957. She had falo.
neighborhood's single family
lived In Winter Springs since
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral from Winsong Development
home residential character.
1959. She held several news Home, Altamonte Springs, is Corp. to build two duplexes at
The matter was incorrectly
writing and editing positions In charge of arrangements. 2506 and 2506 Princeton Ave.
during her career wilh the
Orlando Sentinel. She started
as a part-time correspondent
in 1961. She was instrumental
in founding the women's
auxiliary of the Winter
Springs Fire Department. She
won aw ards for feature
V E T E R A N S
writing from the newspaper
and the Orlando Press Club.
W ho H tv i HcaoraWy S a r v tf T le lr C o n trjf i« T l a * *1 W ir or Ptace
She was a m ember of St.
Augustine's Catholic Church
in Casselberry.
She Is sru v lv ed by a
daughter, Mrs. Ellen John­
son, of Winter Springs; two
sons, Joseph P., of Orlando,
and Brian M., of Winter
Springs; her father, John H.
Lyons, of Maitland; three
sisters, Mrs. Jan e Meliott, of
TOwson, Md., Mrs. Theresa
Gray and Mrs. Anna Marie
Storm, both of Monkton, Md.;
Bacauaa of ta lack rf burial apaca and tf* Manca of ih* National Camrtary in Florida,
five granddiUdren.
Baldwln-Fairchild,
Alta­
m ir * w ipin g gravo spaoaa In ftto a a i M n *1 R to . ta M M M o t t t o t Aa an
honorably dachargad vataran of fta IM M StalM Armad Foroaa, you may ba qualifM
monte, is in ch arg e of
to Fra* Bui* Span. Howavar, you n u t ragttlar to tNa. You n u t ba abta to alto*
arrangements.
proof of HmraMa Dbcharga. Thar* an I IknM nunbar d \Marana space availahta.
DONALD E. ROTH
Cartrttcau to tpaoaa will ba iuuad ona first com firat im w d baa*. To m in raasrDonald Edwin Roth, 82, of
100 Buck Court of Casselberry
vatton. mad Aa coupon M w i to
died Monday a t F lo rid a
r ——
—
O A K L A W N M E M O R IA L P A R R ----------------------Hospltal-AUamonte. Born
‘
HI 4 B o . 244, S anford, a 32/71
},
( 306) 322-42*3
Feb. 14.1920, in Buffalo, N.Y.,
Plata* S*nd My V*t*ran of Service Eligibility Certificate.
he moved to Casselberry from

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Judicial Con Gam es Testimony Disallowed In Hastings Trial
MIAMI (UPI) - A burly former bail
bondsman’s colorful testimony about howunscrupulous bondsmen and defense lawyers
fleece criminal defendants by claiming they
can bribe judges won’t be permitted at the
bribery conspiracy trial of U.S. District Judge
Alcee Hastings.
After JamesGunn, 51, testified wilh the jury

WASHINGTON (UPI) Southern congressmen took a
partisan line on President
Reagan's State of the Union
address Tuesday, but even
R e p u b lic a n s a d m itte d
R eagan appears to have
reshaped his priorities since
his election.
Rep. Trent I/&gt;tt, R-Miss.,
the GOP whip, agreed with
House
Dem ocrats
that
Reagan, for the first time,
admitted government must
take an active role in righting
the economy. Reagan has
PRESIDENT HK U . W
long advocated that the government must leave the
marketplace alone.
“It’s a sign of the times." said Ijott. "I was relieved, and 1
liked the way he put it."
I/)tt indicated he had noticed a difference in Reagan’s
outlook over the past week or two as many in the Republican
party urged him to at least adjust his course.
Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., like several other Democrats,
said Reagan actually had very little to say.
"The president has a remarkable ability to read his script,"
he said. "When you get down to the reality behind this stuff, it
Is more beautiful than it is meaningful.”
Pepper blasted Reagan's proposed freeze in government
spending.
"I think it will Increase unemployment instead of increase
it," he said. "Go ahead, Mr. President, why don’t you lead?"
One of the first proponents of a freeze, Rep. Newt Gingrich,
D-Ga., said he enjoyed watching "the education of Ronald
Reagan.
"This speech was very different from one Reagan would
have made only two months ago," he said. "The president's
speech is a halfway house.
r‘I don’t think it’s a real solution," Gingrich said of Reagan's
program. "It doesn't get us into the promised land.
“ I don’t think the president of the United States has to reach
out Inside the Congress,” said Gingrich. "He has to reach out
to the country."
A presidential hopeful, Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S C., criti­
cized Reagan’s proposal for a standby tax increase.
"If the house is still burning in 1986, he says we’ll call the fire
department!" Hollings said.
Meanwhile, the chairman of the U.S. Chamber of Commer­
ce, Robert Thompson, a Greenville, S.C., lawyer, praised
Reagan’s proposed budget freeze.
"The president’s proposed freeze on much of the federal
budget&lt;s a significant step toward reducing the deficit," he
said.

S A N F O R D . IN C .
Doing Business In Sanford Area Slnct 1911

reported In Tuesday's edition
of the Evening Herald.

100 N . M A P L E A V E .

P H .3 22 -8 32 1

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N O T IC E T O A L L

^

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I A D D R E S S -----------Branch of S e c vic *.

_N o. in F am ily-

I'S arvic* Serial N o ..

.T e le p h o n e No

W. L. Gramkow LFD
Funeral direction Is not something that
just anyone can do. It requires people who
take a sincere Interest In the problems of
others. W.L Gramkow Is such a person; he
cares about what he does.

GRAM KOW
FUNERAL HOME
ISO WEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFOflO, FLORIDA
TELEPHONE 322-1213
WILLIAM L. GRAMKOW

SANFO RD

�S'

PEOPLE

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Cook Of The Week

P IN N IN G OF
A PRESIDENT
C; a i 1 Sm ith,
n e w ly

Wednesday, Jan, }i, 1983—lB

Mediterranean Soup Is
A Warm Winter Winner

right,

in s ta lle d

president of the Junior
W om an’s Club of
Sanford Inc. adjusts a
past president's pin on
re tirin g
president
lionnie Albers at tbe
club's installation and
a w a rd s
luncheon
S a tu rd a y
at
the
W om an’s Club of
Sanford. Among other
community projects,
the club sponsors the
annual Miss Sanford
Scholarship Pageant
to be held March 12 at
Lake
M ary
High
School. See The Herald
Sunday for additional
coverage.

H e r*Id Photo by D o rli D ittrich

Master Artists In Residence
A t Atlantic Center For Arts
The next residency (or Master Artists
at the Atlantic Center (or the Arts will
begin Jan. 31 and run through Feb. 10,
and will feature jazz flutist and composer
H ubert Laws from California; the
"Father of Super Realism” , Iawell
Nesbitt from New York City; and poeteditor Charleen
Swansea
from
Charleston, South Carolina.
This residency anticipates the same
excitement and productivity as occurred
in the previous autumn session with

playw right-director Edward Albee,
writer Reynolds Price and sculptorpainter Mia Westerlund Roosen.
One of the many students chosen to
work with Reynolds Price, Josephine
Hutcheson, C harleston, S.C., has
recently sold her novel to Viking Press,
Tommy Scott Young, executive
d irector of K itani Foundation in
Columbia, S.C. has announced that the
foundation, long committed to bringing

nationally acclaimed black artists into
the South, will give a scholarship to the
Atlantic Center tor the Arts for a talented
black student to wurk with a black
Master Artist.
That student, chosen at auditions
sponsored by the South Carolina Arts
Commission, Is a gifted, young flute
player from Columbia, Roland Haynes
will be studying with the internationally
acclaimed musician Hubert Laws.

Garden Circle
Hibiscus Circle of the Garden Club of Sanford held the
January meeting at the home of Mrs. W. G. Livingston with 12
members present.
Mrs. J. A. Welebob, club president, was a visitor and brought
members up to date on club happenings, and gave a resume of
January board meeting.
She emphasiied the work of Youth Garden Club is doing and
asked for the circle’s support. The flower shows, scheduled
April 22 and 23 is being planned.

Mrs. Mary MacTavlsh presided over the business meeting in
the absence of Mrs. Gordon Brlsson. The following officers
were elected for the next year; Mrs. Mary MacTavish,
president; Mrs. Jean Taylor, vice president; Mrs. Dot
Edwards, secretary; and Miss Sarah Tatum, treasurer.
Hibiscus Circle chose the residence of Mr. and Mrs. W. T.
Stapleton, 202 Bradshaw Drive as the Garden of the Month,
Mrs. MacTavlsh was Ihe auctioneer of white elephant ar­
ticles, which netted the circle $21.25. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Livingston and Mrs. Edwards.

First Aid Course
The office of Community Instructional Services at Seminole
Community College will offer a eight-hour "Multi Media First
Aid" class to begin January 25. Class will meet from 6:30 p.m.
to 10:30 p.in. on Tuesday, January’ 25 and Thursday, January
27. Fee: $6.00.
"Multia Media First Aid” is a highly compressed course in
first aid using various media to facilitate Instruction. Areas
covered are: shock, splints, resuscitation, burns etc.
For further information please call the office of Community
Instructional Services at Seminole Community College, 3231450, Ext. 304.
The common cold, probably the world's most common
illness, is caused by at least 30 difftrent viruses. It is the
greatest single cause of lost working hours in America.

Get a *40 CASH BONUS when
you buy a Kitchen Aid Custom
or Imperial Dishwasher.'

IO W A
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PRICES GOOD
WED. THRU SAT.

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WE W IL L NOW BE CLOSED E V E R Y M O N D A Y

| U.S.D.A. Choice Naturally Aged

SIRLOIN TIP
OR RUMP ROAST

By LOU CHILDERS
Herald Correspondent
When this week’s cook, Fat Samanica, isn’t in the kitchen
cooking for her family, she is in her double car garage which
has been converted into a workshop for her hobby, ceram ics.
Pat was born in Massachusetts, grew up in East Boston, and
attended Boston School of Business one year after high school.
She moved to Florida in 1969. Little did she know when she
made her first ceramic ashtray that she would soon be
cngulled in a "hobby that consumes at least 10 hours a week"
of her time.
P at’s husband, l^onard, a quality control inspector at
Emerson Electric in Casselberry, has really encouraged his
wife by purchasing some heavy duty equipment for her. Her
workshop now holds a pouring machine, a kiln and over 100
molds. "I made Lenny a ceram ic chess set and board," says
Pat, "and I love to make gifts for my friends."
P at’s children, Traci. 13, and Mark, 12, are both students at
South Seminole Middle School.
Pat claims her father, Robert Crowssley, an ex-Navy cook,
taught her what she knows about the culinary arts. “ I learned
a lot of basic cooking just by watching him," she says. "I still
like to cook Shepherd's Pie — it's a one dish m eal."
Over the weekend Pat prepared Mediterranean Soup for her
family and guests to sen e with an old fashioned New England
d a m bake. You can take the girl out of New England, but you
can’t take the New England out of the girl. ThLs soup is perfect
to serve with any fish meal because the one-half cup of lemon
juice gives it just the right flavor.
Pat is fond of entertaining In her Winter Springs home, and
often has the "girls over" for what she calls a Quickie Brunch
— also nice to serve to the family Sunday morning.
Her Winter Party Punch recipe calls for,stick cinnamon —
one stick per mug — an orange that has been studded with
cloves and quartered, and an optional jigger of rum or brandy
to be added to the hot juices.
MEDITERRANEAN SOUP
3ls cups homemade chicken broth ior 3 cans)
la cup cooked rice
2 egg yolks beaten
‘z cup fresh lemon Juice
Parsley flakes
Heat broth and cooked rice until rice is tender and absorbing
some of the yellow color. Wien broth is hot, scoop 1 cup into a
bowl with the beaten egg yolks, stir, and return to soup. Add
fresh lemon juice, stir and serve immediately, sprinkling lops
of each bowl with parsley flakes.
WINTER PARTY PUNCH
1 gallon apple juice
1 gallon cranapple juice
1 orange
10 whole cloves
stick cinnamon &lt;1 per mug)
t ox. ruin or brandy per mug (optional)
Stud doves into skin of orange and quarter orange. Put
Juices, quartered ora'nge and nutmeg into large kettle. Heat
over medium high setting until very hot, reduce heat to warm
and continue to simmer a few minutes to blend spices. Spoon
into coffee mugs, adding 1 cinnamon stick and 1 oz. rum or
brandy if desired, Yield: 32 servings.
SHEPHERD'S PIE
2 pounds lean ground beef
1 can vegetable of choice
6-6 large potatoes
Cook potatoes and mash. In skillet, brown ground beef
stirring until well separated and cooked. Drain juice from
meat and place it in bottom of a 2-quart casserole dish. Cover
meat with can of drained vegetables, spreading evenly. (Can
be corn, peas, green beans, etc.) Next, completely cover
casserole with layer of mashed potatoes. Bake In 350 degree
oven until top of potatoes turns golden brown 130-15 minutes).
Yield: 4 servings.
QUICKIE BRUNCH
2 cans Cheddar cheese soup
6 poached eggs
1 cup milk
toasted bread slices
paprika
Heat soup adding milk to thin slightly. Poach eggs. Toast
bread. Gently slide eggs onto toast and spoon cheese sauce on
top. Decorate tops with a dash of paprika. Makes 6 individual
servings.
GOLDEN APPLE BREAD PUDDING
8 slices bread
3 to 4 Golden Delicious apples
' i cup golden raisins
1 l-3rd cups milk
•i cup butler or margarine
5 eggs, beaten
'
li cup sugar
teaspoon ground cinnamon
‘t teaspoon each salt and ground nutmeg
l4 cup packed brawn sugar
Dairy sour cream (optional)
Toast bread lightly and cut diagonally Into fourths. Arrange
a single layer of bread in bottom of lightly buttered 11*4 x 7 h x
2-inch baking dish. Core and slice 1 apple. Core and dice
remaining apples to equal 4 cups. Spread diced apples evenly
on bread. Sprinkle raisins over apples. Arrange remaining
bread in two lengthwise rows on diced apples. Place apple
slices between rows of bread. Heal milk and butter only until

Pat Samanica prepares M editerranean Soup.
bulter melts. Combine eggs, sugar and seasonings; gradually
add milk mixture, stirring constantly. Pour over bread and
apples. Sprinkle wilh brown sugar. Bake, uncovered, at 350
degrees F. 40 to 45 minutes or until set. Serve warm or cold
Top with sour cream . Makes 8 to 10 servings.__________

COOKIES
G IR L S C O U T S
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Offer eipiies March 31.1983

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Wednesday, Jan. 24, l t | j

amb Shoulder Perfect
1o r Fast, Glorious Dinner
When you think about quick-cooking one-pot meals, put
mb at the head of your list.
I-oinb shoulder chops are perfect for fast yet glorious din­
ners that will win the cook plaudits without a long-term kitchen
sentence.
The star of these two one-pan suppers are shoulder chops
s raight from the lush land of New Zealand where breeding
I mbs is as important as producing champagne is to France.
Succulent taste is not lamb's only attribute. It has less inm al fat than any other red meat, and fewer calories, too. A
single 34-ounce serving comes in at less than 200 calories that
! fc rich in protein, B vitamins, thiamine, riboflavin and iron.
These two dishes also show how easily the cook can flavor
inner with a foreign accent.
Middle Fast I-tmb and Beans is a tangy combination put
together in one skillet, tender and flavorful in just a half hour.
It m arries the flavors of lemon, garlic, rosemary and onion in
n rich broth that permeates both thp lamb and the chick peas, a
marvelous legume also known as a garbanzo or ceci bean. A
crisply steamed green vegetable would be an excellent ac­
companiment.

garlic until golden. Add broth and lemon juice, scraping up bits
from bottom. Return chops to skillet. Cover. Simmer 20
minutes. Add chick peas. Cook 10 minutes longer or until chops
are tender. Arrange chops and chick peas on serving plate.
Gamish with parsley and lemon slices. Yield: 4 to 6 servings.
TAVERNALAMB c h o p s
8 shoulder lamb chops
1 can (1 pound) chopped tomatoes, undrained
4 cup sliced, pitted black olives
1-3 cup chopped onion
1 clove garlic, chopped
4 teaspoon pepper
4 cup feta cheese, crumbled
In shallow baking dish arrange Iamb chops. Combine
tomatoes, olives, onion, garlic and pepper; mix well. Spoon
over chops.-Sprinkle feta cheese over all. Cover. Bake in a 375
degree F. oven 30 minutes. Uncover. Bake 10 minutes longer.
Yield: 4 to 6 servings.

CAPTAIN’S CHOICE
SHRIMP PLATTER

The Tavcma l,amb Chops dish is a robust and lively com­
bination with a Greek flair. Tomatoes, black olives and feta
cheese bring daziliang color to this simple entree. All the
ingredients are mixed and then spread over the chops, placed
in the oven and baked. While it's cooking, toss a green salad
and prepare some rice. The result Is a quick trip to Greece
courtesy of New Zealand.

Family Meal
Takes Flair
O f Orient
Sometimes all it takes to turn an ordinary meal into an ex­
traordinary dining experience is to present favorite family
foods in new and intriguing ways. With a little kitchen
creativity, beef round steak, vegetables and lettuce can
become Oriental Beef Stir-Fry, an exotic entree sure to make
any meal a special occasion.
Strips of beef top round steak as well as red onion rings and
small whole mushrooms arc quickly stir-fried in garlic and
ginger-flavored oil. Tomato wedges are added for color and all
is enhanced with a soy and sherry sauce. You'll find top round
steak an excellent choice for stir-frying for the top round is the
most tender of the round muscles. Top round steak also helps
to stretch the food dollar for it is less expensive than many
other lender steaks.
On a novel serving note, the beef and vegetables come to the
table on a bed of shredded lettuce. While the cool, crisp lettuce
offers pleasing flavor, texture and color contrasts to the beef it
also helps keep the entree's calories in check.
Cheery Cherry Cups carry out the Oriental theme tastefully
for dessert. Inspired by cherry tarts, they feature crispy cups,
made by frying eggroll skins, and a bright red cherry filling
that’s flavored with vanilla butter and nut flavor and sprinkled
with coconut. You'll enjoy preparing and serving tills unusual
dessert that illustrates the versatility and high quality of
Convenient canned cherry pie filling.
ORIENTAL BEEF STIR-FRY
14 pounds beef top round steak, cut 1 to 14 inches thick
1 head iceberg lettuce
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1 teaspoon sugar
4 cup soy sauce
1 tablespoon sherry
Ik cup oil
1 clove garlic, cut in half
2 slices fresh ginger root
1 large red onion, sliced
8 ounces (about 2 cups) small mushrooms
1 large tomato, cut Into 12 wedges
Partially freeze steak to firm and slice diagonally across
the grain into very thin strips. Core, rinse and thoroughly drain
lettuce. To shred, halve head lengthwise, place cut-sides down
and slice crosswise with stainless «teel knife. Refrigerate
shredded lettuce In plastic bag to crisp. Combine cornstarch,
sugar, soy sauce and sherry; pour over steak strips, stirring to
t. Heat 2 tablespoons oil in large frying-pan or wok until
. Add garlic and ginger root and cook 9 seconds, stirring
stantly; discard. Cook onion 3 minutes, stirring frequently.
II
gtdd mushrooms and cook 2 minutes. Remove and keep warm.
P ra ia marinade from steak strips; reserve. Quickly brown
fte a k strips in remaining oil, stirring constantly. Add
m arinade and heat through. Stir In onion, mushrooms and
tomatoes and heat through. Arrange lettuce on large platter.
Serve beef stir-fry over lettuce. 5 to S servings.

E

CHEERYCHERRYCUPS
; 1 can (21 ounces) tart cherry pie fill
* 4 teaspoon vanilla butter and nut flavor
oil for frying
6 eggroll wrappers
j. 2 tablespoons flaked coconut
-Combine cherry pie fill and vanilla butter and nut flavor in
saucepan and cook slowly 3 minutes. Cool. Heat oil in deep fat
fryer to 365 degrees F. (Pan should not be more than hall full.)
To prepare cupe, fry an eggroll wrapper 30 seconds. Place
6bwl of soup ladle in center of wrapper to form cup and cook In
hot fat approximately 45 seconds. Drain on absorbent paper.
Repeat with remaining wrappers. Place approximately 4 cup
cherry pie fill In each cup. Sprinkle each with an equal amount
of coconut. Yield: 6 cherry cups.

S m all. !?.e.r.v.®?. .?.l°.W... $23°°
Medium
.!?.
*34°°
Large....(?f.r.v.e.?.??.,.93 9 L M 8 00

Extra friendly and helftft

Such hearty and delicious dinners could make lamb
synonomous with quick and easy for the cook.
MIDDLE EAST LAMB AND BEANS
4 teaspoon dried rosemary, crumbled
’4 teaspoon salt
l i teaspoon pepper
8 lamb shoulder chops
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 large onion, sliced
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 cup beef broth
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1 can (1 pound, 4 ounces) chick peas, drained
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
lemon slices
Combine rosemary, salt and pepper; sprinkle on chops. In
large skillet, heat oil; brown chops, a few at a time, on both
sides. Remove and set aside. In same skillet, saute onions and

Middle East Lamb And Beans is a meal-ln-a-pot.

DRUMMETTE PLATTER

At Put**, you II find that one o&lt;the nice extras
you get is the fnendfy. persona) service Wo re
ready to do whatever we can to make
shopping a pleasure tor you

Small J?.e.r.v.^?. .?.l° .1?).... *750
Medlum"$^?.i?.i9 2?L.*1 2 M
Large... .i?.G.r.v.®?
.3.9i.. * 18°°

THIS AD ■FPICTIVIi
THURSDAY, JAN. 27
THRU WIDNISDAY
F IB . 2, 19S S . . .
CLOUD SUHDAY . . .

CONNOISSEUR’S
CHOICE PLATTER

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS
Beef Cube Steak

GINGER ALE.
CLUB SODA,
DIET ALE

0 *r
lb

Bottom
Round Roast!

* 2 79

U.S.O.A. Choice Beef

CANADA DRV

Eye Round Roast, ft' *2 79

1 liter PRODUCTS

Shoulder Steak. .. ft' *1 89

Sm all....SSs™!?. .?.!&lt;?J.?)..*22°°
Medium .ffe” ».1?.&amp;.29L*36w
Large ,.(Selves 2 6 to.99).. *5400
Tasty Gsrman or

Bssf Bologna....... T ' 40*
Delicious

Cooked Salami ....qT'" 40°

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Boneless

Flavorful Smoked

Braunschweiger.. ° T " 40°
Delicious Fresh

L iv e rw u ra t.................... 49*

S W IF T ’S P R E M IU M
FU LLY C O O K E D
(EIT H ER EN D O R W H O LE)

Taste Tempting!

Pickle A Pim ento
Loaf..........................aur ' 4 9 *
Tasty

Polish L o af.............9T ' 4 9 *

Smoked
Hams

Zesty-Flavored Franklin Hard or

Genoa Salami .

* T" 89*

Ready-to-take-out Southern

Fried C h ic k e n ......S i »3”
(BUY 1 9 pc. bo*. GET M b. Potato Salad FRECt)

per lb.

Always A Favorite!

Swedish S tyle
Meat B alls.........

Citrus
Punch

[3 Fresh Produce
BOIL, FRY OR
MASH THESE

MADE FROM
CONCENTRATE
PUBLIX
BRAND CHILLED

White
Potatoes

Orange
Juice

io:
99c

pe'
ib
Zesty-Flavored C hicken or

Deviled C rabs..

I Tuna Salad

I Pineapple Pit*....... 70c,h *1”

89'

I Lasagna................... ft' l 20#
I Corn S o u fflo ........ ft' * 1 79

■ Hot from the Deli!

| Plain or Seeded

■ Jewish Rye
I B rea d .......................

White
G ra p e fru it.........8 f t 99*

Mint Patties........... £ 0,*

[3

§

Wine

|

S') 79

Margarine............. 3 eft

I
I

S-J79

Ptllsbury Buttermilk, Butter or
Country Style

1
I

1 ..5-liter bot.

Clusters ol

Biscuits..............4 c*m 99* I

Tem ple
O ranges.............10

Goo Goo C andy.... U . *129

Breakstone

Kraft Miniature

Sour Cream....... .... *2' 5 9 * |

Marshmallows..... 3 1* 9" *1

Dairi-Fresh

91

Florida Sweet, Juicy Seedless

Red Grapefruit.. 8 f t * 1 ”

[3 H ealth &amp; Beauty

For Snacks or Salads, Tasty, Red

Emperor Grapes., ft.' 49°
Good For Pie, Sauce or Baking

Roma Apples.. . 3 &amp; 69*
For Your Cooking Needs,
Zesty Yellow

Cooking
O nions............... 3 &amp; 49*
Serve With Cheese Sauce, Tender

Fresh Broccoli.... .

bunch

89*

6.4-oz. Gel or 7-oz. Regular

Colgate
Toothpaste.......

pt* S') 29
lube

Style II or III Shampoo or
Style 200 Conditioner

Style Hair Care..... *179

Efegjmt Chefmate
SiherStone Cookware.

Ripe, Juicy, Delicious

Anjou P e a rs ......3

$
N ew Z e a la n d F ro z e n
Breakstone
I L e g - O - L u m b .......
Rlcotta C heese.... ’ft* *149 I N ew Z e a la n d
Sealtest Light 'N Lively Lowfat
■ Lamb Shoulder
or Small Surd
S "Roast
------- 4

Half &amp; H a lf............. 99* I

Cottage Cheese ... ’ft*89* ■
(Regular Price $ 1.59 Each) 3-oz.
Rondele’ Garlic &amp; Herb or Pepper

Cheese Spread
Spread.Sitt FREE!!
Kraft Individu&amp;lly-Wrapped Sliced •
Cheese Food: American, Pimento,
White American or

«1«
»*f
ib.

*1”

New Zealand
«

Lamb Shoulder
C hops..................... ft.' * i «
Swift's Promlum or Lazy Maple

SNcad B a co n ........ &amp; ' I 11
Swift's Premium Sliced Salami,
. Spiced Luncheon or

Swiss...................... ft* *1M ■ Boof B o lo g n a.......ft:
Kraft Chunk Style Cheese

89*

I Lyket

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sliced

0*9
ib.
b«g

Tasty T o m ato es..

I Sunnyiand Sliced

Natural Swiss........f t M 491 Cooked H a m .......... f t ! ' *2**

• 1*»

Florida (Extra Large)

39*

Excellent Steamed
Delicate Flavored

Brussels Sprouts..

|

Aged Swiss........... f t ! *249 1 Grill F rn n k s ............ f t * 3 «

Florida Sweet

Juice Oranges ..5

Lambrusco

f

Florida Easy To Peel Flavorful
(8 0 Size)
to.
(4 S B u th .lB o i ol H O O ra n g .i............. S M B )

79*

I B read ....................... EY. 59*
I
D airy
D airy
I
I
RIUNITE ROSATOORl
I
Fleischmann’s Twin-Pack or Bowl
RED OR WHITE
Soft Margarine...... f t 99* ■

Breakfast Club Regular Quarters

York

Eli

■ Fresh Party Rye or Pumpernickel

Margarine.............. "V 79* l
Butterflnger...........’ft*

$169

64-oz. size

Blue Bonnet Whipped (Bowl)
or Soft (Twin-Pack)

Fun Size Baby Ruth or

half
lb.

• 3 7 9

■ Fresh-Baked

Light Spread...... ... bo*i *159 I

Florida Sweet Juicy Seedless

2$$

Tasty Miniature

Fleischmann's

Candy [ 3 Candy

$

lb

Start collecting
today!

Wisconsin Cheese Bar
Monterey Jack, Medium Cheddar,
Mild Cheddar Horn or
^

Mozzarella .................

| Webber IVlild, Hot, Taste Treat
| or Sage'Whole Hog
| S a u t a w e ....................... f t

^

p* i

lb.

69*

Beautiful Seasonal Bouquet
of Fresh

Cut F lo w e rs .........* 2 "
In Bud and Bloom Potted

Daffodils or Iris.... ftp *1 ”

[3 Housewares_ _
Ekco Cooking Pans

Square Cake P an .
Round Pizza P a n ..
6-Cup Muffin P a n .

*2 ”

9A9. H 19 I Galileo Sliced Salami or

I Paper oni................ ft1; ’ 1 »
■ Seafood Treat, Frozen

I Turbot! F ille t......... ft' »2*»
a Seafood Treat, Frozen Deep See

•Kb
IM
•K b
IM

•K b
lot

»j m 1 M u ssels..,....... :..... *

»2,#

S9 4 » 1 Seafood; Treat, Frozen
! (imitation Crab Lege)

*2

■ Dm p Water U g s . V 'S'*

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

Microwave Magic

Authentic
Mexican Fare
In Minutes

HCRSMcrs

M A X W E L L M OUSE
A O C . R E G . 0"V&gt;
O fl E L E C P E R *

Chocolate
Syrup
24-et. bot
wm&gt; 0 - « MM t t a « t

Fmata.w C o m m

Coffee
1 *&gt; beg
wit* 0 * « IA * itftpMp
eric* !«••« C*r*f*e#1a

It seems that interest in Mexican foods is not limited to
restaurants. Many recipe requests are for one kind or
another Mexicari dishes. Most of these are one dish meals
which can be easily prepared in the microwave without
compromising the authenticity. Adding a crisp green
salad and a caram el creme or custard for dessert one can
enjoy the flavor of Mexican fare without leaving home.
.
POTATONACHOS
3 sliced bacon
3 medium potatoes
2 tablespoons water
14 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1-3 cup sliced jalapeno peppers
Microwave bacon until crisp. lUse method that suits
you best). I prefer placing the bacon in a single layer on a
paper plate covered with paper toweling.
Scrub potatoes and slice1«inch thick. Place i n i ': quart
glass casserole. Add water, cover and microwave 100
percent power 4-5 minutes or until almost lender. Remove
cover and microwave 2-3 minutes until tender.
Arrange potatoes In single layer on 3 glass plates. (Use
any microwave safe plate. I Top potatoes with cheese and
peppers. Crumble bacon and sprinkle over potatoes.
Microwave 100 percent power, one plate at a time, un­
covered 4 to 1 minute until cheese is melted. Makes
approx. 3 dozen snacks.
TACO-TOPPED BAKED POTATOES

Wieners

Pizza

t-tb beg

1 4 .3 - O I p i g
*»*•

Home Economist
Seminole Community College

GALA II WHITF
DCCORA TOR OR
ASSORTED DECORA TOR

Mayonnaise

Foil
JOO vq n toll

large toll
w.t* One S i*
__ Price
Certificate

am* 0 *« s i h item ?

Be k # 5a*e»

l l2 pounds ground beef
1 can 18 ox. \ tomato sauce
1 egg
1 ( l 'i oz.) taco seasoning
h cup soft bread crumbs
li cup chopped onions
l i cup chopped green pepper
2 tablespoons diced green chilies
1 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese
1 cup sour cream
corn chips
Combine ground beef, tomalo sauce, egg, seasoning
mix, bread crumbs, onion, green pepper, chilies in mixing
bowl. Press half of meat mixture into a 5 cup glass or
microwave plastic ring mold. Top with cheese and then
add remaining mixture. Cover loosely with wax paper.
Microwave 100 percent power for 10-12 minutes or until
meat is set. Drain off juices. le t set 5 minutes. Invert on
serving platter. Serve with sour cream and chips. Ole!
Next week: Microwave more Ethnic Foods.

p u b l ix a l u m in u m

Towels

33*oi is*

ww One S I* Sl**B

Certiftcil#

TACO MEATLOAF

i like those you can get at a local “fast food")
4 medium baking potatoes
Topping:
4 pound ground beef
1• cup chopped onion
1 tablespoon packaged taco seasoning mix
water
grated cheddar cheese
Sour cream
Scrub and prick potatoes. Arrange in a circle in
microwave.
Microwave 100 percent power 12-14 minutes or until
tender. Turn and rearrange potatoes price during baking.
Crumble ground beef In 1 quart casserole; add onion,
Microwave 100 percent power 3 minutes or until meat is
lightly browned, Stirring once. Drain Stir in taco
seasoning and half the water. Cover. Microwave 100
percent power 2-3 minutes or until heated through. Stir

4 8'O t hot

W.t* One 54M SU«*0

a m * o «e s i * i u * »
Fr*e# $•*•» CerfiUcaie

Mycoff

PUBLIX REAL

Apple
Juice

CO M BINATIO N

once.
Make a crosswise cut in each potato, press sides of
potato to form an opening. Spoon filling in potatoes. Top
each with sour cream and sprinkle with cheddar cheese.
Microwave 100 percent for 1 minute to melt cheese.

Midge

TREE TOP REG

TOTlNOesTRA-

RATHBIACKMAWK
MEAT OR BEEF

Wednesday, Jan. 24, IMJ—28

« t» 0 -* SIM S U « p
!•«* !» ,* . c * tl.l.c tl-

H U N T - W E S S O N ’S
TOM ATORAM A

Laundry Detergent

G ain........................ tS T -'l"
(Limit 1 pl«*«*. with othor p u rc h ito t of S7.50
or mor«, deluding *11 tobacco product!)

i2 io

Lyeol Spray.......... ’?.V
Lyeol C lea n er..

• ^ 70

Lyeol

Toilet Bowl
C lea n er................. *&amp;'
Lysol Batin Tub &amp; Tils

C lea n er...............

1110

38*oz. bot.

«1&gt;e

$-|79

17-01,
e*n

Floral, Seaside or Desert
Air Freshener

P re tty As A
P ictu re...............
(25c Off Label) Electric
Dishwasher Detergent

M eh A ll................

•xcR S 149
fo r

N—

_

_

I2 &gt; 9

98®

Shield Soap..........

(204 Off Label) Fabric Softener

39®

Manwich Sauce

Key Lime Pie Filling or
(3-oz. to 4.25-oz.)

.I7cVr*159

Hunt's Whole Peeled

89®

M ushroom s..........4

(254 Ofl Label) Heavy Duty
Laundry Detergent

Green Giant Whole Kernel or
Cream Style

Wisk Liquid....

Golden Corn..... 2

3L V « 1 « 9
157*01.
t ilt

»5»

(84 Off Label) White or Pink
(4.75-oz. Bar)

7 - b it
phg

*139

Pampers

Ocean Spray Cocktail

Cranberry Juice
Dole Unsweetened

■ £ 3

&gt;le Juice

12 c l.

phg.
3 0 -c t.
pkg

t2 *

Brown, Onion, Chicken or
Mushroom

12 8 o &gt; .
bol

9399

4 6 *0 1

can

88

®

81

C in e

Heinz G ra v y ........ V &lt; ‘
Heinz Apple, Apple Cherry
or Mixed Fruit

69®

Baby Juice...........5 Vo*0,' *1

Wise Regular

1 08

IB o i

$199

16 o i

59®

c*n

16 o i
can

59®

Lite P e ars.........

16 o i.

69*

can

K e tc h u p ..........

1 6 o i.
can

Lite Mixed Fruit.

C o c k ta il...........

1 7 -o a
can

59®

12 o i
can

$139

Libby

Corned B e e f....
Libby

Orange Juice« •••••# * *

99*

can

Pork A Beans......20ll° ‘ 48®

Moalt.....f t

Mrs. Fanning's Bread &amp; Butter

&gt;1»

PictSweel French Cut or Regular Cut

Green Beans.... 2 P
v,V 89*
Downyflake Regular or Buttermilk

Watflaa............ 'it

79&lt;

Tyson Fillets ol

Chicken Breasts

'J T * 2 «

Pickles................... V

79®

In Spring Water, Star-Kist Solid
7 - o i.

W hite Tuna........... T£can M «
Hungry Jack Complete

P ancake M ix .......

1 -lb

pkg.

$ 10$

Pillsbury Family Fudge

B row nie Mix........ .

Steak-Umm

Sandwich Steaks.. X : *259

69®

3 2 .5 -ox.

pkg.

Pum pkin.......

$189

Coffee Filters

79®

10 0 cl

69®

hot

200 Jw G reenStam psR 3
V o * . bot. Long Acting or Regular

Sinex Nasal Spray
1 (Iffa c ltv # Jan 27 7 eb 7 19431

DRIP OR ELEC-PERK

T T ^WGreenStamps

Folger’s
Coffee

6 cl

2 (Effective Jan 77 Feb 7 19831

$099

e*

^ ^ 2 - l b . can

_

i ■ . . . . . il »

can

PuW.i

G«n*r»l F o o d * B u i Irish Mocha M ini,
J
Cal* Am aietlo cm Francan S w in Mocha or ,
tO o t C a l*' Vi*nna or Orang* Cappuccino J

International Coffee
] c n i t c i i o Jm

it

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t

i*a i&gt;

100 JwGreeTstampsf3
I ....... .

I ik ff

t 16-cl. pkg . Orang* I Spica. G *n ll*
{ Orang* H*rb. Almond P ltaiur* Herb
I Toaily Spic* H*tb. Cinnamon Appl*

99.
M

c k r . c. ' ^ r 99.

Publix

']

WGn£ps[3

89
»

16-oz. bo t.,

” r »1”

Sunlite Oil

Heinz Pickles

5 lftf» c li&lt; * Jan I t t t b

1 1**2)

K osher D ills......... 3]tV 99*
Enchances the Flavor of Meat
Heinz 5 7 Sauce
Z V *1 ”

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD

S5SS3L— .... 3» *i

PutAi
•

I 4 llr te c tu * j i n 2/ f i b 7 . IM 1J
kBB#H 4eeBeeeeea*aM 8e#eeeseeee4

Heinz Sweet Sliced

Cucum ber
P ick le s...............

... | 'i.

| Upton Spice A Herb Tea

Cheez Curls, Cheez Balls,
Corn Chips or Pretzel Twists
(5 to 7h-oz.)

P lan ters Snacks . .

rh a

100 ^V/GreenStamps

(Limit 1 Please, With Other
Purohasss of I7 .* 0 or Mere,
Iic lu d in i All Tobaceo Items!

s

pkg .

Good N ew s
Disposable Razor

M i wmr« S mas*
a s*im p s I rPuSu
a
hh

n n s in

R

Mb. pkg.,

U pton Bulk Tea
I
•4

6 l E t U c t i f * Ja n 2 1 F t * 7 I M J l

Ore-kJa Pixie Crinkle Cut

Potatoes........... ,K . 99&lt;

In bowl mix together figs, walnuts and cranberries. Sprinkle
on 1 tablespoon of flour and toss to coat evenly. Stir together
remaining flour, brown sugar, soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and
salt. In large bowl of mixer set at low speed, stir together
pumpkin, eggs, oil and water. Gradually stir In flour mixture,
scraping sides jvith rubber scraper as required. Silr In flourcoated fruit and nut mixture. Turn batter, evenly, Into six
greased and (loured (!4-by-24-by-ll 4-inch) miniature baking
pans. Bake in a 350-degree preheated oven until well browned
and cake tester inserted in center of one loaf comes out clean,
about 35 minutes. Turn out on rack and cool. This kitchentested recipe makes 6 miniature loaves of breads.

Mm l ii » r

TW1 40 I F M C tirl IN THE F o il OWING COUN11IS ■ &gt;*,«* CkWlolU
CMrirt. Cower
H.«Mon4, HWikoro I M i Loo Monotoo O im g i
Okooto Phco fw o lu . Row. toraool* Sonwolo unlot, olho rm io nolo*

’5? 99*

79 o i
can

Mr. Coffee

w here s h o p p in g is a p le a s u re

Publix

Pumpkin
Custard Pie.......

16 o i
can

Planters Peanuts . Voc.h * 1 "

*1 19

Pizza
Family

*1

Mashed Potatoes .
Campbell’s

Morton Gravy &amp; Salisbury Steak,
Sliced Turkey or Beef Patties _

ra g
|jr*

Hungry Jack Family Size Instant

79®

can

Chef Saluto Deep Dish Pepperoni
or Deluxe(20.5 to 2J.75-OZ.)

£*.' *278

Libby S olid P a c k

16-oz. Cocktail or Dry Roasted
Peanuts or 16.5-oz. Dry Roasted
Unsalted

46-01

Tom ato Juice ...

Minute Maid Regular or
‘ More Pulp" Concentrate

$119

Cream Of Chicken,
Stars &amp; Chicken, Chicken
Noodle O's. Chicken Soup &amp; Rice
(1 0 4 -1 0 4 -o z . cans)

69®

In Heavy Syrup, Libby

Fruit Cocktail....

32oi
bol

Baby F o o d ...........5

Libby Chunky

17-03. pkg.

65®

*1

Heinz Keg O

Libby Bartlett Halves

Cakes

FIG PUMPKIN QUICK
BREAD
4 cup coarsely chopped California dried figs
11 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
l i cup fresh or frozen, thawed
cranberries, halved
14 cups unsifted all-purpose flour
1 cup firmly packed brown sugar
4 teaspoon baking soda
4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
4 teaspoon salt
1 cup cooked, canned or frozen, thawed pumpkin or yellow
winter squash
2 eggs
4 cup cooking or vegetable oil
4 cup water

B reak fast C lub G rad e A F lorida

Large Eggs .....

3 or
pkg*

Royal G elatin...... 5

In Heavy Syrup, Libby Halved

B a rtle tt Pears...

$109

pkq

Assorted Flavors

Libby Sliced Yellow Cling

Lite Peaches

T at

$109

Cam pbell's
S o up ...................... 3 7« *1

Corned Beef
H ash...................... ,5c ' : r »
Peanut Butter

Many stati-s, ste-h as ('flUiomla. produce them as an Im­
portant agricultural crop. Enjoy fresh or dried figs to eat out of
hand or use them in baked items.

*1

phq

Libby Lite Fruit

Superman Creamy or Crunchy

ASSORTED FROZEN
PEPPERIDGE FARM

• r-

Polar B’a r .......

Figs have been a popular food in many countries for cen­
turies. They are considered a “nearly perfect fruit," being low
in ^ d lu m and high in a variety of nutrients.

69®

Heinz Assorted Strained

Libby (Serve With Eggs)
$119

2

Potato C hips...

Green Giant Cut. Kitchen Sliced
or French Cut

G reen B eans.......3

S 2 3S

®

88 ®

can*

S229

4 S ib
b ig

88

17 oi

S w e e t Peas...... 2

Royal Pudding

s ix - p a c k

99

$ 1 9 9

W heat B read.... 2 .!&gt;«»

can*

Green Giant

Make Tasty
Yeast Bread

IN 12-OZ. CANS
REG. OR LIGHT

Publix Special Recipe Honey

l2-oi

Niblets Corn..... 2

Dried Figs

O riin g a , L n k o , S om inol#,
S O tc a o la C o u n t!* * O nly!

*1

p ig *
lo t

S c a lie s t P lain or Crunchy
$119

17o i
cant

Green Giant Golden

(75e Ofl Label) Concentrate

Dog Food............

ww* Owe S i* StertRp
IMt# S*t|r Certificate

10 or pkg

Beer

Ice C re a m ............. SI.'

Shout P re-W ash.. 3LV~ M ”

Thrive

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Hunt’s Original Sloppy Joe

(254 Off Label) Liquid

D iap ers...............

Cinnamon
Rolls

1

15-oz.
cans

Tom ato P aste......

Green Giant Sliced or Whole

Pampers Newborn

Broccoli
Spears

Schlitz

T o m ato es.............

Toddler Diapers

P U S B U ftV

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Final Touch..........

Dove Soap..........

$

F ig s b le n d w ith o th e r f ru its f o r h e a lth y b r e a d .

BIRDS IV F

Hunt's Regular or Italian Style
50-oi.
pkg

(20a Off Labal) 5-oz. Bar

A ll Detergent

Tomato
Sauce

Wesson !
Oil

Deodor king
28-ot.
bot.

HUNT’S

HUNT’S

Regular or Scent II

100

LONGWOOD VILLAGE CTR.,

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Glad Tall Kitchen Ba?s
T lt H K lN * J M . lM r t . l. m i]

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P u b l?

FIG YEAST BREAD
4 teaspoon salt
4 cup sugar
1 cup milk, scalded and cooled
2 packages active dry yeast
4 cup warm water
4 cup melted butter or margarine
3 eggs, slightly beaten
4 to 5 cups unsifted flour
1 cup coarsely chopped California dried figs
4 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
2 tablespoons grated orange rind
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons milk
In large bowl, stir together salt, sugar and cooled scalded
milk. In small bowl or cup, stir yeast and warm water. Let
stand about 5 minutes. Stir and add to bowl. Stir In melted
shortening and eggs. Add about 2 cups flour and itlr well. Then
add an additional 2 cups flour to make a soft dough. Turn
dough onto floured flat surface and add enough additional flour
to make a non-sticky dough. Knead until shiny. Form Into a
ball and place in a greased bowl, turning to grease the top.
Cover lightly and let stand in a warm place until doubled in
size, about 45 minutes.
Punch down. Toss together figs, walnuts and orange rind.
Mix into dough with fingers. Divide dough into halves. Using
half the dough, divide Into six equal pieces. Shape Into halt*
Place in well-greased popover pans, large custard cups or
other' sm all baking molds. Cover and let rise until shout
doubled in size. Mix egg yolk and milk; brush gently on tope.
Bake in preheated 35&lt;Fdegree oven about 25 minutes or until
well-baked and brown. Cool on wire rack. The remainder of the
dough will make twu loaves (74-by-3 4-by-l 4 Inches). RsVy
In well-greased loaf pans at 350 degrees, about 40 minutes.
n

�BLONDIE

IB—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jin. J*, 1»8J

by Chic Young’’

WANT SOMETHING
" 7 TO HOLD ME TILL
V . . DINNED K

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Answer to Previous Punle
42 Fued period
m historical
1 Skenvered
lime
43 Powerful
dish
(■plosive
6 From one tide
(abb')
to the other
44 Eipose
12 Overjoy
45 One (Sp I
13 la n d
47 Ferrous metal
I I Volcano
|2 wds I
mouth
50 Erode
15 Actress
53 Unable
Hepburn
A * * T
54 Grow mo'e
16 Feeler
P
intense
i 0
18 Noun suHn
55 Encouraged
19 Set up golf
56 Bear witness
ball
14 Consul of old 34 Uniform
to
20 Those in
ornament
Rome
57 Sows
office
38 Adenosine tri­
17 Sicken
22 Climbmg
phosphate
21 Comes dote
DOW N
plant
(abbr)
23 Compete
25 Elderly
1 G'a»n of corn 24 Edible tuber 39 Won
26 Hawaiian
40 Ponders
2 Greatly happy 26 Layer
goddess
4 1 Penchant
3 Hdd back
27 Actress
28 Continent
43 Hauls
4 Solar disc
• Burstyn
29 House wing
5 Swiss cap tal 28 Broke bread 44 Spree
30 Church hymn 6 Motoring
46 Scruff
29 Arrival time
32 Chemical
48 Glares
association
guess (abbr) 49 Green plum
group
7 Hints
31 Word of
35 Fish eggs
50 Oklahoma
S Flushes Out
negation
36 Breadwinner
town
9 Monster like
37 0-rection
10 Third person 32 Monkey
5 t Gamble
33 Coupe
39 lo w tide
11 Piggery
52 Noun tu lfn
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By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Thursday, January 27, 1983

E.EK &amp; MEEK
W

TR 1G C 1D

eeiios iu iojb is..
—

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P R IS C IL L A 'S POP

by Howie Schneider

ID 5OM&amp;H0WJ JUGGAf SOUR
OJIUDCWJ OF VUUUERABirTV
AUDVOJRTHKSHOIDOFFM)

VUITH *tD JR lUSTOUCT
F O R SURVIVAL 1

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Ed Sullivan
SOME c F u e . O F
COURSE. W IL L J U S T
CONTINUE T O RAISE

EVE BROW’S

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb
191Of c irse it's important to
try to i ive money, but don't
tackle ’ asks today which are
better .eft to experts. It may
cost von more in the long run.
Order now: The NEW Astro*
G raph Matchmaker wheel
and booklet which reveals
ro m a n tic c o m b in atio n s,
compatibilities for all signs,
tells how to get along with
others, finds rising signs,
hidden qualities, plus more.
Mail $2 to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station. N.Y.
10U19. Send an additional $1
for your Aquarius AstroGraph predictions for 1983. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
PISCES (Feb.2(VMarch20)
Don't rely too heavily today
upon your social contacts
where your-career is con­
cerned. Unfortunately, they
may promise to do things for
you which they can’t.
ABIES (March 21-April 19)
Don't permit outsiders to
interfere in family problems
today. Instead of helping to
d e a r things up, they’re likley
to make the issues more
complicated.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Be sure to think before you
sp eak today. T h ere's a
possibility you could say
som ething which m ight
unintentionally offend a
friend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
M atters affecting
your

A H iatal Hernia
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband and I have both been
diagnosed as having a hiatal
hemia. My husband has had it
for a long tim e but mine just
came on this summer.
Why do so many people
have this? Is it a weakness?
And why are the symptoms so
different? I vomited every
meal with m ine but my
husband just bloa's until he
can hardly breathe. It seems
to crowd his lungs. We both
have extreme acid backing up
in our throat.
Our d o cto r gave us
Tagamet which Is working
very well. We both took an­
tacids but nothing helped. Is
this condition dangerous? Can
it kill you? The doctor said
stick to a soft diet and eat
small amounts of food.
Does weight make a dif­
ference? If you eat too much
will the hem ia burst?
DEAR R E A D E R -A hiatal
hernia,
also
called a
d iaphragm atic hernia, is
simply an enlarged hole in the
diaphragm. This allows a
portion of the stomach to slip
through the hole into the chest
cavity, or herniate.

finances or career must be
handled with extreme skill
today. Careless m ethods
could cause you avoidable
problems.
CANCER i June 21-July 22)
Be tactful in your one-to-one
relationships today. You
might have to deal with some
touchy individuals. Don't get
off on the wrong foot.
I .El) (July 23-Aug. 22) This
is not the day to leave im­
portant tasks until the last
minute. You're not likely to
perform too well if you feel
you are racing the clock.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Try to steer clear of in­
dividuals or groups today
whose company you do not
enjoy. There's a chance you
might again rub one another
the wrong way.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Weigh your actions carefully
today so that you don’t do
anything to provide fodder for
persons who like to gossip
about others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Normally you a re ra th e r
astute in business or financial
m atters, but today your
judgment might not be up to
p ar. Don't m ake rash
decisions.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Any persons who are
handling situations for you
today where money is in­
volved must be selected with
extreme care. A wrong choice
could prove expensive.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You are the type who likes
to think for yourself, but today
you may turn over to others
decisions you should be
making personally.

Yes, you need to eat small
meals and not lie down for a
couple of hours after eating.
This is one medical condition
in which what you do can
make a big difference.
What you need to do is
outlined more completely in
The Health litte r 4-8, Hiatal
Hemia, Esophageal Reflux,
which I'tn sending you.
Others can send 75 cents with
a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me, in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
No, it is not dangerous but it
can be disagreeable.
DEAR DR. LAMB R egardin g the expression.
“An apple a day keeps the
doctor aw ay," could six ap­
ples a day do more harm than
good?
I used to eat six to eight
apples a day. Then 1 noticed
pain in my shoulders. When
the pain became unbearable I
stopped eating apples and the
pain disappeared. Does this
make any sense to you? I’m 63
years old. How could too
many apples cause pain in the
shoulders?

Many people have such
hernias and have no symp­
toms at all. In others the
backing up of acid digestive
juices into
the
lower
esophogus cau ses burning
pain and what you describe as
acid in your throat. This
happens because of a faulty
closure mechanism at the top
of the stomach.
Obviously th e Tagamet
helps to prevent the stomach
add, which in turn helps to
prevent such symptoms. The
add in the stom ach may react
with bicarbonate in foods or
medicines to release carbon
dioxide gas and cause more
distention.

HOROSCOPE
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Jan u ary !', 1983
This coming year you could
bo quite fortunate with a r­
tistic or creative ventures.
Put your imagination to
profitable uses.

How To Deal With

Yes, being overweight is a
major factor in aggravating a
hiatal hemia. Most women
develop one during pregnancy
because of the enlarging
uterus. Anything in the ab­
domen — fat, gas or fetus —
can help cause the stomach to
be pushed through the
enlarged hole and make
matters worse.

DEAR READER - In the
first place I do not know that
the apple; were related to
your shoulder pain. You
would have been wise to see a
doctor because pain in the
shoulder can be caused from
serious disorders, such as
heart problems.
If the apples were related to
your shoulder pain, it may
have been that too many
apples caused you to have
gas. If the gas was trapped in
the colon where it bends under
the diaphragm, the distention
of the colon could cause
referred pain to the shoulder.
The sam e thing would happen
from gas induced by any food
that caused you to develop
gas.

W IN AT BRID G E
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West
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64

Opening lead 4J

roven finesse against
last's queen, drew the last
trump, showed his hand and
announced, “Six is safe, but
I'm going to take the heart
finesse and try for seven "
“Why do you experts nev­
er misguess the location o( a
queen?’ asked East 'You
didn't even take time to
think before you made the
winning play in trumps "
“We don t always locale
missing queens." replied
South "This time I dtdn t
really care where her lady­
ship was hiding If you have
shown out of clubs, I would
have lost a club trick, but I
wouldn't have lost my
slam."
The expert had indeed
seen an absolutely safe way
to play the hand and spent
no time trying to guess the
trump situation. If East had
been void of clubs, South
would have played a second
club to his ace, led a dia- ,
mond to dummy, discarded
a second heart on the king of
ades
and
p layed
tmonds.
West could ruff the fourth
diamond or discard on it.
Either way he would eventu­
ally have to take his queen
of trumps and either lead a
heart to give South two
heart tricks or a spade to
give him a ruff and discard

a

By Oswald Jacoby
and Janies Jacoby
Expert South discarded a
heart on dummy's ace of
spades, studied the hand for
a moment and played
dummy's king of clubs.
West discarded the nine ol
hearts. Now South took the

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN i

G A R F IE L D

by Jim Davis
1

✓ -------- N.

|

( 1 HATE A
T n ig h t ie A
NIGHT. /
V
JO N
)

(

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i-za

ANNIE
q o $ h. ■pappy ;

m rz
(TALL ABOUT? PAN LION
BEIN' LIBBY'S FATHER.
A N '-|

WELL KNOW
WORE COflE
MORNING,
ANNIE.

1 / tr

r

�Running Out' Is
W eeper O f Year
NEW YORK fUPI) — It’s been u long time since! anyone in
the movie business came out with a good old-fashioned, sixhandkerchief cry, but CBS will more than make up for the
oversight Wednesday night.
"Running Out," a GE Theater presentation slated to mr
from 9-11 p.m., EST, is a real nose-honker. It even has the
obligatory violin — mercifully without strains of "Hearts and
Flowers" — but marinated, nonetheless, in enough tears to
break a drought.
Under the scenario offered, Elisabeth St. Clair, the beautiful
daughter of French-Immigrant parents, finds herself pregnant
and forced Into marriage at 15 with her teenage New York
boyfriend, Paul Corsini.
Unable to handle the stress of being a wife and mother at so
tender an age, she abandons both her baby and her boyhiujand — played in an ongoing fit of rage by Tony Bill — and
runs away to relatives in Paris where she falls into a heap of
little pieces only her therapist can put back together again.
"Running Out" opens, somewhat after the fact of the title, 12
years later when the truant mother, portrayed by Deborah
Raffin, reappears in New York as translator to a high-powered
French business executive who has a week in which to close an
unspecified multi-million-doUar deal.
Finding herself with time on her hands, she heads for
Greenwich Village where Corsini — quite happy with his livein lover, Shelly, and daughter, Jenny, who has blossomed into
a budding violin virtuoso — now Is in the business of
customizing antique automobiles.
With all the class of an invading Panzer division, Elisabeth,
without so much as a phone call, blunders into the daughter she
never has known at Corsini’s front door and manages to
traumatize her out of her next 12 years’ growth.
Jenny dares not tell her father she has just run into her
mother because he goes berserk at the very' mention of her
name. He thus is forced to leam the hard way his one-time wife
has blown into town again and would like to get acquainted
with her daughter if it’s ail the sam e to him.

Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

TONIGHTS TV

EVENING

6:00
0

4 S □ 7 O NEWS
It (35)CHARLIE S ANGELS
(D 110) FOCUS ON SOCIETY

6:30

0 4 NBC NEWS
1 O CBS NEWS
&gt; O ABC NEWS□
€D (SO) FOCUS CNSOClETY

6:35
11 (17IBOBNEWHART

7:00

0 4 LIE DETECTOR
S O PM MAGAZINE
' O JOKER'S WILD
I f (IS)THE JEFFERSONS
ED (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
11 (17| QOMER PYLE

7:30

0

4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
S O T iC T A C D O U Q H
f O FAMILY FEUD

11 US) BARNEY MILLER
ED (101UNTAMEO WORLD

7:35
12 (17) ANDY GRIFFITH

0

8:00

4 REAL PEOPLE Featured a

' gathering of

Name huniefs" in
loch Ness Scotland, a New York
City love witch, a horse auction, a
visit wtlh a modern-day gypsy
5 O A CHILD'S CRY Thudocumeniary presents a close-up look at
children struggling w&gt;th th e ,daily
threat of violence hunger, oppres­
sion and spiritual darkness
&gt; a TALES OF THE GOLD MON-

"We decided we are an
ensemble," says Wilson, who
plays Daniel, ihe middle of
the
seven
M cFadden
brothers. "And, when a star
comes along, the ensemble
dies. So we all got together,
literally, and agreed that
there will be no star men­
tality on the show.
"If any one of us shows a
tendency to develop a star
mentality, the others get
together and talk to him. It
happened to me once, when I
began to act like a star. They
talked to me."
He realized the error of his
ways,
repented,
and
everything is once more full
of love and ensemble.
Wilson first was noticed
when he played Mickey, the
leader of the pack, in the
recent hit movie "P orky’s."
That led directly to "Seven
Brides” and he's delighted
that it did.

TV Ratings Race Expands
NEW YORK (UPI) - 19M of a strain on the diary," he
said. "It Isn’t a problem
Is just around the comer,
to d ay ,
but
certainly
and while Big Brother is not
somewhere down the road, it
watchlAg you yet, the A.C.
will be.
Nielsen Co. is. So Is Arbltron,
"Ithink the only way we’re
and at the rate Arbltron is
going to be able to measure
expanding its surveillance,
television viewing, computer
nobody is going to get away.
viewing or usage, gameEveryone, of course,
playing, VCRs and all the
knows about the all-powerful
rest of the things that go on
Nielsen families. They are
that television screen is with
the oracles who determine
a m eter. A lot of m eters."
whit the rest of us will or will
A lot of meters cost a lot of
not w atch on national
television - but how many . money, but advertisers who
need ratings to tell them
are aware of that other clan?
which programs are best for
Who are the Arbltrons?
Poor relations? Folks from ' the hawking of wares, are
m ore than willing to foot the
the other side of the tracks?
bill.
None of the above.
Aurlchlo said the bill is
"Let’s m ake clear the
likely to grow as independent
difference between the two
telev isio n ststlons and
companies," said A r b 11 r o
p ro life ra tin g cable f r a n ­
n executive vice president
chises continue to fragment
A.J. A urlchlo. "Nielsen
traditional network
deals with a national panel
audiences.
and that panel reports the
"Our engineers have deve­
ratings for NBC, CBS and
loped several different kinds
ABC on a continuing basis.
of m eters - meters we’d
"W e're locally oriented.
install on a regular TV set,
We’re the Nielsen of New
m eters that would go on a 37York,
San
Franclaco,
channel cable system and
Chicago, Los Angeles, etc. —
m etera that would go on a
214 m arkets to be precise."
110-channel cable system,"
And A rbitral is growing he said.
both in its metered homes
"There will probably be
where what the people watch
different kinds of meters if
is computer-recorded and in
there is a VCR associated
more than 1.2 million homes
with it, or a computer.”
where telephone surveys or
Not content with p ast
diaries to be mailed in tell
m
easu rem en ts, A rbltron
the talc of the tube.
also is Invading ethnic neigh­
Aurlchlo said Arbltron is
borhoods with its ubiquitous
expanding lt» m etered
m
e te rs testing the
homas to 5,000 in 14 markets
television tastes of black
and making allowances for
viewers and now, in a special
that complex new television
p ro je c t
with
Spanish
phenomenon called cable.
In
tern
atio
n
al
Communic­
"When you get down to it,
ations Corp., of Hispanic
hoiMthnida that are looking
audiences in New York. Los
at 27 or 31 channels a rt a bit

\

(D O

(CBS) Orlando

®

INBCt Daytona Beach
Orlando

S3 ( 1 7 )
(10) @

e

independent
Orlando

11:30

0

4 HITM AN
11 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
ED(10) POSTSCRIPTS

Independenl
Atlanta, Ga
Orlando Publtc
Broadcaiting System

In addition to ihe channel* lilte d , cableviiion lu b tc rlb e n may tuna in fo independent channel 44.
$l Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1 ; tuning to channel 13. which c a r r itt tp o rtt and the C h riilia n
Broadcalling Network (CBN).

12 (17) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

Roger Wilson says the
eight regulars on the new
CBS series "Seven Brides for
Seven Brothers," recognized
the danger inherent in eight
folks fighting for stardom.
And they have made a pact
unique in the annals of
television.

he created and wrote the
p ilo t. Recently, his
. “ Bloodline" was on ABC — it
had been a feature, disap­
pointing to him, so he re-cut
it and wrote in some new
n a rra tio n for the ABC
show ing. Next F eb ru ary ,
you’ll be able to see the film
version of his "Rage of
Angels." And his very first
novel, "Naked Face," has
been bought for a cable
dramatization.
GENERALLY,
WHEN­
EVER you get two or more
actors working together, you
run the risk of blood being
spilled. Ih e desire for the
limelight is so strong that
they'll fight at the drop of a
curtain.

0 (3 5 )

AFTERNOON

3:00

12:0J

0 4 FANTASY
} O GUIDING LIGHT
7 Q GENERAL HOSPITAL
II (35)CASPER
fD (10) FRENCH CHEF (MON)
fD (10) COOKIN' CAJUN (TUE)
fD (10) ENTERPRISE (WED)
fD (10) HIDDEN PLACES: WHERE
HISTORY LIVES (THU)
fD 110) THE LAWMAKERS (FRI)

6:05

Into TV Blockbusters

ROGER WILSON

(ABC) Orlando

A ngles and Miami.
Neither group, he said, is
easy to measure.
"It's just a cultural thing
— a natural tendency for
more suspicion in term s of
somebody doing research,"
Aurlchio said. "But if you
can impress upon them the
importance of it, you can get
them to respond.
“it takes a little extra
handholding. We don't have
Polish people or Italians that
cooperate too well yet
either."
With
or
without
c o o p e ra tio n ,
h o w e v e r,
Arbltron and Nielsen both
guard the identities of their
families the way the average
citizen guards his check
book, so don’t go looking for
them.
That, said Auriccio, is "a
criminal offense.".
"It happens," he said, "f
once found 10 Nielsen
households ... I never told
anyone about it except a few
friends and I would never tell
anyone where I found the
households, but you can do It.
“ If that happens with us,
the first thing we do is turn
the household off and de­
install them as fast as we
can."
If it all sounds like a
c la n d e stin e
o p e ra tio n
brought to you by your
friendly neighborhood CIA
agent; take heart. You can
dispel paranoia by joining
up.
That way, you at least
know you’re being watched,
and why. You even get free
m aintenance
on
your
television set.

KEY A beautiful card shark gam­
bles with Jake $ Me after he flies her
to a high-priced poker game on
Tagataya
.11 (35) MOVIE
Pal Garrett And
Bill, The Kid ’ ( 1973) Jame*
Cobum, Kris Krutotterjon A newly
appointed lawmen it pressured by
tin superior* to captof* hi* Meiorvj
Inend Billy Ihe Kid
fD (10) LIVE FROM THE MET
Idomeneo
The Metropolitan
Opera s performance ol Moiart I
opera feature* l ean., Cotrutbat.
HUdegard Behrens Frederica von
Slade and Luciano Pavarotti,
Jame* Levine conduct*

( i l 0 CAPITOL
fD (10) PROFILES IN AMERICAN
ART (MON)
fD (101 THE PRIZEWINNERS (TUE)
fD (10) INSIDE BUSINESS TODAY
(WED)
CD (10) MAGIC OF DECORATIVE
PAINTING (FRI)

O (17) PERRY MASON

Cable Ch.

O

®

2:30

11:05

Cablr Ch

WTONFSDAY

Turning Best Sellers
By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Sidney Sheldon's new block­
buster novel, "M aster of the
Game," has already been
sold to CBS for a six-hour
mini-series. It's hard to see
how they can condense that
book, which has more stories
than a wandering minstrel,
into six measly hours.
Sheldon, probably our best
sto ry te lle r today, has
written a book that goes one
step beyond the proverbial
book-you-can't-put-dow n.
This is a book that jumps Into
your hands.
Sheldon believes this Is the
first Uina CBS has bought a
big beat seller. They have
already assigned Norman
Rosemont to produce it, but
Sheldon
will probably
become involved himself.
After all, he Is a TV
veteran. Though he sup­
posedly quit TV a dozen
yean ago to concentrate on
writing novels, you’d never
guess It, judging by his
current representation on
television:
Almost every night you
can see a rerun of "1 Dream
of J e a n n le ," which he
created , produced and
wrote. They, on Tuesdays,
you can te e "H art to H art;"

Wednesday, Jan. 74, 1»IJ—SB

0

by Larry Wright

K IT ’N’ CARLYLE’"

4 SOAPWORLO
O CAROLE NELSON AT
NOON
7 Q NEWS
II
It (35)
(35) BIO VALLEY
£D (10) MYSTERY (MON)
fD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
fD (10) LIFE ON EARTH (WED)
fD (10) NOVA (THU)
fD (10) EVENING AT POPS (FRI)

}

3:0E
U

(17) FUNTIME

12:05

3:30

13 (17) PEOPLE NOW

ill
(35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
fD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

12:30
0 4 NEWS
5 O THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
0 O RYAN S HOPE

3:35
13 (1 7 ) THE FUNTSTONES

4:00

1:00

O
r LrrtLE h o u s e o n t h e
PRAIRIE
&gt; O HOUR MAGAZINE
7 O M E R V GRIFFIN
I I (35) TOM AND JERRY
fD (1 0 ) SESAME STREET g

0 ( 1 ' DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O A IL MY CHILDREN
I t (35)MOVIE
fD (101 BETTY BOOP FESTIVAL
(MON)
fD (10) MOVIE (TUE)
fD (10) MATINEE AT THE BUOU
(WED)
fD (10) SPORTS AMERICA (THU)
fD (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

8:05
1) (17) MOVIE Springheld Rifle
119521 Gary Cooper, Phylll*
Thavler After being court-mar­
tialed a former officer doe* under­
cover work (of the government

9:00
0
4 THE FACTS OF LIFE Jo
become* enraged when she learn*
that a valued teacher is leaving
Eastland n
S O 0*6 THEATER Running
Out A young woman return* to the
husband and daughter she aban­
doned 12 years earlier in hope* of
regaining their love and respect.
Deborah Ratlin and Tony Bill star
Ti O THE FALL GUY A bag man
with a secret Identity turn* to Cott
tor help when he witnesses a mur­
der

4:05
J3(17)THEMUNSTERS

4:30
I I (35) SCOOBYDOO

4:35

1:05

13 (17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

11 (1&gt;) MOVIE

1:30

o AS THE WORLD TURNS

|)

fD (10) THIS OLD HOUSE (FRI)

2:00

0

4 ANOTHER WORLD
7 D o n e l if e t o l iv e
fD (10) OOYSSEY (THU)
fD 110) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(FRI)

9:30
0 (4 FAMILY TIES Ale, goes on
the lam with Ned and learns mhat
his uncle s real crime was (Part 2)

10:00
O
4 QUINCY Quincy investi­
gates the death in an etpiosron ot a
young welder wnose illiteracy pre­
vented him Irom reading a danger
»^)n
JD O DYNASTY Fallon is terrified
by Jett s irrational rage Adam tells
Ale,is of his plan to poison Jett and
Blake and Krystle s efforts to adopt
Steven t baby hit a snag g
It (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

10:05
11 (17) NEWS

10:30
H (351 MAD AMES PLACE

11:00

0

4 1 O f O NEWS
ill (35) SOAP

11:05
12 (17) WOMAN WATCH

2;30

0 0 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
3) O CBS NEWS NK3HTWATCH
® O MOVIE "Phantom Ol The
Rue Morgue " (1954) Kart Malden
Patricia iJedma

THURSDAY
MORNING

8:00
0 ®

NEWS (MON)
0 ) a CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
O SUNRISE
I (35) JIM DAKKER
13 (1 7 ) NEWS

S

6:30
0 ( 4 . EARLYTODAY
®
0
CBS EARLY MORNING
NEWS
. 7 O ABC NEWS THIS MORNING

4 TONIGHT Host Joan Rivet% Guests Sammy Davis Jr . Bill
Cosby
i O MARY TYLER MOORE
&gt; O ABC NEWS NIQHTLINE
i l l (35) THE ROCKFORD FILES

11.35

11 (17) MOVIE Obiective Burma"
M94SI Errol Flynn Williarrj Princ®

12:00
i O HART TO HART Jennifer s
article on prostitution leads tne
Harts into the dangerous world of
hardcore nightlife and murder |R)
7 O THE LAST WORD

7:00
O 1 4 iTODAY
15 ' O MORNING NEW8
7 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
I I (35) NEWS
fD (1 0 )T O LIFEI

7:05
4X (17)F U N T IM I

1:10
) O MOVIE
Kingdom Ol The
Spiders" (1977) William Shalner.
Tif tarty Bolling

1:30
0

4 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

2:15
13 (17) MOVIE Two On A Quino­
line (1965) Dean Jones. Connie
Stevens

* SALE OF THE CENTURY
® 0 CHILD'S PLAY
U (35) DORIS DAY
fD (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT ( R ) g

11:00

0 0)
i}) O

WHEEL OF FORTUNE
THE PRICE IS RK3HT
( 1 ) 0 LOVE BOAT (R)
I) .1(35) 35 LIVE
fD (10) OVER EASY

BARBS

7:15

tW H )

P h il P a s t o r e t

1500 S. F rench Ave.
Sanford

I I you h ave m oney to
burn, y o u 'll a lw a y s have
com pany a t th e fire s id e .

N O W O PEN 7 D A Y S A WEEK

7:30

SUN ■MON 4 AM - J PM TUES THRU SAT 4 AM ■• PM

I I I (35) WOODY WOOOPECKER
f D ( 10) SESAME 8T R E E T g

BREAKFAST SERVED ALL DAY

7:35

10 MINUTE LUNCH SERVICE ON
LUNCH SPECIAL OF THE DAY

13 (17)1 DREAM OF JEANNIE

8:00
J1 (35) FRED FUNTBTONE AND
FRIENDS

8:05
1 1 (17) MY THREE SONS

Dire diagnosis when the
doctor tells you you're as
sound as a dollar.

OR

iS W S P II’ f f l ENTEttFFUSE USN t

(SANDWICHES CHOICES CHANGED DAILY)

(1T (35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
f D ( 10) MISTER ROQERS(R)

6'35
9:00
0 ®

RICHARD SIMMONS
I f ) O DONAHUE
( 7 } 0 MOVIE
(35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
f D ( 10) SESAME STREET g

9:05
(Ct (17) MOVIE

CO O KIN’ GO O D

Chkken
&gt;&gt;
Wings $ 9 &lt; \ ^
CNKUN

-

BACKS

*1

LKG QUARTERS

GOLD KIST
MADE A

\ Cl,*) FRYERS
#
Chicken

$ 1 0 0

COOKIN’ OOOD

W ednesday
Special

Lb.

58*

Turley

**

a,M.rfc*.!°$7W SSSr
SAVI *2.00 m 10 k . Bvckot
U.I.D.A. C M C * Meaty

, n

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99*

f i t * ,. » '

£ £ .-

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691
Heritage Saving* Sale

U I D A. Owe.

Heritage

D*l MwMtt

Chuck Rent

6.

« £ ..4 *

ChMk

S ]W

Steeki

$ ]7 9

U.4.0 A

siH k.

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D A IR Y

Heritage

3 pieces ol golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, rnashed potatoes and giavy.
[creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hoi biscuits I

•I4*.

R ib*

Shoulder Picnics

Pork 'N* Beans........ 3 o, si.oo

2.09

*14?

l-S

A t f W

Heritage

s

Sic

Lyktt I meted I k w U t r

Mixed Vegetables .... 3 o, $1.00

Try Our F a m o u s
3 Piece Dinner!

im ii

Wings

Grad® A Assorted

Ox Tail

dlppral

O ) PA

HOMEMADE SOUP a CHOICE OF &lt; | Q Q
1 OF5 DIFFERENT SANDWICHES * • e # 7

8:30

JZ &lt;17| THAT GIRL

The OMELET
REVOLUTION

Why does the 48-hour flu
strike only on weekends?

fD (1 0 )A M. WEATHER

1:00
7 O MOVIE ' Wmterset 11936)
John Carradme. Burgess Meredith

10:30

0

6:45

12:30
0
4 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Guests author Chris
Buckley
improvisational group
Serious Business (R)
It (35)NEWS

10:00
0 ® THE FACTS OF LIFE (R)
0 1 0 MORE REAL PEOPLE
I ! (35) ANDY GRIFFITH
fD (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

7 O NEWS
fD &lt; 10) A M, WEATHER

11:30
O

9:30
0 ® IN SEARCH OF„.
at (33) FAMH.Y AFFAIR

Dutch Hellene

Cream Style Cam ...... 3,2 Si.oo
Whole Kernel Com . . . l
SI.OO

Cnee •el

Sweet Peas................. 3 0« $1.00

Heritages ibs. f 1 2 9

Cut B e a n s .................... 3 o, $ 1.00

Sugar

Vi

Htrilefe

$1»

Eggs Z $1"

Heritage

Herlteee

Heritage

,

*'

Pager Towels ..........2 Bello* $1.00

A r m i x O

m

m

Shortening*) ' I i l
kuv ONtorr~5dl rift

Bathroom T is s u e ..........4 7® 89c
Owoltney

Great Dogs.................0.. Wc
Enriched Rice ........... 5 l» $1.15

IMOKBV CANYON
CHOPPIO, P B I I I I D , COOKID

Marine white

Sell Rising F lo u r ........ 5 l* 99c

Meats
Or

Iv e rire th

Hem
Turkey

Bread W h ite .................3 l- $ 1.00

PRO D U CE

I

Ot.

|» K

5 9 *

Old Mllwaukaa Baer

Mkleet

$1.99

3 **1 °°

Detergent 1 ..................$1.29
3**

99*

You Malta Us Fam ous!
Open 10:10 a.m.-10 pun. Eacept Fri. A Sat.

S AN FO R D
lfOS French A v t (H w y. 17-13)
33J-3450

W;3»»m

CASSELBERRY
41N. Hwy. 17-fl
131-0UO

JHfy M il

GomMuffin

White

4 *&lt;1,001

5 - 9 9 *

TIP-TOP
"'i J P t P 'vl A* R ft ( '

1100 West 13th It.
1
Sanford
Qtdtfl Service! Swings)
|

FOOO STAMPS WILCOMI

■Mn r i i tH
“

Tel

PRICNI
0 0 0 0 TNRU

3 -in

�*B— Evening Hen Id, Sanford. PI.

Wedmidsy, Jan. Jt, i ? i j

Chocolate Cake From '40s Leads Potpourri Of Winter Food Ideas

/ V

Generously grease 9-inch pic
plate. In medium saucepan,
bring water and butter to a
boil. Add pancake mix; stir
vigorously until m ix tu re

leaves sides of pan and forms
a ball. Remove from heat;
add eggs, one at a time,
beating well after each ad­
dition. Spread evenly onto

bottom and sides of prepared
pie plate. Bake 15 minutes.
Reduce heat to 300 degrees
F.; bake 5 minutes. Spoon
filling into puff; sprinkle with

vings, increase ground beef to filling: proceed as recipe
1 pound, catsup to 1 cup, dry- directs.
mustard to 1 teaspoon and TEXAS TORTILIJV
garlic powder to l 4 teaspoon. BRAND SOUP
Prepare as d ire c te d for
2 tablespoons picante sauce

cheese. Continue baking
about 5 minutes or until
cheese is melted. Makes 2 to 3
servings.
NOTE: To make four ser­

or to taste
2 large (14l» ounce) cans
ready-to-serve chicken broth
See IDEAS, Page 7B

.n

*.1

5 LB AVG. PKG.

FRESHLY

p t

GROUND
BEEF

'-Pride

SAVE 60c PER LB

U .S .D .A . GRADE A

PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., JAN.
26 THRU TUES. FEB. 1, 1983.

BONELESS

PA N TR Y PRIDE CHILLED

FRYER
COMBINATION
PACKAGE

ORANGE
JUICE

BREASTS W IT H RIBS. D R U M S T IC K S .
THIGHS OR T H IG H S &amp; D R U M S T IC K S

BONELESS

SMOKED

BEEF

TURKEY

BOTTOM ROUND

ROAST

IN THE DAIRY CASE

P E R

HALF GALLON CARTON

P E R

P O U N D

$ -1 3 9
SAVE 40e

COMPARE
Hygrade Hot Dogs . . .
MEATY DELICIOUS BLADE CUT

Sliced Pork Loin Chops

to m

LARGE
PKG

LB

JENNIE O' DARK OR LIGHT &amp; DARK

Turkey Pan Roast

2 LB
PKQ.

G E T -1

SAVE 20*

2/$l

BREAD

SAVE 20*

PANTRY PRIDE
BAKED OFF

12 PACK

COTTAGE

lie u

S e a lte s t

COP 7

9

*

0

ill

$^69

F le is c h m a n n s ■ 1 . 7

9

*

0

5 ^4 9
.

30

C h e e s e (LOAF)iHMPM.rt4

C O N TAD IN A

TASTY

TOMATO
PASTE

LEAN
PASTRAMI
M T H f t * U HAKFMV S T O R F S O N l V

@1
60/
CAN

-

■ m
1
SAVE 19

99

3oz

5/$l

PORK, ORIENTAL
CHICKEN OR
BEEF

SAVE 20

COUNTRY PRCE

94THCOCU
ftAACRYSTORESONLY

CHICKEN
DINNER

s l 79

WTTM1 VfG
AAROLL

SAVE 38-

SAVE 48* ON 3

Soz FROZEN

SAVE 80

COVER GIRL
NA1LSLICKS

L~i

rVtRVOAV
LOW

I H O /I N

"

SAVE 90

SAVE 45* ON 5

OODLES OF
NOODLES

1

HALF
POUND*

FRESH BAKED

SAVE

3/sl

ITALIAN
BREAD

CVtHYOAY

H»Al »M».

COMPARE

SAVE

n| 4&lt;jf« Ai|*s

COMPARE

•* TK MU

—1

8oz LOAVES

COMPARE

*3»® 0

PRCCBOOOOONLY94MMNOU COUNTY DUC TOCXJRLOWPWCR. Wl RCSCRVf THf RGMT TOUMTTOUANT1T«S
NONC«XD TOMALIRS NOTWS4W4HI FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

GRITS OR
CORN MEAL

B o a r r iA Q *

tVIRYOA*
low
SAVE
PWCf

B A K t NY

so

$ &lt; J9 9

FOOO

CORN OIL MARGARINE

PKQ

L y k e s „

SAVE tO*

FREEZER
QUEEN

32 cm

PAULEYS- 2 LB CHEDDAR

SUB BAG

DINNER ^ / Q O
I ROLLS fi/70

COMPARE

B o rd e n s
LIGHT &amp; LIVELY

COOKED TEULIED SLICED

$ &lt; |9 9

SAVE

c»*» 9 9 *

.

SU C ED AMERICAN SINGLES

19

1Joj
PKQ $ 2 4 9

O s c a r M a y e r

PANTRY PRIDE

MIX

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

DAIRY

YOOURT

SAVE 1S

324oz LOAVES

BUTTERMILK
OR PULLMAN

COMPARE
A x e lro d s

PKQ

L y k e s H am

150/
CAN

Ooz P U F F E D CORN CHEESE
C R U N C H Y C O R N CHEESE OR
7 5 o z N A C H O TORTILLA

e

SLICED COOKED

?79

GREAT AMERICAN

9

lOu«

S u n n y la n d

HI ( •! M AH ( &gt;M HOT WITH HI AN*

TOM’S

° £ &amp; ,i-„ 9

SL IC ED M E A T B O L O G N A

HORMEL
CHILI

FREE

PANTRY PRIDE

G w a R n e y ’s

59*

SAVE $1.20
PER LB

PLAJN OR LOW FAT

MEAT. BEEF OR CHEESE
WEINERS

a lb
■ AVG. PKQ

SAVE

CHICKEN OR TURKEY

$^59

U.S.D.A. GRADE A

B U Y -1

CHECK
THESE
PR IC E S

COMPARE

LB

box

MARKET STYLE VAC PAC

Sliced Bacon
Fryer Wings . . .

SAVE

89* 0
99*

PK Q

I

SAVE 6 0 c PER LB

CHECK
THESE
PRICES

1201

$ 1 6 9

B i

h

P O U N D

PHI PAWI (&gt;

f OODS

LEAN
PANTRY

in ta d

'S K I '. j s i 2 / * 1 0 9

CLOVERLEAF OR PARTY FLAKE

_

Rolls'SET___ .'A5
ONION OR KAISER ROLLS

A A A F a m o u s

0

Topping

I

FRENCH I
REOULAR O ff CMNKLX CUT

.

I

. .a 9 9 *

ANOEL FOOO BAR

9 9 *

•

ALA

LEMON MERW OUE, PECAN.
CHERRY OR APPLE

I

E d w a rd s m

W

I

OARUC

U

Cotes Broad

I 4 M

Butlor TOOTH— WHP

20 *

.8 8 *

80* OFF LABEL REQ.
OR SUPER MAXI PADS
40*

N o w

F re e d o m . „ .* 2 M

A

99*

SoftSanse umoN.
““

SB*

S ^49
tow

U s to rin e

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CHERRY BOSTON

3104

• • • • en.

C a k e .

u

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.

80-

I1 »

• • • *

FRESH MADE RNO

C re a m

M OUTHW ASH
30*

. . tt *1**

BAR-BOUE BEEF
OR PORK

Sandwich ,

MCMSTURE OR
EXTRA PROTECTION

s S / M

0

B o lte d H a m

__

* 2 * 9

$ 2 «®

sa

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

COFFEE
60s JAR

PEPSI LIGHT,
MOUNTAIN DEW
OR PEPSI FREE-

*
*
§

2 LITER

|

(REGULAR OR 8UQAR FREE)

W ITH T H B COUPON OOOO
THRU WED.. FED. 2, 1 M 3 .
P 7 I jv —

‘

YOU PAY 89* WITH TH IS COUPON ■
OOOO THRU WED , FEB. 2. 1983. |

• • • •

20c O FF

• • • • • • ■m

«

.* .9 9 *

• raooh

H
I

A u n t H a n n a h

I

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9 *

_

W U PPED

V A U IA U J J J t J M 1.1 IA' I J l J liV t

Birthdays, anniversaries,
and other celebrations call for
a special cake. This year,
c e le b ra te twice with th e
" c la s s ic ” Miracle Whip
Chocolate Cake. You'll not
only be commemorating your
personal special occasion, but
also the 50th Anniversary of
Miracle Whip salad dressing.
Millions of Americans know
Miracle Whip salad dressing
as an old friend, a product
which, for as long as they can
rem em ber, has provided the
finishing touch for salads,
casseroles, dips, sandwiches
and a host of other foods. It is
a one-of-a-kind product which
combines the best features of
m ayonnaise
and
oldfashioned
boiled salad
dressing, with a secret spice
blend added for unique flavor.
The
all-time favorite
Miracle Whip Chocolate Cake
was developed during the
1940s, using Miracle Whip
salad dressing in place of eggs
and shortening — one of the
many substitutions brought
about by wartime food
shortages and rationing. Its
h e a rty texture and rich ,
chocolaty flavor are as wellloved today as they were forty
years ago, and the cake's
ap peal is now fu rth er
enhanced by its status as a
"classic".
MIRACLE WHIP
CHOCOUTKCAKK
1H cups salad dressing
l li cups sugar
l ' i teaspoons vanilla
3 cups flour
34 cup cocoa
l li teaspoons Itaking soda
l» teaspoon salt
1 cup water
Creamy Cocoa Frosting
Combine salad dressing,
su g a r and vanilla. Add
com bined dry ingredients
a lte rn a te ly with w ater,
mixing well after each ad
dltion. Pour into two wax
paper-lined 8 or 9 inch layer
pans. Bake at 350 degrees, 30
to 35 minutes or until wooden
pick instiled in center comes
out clean. Cool 10 minutes;
remove from pans Cool. Fill
and frost with;
CREAMY COCOA
FROSTING
1 8-o~, j.Yg. cream cheese,
softened
1 teaspoon vanilla
dash of salt
5 cups sifted powdered
sugar
'* cup cocoa
2 tablespoons inilk
Combine cream cheese
vanilla and salt, mixing until
well blended Add combined
sugar and cocoa alternately
with milk, beating until light
and fluffy.
Variation; Substitute wux
paper-lined 13 x 9-inch baking
pan for 8 or 9-inch layer pans.
Bake 35 to 40 minutes.
BUTTERY ITALIAN
BISCUIT RING
1- 3 cup sweet cream butter,
softened
1 tsp. Italian herb seasoning
(See note)
V» tsp. garlic powder
2 (12 oz.) pkg. refrigerated
big buttermilk biscuits
Heat oven to 400 degrees. In
sm all bowl combine ull
Ingredients except biscuits;
stir to blend. Spread one side
of each biscuit with slightly
less than 1 tsp. seasoned
butter. Place biscuits on edge
in 9" round baking pan,
forming a ring. Bake 20 to 25
inin. or until biscuits are deep
golden brown. I*t stand 5
in in . to absorb b u tte r.
Remove from pan. Yield: 20
biscuits.
NOTE: 4« tsp. oregano
leav es, V4 tsp. m arjoram
leaves, Vi tsp. basil leaves and
Vs tsp, rubbed sage can be
substituted for 1 tsp. Italian
herb seasoning.
TIP: Cover with aluminum
foil during last 4 of baking
tim e if biscuit rings is
becoming too brown.
SUPERBOWL
PANCAKEPUFF
Filling:
Vi lb. ground beef
2-3 cup catsup
Vi teaspoon dry mustard
V* teaspoon garlic powder
dash of pepper
Vi cup (2 oz.) shredded
cheddar cheese
Pancake Puff:
Vi cup water
V« cup butter or margarine
Vi cup original pancake mix
2 eggs
F o r filling; In m edium
skillet, brown meat; drain fat.
Add catsup, dry mustard,
garlic powder and pepper;
m ix well.
G iver; simmer 20 to 25
m in u te s ,
stirring
oc­
c a s io n a lly .
M eanw hile,
p rep are pancake puff.
F o r pancake puff: Heat
oven to 400 degrees F.

�■L

&lt;

Beef, Potatoes
Team In Patties

To the French, it is pomme (le terre or apple nf the earth. To
the Dutch, it is aartiappel or earth apple. To the Russians, it is
Kartofel and to the Germans, it's Kartoffel. Here in America,
we know this popular vegetable as the potato.
Some culinary historians credit the conquistadores. who
explored South America, with the introduction of the potato to
Furope. Others say potatoes were brought to England bv early
colonists.
Contrary to what might be believed, the Germans, not the

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Irish, were the first big potato eaters in Europe And a favorite
German dish is Fricadellan.
POTATO-BEEFCAKES

Wednesday, Jan, ti, 1983—7B

4 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
2 to 3 tablespoons butter or margarine
Prepare mashed potatoes as directed on package for 4
servings except - decrease water to 4 cup. Stir in egg, beef,
onions, garlic salt and pepper. Shape into 8 patties; coat with
flour. Heat butter in 10-inch skillet until melted. Cook patties in
butter until brown, 4 to 5 minuts on each side. 4 servings.

instant mashed potatoes I enough for 4 servings*

1 egg, slightly beaten
2 cups cut-up cooked beef or 1 pound ground beef, cooked and
drained
11 cup sliced green onions (with tops)
4 teaspoon garlic salt

...Ideas
ro u t'd From Page 6H

py
cP ride

1 large (141t ounce) can
Italian style pear shaped
tomatoes (drained)
1 9-ounce bag toasted cem
tortilla chips
2 cups grated C heddar
cheese

HEAD

CALIFORNIA

ICEBERG
LETTUCE

OPTIONAL:

SAVE 30°
PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., JAN.
26 THRU TUES-, FEB. 1, 1983.

S U N S H IN E

HI-HO
CRACKERS

WESTERN EX-FANCY RED

RIPE
TOMATOES

DELICIOUS

APPLES

FRESH
BROCCOLI

PER POUND

3 LB BAG

BUNCH

39 79
C

COMPARE

WE WILL REDEEM YOUR STONEWARE
COUPONS AND YOU CAN PURCHASE
YOUR COMPLETER PIECES THROUGH
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1983.

p in t

SAVE 1 0 c

OUTSTANDING PRODUCE BUYS!

FVENVDAV

GROCERY

C

SAVE 2 0 c

SA VE 3 0 c PER LB

LAST CHANCE TO
REDEEM YOUR
SWEET FLOWER
STONEWARE
COUPONS.

TENDER

LARGE FIRM

SAVE

CHECK THESE P R IC E S

FRESH CRISP
LAUN D RY

RinSO DETERGENT

Tttoa
IIO*

•

*2190 Large Stalk Celery
33* 0
*119 0 N e c t a r i n e s .
89*
1
Yellow O n io n s............ us4 9 *
R ° ^ ORGIARED
lj Sweet Potatoes............. ,1 5 ° Q
7 9 e Ld
15*
Canadian Rutabagas
■

___

GOLD OR BRO W N

Sho wermate SOAP' lot
CHERRY
Hot

DeiMonte_

....

29ch

•

CAN

m

FR ESH

_

!6 o z

ROLLS

CAN

LOW

PW I

OENEWC

Tea Bags.

too

CT

99* 0

REG.. E .P .
A D .C . O R D RIP

OENEHC

Trash Bags

20

•

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Grape M ly . .

CT

COFFEE

*1«* 0

89* 0

PUNCH
LAUNDRY

Baby Powder

$

249

$ 2 29

DETERGENT

‘ 149

6 PACK
1 2 o z CAN

$159

CROC! WY

tVtUvOAY
lo w
l*M C (

save

COMPARE

IVIHVDAV

SSSL

GROCERY

SAVE

LB BAG

72oz BOX

a

$149

COMPARE

HMANO

MAXWELL
HOUSE

R EO U LAR O R U Q H T

R E G U LA R OR N A T U R A l

SAVE 40

natural

G! n t RIC
f OOD

■ LB

CARLING BLACK
LABEL BEER

64oz

S A V E 30

SAVE 14

COMPARE

APPLE
JUICE

BATHROOM
TISSUE
@1' Q Q

Kq j I

^

M OTTS

P A N T R Y PRIDE

C O C K T A ll P E A R S P t A C M t S
OW C H U N K V M I x E D f H U U

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LIBBY
LITE FRUITS

STALK

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PEARS

•

■

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Fyne Taste

■

SWEET JUICY

I— I ALLPURPOSE

Comstock FIUJMO .

SAVE

LAWN

POTATO BUD 6

Batty Crocker. s? *159
D S H W A S H IN Q

80'

Hefty Bags

«

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to

CT

*2®»

STEAK

*

Sun Light . . . JS£$139

90'

A-1 Sauce

|------1

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.

jr? $1m

COFFEE

*

_ „

Mildew Gone . .,9 9

Pet Creamer. . „ „ 1 89

MUSHROOMS STEM S &amp; PIECES

RED

Green Giant . . s

59*0

Hawaiian PUNCH-

0-

99*

4 0 c OFF
FOLGER’S
COFFEE

I

FOLGER’S
COFFEE

REGULAR. E .P . OR D H P

E .P.O R D M P

POUND CAN

2 LB CAN

W ITH T H B C O U P O N O O O O
T H R U WED.. F E B . 2. 1983.

WITH T H S COUPON QOOO
THRU WED.. FEB. 2. 1963.

■M«|

'5

FLAV-O-RICH
ICECREAM

HALF QALLON SQUARE
WITH THIS
THRU W EI

4 cup green pepper, seeded
and diced
l i cup chopped green onion
4 cup avocado, peeled,
pitted and diced
Mix picante sauce, chicken
broth, tomatoes and any or all
of the chosen optional
ingredients in a large kettle.
Heat thoroughly. Just before
serving, drop tortilla chips
into a bowl, pour soup and
sprinkle with Cheddar cheese.
Serve immediately. Serves 4
GLISTENING PEARS WITH
PECAN CHEESE BALL
2 tbsp. sweet cream butter
l 4 cup sugar
1 tbsp. cornstarch
1 cup water
4 tsp. rum extract
4 med. pears, cored, cut in
half
2-3 cup (2.5 oz.) shredded
natural Cheddar rheese
*4 cup finely chopped
pecans
4 tsp. nutmeg
2 tsp. sweet cream butter,
melted
In 10" skillet melt 2 tbsp
butter over med. heat. Stir in
sugar and cornstarch. Add
water, rum extract and pears.
Cover; cook over med. heat,
spooning sauce over pears
occasionally, until pears are
fork tender and sauce is
thickened (12 to 15 min.).
Meanwhile, in small bow I stir
together cheese, p ecans,
nutmeg and 2 tsp. melted
butter. Form mixture into 8
balls. Place balls In center of
p ears. Cover; continue
cooking J to I min. To serve,
spoon additional sauce over
pears. Yield: 4 servings.
COUNTRY-STYLE
POTATO FRITTATA
4 slices bacon, diced
3 cups (about 1 pound)
cooked, pared and diced
russet potatoes
4 cup each chopped green
onion and green pepper
1 or 2 tablespoons butter or
margarine (optional i
6 eggs
2 tablespoons water
*4 teaspoon pepper
4 cup shredded Cheddar
cheese
Cook bacon in 10-inch oven­
proof skillet until crisp ;
remove with slotted spoon and
set aside. Fry cooked potatoes
in drippings until lightly
browned. Add green onion and
green pepper; cook, stirring
frequently until crisp-tender.
Stir in bacon. Add butter if
necessary; beat until melted.
Beat eggs with water and
pepper; stir into potato
mixture. Cook over medium
heat until edges are set. With
wide spatula, lift cooked
portions and allow uncooked
• egg m ixture to flow un­
derneath. Continue cooking
until almost set. Sprinkle with
cheese; broil until cheese
melts and Is lightly browned.
Cut Into wedges to serve.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
BROAUWAY-STYLE
CHEESECAKE*
2 packages no-bake cheese
cake
One-third cup sugar
4 cup (1 stick) m argarine,
melted
2 4 cups cold milk
4 cup heavy cream
2 packages (3 ounces each)
cream cheese, softened
1 tablespoon grated orange
peel
, 1 teaspoon grated lemon
peel
Combine graham cracker
crumbs
sugar and m elted
m arg a rin e .
R eserve
1
tablespoon of mixture. Using
a fork, press rem ain in g
crumb mixture firmly against
bottom and about 3 Inches up
side of an 8-inch spring form
pan.
Pour milk and cream into
large mixing bowl. Add nobake cheese cake fillin g ,
softened cresm ch eese,
orange peel andlem on^eel.
B e st a t low speed w ith
e le c tric mixer o r ro ta ry
beater until blended. B eat at
m edium speed 3 m in u tes
longer, scraping sides of bowl
occasionally. Spoon m ixture
into prepared crust. Sprinkle
lop with reserved crum bs.
Chill at least 1 hour before
serving.

�^ ^ E v tn in g Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wednesday, Jan.U, l»»j

Troubled Family’s Trauma
W ill Require Expert Care

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
Legs Contest Coronation
To Highlight BSP Ball
The annual Beta Sigma Phi Valentine Charity Ball will
be held Saturday, Feb. 12, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the
Sanford Civic Center with music by “ Best of Friends"
and a cash bar.
One of the highlights of the ball will be a Mr. Legs
Contest. Contestants Include: Seminole County Sheriff
John Polk, Sanford Mayor l-ee P. Moore, Delbert Abney,
Phil Roche, school superintendent Bob Hughes, John
Reichert and Ricky Byrd to date.
Talk show host Harry Cup is the master of ceremonies.
From Valentine Girls representing the Sanford Beta
Sigma Phi City Council and Chapters, a queen will be
crowned.
Proceeds will benefit Seminole Mutual Concert
Association, a cultural project of Beta Sigma Phi this
year.
According to ball chairman Margie Beine, tickets (at
$15 a couple) are available by calling in reservations to
Vertls Sauls, 322-8830.

SHEPARD LEADS NUMISMATICS
Hill Shepard of Sanford, left was elected president
of the Florida. United Numismatists with in­
stallation held at the annual membership merting
at the Sheraton Twin Towers in Orlando. Gene
llynds of Hollywood turns over the president’s
gavel to Shepard. The Florida United
Numismatists is a statewide organization with
members from all parts of the world.

Daniels On Honor List

ACS 125 Club

The academic High Honor and Honor lists for the fall
quarter at Mankato State University have been an­
nounced by Dr. Philip Kendall, vice president for
academic affairs.
Three hundred fifty-eight students qualified for the
High Honor list by achieving a 4.0 straight "A" average
while one thousand thirty-four students earned a 3.5 to
3.99 average to qualify for the Honor list.
Harrold Craig Daniels, 1829 Harding Ave., Sanford,
was named to the Honor list.

Seeks Donors
Rick Schwartz, a young cancer survivor from the Orlando
area, highlighted the monthly meeting of the Board of
Directors of the Sanford-l.nke Mary Unit, American Cancer
Society.
Schwartz spoke to the group of contracting cancer while in
college, of his battle with the disease and his victory over it.
Because of the help he received form the American Cancer
Society, Rick travels around the Central Florida area telling
anyone who will listen his success story and is available to
local civic groups.
Crusade Chairman Duke Adamson announced that Vivian
Buck has assumed the chairmanship of the ACS 125 Club, a
club of donors who agree to annually donate SI25 per couple to
the American Cancer Society.
Plans for an exclusive gathering will be announced within
the next several weeks. Those Interested in becoming a part of
this select group of donors may contact Mrs. Buck at 321-0161
to be placed on the reserved list.
Adamson also announced that the 1983 Crusade will place
emphasis on the door to door distribution of life-saving
literature as well as the collection of contributions. The theme
is "Knock on Every Door."
C U P AND SAVE

Dr. Palmer Visits All Souls

j

Dr. Mary Palmer, UCF instructor of music education,
was guest speaker at the Home and School meeting, of
All Souls Catholic School on Jan. 20 when she explained
to parents the value of music in life.
Basic Instruments wc-s distributed and parents
teamed to play simple melodies. After a fun session of
popular songs, several school children entertained the
group with the same rhythm instruments conducted by
school principal Ellen Voinotte.

'Alabama' A# Fair
The 1982 Country Music Association’s "Vocal group of
the Year" Alabama is slated to present an open-air
concert on Wednesday, March 2, at the 71st Annual
Central Florida Fair in Orlando. The show seating will
be festival style on five acres in a newly developed area
on the grounds.
Opening act will be CMA "Female Vocalist of the
Year" Janie Frtcke slated tor 8:00 p.m. Alabama will
follow immediately. For information phone 849-6126.

NEW CONCEPT IN

should be evaluated and
counseled. And on the chance
that the little girls have been
psychologically damaged,
Ihey need counseling, too.
Pleasr follow this advice and
let me hear from you again. I
care.
DEAR ABBY: Our father
died suddenly three months
ago. We will be forever
grateful to his second wife,
"M ary," for making his last

obvious grief was sincere.
Should we confront Mary
and have D ad's rem ain s
moved lo th e ‘ plot next to
Mother in the spring? Two
brothers say, "Wait until
after Mary goes, then do it."
What do you say?
TWO SISTERS
DEAR SISTERS:
with your brothers.

I vote

Every teen-ager should
know the truth about drugs,
sex and how to be happy. For
Abby's booklet, send *2 and a
long, stamped (37 cents),
addressed envelope to: Abby,
Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 38923,
Hollywood, Calif. 90838.

DOLLY MADISON

fBaheff&lt;Thrift§hop)
W hirl you S iv i up to 50% on Too Quality Brood A C ikt

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★ Hamburger or Hot Dog Buns..... 8 PACK 2 PKGS. 95*|
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99

400 N. HWY. 17-02 - 2 Blocks N. Of 04
Next To Sobiks Rett.

*i lilt Mur Slid
Sanford. FI*

Longwood, P I. JJ750

- 339*6995 -

HOURS
Mon • F r l- f A.M. t P.M.
Saturday .e-jo A.M .-S P.M.

DO A LIT T LE . DO A LOT
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COMPLETE COLOR COORDINATING
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NEW LOOK FOR OLD FURNISHINGS
THE HOW TO FOR DO IT YOURSELF PROJECTS
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DECORATING CONSULTANT

IF NO ANSWER CALL
322-8288

OUR $3.00 OFF
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YOU

President's Honor Roll
I&gt;ess than two percent of University of Florida un­
dergraduate students earned straight A's and a place on
the President's Honor Roll fall semester.
Among the 512 are: Theresa A. Braceland, Route 1,
Sanford.
Other Presidents Honor Roll students from Longwood
are: Anne M argaret Euliano, 201 N. Sweetwater Cove;
1 Debra Suzanne Gish, 502 Sweetwater Cove; Joseph
Charles Hutter, 212 Tollgate Trail;'Julie L. Ryder, 2311
Palmetto Drive; Allen David Sims, 104 Sand Pine Lane;
and Kelli Gwyn Williamson, 804 Sweetwater Blvd.

• I Houf Service

l

Coping With Death Class
Tl»e Office of Community Instructional Services at
Seminole Community College is offering a Death and
Dying Course entitled "Good Grief: The Art Of Coping".
The class will meet from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. in building
No. Bon Monday mornings (or six weeks beginning Feb.
7. Instructor: Mama B. Williams, Ph.D.
Registration may be completed in the Registrar's
Office in the Administration Building. Fee: $8.00
For information, call the Office of Community
Instructional Services, 323-1450, ext. 304 from Orlandi
843-7001, ext. 304.

AND TAILORING

J346 H’lhwar 1/ 92

You Decide The Cost

Dear
Abby

12 years so happy.
Dad and our mother had
been happily married for 40
years. When Mother died 14
years ago, Dad bought a
double plot and expressed the
wish to be laid to rest beside
Mother.
When Dad died, M ary
handled all the funeral
arrangements. She hurriedly
bought another double plot for
Dad and herself, ignoring his
wishes to be buried with his
first wife.
We, the children, w ere
outraged, but said nothing at
the time of Dad’s funeral
because we didn't want to
cause an ugly scene. Also,
Mary had been a devoted
companion to Dad, and her

ASSORTED
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EET 2 $1 3 5
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t
PKGS.
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FOR
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EVERY TUESDAY...
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BUY ONE — GET ONE FREE!

ASIAN CLEANERS

321-4996

HOME DECORATING
Avoid Expensive Mistakes.

DEAR ABBY: I just found
out that my mature 13-yearold son has been molesting my
daughters. They are 3 and 6
years old. I think 1 should
have the girls checked by a
doctor to make sure they are
OK, but I need some in­
formation first.
How much do I have to tell
the doctor? Does a doctor
have to report such cases to
the law or the social service
people? Would the police or
social service people take my
son or the girls away from me
and put them in a foster
home? I don’t want to lose any
of my children.
1 talked to my son and he
promised it will never happen
again. If my children need
counseling, is there free or
l ow- cos t
counseling
available?
1 don't feel close enough to
anyone I know to ask these
questions and I don’t trust my
mail to be private. Answer,
please, in your column. Sign
me . . .
UTAH MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: The
welfare of all your children
should be your lirst concern.
Take the little girls to a doctor
to be examined and tell the
doctor the truth. Your son
should be examined by a
psychiatrist. Take him to your
local mental health facility
and be honest with the
peoplr there. Pleaie don't
worry that your children will
be taken from you. You need
to put your problem into the
hands ol professionals. Even
though your son has promised
It will never happen again, he

Reach A
Reader
...reach a buyer •
Was your business
included in the annual
PROGRESS HONOR ROLL

N SW

•

of the Evening Herald s
special Progress edition

To lake advantage of this special offer, present
this coupon to our photographer and m ake a 95c
deposit on your SI 2 .9 5 collection

* last year?

TOTAL PORTRAIT COLLECTION INCLUDES:
2 - 8 x 10s, 3 - 5 x 7s and 15 wallets.

If not, prospective customers were unable to

N O W O N L Y *9 .9 5 :: r H&gt;

read about your firm...when it was founded,

w ith this coupon

who runs it, what type of business and the

iS A y E *3 °°
I
I

■
_

products or services offered.

on your child's regular S12 9 5
portrait collection
QH«gpniJr*i(Uir»t*ip3tw*i*

.■•&lt;&gt; *

Don't miss this opportunity to tell of your

iHx-liMjMiFw* H
S1 il'vfr.Jkei a r i t iU.il SUP wt '•vl e111f Mj.t l *r
[,

firm's contribution to the growth of Sanford.
If you have been in the Honor Roll before, you
^

THESE DAYS ONLY
JANUARY:

WED THUR FRI SAT SUN

24

27

21

24

20

know the benefits and will certainly want to be
^included in this year's February special edition.

DAILY: 10 AM • 8 PM

DON'T DELAY...DEADLINE IS FEB. 4, 1983

SUNDAY: 12 NOON • 5 PM

Call the Evening Herald's Classified Dept.

3101 ORLANDO
DRIVE, SANFORD

for further information:

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

Antoinette or Eorlene will fee happ y to •assist you,

i

�Evening Her*Id, Sanlord, FI.

Wednesday, Jan 74, i &gt;Hi ?0

Chicken Cooking Contest

9

Favorite Recipe Entered Could W in $ 1 0 ,0 0 0
Do you look at the winning
recipes from the National
Chicken Cooking Contest each
year and think to yourself, “ I
wish I had entered. I bet I
could have won."?
Well you can't win if you
don't e n te r your favorite
Chicken recipe. And now’s the
time to do just that, according
to th e N ational Broiler
Council, sponsor of the
cooking competition which
dates back to 1949.
The 1983 National Cook-Off
will be held August 3 In Bir­
mingham, Ala. A finalist from
each state and the District of
Columbia will be chosen te
compete for a total of $20,000
in prizes.
It's easy to enter. Just write
your nam e, address and
telephone number on the front
page of your best chicken
recipe and mail it before the .
April 1 deadline to: Chicken
f ontest, Box 28158, Central
Station, W ashington. DC
20005.
!• Chicken is the only required
ingredient — the whole bird or
any part or parts. Recipes
should be written for 4 to 8
servings, and each recipe
must be on a separate sheet of
paper. Each of the 51 finalists
will receive an expense-paid
(rip to Birmingham where a
panel of national food experts
will select the five winners.
The first prize is $10,000.
Four runners-up will share
another $10,000 in prizes,
ranging from $4,000 second to
$1,000 fifth. Judging is based
on taste, appearance, appeal
and simplicity.
1" Any tim e you serve it,
chicken is a winner in taste,
nutrition and economy. This
recipe for Spicy Chicken With
Wine-Mushroom Sauce will
score high with your family.
Try it soon and don't forget to
enter your own chicken recipe
while there’s still time to get
in on the fun.
* SPICY CHICKEN WITH
Wi n e -m u s h r o o m sa u c e
• 1 broiler-fryer chicken, cut
ip parts
' ; 4 cup flour
; i teaspoon salt
’ 4 teaspoon ginger
1 li teaspoon nutmeg
teaspoon coriander
4 teaspoon allspice
6 peppercorns, cracked
4 teaspoon garlic powder
4 cup butter
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 cup hot water
1 can (4 oz.) mushroom
stems and pieces, not drained
4 cup white wine
In shallow dish, mix
together flour, salt, ginger,
nutmeg, coriander, allspice,
peppercorns and garlic
powder.
Reserve
2
tablespoons of mixture; to
remainder add chicken, one
piece at a time, dredging to
coat. In large frypan, place
butter and olive oil and heat to
medium high temperature.
Add chicken and cook, tur­
ning, about 15 minutes or until
brown on all sides. Remove
chicken from pan and set
aside; d ra in ‘ off all but 2
tablespoons of oil from
frypan . Add reserved 2
tablespoons flour mixture to
oil, stirring to brown, about 1
minute. Slowly add hot water,
stirring constantly to make a
smooth sauce; add mush­
room s and wine. Return
chicken to frypan; cover and
cook about 15 minutes, or until
fork can t^e inserted in
chicken with ease. (For
thicker sauce, remove lid and
cook 5 minutes more.)
CREAMY LEMON CHICKEN
3 whole
broiler-fryer
chicken breasts, halved
4 cup flour
4 teaspoon paprika
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
1 egg, beaten
14 cups seasoned crouton
crumbs
4 cup butter
4 cup chicken consomme
4 cup slivered almonds
3 tablespoons chopped
chives
4 cup whipping cream,
whipped, salted to taste
1 lemon, sliced thin
In a shallow dish mix
together flour, paprika, salt,
and p ep p er. In another
shallow dish place egg; and in
a third shallow dish place
crumbs. Add chicken one
piece at a tim e to flour
mixture, dredging to coat.
Then dip chicken in egg and
roll In crumbs. In i heavy
frypan place butter and melt
over m edium heat. Add
chicken and cook, turning,
abqut 10 minutes or until

brow n on all sides. Add
consom m e and alm gnds;
cover and simmer ab6ut 25
minutes or until fork can be
inserted in chicken with ease.
Fold chives into the salted
whipped cream and chill until
tim e to serve. When chicken is
done, remove lo a warm
serving platter and place a
lemon slice on each piece of
chicken ami then top with a
spoonful of cream.

SAVORY CHICKEN
ANDSQUASH
2 whole b ro iler-fry er
chicken breasts, halved,
boned, skinned, nnd cut in 1inch pieces
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon lemon and
pepper seasoning
l4 cup butter
2 small zucchini squash, cut
in 2-inch chunks

2 small yellow squash, cut
2 small yellow swuash, cut
in 2-inch chunks
1 cup ricotta cheese
I cup condensed chicken
broth
4 cup sherry
Onion, Cheddar, Poppyseed
Crumbs: recipe follows
In shallow dish mix
together cornstarch, salt, and
lemon and pepper seasoning.
Add chicken, a few pieces at a

time, dredging to coal. In a
large frypan place butter and
melt over medium heat. Add
chicken and squash and cook,
turning, about in minutes or
until fork can be inserted in
chicken with ease. In blender
container place
ricottn
cheese, broth, and sherry;
puree .and add to frypan.
Cook, s tirrin g constantly,
o v er.'lo w heat about If)
m inutes or until thick.

Sprinkle with crumbs Makes
4 servings.
Onion. Cheddar, Poppyseed
Crumbs:
In a small frypan place 3
tablespoons butter and melt
over medium heat Add t can
07 i crushed french-fried
onions nnd 1 cup crushed
C heddar cheese crackers;
saute 5 minutes. Stir in l t
teaspoon paprika and 4
teaspoon poppyseed.

Ii \ Spicy Chicken W ith Wine-.Miishrnuiii Sauce
ami I lien enter sm ir i&gt;\\ n recipe in chicken ro o k in g
c o n te s t.

ROYAL CROWN

CO LA

MIXED PARTS

8 P A C K 16 O Z . B O TTU ES

3 EA C H H IN D Q U A R T E R S ,
FOREQUARTERS, W IN G

D E C A F F E IN A T F O

A NEMI TIA VO R S

P R E M IU M FLO RIDA FRESH
P R E M IU M F L O R ID A FRESH WHOLE

COUNTY F A IR H AM BU R G ER S A HOI DOG

BUNS

• • • * 8 PACK

a /8 9 *
M EATY C H IC K E N

WISE P L A IN , BAR B Q OR SOUR CREAM

CHIPS "PT*.1? .. . 9 9 *

OPIN 24 HOURS

Fora Super-Bowl Week-End!

300 EAST H W Y . 434

TEMPLE

THIS AD EFFECTIVE THURSDAY JAN. 27 THRU WEDNESDAY FEB. 2, 1983
WE ACCEPT US DA FO O D STAMPS

PARTY

REGULAR OR LIGHT BIER
6 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

P L A TTE R S

10 - . 99 *
FLO R ID A IS CITRUS

FOR ANY NUM BER P F O P lE

1.79

BASED
ON
40Z
SF R VINO

OF MEAT OR CHEESE

CRISP PASCAL

PU C E

BUCKET

.3 /9 9 *

• . EACH. . .

49*

RALSTON PURINA

MUSHROOMS

* 1 .2 9

APPLES................ l. 7 9 *
M IF C T P D M

O'ANJOU P E A R S .t. 6 9 *
ORANGES .. ’.L
. " .. * 1 .3 9

KRAFT SALE

BORDEN'S ELSIE

"NOBODY COOKS LIKE YO U"
M ACARONI a n d CHEESE

HALF
GALLON

2.89

$

$

1.79

G REEN G IA N T U OZ

* _

7&lt;»OZ PKO.

2/69

M ARG ARINE Y E L L O W QUARTERS

DRUMETTES CHICKEn9 « 9 9

GREEN BEANS . . . 3 / * l

PARKAY ........ 2 lb, * 1

K ITCHEN FRESH

GREEN G IA N T I t OZ. CAN

KRAFT S IN G LE SLICES AMER

GREEN PEAS . . . 2 / 8 9 *

CHEESE.........oi$2 . 0 9

GREEN G IA N T 17 OZ. CAN

KRAFTCHEESESPREAD

POTATO SALAD .

89*

FRESH BAKED. FOR BEST FLAVOR

G RANNY SM ITH, CO O KING , G REEN

ICE CREAM

CO O KE D TO O R D E R
SUPER BOWL SPEC IAL

10 COUNT P L A T T E R

SPACK SALAD

TOMATOES

8

CHICKEN

1.99

1.79

PER
PERSON

AR TFU LLY TR A YED

POTATOES
valley

WE RESERVE T H E R IG H T TO L IM IT U U A N T I7 IE S

OLD MILWAUKEE

FOR GAME TIME

FLO R ID A O R A N G E S

CELERY .........

BROILERS .

THIS AD IS DESIGNED WITH BEST FOOD B U Y S

OPBN 7 DAYS A W II K

*

PIZZAS........&lt; **1 .0 9

WINTER

J4T0S.ORLANDO A V E .

10 M S

PLENTY OF M E A T SPLIT

O P IN 6 A M TO M IDNIG HT

SANFORD

■ n n

TOTINO FRO ZEN PAH IY

_

__

FRENCH BREAD lc. fT 3 ‘

YELLOW CORN . 2 / 8 9 *

VELVEETA .

TR Y OUR ASSORTED FRESH DOZEN

M ARTHA W H IT E

KRAFT FLAVO RS I I OZ.

BAKED COOKIES . . 7 3 *
M ID N IG H T
FUDGE CAKE E.» * 1 .8 9

QUICKGRITS

ALL TH ESE GOOD FOODS W ILL
MAKE Y O U R SUPER BOV.L GETT O G E T H E R , A HUGE SUCCESSII

Clip a n d R e d e e m T h e s e V a l u a b l e Coupons

PKG/

HYDE PARK (0 COUNT » OZ.

2 /9 9

C

*

«

.LO AF ^ 3

* 8

9

BAR-B-QSAUCE . . . 8 9 e
KRAFT l»00 IS L A N D , ITA LIA N OR F R E N C H

PLASTIC CUPS ...* 1 .3 9

DRESSINGS...... oz 6 9 e

M E R IT 100 COUNT 9 INCH PAPER

H U N O R Y JA C K

PLA TES..............« . .9 9 *

POTATOES BTfflT. ?1 . 2 9

1U. T4UT

R E D E E M ONE COUPON W ITH IJ 00 AD D ITIO N AL PURCHASES
OR, TWO COUPONS WITH 110 00 A D D IT IO N A L PURCHASES
OR, TH REE COUPONS WITH t IS.00 A D D IT IO N A L PUHC HASES (E X C L U D E TOBACCO!

Save 36
T H IS C O U P O N G O O D F O R
K R AFT H EA L

T H U COUPON OOOD FO R
O N I D OM N

M AYONNAISE

LAM B BOOS

L IM IT O N I f A IK W A T C O U P O N
F I * F A M IL Y M I t M I l A O D i t l O M A L
P U A C H A I I B X t L U O I M O I H I I IT E M
'
A N D TO BA C C O f X . I M l

L IM I T o n i f A IA F IA Y C O I
F I * F A M IL V W IT H M A O O I
* c h a » * i » « iu w n * T k
A N D T p jA C C O IA F I

fu

�10fr-~Evnlng Herald. Sanford, FI.

Testing
For Blacks
Resisted
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) Standardized tests do not
im prove the q u a lity of
education but serve only to
exclude blacks from the
learning process, a group of
black students and educators
said Tuesday.
Florida has led the nation in
the past 10 years in adopting
standardized tests and plans
to implement more. Blacks
have scored lower than other
segments of the population on
each of the tests.
Black educators disagreed,
claiming the tests are biased
and have no “cultural validi­
ty." If black students are not
learning, they said, school
administrators, not students,
should be held accountable.
Na'im Akbar, a clinical
psychologist at Florida State
University, said the tests
were "cultural imperialism at
its w orst" and Joseph
Baldwin, president of the
Association
of
Black
Psychologists, called them "a
racist enterprise."
Baldwin said he “strongly
urges the black community to
resist all testing."

Legol Notice
IN TME CIRCUIT COUNT OF
THE EIOHTEENTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OF FLO RIDA, SEM.
IN O L I COUNTY, F L O R ID A ,
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE NO. I l Sm -CA lA P
IN THE MATTER OF THE A
□OPTION OF:
JENNIFER OEE MORRIS and
JULIE ELAINE MORRIS
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
REXFORO M MORRIS
Last known m ailing addresses
(a) II* Wyoming Drive
Concord, North Carolina
lb ) Rt. 2, Lot No I*
(Windsor Park)
Spencrr Mountain. N orth Carolina
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that a
Petition lor th* Adoption of the
above minor children hat been
tiled against you by A lbert M.
I lite r, and you are required to
serve a copy ol your w ritten
defenses. It any, to said Petition on
ROBERT H. R O TH ,
ESQ.,
P la in tiffs attorney, whose ad
dress Is 201 N. Palmetto Avenue,
P 0. Box 1612, Orlando. Florida
37X2. on or before M arch I, 1*12,
and tile the original w ith the clerk
of this court either before service
on p la in lill't attorney or Im
mediately thereafter; otherwise a
default w ill be entered against you
tor the retlel demanded In the
petition.
OATEDat Santoed, Florida, this
74th day of January, 1*12.
(SCAD
Arthur H Beckwith
Clerk of Circuit Court
By: Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Jen J». Feb 2, *, It, IM J
DEO 111
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number I2NSCP
IN RE ESTATE OF
DOROTHY O PETERMAN
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS OR D EM AN D S A
GAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS IN
TERESTEO IN THE ESTATE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th a t
the
ad
ministration ot the above estate
and File Number is pending in the
Circuit Court tor Seminole County,
Florida, Probate Division, the
address ol which Is P 0 Drawer C.
Sanlord. Florida 22771
The personal representative ol
the estate is JAMES F PETER
MAN. whose address Is c o 101S E.
Semoran
B lv d ,
Suite
2,
Casselberry, Florida 22707.
The name and address of the
personal representative's attorney
are set forth below
All persons havino claims or
demands againsl the estate are
required. WITHIN THREE (71
MONTHS FROM THE OATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to file w ith the
clerk ol I he above court a w ritten
statement ol any cla im or demand
they may have Each claim must
be In writing and must Indicate the
basis tor the claim, the name and
address ol the creditor or his agent
or attorney, and the amount
claimed It the claim Is not yet
due. the date when It w ill become
due shall be stated. If the claim is
contingent or unliquidated the
nature of the uncertainly shall be
slated. If the claim is secured, the
security shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of the claim to the clerk to
enable th * clerk to m a il on* copy
to each personal represent alive.
All persons interested in the
cslate to whom a copy of this
Notice ol Administration has been
mailed are required. W ITHIN
THREE 2) MONTHS FROM THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA
TION OF THIS NOTICE, to file
any otgectlons they may have that
challenge Ihe v a lid ity ol the
decedent s will. Ih* qualifications
of the personal representative, or
the venue or lurlsdlctlon ol Ihe
court.
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS, AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
Oate ot the first publication ot
this Notice of Administration.
January It, 1**2
• jamas F. Peterman
As Personal Representative
ol th* above Estate
Thomas R. Rogers
Attorney for Personal
Representative
A T TO R N E Y FOR PE RSO NAL
REPRESENTATIVE:
Thomas R. Rogers, Attorney
MIS R. Semoran Blvd. Suite )
Casselberry, Fla. 77707
Telephone. 205 77* TOM
Publish: January I* . 2*. 1*02
DEO 102

1/ V

Wednesday, Jan. 74, 191)

18—Help Wanted

Legal Notice
COMMISSION HEARINO
DOCKET NO. 02*2«4.TP
FLORIDA PUBLICSERVICE
COMMISSION
t*
SOUTHERN SELL
TELEPHONE AND
TELEO RAFH
COMPANY
end
ALL OTHER INTERESTED
PARTIES
ISSUED: 1)142
NOT ICE is hereby given that the
F lorida P u b lic Service Com
mission w ill hold public hearings
inlhe above docket on the Petition
ot Southern Bell Telephone and
Telegraph Company for an in
creese In rates and charges at th*
following tim es and places.
Thursday, February 2. 1*12
7 00 5 00 p m e n d s 00 10 00 pm
City Council Chambers
City A dm inistration Building
SSS South Washington Avenu*
Titusville, Florida
Thursday, F eb ru a ry 2, 1*12
2 00 5:00 p m and 6 00 10 00 p m
Quality Inn
1*01 S W 12th Street
Gainesville, F lorida 37401
Friday, February a, 1**2
2:00$ 00 p m. and 6:00 10 00 pm
Loch
H aven
A rt
Center
Auditorium
341* North M ills Avenue
(Princeton Street E xit oft 14)
Orlando, Florida
Friday, February 4, l*»2
2 00 5 00 p m and 6 00 10 00 p m.
City Council Chambers
Jacksonville City Hall ISth Floor
220 East Bay Street
Jacksonville. Florida
Monday, February 7. 1*91
2 00 5 00 p m and 6 00 10 00 p m
Hernando
County
Civic
Auditorium
U S Highway 41 South
Brooksville, Florida

CLASSIFIED APS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

C L A SSIF IE D DEPT.
HOURS
8:30 A.M . — 3:30 P.M.
M ONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 • Noon

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

4—Personals
BEING ALONE or Alone w ith
the children Is never easy.
S IN G L E
AG A IN SINGLE
PARENTS can help. Christian
Sharing lim e s
322 17*7 223 37*1

6^—Child Gire
Excel Babysitting
in m y home. Anytime
321 30*6
W ILL do babysitting in my home
in Paoia
Call 323 01*6
B A B Y S IT T IN G - my home
Hrs A days. Ilex Rates neg
Gall 321 1177
It's like pennies from heaven
when you sell "D on't Needs"
w ith a went ad

6A- Health &amp; Beauty

Wednesday. February *, 1983
2 00 5 00 p m a n d * 0010 00 p m
Lake City Auditorium
City Hall 2nd Floor
ISO North Alachua Street
Lake City, Florida

LET Davis Quick Relief U n i
m m t massage away your
aches A pains. 120 54*4

Thursday, February 10, 1*12
2 00 S 00 p m. and 6:00 10 00 p m
Municipal Auditorium
I Harrison Avenue
Panama City, Florida

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 17 SSf-CP
Division
IN R E : ESTATE OF
ALLIE M COLLIER.
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
The adm inistration ol Ihe estate
of A L L IE M COLLIER.deceased.
File Number 82 5S* CP is pending
ig Ihe C ircuit Court lor Seminole
County. Florida. Probate Division,
the address ot which is Seminole
County Courthouse. Sanlord.
Florida 32771 The names and
addresses o l
the personal
representative and the personal
representative's attorney are set
forth below
A ll In te re ste d persons are
required to tile with this court,
W ITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
TME FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE
( II all claims
against the estate and 121 any
objection by an interested person
to whom notice was mailed that
challenges Ihe validity ot the w ill,
the qualitications ot the personal
re p re s e n ta tiv e .
venue,
or
lurlsdlctlon ot the court
ALL
C L A IM 5
AND
OB
JECTIONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ot this Notice has
begun on January I*. 1*0)
Personal Representative
STELLA BUERKETT
407 East College Avenue
Normal. Illin o is 61761
Altornev tor Personal
Representative
•
JULIAN K DOMINICK JR
401 Bradshaw Building
14 East Washington Street
Orlando. FL )2*0I
*
Telephone 1205 ) 425 14*1
Publish January I*. 26. 1*12
DED 107

Friday, February I I , IMS
2 00 5 00 p m and 6 00 10 00 p m
Escambia County Health Dept
Auditorium
2251 North Palalox Street
Pensacola. Florida
Thursday, F ebruary 17, l* t)
2 00 S 00 p m and 6 00 10 00 p m
Broward C o m m u n ity College
Central Can.p &lt;is
Bailey Concert Hall
2501 S. Davie Road
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Wednesday. February 22, 1**2
10 00 a m 5:00 p m. and 6 00 p m
to 10 00 p m.
G u llslre am
Room, Bayfront
Center
Baytront Park
a** Biscayne Boulevard
Miami. Florida 22122
Thursday, F ebruary 24, 1*13
2 00 5:00 p m. and 6 00 10 00 p m
College M ain Auditorium
Palm Beach Community College
42X Congress Avenue
Lake
W o rth , F lorida
Friday, February 25. 1*63
2 00 5 00 p m and 6 00 10 00 p m
Fo&lt;t Pierce Community Center
400 North Indian River Orlve
Fort Pierce. Florida

RATES

Hime
54c a lin e
2 consecutive limes 54c a line
1consecutive times «4c a line
10 consecutive times 42c a line
$2.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

Legal Notice

(NOTE: Times shown are lecal
times.)
At each location the hearing will
begin as scheduled and w ill con
tinu* until all witnesses have been
heard or th e ending tim e,
whichever is earlier. It no wit
nesses are present, the hearing
may be adjourned A ll persons
desiring to present testimony are
urged to appear at the beginning of
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
the hearing and should bring bills
THE EIO HTEENTH JUDICIAL
or other documentation relating to
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
complaints
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PURPOSE AND PROCEDURE
CASE NO. I ) 17) CA19-K
Th* purpose ot these hearings
IN TH E M A T T E R OF THE
shall be to perm it members ol th*
ADOPTION OF
public to give testimony regarding
In re:
th* adequacy and quality ot ser
PETITIO N OF GERALD LEE
vice rendered by Southern Bell
M CNALLY,
Telephone and Telegraph Com
Petitioner.
pany
NOTICE OF ACTION
At th * hearings, customers of
TO Waleed E l Shorala
Southern Bell may be heard on any
RESIDENCE Unknown
and a ll Issues In th * case relating
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
to th * proposed increases In
N O T IF IE D that the above named
charges or the quality ol th*
Petitioner, G erald Lee McNally,
company's services. Customers ol
has Hied a petition In in * above
all other telephone companies may
styled Court lo r th * adoption of th *
be heard on the issues of whether
m inor ch ild named in that petition.
th * long d ista n ce service is
You are alleged to be a natural
adequate and whether certain
parent o l that m inor child You are
proposed changes In long distance
required lo serve a copy ol your
service should be Implemented
w ritten delenses, if eny, lo th *
The procedure at th* hearings
petition on Christopher C Skambls
shall be lo r the company lo first
of van den Berg, Gay i Burke,
present a b rief summary ot Its
P .A ., Post O lfiC * Box 71*3.
cat* alter which public witnesses
original w ith the Clerk ot th *
w ill be a llo w e d to present
above styled Court on or before
testimony. A ll witnesses shall be
February 71. 1*12. otherwise a
subjecl lo cross examination al
default m ay be entered against
the conclusion ot their testimony.
you lo r th * re lie f demanded In th *
PUBLIC COUNSEL
p e titio n and a ludgm ent of
Th*
Public
Counsel,
as
adoption m ay be entered ter
authorlied by Section 250 0611,
m lnoting your legal rights as a
Florida Statutes, has intervened in
natural parent.
this docket on behalf of I he
WITNESS m y hand and seel ot
Citiiensol th* Slat* ol Florida and
said Court on this 17lh day ol
will be present at the hearings to
January, l**2
represent th* public. He may be
CAR RIE E. BUETTNER
contacted prior to th* hearings at
Clerk o l C ircu it Court
th* Office of Public Counsel, Room
VAN DEN B E R G .G A Y &amp;
A Holland Building, Tallahassee.
B U R K E . P.A.
Florida 22X1 1*04) M 91X. Th*
By: Christopher C. Skambls
Public Counsel will be available te
16 South M agnolia Avenue
meet testifying members of Ihe
Post O il ice Boa 21*3
public on* halt hour prior to th* Orlando. F lorida 3X02
time th* hearings are scheduled lo
Publish January I f , 26 ft February
begin.
7. ♦. 1*02
JURISDICTION
DEO 104
Jurisdiction over the company Is
vested In the Commission by
Chapter 264. Florida Statutes.
Authority to approve any change
NO TIC E TO T N I PUBLIC:
In rates Is governed by Section
Notice Is hereby o*v«n that th*
264.05, F lo rid a Statutes, and Board of Adlustment of tho City ol
authority to consider th* adequacy Sinford p il l hold a Special
and quality of service Is governed Meeting on Fob. I I , 1*01, In th*
by Section 264.025, Florida City Holt at U : X A.M. In order to
Siafide*. Each of th* foregoing consider a request tor an Insections ot Chapter 264, as well as lerpretatlon of sold yord setback
Chapter 2S-4,
Florida
Ad- requirem ents In Remblewood,
mtnistretlve Code, are Involved in Unit I.
this proceeding
Being
m ore
specifically
By DIRECTION of th* Florida described as* located al Rem
Public Service Commission, this blewood Subdivision. Unit I.
llth day at January, 1IS2.
Planned us* ot tho property:
(SEAL)
Single fam ily dwelling.
Sieve Tribble
B. L. Rural.
Commission Clerk
Chairmen
Publish January 26 4 February 2,
Board ol Adlustment
1*0
Publish: Jan. 26. Feb. 4. 1**2
DED -IX
DED-100
'

DELIVERY M an. Young hard
working. M ust have chauf
H u rt license, and good driving
record Apply in person only.
Sheds A m erica, I12J Hwy 17
*7 N Long wood

Offshore rigs No experience
necessary Start Immediately,
sis.ooo plus a veer eof
form ation call 13121 *70 9144,
Ext. 1344B

E X C E L L E N T income lor pert
tim e home assembly work.
For in fo rm a tio n call 504 M l
1003 E xt 7*40.
G O VERNM ENT JOBS
V a rio u s p o s itio n s a v a lla b l*
th ro u g h lo c a l governm ent
agencies 520,000 lo 550.000
potential. Call (refundable) 1
(4)*) 54* 4714 dept 341 for your
1*13 d ire cto ry. 24 hrs.

STOP AND T H IN K A M IN U TE .
If C la ssifie d Ads d id n 't
work, there wouldn't be eny.
HEAT AND AIR
TECHNICIANS
No r ip necessary F or inlorm a
lion call *19 227 0247 or *1*
227 02*4 * 9 M o n F r i Adams
Enterprises. Inc.

WAREHOUSE workers needed
W ill fu lly train, good pay, lu ll
tim e * 7 * 40*4._____________

TELEPHONE ...$ 4 .0 0 Hr.
No sales, w ill tra in . Hours I I
p m Good commission * plus
Needs several.
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
1*12 French Ave.
222-5174

LAWN
SPRAYING ....... $135 \Mc
W ill train, raises and com
mission, excellent company.
AAA EM PLO Y M E N T
1*17 French A v *.
322-5171

lft—Help Wanted

18—Help Wanted

18-Help Wanted

G E N E R A L O ffic e w ork, no
experience needed, lu ll tim e
im m ediate. 42* 40*4

CORRESPONDENTS
wanted
tor th * Casselberry, Long wood
end Altamonte Springs areas
lo w rite a weekly column on
news Irom these communities
Applicants must have a Hair
for w ritin g , an eye for news
and be able to type column at
your
home.
Call
D o ris
D ietrich, Th* Evening Herald,
222 7411, alter 1 P m
R E L IE F
Houseperent
fo r
C hristian Children's Home,
possible live in. 149SO**

REC EPTIO NIST
a nd
Ap
poinlmenl Sellers, good pay.
must be able to handle incoming calls q u ic k ly , start
right away *29 4094.
MEDICAL Technologist lo work
in doctors oHIca 10 7 M o n .
Tues . Thurs., F r i Salary per
hr. 55 54 Call M rs Thom ason
Wed only 273 2250

WAREHOUSE ..$6.00Hr.
F lo rid *
C h a lle u r
license,
shipping and receiving, load
trucks, top com pany raises
and benefits
AAA EM PLO YM ENT
1*17 French Av*.
212-517*
CLASSIFIED ADS A R E FUN
ADS READ ft USE THEM
OFTEN. YOU'LL L IK E THE

RESULI 5. .

.

IS—Help Wanted

CONSULT OUR

TRUCK DRIVERS
Earn S6 35 per hr to s ta rt w ith
re g u la r schedule in c re a s e s
d rivin g a concrete m ix e r or
block truck lor the leader in
the b u ild in g m a te ria ls in
dustry. Musi be en established
resident, with a high school
diploma and a stable w ork
record. Apply in person
RINKER M ATERIALS
111* W. 35**1 St.
Sanlord. Fla EOE

BUSINESS SERVICE LISTING
AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...

SECRETARIAL . . .t o $240
Accurate typing, shorthand a
plus. E xecutive s e c re ta ria l
position Sharp, good skills,
excellent opportunity.
AAA EMPLOYMENT
1*17 French Av*.
723-S174

Diol 322-2611 or 8 31 -9 9 93

CRUISE SHIP JOBSI
G re a t Income p o te n tia l. A ll
occupations For inform ation
call: (3121 741 *7*0 EXT. 3220

BOOKKEEPER
Accounts payable and p a yro ll
experience Light typing. 10
key calculator. Good telephone
voice Large corporation, w ith
excellent benefits. Apply In
person Long wood Health Care
C e n te r. 1520 G ra n t
St.,
Long wood
GOVERNMENT JOBS
Im m ediate openings. Overseas
and domestic. 520.000 to SSO.OOO
Plus a year. Call I (317) *21.
7052 Ext I244A.

LANDSCAPING $3.50 Hr.
W ill tra in , must drive, split shift
» 2 transmission Permanent
raises, needs now
AAA EMPLOYMENT
1*17 French Av*.
321-5174

Carpentry

Aloe Products
YOUR fin a n cia l dreams
become a re a lity w ith Aloe
PT, no investment 321 721*

have

STOP AND T H IN K A M IN U TE .
It Classilled Ads d id n 't work
. . there wouldn't be any

Home Improvement

CARPENTRY Remodeling, lire
places, w a ll paneling, shelv
ing, handy man repairs. Semi
retired. Ray 305 574 6949.

ROOM Additions, remodeling,
d r y w a ll
hung,
c e ilin g s
.sprayed. tlrepleces. roofing.
37) 4*27

Home Repairs

♦ T R IP L E Ah'
Vj Price special. $14.95 lor
Fam ily o r L iv in g Rm. M2 37*0.

PA IN TIN G and repair, pa'.o and
screen porch b u ilt
C a ll
anytim e 277 *411

Ceramic Tile

Auto CB Stereo

SEAMLESS aluminum gutters,
c o v e r these everhangs walum inum safflt ft fascia. (*04)
775-10*0 collect. Free est.

M EINTZER T IL E Exp Since
1*52 New ft old work comm 1
retid Free estimate M* 15*2

„'C

COOD Y A SONS**
Tile Contractors
221 0157

‘
Ins

Legal Notice
C8. Stereo Installation Repair
CITY OF CASSELBERRY.
a
Auto Sound Center
FLORIDA
A ) w e 2109 French Ave
NOTICE OF PUBLIC H EA R IN O
127 4*25
TO CONSIDER
ADOPTION OF PROPOSED
Wonder whal fo do w nn .'wo*
ORDINANCE
Sell On* — T h* quick, easy
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Want Ad w ay. The m a g ic
NOTICE IS HEREBY G IV E N
number is 372 2*11 or 111 9991
by Ih e C ity ol C a s s e lb e rry ,
Florida, that the City Council w ill
hold a public hearing to consider
enactment ol Ordinance 4B0 en
Additions &amp;
title d
Remodeling
ANORDINANCEOF THE C ITY
OF CASSELBERRY. FLO R ID A
AM END IN G SECTION tSS 27 (C l
(3) OF THE CASSELBERRY
UAlMS.Xitcnens. roofing, block,
CITY CODE. PROVIDING UN
concrete, w indow s, add a
DERORAIN
REQUIREMENTS
room. Ire * estimates 121*443
AND
S P E C IF IC A T IO N S :
A D O P TIN G THE A M E R IC A N
SOCIETY FOR TESTING AND
ALLTYPES CARPENTRY
M ATERIALS. DESIGNATION: D
Custom Built additions. Patios,
X23 S FOR UNDERORAIN PIP E
screen rooms, carport. Door
SPECIFICATIONS; PRO VIDING
locks, p a n e llin g , sh in g le s,
FOR
CONFLICTS.
S E VE R
rerooling For last service,
A B IL IT Y AND E F F E C T IV E
can 323-4917* 365-2371
DATE.
This police is given pursuant to
the provisions ol Chapter 166,
Aluminum Siding &amp;
Florida Statutes, end th * Charter
Screen Rooms
and Ordinances ot Ihe C ity o l
Casselberry, Florida, as amended
and supplem ents.
ALUMINUM Siding, vin yl siding
Said Ordinance w ill be con.
50HH ft fascia. A lum inum
sidered on lirs t reading on Mon
gutters and down spouts.
day, February 7,1*11, and th * City
Fr.ESt.105 165 53*2.
Council w ill consider same lo r
fin a l passage, In accordance w ith
Chapter IM . and adoption a fte r th *
public hearing which w ill be held
Appliance Services
In th * City Hall ot Cassalberry,
Florida, on Monday, F ebruary 14,
at 7 :X P.M. or as soon th a re a tta r
as possible. At th * m a ttin g In ­
CLARENCE'S
terested parlies may appear and
APPLIANCE SERVICE
be heard with respacl to the
we servlet a ll m a lo r brands.
proposed ordinance. This hearing
Reas, talas. IS y rs. exp. 1710111.
may be continued from lim e lo
lim e until final action Is taken by
th * C ity Council.
Beauty Care
Copies ol th*
proposed o r­
dinance are available at th * City
H all w ith th * Clerk ol th * C ity and
tha ta m e may be inspected by th *
TOWER’S BEAUTY SALON
public.
FORMERLY Harriett's Beauty
Dated this Ifth day o l January,
Nook SI* E 1st St . 327 5747
A.D. 1*12.
M ARY W. HAWTHORNE.
City Clerk
Advice te tk e P a b llc It a person
Boarding &amp; Grooming
decides lo appeal a decision m ad*
w ith respect to any m atte r con
sidered at the above hearing ho
w ill need a verbatim record ol o il
proceedings,
In clu d in g
th *
m NIMAL Haven Boarding and
testim ony and evidence, which
Grooming K e h n a lt heated,
record Is net provided by th * City
insulated, screened, tly proof
Inside, outside ru n t. Fans.
of Casselberry.
Alto AC cege*. Wo catar to
Publish: Jan. 26. m i
your pets. Ph. X I S7S7.
DED-117
•
_______ ___
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Nolle* it hereby given that I am
angaged In business al H M So.
M yrlla Av*., Sanford. Florida
33771, Seminole County, Florida
under the IlcIHIout nam e ol
G ERALD SMITHBAUER ft AS
SOCIATES. and that I Intend to
register said name with the Clerk
of tho Circuit Court. Seminole
County, Florida in accordance
with th* provisions ol tho F ic­
titious Nam * Statute*. T o W lt:
Section 665 0* Florida Statutes
l*S7.
Sig Stephen R. Smith
Publish: January ft 17. I f . 2*. I t U
DED 31_______________________
FICTITIOUS N A M I
Nolle* It htrtby given that I am
engaged in business at *17 Savage
Court, Longwood, F la . 22750.
Seminole County, Florida under
th *
fictitious
nam e
of
SOPHIST I CAR. and that I inland
to re g itttr said name with tha
Cierk of th* Circuit Court, Semiol*
County, Florida In accordance
with tha provisions of tho Fic
titiout Nam* Statutes, To Wit
Section 165 0* Florida Statutes
1917
VICTOR
M I C H A E L
M ISILEW ICH
Publish January I*. 3* ft February
7. 9. I N I
D E O **

TLC WITH "R U TH "
Dog grooming, tm ail Breads SI.
Free pick up, dal. Longwood
oraa. 7 days. 131-1*1).

DeGarmaau Bookkeeping Ser.

SPENCER PEST CONTROL
Comm., Rasd., Lawn, T e rm lt*
Work. 227 IMS. Ask fo r Champ

Plastering

Carpet Cleaning

Alteration &amp; Tailoring
EXPERT
d r e s s m a k in g ,
alterations Asian Cleaners.
1*44 Hwy 17 93. Lake M ary
Blvd , 321 499*.

Pwt Control

Child Care
THE H APPY ELVES
Quality c h ild care and pre
school. Infants a specialty,
in d iv id u a l a tte n tio n . Stale
licensed i n E. Crystal Lake
Ave , Lk M a ry 221 21*4

C O L L IE R 'S Home R e p a irs
carpentry, rooting, painting,
.w in d o w repair 121 *422.
HOME Rapalrsremodellng.
root repair* Free est.

**5-2*75
WINDOWS, deori, carpentry,
Concrete slabs, ceramic ft Hoor
tile. M inor repairs. Ilreplacet.
insulation. Lie, tend 222-|1J1.

ALL
Phase* of Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
rote,simulated b rick 2)1 599)

Piano Lessons
GIVE yourself or your children
the priceless opportunity ol
professional piano lessons
Given by a licensed teacher In
your
own
home.
V e ry
reasonable rates No m ileage
charge Best techniques lo r
re a lly
successful
piano
p la y in g . W ill w o rk tim e
around your schedule. For
com plete In fo rm a tio n c a ll
M rs . Jenkins at 231 1700
anytime. It no answer pleas*
try again.

CARPENTER 25 yrs exp Small
rem odeling jobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 272 M42

Remodeling

M aintenance of all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
1 electric 22) 401*

Remodeling Specialist

HOMEOWNERS, relax on your
days off Let us clean yovr
home at affordable rafts. Call
now 231 ISM Patty's Horn*
Pampering Service.

LIHI# want ads bring big. big
results. Just try on*. 222 2611
or 1)1 m i .

B. E. Link Corot.
3227029

A.M. K e lly cleenino servlet.
Speclallling In restaurant ft
• flic * buildings. 472-425*.

Incomt Tax

Cleaning Services

C o n crete Work
BEAL Concrete I man quality
operation patios, driveways
, Days 111 7222 Eves 227 1211

V

SWIFT CONCRETE work all
typas. F o o te rs , drivew ays,
pads, flo o rs, pools, compltta.
Free est. 333 7103._________
FOR a ll your concrete needs call
221 2477. F re * estimates. No
builders pleas*.
______

Dog Training

Sundown Dog
Training
Obadienca training in
home and group. 22M TU

Draperies

W* Handle Th*
Whole Bell Of Wax

Financing A v a lla b l*

D.B.F.S. 1*01 French. Business
ft Individual income taxes 9 9
M F. 9 12 Sat

Lawn Service

*A -1 LAWN S E R V IC E *

Rooting

A &amp; B ROOFON
22 yrs. eiperlenc*. Licensed B
Insured.
F r*e C tllm a l***R Roofing,
Re-Reeling and R epair*.
Shingles, Built Up and T il*.

JA M ES A N D ER SO N
G. F. BO H A N N O N

Mow. weed. trim . haul. R tg u la r
Service. I lim e clean up. 2*

hrs. hast rplu. 421642*..
SHAMROCK
Landscape
Complete Res. ft Comm.
Servlco. Sprinkler sys.. repair,
winter clean up. 331 057*.

Lavw iM ow tn
M ISTER. F ix It. JO# McAdams
w ill rep a ir your mower* al
j o u r home. Call 323705$.

M ajor Appliance
Repair
JO H N N IE S Appliance*, w .
sarvlc# refrigerator*, wash
er*. dryers, range*. Rea*,
rates, m ana.

NEW reroofing, and
repairs. IS Yrs. Exp.
227 1924

Built up and Shingle root,
licensed and Insured.
Free estimates. 322-1936.
JAAAESE. LEE IN C .
Secretarial Services
SECRETARIES N E E O E D FOR;
Temporary and part lim a
positions. Excollanl skills'
necessary, interview by ap­
pointment only. 123 544*.

DR A P I S BY D E BBIE
Reasonable rates
31117*0

Nursing Care
STEAM iRd Pressure Clesalag

CUSTOM M ADE ORAPBRY
Trovers* Rads Installed.
Dorothy Bliss
349-S41J

Excavating Services

LOVING HOME. Eacallant c a r*
ft companionship lor elderly
woman. 2214X5

Roofs) House pointing, and
minor carpenter repairs. All
work
guaranteed.
Free
estimates. 322 *204 or 0314721.

N ursm q Center

TV Repair
* VetN O BXC A VA T IR S
M 0 Co** BackhoeLoader w
extender ho*. * yd. dump
truck-low bed sarv M i t n

Fencing

OUR RATESARELOW ER
Lakeview Nursing Center
71* E Second S I. Sanlord
277 * 707
W ill car* for elderly
In my homo
22)5275

Sea TV S a n k * Center
Service charge S2.9S plus parts.
All makas. 7M 1751.

Tree Service

m ix ;
Personal Incoma T ax**, open
evenings.

FENCE Inttollatton. Chain link,
wood poat ft roll, ft farm fane*.
License ft insured. 22)61*1

Brick
A Block
e x ----- i . , .x .
n o n e ywtk

PIAZZA MASONRY
Quality Work A l Roatonablt
Pfic**. F ra* Estimates
Ph. 34* 5500.

F irewood

T R ^ a m f^ ^ S a r^ ^ ^ h ;

O IL Heater cleaning
anditryklng.
Call Ralph 232 711).

STUMPS ground out.
Raasanabk, free aotimatet.
79*0441

rtm ova,
trash, h a u lin g ,firewood. Fr. Est. 322-9410.

JOHN ALLEN YARD ft T R IE
SERVICE, We'll ramove pine
FIREWOOD $40 ft up. Tree
trim m in g , rem oval. Trash
hauled. F ra * est., 272-9410.

Carpentry
Handymen
CARPENTER repairs ary)
additions. 20 yrs. tip .
Call 337 1152.

Oil Heaters
Cleaned

HANDYMAN Service* PpKdlng.
rep airs, ole. Reasonable
prar work. 42S46S1, 677;47||T

Painting

HOUSE painf Ing S M
a house. Any sit*.
422 104.42)4009

frato. Real, prka 3)1-00.
U|fy TraeStwmp*
Remeve I I inch-dUmeter
Rem Tree Service 339-4291

Upholstery
B IL L 'S FAINTING
interior Exterior pairs Ing Light
carpentry. Horn** pressure
ciaanad. Businas* 3)1 2431.
Homo O l 511*. Bill Sfolner.

LORENE'S

Upholstery.

Fred

Pkk-up, del. ft etl. Car ft
I boat
eaar*. Fgrn n i 172*

�&lt;

» |

18— Help Wanted

31—Apartments Furnished

N e E D m oney’ Sell Avon in
S anford, W ashington Oaks.
M idway and Geneva 3775910
BUSINESS Is great! We need 4
e x p e rie n c e d
real estate
associates to help us market
our m any saleable listings
'Top c o m m is s io n *
W ith
Num ber I Century a \ you're
ahead all the way Let’s talk!
Call June P orriq at Century 31
June Porjig Realty
322 84/8
Realtor

H

Apt
plus

you are havnq d iffic u lty
lindtng a place to live, car lo
drive, a lob, or some service
you have need ol. read an our
want ads every day

Why not sell AVON'
2210859

PART T IM E Men Women Work
Jrom home Phone Program
J ta rn 525 5100 per week
f le x ib le Mrs Can 094 2304 or
189 0918
£ EA R N E xtra money tor
t yo u r grocery receipts
C a ll 322 1302 or 323 0881
IfJ« you are having difficulty
fin d in g a place, to live, car to
f r iv e . a job, or some service
fo u have need of, read all our
' an! ads every day

I

LA K E MARY 3 Bdrm, kids, lu ll
kit,, fenced, 5285 Fee 339 7 m
Sav On Rentals.Inc., Realtor

32—Houses Unfurnished

C M A . g a r a g e , S J 75 m o 293 1 094

X

SSO.OOO to $10,600
Are you bored with
’ BR Year
3
Vo ur job? Tired of working tor
the o th e r man? N ational
Company based In Lexington,
Kentucky looking for qualified
lu ll and pa rt tim e distributors
in 4 county area investment
covered by Inventory Phone 1
800 354 9594

29—Rooms
SANFORD, Reas weekly i,
q io nlhly rales U til inc ell 500
Oak Adults I 841 7883

Santord 3 bdrm, kids air, appl ,
carpel. 5350 f ee 339 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtor
CASSELBERRY Lktnt ?bd a ir
.5275 Fee 339 7200
Sav On Rentals. Inc Realtoi
SMALL 4 bedroom, t bath.
Clean 5350 monlh plus deposit
323 8877
3 BDRM. trees, fireplace. 5335 2
Bdrm Fenced yard, carport
5100 Kids, pets, references
Deposit 323 5028
1 B d rm p a rtia lly fu rn ish e d
house 5350 mo,, plus u tilities,
5300 sec dep 7608 5 Elm
323 0144
AV A ILA B LE now 3 bdrm I bath
house, fully carpeted, rent
5300 Sec dep S77S Call
331 6900or 323 S lit

.-ROOM FOR RENT
332 385)

30-Apartments Unfurnished
LU XU R Y
APARTM ENTS
F a m ily A, A dults section
Poolside. 2 Bdrms, Master
Cove Apts 321 7900 Open on
weekends
M arin e r's V illaqc on Lake Ada. t
bdrm Irom 5265. 2 Bdrm Irom
5300 Located 17 92 just south
of A irp o rt Bivd inSanlord All
Adults 323 8670

LEASE or lease option 3 Bdrm
2 Bath tdyllwildc school area
5400 mo
JUNE PORJIG REALTY
REALTOR
CENTURY 21
332 8678
ELEG ANTLY restored 2 Bdrm ,
I Bath Cent HA Wall wall
Carpel, fireplace, adults, no
pets 5375 645 4461 or 322 4978
3 BDRM. new kit . large yard,
dead end si 5350 mo 321 0123
No phone calls alter 9 p m .
MODERN 1 Bdrm, 2 Bath, w ith
CM A drapes, appt lurnished
5475 Mo., 629 5758 or 834 4246

APARTM ENTS ForRent
Two, I bedroom apts
233 5751
G EO RG IA ARMS APT5.
Applications now being taken tor
beautiful, new I and 7 odrm
apts Central heal and air, wall
to w a ll carpeting, color
coordinated appl stove and
Irost tree retrig and custom
drapes Applications available
at site 2800 Georgia A ve ,
near Seminole High School
Rental Assistance Available
•Y qual Housing Opportunity
hurmsned apertm entsto' Senior
O llie r s 111 Palmetto Ave , J
C o w a n No phone calls

. 1 A N D J BDRM From 5760
Ridgewood Arms Apt 7S*f
Ridgewood Ave 32) 6470
ENJOY country living’ 2 Bdrm.
Duplex A p ts , Olympic SI
pool Shenandoah V illage
Open t lo 4 123 2920
SANFORD 2 bdrm 5100 down
^ppl 52SO mo Fee 339 7200
la v -O n Rentals, Inc. Realtor
BAMBOO COVE APTS
100 E A irport Alvd
1B3 Bdrm s
From |3)0m o
Phone 33) 4430
G E N E V A GARDENS
1 Bdrm Apts 5245 Mo
Mon thru F rl.9 a m toSp m
1505 W 25th St.
322 2090

4

OFFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE
830 7723

) \

V ABCUT

:: 1 A * , r A 6 T

.MEcSASUCH#

_ -.r-:„" %

S T R IK E S .'

41—Houses

- v

(

41-&amp;— Condominiums
For Sale

It you don't tell people, bow are
they going to know? Tell them
with a classified ad, by calling
332 2611 or 8)1 9993
LAKEM ARY
3 b d rm .2Jja lli, Cecil HA 5400 mu
glady (Mown Realty 323 5337 or
377 3974
3 BORM. I bath house tor rent
5700 mo Well built, near town
No children 321 0279 att n p m

37—Business Property
SMALL Commercial Bufldlng
lo r ren t Downtown L a ke
M ary Days phone 32 1 2550
Eves 32) 6053
OFFICE SPACE and or
retail best location
7546 French Ave 377 440)

1600 Sq It office. Its Maple
Ave, Sanford Avail Immed
Broker Owner 322 730*
P R IM E
OFFICE
SPACE.
P rovidence Blvd , Deltona
2164 Sq Ft. Can Be Divided.
Wbn Parking Days 30S 574
MM Evenings &amp; Weekends
904 719 4251

SAT.
10: 00- 5:00

SUN.
1: 045:00

SOM I PLACIS NAVI
T5J ALL
H o w 1 a n d 2 b d r m . a p ts .
Clubhouse w health club, on Site Lake
Tennli, Racquetbell, Volleyball, Jogging Trail,
.Swimming, Self-Cleaning Oven, Icemaker KMore.

*

FINE dinette sei 1110 Game
table. 4 folding chairs. 540
School desk chair 525 J33 0776

r n r v '

Wil s o n m a ie r t u r m t u r e
311 311E FIRST ST
3)7 5627

PWE OWNEOMOME5
7 Bd Fam Park
17x60

113.500

52—Appliances

2 Bd Fom Park
12x61
510,500
2Bd Fam Park
'4x57
512.300
2 Bd 34x64 MustSee
514,900
3 Bd 17x60 Nice
56.495
7 Bd 12x61 Furn
111,500
3 Bd 13x60
54.500
2 Bd 14x64 Ad Pk
173.500
GREGORY MOBILE INC
3803 Orlando Dr 17 97 5 Sanlord
305 323 5200

HAROLD

HALL
REALTY, IN C
41—Houses

41—Houses
FHA VA SPECIAL! Why rent
whenyoucanown NOW. 51.2)0
down payment, 1 bdrm home
on fenced lot Large oak and
citrus trees. Good location)
Only 1392 a mo T a ie i and
insurance included ll. 'lO y r s ,
Price 1)4,100

e r a _____J i

JUNE PORZIG REALTY

REMODELED
3 bdrm ., 1&gt;i
bath, w new root Enclosed
garage and tiled Fla rm . Oak
shaded yard E xtra clean!
G reat lo ca tio n l C re a tiv e
financing! See it today 542,900

STENSTROM
REALTY

-

REALTORS

S a n fo rd 's S jle s Lead er

STONE FIR EPLACE! Sets the
mood tor this 3 bdrm . 3 balh
gem Den, CHA. se p a ra te
entrance to 1 bdrm and bath,
huge lot, and much more
555.000

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

REALTOR
802 S French Aye

CUSTOM
B U IL T
CEDAR
HOME
Energy
e ffic ie n t
custom throughout T e rrific
owner financing P o te n tia l
guest home in r r a r 17 citrus
trees. Loads ot storage Take
44A East to let! on R t. 415, 3
houses on right past Osteen
Post Ottlce 569,500.

COUNTRY L IV IN G 3 Bdrm 3
balh dbl wide Mobile on
lenced corner lo ti Screened
porch, eat.in kitchen, dining
room, and lots m orel Horses
welcome! S1I.S00.
ATTRACTIVE 1 Bdrm 2 bath
home near downtown area!
Panelling, fa m ily room, ealtn
kit. fenced, and an easy
assumption $38.900!

HUGE CORNER LOT! Priced to
te ll last! 3 bdrm. fa m ily rm ,
CHA, lenced yard w w ell and
sp rin kle r system s, m a tu re
citrus trees, double, sue patio
under spraw ling cam phor
Sroo. Large assumable low
in le re tl mortgage. Call lodayl
541,900

JUST FOR YOU ) Bdrm 1 bath
home near Lake Monroe and
shopping! Spacious living and
l/rm ly rm . large M br,, Cent
HA. wall w a ll carpel, enjoy
your awn pool and patio
587,800

O ETA FRESH START
W ITH ‘ SANFORD'S NO I
PROFESSIONAL"
C u rre n tly seeking m o tiv a te d
Sales Associates Excellent
commission Schedule- leads
furnished Ask fo r M r Hall

MAYFAIR V IL L A S ' 3 6 1 Bdrm,
2 Balh Condo Villas, next lo
Maylatr Counlry Club Select
your lot. floor plan 6 interior
decor! Q uality constructed by
Shoemaker lo r $47,900 6 up!

C ALL A N Y T IM E

NOWS THE T IM E
TO BUY!
FH A -V A 12-

JUS
1'4'k

N e e d l is t in g s '
CALL US NOW! Ml

we

322-2420

SPRING HOUSECLEANING?
SELL THOSE NO LONGER
NEEDED ITEMS WITH A
CLASSIFIED AO

323-5774

MLS

E

H

Good Used Tv s525 4 up
MILLERS
7619 Orlando Dr
Pn 327 0113
REPOSSESSED COLOR TV 5
We sell repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles and portables EX
AMPLE Jenilh 21" color n
oalnut console Original price
over 1750. balance due 1196
casn or payments 117 month
NO MONEY DOWN S till in
warranty Call 21st Century
Sales867 1)94 day or mte Free
home tn a l no obligation

BIG Yard Sale cameras, tu rn ,
maple rocker, books, dishes,
Thurs F ri 8 4, J400 Key Ave

5 5 -B o ,n s&amp; Accessories

)3—Lots Act e.iqe

1980 Hyryder 16' hbergtass Bass
Boat, jo HP Spirit motor,
tra ile r and tro llin q motor,
used one season 12.800 00
1973 Kawasaki. 750 needs work
make otter 327 1440

ST JOHNS River frontage, 2 'j
acre parcels, also interior par
cels w ith n ve r acc«ss 112,900
Public water. 20 min to A lta
m onte M a ll 12 •* 20 y r
fin a n c in g
no g u a lily in g
Broker 678 4633

62—Lawn-Garden

CO UNTRY1ACREI
Fot a low down payment and low
interest Irom owner you can
own this high and dry acreage
East ot Sanlord Mobile home
ok with permit, 123.500 to r
quick sale

DANIEL AND WOHLWENDER
GENEVA 2 Story 4 t near Lake
Harney New paint, siding
and root, fa m ily room, large
garage, lenced yard, reduced
to $50,000

F ILL DIRS A TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
Clark A HIM 373 7580, 323 2823

65—Pets Supplies

CallBart

SANDY WISDOM

869-4600 or 349-5698

AKC Black Cocker, female 7 yrs
old, very atlectionale $65
37) 8476

wF A t f S T A T E
U ( A L T O N 171 74»l

B A TEM AN REALTY

FREE lo a good home, female
Schnauser, spayed
32)3625

44 B— Investm ent
Property

Lie. Real Estate B r&gt; e 3640 Sanlord Ave.

Wilco Sales Hwy. 44 W.'
tt

B lk Nice neighborhood
Assume mortgage and gay
equity A real buy! 134,500

SANFORD Reduced 110-000 Ea
3 U n its , 568.871 1 U n its,
588.810
Buy
W holesale,
flexible (inancing, and ownm,
term s Lei's deal 1 884 4871’

LEASE Option tor Rent 4 2,
carpel, CHA, fenced back,
walk to schools, and shopping,
a nice area 554,900
R E N T 3 1, B lk , u til
4nd
screened porch. 5325. first, last
and DD

47

321 0759

EVE

66—Horses

Real Estate Wanted

MUk I sell 4 Shetland |&gt;onles.
Grpat with children Please
call 321 2091

67—Livestock P oultry

N E E D to sell your house
q u ic k ly '
We can
o tte r
g u a ranteed sale w ith in 30
days Call 33! 1611

322 7W3

47-A —Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

Modernizing your Home .'£ e ll no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classil rd Ad

321 0041
REALTOR
A lte r Mrs 323 7448 6 377 6952

Keues

nO R tO i. INC # f l f AITORS

Be UJwe

Call Keyed
*80 ACRES*
Get back lo n a lu rt. Perfect
hunltng rtire a l o r ranchettt.
Secluded, black h a m m o ck
area, owner w ill finance w ith
25*. dawn. Viola R iv tra or
Sharon
P alm ar
R e a lto r
Associates. All. Mrs. 841-4191
549 W Lake M ary Blvd
Suite B
Lake Mary. Fla. 12748
121)200
FORSALE b y o w n e r
a Bdrm Irame house on ■ lots
Corner ol Thompson and Car
penter Axes Osleen. Recently
rem odeled. IS I r u lt tree s
Asking 538,000 377 0795

•

WE PAY cash tor 1st A 2nd
mortgages Ray Legg L ie
M ortgage.Broker 788 2599

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS ot merchandise
every day

Get
WINTER
PARK
117,100.
Spacious home on lovely Park
Ave. S eparate workshop,
citrut. P a rtly turn.
NEAR
IN D IA N
HILLS
Maitland 4 Bedroom. 7 Balh,
Iq screened pool, g a m t room
Fam. rm L ivin g rm .. 7 car
garage • cxc. area. 5115,000.
EUSTIS: Lakelront. 2 m il. long
Lake N orris. Nice brick ond
redwood w -lurn. cottage. For
the lith e rm a n . q u ie t and
secluded 5131.000
DEBARY St. Johns River: 1100
sq It. on 1.4 acres. M in lo M .
Your own boat ram p A dock, 1
bedroom, 1 balh. fireplace in
M ailer Suit*. 1129,100
DEBARY St. Johns River nearlike new, 3 bedroom, 1 batht
with 9»»i* M gt. on I acre.
Many extras 574,900.
The W all St. Co Realtors
Associate B«a W illiam son Off.
I l l 1005 r t 6 323-4741.
DRIFTWOOD VILLAG E
509 W. Lake M a ry Blvd.
Lake M ary, F lorida 31704
Otllco: (1051 131 1001
Have a room to rent? Let a
classified ad find a tenant tor
you I
UNOER 53.000DOWN

1 bdrm doll house Affordable
monthly
p a ym e n ts
Owner Broker l i t ta ll

Call

ple n ty
ol
prospects
Advertise your product or
service In the Classified Ads

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
2544 5 French
332 0231
After Hours 139 1910 372 0779

SP—Miscellaneous (or Sale

ROBBIES
REALTY
REALTOR ML1
1701 5 French
Suite 4
Sanford Fla

POOL T ABLE .1450
Pool light 150
223 1474
F IREWOOD 545
Pickup load
___________ 377 4057____________

24 HOUR [B 322-9283
LOCH ARBOR, large 7 level.
Bdrm, 3 Bath, 5101,000 by appl.
Wm. M a llc io w ik i, REALTOR,
323 791] Eva 323 3317
CORNER Lot 8, Counlry Club 1
Br Fenced 56500 down &amp;
assume 5359 per month
133 3264
EXC. Neighborhood, 5-1. corner
lot, stone fireplace, C-AirHeat, tans, wallpaper. Cony.,
FHA, VA, Super Hornet Must
see. I yr. W ARRANTY!
The W all St. Company
Roaltor
12)1001
HAL COLBERT REALTY
REALTOR '
207 E l l l h SI.
313T i l l

Fatigue and Painter pants
AR M Y NAVY SURPLUS
ItO S anlordA ve
337 5791
BUY SELL TRADE
Florida Trader Auction
Long wood. Fta 339 31)9
COLDSPOT Refrigerator.
Med s i 555
322 3972or 322 1976
WROUGHT IRON table and 4
chairs Burnt orange cushions
Asking 5110 Trash compactor
Sears Kenmore 531 331 6801
TOPPER lor Truck e 5)00.
Between 8 ). 322 6012. a lte r
5 30. call 661 8001
FOR SALE Royce CB 570
F ln g e rh u l Cabinet sewing
machine, 540 Portable stereo
tape deck record p la y e r
A m F m combination. 571. good
cond 372 5947

» » l

•

f

Wednesday, Jan, 2A, 198] —1 'B

75—Recreational Vehicle*, i
SCOTTY I ! ’ T ra ile r w 76 Im
gala eng cxc 52.900 OBO
Purchase separate 174 6830
-------------------F O R D ’ * Ton with
Trop-cana Camper qood cond
3237775

\
j
v
i

BUY Factory Direct
Light
Afight liberyiass Scamp 13 4 ‘
16 travel traders A new 19 5th
wheel Call now to llir e e I 800 .
316 4963 tor Iree brochure and
save’

76—Auto Parts
78 Dodge Colt engine 76 Chcvv
engine 350, Toyota cnqme
373 4063

77—Junk Cars Removed
yVE PAY top dollar tor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto Parts 79 ) 450S
3UY JUNE CARS A TRUCKS
F rom 5 t0 lo l5 0 or more
Call 322 1624
TOP Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Used cars, trucks A heavy
cqu ipment .32? 5990

SO—Autos fo r Sale
We buy Cars and Trucks
M artin Motor Sales
7015 French
3217124
DeBary Autp A M arine Sales
across the rive r too ol h ill I7&lt;
Hwy 17 97 D eB ar, 668 »**»
ABOVE average p n c t l paid lor
d ra n cart, (rucks and travel
trailers 3)3 2900
1980CMEVY M ALIBU 4dr
PS. PB. V 6 eng . etc cond
53980 321 0821
75Da TSUN7d r w ith a u to tra n s
and other extras Gocxl con
ditton 199 down Cash or
Trade 3)9 9100. 834 4601
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
No Credit Check Easy Teems
NATIONAL AUTOSALES
1120Sanlord Aye.
331 4075
1980 Chevy pickup C 10 AmFm.
a ir. auto, ps exc
cond
wholesale price ca ll 322 5564
78 FORD Granada All extras
in cluding auto tra n s , 1450
down Cash or trade 339 9)00
134 4605
'79 Ford Mustang, 4 cyl A C, F’ S
2 D, sunroof Good Condition
Eye 322 9094
1966 Buick special. Runs good
Good gas m ileage 5550
322 3972 or 323 1976
MERCEDES 81. 300D. asunrcxjl
24.000 miles exc cond 521.000
323 1 7 7 ) ___________
1978 Oatsun 510 station wagon
exc cond cc. am lm ac, 53,800
or 5)50 down and take over
payments A lter 6 p m week
days, 321 4081

Cows lo r Sale

Geneva, Fta
349 5228

2404 HWY 17 92

KISH REAL ESTATE

317 (170

B iled shavings 14)0
Straw
IS 10 Quality name cal and
dog loods Including A N F,
Aviary Supplies,

WE BUY equity in Mouses,
apartm ents vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
VESTMENTS P O Box 2500
Sanlord Fla 37771 322 4741

REDUCED lo r quick sale 3 1'.
CHA, enclosed garage ane
lenced b a ck, nice area.
544.900

f

54—Garage Sales

1980 M OBILE Home 14 x40 set
up in adult section ot mobile
park Day 8)1 2423
E venings 831 5116

A

f

53—TV Rxidi^Stereo

Vtoderniiinq your Home? Sell no
longer needed but useful items
w ith a Classified Ad

Let a Classilled Ad help you find
m ore room
lo r storage
Classilipd Ads llnd buyers
last

CHARMING 1 Bdrm I bath
home completely remodeled!
Cent HA, Fam rm , equip, kit.
and more 539.500

JUST received shipment ol good
used refrigerators 30 Day
guarantee Sanlord Auction.
17)5 S French, 323 7340

W ANTEDTO BUY
Recent model.3 2 On
fa m ily lot 647 8169

NEW L is tin g ' Y ou 'll warn to see
this 3 bdrm . 2 bth. t yr. old
home on 1.9 acres in a
b e a u tifu l n a tu ra l setting
Located in Paola 571,900

322-8678

BEAUTIFUL 3 Bdrm J Balh
home in cxc. M aytair. Pan
Fam rm , w ith lire p la ce ,
Sunroom, equip kit. and many
extras S99.900.

TERRIFIC LOW
INTEREST ASSUMPTION
Nice 3 Bdrm home w ith large
p riv a te yard, shady oaks,
across Irom Park
French
doors to screen porch, sunken
Fam ily Room, paddle fans,
new carpel, and much more!
Only 539.500

kenm oreparls. service used
wishers 33) 0697
MOONEY APPLIANCES

1981 SKYLIN E Mobile Home
24x52 t t screen e n closure
porch u tility shed, Cent HA 3
Bdrm. 7 Bath Lot site is
50x100 Can be seen at 126
Leisure Or North DeBary.
Florida in the Meadowtea on
the River Mobile Home Com
m unity Please contad Tom
Lyon at 323 1747 lor additional
inform ation

REALTOR
323-5774
3) YEARS EX PE R IEN C E

323-3200

1BBB Weal t Irst Sir tat — Sanford, F lo rid a *2711 — (301)11\ 1270

372 41)2
L a rry 's M art
New and used lurniture 215
Sanlord Ave Instant cash lor
good used turn

42—Mobile Homes

R E A L T O R S *

37-B-Renta I Offices

51 A—Furniture

CONDOMINIUM in Sanora 3
B d rm , 2 'i bath Beautifully
d e co ra te d 71 4 • * fir s t m o r
tgage. assumable owner w ill
co n sid e r second m ortg a g e
562,500 by owner 323 5944
evening K 323 6445

YOUNG J Bdrm home. Can be
used as residenceor professional
oltices or comm ercial
Only
512.000 down 541) M onthly Call
Broker Owner 331 1611

FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS

MON. - M l .
5:04 - 5:00

T h a t L L BPlNJt

AFTER

ELEV EN

NEW Duplex 3 bdrm bth u fil.
rm carport kitch appl . Lease
339 8S42

a lte r 3 30 and weekends

24Jr Business Opportunities

WHKT5 W IT * / h E W 6 T (S ? \ &gt; )/ t D R X T H ER B I T OS
Th E M A J O R ? i 3 J A 3 P U K E
\ HIM R E TR M N 1N * X
HE H M T H E
E \ ES V C N E E L S E ) C H I C k A r E E j—-■
61A$ 5 V $ T A R £ \ C R BEC C M E T h e \ T ' 3 E A
/
O F A B O W LER J r P F IC IA L c S O r E R ! \ F A L C O N ) / —
PUTTNiS SNE \ HE6 HJPilUi F05 )
p / ' ME6
IN THE (5 U TTE5 J a n i n v e n t i o n -tilr ------ f m u m b l i n ’

PROFESSIONAL O ttlce space
tor Lease, on 17 92 ideal
location lo downtown area 70S
S French Ave or call 322 3170

Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

with Major Hoople

31A—Duplexes

S A N FO R D Lake
M a ry
Grovcvicw, 3 bdrm, 2 bth,

^ F A C ’ ORY work, tulltlm e,
•Jgood pay, start right away
5
629 4094

.

OUR BO AR DING HOUSE

37C-For Lease

Sa n f o RO 2 bdrm, kids, comp
h i porch. 52!0 Fee 339 7 m
Sav On Rentals, Inc . Realtor
BE AU TIFU L 3 bdrm, 2 blh apt .
s p lit Into 2 separate jo in in g
u n its , newly decorated and
furnished 5100 wk plus 5200 sec
dep Call 333 3269 or 32t 4947

N E E D extraMoney?
'

COMFORTABLE I Bdrm
downtown area 570 wk
utilitie s Call 321 4947

*

67A-Feed

|

HAY 17 00
at barn
322 8455 or 373 3400
HAY 17 50 per bale.
21 or more tree del
Other feeds avail. 349 1194

(Xi

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 97. t m ile west ol Speed
wey, Daytona Beach w ill hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Monday A Wednesday at
7 30 p m It's the only one in
Florida You set the reserved
price Call 904 255 8311 tor
further rteialH
Somebody Is looking tor your
bargain. O fler il today in the
Classilled Ads

W iW U X l It) BOV

Need E xtra Cash?
KOKOMO Tool Co. af 918 W
F irst SI , Sanlord, is now
buying glass, newspaper, bi
metal steel and aluminum
cans along w ith all other kinds
ot non ferrous metals Why not
turn this idle clutter into extra
dollars? We a ll benefit Irom
recycling For details call
323 1100

71—Antiques
DEPRESSION GLASS
Show and Sale
S a l, Jan 29. ID 5
Sun . Jan 30. II 5
Sanlord C ivic Center
Admission 12 00

GARAGE
SALE
1972 VW 7 P Wagon

*1895
1978 Jeep Woponeer
EXTRA *
CLEAN

1978 Datsun 2 Dr.

*2195
1978 Concord Wagon

*3995

72—Auction
FOR ESTATE Commercial or
Res denl-al Auctions- &amp; Ap
praisals Call Dell's Agchon
131 5*30

S C A flO
* # W V

SANFORD
M O TO R CO

Get Caih Buyers fo r a sm all
Investment Place a low cost
classified a&lt;r lo r results. 322
2611 or 831 9993.

A M C JEEP
508 5 F re n c h Ave
122 4)87

L o n g w &amp; o d L in c o ln -M e r c u r y
Central Florida s »1 Lincoln Mercury Dealer
5 5 5 5 H IG H W A Y I 7 -9 2 , L O N G W O O D • 8 3 1 -8 0 9 0 • 3 2 2 -4 8 8 4 • O P E N N IG H T L Y T IL L 9 0 0 S A T

U S E D C A R S P E C IA L S
1981 TOWN COUPE

t « #81487
1979 GRANADA
S U » PI 457
Great economy u r

1MOT-MO
SB #30041
S y r clou tr&gt;#-le,

*6150

4475

Slk xr P 14 7b
l ike new luxury te r

TILL 6 P M . «

O PEN SUN

12-6

M 0$ ./24,0 00 M IL E W A R R A N T Y A V A IL A B L E

10,150 |

1171 MARK V
SM # PI 47(1
N il I n oa lot
1979 f BIRO
Slk xr P1464
Super cleen

&amp; SUN

1979 FAIRMONT
Slk x f P l 479
Don I mlai ihtj ona

8tfc#20SU
EitricUntroOM

4905

19 /7 FlHFBlHO
Slk a TBA
low low price

4475
1225

4750

1870 ELDORADO

St#TIA
WMtthnity

1125

1980 IN T O

Slk a 1470
tiisal economy car

3675

W O NAURU
S tk ftP M U

Wieknd iieelil

V

�‘V

C

t

.

. i

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)JB—Evening Hera Id, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Jen. 26.1P8I

----------- J

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________
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scon

JUM BO
ROLL
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JAN. 27-29, 1941

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JAN. 27-29, 19A)

DEL MONTE
(SLICED OR HALVES)

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JAN. 21-29, 1941

A LL THE FUN &amp; EXCITEM ENT BEGINS TODAY

rev/l
VAiUf
17 a c
1 000
JDC
100
JO
10
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P4i#A«tB
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ok

W« ro a M n g m y IP trips for two to tho
Great west, Great Lakes or Hawau. If you
obtain a game marker which says "You Qualify
for Great Trip Drawing," you are eligible for
each of the two drawings. Just submit
ualifier marker to store office and fill out a
rip Entry Form. All entries received by
Fobruary 9, 1983 wM be eligible for the first
drawing on February 16, 1983. Five Great
Trips w l be awarded in the first drawing. All
valid entries received within three days after
game ends wM be eligible for tho final drawing
to be held approximately seven days after
game ends. Five Great Trips wiH again be
awarded at this time. See coflector card for
details of trip prize.

Q

»oe
4 GANi
f&lt;B|»L
1 w 10 UOO
1m 4 9 9
' o 7 fct)
1 a.
PK
1p
1m
749
tr
' r
41
1r
1m
4

cjuos

No Pmcftaia Nacaaaary1

SAVE 80

PORK
CHOPS

W -0 M ANO USOA CHOICE REEF CHUCK
CENTER CUT 7 RONE CHUCK ROAST A
POT

HICKORY SWEET RONE LESS SMOKED
HALE (fU llY COOKED) 2-4 IB AVC

R o a st.............‘F

W O M A N D USOA CHOtCI HEAVY
WESTERN IEEF IO IN IO N E -IN Si .LO IN

S t e a k ......... .. *2 "

SAVE

SAVE 26

IV

Sausage

SAVE 59

SCHLITZ

PAX
1 1 -a i.
CANS

’

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til
■

SAVE 40&lt; . lAM SIU SC O . BULNCO OR
ROSAIO IRJNfTE

M t t ___

A l l FLAVORS CHEK
} LTR
a a a a a a ITl.

i * u«SA

PALMETTO FARM'S PIMENTO

SAVE 10' • I
SEIF RISING

Qmm . ......... '
SAVE 3 0

SAVE 30
SAVE 50
Minute
OHANGL

SAVE x - • SUPerbaand

!

4

c e cream

HARVEST FRESH VINE RIPE

Toanrtoes. . . .

ix

Sandwiches .. «a M

*

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�</text>
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                    <text>E v en in g H erald
Sawyer Expected To Be Named Keeth Principal

Rosenwald Parents Split Over Plans

;

�Battle Of The Buckle, Belt Moves To Court

�In

FLORIDA

Graham Backs Tougher Development

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House Panel OKs Upping Consumer

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G u n Safety I
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Badge Number 92
Is A Mean Machine
^OKLANIW UJPH
"Tndcrd. BadgeNo.02laameanmadilnc. ^^ ^ ^

�Why Shield A
Shady Doctor?
« H S S 5 3 E
WASHINGTON WORLD

Renting
A m erican
Politicians

Democrat
Runners:
Dull Field
k s &amp;s s s

JEFFREY HART

Soviets And The Freeze

The Crime Myth

Kennedy Tied-ln

Scandal

�Cornerstone To Be Installed

Sherwln Williams

REALTY TRANSFERS

For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1,1955
For Veterans with military service since Ian. 31,1955
Veer of Discherge__________________ Age______

FAYVA SAVER
■ LOOK FOR
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Florida Symphony
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Unbelievable prices on the styles
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DENTAL CENTER
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!A continuity series o f
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SidneyJiplfistein, •Music ‘Director
AlfredSavia, Associate Conductor

ijoin us at
730p.m ., Wednesday, April27
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730p.m ., Thursday, April28
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at Leu Qardens, Odando
AlfredS a m conducting

(305)321-4800

Freedom

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Oust Patriots

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�Treat Mom
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DENNIS &amp; K A T H Y 'S

APRIL 28 - H A Y 4, 1983

FAIRW AY

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HERE'S HOW IT WORKS:

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                    <text>H azard
City Sets Hearing To Condemn Plant

.“ Hr

Sanford:
Lake Mary
Must Find

Lawmakers To Adopt
Legislative Program

Improved
Ambulance
Aid Sought

Backs 3-Cent Gas Tax

�5

�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

Sealift

Water Safe; Boiling
No Longer Required

ercent Pay Raise OK'd

W =M M

-

Marie! Refugees Leaving A Legacy Of Crime

�Eye On The
Radical Agenda

IN TALLAHASSEE

WILLIAM HUSHED

Legislature
Does Little
Thus Far

Beating
Up On
Amway

how was the news tonight, dear1
OUR READERS w r it e

rsasSSs Call It Crooms/SMH?
Setting The Rules

BERRY'S WORLD

J A C K ANDERSON

Laws Hide Identity Of Shady Banks

�Little Guy Shoulders Brunt Of Tax Law Changes

W om en M arathoners Run
G reater Cancer Risk

Less Than Half U.5. Adults Register

"Losing Hair?"
Try This At No Risk

Sexual Lines Defining
The Workplace Are Fast
Being Erased, Study Says
presents

C o n c e r ts
in t f e T a r ff
A continuing series o f
free concerts
w ith th e‘Jbrida
Symphony Orchestra
Fun Day At Dog Track Saturday

Sidneyf‘ylfislein,:Music 'Director
AlfredSavia, Associate Conductor

Pleasejoin us at
730p.m., ‘Wednesday, April27
atLake Tola, Odando

NOTICE
The School Board ot Seminole County received in­
put at a recent work session on Crooms High School
facility and the Sanford Middle School facility. At the
meeting on May 11,1983, the Board will act on the
Superintendent's recommendation to determine
future utilization of both facilities. The meeting will
be in the Board Room of the Administration Building
at 1211 Mellonvllle Avenue, Sanford, Florida, and will
begin at 3:00 P.M.
Laws being Implemented are F. S. 230.23(4) and F.
S. 230.33(6). Copies of the Superintendent's proposals
will be available for Inspection at the administrative
offices after May 4.
Roland V. Wlllalms,
Chairman

730p.m., ‘Tfursday, April28

atSanfordCentennialTarit, Sanford
2fflp.m ., Sunday, 9day 1

for theStmwberrySpring f‘estival
benefitingtheAmerican CancerSociety
atLeu gardens, Odando

�SPORTS

Evgnhg ritrald, Sinlord, Ft.

A p op ka Tries To Snap 6-Year District Oddity
Conference Champ Has Never Won District

Colts Draft Elway Anyw ay
s ^ a 'S S S S S S t
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Rotary Tops KO C For 5th Win;
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Jackson-Barber Vows
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Oldies Are Goldies, Wrinkles And All

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■.CDUnUHOUM0. TW
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PUT TOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE •

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MAKE YOUR STOOL THE
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of The Printing Palace staff.

BLAIR AGENCY

VOLKSHOP
214 S. Polm.no Are.
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SANFORD
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PATCHWORK COTTAGE QUILT SHOP

321-0120

323-7710 or 323-3B66
2910A OAK AVI. SANFORD

STANLEY
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                    <text>G le n n Pushing For County G a s Tax H ike

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Tax Rollback
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Sanford Acts To Clean Up

TODAY

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Lake Mary Ignores Threat; Nixes Lot Split

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Pentagon Plans 'Star Wars' Weapons Research

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730p .m ., Thursday, A pril28
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2.00p .m ., Sunday, ‘M ay 1
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Freedom

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SCIENCE WORLD

VIEW POIN T

Cancer
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Reagan
Urged To
Give In

"M y new home computer said there was only a )
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ROBERT W AG M AN

Hoffa's Dream Is Gone

J A C K AND ERSON

Terror^ Writing A Bloody History
BERRY'S WORLD

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                    <text>SUNDAY EDITION

Young Addicts
Possibly 3,000

County Children Have Drinking Or Drug Problem

In vestig atio n
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Wekiva River Day Set

TODAY

Law Week Activities To Be Many

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RUSTY BROWN

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                    <text>State M a n d a te s
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Consumer Prices Up Slightly

Architects For School
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Commissioner Hee-Haws Over Tree Selection

Pair Face 30-Year Prison Terms For Drug Trafficking
Action Reports

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HOSPITAL NOTES

STOCKS

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S e le c te d R e vlo n P ro d u c ts
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�Evening Herald

A Chance
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A N T H O N Y H A R R IC A N

A Matter
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It's Time
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W A S H IN G T O N WORLD

Televise The Senate?

Televise Senate

JA C K A NDERSO N

Pentagon Playing Movie Critic Now

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Court Upholds Drug Trafficking Law

Foreign Ow ners Control M ore Than
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New Anti-Herpes Drug Offers Relief

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AREA DEATHS

Genuine Ruby Ring With Purchase
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                    <text>Racial Discrimination Ruled In School Case

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Plane Audit Criticized
OAKLAWH'S VETERANS DIVISION
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More Blacks To Run Burger Kings

Address___________________________
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For Veterans with military service before Feb. 1,1955Q
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NATION
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�</text>
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75»h Year, No. 1 5 6 -F rld a y, February 18, 1983-Sanford, Florida 32771
Evening Herald— (U SP S 481-280)— Price 20 Cents

Tighter Security A t County Jail Exercise Yard Sought
By VICTOR ASSERSOHN
Herald Staff Writer
Tighter security has been called for at the Seminole County
Correctional Facility to stop prisoners from escaping.
The request for more security at the Jail exercise yard has
been made to county commissioners by Sheriff John Polk and
newly appointed Jail Administrator Jim SchulU.
Three prisoners have escaped from the exercise yard. The
last escape was on Dec. 10 when Harold Lee Tanner, who was
being held on armed robbery charges and considered
dangerous, scaled the walls of the recreational building,
grabbed onto a security camera mounting, ran over the roof,
dropped to the ground and shinned up a 15-foot-high fence,
dropping to freedom on the other side.

Tanner was captured three days later at the MacAllister
Motel in Sanford.
A similar method of escape from the exercise yard was
made by two prisoners last July. Robert Hayter and Robert
Duie used a cloth rope to scale a 20-foot-hlgh wall and then
dropped down by the perimeter fence before climbing It and
dropping outside the jail. Both were captured shortly after
their escape.
Since the December escape, two Jail guards must now be on
duty watching the prisoners during their exercise. One guard
keeps an eye on prisoners in the exercise yard and the other
looks after the prisoners who prefer to stay in the recreational
area inside the building.

There are 240 prisoners housed at the Jail, which is staffed
around the clock by about 50 officers. It is not always possible
to have two guards supervising exercise periods, Schultz said.
“At any time they (prisoners) go out under the present
circumstances there is always a risk that one of the prisoners
will find a way to get out. All we need is a security screen to
prevent an individual from being boosted up on the shoulders
of one of his fellows, dropping down the other side and getting
away," Schultz said.
The state requires counties to permit prisoners at least two
hours of exercise a week. To provide at least two officers each
time the exercise yard is used by 15 to 20 prisoners has a
"crippling effect" on the staffing of the Jail, Schultz said.

"They are not quite getting the two hours because we haven’t
the manpower," he added.
He agrees with Polk, who put the request for tighter security
to county commissioners, that the entire exercise yard be
enclosed to seal it off from the sides of the surrounding
buildings to stop prisoners from scaling the walls. Another
alternative is to put wire stands around the top of each building
or install a mesh screen over the whole exercise yard.
County Administrator T. Duncan Rose III has requested cost
estimates be calculated for each alternative.
Polk also has asked the county commissioners to consider
the cost of paving the dirt exercise yard to keep the Jail
cleaner.

Lake Mary
To Sue Law
Violators

HsraM P int* fey Tam VI k

Maintenance workers at Lyman
High School In Longwood erect
beams to support the gymnasium
roof. A leak was discovered In the
roof on Sunday, forcing school

officials to close the gym. The
gym w a s flo o d e d a lt e r th e
weekend's heavy rains and the
floor received minor damage.
Assistant Superintendent for “a-

n i

cllltles Benny Arnold said It will
be several weeks before an In*
vestlgatlon Into what caused the
leak Is completed.

Lyman Gym Leaking, Closed
By MICHEALBEHA
Herald Staff Writer

to p u m p a n y w a te r w h ich b u ild s up.
A rn o ld s a id . S c h o o l m a in te n a n c e
c re w s h a v e a lso c o n s tru c te d scaffold­
ing to s u p p o rt sa g g in g b e a m s In the
gym .

L y m a n H igh S c h o o l's g y m n a s iu m
h a s b een closed all w eek b e c a u se o f a
leak In th e ro o f w h ich allow ed w a te r to
flood th e gy m floor.
F la sh in g on a p a ra p e t to re loose
d u rin g th e w e e k e n d s to rm s , allow ing
w a te r to ru n th ro u g h th e roof in to th e
g ym . a c c o rd in g to A ssista n t S u p e rin ­
te n d e n t o f F acilities B en n y A rnold.
Ed B u c k n e r. L y m an a th le tic
d ire c to r, sa id th e leak in th e ro o f w as
first n o ticed follow ing th e h e a v y ra in s
w h ic h o c c u rre d last w eek en d . S ev eral
In ch e s o f w a te r co v ered p o rtio n s o f th e
floor o f th e Longw ood school w h e n th e
leak w as d isco v ered S u n d a y .
T h e p ro b lem w as c a u se d by " a
d e te rio ra tio n o f th e roof m a te ria ls ."
B u c k n e r said .
P u m p s h a v e b een p laced o n th e roof

S c h o o l S u p e r in te n d e n t R o b e rt
H u g h e s s a id d is tric t officials have
b e e n m e e tin g w ith e n g in e e rs a n d
a rc h ite c ts to d e te rm in e th e se v erity of
th e p ro b lem .
" W e h a v e a s e r io u s p r o b le m .”
H u g h e s said . " W e ’re try in g to d e­
te rm in e w h o ’s a t fa u lt."
T h e roof h a d b een on th e g y m n a s i­
u m for a b o u t 15 y e a rs. H u g h e s said.
H ow ever, he h o p e s a n in v estig a tio n of
th e in c id e n t will d e te rm in e &lt;f the
a c c id e n t w a s th e r e s u lt of an y
n eg lig en ce o f th e a rc h ite c t o r c o n ­
tra c to r.
An e n g in e e r from th e s ta te De­

p a rtm e n t of E d u c a tio n c a m e to th e
school M onday to e x a m in e th e s itu a ­
tio n , H u g h e s sa id .
A rnold sa id a p re lim in a ry rep o rt
w ould be p re p a re d for W e d n e sd a y ’s
school b o a rd m e e tin g b u t " it will be a
c o u p le o f w e e k s b efo re w e k n o w
a n y th in g ."
M eanw hile, th e s ta te h ig h school
a th le tic a sso c ia tio n is looking for a site
to rep la ce L y m a n a s th e ho st o f th e
s ta te w re stlin g to u rn a m e n t. B u c k n e r
sa id h e h a s notified s ta te officials of
th e s itu a tio n a t L y m a n a n d th e y a rc
looking for a lte rn a te s ite s for th e Feb.
2 6-27 e v e n t.
T h e g y m floor b u c k le d In sev eral
places. H u g h e s said , b u t d a m a g e to
th e floor w a s m in o r. G ym c la sse s
n o rm a lly b e in g h eld in th e b u ild in g
a rc b e in g c o n d u c te d in a n a u x ilia ry
g ym .

By DONNA ESTES
compliance with city laws, the city is not
Herald SUft Writer
powerless to have laws enforced. "You can go
Faced with being unable to enforce city laws
to court to have laws enforced," Petree said,
through the criminal process because State
through the dvil process.
Attorney Douglas Cheshire's office must
Lytle said he would like to see that done,
concentrate the efforts of his office on felony asking that Kulbes prepare a list.
prosecutions, the City Commission of Lake
In other business, the Commission appointed
Mary is looking for help through the civil City Clerk Connie Major the d ty ’s legislative
process.
liaison.
City Commissioner Charles Lytle asked City
Kulbes told the Commission that legislators
Manager Phil Kulbes Thursday night to make whose districts indude Lake Mary — state
up a list of city residents who are accused of Rep. Art Grindle, R-Altamonte Springs, and
violating city laws, but refuse to correct the Sen. Richard Langley, R-Clermont — asked
situations.
the cities to each name a specific Individual
In only one category alone, two residents through whom they can funnel information on
who have mobile homes parked in residential proposed laws to the dty government.
areas in violation of a city ordinance were
The Commission also unanimously agreed to
zeroed in on.
waive subdivision requirements and grant
Just two weeks ago, however, despite the preliminary approval for a proposed three
city’s inability to prosecute violators of junk house subdivision on a J3S acre parcel,
cars, zoning, public nuisances and similar dubbed Lake Emma Cove, oft Rinehart Road.,
ortttnancM, the CUy Onmmlaali riorttnod to an Pine Tree Circle Drive. Tbs action « u
name a code enforcement board.
taken on the request of developer, Sanford
The creation of code enforcement boards is Butler. ’
the method allowed under state law to replace
The Commission's waiver means that Butler
the old municipal court system.
won't have to pave the street, install street
In refusing to act on Kulbes' recom­ lights and sidewalks or conned the property to
mendation that a code enforcement board be the dty water system.
appointed, Commissioner Burt Perinchief
Butler in seeking the waiver said that the
summed up the prevailing thought on the road is an unimproved one-way, one lane
commission that naming the special board street in a heavily wooded area and the
would create another bureaucracy.
residents already there do not wish the road
City Attorney Robert Petree said that while paved, preferring to retain the rural at­
city government depends on voluntary mosphere.

Some To Close For
Presidents Day Monday
The banks and post offices will be closed
Monday for President's Day as will the
Seminole County courthouse and annexes and
the dty halls in Casselberry and-Winter
Springs.
Schools will remain open as will the dty

Monday is the nationwide observance of the
birthdays of Presidents George Washington
and Abraham Lincoln.

TODAY
Action Reports........ ........2A
Around The Clock ... ........4A
Bridge..................... ...... 10A
Calendar.................. ........3A
Classliled Ads.......... __ 1,9A
Comics ................... ...... 11A
Crossword.............. ...... 10A

Free Trees
A Tradition

DearAbby.......... .............5A Nation........
Deaths................ .............3A People........
Dr. L am b...........
S ports..........
Editorial.............
Television ...
Florida..............
Heraseone
1AA W eather......
Hospital ............. .............2A World...........

Sanford To Gain
Hidden Lake Park
City law requires developers to give
the dty land, according to how big its
development is, or to donate the cash
value of its proportionate share for
parks.

■

'

■■

v

•

Jim Jemigan, Sanford's director of
parks and recreation, said he experts
RCA to donate the land In about six
montlis. Among the things RCA must do
before deeding the property, Jemigan
said, is to fill in holes and level the tract.
Morale Photo fev T om VUkooI

Esther and Allan Greene, realtors at Forrest Tliere is the 13th year lor the give-away hy the
Greene. Inc., in Altamonte Springs, ready 2,000 Greens.
dogwootT and live oak seedlings for distribution.

The 12-acre tract will be one of the
d ty ’s key park areas in the southwest
section of the dty, Jemigan said, noting
its ulimale development will probably be

for an activity and natural park com­
bined.

The entry will roost likely be from the
Hidden Lake side with no public access
from U3. Highway 17-92, he said. The
dty has no money in Us current budget to
develop the park.
The Hidden Lake park (its name hasn’t
officially been designated yet) will be the
22nd usable park within the d ty of
Sanford. The largest park in the d ty is
Ft. Mellon Park with 244 acres in the
downtown area.
Development of the city’s 21st park, the
Marshall Avenue Park, is expected to be
completed by October, Jemigan said.
— DONNA ESTES

s
,i i 'i i

The northeastern boundary of the tract
is dirertly behind Joe Creamons
Chevrolet dealership, Jemigan said. Hie
park will run about 1,000 feet due south
behind the Movieland Drive-In and will
be bounded on the west by Hidden Lake.

1 111 w i f

The dty of Sanford will be adding
another 12 acres to its existing 111 Acres
of parklands when Residential Com­
munities of America (RCA), developers
of Hidden Lake subdivision, deeds to the
dty the property Sanford law requires
for parkland development.

n r jp r a if ^ r r w in m »Mn

"It has become a lot of fun," said Allan
Greene of hit real estate firm's annual
distribution of free seedling trees.
“It's like a class reunion with many of
the same people coming back each year
and reporting on what the trees they got
from us are doing," be added.
The distribution at the young trees
each year has become a tradition. This Is
the 13th year Forrest Greene, Inc.,
realtors, purchased seedlings from the
state. Over the years, 29,000 of the trees
have been given away.
Bad weather kept many people away
We&amp;esdny so not all of the 2,000 live oak
and dogwood seedlings were given away.
Distribution wns extended to Thursday.
“ Initially, the tree project was
proposed to the Orlando-Winter Park
Board of Realtors. But when they didn't
carry through with it, we picked it up,"
Greene said. "At that time developers
were
trees with bulldozers and
we thought a tree on a lot added to its
value.
.
They have also supplied trees to
beautify Trinity Prep School and Lyman
High School campuses.
— JANKCA88FJBERRY

halls in Lake Mary, Sanford, Longwood,
Altamonte Springs and Oviedo.

�JA — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday,Fob. II, 19BJ

NATION
IN BRIEF
Medicaid Patient Reviews
Cost $61 Million A Year
WASHINGTON &lt;UPI)—A federal audit reveals the
government could save $61 million annually by
dropping a requirement for regular review of Medicaid
patients in nursing homes.
About 850,000 Medicaid patients are in intermediate
care nursing homes. The law requires that upon ad­
mission and every 60 days thereafter , a doctor or
medical aide under a doctor’s supervision must certify
they need the services provided, not a lower or higher
level of care. Kusscron said the 5.1. million recer­
tifications each year cost $61 million.
Health and Human Services Inspector General
Richard Kusserow said he urged Medicaid officials to
ask Congress to drop the requirements, but they
replied Congress already rejected the idea. Kusseron
said officials told him they may try again next year
after further study

Herald Photo* by Tam 'V lncanl

ANIMAL FRIENDS
it w as love a t firs t sig h t w hen L a r ry B la ir (ab o v e )
o w n e r of a S a n fo rd p e t c a re b u sin e ss, in tro d u c e d
so m e fu rry a n d fe a th e re d c r itte r s to second
g r a d e r s a t S a n fo rd 's Id y llw ild e E le m e n ta r y
School, d u rin g h is V a le n tin e ’s D ay v isit. D an n y
U sh e r, 8, (pho to a t f a r left) p e ts a r a b b it, w hile
A n d rea P e tty , 7, a n d M andy M o r r is ,7, (h o ld in g
dog) c o m p e te fo r th e a ffe c tio n s of a toy poodle
n a m e d V icky. B la ir spoke to th e s tu d e n ts about
a n im a ls an d th e ir c a re a s p a r t of a sc ie n c e c la ss.

EPA Controversy Spreads
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Controversy surrounding
the Environmental Protection Agency’s toxic-waste
program is rapidly spreading throughout the agency,
while Congress and the administration are locked in
negotiations over access to secret EPA documents.
A top EPA water-pollution official last month
reversed staff recommendations and ordered speedy
issuance of a permit for ocean disposal of toxic wastes
to a firm whose lawyer is a former adviser to EPA
Administrator Anne Gorsuch, United Press Inter­
national learned.
Assistant EPA Administrator Frederic Eidsness
ordered preparation of a special operational permit for
burning chemicals on the firm's incineration ship
"Vulcanus" days after he and Mrs. Gorsuch met
separately with her ex-aide, James Sanderson, agency
officials said.
Another EPA assistant administrator, Dr. John A.
Todhunter, socialized with chemical industry officials
about the lime he slowed down enforcement actions
against the industry, congressional records show. He
is in charge of pesticides and toxic substances.

AW ACS Monitor Libyans
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI)—The United States confronted
Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy by sending four
AWACS planes and an aircraft carrier to monitor
Libyan m ilitary movement amid “ extremely
heightened,’ tension In North Africa.
In Khartoum, Presidents Gaafar Numeiry of Sudan
and Hissene Habre of Chad met Thursday to discuss
the reported libyan threats to their nations' security.
Aides to Habre have warned libya was massing
troops, armor and warplanes along the border for an
invasion of Chad. U.*3. officials say there also has been
- a buildup of Libyan troop* along the border with
•” Sudan.

STOCKS
T h n e quotations provided by
m em bers
of
the
National
Association ol Securities Dealers
are representative inter dealer
prices as of approximately noon
today. Inter Dealer m arkets
change throughout the day. Prices
do not include retail markup
markdown

Atlantic Dank
Barnett Bank

Flagship Banks,. 234 24
Florida Power
it Light.. 364 Unchanged
Florida Progress . 184 184
Hughes Supply... 334 34
Morrison's ........ ■184 184
NCR Carp........... 103 105
Bid Ask Plessey. ... 934
no trades
3354 34l« Scotty’s ............. . 194 194
294 291** Southeast 204 Unchanged

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Gusty winds and heavy rains lashed
both coasts, hitting Mid-Atlantic states with blustery rains and
dumping snow on New England today. A storm that doused
northern California with nearly 4 inches of rain stirred up galeforce winds in Nevada. Travelers' advisories were posted over
New Hampshire and southern Maine for up to 6 inches of snow
as a storm system crept up the East Coast. Concord, N.H.,
received an inch of new snow Thursday. The snow changed to
rain over southern New England and southeast New York
state. Fog limited visibility to 1 mile in the Mid-Atlantic states
and more than an inch of rain soaked Cape Hatteras, N.C.
AREA READINGS (9 a.m .|: temperature: 58; overnight
low: 48; Thursday high: 76; barometric pressure: 30.04;
relative humidity: 80 percent; winds: northwest at 7 mph;
rain: trace; sunrise 7:01 a.m., sunset 6:18 p.m.
SATURDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH; highs, 11:47
a.m., 11:58 p.m.; lows, 5:44 a.m., 6:04 p.m.; BAYPORT:
highs, 5:22 a.m., 4:59 p.m.; lows, 11:23 a.m., 10:57 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Small cratl should exercise caution until seas sub­
side. Wind northerly 15 to 20 knots becoming northeasterly
around 15 knots today decreasing to around 10 knots tonight.
Wind Saturday easterly near 10 knots. Seas 4 to 6 feet
decreasing to 3 to 4 feet tonight. Fair weather.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly sunny today with highs near 70
or low 70s. Wind north to northeast around 15 mph. Tonight fair
and cool. Lows mostly upper 40s. light northeasterly wind.
Saturday partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers.
Highs around 70.

HOSPITAL NOTES
' O xntrtl Florid* B tg io n il H o tp iU l
T h u rtd iy

yj ,

AD M ISSIO N S

. Sanford:
. • M a t* ' W . Ol*w&gt;
Oeloret A . Dolson
• Samuel Elm ore
Lao C. sn trm a n . DeBary
4 V erna Jew oll, Daitona
Herm an C. E U tV . Long wood

jrjk

Earning Herald

D IS C H A R G E S
Sanford
M arvin Bland
Tftalma I . Franklin
Van D. Frays ler
Barbara G. G tbw n
Jam et O John von
Joe L Mickle
Bobby Jr. G W eill
Alvin C. Bavery, Deltona
Theda J. W erner, Enterprise
Florence Sutton, O il ten

iujpi « mn&gt;

Friday, February II, 1*13—Vol. 75, No. 15*
Published D aily and Sunday, except Saturday by The Sanlard
Herald, Inc.. I N H . French Ave., lan iard. F la . &gt;7771.
Second C la n Pailapa Paid al lan iard. Florida Ji/71
Hom e D e live ry: Weak. S I.M j Month. M i l l i Month*. 114 M ;
Yaar, MSJM. d y M a ll: Week t l.t S ; Month, t i l l ; « Month*.

UI H Year, UJM

Lone Gunman Robs Sanford Shoe Store
A man walked into the Fayva Shoe Store in the Zayrc Plaza,
Sanford, Thursday at 10:25 a.m., pointed a revolver at
manager Kenneth Wolfe and ordered him to hand over all the
store’s money.
Police said that after being given an undisclosed amount of
cash, the gunman ordered Wolfe to the back of the store.
Instead, he ran out the front door and called for help as the
robber fled.
WATCH STOLEN
A $300 gold watch belonging to Victor Gustin of Alberta
Street, Ixingwood, was stolen from his home between noon on
February 13 and 8:57 p.m. Thursday, police reported.
THIEF TAKES GUN
A handgun valued at $135 belonging to Randolph Hughes of
Orlando was taken from the cab of his semi-trailer parked on
the north side of Sanford Farmer’s Market, U.S. Highway 1792, between 2 and 7 n.m. Thursday.
CHILD SETS MATTRESS ALIGHT
A three-year-old child playing with matches set a mattress
on fire in the bedroom of her home at 77 William Clark Court,
Sanford. Reginald Jones and her mother, Katie Jones, were
unharmed. The fire was extinguished al 12:47 p.m. by
firefighters from the Sanford Fire Department.
GOLF BALLS STOLEN
A vandal who smashed a mirror at the Sabal Point Country
Club, logwood, between 3 p.m. Wednesday and 8:40 a.m.
Thursday took a motorized golf ball picker and picked up
every golf ball on the driving range and then drove into nearby
woods.
The golf ball picker was abandoned but about $20 worth of
golf balls was missing, police said..
TIRES STOLEN
Two tires worth $250 were taken off a 1978 Dodge pick-up
truck on the car lot of Gendrcau Auto Sales, 1906 N. U.S. High­
way 17-92, Maitland. The theft occurred between 8 and 9:30
a.m. Wednesday, police said.
CRASH VICTIM DIES
A 79-year-old Forest City woman involved in an accident on
February 4 died early Wednesday morning, the Florida High­
way Patrol reported.
Hazel Marie Hartley of IjoI 2, State Road 436, Forest City,
was driving along State Road 436 attempting to turn left into
Academy Drive when she turned across the path of a car and

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts
★ Police
collided with it, the FHP said. The other car was driven by
George Varga of 2220 Dcno Drive, Apopka, who was uninjured.
Mrs. Hartley was taken to Florida Hospltal-Orlando where
she died at 2:15 a.m. Wednesday.
GRAND JURY RECESSES
A grand jury investigating an 18-year-old Eustis man ac­
cused of the first-degree murder of a Sanford man who was
shot in his von recessed Thursday for a week.
Donald Ray Bean Jr. is charged with the murder of John
Thomas Ellis, 816 Cherokee Circle, Sanford, who was found
dead in his van on Grant Street, near Dog Track Road in
long wood ol about 3:20 a.m. Saturday.
One of the witnesses appearing before the grand jury was a
17-year-old who is expected to be charged as an accessory
after the fact of the murder, court sources said. The youth is
presently in the Volusia County jail where he is being held on
charges of possessing stolen property and carrying a con­
cealed weapon.
SLEEPY BURGLAR?
Someone broke Into Judy Ann Carrol’s apartment In
Springwood Circle, Longwood, after 8 a.m. on Wednesday,
took a nap In her bed and left, leaving grit behind tn the bed.

She discovered her bed had been slept in when she returned to
her apartment at 8:15 p.m.
Similar strange happenings occurred about two months ago,
says a police report, when someone broke into the apartment
and turned the shower head toward the ceiling.
CHURCH BURGLARIZED
A thief broke into the Ravenna Baptist Church, 2743 Country'
Club Road, Sanford, and ransacked the offices before stealing
an undisclosed amount of money and sound equipment.
The burglary occurred sometime on Wednesday and was

Judicial Panel Calls For Divorce Law Reform
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Florida should reiomi its divorce
laws to require mandatory mediation of child custody and
visitation issues and funnel all child support payments
through the court system, a special Supreme Court com­
mission recommended.
The panel also endorsed a Florida Bar proposal that would
allow certain childless couples to obtain divorces either by
mail or a single stop at a court clerk's office.
"The commission believes that this report contains very
progressive proposals aimed at putting Florida in the forefront
in the resolution of matrimonial law issues in this country,"
said Justice Ben Overton, the panel's chairman.
TV key recommendations included:
— Requiring couples seeking divorces who have children '0
view a film on the effects of divorce upon children and sit down
with a mediator in an attempt to work out custody and
visitation arrangements;
— Having judges settle custody and visitation issues first
before moving on to other divorce issues such as property
dispositions and alimony;
— Developing of statewide guidelines for selling child
support;

— Enacting of a new law to more clearly define marital
property to eliminate current gray areas and confusion;
— Requiring that all child support payments be made
through the circuit courts to aid for better enforcement.
The commission said it backs the simplified divorce proce­
dure without lawyers that was proposed by the Bar at the
request of the court.
Under that proposal, which is pending before the justices,
couples who are Florida residents for at least six months, have
no children, have been married less than five years and have
worked out a division of property and debts could fill out a
simple petition for divorce without lawyers.
Depending upon details yet to be worked out by the court, the
petition could either be notarized and mailed or signed before a
court clerk. A Judge would review the petition and either grant
a divorce or summon the couple for a hearing.
The mediation process would he largely patterned after one
developed in California.
The panel recommended the mediation sessions bo com­
pletely confidential, so nothing either parent said could be
later used in court, and suggested the service be provided free
by the state, possibly funded by an Increase In the marriage
license fee.

County Could Save $ By Storing
Fuel In Unused Tanks At Port
A continued slump in the oil market could be a boon to
Seminole County.
Unused tanks at the Seminole Port Authority's tank farm
leased by the St. Johns Petroleum Co. could be used for storage
by the county, allowing a 20 percent savings for fuel this year,
County Commissioner Robert Sturm, a member of the
authority board, said.
The tank farm has not been used by St. Johns since
November because of uncertainty by the company’s parent
firms. The continued downward trend in gasoline prices should
continue to keep the facility closed, according to Dennis
Dolgner, executive director of the port authority.
Dolgner said it is unlikely that the company will reopen its
operations at the port complex until the oil market stabilizes.
But the company has already paid Us $28,000 lease on the tank
farm.
Under a clause in the contract, the county could store fuel In
any unused tanks at the complex, Dolgner said. The port would
receive a small fee, less than one cent per gallon stored In the
tanks.
Since oil prices have dropped by as much as 30 cents per
gallon this year, the county could buy fuel at the reduced price
and store it for later use, Sturm £aid.
Dolgner promised to explore the lease agreement for details
on the storage clause.
Information on financing for a proposed new building at the
port was not avaUable Wednesday, Dolgner said.
He told board members not aU lending institutions have
submitted proposals to Chilton Construction Co. of Cocoa, the

firm which will construct the building.
The building Is expected to be ready for occupancy by
summer.
Dolgner laid he could have leased more than 10,000 square
feel of space last week If the building had been constructed. He
anticipates "no problems" tn leasing the 16,000-square-foot
building. - MICHEAL BEHA

reported to the Seminole County sheriff's department by
church secretary Diana Johnson Graham.
FUR COAT STOLEN
A rabbit skin fur coat worth $100 and belonging to Susan
Tindel of l^ake Mary was stolen from a truck parked In the
parking lot of The Bam U.S. Highway 17-92, Sanford, between
9:15 and 10:40 p.m. Wednesday.
The truck belonged to Betty Johnson of Orlando who had $143
In cash taken from the truck, police said.
STUDENTROBBED
A 19-year-old woman was robbed of her pocketbook by two
men who also attempted to abduct her, according to a Sanford
police report.
Ann Solitro of Jenkins Circle, Sanford, told police she was
approached by two men, one holding an iron pipe, at about
10:30 p.m. Wednesday when she was near TTie Bam
restaurant-lounge on South French Avenue in Sanford.
FIRE CALLS
The Sanford Fire Department responded to the following
emergency calls:
Tuesday
— 8:14 a.m., Carriage Cove parking lot, State Road 427,
rescue.
— 10:24 a.m., Seminole Community College, rescue.
— 11:11 a.m., 22 Carriage Cove Way, rescue.
— 2:23 p.m., 712 25th St., rescue
— 11:34 p.in., 7704 W. 9th St., rescue,
Wednesday
— 9:49 a.m., 2660 Jewitt Way, rescue.
— noon, 180 W. Airport Blvd., accident.
— 3:51 p.m.. 513 E. 7th St., rescue.
— 5:43 p.m., 325 Elliott Ave., power line trouble.
DUI ARRESTS
The following person was arrested In Seminole County for
driving under the influence IDUI):
— Anthony Joseph Furlan, 21, of Maitland, who when asked
by a deputy sheriff after an accident if he had been drinking, is
alleged to have replied: "All day," was arrested at 7:03 p.m.
Wednesday (or driving while under the influence of alcohol. He
failed a roadside sobriety test and was arrested al Ihe scene of
the accident at the intersection of State Road 15 and State Road
436.

ABC: Soviet Defectors
Level Charges Of
Indiscriminate Killing
NEW YORK (UPI) — Soviet deserters charged their col­
leagues in Afghanistan kill women and children indis­
criminately, wage chemical warfare and trade their ammu­
nition for hashish in the central Asian nation.
In an interview with ABC News taped al a Moslem rebel base
in southeast Afghanistan, the deserters also described the
morale of Soviet troops as low.
"The officers told us Afghanistan is full of foreign merce­
naries and we have to help the Afghanistan people to fight back
the aggression," one of the deserters said In Wednesday’s
broadcast.
Explaining why he surrendered, Sergei Mescherlyakov, 22,
said, "because I do not want to kill women and children."
In addition to indiscriminate killing, the deserters described
widespread presence of chemical weapons, repeatedly denied
by Moscow.
"The army has chemical units everywhere," said Valery
Kissilev, 20. "The Infantry has them, the paratroops. Even the
air force has Its specialists in that field."
Afghan refugees and rebels regularly report chemical at­
tacks and the United States has accused the Soviet Union of
chemical warfare In Afghanistan as well as in Cambodia and
Laos, but the charges have not been proved.
ABC said its correspondent Interviewed the deserters at a
Moslem guerrilla base near Kandahar, in southeastern Af­
ghanistan.
The rebels, who have battled Soviet and Afghan government
troops since Moscow installed Marxist President Babrak
Karmal in 1979, required the deserters to study the Koran and
encouraged them to Join the fighting agahist the Soviet forces,
ABC said.

Counties To Ask State For
Power To Levy Penny Gas Tax
As expected, Ihe state association of
county commissioners will ask the state
to give them the ability to raise more
money to solve local problems.
County commissioners from around
the state gathered in Jacksonville last
week to discuus their needs and ways
those needs can be met.
The most probable solution, according
to Seminole County Commission
Chairman Sandra Glenn, is for the
legislature to give commissioners the
ability to levy a 1-cent gasoline tax
without voter approval. Under current

stale law, commissioners can levy a lax
but only with voter approval.
Mrs. Glenn expects that power to be
approved by legislators this year along
with an extension of the local option sales
tax Increase. The extended sales tax hike
would allow local governments to use the
revenues from the tax hike to fund Jail
and transportation Improvements.
Meetings between Seminole County
commissioners and the county's
legislative delegation have been stymied
by the county's failure to enact anv
money-raising methods of its own.
The legislators said the county must

make efforts to solve Its own financial
problems.
County officials estimate there are at
least $100 million in improvements
needed on county highways.
Repairs to state highways in the county
are estimated to cost more than $40
million.
A 1-cenl gasoline tax could generate
more than $600,000 o year for Seminole
County, officials said.
A voter-approved l-cent local sales tax
could generate $6.6 million a year.
-MICHEAL BEHA

�City Dying With Steel Company

FLORIDA

LACKAWANNA, N.Y. (UPI) — The Indians named it
Lackawanna, meaning "fork in the river." But the street
names tell what the city is really all about — Bethlehem.
Steelawanna, I&gt;ehigh, Mill.
Ijckawanna is home of "the plant," as residents commonly
refer to the huge, 2li-mile-Iong, Bethlehem Steel mill that
sprawls along the shores of take Erie, just a spit south of
Buffalo.
But “the plant" —the lifeblood of tackawana for most of the
century — is dying and some residents fear that means the
death of tackawana as well.
"I'm 59, I've lived here all of my life. Where am 1 going to
go?," says Les Vilagy, who owns Molnar's bar on the comer of
Steelawanna and Bethlehem Streets.
His business has sagged with the town's economy and some­
times only brings in $30 to $40 a day.
"If I was younger, then it might be a different story," he

Third Miami Officer
Indicted In 3 Months
MIAMI (UPI) —The officer whose fatal shooting of a
young black incited three days of violence in the
Overtown ghetto surrendered to his fellow officers to
face a manslaughter Indictment — the third against a
Miami police officer in three months.
Luis Alvarez, 32, arrived at a Mctro-Dadc County
police substation Thursday afternoon in a black
Cadillac, turned himself in, and was released soon
afterward on his own recognizance.
Black leaders said they were "relieved" at the in*
dictmcnt but the police union reacted angrily.
If convicted on the second-degree felony charge,
Alvarez faces up to 15 years In prison and a $10,000 fine.

NORRIS H. FURAY
Norris H. Furay, 80, of 1205
Scott Ave. in Sanford died
Thursday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Bom Jan.
10,1903, In New Carlisle, Ohio,
ht came to Sanford in 1970
from Orlando. He was a
retired furniture merchant.
Survivors include his wife,
Agnes; two daughters, Mrs.
Dolores Smith of Sanford and
Mrs. Phyllis Varner of New
Smyrna Beach; a son, Gerald
R. Furay of Springfield, Ohio;
a brother, James Furay of
New Carlisle, Ohio; eight
grandchildren; and four
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services and burial
will be in New Carlisle, Ohio.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA is
in
charge
of
local
arrangements.

PORT CANAVERAL (UPI) — An Iraqui cargo ship
loaded with $500,000 worth of orange juice concentrate
and 19 Russian sailors headed toward Tampa Bay
today after it was turned away from Port Canaveral,
officials said.
The Zain A) Quas, which was denied access to Port
Canaveral Wednesday, was expected to arrive at an
alternate docking site in Tampa today or Saturday.
Coast Guard 11. Commander Bruce Klunek said the
reason the ship was diverted to Tampa, "of course, is
national security. There are some things that happen
in Cape Canaveral that have a high national security
priority," he said.
Port Canaveral is located near defense-oriented
facilities at the Kennedy Space Center. Top-secret
Trident submarines also dock at Defense Department
facilities at Cape Canaveral.

WORLD

MRS. NETTIE BARCIKOSKI
Mrs. Nettie Bardkoski, 95,
of 240 Cypress Way in
Casselberry died Sunday at
Ufe Care Center, Altamonte
Springs. Born Feb. 9,1888, in
Detroit, she moved to
Casselberry from Clifford,
Mich., in 1957. She was a
homemaker and a Catholic.
Survivors include four
grandchildren and 13 great­
grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
ROY ARTIS CASON
Roy Artis Cason, 70, of
Black Hammock Fish Camp
in Oviedo died Wednesday at
Florida Hospttal-Orlando:
Bom Feb. 18, 1912, in Live
Oak, he moved to Oviedo from
there as an infant. He was the
owner of a plumbing company
and a Baptist. He was a
member of a union for retired
plumbers.
Survivors include his wife,
Bobble; and a brother, Myers
A. of Orlando.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Goldenrod, is in
charge of arrangements.

IN BRIEF
Reagan Missile Warning
Sparks Election Squabble
BONN, West Germany (UPI) — President Reagan's
warning against West German rejection of U.S.
missiles has sparked a sharp exchange between the
two major parties competing in next month’s general
elections.
Ilans-Jochen Vogel, the opposition Social
Democratic candidate for chancellor in the March 6
national elections, reacted Immediately Thursday by
saying there would be no "automatic deployment" of
the missiles.
ileagan told a nationally televised news conference
Wednesday In Washington a West German failure to
station the missiles would be "a terrible setback to the
cause of peace and disarmament.”

Party officials said Vogel's refusal to commit
himself on deployment of the U.S. intermediate-range
Pershlng-2 and cruise missiles served the interests of
the Sbvlet Union, not of West Germany.
Defense Minister Manfred Woemer said Thursday,
refusal to deploy the missiles also could result in the
loss of American military support for West Germany.

CALENDAR

R a ts !
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
health departm ent's " ra t
patrol" says it has liberated
another 235 blocks of ratinfested territory around the
city.
The rat-fighting team has
routed the rodents from 235
blocks
In
Brooklyn,
Manhattan and the Bronx,
Health Commissioner Dr.
David Sencer said Wed­
nesday.
Since 1976, the Rodent
Control Program, known as
the "rat patrol,” has expelled
the rats from 1,454 rodentinfested city blocks, including
some areas of Park Avenue,
where rats appeared to feast
on flowers and trash on the
center island of the fashion­
able thoroughfare.
In 1982, Sencer said, the rat
patrol made 80,453 ex­
terminations.

Ave. in Panama City died
Wednesday. Bom Nov. 9,1918,
in take Monroe, she moved to
Panama
City
from
Casselberry in 1970.
She was a homemaker
and attended'the Church of
Christ in Panama City.
Survivors
include
her
husband, Adrian J. Sr.; two
sons, Adrian Jr. and Albert
Frank; Orlando; a daughter,
Mrs. Martha Lee Hoke of Hot
Springs, Va.; and seven
grandchildren.
W. Guy Black Home for
Funerals, Orlando, is in
charge of arrangements.
LESTER G. CASTOR
Lester G. Castor, 72, of 607
Sherwood Drive in Altamonte
Springs died Wednesday in
Florida Hospital •Altamonte.
Bom in Indiana Aug. 21,1910,
he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Miami in 1974.
He was a chief engineer for a
commercial laundry com­
pany and a member of the
Altamonte Springs Seventhday Adventist Church.
Survivors include his wife,
Eileen R.; a son, Douglas D.
of Indianapolis, Ind.; a
brother, Walter L. of Tampa;
five sisters, Josephine Humer
of Clearwater, Thelma
DeHart and Elsie Landis,
both of Noblcsville, Ind.,
Georgia Wyant and Lois
Campbell,
both
of
Indianapolis; five grand­
children; and two great­
grandchildren.
Garden Chapel Home for
F u n e ra ls ,

O rla n d o ,

MARGARET
E.
NICHOLAS
Mrs. Margaret E. Nicholas,
90, of 812 leopard Trail in
Winter Springs died Thursday
at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Bom Feb. 18, 1892,
in Parkersburg, Pa., she
moved to Winter Springs
from Canton, Ohio, in 1976.
She was a homemaker and a
Protestant.
Survivors
include
a
daughter, Mrs Dorothy
Hissong of Winter Springs;
six grandchildren; and 13
great-grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Goldenrod, is in
charge of arrangements.

EACH
WEEK!

SPECIAL

4.25

3.50

3.25

2.50

4.50

3.75

$J99

2.85

1.95

Jf« W S P £ C IA l

FRIED RED SNAPPER 3.75

2.95

WfDftfSDAY

DELM0NIC0 STEAK
THURSDAY

FRIED CHICKEN
FRIDAY
SATURQAY

FR. CATFISH NUGGETS 3.25

s Credit w ith
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daughters, Mrs. Helens. Ford
of Maitland and Mrs.
Katherine S. Rolston of
Bristol, Pa.; 18 grand­
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Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
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MRS. AGNESS WAHLBERG
Mrs.
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Wahlberg, 64, of 1616 take

MONDAY

88, of 2455 Falmouth Road in
Maitland.died Wednesday at
Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
Born Sept. 21, 1894, in
Amesbury, Mass., she moved
to Maitland from Penn­
sylvania in 1973. She was a
homemaker and a Catholic.
Survivo; &lt; include two

selling.
But when it was announced, the news still shook this In­
dustrial city right down to its steel girders.
Pride has always been high in tackawanna. You can see it In
the palatial Our Lady of Victory Basilica, the infant and boys
home and hospital built by Father Nelson Baker, and In the
rich mixture of people — the Poles, Italians, blacks, Puerto
Ricans and Arabs.
Some longtime Bethlehem employees are depending on their
pensions to provide an economic lifejacket through the rough
years ahead. Others voice feelings of betrayal and
bewilderment.
Don Grey, 37, had 10 years seniority at the plant and thought
he was set for life.
"I really don’t know what I’m going to do now," he said. "I •
bought a house, I have a mortgage payment to make and there
aren’t even any jobs for me to chase now that the plant is shut
down."
Jim Crean, a restaurant operator whose father worked at the
plant for over 40 years, expresses more optimism. "The area is
rich in heritage and pride. The people will never give in to its
being a ghost town," he said.
But it has already begun looking like one. Everywhere,
homes and buildings are being boarded up.
The state tabor Department estimates another 8,000 jobs;
outside the plant will disappear with the Bethlehem shutdown,
boosting the region’s jobless rate from 15 percent to above 17 ■
percent.
A couple of specialty steel plants remain In town, as well as a
respectable number of local businesses. But "the plant” was
its heart.

U • In

charge of arrangements.
MRS. MARY MORRISON
Mrs. Mary H. Morrison, 97,
of 1560 Hobson St. in
Ixmgwood died Wednesday at
Florida Hospital-Altamonte.
Born March 10, 1885, in
Glasgow Scotland, she moved
to Longwood from New
Jersey in 1957. She was a
retired chemist assistant and
a Presbyterian.
Survivors
include
a
daughter, Mrs. Margaret
Pitman of tangwood; two
grandchildren and two great­
grandchildren.
Baldwin Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
MRS. KATHERINE A.
SHANLEY
Mrs. Katherine A. Shanley,

MRS.

COLONIAL
ROOM

said, rubbing his white-haired brusheut. "I’d probably get
out."
Bethlehem announced last week steel-making operations
would end at "the plant” by the end of 1983, resulting in the loss
of 7,300 jobs and leaving a skeleton staff of about 1,500 to man
the firm's galvanizing operation.
For a facility that at one time employed 22,500 workers, the
Impending loss threatens to sound the death knell for this city’s
economy.
"Since 1977, we knew that it was going downhill," admits
Diane Kozak, a member of the Lackawanna Chamber of Com­
merce and the city’s school board. “It's the end of an era ...
what we have to do now is try to pick up the pieces."
The shutdown news didn’t come out of the blue. The giant
steelmaker had been losing money, the firm had been
protesting its tax assesment at the tackawanna plant, smallscale layoffs were becoming common — and autos weren’t

AREA DEATHS

Iraqul Ship Diverted

O h ,

Friday, Feb. tS. J9B3--3A

American Dream Rusting Away In Mill Town

IN BRIEF

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18
Weklva AA (no smoking) Weklva Presbyterian
Church, State Road 434 and Weklva Springs Road, 8
p.m., closed.
Longwood AA, 8 p.m., closed, Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, State Road 434. Longwood.
Re bos and Live Oak Rebos Club AA, noon and 8 p.m.,
dored, 220 Live Oak Center, Casselbcrrv.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19
Jewish Community Center Couples Group annual
Purim Old TV Show Costume Party, 8 p.m., JCC, 851 N.
Maitland Ave.. Maitland. Call 862-2214.
Carnival, sponsored by Milwee Middle School PTA,
10a.m. to 3 p.m., Food, games and laser show. Auction
2-3 p.m.
Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.. (open), Florida
Power &amp; Light Co., 301 S. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.
Spaghetti Supper, 5-7 p.m., Congregational Church,
2401 Park Ave., Sanford. Children under 6 free.
Zoo benefit at McDonald’s parking lot, Highway 17*
92, Sanford, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Petting zoo, carnival
games and prizes, plant sale.

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

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�Eve n in g Herald
tUSPS 4 U K I

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30M22-2611or 831-P993
Friday, February 18, 1983— 4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week, $1.25; Month. $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

Pickle, Pepper
And 55 Pensions
At 82. Rep. C laude P e p p e r c a n claim th e w isdom
th a t c o m e s w ith age a n d exp erien ce. He sh o u ld be
ab le to d istin g u ish , th e n , b e tw e en th e firm defense
of a p rin cip le a n d s h e e r stu b b o rn c s s.
W c se c th e la tte r In P e p p e r’s u n a lte ra b le
opposition to a n y c h a n g e in th e age at w hich
w o rk e rs b e c o m e e lig ib le for S o cial S e c u rity
re tire m e n t ben efits. O ne of th e p ro p o sals to put
Social S e c u rity on a m ore so u n d fin an cial fooling
Is to Increase th e re tire m e n t ag e from th e p rese n t
65 to 6 6 b v th e y e a r 2015.
P ep p er c o n sid e rs th is to be a cu.' in b enefits, a n d
s a y s h e will o ppose th e e n tire pack ag e of Social
S e c u rity refo rm s now before C o n g ress if it Is
Included. T h e th re a t could be se rio u s b e c a u se
P ep p er Is c h a irm a n o f th e pow erful H ouse R ules
C om m ittee a n d could be In a position to s c u ttle th e
reform effort.
Rep. J . J . Pickle of T e x a s, w hose w isdom a t age
6 9 m ay rival th a t o f P e p p e r’s, s a y s a n In crease In
th e re tire m e n t ag e is in ev ita b le If Social S e c u rity Is
going to be kept so lv en t, a n d a n y o n e looking at th e
Issue w ith p e rsp e c tiv e w ould h a v e to agree.
O ne of th e re a s o n s for th e long-term pro b lem In
Social S e c u rity fin a n c in g Is th a t A m e ric an s a re
living longer. T h e y c a n be e x p e cte d to d raw
re tire m e n t b e n e fits for a g re a te r n u m b e r of y e a rs
th a n w as th e c a se w hen eligibility for full b en efits
w as fixed at ag e 65 a n d for e a rly re tire m e n t
b e n e fits at ag e 62. If p rese n t tre n d s in longevity
c o n tin u e , p e rso n s re tirin g a t ag e 6 8 In th e y e a r
2000 could ex pect to enjoy a s m a n y y e a rs In
re tire m e n t a s p e rso n s w ho retire d a t ag e 65 in
1960.
T h is u n d e rlie s th e a rg u m e n t th a t a g ra d u a l
In crease in th e re tire m e n t a g e pegged to in c re a se d
longevity w ould not be u n fa ir to a n y o n e .
T h e p roposal co m in g o u t of th e P re sid e n t's
Social S e c u rity R eform C o m m issio n w ould leave
th e re tire m e n t age at 6 5 u n til th e y e a r 2 0 0 3 .
It w ould th e n be In cre a se d by one m o n th e a ch
y e a r for th e n e x t 12 y e a rs u n til It re a c h e d 6 6 In
2015.

A c h a n g e o c c u rrin g so far In th e fu tu re could
h a rd ly be d isc o n c e rtin g to a n y o n e m a k in g re ­
tire m e n t p la n s today.
B ut P ep p er th in k s th e re tire m e n t ag e of 65 Is
sa c ro s a n c t, a s th o u g h ch iseled on sto n e by so m e
p ro p h et of yore.
In tru th , it s e e m s to h a v e b een picked by P rin ce
.O tto von B ism arck w h e n th e G e rm a n Social
iS c c u rity s y s te m set u p Its re tire m e n t p ro g ram In
'1 8 8 9 . a n d It w as a rb itra rily a d o p te d from th at
m odel w h e n th e U.S. p ro g ra m w as c re a te d in
0935.
A s w c n e a r th e e n d o f th e 2 0 th c e n tu ry , w hat
a g e Is a p p ro p ria te for Social S e c u rity re tire m e n t
h a s b een m a d e d e b a ta b le by c h a n g e s In lifestyle,
by m e d ic a l te c h n o lo g y , a n d by g r e a te r u n ­
d e rs ta n d in g of th e p ro ce ss o f ag in g .
T h a t is e x a ctly th e p oint P e p p e r c h o o ses to
ignore.
His in siste n c e on e x c lu d in g th e re tire m e n t age
from th e reform a g e n d a is s h o rts ig h te d at best a n d
o b s tru c tio n is t a t w orst.
Indeed. If refo rm s of th is n a tu re c a n n o t be
c o n sid e red . Social S e c u rity m a y not m ak e It Into
th e 2 1st c c n tu rv .

PLEASE WRITE
better* to Ute editor are welcomed for publication. All
letter* most be signed, with a mailing address and, If
possible, a telephone number to the IdentlUy of the writer
may be verified. The Evening Herald will retped the
wishes of writer* who do not want their names In print
The Evening Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
t« eliminate libel or to conform to space requirements.

BERRY S WORLD

Langley said by a small Increase of one
.cent per can of beer. 10 cents per quart of
wine and 20 cents per quart of hard liquor,
some $55 million could lx- raised each
year.

executive ofllcc ol the governor.
If passed by the legislature during Its
coming session In April and May. the law,
would become effective on Oct. 1. 1983.
Jim York, chief counsel of the Florida
Sheriffs’ Association, suggested at a m eet­
ing of law enforcement officials of Central
Florida last week, that the legislature raise
taxes on alcoholic beverages to solve the
problem of funding additional state pris­
ons.
York said at the time that no one who
likes good scotch would object to paying a
nlcklc or more per bottle for prisons. He
also noted that 85 to 90 percent of all
crim es urc related to alcohol In some
fashion.

He said all the money In the county Jail
trust fund would be apportioned annually
to the departm ent of revenue for distribu­
tion to the counties. The Department
would then distribute m oney to each
county according to the proportion that the
population of the county bears to the
population of the state, as determ ined from
the annual population estim ate of the

The word being talked up am ong local
Democrats Is that Troy Plland. erstwhile
m ayor of W inter Springs and unsuccessful
candidate for a legislative scat last year,
may be called upon to replace Bill Waek as
Democratic com m itteem an from Seminole
County.
Wack had m ore than a year to run In Ids

State Sen. Richard Langley. R-CIcrniont.
has introduced a bill In the Florida Senate
to Impose nn additional excise tax on
alcoholic beverages.
The extra revenue from the sale of beer,
wine, and liquor would be plaecd In a
county Jail bind. The money In the trust
fund would be used exclusively for con­
structing. equipping, operating and m ain­
taining county Jails and correctional facili­
ties.

ClO c*
ByDONNA ESTES

term when he subm itted his resignation to
tn k c o v e r b e g i n n i n g M a rc h I th e
chairm anship of the presidential campaign
of Sen. Alan Cranston. D-Callf. In three
New England states.
Wack Is to be In charge of Rhode Island,
M assachusetts and Connecticut In the
Cranston bid for the Democratic nom ina­
tion for president in 1984.
The California senator certainly m ade a
lot of Seminole County friends when he
was guest speaker In October for the
Democratic banquet In Altam onte Springs.
Few doubted that Plland was going to
win election to the Florida House In
November, lie had support from Demo­
crats and Republicans alike and from
persons in leadership roles from the
county, the C entral Florida area, the
Florida League of Cities clear to the lower
house of the legislature.
All that the m an who ended up the victor
In the contest. Carl Sclph. had was support
from people and he worked hard beating
on doors to gather that support together In
actual turnout at the poll.

SCIENCE WORLD

ROBERT WAGMAN

W in d y

S a lt

C h ic a g o

Ta s te

B a ttle
CHICAGO (NEAI-Prcsldcnts. senators
and governors come and go without
causing much of a stir within Chicago's
political machine. To the m achine, the
most critical political office is that of
Chicago mayor, since the mayor con­
trols tlie thousands of patronage Jobs
that form the m achine's power bast'.
Chicago will elect a new m ayor this
year. The city hasn't elected a Re­
p u b lican In 59 y e a rs, nor will it
now -and so the election that counts is
the Democratic primary scheduled for
Feb. 22.

C h a n g in g

Not since the 1932 election of Anton
Ccrmak lias Chicago had so wide-open a
mayoral election, and for sheer dram a,
few modern political contests can m atch
this one.
Chicago’s late Richard M. Daley was
the archetypical blg-cltv political boss
for more than two decades. During his
six term s as mayor, the Democratic
m achine's control was almost absolute
The m achine hasn't fared that well
sin c e D aley's d e a th In 1976. His
almost-hand-picked successor. Michael
(Handle, won the special election to
succeed him In 1977. However. In 1979.
he was upset by an ’’outsider”—the
theatrical and flamlxtyanl Ja n e Byrne.
T he m arriage of B yrne an d the
m achine hasn’t been completely hnppv.
Byrne controls the m achine, but has
never been able to win Its heart. Now
Byrne Is running for a second term, and
her opponrnl Is none other than Rich­
ard M. Dalev—who thinks It's about time
thut he lay claim to what he sees as Ills
rightful political heritage.
For 40-ycar-old Richie Daley, the
contest Is more than a simple electoral
battle: It's a vindication of his father’s
name, which Ja n e Byrne has not held in
very high esteem during her four years
as mayor.
This cleetlon has had an almostschizophrenic effect on the machine.
Byrne has an abrasive personality and
Isn't personally liked by m any of the
city’s 50 Democratic ward committeem en-but they owe their Jobs to her
and therefore their lovaltv.
But the Daley name has an almost
magnetic pull for Democratic politi­
cians. and m any of those ward com ­
m itteem en have known Richie Daley
since h r was a boy. They sec him as one
of them , w hile-although she sounds
and acts like a political b oss-Janc
Byrne Is an outsider.
When the ward com m itteem en met In
November to select a slate of primary
candidates. Mayor Byrne was the only
candidate proposed for the mayoral
post. Thirty-three of the ward com m it­
teemen endorsed her. but the support of
some appears to be lukewarm at best.
This election Is extremely difficult to
handicap because It Isn't, simply a
tw o -p e rs o n c o n te s t: R ep. H aro ld
W ashington, a p opular black c o n ­
gressm an. also has thrown his hat Into
the ring. W ashington hopes that Byrne
and Daley will spilt the white vote, while
the black vote will lx- solidly behind
him.
D aley s a y s h e w a n ts to b rin g
"stability" back to the m ayor’s office.
"Jay n e Byrne hires und fires by whim ,"
he says. "The people of Chicago deserve
more.

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

E co n o m y
NEW YORK (NEAi-Thc official u n ­
employment figures for Jan u ary are
out. and they signal, unm istakably, that

the current recession Is drawing toward
Its close. For that very reason, they also
herald the opening of n new stage In the
continuing buttle between President
Reagan and the liberal media: the
struggle In conceal, or at least minimize,
the fact of recovery.
The dow nturn In unemployment Is
rem arkably sharp, however you want to
look at It. In December, unemployment
stood at 10.8 percent. In Jan u ary ,
m easured In the sam e way. It was down
to 10.4 pcrcent-ncarly hulfa percentage
point. The Bureau of Labor Statistics
says It was actually even lower: 10.2
percent. But the bureau arrived at this
latter figure by counting the personnel
of the arm ed forces as m em bers of the
work force, reasoning (logically enough)
that when military service Is voluntary,
as It Is today. It ought to count as a Job
like any other. W hether you count
m ilita ry p e rs o n n e l a s a m o n g th e
employed or not. however, the decline
In unem ploym ent from December to
Jan u ary Is both real and slgtiflcant.
Unemployment is a notoriously lag­
gard economic Indicator, slow to rise at
the start of a recession and slow to fall
when It ends, and In this case It lived up
fully to Its reputation. Housing starts
am i au to sa le s have been headed
upward for m ouths: the combined Index
of leading economic indicators rose
steadily through almost all of the latter
half of 1982. But unem ploym ent still
squatted there, ugly and all too visible,
like some unw anted visitor In a home
already hungry. Now lie has risen to go.
and It is cause for rejoicing.
More precisely, it is cause for rejoicing
am ong all save those who have a vested
Interest In the continuation of the
' recession. I do not suggest for a m om ent
that cither the Democrats or the liberal
media actually want the recession to
continue. But Its existence has been a
major political Inconvenience for Mr.
Reagan, and Ills opponents would be
less than hum an If they were not
reluctant to concede that it is ebbing at

B e tte r
last. There are always various ways or
looking at these things, and you can Just
about count on the Democrajic politi­
cians and the Wnshlngfon press corps to
look on the economic upturn of 1983
with a searching and skeptical eye.
Take the media, for starters. In 1981,
when Mr. Reagan was pushing Ills
budget through Congress. It was a rare
evening when the television news pro­
gram s failed to Interview some quiverlipped little old black lady on how she
would enjoy starving to death when the
Reagan budget cu ts went Into effect. In
1982. real events ulways being prefera­
ble to hypothctlc.’il ones, media a tte n ­
tion shifted to the rising num bers of the
unemployed, und we saw yard after
yard of footage In which lald-off workers
berated Mr. Reagan and swore they
would never vote for him again, or
futllcly scanned the classified pages, or
lined up at the u n e m p lo y m e n t office
for the com pensation checks.
Do not. however. In 1983. expect to
sec m any TV shots of workers reporting
to thclrjobs again. There will be pockets
of poverty aplenty for m any m onths to
come, and wc can count on the media to
find them and m ake the most of them .
Soon we’ll be hearing: "Unem ploym ent
m ay be down In the country as a whole,
but here in the Wyoming panhandle,
where laborers from all over America
had assem bled In the hope of finding
work on the Dense Pack missile project,
unem ploym ent is at a record high and
Ronald Reagan's nam e Is still m ud."
The Democratic Party, with less need
to pose as objective, can be expected to
play even harder hardball. As the
economy recovers, tax revenues will
increase and those horrific deficit "pro­
jections" will begin to be seen us the
chim eras they alw ays were. T h a t’s
when Messrs. Reagan. O’Neill. Dole ct
al. will get down to the nitty-gritty. Do
those extra revenues get applied to
reducing deficit, or do we simply spend
th em on federal p ro g ra m s-a lw a y s
worthy ones, m ind y o u -th a t Mr. Reagan
trim m ed or elim inated? O’Neill, who Is
bent on spending our way out of this
recession will be very reluctant Indeed
to adm it it’s over.

NEW YORK (UPI) - A low sodium
diet. It turns out. eventually tricks or
retrains the taste buds, according to
r e s e a r c h e r s a t th e U n iv e rs ity of
Pennsylvania.
As a re su lt — a n d d e sp ite the
difficulty at the start of sltch a diet —
salty foods after a while come across as
less appealing.
The report In the American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition Is based on a taste
study by scientists at the university's
Moncll Chemical Senses Center.
T he research ers said their study
supports Impressions from physicians
and low-sodium dieters. They said also
that It contradicts earlier experimental
studies which contended that sodium
restriction m ust inevitably produce
craving for salt.
The backdrop, as sketched In the
report:
Sodium balance in an organism Is
Influenced by m any factors. Including
disease, diet and hormonal state. In
m any anim al species, sodium loss
triggers salt intake. When laboratory
anim als, for exam ple, arc made sodium
deficient, they Increase their Intake of
salt solutions. They even accept strong
salt solutions previously avoided.
People also show altered taste and
Increased salt intake after sodium de­
pletion. research evidence suggests.
Even m oderate decreases In sodium
ingestion for 24 hours is supposed to
Induce a heightened liking for salty
soups.
These reports on clinical studies
contrast with what Is called anecdotal
evidence — clinical im pressions of
doctors und self-reports from patients on
low sodium diets.
The unccdolal evidence suggests that
as a result of restricting sodium Intake,
people come to prefer less salty food, the
Pennsylvania scientists said.
D u rin g t h e i r r e s e a r c h , th e i n ­
vestigators tried to resolve these contra­
dictory reports.
They theorized that If (he taste buds.
Indeed, work against people on low
sodium diets, then some method m ust
be found to circu m v en t th e taste
changes.
The battle with salt goes on because
excessive salt intake has been traced to
high blood pressure In susceptible
persons.
The Pennsylvania scientists tested
taste responses to suit in young adults
put on low-sodium diets for five m onths.
They recorded taste responses to salt in
soups, crackers, and solutions during a
two-month prc-cxpcrlment period and
during the five-month low salt period.
Taste responses also were recorded
am ong adults in a control group. They
consum ed a regular diet during the
study period.
The researchers found the perceived
Intensity of salt In crackers went up In
the low salt group. Salt concentrations
of m axim um pleasantness In soup and
crackers fell In the low-salt but not in
the control groups.
Said another way: the low-sodium
dieters becam e more sensitive to the
taste of salt and began to prefer their
food with less salt.
The Pennsylvania scientists believe
taste changes go through two phases
when people arc on low sodium diets.

JACK ANDERSON

Unreliable Test Wrecks Careers
*

r

ii

c

*

\
"Hil I'm awkward and insecure. They say that
turns some women on!"

W A S I I I N G T O N —E n s i g n D a v e
Scheuerm ann’s promising career as a
Navy filer was shot down in flames in
Match 1982-by a laboratory analysis
whose reliability has been questioned
by some of the nation’s leading medical
experts.
T h e la L t e s t I n d i c a t e d t h a t
Scheuerm ann had been using m ari­
juana. The ensign, who stood first in his
class al flight school in Pensacolu.
insists he has never smoked pot while In
the service. Here’s the story:
A Navy legal officer heard rum ors of a
’’wild party" at Scheuerm ann s hom e.
Called on the carpet, the pilot denied
that there had been any u*t of drugs at

the (tarty. T he legal officer asked him to
subm it to a urinalysis test to detect
m a riju a n a use. T he test Is called
EMIT—E nzym e M ultiplied Im m u n o ussuy test.
Confident that he hud nothing to fear,
S cheuerm ann agreed to take the test.
To his shock und dism ay, the results
cam e back positive.
S c h e u e r m a n n w as a b o u t to be
drum m ed out of the Navy when an
in v estig atio n tu rn ed up several ir­
regularities. IBs urine specim en had
changed custody four titties on its way
through the laborulories-and the chain
of custody couldn't be traced.

Worse yet. the lest result cam e back
as part of a report titled: "Aircraft
Accident: Non-falal." Scheuerm ann has
never been in an aircraft accident of any
kind.
Scheuerm ann took a second EMIT
test: the result was negative. He passed
three lie-detector tests. Still, his com ­
m anding officer refused to reinstate him
as a pilot.
It w asn't Just procedural irregularities
that cast doubt on S cheuerm ann's case.
The EMIT test Itself has been criticized
by e m in e n t p a th o lo g is ts a n d to x ­
ico lo g ists a s b e in g h o p e le ssly In ­
conclusive.
One of the com panies that developed

EMIT has acknowledged that 5 percent
of the test results are deceptive. Medical
experts told my reporter Don Corrigan
the range of error Is m uch higher titan
that.
Dr. Richard Hawks, chief of research
at the National Institute on Drug Abuse,
said it is totally unacceptable to use
EMIT results us a basis for disciplinary
action without corroborating data. Of­
ficial Pentagon policy requires con­
firmation by more reliable testing. But
that policy is violated regularly.
Ali a c ro s s th e c o u n tr y , se rv ic e
personnel and civilians are being fired
or othciw lsc punished for dunking
EMIT tests.

I

�PEOPLE
tvenmg Herald, Sanford, FI

G a rd e n in g
PLANT
SALE

Insect, Disease Control
In Home Vegetable Plots
In order to ensure a nice supply of fresh vegetables from
your home garden, insects and diseases must be controlled.
A suggested genera] purpose spray for insects of vegetables
is one containing malathlon or diazinon plus Sevin or
methoxychlor. A suggested general-purpose spray for diseases
of vegetables would contain one or more of the following
fungicides: zineb, maneb, paptan, daconii or copper.
For powdery mildew on cucumbers, squash, and melons, use
Karathanc. Many ready prepared general-purpose dusts and
sprays are commercially available. Apply according to
recommendations and precautions on the label.
Begin control efforts early. Apply fungicides at weekly in­
tervals as a preventive measure. For insects, dust or spray at

Desmond

At

Hastings

F O llO W IN G

R u th G re e n , left, an d
K ay
B a r th o lo m e w ,
m e m b e rs
of
th e
B e a u tific a tio n
Com*
m itte c of th e G r e a te r
S a n fo rd C h a m b e r of
C o m m e rc e , w ill u s h e r
in
s p rin g
w h ile
“ p re tty in g u p ” S a n ­
ford by h e lp in g w ith a n
A zalea a n d C a la d iu m
S a le on M a rc h 4-5.
P ro c e e d s w ill b e n e fit
P h a s e III of th e J a c k
W c ib l e
m e m o ria l
l a n d s c a p i n g of t h e
G ood
S a m a rita n
H om e.

L O C A T IO N ®

CHAMBER Of COMMttCI I
SANFORD PLAZA
I
zayre
PLAZA

\

VflNN-WWE

‘AAIA

|

the first signs and repeat treatments as needed. The materials
listed in the following table arc safe if properly used and are
effective against the insects listed.

H *r«ld Photo by Tom Vlnctnl

5X
S e v in

4% o r 5%
M a la th io n

A p h id s
Armyk’o rw s
Budworms
C abbage worms
C o lo r a d o p o t a t o b e e t l e
C ucum ber b e e t l e
Earw orm s
F lo a b e e tle
F r u i t , h o r n , p in w o r m s
L e a f-h o p p e r
L e a f-r o lle r
M elo n p i c k l e
M e x ic a n b e a n
Panto r a s
Pea w e e v i l s
R ed s p i d e r s
S tin k bugs
T h r ip s *
L e a fm in e r s

1.5%
L in d a n e

R o te n o n e

Sanford Woman's Club
Hosts District Festival
The Woman's Club of Sanford was the
hostess club for VII Florida Federation
of Women’s Clubs Annual District VII
Arts Festival and Sewing Contest. The
event was under the direction of the
club’s Arts Department headed by
Jeanette Dunn.

D ia z in o n 2%
D ia z in o n 2%

Diazinon may be applied to the soil surface as a 5 percent
dust or a 14 to 2 percent bait for control of ants, cutworms,
grasshoppers and mole-crickets. Do not apply this material to
leaves of plants.
Most Florida soils contain parasitic plant nematodes. For
most vegetables these soils should be fumigated. Fumigants
are usually applied from two to three weeks prior to planting,

depending on the nemalicide that is used.
•
Consider all pesticides as potential poisons. They should be
applied strictly according to manufacturers’ precautions and
recommendations. Always wash vegetables from the garden
thoroughly before using. Use pesticides only as necessary to
control Insects and diseases and stop applications during the
harvesting season.

[.eesburg, Eustis, Pine Castle, Apopka,
Suburban, Ml. Dora, Wildwood and
Sanford.
Registration began at 8:30 a.m.
followed by coffee and refreshments.
Jane Kelley, District VII Director, called
the meeting to order. Pat Foster,
president of the Woman's Club of San­
ford, welcomed the delegation.

Winners of each club in the district
were in competition for awards with
these winners competing in the Florida
State competition at the annual con­
vention in the spring.

Winners from the Sanford Club in­
clude: Ann Brisson, second, painting;
Ruth Gaines, first, embroidery; Thco
Hill, first, crocheted afghan; Bill Gielow,
second, crewel skirt; and Frances

Entries included winners from the
following clubs in District VII: Oviedo,

\\

Husband Helping W idow
DEAR ABBY: Four months ago my
husband and I lost a very good friend and
neighbor. Naturally we offered our
condolences and help to this man’s
widow, who happens to be a very at­
tractive woman about my age (middle
60s). Now my husband gets calls quite
often. Her faucet is dripping, her furnace
is making a noise, her storm window
needs fixing, etc.
His last visit to her house lasted 44
minutes. And there’s always a freshly
baked apple pie waiting for him over
there. (His favorite.)
Tomorrow he is taking her to the
dentist! That’s where I put my foot down.
But he said he had already promised to
take her, so off they went. Of course, this
is only the first of three appointments.
Another neighbor made a little Joke
about how attentive my husband has
been to this widow. I laughed it off, but I
was burning up Inside.
What now? I feel better Just putting
this down on paper.
GOOD OLD JANE
DEAR JANE: Don't be too “good" or
you'll be old before your time, Jane. Tell
your helpful hubby that the neighbors are
ipiking and enough Is enough already.
Then go along for the ride. And (while
you're sitting between them, gel Jane's
recipe for the apple pie. Three may he a
crowd, but there's safety In numbers.
DEAR ABBY: I never thought I’d be
writing to you, but here goes Iam datins

that he has more than a casual interest in
her. Wise up, and say goodbye to Jimmy.
M
n p flDEAR ABBY: I recently read a verse
W m \JF
in Uie letters to the editor column in the
a '- j T
A h h v
Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator.
rtA /i/y
|
j^now whether it's original, but I
^
_____________think it's worth passing on. 1 hope you
agree.
NEWCASTLE READER
a younger man I'll call Jimmy. I am
DEAR READER: I do. And here it is:
deeply in love with him. The problem is
it ISN’T THE CAR,
that there is this girl at work who is after
r r s THE DRIVER
him. (Let’s call her Shirley.) Shirley is
“Sir; It isn't the car that begins to
married, but she wants to have jimmy's whine when forced to stop for an old stop
baby. She says she isn't in love with him, sign — it’s the driver.
but her husband has a low sperm count
'*H isn't the car that takes a drink, then
and they can’t seem to have a baby, quickly loses its power to think — it’s the
which they want very much.
driver.
Jimmy tells me that he doesn’t want to
»it |, n't the car that falls to heed the
lose me but he would like to ac- dangers of reckless, discourteous speed
commodate Shirley. He says he doesn't _ R's the driver,
love her the way he loves me, but they
•&lt;]( isn't the car that steps on the gas
have necked in his car u few times.
and causes an accident trying to pass —
This hurts me, Abby, because Jimmy |t'» the driver,
and I have talked about marriage and I
“ A car may be bent and twisted awTy,
was counting on maybe having a spring but li isn’t the car that will have to die —
wedding.
it’s the driver."
„
Please tell me what to do.
J
IVI„ ' ' ? n m
JUST ABOUT HAD IT
CAMPBELL, OHIO
DEAR JUST: You don’t say how
You’re never too old (or too young) to
“ young" Jimmy is, but he sounds im- learn how to make friends and be
mature and naive. A man who would popular. For Abby’s booklet on
consider fathering a child as an ae- Popularity, send $1, plus a long, sclfcommodatlon is not ready for marriage, addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope
And the fact that be and Shirley have ^ Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 3890,
neeked in Ms ear a few times indicates Hollywood, Calif. 99038

Following luncheon, members with
entries in the Sewing Contest modeled
attire they constructed in a fashion show
directed by Sharon Harkness.
After the luncheon door prizes donated
by Sanford businesses were awarded.
Judges were: Faye Siler, Sylvia
Vandershice, Eddie Senkarik, Barbara
Ruprecht, Carolyn Betts, Connie Davis,
Mrs. Frank Woodruff and less Morgan.

| liij

4KUT • H
|

Wilson, third, ceramics.
Entertainment was provided by the
School of Dance Arts in Sanford.

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Ann B risso n a r r a n g e s p a in tin g s a f t e r th e y w e re ju d g e d

Scouts Annual Derby Saturday
Cub Scouts from all of Seminole District will be participating
in the annual Pine wood Derby competition on Saturday, Feb.
19 at Joe Creamons used car lot on U.S. Highway 17-92.
Registration is scheduled at 9:15 a.m. At this time the boys
will be weighing in their cars and making the last final ad­
justments. The checkered flag will be dropped at 10 a.m.
following a brief opening ceremony.
Boys will be judged by the following age groups: Tiger Cubs,

United Wbu
QUILTING FOR
SCHOLARSHIP
A q u i lt m a d e
by
m e m b e rs
of
th e
A m e ric a n A sso ciatio n
of U n iv e rs ity W om en,
w ill be ra ffle d o ff a t
th e a n u u a l S c h o la rs h ip
B ru n ch a n d F a s h io n
Show to be h eld a t
10:30 a .m . S a tu rd a y ,
F e b . 26, a t th e Q u ality
Inn N o rth , 1-4, a n d 434.
P u ttin g
fin is h in g
to u c h e s on th e q u ilt
a r e , fro m le ft, D r.
,J u n c
G o rd o n ,
Pat
H e rriu g ,
M a rg e
M o rg a n a n d L a u r i e
L in sle y .

The Sanford-Semlnole Art
Association will hold its an­
nual members art exhibit and
tea on Sunday, Feb. 20, from
noon to 5 pm . at the Sanford
Civic Center on Sanford
Avenue
and
Seminole
Boulevard.
Works of art have been
doncted by SSAA members
and will be raffled off during
the afternoon. Price of the*
donation tickets isfl each, or
6 for 85. Winners do not have

FOR TH E B EST

TV SERVICE
C A L L M IL L E R S
■ P H m O ill
l i l t o&lt;und(. b, n r til

7-year-olds; Wolf Cubs, 8-year-olds; Bear Cubs 9-year-olds;
and Webelos 10-year-olds.
After the running of the “finals" in age group competition,
there will be a run off for overall grand champion.
Following the boys’ competition, parents will be allowed to
accept the challenge and join in the event.
An invitation is extended to Interested spectators who would
like to attend.

to be present to win.
The public is welcome at no
admission charge. For fur-

ther information about the
association, please call Jane
Patterson 869-7898.

GRAND OPENING!

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�SPORTS
6A-Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Jo n es P resses
Lions, 66-39

Lady H a w ks' 4th-Quarter

District 3A-S
Girls Basketball
at Lake Mary
Tonight's games
Lake Mary vs. Eustls 6:30 p.m.
Jones vs. Osceola 8:30 p.m.
Thursday’s results
Jones 66, Oviedo 39
Osceola 42, Leesburg 37

Com eback Stuns Seminole

B y BRENTSMARTT

Herald Sports Writer
. Unable to work the ball through a
Jones Tiger man-to-man press, Oviedo’s
Lady Lions, fell 66-39, in the opening
round of the District AAA-8 tournament
at Lake Mary.
"When you try your best and make
mistakes you can't get upset," said
Oviedo coach Bolton about his young
squad which finished with a 16-10 record.
"We could have stayed within 10 or
points of them (Jones) without
pressing but I have two freshmen
bringing the ball upcourt."
Staying close through much of the
initial period, Oviedo began to slide in the
last three minutes of the fl
when Jones installec
first quarter, Jones
In the second the
the Lions In the foul-plagued contest. Not
scoring or much less getting the ball to
the midcourt stripe until a Fayetta
Robinson bucket at 4:10, Jones opened a
37-13 gap.
Doing most of the damage for Jones
was center JackJe Washington and
flashy, slick-shooting guard Shelia Riley.
The only gleam of light in the entire first
half or game was Robinson who scored 15
of the Lions 20 first-half points as Jones
tbok a 40-20 bulge to halftime.
( In the second half, with the outcome
Inevitable, both coaches cleared the
benches as Oviedo never challenged the
tklented Tigers.
- "Everybody underestimates Jones,
they're a very good and well-coached
dub. I think Jones will win the whole
thing," said Bolton.
O viedo’s T ra c y J a c o b s (no. 21) is sa n d w ic h e d b etw een A n o in ette
] For the unseeded Tigers (not enough
M c G a rv in (no. 42) a n d a n o th e r J o n e s p la y e r d u rin g D is tric t 3A-8
district games) who now advance to the
c
a g e p la y a t L ak e M a ry . J o n e s h a m m e re d th e Lions, 66-39.
semi-finals tonight against Eustls,
aihlngton led the way with 23 points,
iley followed with 15. Robinson carried
e total load tor Oviedo with 23 points
■td 10 rebounds.
By 8AM COOK
Second Street Gym fighter, under the
tin the other game Thursday, Osceola
HenddSpMla Editor
tUUdage ot Vic "Taco" Perez, belted
w v d a d UMtburt, 4MTI to.eam the right
tH dtm on mrt Pwn t f w k i .
Morten wtth consecutive ri*ht heMe
t4 f*sy Jones tonight at »t».
It won’t ever receive the same hype as which sent the Del-and fighter reeling
Lake Mary's Rams take on Eustis at
All and Frazier or Leonard and Duran, Into the ropes in the first round.
6130 p.m.
but tonight's 165-pound battle In the
In the second round, Dickerson was
JONES&lt;«)
even
more devastating, twice ham­
Regional
Golden
Gloves
Tournament
Washington 9 5-8 23, Johnson 4 0-3 8,
itogers 21-4 5, Riley 71-215, McGarvin 1 between Sanford's Jerry Dickerson and mering Morgan to the point where he had
Orlando's Rich Dombrowski looms as a to take standing-eight counts. The
04 2, Love 0 0-2 0, Hill 0 34 3, Caldwell 11referee finally stopped the bout with 51
73, Page 11-4 3, Williams 104 2, Lane 0 2- terrific fight.
seconds
left In the round.
Both
scored
easy
victories
Thursday
4.2, Tangela 0 0-2 0, Totals 26 14-42 66.
Dombrowski, a former two-time Allnight as the Fourth Annual Golden
OVIEDO (39)
Gloves Regional got underway at the American wrestler at the University of
Robinson 10 3-11 23, Christel 1 1-2 3,
Nelson 0 04 0, Barth 13-4 5, Redway 3 0-2 American Legion Coliseum at Orlando. Central Florida, ran his record to 44 with
6j Boehma 0 04 0, Rickey 0 2-2 2, Virgin 0
Dickerson, a crisp-punching 20-year- an easy victory over Orlando's Mike
04 0, Jacobs 0 04 0, Gulledge 0 04 0,
old, Improved his record to 7-1, by bat­ Feliu of the Church Street Gym.
The Labor Union 517 fighter beat up
Buriord 0 0-1 0, Totals 15 9-22 39.
tering DeLand's Bruce Morgan. Tbe

J

l-y
J

Friday, Feb. II, m i

4 A-9 D is tric t T o u rn a m e n t
T o n lg h t'a gam e*:
Lake Howell vs. Lyman 6:15 p.m.
DeLand vs. Mainland 8 p.m.
T h u rs d a y 's scores:
Lake Howell 57. Seminole 56
Mainland 58, Lake Brantley 50
By CHRIS FISTER
H erald S p o rta W rite r

the second half and reeled off six
straight points to lake a 40-31 lead.
Moments later. Seminole took an
11-point lead. 44-33, on a Jum per by
Campbell at the 4:46 m ark in the
DAYTONA BEACH -lf there's one third quarter.
With Seminole leading, 48-40.
team that doesn't get fazed when It
fulls behind. It's the Lady Sliver Brown hit a layup and was fouled
and converted the three-point play
Haw ksofLake Howell High.
For over 30 of the 32 m inutes In and Tammy Johnson came back
T hursday night's first round game seconds later to hit a layup that cut
in the 4A-9 District Tournam ent. S em inole's lead to five points.
Lake Howell trailed Seminole High's 48-43. as the quurtcr ended.
L a k e H o w e ll c a r r i e d t h e
Lady Seminoles. But, with 1:38
rem aining In (be game, the Hawks' m om entum Into the fourth quarter
Cindy Blocker came up with a steal as the Hawks reeled off six straight
nnd was fouled going up for the points to pull within one point,
shot. Blocker sank both free throws 50*49, with 6:20 left to play.
The most crucial m om ent of the
and Lake Howell took the lead for
the first time, 53-52. and eventually game for Seminole occurcd with
went on to win. 57-56 at Mainland 2:55 left to play. Hlllery went to set
a p ick for C am p b ell but w as
High School.
whistled for a blocking foul, it was
"They beat us and th at's all I can
say," Seminole coach Ron Merthle her fifth foul.
"Dledrc (Hlllery) was really con­
said. "But we'll be back next year,
trolling the gam e." Lake Howell
you can be sure of that."
The Lady Seminoles came out like coach Dennis Codrey said.. "We
couldn't contain her at all."
gangbusters In the first quarter and
Mary Johnson hit one of two free
behind the offensive punch of Max­
ine Campbell and ihe Inside work of throws after Hlllcry's foul to cut
Sem inole's lead to. 52-51. Seminole
Dledrc Hlllery. combined whh 11
Lake Howell turnovers. Seminole* then went Into a spread offense and
tried to eat up as m uch of the clock
took a 19-9 lead after the first
as possible. Bui Blocker came up
quarter. Lake Howell's Christy Scott
with her clutch steal and hit two
kept the game from getting comfree throw s after she was fouled
pleicly oui of hand as she scored
going up for a shot.
seven of the Hawks nine points.
Blocker cam e back with 58 sec­
Lake Howell pulled to within four
onds left nnd banked In a shot that
points with 3:25 left in the second
gave the Huwks a three-point lead.
quarter but Seminole went back up
55-52. and Tam m y Jo h n so n 's layup
by seven with less than a m inute to
with 38 seconds left put Lake
go on two free throw s by Dec
Howell In control by five. 57-52.
Goebclbcckcr. A shot at the buzzer
Seminole hit two more shots but
by the Hawks' Jan cn e Brown, made
ran out of time to come back.
fhe score 34-29 at the half.
Tam my Johnson led the Hawks
The Tribe cam e out fast again In

D ick e rso n -D o m b ro w sk i H e a d lin e s G o ld e n G lo v e s
Boxing
Feliu prettyjwell in the first round and
Feliu decided to "retire" and not come
out for the second round.
"Dickerson and Dombrowski. I’ve
been thinking about it all night," said
Golden Gloves Director and matchmaker
Kent Foyer Friday morning. "It should
be a good one."
In other action Thursday, Altamonte
Springs' Dan Fixl (132) came on strong in
the second and third rounds to post a
decision over Merritt Island’s Karl Kirk.
In a Seminole County matchup,

man Trips Tribe; Rams Fall,

ByGEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer
{Using superior speed and attempting
more
bore aj
and better scoring kicks, the
ifyman Greyhounds kept the Sanford
Seminoles from advancing past the
second round of District 4A-9 Soccer
competition, scoring a 3-2 victory at
Lyman Thursday night
Seminole began In the traditional way
a long pass to Rick Nooney from Eri
Moreno, who attempted an early shot.
However, the 'Hounds, led by the
lightning speed of Kevin Hines and Keith
Young forced the 'Noles to play in their
own territory most of the game.
Along with that Intense Lyman
pressure came many a beleaguered goal
situation for the Tribe, as goal keeper
Dean Shoemaker fought all night, but to
no avail, to keep the Greyhounds
scoreless. The pressure began early, as
Seminole Robert Iannone barely saved a
Lyman shot, and Lyman's Donald Monk
barely missed two chances.
Hines then began making his mark,
booting a kick which couldn’t have been
any closer to a goal than it was. He
followed with a head shot, but Shoemaker
and Scott Meek scrambled to save the
score. Seminole played beads up ball
when pressured, but something Anally

but his forte was speed. The entire
Lyman team, for that matter, burned the
Seminoles all night long with their
blazing speed, outrunning the Tribe at
broke when David Dangel slipped a goal
every turn.
over Shoemaker's outstretched hands for
Although Seminole valiantly applied
a 1-0 Lyman lead.
whatever pressure possible, and Griffin
Shortly thereafter, Young boosted the closed the gap shortly before the game's
'Hounds' advantage with one of his two end with his only goal, sloppy play and
goals of the game for a 2-0 lead.
missed opportunities finally took their
Paul Griffin of The Tribe finally got a toll, and Lyman held off a final series of
chance for a Seminole score, but his kick drives to preserve Us win.
was slopped effortlessly by outstanding
Lymar. will play DeLand, a 2-1 winner
Lyman goal tender John Plnkley. over Lake Howell, Saturday at 7 p.m. at
However, Pickley couldn't quite stop DeLand's Spec Martin Stadium.
The Silver Hawks held a 1-0 lead at
Seminole Brian Nulty, as he put the Tribe
halftime
but the Bulldogs broke loose for
on the scoreboard by rifling a kick into
two
second-half
goals for the victory.
the net to close the gap before the half, 2Kevin
Hart
kicked
the tie-breaking
1.
goal for the top-seeded 'Dogs.
Lyman started a bit slower in the
second half, but Young more than made
In District 3A-5 soccer play Thursday,
up for it by punching his second goal past lak e Mary dropped a 2-0 decision to
a flying Shoemaker for a 3-1 margin. For fourth-ranked Daytona Beach Seabreeze
a second, however, it looked as though at Lake Mary. In the other semi-final
Griffin would retaliate, but, with open round game, Daytona Beach Father
space between him and the net, he hit a Lopez nipped Oviedo, 3-2.
shot which was Ju$ loo weak, and
Rahmin Poursarzlb put the Seabreeze
bounced off the left bar.
crew on top five minutes into the game
Young then came Into action, as had with a 20-yard aide /ulley for a 1-0 lead.
his counterpart Hines. He made several The lead held up until halftime, although
strong clearance kicks for the 'Hounds, the Rams had several good opportunities

Prep Soccer

Casselberry’s Arthur Zacco (132) had too
much for Sanford's Scott Arnett, beating
the younger Arnett wtth quick lefts and
rights to the head for a unanimous threeround decision.
In other action, Kevin O’Hara (132) lost
a split-decision to Ira Lee, Roger Medina
(139) took a unanimous decision over
Orlando's Chsuncey Johnson, Greg
Brown (147) of the Orlando Naval
Training Center overwhelmed Bobby
Wynn, Orlando’s Harvey Hester (139)
decisioned Merritt Island's Willie Welch,
Larry Mack (147) dedsloned Tim
Wineland, Dale Robinson (147)
dedsloned Robert Doby, Dennis Bennewitz (165) dedsloned Albert Franklin,

with 17 points. Scott added 13 while
Blocker tossed In 10 points and
came up with six stcnls and Mary
Johnson scored seven (mints and
handed out 10 assists.
"Blocker and Mary Johnson really
played well when wc needed it,"
Codrcy said. "And Monica McNeil
did a good Job off the bench, she
was really the only one who could
hold down Hlllery."
Hlllery led the Tribe w ith a
game-high 21 points and 19 re­
bounds. Campbell added 16 and
Mona Benton 13.
L ake H ow ell will now m eet
Lyman In tonight's 6:15 semi-final
with the winner playing (he winner
of the DcLand-Malnland game for
the district cham pionship.
LAKE HOWELL (57)
Blocker 3 4-6 10. M. Johnson 3
1-3 7. T. Johnson 8 1-2 17. Scolt 6
1-1 13. Brown 2 3-3 7. McNeil 1 0-1
2, Green.O 1-2 1. Totals: 23 11-18
57.
SEMINOLE (56)
Benton 6 1-4 13. Hlllery 9 3-4 21.
Campbell 8 0-1 16, Stallworth 1 0-0
2. Jones 1 0-2 2. Goebclbcckcr O 2-2
2. Totals: 25 6-13 56.
Lake Howell
9 20 14 14 -57
Seminole
19 15 14
8 -56
Total fouls: Seminole 14. Lake
Howell 13. Fouled out: Hlllery.
Technicals: none.
In Thursday night's second game,
a sluggish second half spelled doom
for the Lady P a trio ts of Lake
Brantley as Mainland claimed a
58.50 victor)'.
B e h in d th e hot s h o o tin g of
Rhonda Vazquez. Lake Brantley
took a 22-20 lead after the first
quarter. Mainland came back to
take the lead at halftime. 32-31.
The Lady Buccaneers oulscored
Lake Brantley. 16-10. In the third
quarter to take a 4G-41 lead Into the
fourth. The Patriots didn’t score In
the fourth quarter until the 3:58
m a r k , by t h a t tim e ( h o u g h .
Mainland had a seven point lead.
50-43. The Buccaneers went up by
10 with less than two m intues to
play and Brantley could not mount
a come back.
Vazquez finished a brilliant career
at Lake Brantley with a game-high
17 points, Linda Trimble added 13
In her last game with the Patriots.
MAINLAND (58J
Hlckley 5 4-4 14. Harold 7 2-3 16.
Johnson 4 2-6 10. Green 4 O O 8.
Baker 2 0-1 4. Lewis 1 2-4 4. Abney
1 0-0 2. Totals: 24 10-18 58.
LAKE BRANTLEY (50)
Vazquez 8 1-2 17. Nunez 2 2-2 6.
Trimble 5 3-7 13. Pritchett 3 0 0 6.
Brown 2 0-1 4. Lubcnow 2 0-0 4.
T o t a l s : 22 6 - 1 2 50.
Mainland
20 12 14 12-58
Lake Brantley 22
9 10 9 -5 0

2 -0

to score.
"We put a lot of pressure on them the
first half," said Lake Mary coach Larry
McCorkle whose team finished 10-11.
"We had two or three chances to put It in
but we didn't get it done."
Twenty-two minutes into the second
half, Eric Nelson kicked In the final
for the Sand Crabs to advance them to
the championship game Saturday at 7
p m. at Lake Mary against Father Lopez.
McCorkle cited Jose Delrosarto and
keeper Joe Dalton for their defensive
work. "Delrosario marked their best
forward and did a good Job on him," said
McCorkle. "Dalton had 17 saves and both
their goals were unsavable."
In the second game, Father
Cook put on a one-man show — scoring
three goals despite an elbow Injury — to
knock off the Lions.
Cook gave Lopez a 1-0 lead five minutes
into the game but Oviedo's Rob Moody
booted home a score with eight minutes
left in the halftime for a 1-1 deadlock.
Juan Pidllla scored three minutes into
the second half for a 2-1 Lion lead but
Cook kicked In a left-footed goal for a 2-2
stalemate.
With six minutes to play, Cook struck
again for the decisive score in the 3-2
victory.

Lyman's Donald Monk moves past a Seminole defender.

Rawls, Likens , Oviedo 5 Seek Mat Titles
Two wrMtlan from Lake Mary and five from
Oviedo open Slate SA Wrestling Tournament action
today at Haines Cky.
la k e Mary's Jack likens, 284 with four cham­
pionships at 107 pounds, Joins teammate Robert
Rawls, 27-1 with three titles at unlimited, as the
county's best chances for a state title.
Lake Brantley's Richard Fanner won a Mate
championship last year at the 4A meet In Tampa.
Joining likens and Rawls are Oviedo's Jerry
Jordan (102), Shawn Knapp (108), Brian Smith
(118), Mike Hilgar (123) and Stev^Berg (129).
Knapp lost to likens. 1&lt;M, In last Saturday's region
f4tzmpionihlp while Smith also placed aecond.
Jordan, Hilgar and Berg placed third.
Of the seven county representatives, none is a

Prep Wrestling
senior. likens and Rawls are Juniors as are Hilgar,
Knapp and Berg. Jordan and Smith are just
sophomores.
Oviedo coach John Horn credits tne Lions'
resurgence—only Hilgar won a district title—to a
“tough training program."
“After the conference we pretty much knew
which wrestlers were going to do well," said Horn.
"I took them and got (former lion wrestling
standout) Doug Jordan to work wtth the other kids.
“We really worked on conditioning and it has paid
off. The kids really noticed what good shape they
were in during the third period." Horn added.

likens and Rawls, meanwhile, took fairly easy
routes to their championships, likens notched two
pins and two easy decisions (114 and 10-1). San­
ford’s Rawls, wrestling for only his second year,
pinned all four opponents. Only one-Blair Harris in
the final match—went Into the second period.
Likens Is an intelligent wrestler who knows a
variety of moves to build up leads through
takedowns and back points.
Rawls, 6-9 and 328 pounds, uses his bulk to
overpower opponents but has good quickness for his
size loo. “If Robert (Rawls) gets any part of his
body on top nf you, it's over," said 1-ake Mary coach
Frank Schwartz.
Rawls hopes to “get over" four more times this
weekend.—SAM COOK

FRONT END S n g r
ALIGNMENT 7

OIL CHANGE
A
LUBE
AMS■!CAN CAM

Mfi‘»1 AMI, H{( AN
( AH&gt;

fREE
BRAKE
INSPECTION

SR&amp;E TIRE CO.
ROUTR %. SOX 4M, SANFORD, FLA. l U I U S
HWY. 1l . f i - JU ST SOUTH OF F L I A WORLD
HOURS M O N .-F it. I A M .J ».»■ SAT. » A M .- N f A

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Earnhardt,
Bonnett
SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Sanford Recreation Needs
4 Volleyball League Teams
The Sanford Recreation Department Co-ed
Volleyball leagues still need more teams to complete
both leagues. Fees and rosters are due Feb. 22 and
league play begins Feb. 28 for the "A" league and
March 3 for the "B" league.
Entry fee is $15 per team and to be eligible men or
women must have turned 16-years-old on or before
June 15, 1982.
The Sanford Recreation Department Is also offering
an adult self-defense class. Classes begin Thursday,
March 3 at 1 p.m. at the Youth Wing of Sanford Civic
Center. Cost Is $20 for the six-week course.
Instruction Is by David Kolodzlk, who holds the rank
of Sl-Bok (Senior Instructor) In Shaolin Kung-Fu.
Registration Is at the Sanford Recreation Department
on the Second floor of City Hall, at the youth wing of
Sanford Civic Center or at Westslde Recreation Center.
For more Information contact Mike Kirby at 322-3161
ext. 290.

Baseball Rescheduled
Thursday’s Seminole County Baseball Tournament
game between Seminole and Lake Mary was rained out
and rescheduled for today at 1 p.m. Lake Howell and
Oviedo will play at 3:30 p.m.
The winners meet Saturday at 1:30 p.m. while the
losers play at 11 a.m.
The Seminole-Spruce Creek tennis match was also
rained out Thursday.

Lakers Maul Mavericks
United Press International
Those thuds heard In the Southwest Thursday night
probably were the Mavericks coming down to earth.
Even though they had defeated the Lakers twice
earlier In the season, the Mavericks got a painful
lesson on why the tas Angeles takers are the reigning
NBA champions, as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic
Johnson and Norm Nixon combined for 82 points In a
127-110 victory over the Mavericks.
"Those were the takers," said shell-shocked Dallas
Coach Dick Motta. "That’s probably what should have
happened the other two times."
With Nixon bombing from the outside and AbdulJabbar dominating Inside, the takers Jumped to an
early 14-point lead before the Mavericks got within two
points, late In the first half. After taking a 7-point lead
Into the fourth period, the takers dominated down the
stretch on the shooting of Nixon, Michael Cooper and
Johnson.
Abdul-Jabbar hit 14-of-19 shots from the field en
route to 32 points, Nixon and Johnson had 25 apiece,
Jamaal Wilkes added 18 and Cooper 12 as the takers
shot 51 percent from the floor.
Elsewhere, Portland beat Boston, 121-114, Denver
topped New Jersey, 117-108, New York defeated
Cleveland, 108-92, Detroit edged Houston, 113-110, and
San Diego whipped Golden State, 112-102.
*
*

Whalers Top Montreal, 4- 7
United Press International
Life abounds with mysteries —lo r instance, what
makes the Hartford Whalers tick?
“Maybe we get overconfident against the lower
teams," said the Whalers’ Mickey Volcan, trying to
explain the team’s erratic record. "When we play a
good team, we seem to do the little things better
because If you make a mistake, It comes right back to
hurt you."
This time Hartford did the hurting. Mark Johnson
scored two goals, Including a shorthanded, empty-net
effort, In a 4-1 vlrtory over Montreal for the Whalers’
third straight home triumph over the Canadiens.
In other games, Philadelphia beat Edmonton, 7-3,
the New York Islanders beat Pittsburgh, 4-1, Los
Angeles knotted Detroit, 5-5, Minnesota downed
Quebec, 6-3, and Toronto upended St. Louis, 6-3.

Missouri Topples Kansas
United Press International
Missouri learned this much about its politicians
Thursday night: they are better at pressing the flesh
than pressing on defense.
In a prelude to the Big Eight game between Missouri
and Kansas In Columbia, Mo., the Kansas Legislature
defeated the Missouri General Assembly, 30-20.
In the evening’s main event, the lOth-ranked Tigers
stopped Kansas, 74-69, behind 21 points by Greg
Cavener and 18 by Jon Sundvold.
The victory hiked Missouri’s record to 204, the
fourth straight year the Tigers have won 20 or more
games.
Elsewhere In the Top 20, No. 6 St. John’s ripped
Connecticut, 96-76, and No. 11 UCLA defeated Stanford,
99-86.
At New York, St. John's rebounded from its loss to
Boston College behind 27 points by Chris Mullin and 20
by Bob Kelly. Connecticut played without Its leading
scorer, Earl Kelley, who has an Injured leg.
At Los Angeles, Brad Wright, filling In for Injured
center Stuart Gray, hit 6-of-6 shots and scored 15 points
to power UCLA, which hasn’t lost to Stanford In Los
Angeles since the 1951-52 season.
In other games, Russell Cross scored 31 points to lift
Purdue over Michigan State, 61-55; Terrell Schlundt
scored 16 of his 19 points In the first half and Marquette
held off Wisconsin, 6663; Tony Campbell toased In 21
points to lift Ohio Slate over Northwestern, 71-55;
Bradley dropped Indiana State, 82-56, with Volae
Winters scoring 20 points and making 10 assists; Steve
Harris had 20 points and Herbert Johnson 19 as Tulsa
stopped Creighton, 6765, and Brett Applegate scored
22 points and Devin Durrani 21, to push Brigham
Young past Colorado State, 6968.

After an hour delay due to the rain, 35
cars lined up for the first 125 mile run.
Darrell Waltrip Jumped out to an early
lead with Earnhardt, Buddy Baker and
Kyle Petty running bumper to bumper.
On lap six Bruce Jacobi, from
Indianapolis, Ind., lost control of his
Pontiac on the back-stretch and was
Involved In one of the worst flipping
crashes ever seen at the speedway,
according to track officials. Jacobi was
In serious but stable condition today,
according to Dr. Carl Schwenker. On the
restart Baker and Petty took time to
swap the lead back and forth until A.J.
Foyt took over.
Foyt led from the 28th lap until the
buck-stretch of the final lap. At that time
both Earnhardt and Baker put their 1983

Ford Mustangs Into a draft and shot by to
finish first and second with Petty also
slipping by Foyt for third.
Foyt said, "I knew they were going to
do that. There was nothing I cculd do. I
was hoping to use a slower car to help
block them, but there weren’t any when I
needed them. Kyle got a little loose there
at the end and we almost hit. It was fun
but we didn’Lwln."

Top driver Bobby Allison had to pit
early In the race and tost a lap which he
could not make up. This will put him way
in the back of the field In Sundays' 500.
Terry tabonte could not get his car
started for the race, so he will also have
to start way in the back of the field.

In the second 125 mller, It was once
again the sling-shot that won the race as
Neil Bonnett slipped by Richard Petty to
win by less than a car length. Petty lead
early In the race In the STP Pontiac as
Geoff Bodine and Cale Yarborough along
with Bonnett made it a five-car freight
train lap after lap.
Midway through the race, Rusty

Petty felt that he had one of his better
races and said, "I did good for me, didn’t
I? I didn't have any help on the last lap.
That slow car didn't help me. I knew
what Neil (Bonnett) was going to do and I
was going to try and do something back
but I didn't get to. I had to go high and
there wasn't any way.

Auto Racing

-CARLVANZURA

Seminoles Honor Parents, Crooms
There will be a little bit of everything to
see tonight when Seminole High School's
basketball team closes its regular season
against Daytona Reach Seabreeze at
Seminole High.
TIM
sport standout will also sign autographs.
Coach Chris Marlctte's cagers will be
Seminole will also honor the parents of H A IN ES
looking for their 21st victory against a its basketball players and the Crooms
tough Sand Crab squad which battled Panthers who put together a 54-game
Detand to the buzzer before losing 55-53 winning streak which was snapped in the
edge Tuesday.
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanis Freshman
Montreal Expos left-fielder Tim Basketball Tournament by take Mary.
Raines will also be on hand to give the
Junior varsity cage action begins at
boosters some help In the concession
stand where the ex-Seminnlp High three- 6:15 p.m.

Prep Basketball

Twins' Griffith Keeps Rolling With Punches
United Press International
Next to Sugar Ray Leonard. I've
never seen anyone roll with a punch
better than Calvin Griffith.
The Minnesota Twins' owner is ut­
terly Indestructible, Lhc most resilient
Individual I've ever run across. Not
only In baseball, but in the whole world.
What 1 like so much about ol’ Calvin
is you always know exactly where you
stand with him. He gets sore as a boll
sometimes, but he couldn't hold a
grudge If his life depended pn it.
Take that arbitration case he had
; SHth Ron Davis, one of his relief pit­
chers. The Twins lost. They were of­
fering Davis $360,000, a $60,000 raise,
for what he did last year when he won
three games, lost nine, and had a 4.42
earned run average and 22 saves.
Davis and his agent, Nick Buoniconti,
the old Miami Dolphin, asked for
$475,000, and when the arbitrator ruled
the 27-year-old, right-handed fastballer
should get what he was asking, Griffith
nearly had apoplexy.
"He's no more entitled to that salary’
than I am of being president of the
United States," railed the Twins’ irate
71-year-oldowner.Thiswas on Tuesday.
He was all over U by Wednesday.
It rained pretty hard at the Twins’
training site In Orlando, Fla., and
although that chased some players,
who were working out on their own, like
Pete Rcdfem, Terry Felton, Jack
O'Connor and Jeff Little back inside, it
couldn't dampen Griffith's outlook. Or
his appetite. He had a good lunch at the
ballpark, then went back Into his office
to do some work.
When I asked him how he was feeling,
he told me:

M. McDonald (L M ) d. Duncan 1
Glatling (L M ) d. Con*tatlno4 2: Th
McDonald (L M ) d. Ballard 15.
Doublet:
0 . Katdln-S. Katin
(L ) d. Viner M McDonald 4-5;
McNeill T . McDonald (L M ) &lt;f*
DuncanConti at Ino S3.
O IR L S
1
E O O E W A T E R 4, L A K E H O W I U

Dog Racing

Wallace In the Ramada Inns Bulck, spun
in front of local racer Rick Wilson and
Petty. Wallace's car went into a series of
flips in almost the same place as Jacobi's
flips. The car was In the air for at least 4
complete spins. Wallace suffered a slight
concussion.

At laniard Orlando
Thuridey night ratidfi
B !n t raca — 5-14, 8. 31.41
SNightflcIhar
41.00 1.40 4 40
2 Spec* King Jim
5 40 110
I M K K I m E 'd n '
2 45
O ( M l I31.3S; P (a ll 21 1.44; P
1
( I alt) 2441; T ( M i l m . M
Singlet:
Houtton ( E ) d. C.
Second fact —H.Ci 31.21
Enrlquei 1 3 ; B Burn* ( E ) d. P.
5 Stormy Streak
&gt; 140)1 10 100
E n riq u e iI 4. Dott (L H ) d Nguyen
4 Peanut Method
* 00 4 40
I E ) 1 1 ; Haynet ( E ) d. Peters 1 3 ;
1 Go Kit*
5 00
White ( E ) d. Polino 4 2.
0 (5-41 I X to. P (1 4 ) 111.21; T
E V A N S 3 .0 V IE D 0 4
(S 4-7) 1,311.41; D O (S 3) 331.41
Singlet: W arner d. Salnerl 1 &gt; ;
Th ird rare - 1 1 4 . M : 31.11
Rutted d. Cottilio 1 3 ; Studtllll d.
4 Rlngo Kenny
22 40 12.70 4 40
Davenport 14.
SSandeeFlipper
4.20 3 40
2 Cherokee Angel
240
&lt;3 (1 4 ) )IS .M ; P ( I I I 131.41; T
(4.13) 1.404.40
N B A Standing*
Fourth r a c e - S 14. D : 31.M
By United P re u International
IS S C Ie m
IS Ifl 4.20 4 30
Eattern Conlerenee
I My Violet
1.00 4.10
Atlantic C ivilia n
k L C tN o S h a a
540
W L Pet. O B
Q ( 1 I I 31.01; P ( M l 141.44; T IT- Phila
44 1 .443
M i 43S.M
Botton
31 13 .ISO 5\»
Fifth r a c e - 1 1 1 C : 31.31
New Je rty
33 11 -43S 1 U i
3 M L Shane
IC.30 4 40 4 00
Wthngtn
24 24 .440 11't
7 Rebs Clyde
5.20 5 20 New York
23 21 .451 21 .
4 JR Scott
500
Central Olvltlan
&lt;3(2-31 11.44; P 43-2) 52.21; T ( 1
Milwauke
34 11 .4J4 3-4) 114.44
Atlanta
3§ 24 .410 I'*
t ilt h r a c e - - M I C : 43.51
Detroit
25 21 412 1*r
1 Falla!
3 40 3.40 3 00
Chicago
14 35 .340 34’/e
2 Our Bo o m Louie
1.40 4.00 Indiana
14 34 JOS I I
5 Shirley Loy
4.90 Cievelnd
13 40 .345 21vi
Q (2 1) 20 40; P (121 24.31; T (1
Western Conference
3-51 144.21
Mid watt Olvltiea
Seventh race — 5-14. A : 31.31
W L Pet. OR
3 bynamite Dennis 4 40 4.00 2.10 San Anton
32 22 .513 —
4 Nebraska Gam bler
5.10 2.40 Dalle*
35 24 .410 5&lt;4
I Ranger Kit
3 00 ken City
25 24 .410 S'a
0 ( 3 4) 23.00; P (1 4 ) 21.11. T 13- Denver
24 24 .441 4
I D 152.40
U tth
11 34 .354 13 '.
Eighth race — 5-14, D i &gt;..44
Houtton
10 43 .113 21
I Sen Too
1.20 4.00 2.40
Pacific Oivitian
5 Witty C H c
5.20 3 40 Lot Ang
31 11 .140 1 Chalk D v tl
4.20
Portland
31 31 .514 1
Q (3 -D 1 1 .4 C ;P ( 1 3 ) 3 1 .M ;T ( 1
Phoenix
31 23 SIS IV i
1 1 ) 111.43
Seattle
21 24 .534 12
Ninth race - » » . B 131.14
Golden St.
21 31 404 t l
« we&lt;l Decorated 410 5 10 5*0
San Diego
I I 34 .333 33
4 M .u Sweetie Pie
21.10 430
T h u rtd a y 't Retail*
I T in y Grain* Ot
410
New York 104. C ltve lin d 12
O I 4 -I ; 51 40; P ( M ) 143.00; T t i ­
Denver 111, New Jersey 104
l l ) 511 43
Lot Angelet 121, Delist 110
lOthrace — 1 1 4 ,0 : 31.44
Detroit 113, Houtton 110
4 Allen't Butch
11.20 4 40 5 00
Portland 131. Botton 114
2Lk'lc»ou* Lori
310 210
San Diego 112. Golden St. 102
3 hooch
3 00
0 (2 -3 ) 41.10; P (1 3 ) 12.41; T ( 1
23) 552.20
11th ra c e - » « , A : 31.41
5 Ardent Break
11 13 3 10 3 40
I October Gold
4 40 2 40
4 All For Pleasure
5.40
0 13-1) 25.44; P ( I D 40 44; T ( 1
141 451.41; Pick S li (13-4-1-15) 1
winner 23.143.10
12th race — 114. C : 31.44
I Candy Mink
4 40 3 40 2.10
? Big Tim e La Pu
1.40 5.00
1 Sweet Boy
4.40
0 (3 3 ) 21.00; P (1 3 ) 44.41; T I I
31) 333 20
I3thrace — 1-14, D : 44.43
1 Goldenrod Beth 110 1.20 2.10
4 So&gt;o Sandy
1.40 3 40
t D J Machek
210
0 ( 4-7) 24.44; P (1 3 ) 41.11; T (141) 233.44
A — 3.132; Handle 5334,441

NBA

really felt sorry for the Twins' owner
because he knew he couldn't afford the
money.
Griffith, a little surprised, responded
this way:
"Well, If you remember, he came
over here and raised hell about what a
horsefeathers SOB I was, but after we
got acquainted, he said I was a better
guy than he expected to find. You know,
he's the player rep with our club, and 1
have to say this about him: he has
never gone out of his way to hurt us and
he's always been cooperative. Per­
sonally, I think he Isn’t a bad fellow."
Jenier college men
At the same time Davis won his ar­
S R M IN O LR 1, P L O R ID A J C i
bitration case, Bobby Castillo, the
Singlet: Pernfors d. Anderson 1
Twins' biggest winner last year with his 4, 4 1; Svention d. Holer, 4 2, 1 0 ;
13 victories, lost his case. He was Svantetton d. Frydlng, 14, 3 4, 1
B ru m fitld d Northolm. 4-4,1 2 ;
looking for $390,000 and wound up with 3.
Trren d. M cN am ara. 74. 1 0 ;
$185,000.
M errill o Media. 4 4. I S.
Doublet:
Perntort Svantetton
"Can you beat that?" Griffith said.
d. Frydlng AtrNem are. 4 3. 1 3 ;
"He wins 13 games and gets turned M
e rritt S ve n tto n d. H e rd in down; the other fellow wins three and M edU , 4 4. 4 0; Tree Bumfleld d.
gets approved. Maybe you can un­ A n derton C rid e r, 4 4, 1 1 , 4 3.
Record*: Seminole 3 0 Florida JC
derstand that. I can't."
42.
Those who don’t know him sometimes
make Jokes about how Calvin Griffith
plays it so close to the vest and won't
throw away his money on free agents.
They can tell all the jokes they want,
BOVS
but under his direction, the Twins made
L A K E H O W E L L 4. E O O E W A T E R
a profit last year, albeit a modest one of I
Single*, kundit (L H ) d. Wade I
$141,000, and came up with some ex­
traordinarily good young ballplayers. 2; Chase ( L H ) d Neeley 1 3 ;
MacKenney ( L H ) d. Bairley 1 4 ;
Ron Davis needn't expect any dirty Fra iie r ( E ) a. Dahl I I , - Lowe
looks from the boss either when he 'L H ) d C lU l 14.
E V A N S !, O V IE D O )
reports to camp Thursday. Griffith isn’t
Single*:
L'Rhuereux ( 0 ) d.
that way.
Tun*tlll I I; Bmtamante ( E ) d.
"I'll be just as polite to him as I am to Knndell 4 5. Bicker ( E ) d. Holtrey
everybody," he said. "In this game like 1 4. impended due te rain.
L A K E M A R Y 5, L V M A N 3
any other, when you lose, you have to
Singlet: D. Katdin ( L ) d Viner
roll with the punches."
4 1 ; McNeill ( L M )d .S . Katdin 1 4 ;

Milton
Rlchman
UPI Sports Editor
"So fantastic, it's unbelievable."
I could tell he meant it, but that
doesn't mean he had forgotten all about
the arbitration decision on Davis.
"Can you Imagine such a thing?"
Griffith said. "He won three ball
games. Only three baligamcs. They say
we ballclubs don't always lose at ar­
bitration. But we don't win anything
even when we do win, because we
always have to come in with more
money than we feel the player deserves
Just to try’ and balance out their claims.
What's so fair about that?"
Griffith had said the day before he'd
probably be stuck with Davis now since
he couldn't imagine any club willing to
pay the new salary he had been
awarded. Did he still feel that way?
"Some clubs asked about him," he
said. "Then they tell me to look at their
farm system and see If there's any
players In It we’d want. I tell ’em we're
gonna wait until (Twins’ Manager)
Billy Gardner gets down here to sec
what’s what. He’s due In today."

J.C.

Tennis

Prep
Tennis

When the Yankees dealt Davis to the
Twins shortly after the season started
last year, he had some rough things to
say about Griffith. He called him
"cheap" among other things, but after
this latest arbitration ruling, he ac­
tually was sympathetic, saying he

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Playoffs May Expand

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MON.-WED.-SAT.

1:00 P .M
P L A Y T H E E X C IT IN G

PICK-SIX
W IN N E R S IX IN

AROWANO

W IN TH O U S A N D S
O F O O L LA R S

•
ALL NEW CASH.
S E L L M A C H IN E S
•
T R IF E C T A O N
E V E R Y RACE
•
|T H U R S D A Y A L L L A D I E S
A D M IT T E D F R E E I

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NEW YORK (UPI) - Pretty soon you may mix
snowballs with fastball and curve balls.
Baseball's league championship series, determining
the two teams that advance to the World Series, could
be expanded to a best-of-seven playoff next season, U
was announced Thursday by the baseball com­
missioner's office.
A best-of-flve series currently is used, but at a
meeting Wednesday the Executive Council recom­
mended It be expanded, thereby adding another
weekend of playoff activity and increasing the risk of
poor weather in many sites.

Scorecard

Slingshot To Wins
DAYTONA BEACH-Dale Earnhardt
and Nell Bonnett won their crash-marred
twin 125 mile events at Daytona Inter­
national Speedway Thursday.

Friday, Feb. IS, I f l l — 7A

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Pin non
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•69 •76

IW

OWNED &amp; OPERATED BY MIKE GATTO INC

GOO

5 5 5 W. 1st S T . S A N F O R D , FL

f Y E A RF322-2821
TIRE CEN TER

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1

�BA—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Feb. IB, 1783

'Gandhi,' 'Tootsie,'
'E.T.' Garner Most
Oscar
HOLLYWOOD OJPI&gt; - “Gandhi,” the epic film of India's
social reformer won 11 Academy Award nominations Thur
sday, including best film, followed by "Tootsie" with 10 and
“E.T. the Extra-Terrestrinl" with nine.
Ben Kingsley, who starred in the title role of "Gandhi," and
Dustin Hoffman, who won critical acclaim for his dual role as a
man and woman in "Tootsie," were nominated for best actor
by the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Nominated for best film were "Tootsie," "Gandhi," "E.T.
The Extra-Terrestrial," "The Verdict" and "Missing."
Also nominated for best actor were Jack I^mmon for “Mis­
sing," Paul Newman for "The Verdict" and Peter O’Toole for
"My Favorite Year."
Best actress nominees were Meryl Streep for “Sophie’s
Choice," Julie Andrews for "Victor-Victoria,” Jessica Lange
for "Frances," Sissy Spacck for "Missing" and Debra Winger
for “An Officer and Gentleman."
Nominated for best director were Wolfgang Petersen for
"Das Boot," Steven Spielberg for "E.T. the Extra-Terre­
strial," Richard Attenborough for "Gandhi," Sydney Pollack
for "Tootsie" and Sidney Lumet for “The Verdict."
Nominated for best performance by a supporting actor were
Charles Duming, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas;" Lou
Gossett Jr., ’ An Officer and a Gentleman;" John Lithgow,
"The World According to Garp;" James Mason, "The Ver­
dict," and Robert Preston, "Victor-Victoria."
• Miss Lange enjoyed a double triumph, also winning a best
supporting artrc.rs nomination 'or “Tootsie."
Other nominees for best supporting actress were Glenn
Close, "The World According toGarp;’’Teri Garr, "Tootsie;"
Kim Stanley, "Frances," and teslie Ann Warren, "VictorVictoria."

WINNER
S o u th east B ank c u s to m e r J u a n ita B ry a n , rig h t, of
183 S. F ifth St. in L ak e M a ry is one of five g ra n d
p rize w in n ers chosen s ta te w id e in S o u th e ast
B a n k 's Q uick &amp; E a sy "T o u c h of C la s s ” sw eeps ta k e s . In add itio n to a d e lu x e C a rib b e a n c ru is e
for tw o, sh e w as a b le to w ith d ra w $500 in c a sh in a
fiv e -m in u te s p re e re c e n tly a t S o u th e a s t’s F o re st
City Q uick &amp; E a s y 24-Hour b a n k in g lo cation.
R ic h a rd C a llih a n , m u n a g e r of th e F o r e s t C ity
c e n te r a t 351 S ta le H oad 434 in A lta m o n te S p rin g s,
p re s e n ts iie r w ith h e r p riz e . F lo rid a c o n su m e rs
e n te re d the s w e e p s ta k e s e a c h lim e th e y m a d e a
tra n s a c tio n w ith th e ir Q uick &amp; E a s y c a rd o r
m aile d e n trie s to th e b a n k b e tw e e n S ept 13-Nov.
19. M s. B ry a n who w as s e le c te d a t ra n d o m fro m
90,000 e n trie s in C e n tra l F lo rid a , p la n s to ta k e h e r
c ru is e in N o v e m b e r.

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F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged in business at 744 SAN D
P IP E R .
CASSELBERR Y,
F L O R ID A 37707, Seminole County,
Florida under the ffclillous name
of C A M E R A O N E , and Ihst I In
tend to register said name with the
C lerk ol the C irc u it C ourt,
Seminole County, Florida In ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes, To W it:
Section IAS Of Florida Statutes
1957.
TH O M A S D IX O N
Publish February 11, II. }S &amp;
March 4. 1913
D E E 90
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that 1 am
engaged in business at 774
Cherokee C lr . Sanford Fla
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name ol Q U A L IT Y
P A IN T IN G , and th jt I Intend to
register said name with Clerk ot
the C irc u it C ou rt, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with the provisions ol the FIc
tllious Name Statutes. ToW it
Section 845 09 Florida Statutes
19S7
Signature
Steve L. Ryal
Publish: Feb. 4. 11, 11. 75. 19S3
DEE3S
N O T IC E

U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
NAM E S TA TU TE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the under- ■nert pursuant to
ihe "Fictitious Name Statute."
Chapter 145 09, Florida Statutes,
will register with the Clerk ot Ihe
Circuit Court, In and for Seminole
County, Florida upon receipt ol
proof ol the publication ol nils
notice, the llctltlous name, to wit:
C O M M E R C IA L
W A L L C O V E R IN G S
AN D F L O O R C O V E R IN G S
under which I am engaoed in
business at 1175 East Semoran
Boulevard, Casselberry, Florida
That the person interested In
said business enterprise is as
follows W A L L P A P E R R E V IE W .
INC.
Dated at Casselberry, Seminole
County, Florida, this lllh day ol
January, 19(3.
W A L L P A P E R R E V IE W , INC
By: N O R M A N C C O O P E R .
Secretary
Publish Ja n u a ry 7(, 1913 A
February 4. It. U . 1983
D E D 177
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
that by virtue ot that certain Writ
pf Execution Issued out ol and
under the teal ol the C O U N T Y
Court of Seminole County. Florida,
upon a tlnal lodgement rendered
In Ihe aforesaid court on Ihe tlth
day ot November. A .D ., 19(7. In
that certain cate entitled. General
Finance Corporation of Florida
P la in tiN ,
vt
G a ry
Snoke.
Defendant, which aforesaid W rit
Execution was delivered to me
as Sheriff ol Seminote County,
Florida, and I have levied upon the
following described pro perty
owned by G a ry Snoke. said
property being located in Seminole
County, F lo rid a , m ore partlcularly described at follows:
On* 1974 Datum Pickup Tru ck ,
It. qrt*n in color.
ID No. H L O M O lia f i
Being stored at Rattltl A Sons In
Sanford. Florida,
and the undersigned as Sherlfl ot
Seminole County, Florida, will at
11:00 A M on the 78!h day of
February. A D. 1983, otter tor tale
and sell to the highest bidder, lor
cash, subject to any and all
existing liens, at lh « Front (West!
Door at the steps ol the Seminole
County Courlhouse In Sanford.
F lo rid a , the above described
personal property.
That said sale is being made to
satisfy tha terms of said Writ ol
Execution.
John E Polk,
Sherilf
Seminole County, Florida
Publish February 4, It, 18, 75, with
the sale on F e tru a ry 78, 19(3
D E E 74

L E G A L N O T IC E
T O E N O IN E E R S
TH E
BOARO O F
CO U N TY
C O M M ISSIO N ER S
T H E C O U N T Y O F S E M IN O L E
The Seminole County Board ol
County Commissioners. In com
piience w ith the C o n s u lte d *
C om petitive Negotiation A ct,
C hapter 3(7 055 is in v itin g
proposals from solid waste
engineering consultants to provide
necessary services as general
solid waste engineering con.
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T , IN
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
sultants tar Seminole County's
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
D epartm ent of E n v iro n m e n ta l
Notice is hereby given the) I am
F L O R ID A .
Services Projects may include
engaged In business at 007 South
C IV IL A C T IO N NO . IM 8S-CA-A9.
design and location study lor new
French Ave.. Sanford, Seminole
E
transfer stations, rale study,
County, Florida under the lie
F IR S T F E D E R A L SA V IN G S A N D
permitting of a landfill sit*.
tllaous name ot Century 71 June
LO AN
A S S O C IA T IO N
OF
General criteria tar selection
Porno Realty, and that I Intend to
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , a cor
will include:
register said name with the Clerk
poration organited and existing
1. Professional qualifications of
ol the Circuit Court. Seminole
unoer the Laws of The United
firm end specilic individuals to be
County, Florida in accordance
Stales ol America.
assigned to this project with
with the provisions of the FIc
Plaintiff.
specific abilities with respect to
litlous Name Statutes, T u W H :
vs
Section 145 09 Florida Statutes solid waste engineering. A n y
F R A N C IS E K A L A K A U S K IS and
anticipated su bcontractors lo r
1957.
wife. C A R O L B K A L A K A U S K IS .
professional service* should be
June C. P o n lg
C IT IC O R P P E R SO N TO P E R S O N
Publish February 11, I I , 25 A listed
F IN A N C IA L C E N T E R . INC. and
2. List of all projects of sim ilar
March 4, 19(3
M A R Y M A S TE R S .
nature performed in the last live
D E E 19
Defendants
(S) years in the State of Florida.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
I. Capacity to accomplish work
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC H E A R IN G
T O F R A N C IS C K A L A K A U S K IS
OF PROPOSED CHANCES AND
w ith in
lim a
fra m e
to be
and
w ife.
CAROL
B
A M F H D M E N T I IN C E R T A I N
established by Board of County
Commissioners.
K A L A K A U S K IS
D IS T R IC T S A N D B O U N D A R IE S
Post Office Box 9S3
O F T H E Z O N IN G O R D IN A N C E
4. Present work load
Phenix C ity. Alabama 34147
5 Location of firm within Ihe
OF TH E C IT Y OF SANFORD,
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
F L O R IO A . ’
general geographical area.
N O T I F I E D that an anion to
Notice is hereby given that a
a. Proof ot professional liability
foreclose a m o rtg a g e on the
Public Hearing will be held at the
insurance.
following property in Seminole
Commission Room In the City Hall
7. Expressions of Interest must
in the C ily of Sanford. Florida, at
County, F lo rida:
tallow format a t above out lined or
7:00 o'clock P M on February 21.
Lol 13. Block 19. T O W N S IT E O F
they will not be considered.
N O R T H C H U L U O T A . according to
tf(3, to consider changes and
Any firm desiring fc provide
amendment* to the Zoning Or
the plat thereof as recorded in Plat
professional servlets described
Book 2, Pages 54 through 54 ot the dinance of the City of Ser.ford.
about snail submit expression ot
P u blic R ecoroa of Sem inole
irtcrest including qualifications
Florida, as follows.
and experience by 2:00 p m .
The Code ot the City of Sanford.
County, Florida
Wednesday, M arch t . 1(81 fo the
has been filed against you and you
Florida, Appendix A . Zoning
ere required to serve * copy ot Ordinance (Ordinance No 10*7, at
attention of:
your w ritten defenses, it any. to it Amended)
Jo Ann Blackmon. C P M
Purchasing Director
on P H I L L I P H . L O G A N , of
A R T IC L E V.
H i* r ray Inlam
2nd F lo o r, C e n tra l Services
S H IN H O L S E R , L O G A N . M ON
C R IE F A N D B A R K S . Attorney*
Building
Sec. 5 M R 1 (M ultiple Fam ily
lor Plaintiff. Past Office Box 7279. R esidential O w e H in g ) D is tric t
Corner of 1st Street and Park
Sanford. Florida 32771. and file tha Paragraph D . Density Controls
Avenue
original with the Clerk of the above
Sub paragraph (4) Town houses
Sanford. Florida 32771
Court on or before M arch 23, 19(3; and cluster home* item h , sub
Mark tut*Me at envelope PS
otherwise a Judgm ent may be item cc. shall be emended to read
M L Solid Waste Engineer, Wed­
entered against you tor t M relief as follows:
nesday, M arch *, t(B3.
demanded in the Com p Hint
cc Each town house or duster
Persons *re advised that, a they
decide to appeal any decision
W IT N E S S m i hand end the home building shall contain not
made at this meeting hearing,
* Official seal ot this Court, on this last than three f 3), nor more than
they w ill need a record of the
e*ghtl() units
15th day ot Febru ary. 1»*3
proceedings, and. ter such purA ll parties la interest and
(Seal)
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H . JR . cituens shall have an opportunity
post, they m ay need to ensure that
a v e rb a tim
re c o rd o l the
to be heard at said hear ng
v.
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
proceedings Is made. M ic h record
By order of the City Commission
COURT
includes m e testim ony and
ol the City ot Sanford. Florida.
B y: P a ln tia RobmsOft
H N Ta m m . j r .
evidence upon which appeal is to
Deputy Clerk
Publish Fe b II. 25. M ercn 4. 1).
b* based
City Clerk
Publish: Fab. IB 1(13
19(3
| Publish Fab A I*. 19(3
D E E 121
D E E 121
I D E E 25

Legal Notice

!

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

18— Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem inole

831-9993

322-2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:30 A .M . — 5:30 P.M.
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y 9 - Noon

RATES

(lim e
54c a line
3 consecutive times 54c a line
7 consecutive times (Beeline
10consecutive times (Ic e line
53.00 Minimum
3 Lines Minimum

D E A D L IN E S
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday-. Noon Friday
Monday- 5:30P.M. Friday

IM P R O V E Y O U R F U N L I F E
Companions tor all occasions
__________ call 331 9377___________

SW EETO R A N G ES
3 VarietiesS4 a Bushel
327 3047

5— Lost &amp; Found
6A Health &amp; Beauty
LO ST white lemale M alm ute
wearing a brown collar. An
swers to F ro s ty . Contact
Humane Society. Reward

__________ 377 X80),
Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell It alt
with a Classilled Ad In Th e
Herald. Call 377 7411 or (31
9993 and a friendly ad v k c r
will help you.

6— Child Care

TR Y
D A V IS
Q u ick
relief
liniment for your aches anil
pains. None better. (30 5494.

12— Special Notices
S P A G H E T T I Supper Com pete
Congregational Church, 7401
Park, Sanford, Sat., Feb 19, 5
to 7 p.m . Adults S3 00; Children
SI.50, Under 4 Free.

B A B Y S IT T IN G m yhom e.
H r v A days Ilex Rates neg.
Gail 371 1177
t A M A Mature lady who gives
excellent child care In m y
home. 373 1359.
W IL L babysit in m y home days,
eves, and weekends.
371 5115
Modernliing your Home t 5ell no
longer needed but useful items
with a Classilled Ad

legal Notice
( Publication ol Charter)
Comptroller
of tho Currency
Treasury Department
of the United Slates
Washington, D .C .
W HEREAS
s a tis fa c to ry
evidence has been presented to the
Comptroller of Ihe Currency that
L I B E R T Y N A T IO N A L B A N K "
located in L O N G W O O D Slate ot
F L O R ID A has complied with all
provisions of the statutes ot the
United States required to be
com plied w ith before being
a u th o rlie d to com m ence Ihe
business ol banking as a National
Banking Association.
NOW . T H E R E F O R E , I hereby
c e rtily that the above nam ed
association is authorised to
commence the business ot banking
n a National Banking Association.
IN T E S T IM O N Y W H E R E O F ,
witness m y signature and seal ot
office this tSth day ol December,
1947
C .T. C O N O V ER
Comptroller
of Ihe Currency
Charter Number 17553
Publish February 4. It, 18. 35 A
March 4. 11, 18. 35 A April 1. 1983
D E E 34
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T OF
T H E 1ITH J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y ,F L O R ID A
GENERAL
J U R IS D IC T IO N
D IVISIO N
CASE NO. 1719)5 CA Of E
A M E R IC A N
S A V IN G S
AND
LO AN
A S S O C IA T IO N
OF
F L O R ID A , a Florida corporation.
Plalnlitt,
vs
M A R C IA E
HARPER
and
G L O R IA J. R O B IN S O N , two
single women, e! at..
Defendants
N O T IC E OF S U IT
TO : The Defendants, M A R C IA
E HARPER
and G L O R IA J .
R OBINSON, whose residence is
unknown, and lo the unknown
defendants who may be spouses,
heirs,
devisees,
grantees,
assignees, lienors, cre d ito rs,
trustees, and all parties claiming
interest by, through, under or
against the Defendants, who are
not known to be dead or alive, and
all parties having or claiming to
have any right, title, or interest in
the property described herein
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D Ih a ta suit
to foreclose a mortgage on the
following described property in
Seminole County, Florida:
The North 35 feet of Lot t ( and
tha South 75 feet ot L o ti 9, B lock G,
B U E N A V IS T A E S T A T E S ; ac
cording to the Plat thereof as
recorded in Plat Book 1, Page t, ol
the Public Records of Seminole
County. Florida.
has been filed eg Inst you and you
are required lo serve a copy ol
your written delenses, if any, to it
on L A U R IE L . R O S E N . E S Q ,
Broad and Cassal, 1101 Kana
Concourse, Bay Harbor islands,
Florida, 11154. on or before M arch
9. 19(3, and file the original with
the Clerk of this Court either
before service on Plaintiffs at
tor nay or immediately I hereafter;
otherwise, a default w ill be an
fared against you tar the relief
demanded in Ihe Complaint Iliad
herein
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal of
this Court at Sanford. Seminole
County, Florida, this 1st day of
February, 1M3.
(Seal)
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H , JR
As Clark of the Circuit Court
B y: Eva Crabtree
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: Feb 4, I I , IB, **, I9S3
DEE3B

F IC T I T I O U S N A M B
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at K&gt;4 White
Oak D rive. Altamonte Springs
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name ol C A R O L Y N 'S
C U P B O A R D , and that I Inland lo
register said nam e with the Clerk
ol me Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida In accordance
with ihe provisions of the F ic ­
titious Name Statutes. T o w n -.
Section (as 09 Florida Statutes
T»S7
Signature
Carolyn L Straw
Publish: Feb. 4. I I , K . 25. 1*13
D E E 3*

Typing, tiling, answering phone.
Work on C R T terminal, with
figures S a la ry negotiable.
Start Feb. 7( it possible. Send
resume with references to 7701
S. French Ave. Suite No. 5.
Sanford, F la ., 37771.
SEC R ETA R Y
Receptionist.
Experienced for busy Sanford
office Heavy typing, using
W ang
w ord
processing
equipment, filing, and other
general office duties. Equal
Opportunity Em ployer. Phone
372 6(41 or lurnlsh resume lo
P.O. Draw er 1976 Sanford.
Fla, 17771.
P A R T T I M E Pressman, ex
perienced on AM 1250W, call
Ralph Jenson 322 0074 for app.

9— Good Things to Eat

4— Personals

B U SIN ES S Is areall We need 4
experienced
re a l
estate
associates lo help us market
our m any saleable listings.
Top com m issions.
W ith
Number I Century 11, you're
ahead all Ihe way. Lei's talk I
Call June P o n lg at Century 31
June Porilg Realty
372 (67S
Realtor
B A B Y S IT T E R wan'ed Mon Frt.
In m y home. Ret. 321 4449 or
•31 (7(7. Ask lor Frank.
JO IN Num ber 1 beauty com­
pany. Sell Avon In opon
territories. 311-0419) 311 1078)
711-5910.______________________
P A R T T I M E Work Irom home
Phone Program . E a rn 1751100
per week. Flexible hrs. FuUer
Brush.
Call (94 2704 or (31 1097

21— Situations Wanted
18— Help Wanted
BR AKE AND FR O N T EN D
Experienced mechanic with ret.
end tools. High income, paid
vacation benefits, phone Carl
at M r. Muffler 323 3(11.

LONGW OO D
H EA LTH
CARE C EN TER
Accepting applications for all
nursing positions. All Shifts.
R N , L P N , Aides. Full and
perl lim e Excellent benefits.
1520 Grant St., Longwood.
Female Models
N E W Lingerie Shop opening.
Call 3)1 9377 For Appts
LA B O R JO B S Full time work,
with or without experience.
Immediate. 679 4094.

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

AAA EM P LO YM EN T
H U N D R E D S O F JO B S
W E CARE
LO W F E E - T E R M S
NQ C H A R G E T O E M P L O Y E R S
1917 F R E N C H A V E .
1115174
BEVER LY
PAT
★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

G E N E R A L
O F F I C E
T R A IN E E S
No experience
needed Full time with good
starting pay 629 4094.
Casa Mia P in e h a
Waitress wanted Apply in
person 373 3006
G O V E R N M E N T JOBS
Immediate openings Overseas
and domestic. S70.000 lo 150.00)
- a year Call 1 312 920 9475
ext I744A
C H R IS T IA N Children Home has
immediate need ol a mature
individual tor a relief house
parent. Live in position Hours
tl midnight to ( a m Wed L
Thurs 12 noon to 11 midnight
Sat, k, Sun. Off Mon , Tuos A
Friday. C A L L 349 5099.

WORK FINDERS INC.
? ? ? ? ? .................................. $ » $
Just because w* haven't ad
vertised a iob you're looking
for. doesn't mean we don't
have It C O M E IN A N D ASK
USIM
743$ French Av*.
(in S e b ik s B M g .)

321-5763
P R O F E S S IO N A L Basket Maker
lor Jai Alai Cestas. 1 yrs exp.
required. Call O S Jai Alai for
interview.
E L D E R L Y lady lo live In with
elderly gentleman as a house
keeper prefer someone who
can drive 122.1410.
E A R N Extra money tar
your grocery receipts.
Call i n 1702 or 3210(61
F U R N I T U R E d e liv e ry man
w a n te d .
E x p e r ie n c e
preferred. Chauffeur license
required 322(122.
Caek
For line dining experience only.
Swing shift. Apply In person 25 p m Deltona Inn.
D R IV E R S D E L I V E R Y Local or
over the road. Good pay, start
right away. 479 6094.
W A R E H O U S E S TO C K
W O RK
Immediate openings, tall time.
nnM pay. 679 4094
If

SANFORD
Lovely I Bdrm . Inlowrt
1 886 6(71___________

CLERK TE L L E R

Orlando - W inter Park

you ara having difficulty
finding a place lo live, car fo
d riv t. a iob, or some service
you have need of, read all our
want ads every day.

ATTENTION
20 POSITIONS
NEW LOCATION
New Appliance Co. now ex
pending m Central F I.. San
lord, DeLend, Alt. Springs,
need) people In an depti Earn
w hile le a rn in g . R a p id ad
vane aments C A L L 1213070.
Alt 111 t i l l , DeLand 73( 4453
R E C E P f lO N A P P O IN T M E N T
S E TTE R S
W ill train, tall
time Star* right away.
639 4004

e c la liiin g in Hom e
Health Care. Reas, rates 122*
5741 Lk. M ary &amp; Sanford area
References before 6 p m 3720171. 377 7744. 66( 50(1.
Housekeeping-Experienced
Reliable own transportaiion.
37) 0(37

Business Opportunities
Plumbing. Hardw are. D IY , Bus
W wo Real E sta te
Wm.
Mallciowski Realtor. 322 79(3.

41— Houses

31— Apartments Furnished

7 BDRV.

kids, porch, air,
carpet 110 wk Fee 339 7700.
Sav On Rentals, Inc. Realtor
D A N IE L A N D W O H L W E N D E R

LG . 2 Bdr., turn., Sanlord, Max.
1150. Agree to live with single
male tenant. 172 7764.

4 Room Fully Furn.
Child or pet O K , 1750 mo., 1100
Dep.. 371 0(21.

G E N E V A 7 Story 4 1 near Lake
Harney. New paint, siding,
and root, fam ily room, large
garage, fenced yard, reduced
to 150.000.
S A N D Y W ISD O M

869*4600 or 349*5698

31A— Duplexes
S A N F O R D . 7 bdrm , kids, tenc
ed, 1750. Fee 139 7700
Sav On Rentals. Inc. Realtor

KISH R E A L E S T A T E
371 0041
R EA LTO R
Alter Hrs 373 7468 A 177 4957

32— Houses Unfurnished
IN D E L T O N A
L A R G E Laketronl home, 3 BR.
2 'j bath, office, formal DR.
L R , Fam . R m . huge garage

HAL C O LB E R T R E A L T Y
R EA LTO R
707 E. 25th St
727 7171

B A TEM A N R E A L TY

S M A L L E R family home, 3 br 2
bath. LR , D R , dble garage

Lie. Real Estate Broke7640 Sanford Ave.

2 Townhomes. 2 BR, V , bath,
L R , dining area, screened
porch
D A Y S $74 1434
E V E S 719 4251_________
S P O TLE S S 3 t. Good lease,
terms, no pets NearHosp
__________ (3 0 5673_____________
D ELTO N A
3 Bdrm ., porch.
sep6rate laundry room, large
comer lot, wall air, 17*5, 1st.
last, 1100 sacurlly No pets.

574-1040 _______
W A S H IN G T O N O AK S spacious 4
bdrm, 2 bath, In good neigh
borhood Central Heat, all
appl 1 1)75 mo. (30 4401 or (94
1967. Ask for M r. Jess.

D O N 'T H E S I T A T E Call today.
Make offer on Ihese
C O U N .H Y 3 7 with acreage
asking 159,900
C IT Y nice neighborhood, 3-1* a
b l k Fam ily room. Cent H A ,
enclosed garage, fenced back.
Fruit trees, asking 144,900
P A O LA 5 Acres M gh and dry.
L E A S E Option 4 7 large family
room, carpeted. C H A , fenced
back, nice neighborhood.
154.90C
H A N D Y M A N 'S N ig h tm a re
Country, 3 stories, 6 BR, 8
fireplaces, plus 3 acres Best
Otter

321-0759

EVE

322-7643

A V A IL . M a r. t, 2 8d , (built in
chests). ) bth., screen porch,
st. rm ., carport, w w carpet, a
c, comp, fenced yard. New
frost.fre e elec, re frlg . A
natural gas heater A range
Real cream pull. 17(5 mo. 1150
dep. No preschool kids. No
pets. Lease A local ref. req
372(635

N IC E 3 bdrm , I bath, horns 1375
mo
J U N E P O R 2 IG H E A L T Y
R EALTO R
C E N T U R Y 71
377 (47(

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader

28— Apts. &amp; Houses
T o Share

S U N L A N D Available Feb 16. 3
b d rm ca rp o rt corner lot,
convenient to everything. 1400
mo 377 4731.

W E L l i T A N D S E LL
M O R EH O M ESTH AN
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y )

C O U N T R Y Home to share, non
smokers, references. Split util
&amp; rent 305 46( 4014.

33—Houses Furnished

J U S T L I S T E D 3 Bdrm . 2 Bath,
home In exclusive lanora on a
large lol. Vaulted ceiling, in
living room, dining room and
master bedroom. Fireplace,
paddle Ians, equipped kitchen,
patio and morel 879,900.

3 Bdrm . 2 Bath apt. to share V*
rent, ' i utilities Call 32 1 5979
or 323 1575

D E L T O N A , l G , 1 bdrm . LR .
dining area, kitchen, screen
p orch ,
landscaped
ya rd,
available now. 1760. 1st. last.
1100 Sec. D e p . No Pets.

29— Rooms
P U P N IS H E D
Rm.
p riv a te
entrance, kitchen facilities ISO
wkly. La dy preferred. 322
7(79, .__________________________
S A N F O R D , Reas
weekly 4
monthly rates Util &gt;nc eft 500
Oak Adults I (41 7113
S A N F O R D furnished rooms by
Ihe week Reasonable rates
M aid se rv ice , ca te rin g to
working people Unlurnished
apartments t and 7 bedrooms.
37)4507, 500 Palmetto Ave

574-10(0
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T lk
BOAROS
ARE
GREAT
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
ARE
EVEN B E TTE R

W -M obile Homes
C A S S E L B E R R Y 7 bdrm . turn,
kids, pets, yard. prlv. lot 177S.
Fee 339 7700
la v -O n Rentals. Inc., Raattor

O F F I C E S P AC E and or
retail best location
2S44 French Ave 322 4403

37-B— Renta I Offices

30-Apartments Unfurnished

N IC E L Y furnished 1 Bdrm apt
carpeted, panelled, all utilities
furnished, 2 Blocks Iro m
downtown. Single only, no pets
or children 1775 Mo . 307 Oak
Ave aft 5.
AA H I 1 Bdrm apt. carpeted,
draped, tally equipped kit
chen. Water, garbage,- sewer
lees included 1745 mo on
discount lease. (31 401).

P R IM E
O F F IC E
SPACE.
P ro vid e n ce B lv d .. D eltona.
JH 4 .S q F t. Can Be Divided,
w ith Parking. D ays 3 « 1 ? 4
14)4 Evenings A Weekends
*04 7(9 (251
1400 Sq ft. office. I l l Maple
A v e . Sanford Avail. Immed
Broker O w ner. 377 7709

37C F o r Lease
P R O F E S S IO N A L Office spaca
lor Laata. on 1792. Ideal
location to downtown area. 705
S French Ave. or call 322 3170.

M a nn e r'sviila g e o n L a ke Ada. I
bdrm Irom 1265. 2 bdrm from
1)00 Located 17 n just south
of Airport Blvd In Sanlord All
Adults. 373 (670

E N J O Y country living? 2 Bdrm,
Duplex Apts., Olymp&gt;c st.
pool Shenandoah Villa ge
Open 9 to 6 12) 7970
O E N E V A OARDKN1
1 B drm Apts. 1765 Mo
Mon. thru F rl. 9 o.m to 5 p m
1505 W . lllh SI.
373 7090
LUX UR Y
A P A R TM EN TS
F a m ily A Adults section
Poolside. 7 Bdrms. Mesttr
Cove Apts 311 7900 Open on
weekends
O E O R O IA AR M S A P T I .
Applications now being takon tar
beautiful, new 1 and 7 bdrm
apts Ceniratheaf and air, wall
to w a ll ca rp a lln g, color
coordinated appl., stove and
Irosl troo rotrlg. and custom
drapos Applications available
at s ite 2600 Georgia A v a ,
near Seminole High School
Rental Assistance Available.
Eouel Hom ing Opportunity.

37 D-Industrie I
for Rent

Furm sheda p artm m istaf Sen or
C ititm s 111 Palmetto A v e . J
C o »* n No phone colls

F IV E points area in d u stria l
to n in g b e h in d
P ra s tlg e
L u m b e r, New w arehouse
space available irom 1100 sq.
ft. lo 15.000 sq ft Days 12)
5642, evening* (11 7259.

40— Condominiums
FOR R E N T
2 bdrm ., 2 beta
condo G rou nd floor com
pletely redecorated
San
delwood, Airport Blvd
No
children No pets Lloyd An
derson, Orlando off. 105 *94
(7)1 ret. (94 (044
3 B D R M , 2 story condo, 1400 mo.,
(*i A last includes main
tenance, pool and tennis
w u rtt 372(111,
If

you are having difficulty
finding a place, lo live, car U
drive, a job. or tome servlet
you have need ol, rood i l l our
want ads every day.

41— h o u s e s '

JU N E PO RZIG R E A L T Y
n e w L IS T IN G !
‘ M ttous. j bdrm . , bath home
t o m * country, * * vios# to

C A L L A N Y T IM E
7545
Pets

322-2420

Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell it all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 177 H I 1 or 131
0*93 and a friendly ad visor
will help you.

HALL

R E A L TY , IN C I

R EALTO R
323-57741
I 1) Y E A R S E X P E R IE N C E

C O U N T R Y C L U B S P E C IA L!
E n e rg y efficient 7 B dim ,
concrttt btaJb home. Large
yard with tree*, i n * &lt;»•""
and 1)13 a me- Principal and
Inforest, 11MB yeaxs FH A er
V A . O n ly 131.100
T H A T 'S IN C R E D IB L E !
F H A -V A S P E C IA L I Why rent
when you can own now! 11.150
down payment! 3 bdrm home
on fenced lot, large oak and
citrus trees Good location!
Only 1167 mo Princ. and in
tereit 12 I 30 years Price
O N L Y 136.500
W O U L D Y O U B E L IE V E ! Al­
most nexx I story " B E A U T Y '.
« bdrm . 2 bath. C H A . hifebe*
equipped plus m lcrawave,
privacy fenced. LnbelieveabfT
huge bedroom s and ware
shop! Excellent farms Only
154.900.

C U S TO M
B U IL T
CEDAt
HOME
E n e rg y
efflclonl
cut tarn tbraugheut. Terrific
ow ne r fin a n cin g , potential
guest Berne in roar. I?
trees. Lends et otefoge- Take
44A East te left aa Rt «&lt;L &gt;
houses an rtabt peat Osteen
Pott O tlk e . Only 109.10#

tar tha kids. 7 plus acres, plus

* — *5
N E W l A 2 Bedrooms Adiocont
to Lake Monroe. Hoehh Club.
Racquetball A M oral Sanford
Landing S.R. 44. 2214220

M A T F A IR V IL L A S ! 3 A 3 Barm.
1 Beth Condo Villas, next lo
M aylair Country Club Selectyour lot. tloor plan A interior
decort Quality constructed by
Shoemaker for 147,900 A upl

H ARO LD

B A M B O O CO V E 1
300 E Airport Blvd.
I A 2 Bdrm s
F ro m U X m o
Phone 1216420

LO N G W O O D 2 bdrm . kids. pets,
carpel 1275. Fee 339 7)00
Sav-Oa Rentals. Inc. Realtor

C O U N T R Y L IV IN O L a rg e 24x44
double wide mobile home, on
12 acres. Large fishing pond,
tool S p ill bedroom plan,
lam ity dining room. Cent. HA
and more, fenced and horses
welcome! 177.100

O F F IC E SPACE
FOR LE A S E
130 7721

t, 7 A N D 1 B D R M From 17)0
Ridgewood Arm s Apt 7510
Ridgewood Ave 3116470
Park Ave , 1 bdrm, garage, pets,
kids 1750. Fee 339 7700.
la v O n Rentals. Inc. Realtor

■ E A U T I P U L * M r * . I Bam
home In Ramblewaad en a
private treed laf and cut da
s a d Nawty decorated, witn
sunken living room. U rge
family roem, split bdrm. plan,
dining room, and many decor
touches! Furniture optional.
171.900.

37— Business Property

C O M F O R T A B L E t bdrm . no
pets, 170 wk. plus util. 1200 sec
dep Call 331 6947.

7 BDR M on quiet St. 1270 Mo
plus 1770 security Dep No
pets 377 9407 or 349 1664.

F A M IL Y H O M E 3 Bdrm, I Bath
home In Pinecrest with your
own pool and patiol Equipped
kitchen, fenced y frd . many
extras tool Convenient area,
1)9.900.

R EALTO R
* 7 1 French A y «.

322-I678

MLS

W E H E E O LISTINGS!
CALL US NOW!! H

323*5774
U t t H W Y .1 7 91

�41— Houses

41-Houses

LA KE M AR Y
5 OR, 1 Bath
Home on I I acres, Lakefront.
Zoned Agriculture with hup •
Barn, Shop ft Kennels. * /
O w n e r fin a n cin g . P riv a te
Estate with lots ot Trees In the
pathway ot progress. Partially
platted lor future develop
ment. Owner 3M a lt! nit. a.

R O B B I E ’S
REALTY
R E A L T O R . M LS
I H I S. French
Suite a
Sanford, Fla.

24 HOUR

m

m

322-9283

------------- -------------N
Equal
P ro fe s s io n a l

S e r v ic e
;{A it O «
SEM INOLE CO UN TY
BOARD OF
REALTORS

U N D E R 17.000 DOW N
1 bdrm . doll house Affordable
m onthly
pa ym e n ts.
Call
Owner Broker 111 tail
W E L L maintained. 2 bdrm .,
carpet, drapes, appliances,
new
root,
new
paint
throughout, priced right to sell
Immediately. 3714744

1st
ttv v .rr.v};

W

Be

Cad

Keyed

FO R A L L Y O U R
R EAL E S TA TE NEEDS

323-3200
O P E N H O U S E Sat. A Sun ID S
tat P IN E N E E D L E C O U R T
TH E FO R ES T. LA K E M AR Y.
Super I Bdrm ., I Bath custom
M o d u la r. E n e rg y efficient.
Florida rooms with Paddle
fans. Largo utility with work­
bench. M A N Y E X T R A S N O T
FOUND
IN
S TA N D A R D
M O D E L S . Owner says salll
Asking SS*.»M. Call for details.
S a n d ra
S w ift R e a lto r
Associate Eves, eat-eat)
Sat W. Lake M a ry Blvd.
Suite B
Lake M ary, Fla. » 7 * i

222 2210
G E T T H O S E L U X U R Y IT E M S
FO R A F R A C T IO N OF T H E IR
CO ST F R O M T O D A Y 'S W A N T
ADSI
Y O U R ID E A L
C O M R IN A T IO N
Large I Br homo with extra
rental for Income, garagew orkshop,
g orden
spot,
bearing citrus, largo ccm er
lot, no city tax. D rive by ItOt S.
Park A ve., then call for appt.
Priced ISA,900 Owner will hold
mortgage. You'll love it

CallBart
R EAL E S TA TE
R E A L T O R , M l ta il

Kids outgrow the swing set or
small b lcyd e T Sell these Idle
items with a want ad. T o place
your ad, call your friendly
Classified gal at The Herald,
M2 2*11, or 111 m i .

1 B D R M ., 2 Bath, Fireplace,
Dbl. garage, tOOxISO Ft. lot.
Close In. sat,too, 2SS W lldmere
Ave., Long wood
P R ETTY
as M odal hom o,
almost now 1-2 split plan.
C eda r and stsno ox ta rle r,
upgrades throu gh ou t. Lake
M a ry
schoels, m otivated
seller. saj.OM.
The Wall St. Company
Realtors________________ 271 5005
S P R IN G
H O U S E C L E A N IN G ? ,
S E L L T H O S E NO L O N G E R
N E E D E D IT E M S W IT H A
C L A S S IF IE D A D

W H Y SA V E IT . . . S E L L IT
Q U IC K L Y with a Fast Acting,
Low Cost Classilled Ad

M L tot Unbelievable It ll
u.60 lanced yard carport
sprinkler system lamily
section reduced to SI I.MO
M L tSO Groat buy 24x00
with all the extras Only
S11.000
M L *40 Fantastic oppor
ly J4 .4 t} bedroom 2 bath
spilt plan like now family
section
M L at) Once in a 'lie time
yes. when you sir* this
beauty 74x40 -1 bedroom 2
bath - with many extras in
family section only 121. *00

T O T v z x z z r z r
chempon
14x44 screen
porch spill bedroom

Saltsman needed.

S T E M P E R A G E N C Y INC.
133-4tt I

42— Mobile Homes
ttIO M O B IL E Home 14'x40' set
up In adult section o* mobile
park Day 1)1 2471
*
E v e n in g s !!) S JH
. .
PREOW NEOHOM ES
14x13 Adult Park
117.900
14x70 Fam ily Park
t i l . 100
14x70 Fam ily Park
s 16,900
14x70 Fam ily Park
S23,100
Gregory Mobile Homes

305/282*0280

S A N D 4 A .M .!

TH E REAL
1 N P IS A T c z e
—
L IK E
P R E M IS IN '

E V E R KNEW
PR0M 10ED
M E R IT
A P P O IN T ­

E C iD N tf M V

M EN TS ANP

B U T 0VERS P E N D IN •

NEWS PAPERS

T H E IR

'

2 ( BUCKETS?

.—
.. ■-a-■.—
.

PUT

m s

B R O T H E R -IN LAW ON TH E
P U B L IO
PAY­

H

ROLL

x ;

— —

80— Autos for Sale

A B O V E average prices pa.d for
d ta n cars, trucks and travel
trailers. Jack M arlin M l 2900

'71 G R A N A D A .* cyl .
17* down with credit
M artin Motors 312 71)4

if f ! v w Beetle Runs well,
rebuilt engine and Ira n
smisslon. SI 50 A ll. 4 171 0415.

Don’t Despair O r Pull Your Hair
— Use A Want Ad. M7 7411 or
I l f *9*1.

1*77 L T D F O R D new paint
job. good cond. air.
D U O 331 4725

DeBary Auto 4 Marine Sales
across the rive r top ot hill 174
Hwy 17 91 DeBary 4*1 isxa

61 M E R C U R V , 2 dr. hardtop,
elec, rear window. V 1, runs
lint. 1 owner. 1450 172 1706.

77 C H R Y S L E R Station Wagon.
PS. PB tilt wheel, A C , AM FM
■ track 1750. 221 1314.

'77 D O D G E Ram Charger
P S P B, excellent condition
S4.000 171 4421

1*10 Chevy pickup C 10 A m F m ,
a ir, auto, p i exc. cond.
wholesale price call 122 5544.

19*1 S K Y L IN E Mobile Home
24x13 It. screen enclosure
porch, utility shed. Cent. H A . 1
Bdrm . 7 Bath. Lot site is
10x100 Can be seen at 12a
Leisure Dr. North DeBary,
Florida in the Meadowlea on
the River Mobile Home Com
munity. Please contact Tom
Lyon at 122 1747 tor additional
information
'71 12x40 Arlington 2 Bdrm .,
Very Good Condition. 11.100.
127101* Alter 4 p m.

43— Lois-Acreage
ST. JO H N S River Irontage. 3W
acre parcels, also interior par.
cels with rlva r aetata 111,*00.
Public wafer, &gt;0 min. to Altamonte M a ll 13*? 70 y r.
financing , no q u a lify in g .
Broker 611 4121.______________
10 A C R E S Nica high pastura In
teed grasses, partially fenced
Privala road anfranct. *«0 Ft.
off M a yto w n R d ., Ostaan
Good watar, at about 80 and
120 It. Homesite or Mobile
home
a pproved.
T e rm s
available. IS yrs. at 1 0 .'In
ter cat. S4.000 down. 1257 *0 per
mo Price S10.000 171*040
S — 10x127. Some Iruit trees.
S3700 each. S miles S ot
Sanlord. 404 914 *717 or P .0
Box 1512. M aryville, Term.
1710)__________________________

47 Real Estate Wanted
WE B U Y equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
acreage
LUCKY
IN
V E S T M E N T S P O Box 3500.
Sanlord Fla 17771 177 4741
N E E D to sell yo u r house
q u ic k ly l
We
can
oflar
guaranteed sale w ith in 10
days Call l i t 1*11.

47*A — Mortgages Bought
&amp;Sold
WE P A Y cash tor 1st l 2nd
mortgages Ray Legq L it
Mortgage Broker tea ?svo

so— Miscellaneous for Sale

If you don’t tall people, how are
they going to know? Tell them
with a classified ad. by calling
122 2*11 or H I m i .
B U IL D your own •cypress clock
- wood clock works - finishes.
Frea Info. 121-4212.
W H E E L C H A IR water bed, etc.
132 IBS!
15' F IB E R G L A S S boat and lilt
trailer good cond. 1171. l wheel
bicycle 175. 15 m m camera SI0.
W -4 4 K .

LEVI Jeane and Jackals.
A R M Y N A V Y S U R P LU S
110 Sanford Ava.
M l 5711
SE A R S Rofofllltr Ilka new I
horsepow er w ith plows A
cultivators. 122 5211.__________

1*0 C A R E F R E E 11 ft. salt
contained, twin beds, air, pat io
door, roll out awning, large
refs, twin holding tanks and
mora. Tyson Lana Mobil*
Park. Rts. No. 1713. South
DeLand

----- /
j / y

Bad Credit?
NoCredlt?
W E F IN A N C E
No Credit Check Easy Term s
N A T IO N A L A U T O SALES
. 1)20 Sanford Ave
M t 4075

D O D G E Omni 1*10.11.000 Miles
4 D r. Hatch Back. F M tape
stereo A C P S Ex cond (Must
sell) Call 14* 5*44

m

D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hw y *7. I mile west of S p e e d ,,
wey. Daytona Beach w ill hot*
a public A U T O A U C T IO N
every Monday 4 Wednesday at
7 X p m It's the only on* In
Florida You set the reserved 1
price. Call *04 755 1111 for
further details.

l*4SM utttns excellent
D M t e r Best otter. jL.
M l 1127

77 D A T S U N F10. 5 speed, air, 4
cylin d e r sport coup*. 1*9
down Cash or trade. M*
*100 114 4405._________________
74 D O D G E pickup. I l l Auto,
good condition, 19* dn Cash or
trade. 11* ♦100 U 4 4405

---------- I*yT\

O
(C v H A R lT V
B E c S iN S a
W '
«t|M a aw t t f S ^ f e l't l-a

t

AND LE T AN E X P E R T DO TH E JO B

Wlleo Sales Hw y. 44 W.

D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 o r 8 3 1 - 9 ° 9 3

67Ai -F e e d

L A R R Y 'S Furniture Mart.
711 Sanlord Ave .172 4117
Sell and Service v e ry best
portable kerosene heaters
4 6 r A clue contrmp *7" good
conn SI00
__________t a II 37/ 0441__________
M O V IN G
King b id headboard, liners. &amp;
spread Cullee table, hide a
b»d. 2 chairs, dining barrel set
Sewing machine and cabinet
M l 0714

52— Appliances
Ken more parts, service, used
washers 171 06*7
M O O N E Y A P P L IA N C E S
Make room In your attic, garage
Sell idle item s w ith a
Classified Ad. Call a friendly
ad taker at 222 7411 or l i t 9991.

:—

T o L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s -

F R E E Siberian Huskey male. 2
yrs. old. Good with children
____________323 *40*____________

W ILSO N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S T ST
W7 1437

53— TV-Radio-Stereo

) 11*|70

Baled shevlngt S4.lt. Straw
D M. Quality name cat and
de« loods. including A .N .F .
Aviary Supplies.

A K .C. Reg Alrdale Pups
• wks. shots 4 wormed
Call 1301) 171 ill*

51-A— Furniture

1

W E POSSESS
C O LO R TVS
We te ll repossessed color
televisions, all name brands,
consoles,
and
portables.
E X A M P L E : 1 R C A 35" color
consol* original price over
S700 balance dua S177 cash or
payments 117 mo. 1 Zenith
color porlabla. ItSS cash or
paym ents.
NO
M ONEY
DO W N, lll l l In warranty. Free
home trial, no obligation. Call
21st Century Salas. 487 51*4
day or nit*.
T E L E V IS IO N
21" Color Console
1*" Color Portable
■4711**

H O M E * -^ — '
l"| j

65— Pets-Supplies

50-A— Jewelry

S ill
1171

Good Used T V s i l l 4 up
M IL L E R S
241* Orlando Dr
Ph 722 0112

54— Garage Sales
M O V IN G Sale
Sat . and Sun. * 'till
7472 Chase Ave.
DO LLS —
Some M adam e
Alexanders. No. 14 Wall St.
Village Fee Market
M E N Only
Saturday
214 W. tlth St.
M O V IN G SAL E — 4 Houses
on Elliabeth C l., Sanlord
F ri.a n d S a t.
L A K E 4 70th SI , Sat. Only. 1:00
‘ T ill,
R o to tllle r,
R iding
L a w n m o w a r, Dinner B ell,
Hand Tools, Misc., 1217417.

H A Y S2 50 per bale.
25 or more tree del
Other feeds avail. 14* 11*4.
So

W a n k 'd 1b B iA

Need Extra Cash?
K O K O M O Tool Co . at t i t W.
First It.. Sanlord. is now
buying glass, newspaper, bi
metal steel and aluminum
cans along with all other kinds
of non ferrous metals Why not
turn this Idle clutter Into extra
dollars? We all benefit Irom
recycling For details call
12) 1100
W A N T E O tO b u y .
Germ an Spiti Dog
177 17*4

71— Antiques

Alteration &amp; Tailoring

EXPERT
d re s s m a k in g ,
alterations Aslan Cleaners.
3*44 Hwy 17 91. Lake M ary
Blvd . 171 4*94

A M. Kelly cleaning service.
Spedaliiing in restaurant 4
office buildings. 422-03M.

B A TH S kitchens, roofing, block,
concrete, w m a o w i add a
rogm. tree estimates 171 444)

can 323-4917,365-2371

Aluminum Siding &amp;

FOR E S T A T E . Commercial or
Residential Auctions K *p
praisals Call Dell's Auction
171 1470

AUCTION
■jAT., F E B . I t t h lp m.
Benefit V F W Post 1010! at the
Log Cabin net.) to City Hall.
Col
D ela rco Auctioneer.
Refrigerator, bicycles adult
tric y c le and other m ls c ,
merchardisf

A u ctio n Sale
F r id a y N ita 7 P .M .
Matching Couch, Loveseat and
chair, Beautilul old Rockers.
T V 's Stereos, Tw in Mattress 4
Springs. M edal Shelving.
E le c tric H eaters. O rg a n ,
B icycles, E x e rc y c l* . Tw o
Radio
Control
Boats.
A u tom atic Dishw asher and
A u tom atic W asher, Rattan
Chairs. 4 all kinds ot Antique
Glasswtar, Lamps 4 other
Hems.

Screen Rooms
A L U M IN U M Siding, vinyl siding
soffit 4 fascia. Alum inum
gutters and down spouts
F r. Est. 301.141 134)

Appliance Services

•WE CARE A T*
S E M IN O L E C H IL D C A R E
71* Seminole D r Lake M ary.
Children are our specialty! We
are State licensed and cer
titled lor teaching and caring
Low family rates. Call 172 1*10
lor Information
HAPPY ELVES
Q U A L IT Y Child Cara 4 Pre
school. P a rt-tim e and lu ll
time. Lake M ary Elemantary
•Her.school.car*. Individual
attention and T L C a speciality.
State licensed. 170 E Crystal
Laka Ave Lake M ary.
331 7M4

IS' x 1" 71 Lucraft. 70 Hp
Johnson. P .T .T ., Hawg T .M .,
Depth U n d e r, a H a rd in g
Galvanlted tilt tra iltr. 11,000
1112172.

59— Musical Merchandise
S T E IN W A Y Grand Piano
, good condition 11.000
121 0720
H O B A R T M . Cabal piano and
bench. Ebony cotor, very good
cond. 1410 firm . Call alter 4
p m . 1711000

62— Lawn-Garden
F IL L D IR T 4 TO P SOIL
Y E L L O W SAND
Clark 4 H irl 121 751ft 111 2123

Equipment

Equipment Auction

76— Auto Parts
71 Dodge Colt angina, 74 Chevy
angina 150, Toyota angina
____________ M l 4047____________
H U B C APS odd 4 over SO asst,
sets new 4 used Welder with
hose, gauges, tanks, cart. Car
Radio*. 121 754S.

77— Junk Cars Removed
W E P A Y topdollar lor
Junk Cars and Trucks
CBS Auto Parts 7*3 4105

Sat. Fab. tt, 10 a m.
F a rm tra cto r* , tru c k s and
tq u lp m a n f.
Consignm ents
accepted dally.

3 U Y JU N A C A R S !T R U C K S
From t lO f o lH or more
Call M l 1*24.

Daytona Auto Auction

TO P Dollar Paid tor Junk A
Used cars, trucks 4 heavy
equipment 377 5V90

Hxry. 12, Daytaaa leach,
H 4 U M 1 II
w a ste-

I T M A K E S CASH .
P L A C E A C L A S S IF IE D A O
NOW. Call 221 1*11 or M l m i .

79— Truck s-Trailers

s e l l in g

65 -sHets-Supplies

P U R E B red » w kt. old Poodle
Puppy. Fem ale Apricot. 175.
M l 1014 or 1211411.

Remodeling Specialist
We Handle The
Whole B a llo t Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

Home Repairs

Concrete Work
B E A L Concrete I man quality
operation patios driveways
Days 1)1 7)3) E v «s 377 1321
S W IF T C O N C R E T E worx all
types. Footers, d riv e w a y s,
pads, floors, pools, completa.
Free est 327 7103

IS years Reliable Service.
Repair A c. ralrlgs., Ireeiars.
rentes, d-w. wash.dryers.
1)1- 044* 3)1-1747.

Draperies
O R A P E S B Y D E B B IE
Reasonable rates
M l 12*0

u p

C U S TO M M A D E D R A P E R IE S
Traverse Rods Installed.
Oorolhy Blits
14*5411

TO W E R 'S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a rrie tts Beauty
Nook It* E 1st St . 372 1742
Little want ads bring big. big
results Just try one. 327 2411
or *31 **93

Boarding &amp; Grooming

A N IM A L Haven Boarding and
G room ing Kennels heated,
insulated, screened. Ily proof
inside, outside tuns Fans
Also AC cages We cater to
your pets Ph. 372 1717.

Dryw all Repairs
DR YW ALL
Plaster 4 Ceiling
repairs " A ll work guaran
teed" Lie. 4 Ins. Orywall
Specialty Serv., Inc 711*317

Electrical
M A STER
E le c tric ia n .
Registered contractor. Comm.
4 Res. Quality home service.
Free Est. Jam es Paul M l 7SS*.

Want Ads Get People Together
— Those Buying And Those
Selling. 377 2*11 or 111 f 9*3.

Excavating Services

“ ^^rtJffETCAVATUfO^T
Bookkeeping

4*0 Case Backhoe Loader w-,‘
extender hoe. * yd. dump
truck.low bed serv M l M7S ;

DeGarmeau Bookkeeping Ser
377 7307
Personal income Taxes, open
evenings.

Brick &amp; Block
StoneWork
p ia z z a m a s o n r y

Quality Work At Reasonable
PriCM Free Estimate*
Ph 14* iS00. AI*. I p i t t .

C O L L IE R 'S Hom e Repairs
carpentry, roofing, painting.
_jvm d o w reoajr M l 4423
W INDOW S, doors, carpentry,
Concrete slabs, ceramic 4 lloor
tilt. Minor repairs, flrtplacas,
insulation. Lie. Bend 123-4121. .
C A R P E N T E R 25 yrs exp Smal*
remodeling jobs, reasonable
rates Chuck 373 *445
•
M aintenances all types
Carpentry, painting, plumbing
4 electric. 373 8034
p a i n t i n g and repa.r. patio and
screen porch bu ill
Call
anytime 322 Vast

Income Tex
O .B .F.S . Inc. 1*01 French. Bust
net* 4. Individual income tax
*• M F . *12 Sat 211-1112.

A

&amp;

B R O O F IN

11 yrs. experience. Licensed 4
Insured.
F re t Estimates on Roofing,
Re-Roofing and Repairs.
Shingles, Built Up and Tile.

JAM ES ANDERSON
G. F. BOHANNON

32 2- 94 17
M orrltonRootlngCo.
S p e d a liiin g In shingles and
build up. Low Low Halts. 24
hr. service. 7ta 3171___________
N E W reroofing, and
repairs. IS Yrs. Exp.
•
M31*24

Built up arid Shingle roof,
licensed and Insured.
F r e e e s t im a t e s . 322-1936.

J A M E S E . L E E IN C
Lawn Service
Litton Lawn Service
Commercial and Residential.
Winter Clean up. M l 554*.

♦ A-1 LAWN S E R V IC E *
K W w a c o 'rim . haul Regu.er
Service i lime clean up 24*
hrs. best r a i j j, U l A i X .

Lawn Mowers

C L A R E N C E 'S
A P P L IA N C E S E R V IC E
We service all major brands
Reas rates 11 yrs c«p 32)0131.

Beauty G

P O R C H E S , bathroom floors,
rotten wood replacement, all
small |obs welcoma. 371 0131.

Secretarial Services

3Z1-5421
IN V E N T O R Y
L IQ U ID A T IO N
A U C T IO N
M ONDAY,
F E B . 21st 7 p.m.
Furniture, bedding, tools,
reproductions,
brass,
item s, som ething for
everyone.
S A N F O R D A U C T IO N
1215 S. F R E N C H A V E
323-7340

Carpentry by " B I L L "
W OOD Arleslen General car­
pentry, screened room doors
etc. Rees. Rates. 177 2420.

Roofing
FOR efllcient and reliable Home
Cleaning. Call Patty's Home
Pampering Service 121 3544.

Additions &amp;
Remodelmq

ROOM additions, garage con
v e r s io n s
F IR E P L A C E
S P E C IA L IS T
Q u a lity
1.
dependable 4 lowest prices.
Ask lor Dawson 311 *940.

D l l W. H w y. *4

Ma k e s

Cleaning Services

CB. Stereo Installation Repa r
A C / 1 A u ,° Sound Center
710* French Ave
177 4111

S A T. 1-5 p.m . SUN. 141p.m .
F R E E A D M ISS IO N
O V E R 1*4 D E A L E R S
H W Y . 44 (1« M l. E . O F 1-4)
V O L U S IA C O U N T Y
F A IR O R O U N D S
O L A S t R E S T O R A T IO N

72— Auction

R e m o d e li n g

Financing Available

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
A N T IQ U E M A R K E T
SH OW A N D S A L E
D E L A N D , F L O R ID A
F E B . 19-20, 1983

Sat. 1J
55— Boats &amp; Accessories

ms

Let a Classified Ad help you find
m ore room for storage.'
Classilled Ads find buyers
last

Auto CB Stereo

A LL TY P E S C A R P EN TR Y
Custom Built additions. Patios,
screen rooms, carport. Door
locks, pane lling, shingles,
rerooting For last service.

D e ll'* A uction

s t o r in g it

..ic

C O O D r A SONS
Tile Contractors
171 0112

Home Improvement

Child Care

H U M A N E SoLiaty carport Sale.
!0V Forest O r., Sanford.

^ •A —farm

Ceramic Tile

P

CASH DO O R PR IZES

Big Man's belts
S U M T o 40 F R E E Buckle with
all ball* MOO or o v tt. Village
F la a m rk t. Sat. 4 Sunday.

80 —Autos for Sale

CO N SULT OUR

121 1200

B E A U T I F U L 10" 1*11
Grandfather Clock.
I9S0. Call 122 7401

C A L L C O LL E C T

R EAP

B E TW E EN

It you d o r', believe that want ads
bring results, try one, and
listen to your phone ring. Dial
127 7411 or l i t *9*1

This l*tl peechtrno 74xM
fam ily
section
with
cathedral
callings
unboiievabie value.''_______

IMS I. Goldenrad Rd
Orlande. FI. H**»

£A R S
A N P

HAP
BREAKFAST

N E W L IS T IN O I 1 bdrm , 2 bath,
lam room, nica cond. includes
w asher and d r y a r . Balow
market value. SIS.OOt.

T o ira T O T O p s n s r

H O M E B R O K E R S -•

CANP'PATES

B E A U T I F U L Vj carat Marquis
Solitaire valued at 17,000.
Asking 11.000. Call before 4
p m 231 4174.

21" C O N S O L E Color Zenith T V
goodcondiiionltOO.
M M 2 14.

F O R IM O IT

ll

SANFORD R E A L TY
R EA LTO R
M1-SI24
A lt Hrs. 132-4*14,231-4141

BUY SELL TR A D E
Florida Trad er Auction
Long wood, Fla. 11* li t *

These are only a lew el
many homes w t have
available in arts parks.
Call tor a showing

C F TH EM
, £0ULD
D R IV E

W 1NNER I

— -----------

V A L U E I 11 Cash to m rtg. or
O W H . W reas. down. M id
SlOs Bit 14(4 Owner Assoc

N A N N Y goat S7S. 7 kids. 1 m alt.
I lemale, SIS ea Rabbits 11 ea
Osteen area 172 0001.

r m i t

iv ir p c t a n t

EVERY V

W H E N W IL L
y&lt;2u s e t t o

FOR S A L E by owner — 7 bdrm,
1 bath. Fla. room, scr. porch.
I meed yard, assumable * \
mortgage. S14.900 127-4121.

L O TS OF E X T R A S I O o w lth this
pretty 1 bdrm , 2 bath home in
lirst das* ci.,d. s4t,v04.

INC rn REALTORS

ANP I L L
B ET M 05T

Friday, Feb. II, 111) - » A

Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

80— Autos for Sale

8 0 - r A u l o s f o r S a le

lVE ALREAPY
MAPE AN
R N P lN d J a
V / IN N IN 6

w ith M a jo r H o o p le

Y O u N G 1 Bdrm home. Can be
used as residence or professional
offices or commercial. Only
117,000 down 1411 Monthly. Call
Broker. Owner 1111411.

LG . 1 bdrm . ILy bath in Sanford
Lg. fenced yard, trull trees,
many other extras. 20’ . down,
owner finance balance ta t.900
171 0720

I tea Shepherd Reed
Winter Sprint*. Fla- Ml**

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Fencing
F E N C E installation Chain link,
wood post 4 rail. 4 farm fence.
License 4 Insured M l 4111.

It

you are having dilliculty
tindmg a place to live, car to
drive, a job. or some service
you have need of. read all our
want ads every day.

M IS TE R . F ix It Joe McAoems
will repair your mowers at
your horn* Call M2 7015

Sprinkler Systems
And Repairs
SANFORD
Irrig a tio n
4
Sprinkler Systems Inc. Free
est. 121 0747. 21 yrs. exp.

Steam and

M ajor Appliance
Repair
J O H N N IE S Appliances. We
service refrigerators, wash
ers. dryers, ranges. Reas
rates. 123 131*

S T E A M and Pressure Cleaning
(Mabil* Hamas, Hausas and
Raafl) House painting, and
minor carpenter repairs. All
w ork
guaranteed.
F ra *
estimates. 122-47*4 or *31-4711.

Stonevxjrk
Nurstttq Cenler
OUR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
Laxev.ew Nursinq Center
21* E Second St . Sanlord
_ ____________323 4707_____________
L O V IN G P R I V A T E H O M E .
Excellent 74 hr. care 4
com panionship for e ld e rly.
Reasonable. 321 4)01.

Painting
HO U SE painting 1100
a house Any siia.
473 10)4.421 400*
B IL L 'S P A IN T IN G
interior Exterior painting. Light
carpentry. Homes pressure
cleaned Business 111 2*21.
Home 111 1114 Bill Steiner.

A L L Brick. Block and Stone
work. Driveways and patio.
F IR E P L A C E
S P E C IA L IS T
Quality 4 Dependable and
lowest prices. Ask for Dawson
M l 4*40

Temporary Services

P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
A variety of temporary services
available M3 S44*.

T V Repair

Sun T V Service Center
Service charge 17 *1 plus parts
All makes 7at 1711

Pest Control
Tree Service
SPEN CER P E S T C O N TR O L
Comm., Retd., Lawn, Term ite
Work. M21*45. Ask lor Champ.'

Plastering

Carpentry

P E R S O N N E L U N L IM IT E D
Continuing secretarial services
available inouroffice.
172 144*

T R I County Tre* Service. T rim
rem ove,
tra sh,
hauling,
firewood. F r. E li. M2 *410.
S TU M P S ground out.
R easonable. tree estimates.
714-0441

Handyman
C A R P E N T E R repairsand
additions 30 yrs exp
Call 277 1117

H A N O Y M a N services Painting,
re p a irs, ale.
Reasonable
gum work. 425 0451. 477-4711,"

Carpet dom ing

A LL
Phases 04 Plastering
Plastering repair, stucco, hard
c/.te. simulated brick. 121 i* »l

Piano Lessons
Home Improvement

• T R IP L E 4 * '
■i Price 'special S14.M lor
Fam ily or Living Rm . 142 27*0.

C L A S S IF IE D
m o u n t a in s

71 F O R D R A N G E R
Pick Up. 1700
M l 4141

Ceramic Tile

ROOM Additions, remodeling,
d ry w a ll
hung.
ceilings
sprayed, fireplaces, roofing
121 4*11.

ONE PHO NE CALL STAR TS A
C L A S S I F I E D A D O N IT S
R ES U LTFU L
END
TH E
N U M B E R IS M2 2411

M E IN T Z E R T IL E ( &gt; p smee
1*11 New 4 old work comm 4
, res id Free estimate 1**4541

S E A M L E S S aluminum gg tiers,
cover that* overhangs waluminum seHif 4 lasci*. 1*04)
775-74*4 collect, fre e est.

ADS
MOVC
of merchandise

every day.

Pump Sales Serv.
SANFORD
Irrig a tio n
4
Sprinkler Systems, inc. 74 hr.
Serv 25 y r v exp M l 87*7.

JO H N A L L E N Y A R D 4 T R E E
S E R V IC E . W a il ramova pin*
trees. Reas, price llt-S U O .
U g ly Tree Stomp*
Remeve t l inch-diameter
Rem Tre e Service 33*43*1

Upholstery
L O R E N E 'S Upnctstery
Free
pick up. del 4 est Car 4 boat
seats F u m M i l 77*
Custom Uphotitary 4 O rap
F R E E est pickup and detlv
Call Sharon M ) 7t*«

.

�A

10A— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

B L O N D IE

Friday, Feb. 1», 1983

42 Possessive
Answer to Previous Puttie
pronoun
T
O T
0 7] 777
o7 70
1 Romiine
45 Game like
T A o
a u] T T _ W H i T
4 Lite Yugoslav
bowling
t T C a e N i L 11 1
,
leader
49 Of missile
T H O L t
L 0 1
□ □ n
8 Fatigue
industry
IT □
_TJ □ □ ■
------------1C
12 Destroy (si)
51 Short sleep
F U J I H.l
M]a 1 V a n a
13 Arab country 52 Bridle pad
14 Acknowledge 53 Oull pain
GdHoD nnn nnn
15 Cry of
54 Belonging to ■ ■ ■ H M D □ n o n n o n
surprise
us
18 Permeate
■ i : i n a iMi:i
55 Cooling drinks
18 Soviet
M
56 Norse deity
20 Shirpent
■ n u n n i n n l
57 Pigpen
21 Injure
n n n u T I n n r i n H n ri r?
22 Applies
DOWN
10 Repeating
31 Aquatic
frosting
mammal (pi)
from memory
24 City in New
i Russian
11 Rem's metes 33 Gain control
York
emperor
(2 wde)
17 Hypothesis
26 European
Hawaiian
38 Append
19 Arbitrary
capital
island
by Mort Walker 27 Trousers'
40 Large felinee
assertion
Fitful
41 Scoff
pocket
(colloq)
Animal of
30 New York
23 Suggestions 42 Village in
South
Ireland
river
24 Thing nearer 43 Liitan
America
32 Baerlika
to hand
Inspiration
44 City in
34 Dolti
Court game 25 Impolite
Pennsylvania
35 Socket
26 Beginning
Unity
46 Repeat
,36 Ory.ae wine
27 Nitives ol
Tuberous
47 Of the see
37 Beverages
Luton
(abbr.)
plant (pi)
3B Hope
28 Singletons
Author
740 Latvian
48 Lively
29 Hebrew letter 50 Mrs. Nixon
Turgenev
41 Eat

by Chic Young

B E E T L E BA IL E Y

WHAT Tt-lE
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T H E BORN LO SER

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HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, February 19, 1983

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK

5CMET1M651GETTHE FtOWG
m T THE-ONLY REA60K3 I'M
5rm kJS HERE. UKE. THIS...

6 BECAUSE EVERYOUE
HAS REJECTED ME

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by Ed Sullivan

P R JS C IL L A 'S POP

WW PON T SOU REAP
ASTORV TO SOUR
SISTER. CARLVLE ?

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WAIT A MINUTE ' TCAN
BE JU9TA6 INTEREST­
ING AG FOP ' COME
o v er h e r e amp i l l

PROVE IT/

by Stoffel A Heimdahl

BUG S B U N N Y
W H0 ? £ $ T H lS
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O J A R T ^ 2 M O R SE
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QUARTER
H O R S ED
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£ iS 6 lP
H P R S E 5

YOUR BIRTHDAY
February 19. 1983
Strive to acquire special­
ized knowledge this aim ing
year which you can put to
practical and profitable
uscs. Later results will l*e
well worth list* time you
spend In study.
AQUARIUS
(Ja n
20-Fcb. 19) Now ts the time
to finalize a materially bas­
ed venture In which you're
Involved. If you don’t dilly­
dally. It can Ik- settled to
your advantage. Older now:
T he NEW A stro-G raph
M atchm aker wheel and
booklet w hich rev e a ls
rom antic co m b in atio n s,
compatibilities for all signs,
tells how to get along with
others, finds rising signs,
hidden qualities, plus more.
Mall $2 to Astro-Graph. Box
489. Radio City Station.
N.Y. 10019. Send an addi­
tional $1 for your Aquarian
Astro-Graph predictions for
1983. Uc sure to give your
zodiac sign.

L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Be

patient and take things a
step at a tim e today with
Important goals and objec­
tives. Haste could cause you
to slip off the ladder of
success.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
2 2 )Look beyond today and
begin now to m arshal your
forces
for
fu tu re
achievem ents. Figure out
ways to control your tomor­
rows. Instead of having
them control you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Ik* firm and realistic In your
commercial afTairs today.
Don't let those you deal
with try lo burr)’ you be­
PISCES (Feb. 20-March yond your chosen, comfort­
20) M ental g y m n a stic s able pace.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
shouldn't faze you today.
You could he especially 22) One with whom you arc
adept at weighing facts and closely associated lias your
figures and in evaluating best Interests at heart to­
proposals.
day. Don't turn a deaf ear to
ARIES (March 21 April this |x.*rson's Ideas or sug­
19) Sensible m easures ran gestions.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.
be taken today to stabilize
conditions affecting your 23-Dcr. 211You’re not like­
materia] security. Do w hat's ly to find fulfillment today
unless you're doing things
necessary.
TAURUS (April 20-Mav which arc worthwhile and
20| Self-Interests can lx* ad ­ productive. Make your ef­
vanced today, but don't forts meaningful.
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
look to others to do for you
what you should be taking 22-Jun. 19) In social situa­
care of yourself. Ue your tions today you arc apt to be
the dom inant force. How­
own person.
GEMINI (May 21-June ever. you'll handle yourself
20) You can accomplish in a m anner so that friends
more today by working In a will not find It offensive.
G A R F IE L D

FR ANK AND E R N ES T

quiet atm osphere, away
from those who could break
your concentration. Seek
solitude.
CANCER (June 21-July
221 Today you may have
opportunities to solidify
friendships with persons
who are Important to your
future plans. Do all you can
to strengthen bonds.

Diet Pills Can Do
More Bad Than Good
DEAR DR. LAMB - I re­
cently started taking diet
pills to help lose weight. I
am 15 years old and In good
health. My problem Is that
Instead of feeling peppy and
energetic I always feel ex­
hausted and light-headed.
Is this a common reaction?
Is It dangerous? The plUs
arc time-release capsules
containing phenylpropano­
lam ine hydrochloride and
caffeine.
DEAR READER - Throw
those pills In the garbage
can. Phenylpropanolam ine
hydrochloride has been Im­
plicated In causing high
blood pressure. It Is under
review by the Food and
Drug Adm inistration and a
num ber of com panies that
have m arketed products
that contain It have w ith­
drawn their products from
the m arket.
My general opinion Is that
people should not use diet
pills of any type. Too often
they contain harmful su b ­
stances. Caffeine In diet
pills is the same as caffeine
In coffee. Too m uch can
m ake you nervous and Jit­
tery. also lightheaded. In­
d iv id u a ls who h av e a
tendency to high blood
pressure or other circula­
tory disorders should be
particularly careful.

If you really need to diet
it is best lo follow a sensible
balanced diet and lose
weight very slowly. A good
exercise program with a
balanced diet Is also Im­
portant.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
work Involves a lot of travel­
ing and at tim es iny suit­
case Is heavy. On my last
trip 1 developed an ex­
cruciating pain in the bone
of my right elbow, outer
side. It was diagnosed ns
tennis elbow. It Is not only
the bone which Is painful
but the entire arm from el­
bow to the palm, so much
so that it is painful lo shake
hands or grip and lift a light
obJecL I have been advised
to massage with ointment
and use hot fomentation,
w hich d o e s n ’t provide
relief. What do you suggest?
DEAR READER - 1 am
assum ing Ihfc diagnosis Is
correct. You did not say If
you play tennis or not but
other strains can cause the
same form of Injury lo the
area where tendons attach
to the side of the bone Just
below the elbow. In the
classical form'll Involves the
muscles that straighten the
elbow as In the backhand
stroke.

Another reason you could
feel exhausted Is from the
diet Itself. We get energy
from our food. When we
don't cat enough and don't
really have a lot of body fat
reserves we do get ex­
hausted. Also Inadequate
First, stop using that ami.
food Intake, particularly
with some diet fads, leads to Use passive stretching for
severe chemical changes In full range of motion: local
th e body th a t a rc not heat may aid the stretching.
healthy and can lie danger­ If you are a tennis player get
some lessons from a pro to
ous.
find out if you can improve
A lot of young girls diet your technique. Your doctor
who should not. Being too can give you some medi­
thin can delay their normal cines lo relieve the pain.
sexual development and af­
fect normal hormone func­ You might wear a brace, the
wraparound hand you see
tions.
on tennis players' forearm
I want you to very careful­ to help prevent a shock lo
ly read The Health Letter the area. Once you have
num ber 16-2. Dangerous tennis elbow you need reg­
Dieting, which I am sending ular attention by a physi­
cian while you recover.
you.

WIN AT BRIDGE
went rlaht to seven no­
trump. However, the 21-

NORTH

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer South
Wnl Norik East
Put
Pan

7 NT

P in

South
1NT

Pan

Opening lead. 4J

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

The game was rubber
bridge. South was Sam Stayman, retired businessman
and still active bridge play­
er.
He was slightly disturbed
when his partner ignored the
Stayman convention and

lnt dummy was quite satactorv even though there
G
were only 12 top triexs.
. It looked like about a 99
percent play for the grand
slam, but Sam raised it to a
sure thing.
He left the clubs alone
except to discard dummy's
four spot on his king of
spades somewhere along the
way to come down to a livecard ending. Dummy's last
five cards were the ace of
hearts and A-Q-10-9 of clubs.
Sam's were the 10s of hearts
and diamonds and K-6-5 of
clubs.
East's last five cards were
a small heart and four clubs,
and Sam knew it.
How did he know it? East
had discarded on the third
spade and third diamond, so
West had been dealt six
spades and four diamonds,
west had followed to two
hearts. Twelve of his cards
had been accounted for.
Sam led a club to
dummy's ace and when West
followed small, Sam led the
10 of clubs and let it ride
with certainty of success.
Then he took his king of
clubs, got back to dummy
with the last heart and made
his 13th trick with the queen
of clubs.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

by Jim D avit

by Bob Thaves
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�E v en in g H erald

LEISURE
Complwt* Wwwk’t TV Listings

Sanford, Florida — Friday, February II, 1H3

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vrrj|

.

HtraM Phata by Tam Vlacafit

Dan Spangler, whose hobby is carving and woodworking, displays some of the miniature furniture he made for three dollhouses he constructed
for his three granddaughters.

'W hittling Dan' Carves U p Dollhouses
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
A farm boy from the Centralis area of Illinois, Dan
Spangler of Chuluota whittled hla way around the world
during his 20 years In the U.S. Navy as a heavy equipment
operator, and th at’s pretty hard work. However, one of the

C heers I
’Cheers,’ perhaps the best comedy on
the tube, is a perennial ratings
cellar-dweller and its place in the
nightly line-up may be the reason.
Page 5.

toughest Jobs he ever tackled began two months before
Christmas, but It was a labor of love.
His love for working with wood is shared by daughter,
Sharon Adams, who lives nearby in Chuluota. It was her
suggestion that they build and furnish a doll house for the
Barbie dolls belonging to her children, Mandy, 7, and

Unbelievable
‘Ripley’s Believe It Or Not’ may be a
bit gruesome at times, says TV critic
David Handler, but it’s “harmless
fun." And host Jack Palance “is
perfect." There’s more on Page 7.

Crystal, 4, for a Christmas gift. From there, the project
began to grow. It was decided that each girl should have
her own dollhouse. But to build doll houses for two of the
granddaughters and not the third did not seem a very good
idea, so 3 -year-old Jessie Holbin was added to the list.
See WHITTLER, Page 2

Throwback
T.J. Hooker wouldn’t fit in with the
gang on ’Hill Street Blues.’ Hooker is
an old-fashioned cop who sees only
black and white, no shades of gray.
Find review on Page 8.

�2— Evening Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Friday, Feb. 18, 1983

W ho Said ‘Judy, Judy, Judy ?
DEAR DICK: My dad and I are having a disagreement
about the person in a movie who said "Judy, Judy, Judy.”
Would you please tell me what actor it was. and in what
movie? J.V.D., Kalamazoo, Mich.
It wasn't. Impersonators of Cary Grant have for years
used that in their acts, hut Grant says he never, ever uttered
the line in any of his films. Nobody seems to know how it got
started, but it did. and Grant is stuck with it.
DEAR DICK: My wife and daughter, among others, won't
believe me when I say there used to be a popular singer
named Matt Monroe. They say Vaughn Monroe, yes, but
Matt, no. I thought hr sang the theme from "To Russia with
Love" but he wasn't listed on a recent repeat. Can you help?
J.C., Joplin, Mo.
You are right, except for a small detail. He spells his
name Munro. not Monroe. But he was a fine singer and, yes,
he did sing the "From Russia with Love" theme in that film.
DEAR DICK: Could you help us, please? Is Robert Wagner
of "Hart to Hart" any relation to country singer Mickey
Gilley? And is Judd Ilirseh, of "Taxi,” any relation to Sid
Caesar? K.W., Merrill* Mich.
None of the above arc related to any of the above.
DEAR DICK: I say Tom Selleck was the Marlboro Man on
the billboards. My husband says he was not. Which o( us is
right? E.V., Kirtland A.F.B., N.M.
This time, your husband wins. Selleck did some TV com­
mercials early in his career, but he was not the Marlboro
Man.
DEAR DICK: Is the beautiful woman who plays C.J. on
"Matt Houston” the same one who played Princess Ardala in
"Buck Rogers"? And, No. 2, I think I heard that Dudley
Moore died. Did he? FJ5., Albuquerque, N.M.
Yes and no. Yes, Pamela Hensley was Princess Ardala
and is now C.J. but, no, Dudley Moore did not die.

Ask Dick
Kleiner
DEAR DICK: I have been wondering about Martin Landau
and bis wife, Barbara Bain, since they did "Mission: Impossi­
ble" and "Space: 1999.” What are they doing in the '80s?
L.M.L., Juneau, Alaska
Working. They are both working actors, and they go wher­
ever they can find jobs. They arc also involved in a little
theater group in Los Angeles. You will sec them in movies
and on TV shows here and there. It's a tough, competitive
life for actors these days.
DEAB DICK: We have tried for months to find out what
Burt Reynolds' name was when he played the blacksmith on
"Guntmoke." Can you help us, please? C.B., South William"sport, Pa.
Yes. The character's name was Quint Asper.

Jaclyn Smith plays a top attorney, Kevin
Conway (seated) her partner and Ron Hunter
the district attorney in "Rage of Angels,"
airing Sunday and Monday on NBC.

DEAR DICK: What was the name of the Western series
that Rory Calhoun was In? E.M.B., Miramar, Fla.
That was "The Texan," which ran on CBS from '5B to '60.
DEAR DICK: We see the name Whitney Blake as a pro­
ducer on "One Day at a Time.” What was the name of the
series on which the played a mother? J.M., Hughesville, Pa.
Whitney Blake was a co-creator of “One Day at a Time,"
along with her husband, A1 Mailings. And, as an actress, she
was part of the "Hazel" family, with Shirley Booth and Don
DeFore.

Silver Anniversary For Grammy Awards
John Denver is the hosl of
the silver anniversary of the
Grammy awards, the' highest
award in the recording indus­
try. to be televised in a threehour. live broadcast from the
Shrine Auditorium in Los
Angeles. Wednesday. Feb 23
on CBS
In addition to saluting (he
new recipients of awards, the
program will honor the musi­
cal achievements of the past
25 vears. for pop. rock. jazz,
soul, gospel, country and clas
sical music.
Some of the nominees:

For record of the vear:
"Always on My Mind." Willie
Nelson; "Chariots of Fire."
Vangclis; "Ebony &amp; Ivory."
Paul McCartney and Stevie
Wonder; "Rosanna." Toto.
"Steppin' Out." Joe Jackson.
For album ol the vear
"A m erican Fool " John
Cougar; "The Nightfly." Don­
ald Fagcn. "T h e ' Nvlon
Curtain." Billy Joel. "Toto
IV." Toto; "Tug of War." Paul
McCartney
For best new artist Asia.
Jennifer Holliday, the Human

League, Men at Work and
Stray Cats.
F or b est pop vocal
performance, female: "Get
Closer," Linda Ronstadt;
"Gloria,” Laura Bramgan;
" H e a rt A tta c k ," Olivia
Newton-John; "Love’s Been a
Little Hard on Me,” Juice
Newton; "You Should Hear
How She Talks About You,"
Melissa Manchester
F or best pop voeal
performance, male "Blue
Eves." Elton John; "Don't
Talk to Strangers," Rick

Springfield; "I.G'.Y. (What a
Beautiful World)." Donald
Fagen: "I Keep Forgettin'
(Every Time You're Near)."
Midia'el McDonald; "Truly,”
Lionel Hichie.
And for best pop vocal per­
formance by a duo or group
"Ebony ti Ivory." Paul
M cC artney and S tev ie
Wonder; "Hard To Say I'm
Sorry." Chicago; "Mane’ater."
Daryl Hall &amp; John Oates;
"Rosanna," Toto. "Dp Where
W'c Belong," Joe Cocker and
Jennifer Warncs

Cheryl Ladd plays the legendary Him star and
princess of Monaco, Grace Kelly, and Ian
McShane plays Prince Rainier in "Grace
Kelly," airing Monday on ABC.

...W h itfle r A Real Cutup
Continued from Page 1
The houses were each 28 Inches high, 36 Inches long and
14 inches wide. Spangler and Mrs. Adams had no plans or
patterns to go by so they had to develop the scale for all
the furnishings as they went.
Spangler even made the shingles for the roofs, framed
the windows, built cabinets, furniture in a different style
for each house, and carved the tiniest details down to door
knockers, lamps, and vases. For the bathrooms, he made
the tub, sink and toilet, even the toilet paper holder and
shower head.
Sharon, the only female graduate from Westslde
Vocational Training Center in Winter Garden, and an
employee of a Sanford cabinet-making firm, helped make
the furniture and put the shingles on the houses.
Various other family members pitched in to help with
the painting and furnishings for the project which took two
months to complete,
" It easily took 60-70 hours on each one,” says Spangler.
"I would be working on the various pieces while wat­
ching TV or waiting in (he school bus” which he drives for
Geneva Elementary School.
Other family members lent a hand
with the
wallpapering and painting, and still others made bed­
spreads and curtains.
“We had at least flOO invested In m aterials,” says
Spangler. ” We went with the most expensive spray dry

varnish on the furniture,” says Sharon, "and used 3-4
coats."
The five-room houses have two bedrooms, a bath, living
room, and dining room-kitchen and are complete down to
a miniscule mouse hiding under the bed, dishes and
silverware on the table, and hairbrushes.
Keeping the project under wraps wasn't easy.
"We worked on it here and their moms would always
call before they came so we could lock up what we were
working on up ih a spare bedroom, Mrs. Spangler says.
"With everyone spending so much time on the project and
not paying them much attention, the girls thought they
were being neglected.”
The Job wasn’t finished ur'.il Christmas Eve. On
Christmas morning, after the other gifts were open three
very surprised and happy little girls were lined up in front
of their houses which were already for Ken and Barbie to
move into.
Spangler began whittling and carving wood at the age of
six when his father gave him his first pocket knife.
Although he has other wood carving knives, he still
prefers to make his Intricate carvings with a small pocket
knife using fir or white pine. “ Hardwood la too much
work," he says.
“ His carvings are all around the world," says his wife,
Jean. “ He has never sold one, but just gave them away
when people asked for them."

Susan Blakely plays actress Frances Farmer,
who is appalled at the way she looks after a
Hollywood makeup man (George Touliatos)
transforms her In "Will There Really Be a
Morning?,” Tuesday oq CBS.

�Friday, Feb. I*. 1983-3

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI

TELEVISION
February 18 thru 24
Cabls Ch.

Cable Ch.

CD O
(D O
(D e

(A B C ) Orlando
(C B S ) O rlando
(N B C ) O aylona Beach
Orlando

23) (35)
&lt;B&gt; ( 17)
(10) ©

Independent
O rlando
Independent
A tlanta, G a.

j

O rlando Public
B roadcasting Sysftm

In addition fa ths channtls liita d , cabltvision subscribers m ay tuna In to Independent channel 44,
$t. P etersbu rg , by tuning le channel •; tuning to channel 11, w h ich carries sports and tha Christian
Broadcasting N stw o rk ( C B N ) .

Specials Of The Week
A F TE R N O O N

other great big band performers
are featured In filmed highlights of a
‘30s and '40s music revival.

3:00

4:35

SATURDAY
CD

(10} S IM P LE TR E A S U R E S
Classical guitarist Rubon Romoro
porforms musical selection* from
ths Renaissance. Baroque. Roman­
tic and contemporary periods
EVENING

6:00

ED

(1 0 ) S U R V IV A L " B a llo o n
Safari'' Alan and Joan Root's flight
over Africa's Sarongali Plain In a
hoi air balloon 1* d o c u m e n te d .
David Niven narrates (R)

(12) (17) D EAR LO V E Y H E A R T A girl
causes serious problems for herself
and others when she under!ekes
writing her high school newspaper's
advice column.
EVENING

CD (10)

N A TIO N A L G EO G R A P H IC
8PEC1AL "Th e Thames " A trip tak­
en along the Thames River docu­
ment* the massive dean-up that
has restored Its waters to a new
vitality Q

10:00
ED (10) FUNDI: T H E E LLA BAK ER
S T O R Y Ju lia n B o n d . Eleanor
Holmes Norton. James Forman.
Anne Braden, and Rev. Ralph Aber­
nathy share their recollections of
civil rights act Mat Ella Baker.

6:00

N A TIO N A L G EO G R A P H IC
SP E C IA L "Th e Tham es" A trip takon along the Thames River docu­
ments the masstvo clean up that
ha* restored Its waters to a new
vitality. Q

W EDN ESDAY
EVENING

9:30

ED

(10) T O N O R W A Y: H O M E O F
G IA N T S M onty Python's John
Cleese dons a reporter's cap in
search of his Norwegian roots and
10 Investigate the greet Viking spirit
and tradition.

SUN D AY
A F TE R N O O N

8:00

.

EVENING

8:00

(4) o is T H IS O O O O S Y E . C H A R ­
LIE BR O W N ? Linus and Lucy sadly
announce to the rest of the Peanuts
gang that they must pack up and
move away to the strange city
where their talher has a new fob.
ED (10) SU R V IV A L "W e Live With
Elephants" David Niven narrates
the story of Dr. Ian Douglas-Hamilton's five-year study living with his
family amidst a herd of wild ele­
phant* In Lake Manyara National
Perk, Tanzania &lt;R)

1:05
(12) (17) P O R TR A IT O F A M ER IC A
Nevada, a land ol rugged snow­
capped mountains, grassy valleys
and formidable deserls Is profiled.

4:00

CD

(10) BIO B A N D C A V A L C A D E
Bob Crosby. Frankie Carle. Mar­
garet Whiting. Freddy Martin and

M ONDAY

fj) a
G R A M M Y AW A R D S John
Denver hosts the silver anniversary
edition ol this awards ceremony, to
be telecast live from the Shrine
Audllortum In Los Angeles
CD O A L L -S T A R FAM ILY FEUD
S P E C IA L Richard Dawson hosts
Ihis competition between male and
female "Perfect 10's." Including
Steven Ford. Richard Simmons.
Phyllis Dilter and Marilyn M cCoo
ED (10) T H E HO R RO R O F IT ALL
Jose Ferrer narrates a look at
some of the foremost horror films of
the last 60 years, featuring film clips
and interviews with those who
helped make them.

9:00

ED (10) N A TIO N A L G E O G R A P H IC
S P E C IA L " T h e
S u p e r lln e r s :
Twilight Of An Era” A nostalgic voy­
age of fascinating luxury and
remembered glory is taken aboard
the last ol the great liners stilt in
trans-Atlantic service — the Queen
Elisabeth 2, (R|

A F TE R N O O N

EVENING

7:00

ED (10)

THURSDAY

TUESDAY

2:00

ED (10) SUR VIVAL

"W e Live With
Elephants" David Niven narrates
the Story of Dr. Ian Dougias-Hamilton's five-year study living with hi*
I amity amidst a hard of wild Ste­
phan It in Lake Manyara National
Park. Tanzania. (R)
EVENING

7:05
112) (17) P O R TR A IT O F AM ERICA
Nevada, a land of rugged snow­
capped mountains, grassy valley*
and formidable deserls I* profiled

M OR N IN G

8:00
(HJ (35) A N G LE R S IN A C TIO N
A F TE R N O O N

Scheduled: coverage ol the John­
ny Dumphua / Larry Shields 12round U S B A Junior Wellorweight
Championship bout; coverage ot
the Women's World Speed Skating
Championships (from East Germ a­
ny)

1:00
O

5:00

li ) W R E 8 T U N O

1:30

(3 )

O D A Y T O N A 600 S PEC IAL

ID O

T H E R O A D T O LO S A N G E ­

LE S

2:00
O
( D W O R L O CHA M PIO N SHIP
K ICK BO XING
(1 )
O
N CAA B A S K ETB A LL
Oaylon al Old Dominion

2:30

CDO

(12) ( I T )

W R ES TLIN G

(3)

N C A A B A S K E TB A LL
Florida at Tennessee
CD O SP O R TSB EA T

CD O

3:30

P S A B O W LIN G Live cover­
age of the S 126.000 Roialda Open
(from Dick Weber Lane* In SI. Lou­
is. M o ).

CD Q

5:35
M O TO R W E E K IL L U S T R A T ­

ED

3:00
Q

O
S I P G A G O L F "Isuzu-Andy
Williams San Diego O pen" Live
coverage of the third round Ifrom
the Torrey Pines Golf Course In La
Jolla. Calif).
CD O W IDE W O R LD O F S P O R TS
Scheduled: live coverage ol the
Indoor Dream Mile (Irom Richfield,
Ohio); coverage of the International
Toboggan Championships (from SI.
Morllz. Switzerland).

4:00

EVENING

6:05
(12) (17) W R ES TLIN G

8:35
02) (17) N B A B A S K E TB A L L Atlanta
Hawke ve. Dallas Mavericks

SUN D AY
M ORNINO

A U T O RACIN G Live cover­
age of the N A S C A R Busch Clash
(from Oayfona Intarnatlonal Speed­
way, F la ).

(D O
FISHING W ITH R O LAN D
M AR TIN

4:30

11:30

(D

O

S P O R TS

SATU R D AY

10:00

. 0 ( 3 ) N O R M S LO A N

A F TE R N O O N

12:00
O

( I ) O U T D O O R LIFE

1:00
0

(it

N CAA B A S K E TB A LL
DePaul vs St. Jo h n’s (from Madi­
son Square Garden)

1:30
ID O

CD

BILL D A N C E O U T D O O R S

2:00

O
T H E S U P E R S TA R S "Th e
Suparteam a" Tan-m a n squads
from Super Bowl Champions Wash­
ington Redskins and '82 World
Series Champions St. Louis Cardi­
nals compete (Uve from Key Blacayne. Fla.).
CD (10) TE N N IS " U S National
Indoor Championships" Coverage
01 the finals ol this $316,000 tour­
nament from the Racquet Club In
Memphis, Tennessee

3:00
O
(D
8P O R T8W O R LD
Scheduled; coverage ol the World
Pro Figure Skating Championships
(from handover, Md ), coverags of
the Ariberg Kandahar Downhill ski­
ing event (from ST. Anton. Austria)

3:30
CD O A M A T E U R B O XIN G " U S A
vs. Yugoslavia’' (from Ri)ska. Yugo­
slavia).

11:30

CD

O
VIEW PO IN T The relation­
ship between crime portrayed by
the media and crime in the street*
Is examined by a panel of expert*
who discuss allegations that crime
reporting Is sensational and may
even encourage criminal activity.

FRIDAY
A F TER N O O N

12:00

ED

(10) R OSEM ARY C LO O N EY .
W ITH LO V E Popular songs from
the pasl are p e rfo rm e d by
Rosemary Clooney and Ihe Conrad
Jazz All-Slats

Meadowlands.
NJ )

East

Rutherford,

Marcelino Sanchez (I. to r.) plays Kcnibrandt,
Terry INIichos is Vermin and Michael Beck
plays Swan, all characters in the film “ The
Warriors,” to air Friday, Feb. 25 on ABC.

4:30
a
( D PG A G O L F "Isuzu-Andy
Williams San Dwgo Open" Live
coverage ol the final round (Irom
the Torrey Pines Oolf Course In La
Jolla. Calif.)
CD O W IDE W O R LO O F 3 P O R TS
Scheduled: Uve coverage of the
Ruben Castillo / Juan LaPorte 12round W B C Featherweighl Cham ­
pionship bout (from San Juan.
Puerto Rico); coverage of Ihe World
Motorcycles O n Ice Championships
(from Inzefl. West Germany)
EVENING

7:05
(12) (17) W R ESTLIN G

THURSDAY
EVENING

021

8:05

( I T ) N C A A B A S K E TB A LL
Arkansas vs. Tsxss

FRIDAY
A F TE R N O O N

CD

1:00

(1 0 ) 8 P O R T 8 A M E R IC A
"Mtdwinler Swimming And Div­
ing"
EVENING

3:46

8:05

O
N C A A B A S K E TB A LL
Missouri vs. Virginia (from The

Q2&gt; ( I T ) N C A A B A S K E T B A L L
Indiana vs. Michigan

CD

m

T H E HO R RO R O F IT A L L
Jose Ferrer narrate* a look at
some of the foremost horror films of
the last 60 years, tsaluring film clips
and interview* with those who
helped make them

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY

m

10:00

ED (10)

9:00

ED (10) T H E M ARX B R O TH E R S IN
A N U TS H E L L Film clips and inter­
views are featured in a salute to the
most celebrated comedy team in
the.history of motion pictures Groucho. Harpo. Chico. Zeppo and
Gum m o Marx. |R)

Doris (Valerie Landsbcrg) falls into a fantasy
world where her friends are characters from
Oz, after she gets a bump on the head in
••Fame," airing Thursday on NBC.

George Hamilton stars as both the swash­
buckling hero who helps right injustices and
his foppish twin brother in the comedy spoof
"Zorro, the Gay Blade,” to air Saturday, Feb.
26 oil CBS.

�•1 - E v e n i n g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Frid a y, Feb. 18, 1983

E V EH 'V G
O

® ijj O

«;r:C
CDO NEW S

a D (88) C H A R IIE '8 AN Q ELS
CD(10) A R T O F BEING HUM AN
6:05
OX (17) C A R O L B U R N E TT A N D
FRIENDS

6:30
O ® N B C NEW S
(3 ) O C 8 S NEW S
f f i O A B C NEW S g
( D (10) A R T O F BEING HUM AN

6*35
9 1 (1 7 )B O 0 N EW H AR T

7:00
O ® U E D E TE C TO R
(3 ) O P-M. M AG AZINE A look *1
what former "Charlie'* Angela"
afar* are doing today; an Edible Art
Con leal In New York City.
(7 ) O JO K E R 'S WILD
(1II (35) T H E JE FFER SO N S
ED (10) M AC N EIL / LEHRER
R EPO R T

7:05
QX (17) WINNERS Duetts Dr Martin Luther King Sr; University of
Louisville head coach, Denny Crum;
"Three'* Company” star. Priscilla
Barnes

7:30
O (11 E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
( S I O T t C T A C DO UG H
( 7 ) 0 FAM ILY FEUD
(111(35) BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) U N TA M ED W ORLD

7:35
(1 J ( 17) AN DY GRIFFITH

a

8:00

(!)
TH E
POW ER8
OF
M A TTH E W S T A R The lives of three
aslronauts depend on Matlhew and
Walt'a ability lo recover a NASA
g u id a n c e system stolen In mldflight
(3 ) O TH E D UK ES O F HAZZARO
Jesse's life Is endangered alter he
witnesses a robbery and Is the only
one who can Identify one of the
crooks
ffi O BEN SO N Benson and Clay,
ton learn that they may be related
lo each other, g
(U) (35) M OVIE
"The Prisoner Of
Second Avenue" (1875) Jack Lem.
mon, Anne Bancroft. Based on ihe
play by Ned Simon. An advertising
executive loses his |ob and his sani­
ty due to an economic recession
and Ihe hectic pace of Manhattan
CD (10) W A S H IN G TO N W EEK IN
REVIEW

8:05
OX (17) M OVIE “ Amazing Spider.
Man: Deadly Oust" (1878) Nicholas
Hammond, Roberl Simon Three
sludents build a bomb with stolen
plutonium and I hr oaten lo klN thou,
sands of people.

B o n o y iT h M tiB

EX

t: \I H .\T l HHl STHIM

SATURDAY

February 18

FRIDAY
8:30
ffl O
TH E NEW O O O C O U P LE
Felix can't lake Ihe heal when
Oscar starts dating his ex-wife,
Frances.
CD (10) W A L L S TR E E T W EEK
"When The Chips Are U p " Guest:
William Hambrecht, president of
Hambrecht 5 Qulst.

9:00
O
®
K N IG H T RIDER Michael
Knighl discovers that a Bible printing plant In a small town Is a front
for a huge counterfeiting operation.
(3 ) O D ALLAS Pam leaves Bobby
and Southfork, and Rebecca's will
reveals some surprises.
(D O
M OVIE
"First Family"
(1850) Oilda Radnor. Bob Newhart.
The sexually repressed daughter of
the country's weirdest presidential
family complicates her falher'a
attempt* to conduct the affairs of
slate.p
ED (10) R OSEM AR Y C LO O N E Y ,
W ITH LO VE Popular songs from
the past are p erfo rm ed by
Rosemary Clooney and the Conrad
Jazz All-Star*

10:00

O

®
R E M IN G TO N S T E E L E
Remington and Laura spend
homecoming at Murphy Michael's
alma mater investigating a murder
in which all ot Ihe clues are provid­
ed by Six alumni
(3 ) O
FA LC O N C R E S T Angela
(lies to Paris to investigate Rich­
ard’s past, while a murderer contin­
ues lo terrorize the residents of Fal­
con Crest.
o r (38) IN D EPEN D EN T N ETW O R K
NEW S
ED
(1 0 ) L IF E
ON
EA R TH
"Conquest O l The Waters" David
Attenborough looks al the astound­
ing fish dynasty with its 30.000 dif­
ferent species (R ip

91) (35) SO AP
ED (10) ALFR ED H ITC H C O C K PRE­
S E N TS

11:05

91 (17) A L L IN T H E FAM ILY
11:30
0
®
TO N IG H T Host: Johnny
Carson. Quasls: Eydia Gorme,
actress Brldgette Anderson
1 3) Q M ARY TY LE R M OORE
f f i O A B C NEW S NIG HTLINE
9J) (35) T H E R O C K FO R D FILE8

11:35
9 1 (17) M OVIE "Shoot The Sun
Down" (1880| Christopher Walken.
Mergot Kidder.

12:00

(3 ) O M OVIE "Dixie: Changing
H a b its " (P ra m la ra ) Su za n n e
Pleahette. Clorls Leachman
GD O T H E L A 8 T W O RO

12:30
D
®
S C T V N E TW O R K Guest
Ben Vereen
9J) (35) NEW S

1:00
f f l O M OVIE "Bus Slop” (1856)
Marilyn Monroe. Arthur O'Connell

91

2:00
2:50

CD O M OVIE "Call O l The Wild"
(1935) Clark Gable. Jack Oakte

3.00
0 1 4 1 E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T

3:30
O f f i NEW S
(7 ) O M OVIE
"Sm arl Money"
(1031) Edward O. Robinson, James
Cagney

4:00
0

10:30
() t (35) M A O AM E'8 PLA CE

11:00
O ®

(3 ) O ' M O NEW S

O f f i F LA S H G O R D O N Q .
(3 ) O B LA C K AW A REN ESS
(7 ) O M OR K 4 MINDY / LA VERNE
4 SHIR LEY
(ID (38) JIM BAKKER

7:05
9 1 (17) B E TW E EN T H E LINES

7:30
a ® Q IL U G A N 'S ISLAND
(3 ) O TH IR TY M INUTES

7:35
9 1 (17) V E G E TA B L E S O U P

8:00
Q ( ! ) T H E FLIN T8 T O N E FUNNIES
C3) O P O P EYE 4 O LIVE
(7 ) Q SUPER FRIENDS
01) (38) AN G LE R S IN A C TIO N
CD (10) LAP Q U ILTIN G "Border
Treatment And Stencil Study”
Georgia Bonesleel demonstrates
tips on how lo finish Ihe outside ol a
quill.

8:30

O ® T H E SHIR T TA L E S
(3 ) O PANDAM ONIUM
ffl o
P A C -M A N / L IT T L E R AS­
C A L S / RICKIE RICH
9 1 (36) O R A N D PRIX A L L -S TA R
SH O W
C D (1 0 )Q U IL TIN O
8:35
9 1 (17) M OVIE "Siren O l Bagdad"
(1953) Paul Henreid, Patricia Madi­
na Upon discovering lhal some
lovely Bagdad dancing girls are
going to be auctioned off as slaves,
a magician and his friend try to res­
cue them

9:00
Q ® SM URFS
(3 ) O M E A TB A LLS 4 S P A G H E TTI
(11) (36) LEAV E IT T O BEAVER
CD (10) FLO RID A H O M E G R O W N

9:30

4:05

(I) o
B U G S B UN N Y / ROAD
RUNNER
CD O P A C -M A N
( I I) (35) T H E HARDY B O Y S / N AN ­
C Y DR EW M YS TER IES
CD (10) FR EN C H C H E F

0 1 (17) M OVIE "Th e Heist" (1972)
Chrlslopher George. Elizabeth Ashley.

co author of a Beatles biogra­
phy, "The Love You Make,"
iold me. "Yoko chain-smoked
through our session Shed
lake only a puff then stub it
out. She'd line the butts up one
by one. When I ground my
own cigarette in her ashtray
she carefully removed it. She
ut it in my ashlrav."...
alum O’Neal was in New
York and saw "Little Shop of
Horrors." She also saw Eunice
and Sargent Shrlver's son.
Anthony.
Sheila MacRae is doing
comedy with her daughter.
Heather, singing and her son,
Bruce, Blinking the piano —
they all open at the Inner
Circle... "Goodnight Grampa"
opens next month on Second
Avenue. Heavy-duty maga­
zines arc planning profiles on
its star, off-Broadway’s new­
est kid on the block — Milton
Berle... Debbie Reynolds and
the ex. Eddie Fisher, open in
New Y’ork on the same night
She's in "Woman of the Year.”
lie's in ? nightclub Lotsa
luck.

?

Peopla once believed that
if their palms itched they
would receive money.

toward Louisiana amidst porsonsl
conflicts between Ihe officers on
the subject of wsz.

1:00
a ® W R ESTLIN G
CD (10) FAM ILY P O R TR A IT

1:30

(3) O DAYTONA BOO8PECIAL
(D O THE ROAD TO L08 ANGE­
LES

10:00
®

O S C O O B Y O O O / PUPPY q
CD(to ) M A G IC O F O IL P AINTING

10:05
9 1 (17) M OVIE
"Genghis Khan'­
l l 865) Omar Sharif, Stephen Boyd.
The terrifying Khan leads the Mon­
gol hor des across Asia.

10:30
O
®
T H E G A R Y C O LE M A N
SHOW
(3 ) O T H E D U K ES
91) (35) TH R E E 8 T O O G E S
CD (10) TH IS O L D H O U S E Bob Vila
talk* with landscape architect Tom
Wlrth about plana for Ihe farm­
house grounds.

11:00
O GO INCREDIBLE HU LK / A M A Z ­
ING SPIO CR-M AN
(3 ) O S O LID G O L D
( 7 ) 0 LASSIE

60 (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
11:30

CDO

K I0 8 W O R LD
91) (35) StSKEL 4 E B ER T A T T H E

MOVC6
CD(10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
AFTERNOON

O®

12:00

D A N C E FEVER
( 3 ) 0 M OVIE "The Day The Earth
M oved" (1874) Jeckle Cooper. Stel­
la Stevens. Until the tremors start
no one believes a men who says
there will be an earthquake
(D
O W E E K E N D S P E C IA L S
"Horatio Alger Updated: Frank
And Fearless" A courageous boy
outwits a group ol vklainoue kid­
nappers lo rescue a young child
and regain hit I amity heritage. (Pari
2|tJ
91) (38) M OVIE "Fireball Forward"
(1872) Ben Q a o a ra , Eddie Albert A
lough World War II general lake*
charge ol • division which 1* pla­
gued with problem*.
f f l ( 10) G R O W IN G YEA R S

12:30
a ffi AMERICA'S TOP TEN
3 ) 0 AMERICAN BANOSTANO
O (10) GROWING YEARS

12:35
9 1 (17) M O V * "Th e Horae Soldiers" (1889) John Wayne. WWam
Holden. The Union cavalry drive*

David Niven narrate* (R)

6:05
9 1 (1 7 ) W R ES TLIN G

6:30
O
®
N B C N EW S Frank Bourghottzer present* a special repori
on " 2 0 lh -C e n lu r y C o m p u ls r
Pirates."
CS) O C B S NEW S
( 7 ) 0 NEW S

CD (10) FAM ILY P O R TR A IT

2:00
O
®
W O RLD CHAM PIO N SHIP
K IC K BOXING
(3 ) O
N C A A B A S K E TB A LL
Dayton al Old Dominion
CLD (38) M OVIE
"The Bridge* At
Toko-Hi" (1854) WHUam Holden.
Grace Kelly. The personal lives ol
men who struggle lo survive In the
dangerous battlefields of the Kore­
an W ar are a* tortuous as the war
It tell.
CD ( 10) r r a e v e r y b o d y ' s b u s i ­
ness

8:05
9 1 (1 7 ) ROM PER ROOM

( ! ) N B C N EW S OVERNK1HT

Harris Saves Play
By Cindv Adams
NEW’ YORK - London's
critics didn't play nice with
Richard Harris. After 10
weeks, his "Camelot" posted
its closing notice. But Richard. who plays King Arthur,
galloped to the rescue He put
in his own money to save the
production and everyone's
jobs. That king's a real
prince... Mario Thomas and
Phil Donahue had sun. sea,
sand and surf in Puerto
Vallarta. But for 3900 a day
they didn't have silence. Their
five-bedroom rented villa
came with parrots and a cat.
Mario complained. The cat
was boarded with another
family. The parrots — who
are probably talking about
Mario now" — were also
moved.
“Yoko Ono gave me 1 1 'l
hours on tape." Steven Gaines.

7:00

E l ® N B C NEW S O V ER N IG H T

10:05
91' (17) NEW S

1:35

(17) M OVIE
"M oby Dick"
(1856) G regory Peck. Richard
Basehart.

M ORNING

February 19

2:30
(7 ) O W R ESTLIN G
CD (10) r r s EVER YB O D Y'S BUSI­
N ESS

3:00
8

®
N CAA B A S K E TB A LL
Florida al Tennessee
(7 ) O 8 P O R T8 B E A T
CD (10) S IM P LE TR E A 8 U R E 8
Classical guitarist Ruben Romero
performs musical selections from
the Renaissance. Baroque. Roman­
tic and contemporary per tod i

3:05
3 1 (17) M OVIE
"Casablanca"
(1843) Ingrid Bargman, Humphrey
Bogart A gambling casino owner
holds the key lo the escape ot a
French Resistance leader and hta
wile, who are fleeing trom Ihe Nazis

CD Q

3:30

FOR BOW LING Live cover­
age of the 5125,000 Rolatda Open
(from Dick Weber Lanes in St Lou­
is. M o )
CD (10) TO N Y BROW N S JO U R N A L
"Jim Crow ’s Graveyard" Tony
Brown trace* the growth of the allblack fighting unit Irom a support
and bomber escort command fo a
fighting unit. (Part 3)

4:00

O A U T O RACING Live cover­
age of Ihe N ASC A R Busch Clash
(from Daytona International Speed­
way. Fla ).
0 )) (35) IN CREDIBLE HU LK
0 ) (10) FREED O M T O 8 PEAK
(Premiere) "The American Dream"
William F. Buckley Jr. hosts an
overview of what tom e ot America's
greatest thinkers have beliaved
about Ihe promise of this nation, g
(3 )

4:30

O SP O R TS S A TU R D A Y
Scheduled: coverage of Ihe John­
ny Bumphus / Larry Shields 12round US BA Junior Welterweight
Championship bout; coverage of
the Women's World Speed Skating
Champion ship* (trom East Germ s-

(3 )

f f l (10) EN TER PRISE "Chef's Spe­
cial" Chef David Garo Soktlch la
followed aa he arranges and over­
sees every complex detail that
precedes the opening of his new
San Francisco restaurant, g

6:00
O
®
P G A G O L F "Isuzu-Andy
Williams San Diego O pen" Live
covorage ol the third round (from
the Torrey Pm#* Golf Course In La
Jolla. Calif).
C7) O W IDE W O RLD O F 8 P O R TS
Scheduled kve coverage of Ihe
Indoor Dream Mile (from Richfield,
Ohio); coverage of Ihe International
Toboggan Championship* (Irom SI
Moritz. Switzerland)
QD (38) DANIEL BO O N E
ED (10) W A S H IN G TO N W EEK IN
REVIEW

7:00
o ® IN S E A R C H O F...
( 3 ) 0 HEEHAW
(D O
M EM O R IES W ITH LA W ­
R EN C E W ELK
9 1)(38 ) T H E JE FF E R S O N S
ED (10) N A TIO N A L G EO G R A P H IC
S P E C IA L "Th e Thames" A trip tak­
en along Ihe Thame* River docu­
ment* llie massive clean-up lhal
has restored Its waters to a new
vitality, g

7:30
O ( ! ) P U B LIC AFFAIRS
9J) (35) B AR N EY M ILLER

8:00
Q
( ! ) DIFFERENT S TR O K E S
(3 ) O
BRING ’EM B A C K ALIVE
( D O T J . H O O K ER
9 0 (36) T H E R O C K FO R D FILES
ED (10) M OVIE "M y Fevorll*
Brunella" (1647) Sob Hope. Doro­
thy Lamour. A mysterious woman
persuade* a baby photographer to
become a super-sleuth

8:30
O

(!)

SILVER

SPOONS

8‘35
9 1 (1 7 )N B A B A S K E TB A LL Atlanta
Hawk* vs Dallas Maverick*

9:00
O ® G LE N C A M P B E LL M USIC
SH O W
(» ) O
M O V IE "T h e Fighter"
(P re m ie re ) G re g o ry H arrison.
Glynnis O'Connor. An unemployed
mill worker jeopardize* hi* mar­
riage and his Ills when he enters the
risky world ol amateur boxing
(7 ) O LO V E B O A T
9 11(35) O U N S M O K E

9:30
O

( ! ) TE A C H E R S O N LY
ED (10) T O N O R W A Y: H O M E OF
G IA N T S Monty Python's John
Cleese don* a reporter's cap In
search of Ms Norwegian roots and
10 Investigate Ihe great Viking spirit
and tradition.

10:00
O ® T H E FAM ILY TR E E
(Z ) O F A N TA S Y tSLANO
9lJ (35) IN D EP EN D EN T N E TW O R K
NEW S
ED{10) F A W L TY TO W E R S

10:30
91) (35) 8 I8 K EL 4 E B E R T A T TH E
M OVIES
CD (10) DAVE A LLEN A T L A R O E

10:50
9 1 (1 7 )N E W 8

11:00
O f f if f iO f f lQ N E W S
9JD (35) BEN N Y HILL
CD (10) ALFR ED H ITC H C O C K PRE­
S E N TS

11:30
O
®
S A TU R D A Y N IG H T LIVE
Host: Howard Hesaeman. Quest:
Marvin Qaye.
(J ) O
M OVIE
"Devil Dog: The
Hound Ot H*U" (1878) Richard
Crenna. Yvette Mlmieux.
ffi O
M OVIE "South Peclfc "
(38) M OVIE
"Castle Of Fu
Manchu" (1872) Christopher Lee.
Maria Perachy

00

11:50 '
9 1 (17) TU S H t "M oney"
James Brown.

Quest:

12:50
9 1 (17) M OVIE "T h e Prince And
The Showgirl" (1857) Laurence OHvter, Marilyn Monro*.

5:30

1:00

ED (10) W A LL S TR E E T W EEK
0 f f i LA U G H TR A X
"When The Chip* Are U p " Ouaat:
William Hambrech', president of
1:15
Hambrecht 4 Quit!
OH (38) M OVIE
House Ot Frank­
enstein" (1845) Boris Karloff. Lon
5:35
Cheney Jr.

91 (17) MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRAT­
ED
EVENING
O ffiN E W S

6:00

O f f if f iO N E W S
) (38) K U N Q FU
(1 0 ) S U R V IV A L " B a llo o n
Safari" Alan and Joan Root's flight
over Africa's Serengetl Plain In a
Is documented;

2:00
2:30

ffi O
M OVIE "First T o Fight"
(1867) Chad Everett, Marilyn Devin.

3:20

0 1 (17) M OV* "T h e Malien Jo b "
(1868) Michael Came. Noel Coward.

�Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

February 20

SUNDAY
M ORNING

7:00
O (4 ) 2*8 CO M P A N Y
i ) I O R O B E R T S C H U LLE R
(7 ) 0 T O O A Y'S B LA C K W O M A N
(19 (35) BEN HA D EN

7:05

(7) O DISCUSSION
CD (10) M A G IC O F O IL PAINTING

1:05
a s (17) P O R TR A IT O F A M E R IC A
Nevada, a land ot rugged snow­
capped mountains, grassy valleys
and formidable desert* I* profiled.

(IJ) (17) T H E W O R LD TO M O R R O W

7:30
O ( D (□ ) ( U ) E J . DANIELS
(ID O
FIR S T P R ESBYTER IAN
C H U R C H O F O R LA N D O

7:35
0® (1 7) IT IS W R ITTE N

8:00
O GO V O C E O F V IC TO R Y
&lt;D© REXHUM BARO
( Z J Q B O B JO N E S
01) O S ) JO N N Y O U E S T
(D (10) S E S A M E S T R E E T (R ) Q

8:05
0 1) ( IT ) C A R TO O N S

8:30
0 (41 S U N D AY M ASS
( J ) O D A Y O F DISCO VERY
1 D O O R A L R O B E R TS
(IT (S3) JO S IE A N D T H E P U S S Y ­
C A TS

0:00
0 t 4 I T H E W O R LD TO M O R R O W
I » O S U N D A Y M ORNING
(7 ) O S P EAK EAS Y
(11) O S ) B U G S B U N N Y A N D
FRIENDS
CD (1 0 ) M O V IE
"N a p lu n a 'a
Daughter" (1040) Bad Skelton.
Either WifUam* A South American
romance develop! between a beau­
tiful daligner and her paramour, a
polo itar.

9:05
11} (1 7 )L O S T IN 8 P A C E

9:30
O
14) M O N TA G E : T H E BLA C K
PRESS
( D O D IR EC TIO N S
II (3 5 )T H E J E T 8 0 N S

1:30
GD O BILL O A N C E O U TD O O R S
CD (10) FLO RIDA H O M E G RO W N
"Propagation"

ID

2:05
OX (17) M OVIE " T o Sir With Love"
(1967) Sidney Politer, Judy Oeeaon.
A black man leaches his students
more lhan what the testbook* have
lo otter after accepting a |ob In an
East End London school.

2:15
HD O M OVIE " Outrage" (1073)
Robert Culp, Martyn Mason. Teen­
agers I error ire a man and hit (amity
to the point where their lives ere
threatened.

3:00
O
(T )
8P O R TB W O R LD
Scheduled coverage ol the World
Pro Figure Skating Championships
(Irom Land over. Md ), coverage ol
Ihe Arlberg Kandahar Downhill ski­
ing event (from St. Anton, Austria).

10:00
0 &lt;4 1H E A L TH B E A T
CD O
FISHING W ITH R O LAN D
M AR TIN
l i t (39) M OVIE “ Blondie Know*
B e il" (1947) Penny Singleton,
Arthur Lake Oagwood la fired when
he It caught Impersonating hit
boat

10:05
OX (17) LIG H TE R SIDE

10:30
O
())
(D
CD

( I ) EM ERGENCY
o B LA C K A W A R EN ESS
O FIR ST B A P TIS T C H U R C H
(10) AM ER IC A T O T H E M O O N

10:35
03) (17) M OVIE
"Von Ryan'a
Eapraaa" (10415) Frank Slnaira. Tre­
vor Howard. An American lead! a
prtaofMra' revolt agalm l the Naria
taking them to Austria.

11:00
( 5 ) 0 TH IR TY M tN U TES
CD (10) A M E R IC A T O T H E M O O N

11:30
0 ( 4 ) N O R M S LO A N
IS) O F A C E T H E N A TIO N
CD O TH IS W E EK W ITH DAVID
BR IN KLEY
OS (30) LA U R E L A N D HARDY
CD (10) C O O K IN 'C A JU N
A F TE R N O O N

12.00

0 ( 3 ) OUTDOOR LIFE
( D O M OVIE "Th e Return Ot The
Pink Panther" (107S) Paler Salieri,
Christopher Plummer. Accidentprone Inspector Clouseau disguises
himself as a bellhop and a pool
repairman In order to trap an ehraive diamond thlel.
Oil (35) M OVIE "Th a Impossible
Years” (1005) David Niven, Lola
Albright A teen-age girl grows up
overnight much to her father's cha­
grin.
CD (10) TH E O O O O N EIGH BOR S

12:01
(1 ) O N O T E : 5 -M IN U TE D A Y TO N A
BOO R E P O R TS W ILL B E B R O A D ­
C A S T U V E A P P R O X IM A TELY E V E ­
RY H A LF H O U R D U M N O TH E
12*0 N O O N M O W .

12:30

2:00

O
T H E S U P E R S TA R S "The
Superteam s" Tan-m an squads
from Super Bowl Champion* Wash­
ington Redskins and '82 World
Series Champion* SI. Louis Cardi­
nals compels [Hve from Kay Biscayna, Fla.)
CLD (35) M OVIE " A Slap Out Of
Lina" (1070) Vic Morrow. Peter
Falk. In order lo solve their financial
problems, three Korean War bud­
dies plan a millkxvdottar robbery.
CD (10) TEN N IS " U S National
Indoor Championship*" Coverage
of the final* of Ihlt 5315,000 tour­
nament from Ihe Racquet Club In
Memphis. Tennessee.

CD O

3:30

A M A TE U R BOXING "U S A
vt. Yugoslavia" (Irnm Rijeka, Yugo­
slavia)

3:45

CD O
NCAA B A 8K ETBA LL
Missouri v*. Virginia (Irom The
Meadowlands. East Rutherford.
NJ)

4:00
(11) (38) INCREDIBLE HULK
CD (10) B&gt;0 BAN D C A V A L C A D E
Bob C rotby, Frankie Carle, Mar­
garet Whiting. Freddy Martin and
other great big band performers
are faalursd In filmed hlghlighl* of a
'30* and '40* mus e revival

o

4:35
OX (17) D EAR L O V E Y H E A R T A girl
causes serious problems tor haraeff
and others when the undertake*
writing her high school newspaper's
advice column.

5:00

Q|) (38) DANIEL BOONE
83 (10) FIRING LINE

5:35
OX (17) U N D ER SEA W O R LD O F
JA C O U E B C O U S T E A U
EVENING

6:00
C D O C D O new s
(1D (35) K U N Q FU
CD (10) N A TIO N A L G E O G R A P H IC
S P E C IA L "Th e Thsmee" A trip tak­
en along Ihe Thames River docu­
ments the massive clean up that
has restored Its waters to a new
vitality, g

6:30
OGDNEW S
(1 ) © C B S N EW S
( D O A B C N EW S

P A N TM Q

OX (17) M C E P EO P LE Quests: carloonlit. Morris Turner; Phitedelphia
Dance Company founder. Joan
Myerl Brown; The Peanut Butter

1.-00
(3 )

NCAA

BASKETBALL

OePeuI vs. 01. John's (from Madi­
son Square Garden)

O (1 ) V O YAG ER SI A female Intel­
ligence officer complicate* Phlneas
and Jeffrey's attempts lo get Gen.
Douglas MscArthur away from
Pearl Harbor before the Japanese
alteck.
( D O N M IN U TE S
CD O R IPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR
NOT1 Featured: the strange tale of
the "man who never was": the
world's only real flea circus; am aiIng performing animals; bizarre fes­
tivals; oddities In American cities;
the remains ot loti cfvtltiatlont.
0 D (38) W ILD, W ILD W E S T
CD (10) A U S TIN C IT Y U M fTS " B B
King" The "King of the Blue*" pre­
sents a (p e d a l mix of country and
blues In a performance featuring his
classic hit, "T h a Thrill Is Gone."

7:05
OX (17) W R ES TLIN G

8:00
0 ( 3 ) CH IPS
( J ) Q AR CHIE B UN K ER 'S PLA CE
(D
O M A T T H O U S TO N
(U ) (3 8 ) H E A L T H M A T T E R S
"Kidney Transplant"
CD (10) LIFE O N E A R TH "Invasion
Ot The Land" David Attenborough
looks at the ancestors ol amphibi­
ans, and Ihe caplure of a coelacenlh - a fish thought lo be exllnct
until 1038 — la recorded on film lor
the first lima. ( R ) g

8:05
OX (17) N ASH VILLE A U V E !

8:30

( D O G LO R IA
a t) (38) JE R R Y FA LW ELL

0:00
O ( i ) M OVIE "Rage O l Angels"
(Pari 1) (Premiere) Jactyn Smith,
Ken Howard Based on the novel by
Sidney Sheldon. Alter nearly being
disbarred on her Ural day In court, a
fledgling lawyer sals up her own
practice and becomes romantically
involved with a politically ambitious,
married attorney.
CD
O
TH E
JE F F E R S O N S
CD O M OVIE ' Star Trek - The
Motion Picture" (1070) William
Shatner, Leonard Nimoy. Admiral
Kirk clashes with the new com ­
mander of Ihe starship Enterprise
on a mission to find a huge, uniden­
tified vessel that Is carving a
destru ctive path through the
galaxy, g
CD (10) M A S TE R P IE C E T H E A TR E
"Winston Churchill The Wilder­
ness Years” Despite opposition
from many of hia colleagues,
ChurchiN urges Ihe government to
take his warnings about Hiller seri­
ously. |Part 6) g

4:30

(D P G A G O L F "lauiu-Andy
Williams San Diego O pen" Live
coverage of the final round (from
tha Torrey Pines Goll Course m La
Jolla Calif I
CD O W IDE W O R LD O F S P O R TS
Scheduled live coverage of the
Ruben Castillo / Juan LaPorl* 12round W B C Faatharwalght Cham pionshlp bout (from San Juan,
Puerto Rico); coverage ot the World
Motorcycles O n Ice Championships
(Irom Inwfl, West Germany)

B Q D M t t T TH E PRESS
(D O WALL STREET JOURNAL
REPORT
CD (10) MAOIC OF DECORATIVE

O

7:00

8:35

9:05
(IX (17) W E EK IN REVIEW

9:30
(3 ) O O N E D A Y A T A TIM E
0 9 (38) JIM M Y S W A G O A R T

10:00
CD O
TR A P P ER JO H N , M.O.
O ) (10) T H E O O O O N EIGH BOR S

10:05

Friday, Feb, it, 1083— S

'C h e e rs 1Not Bottoms Up
By VERNON SCOTT
UPI Hollywood Reporter
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Alm ost everyone In the
media and most folks in
Hollywood agree that the
best weekly TV comedy to
come along In years is
"Cheers,” the Boston bar­
room sitcom.
But "Cheers” Is In rating
tro u b le, reg u larly m ired
deep in the ratings, a fact
that astounds many critics
and reviewers.
Why would a quality
comedy, sharply written and
brightly played by an at­
tra c tiv e cast, find itself
without a solid audienqe?
Any TV diagnostician
would look immediately at
Its opposition p ro g ram s,
"Simon &amp; Simon" and "It
Takes Two.” "Sim on &amp;
S im on,"
a
hum orous
detective show, is regularly
in the top 15 or 20. " It Takes
Tw o" does only slightly
better than "Cheers."
Ergo, "Simon L Simon” is
a definite factor.
What is "Cheers’" lead in?
"G im m e A B re a k ,” a
mindless, lowly rated sitcom
with slightly higher ratings
than “Cheers."
And what show follows
"Cheers?" The most ac­
claimed series on the air,
"Hill Street Blues," which
has a healthy rating in and
around the top 20.
A nother fac to r is th a t
"Cheers" is on NBC, which
runs last in network ratings.
That "Cheers" is set in a
tavern would not appear to
be pertin en t. The old
"D u ffy ’s T a v e rn " and
"Archie Bunker’s Place,"
apparently have not raised
the ire of the blue nose
crowd.
Why, then, especially in
view of universal praise by
critics, is “ Cheers" not a big
hit?

Producers Less and Glen
C harles and producerdirector Jam es Burrows (all
three formerly associated
with “Taxi") are at a loss to
understand why their series
appeals lo such a selective
audience.
It is ap p a re n t th a t
"Cheers" la watched by
m illions of view ers who
seldom tune in to see
anything else, a manifesta­
tion gen erally involving
Intellectual
shows
—
especially dram as such as
"The Paper Chase."
But “ Cheers" is not a
cerebral show. Neither does
it rely on physical comedy,
slapstick or the sophomorlc.
It is sophisticated to a
degree, eliding laughs from
im p e c c a b ly
d raw n
c h a ra c te rs and th e ir interlationships.
A piquant romance exists
between the two leading cha­
ra c te rs , Sam "M ay d ay ”
Malone, an ex-baseball relief
pitcher who owns the bar,
and Diane Chambers, an
o v e re d u c a te d w ould-be
poetess reduced to working
as o barmaid.
They are a delightfully
a ttrad iv e couple played by
Ted Danson and Shelley
Long, still at the flirting
stage of their relationship.
The supporting cast of
barflies and Malone's other
employees, who provide a
strong family feeling to the
se rie s, have c a p tiv ate d
regular viewers of the show.
The humor Is gentle and
charming and the dialogue
bright and fast.
Danson, who has gained a
following among the ladies
for his macho appearance
and bemused tolerance of his
inept employees, believes
"Cheers" will survive if
given another year on the
air.
“ We'll find our audience,"

he said. " It’s just a m atter of
time, of getting viewers to
tune In a couple of times so
they get to know us.
" I can’t believe our show
won't catch on. It's not a bad
thing that we are enjoying
word-of-mouth promdion.
People who watch the show
talk
about
it.
They
rem ember the dialogue and
it doesn't Insult anyone's
intelligence. The characters
are a caring bunch of people
whose hom e aw ay from
home happens to be the bar.
Hey, there are a heck of a lot
of places where there is
much of Mayday Malone in
Danson, just as elements of
Diane are present in Shelley
Long. Both performers are
m arried, and happily so, but
they set off sp a rk s on
cam era.
Danson is aware of their
special magic, saying, "We
come from totally different
acting backgrounds, but
som ething happens -on
Tuesday nights when we do
the show for a live audience.
" It’s difficult to describe,
but th e re 's flirtin g , oneu p s m a n s h ip ,
h e a lth y
com petition and m utual
trust. We absolutely relax
and have fun. It isn't the
same during rehearsals, but
the performance chemistry
is there.
"I like playing Sain. He's
my first leading man role
with sexual overtones. He's
given me a new awareness of
myself in that reaped.
"Our cast has a genuine
family feeling and I think
that comes across on the
screen . Wc work in a
m utually p ro tectiv e a t­
mosphere. We’re all profes­
sionals and our work is very
important to us. But we also
share the desire to have fun.
"All we really want to do is
sh are it with a s m any
viewers as possible."

a x (17) N EW S

10:30
d 9 (38) JIM BAR KER
CD(10) F A W L TY TO W E R S

11:00
(3 u d o n e w 8
CD (10) S N E A K PREVIEW S Naal
Oabler and Jeffrey Lyon* review
“ The Pirates Of Penzance." "The
8ting It" and ' Hunger." .

o

11:05
OX (17) JE R R Y FA LW ELL

11:30
0

(3 ) E N TE R TA IN M E N T TH IS
W E EK
(4 ) O 8 O U 0 G O L D
0 9 (35) I T S Y O U R BUSINESS

12:00
(D O N E W 8
0 9 (35) W .V . G R A N T

ax

12:05

(17) O P EN U P Quests: Roy
Patterson, president ot the National
Association of Black Journalists.
Paufyne White, praaidanl of tha.
National Association of Media -

0

12:30

QD M O V IE
"IftdianapoH*
Spaariway" (1939) Gate Pag*. Pat
O'Brian.
CD O M O W "L a M ans" (1971)
Slava McOuaan. Stagfrtad Rauch
CD B JA C K A N D E R S O N C O N FI­
D E N TIA L

Kenyatta On ‘Against The Odds'
"Lincoln and Malcolm X." History Month, airs Thursday,
By Andrew J. Edelitein
another
"Against the Odds" Feb. 24 and profiles black
Nickelodeon has been
marking Black History Month segment celebrating Black nationalist loader Malcolm X.
this February with several
provocative programs.
On Sunday, "Against the
Odds," the biography scries
hosted by Bill Bixby, tells the
story of African statesman
Jomo Kenyatta.
Vintage film clips and still
photos are used to chronicle
Kenyatta's life, beginning
with his youth as a primitive
Kikuyu tribesman in Kenya
and following his struggle to
lead his people to freedom.
For young viewers who are
beremfng aware, via the film
"Gandhi, with the role that
one man can play In shaping
his country's history, Kenyalta’s story, albeit briefly told
here, is equally inspiring.

The offices of Largen and Clonts,
Surgical Associates, P.A ., announce the
addition of

BRUCE E. W ALTON, M .D.
whose practice is limited to plastic and
reconstructive surgery. V isits by ap­
pointment only. Telephone 323-2348,
Lakeview Professional Center, Suite 1
and 2. 819 E . F irst St., Sanford.

�6— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Feb. 18, 1983

Daytime
M ORNING

5:00
O 3 ) N B C NEW S O VER N IG H T
(TU E-FR t)
( I I (17) M ISSION: IM POSSIBLE
(FRI)

5:20
(CD (17) W O R LD A T U R G E (M O N )

02)

5:30

(17) r r s
(M O N )

YO UR

d l (17) W O R LD A T LA R G E (T U E TH U )

O
3)

O

( I ) 2'8 C O U N TR Y
O
C B S E AR LY

M ORNING

1:05

9:30
CD IN SEAR C H O F...

(ID (35) FAM ILY AFFAIR

(D

6:30

6:45

O ( D T H E F A C T 8 O F LIFE (R)
IS) O M ORE R EAL PEO PLE
OX (38) ANDY G RIFFITH
CD(10) E LE C TR IC C O M P A N Y (R )
O CD S A L E O F T H E C E N TU R Y
( 5 ) 0 CH ILD ’S PLAY
(U ) (38) DORIS DAY
CD (10) 3 -2 -1 C O N T A C T (R) g

11:00

(4 ) W H E E L O F F O R TU N E
(3 ) O TH E PRICE IS R IG H T
( D O LO VE B O A T (R)
(1 li (38) 38 LIVE
CD (10) O VER E ASY

0

7:00
0 ( 4 ) TO D A Y
3 ) O M OR NING NEW S
CD O G O O D M OR NING AM ERICA
QJ) (SB) NEW 8
B ) ( 1 0 ) T O LIFEI

7:05
(IS (17) FU N TIM E

7:15
£ 0 (10) A.M . W E A TH E R

7:30
(1 \) (38) W O O D Y W O O D P EC K ER
CD (10) 8E 8 A M E 8 T R E E T g

7:35
OS (17) I DREAM O F JE A N N IE

8:00
QD (38) FR ED F L IN T 8 T O N E AND
FRIENDS

3 ) H IT M AN
(ID (38) IN D E P EN D E N T N E TW O R K
NEW S
CD (10) P O S TS C R IP TS
A F TE R N O O N

12:00
0 3 ) S O A P W O R LD
CJ) O C A R O LE N E LS O N A T
NOON
CDO NEW S
01) (35) BIG VA LLEY
CD (10) M Y S TE R Y (M O N )
CD (10) M A S TER P IE C E T H E A T R E
(T U E )
CD (10} LIFE O N E A R TH (W E D )
CD(10) T H E C O U S T E A U O D Y S S E Y
(T H U )
CD (10) R O SEM A R Y C L O O N E Y ,
W ITH LO VE (FRI)

12:05
OS (17) PEO PLE NO W

6:05

12:30

8:30

0 3 )N E W 8
(3 ) O T H E Y O U N G A N D T H E
R E S TLE S S
( D Q R Y A N ‘8 H O PE

as (17) M Y TH REE SO N S
a I) (38) G R E A T 8 P A C E C O A S TE R
CD (10) M ISTER R O G ER S &lt;R)

8:35

as (17) T H A T G IR L

9:00
3 ) RICHARD 8IM M O N8

O 3 ) A N O TH E R W O R LD
C 7 J Q O N E U F E T O LIVE
CD(10) 8U R VIVA L (T H U )
CD (10) M A G IC O F OIL P AIN TIN G
(FRI)
2:30
CD O C A P IT O L
CD (10) ERICA / M AK IN G TH IN G S
W O R K (M O N )
CD (10) INSIDE B U SIN ES S T O D A Y
(W ED )
CD (10) M AG IC O F D E C O R A TIV E
PAIN TIN G (FRI)

3:00

as (17) PERRY M A SO N

3 ) F A N TA S Y

O G UIDING LIG H T
CDO G E N E R A L H O S P ITA L
OB (38) C A S P E R
CD(10) FRENCH CH EF (MON)
CD(10) C O O K IN ' C A JU N (T U E )
CD (10) EN TE R P R ISE (W ED )
ID (10) B E TW E E N LIFE A N D
D E A TH (T H U )
CD(10) T H E LA W M A K ER S (FRI)

3:05

as (17) FU N TIM E
as

3:35
OS (17) T H E F U N T B T O N E S

4:00
Q
CD L IT T L E H O U S E O N T H E
PRAIRIE
(S3 O H O U R M AG AZINE
CD O M ER V GRIFFIN (M O N -T H U )
CD o LO V E IN T H E AFTER ! lO O N
(FRI)
O S (35) T O M A N D JER R Y
CD(10) S E S A M E S T R E E T g

1:00

4

OS (38) S C O O B Y D O O

l l '» A Little B it M m t But O n so
O e licio u ti 1 Pound*

*3.95

SAUTEED CRAB MEAT&amp; MUSHROOMS
Chunk* 01 L u m p M eat S F rash
M u th ro o m t Soutood In P u re B u tto n

.DINNER *6 .9 5 ALACA R m * 5 » 9 S
MARYLAND STYLE CRAB CAKE
T w o C o k o t M ade W ith *5 P c i. F ro th Lo cal
C ra b M oot S a u to o d T a A O o ld o n S ro w n

DINNER

$7,95 ALACAkTE-j*»95

IIAPPY HOURS
I l i J O T o t i M A n d lO it a 'T III C lotlng

2 FOR 1 ALL I1IBALLS

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IN ANNE BONNIE’S TAVERN'*
M M F R E N C H A V C ( H W Y . 17-91)
SANFORD

a # (17) C A R O L B U R N ETT A N 0
FRIENDS

6:30
O QD N B C NEW 8
( I ) □ C B S NEW S
( 7 ) 0 ABC N E W S g
CD (10) O C EA N U S

8:05

10:05
a i d / ) N EW S

10:30
OX (38) M A D A M E 'S P LA C E

11:00
0 8 ) 3 i O (23 O n e w s
01) (38) S O A P
CD (10) H ITC H H IK E R 'S G U ID E T O
TH EQ A LAXY

02) (17) M OVIE "Th e April Foot*"
11:05
(1967) Jack Lemmon. Catherine a i ( 1 7 ) A L L IN T H E FA M ILY
Deneuve A Madison Avenue e ie c 6:35
11:30
utlve is bewitched by his boss's
021(17) BO B N EW H AR T
3 ) TH E B E S T O F CARSON
beautiful wtf* with whom he decide* 0
Host: Johnny C arton. Guests
to run away lo Part*.
7:00
Angle Dickinson, Melissa Manches­
O (4 ) LIE D E TE C TO R
8:30
ter, Charles Nelson Reilly, Addle
CD O P M. M AG AZIN E
(JP O
S Q U A R E PEGS
Evan*. (R)
O JO K E R 'S W ILD
9:00
(5 ) O M A R Y TY L E R M O O R E
(38) TH E JE FFER S O N S
CD (10) M AC N EIL / LEHRER Q 3 ) M OVIE "Rag# O l Angels" (7 ) O A D C N E W S M G H T U N E
(Part 2) (Premier*) Jectyn Smllh, a 1: (38) T H E R O C K F O R D FILES
R EPO RT
Ken Howard Based on the novel by CD (10) A L FR E D H IT C H C O C K PRE­
7:05
Sidney Sheldon Jennifer Parker's S E N TS
QZ) (17) G O M E H PYLE
romance with now -U S Senator
11:35
Adam Warner, whose child she Is
7:30
"The Lusty Men"
carrying, ends, and aha becomes 0 1 ( I D M OVIE
O 3 ) E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
entangled with Michael Moretu, a 11952) Susan Hayward. Robert
(S ) O T IC T A C D O U G H
Mttchum
ruthless underworld lawyer.
CDO FAM ILY FEU D
®
O
M*A*S*H
12:00
CX(38) BAR N EY M ILLER
CD O M O V IE "O re c* Kelly" 3 ) O TR A P P E R JO H N . M.D.
CD (10) U N TA M E D W O R LD
(P re m ie re ) C h ery l L ad d , Lloyd
Q w u o meets a childhood blend
7:35
Bridget
The III* 01 legendary whose critical illness la the result of
02) (17) AMERICAN PROFESSION­ screen star Grace Kelly, who gave a weight-reduction program run by
ALS Chrl* Dewhurst who n*es dan­
up a successful acting career lo a doctor. (R)
gerous M arch and rescue m illio n ,
marry Prince Rainier of Monaco, It ( 7 ) 0 T H E L A S T W O R D
for the U S C o a l! Guard It fea­
dramatized
tured.
12:30
Q3 (10) N A TIO N A L G EO G R A P H IC
S P E C IA L " T h e
S u p e rlln e ra : O 3 ) L A T E N IG H T W ITH DAVIO
6:00
Twilight Of An Era" A nostalgic voy- L E TTE R M A N Guest: actress San­
O CD L IT T L E H O U S E ' A NEW
aga ot fascinating lusury and dra Bernhard.
B EGINNING
remembered glory it taken aboard (LI: (38) N EW S
CD * 4 18 TH IS G O O D B Y E C H A R ­
the last ol Ihe greet liners still In
1:00
LIE B R OW N ? Llrvua and Lucy sadly
Irans-Allantlc service — the Queen (D O M OVIE "Haw aii" (1966)
announce lo the real ol Ihe Peanut*
Elizabeth 2. (R)
Julie Andrew*. Richard Harrla.
gang that they m uit pack up and
move away to the strange cily
9:30
1:10
where their father hat a new |ob
CJ) O N E W H A R T
3 ) O CO LUM BO
CD O T H A T ’S IN C R EO IB LEI
10:00
Featured: young video game
(J ) O
C A G N E Y 4 LA C Y
chempioni compete In Ihe ftrtl
1:30
OX (38) IN D EP EN D EN T N ETW O R K
Video Gam e Invltalional, three© 3 l N B C N E W S O V E R N IG H T
NEW S
dimensional TV ; scorpion hunters; a
CD (10) FR O N TLIN E "Pentagon.
2:00
grandmother demonstrates her
Inc." Jessica Savilch hosts an 0 1 (17) M OVIE "T h e Clone Mas­
weight lifting skills
esaminatton ol what would happen
ter" (1978) Ar1 Hindi*. Robyn Doug­
OX (38) M O V IE "Th e Paper
II Ihe U S budgets unprecedented
las
C h a M " (1974) Timothy Boltoms.

S

TUESDAY

I

EVEN IN O

5:00

8:00

a
3 1 IA V E R N E a SHIRLEY a
COMPANY
(5 ) O TH R E E 'S C O M P A N Y
( I ) o a l l IN T H E FAM ILY
a l) (38) E IG H T IS EN O U G H
CD (10) M ISTER R O G ER S (R)

0 3 ) ( D O C D O new s
0 fl (38) C H A R L IE'S A N G E LS
CD (10) U N O ER S TA N Q IN G H U M AN
BEHAVIO R

5:05

6:05
a i ( I D C A R O L B U R N E TT AN D
FRIENDS

I S (17) T H E BRADY B U N C H

5:30

February 22

0 3 1 P E O P LE ’S C O U R T
( i J Q M 'A 'S 'H
(7 ) O NEW S
CD (10) P O S TS C R IP TS

The Frances
Farmer Story
Frances Farm er's tragic
life story is retold in "Will
T h e re
R e a lly
Be a
Morning?," airing Tuesday
on CBS.
Susan Blakely stars in the
drama, which is based on
the autobiography of the
Hollywood star of the '30s.
Lee Grant. John Heard.
Melanie Mayron and Royal
Dano co-star.
The story follows Miss
Farm er from her troubled
childhood in Seattle, where
the young Frances was
caught between a dictatorial
mother and an ineffectual
father.
In college a t the Universi­
ty of Washington, she first
became interested in radical
illies and acting — the
iter turning into a success­
ful career on Broadway and
in Hollywood.

G

young man returns home Irom
Army duly and finds hia quarreling
parent* *lill engaged in batll*
CD(10) TH E C O U S T E A U O D Y S S EY

8:05

a t (17)

M OVIE ’ Entign P u lve r ’
(1964) Robert Walker. Burl Ivet A
mischievous ensign Joins his Navy
crew In plotting against Iheir eccen­
tric captain

6:30
O 3 1N B C N EW S
3)
C B S N EW S
( 7 ) 0 ABC N E W S g
CD (10) U N D E R S TA N D IN G H U M AN
B EHAVIO R

o

6:35

GOOD! FRESH! HOT! GARLIC CRABS

A LA CARTE

6:05

amounts lor defense spending dur­
ing a deep economic recession g

4:35

IT'S CRAB SEASON

*6.95

NEW S
OX (38) C H A R L IE S AN G ELS
8 0 (10) O C E A N U 8

OS (17) LE A V E IT T O BEAVER

Jjakitlil oJoey
DINNER

6:00

O 3 ) CD O (D O

LtndMy Wegner. A young law stu­
dent attempts to Impress a tyranni­
cal professor while unwittingly tail­
ing in love with hia daughter
£D (10) SUR VIVAL "W e Live Wllh
Elephants" David Niven narrates
the story of Or. Ian Dooglas-Hamllton’i live-year atudy Irving with hi*
Iamity armd*l a herd ot wild ele­
phant* In Lake Manyara National
Park, Tanzania, (R)

4:05
M U N 8 TER S

4:30

a 3 ) D AYS O F O U R LIVES
I D O ALL M Y CHILDREN
0D(38) M OVIE
CD (10) M OVIE (M O N . T U E )

BRING YOUR FAMILY
&amp; FRIENDS TO .

3:30

(38) B U G S B U N N Y A N D
FRIENDS
CD(10) E L E C TR IC C O M P A N Y (R)

as (17) T H E

EVENING

1:30

2:00

a
CD

11:05

11:30

( S O NEW S
{ D (10) A. M. W E A TH E R

o

A S T H E W O R LD TU R N S
CD(10) TH IS O LD H O U S E (FRI)

10:00

O

o a &gt; EARLY T O D A Y
3 ) O C B S E AR LY M ORNING
NEW S
CDO A B C NEW S TH I8 M ORNING

CD (10) M A TIN E E A T T H E B U O U
(W ED)
CD{10) S P O R TS A M ER IC A (T H U )
CD (10) FLO RIDA H O M E G RO W N
(FRI)
OS (17) M OVIE

10:30

6:00

CDO SUNR ISE
a i)(3 8 &gt; JIM BARKER
05) (17) NEW S

O

9:05

as (17) M OVIE

BUSINESS

5:35

S

(3 ) O D O N AH UE
(7 ) O M OVIE
a D (38) LEAV E rr T O BEAVER
CD (10) S E S A M E S T R E E T g

February 21

MONDAY

0 1 (1 7 ) B O B N E W H A R T

7:00
0 3 i LIE D E T E C T O R
3 ) 0 P M . M AG AZIN E
( D O JO K E R 'S W ILD
0 1) (38) T H E JE F F E R S O N S
CD (10) M A C N E IL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
0 1 (17) G O M E H P YLE

O

7:30

3 1E N TE R TA IN M E N T T O N IG H T
( D O T IC T A C D O U G H
(D O FAM ILY FEU D
(t 0 (35) B A R N EY M ILLER
CD (10) U N T A M E D W O RLD

7:35
02) (17) AN D Y G RIFFITH

O

8:00

3 ) T H E A -T E A M Hannibal and
The Fee* are thrown into Jail when
they try to gel medical attention lot
Ihe wounded B A. in a small town.
3 ) O M OVIE "Will There Realty
Be A Morning?" (Premiere) Susan
Blakafy, Lee Grant The glamorous
and troubled lit* ol actress Frances
Farmer, from her chaotic childhood
through her rise to stardom and
eventual emotional breakdown, la
dramatized.
(D Q H A P P Y D A Y S
(ID (38) M O V IE "T h e Subject Was
Roe**'' (1968) Patricia Neal. Jack
Albertson. After World War II, a

8:30

(D

O

LAVERNE

4

SHIRLEY

9:00
O 31 BAR E E S S EN C E Tyger tela
out lo eipand the perlume line into
a cosmetic* business, but toon dis­
covert that Hadden s conglomerate
la on shaky financial ground.
CD O T H R E E 'S CO M P A N Y

CD (10)

AM ER IC AN P LA YH O U S E
“ Tha File On JiU Hatch: 1950»-aarly 1970*" Carl accepts a teaching
position al H no level l University in
Chicago, and Sheila becomes
Involved in Ihe civil rights move­
ment alter their only child, Jill, is
born (Part 2 ) g

(X O &gt;

11:00
Q 3 &gt; &lt; » a ( D O N EW S
111 (3 5 )S O A P
CD (10) H ITC H H IK ER 'S G U IO E T O
TH EQ A LAX Y

11:05
OX (17) A L L IN T H E FAM ILY

11:30
a
(4 ) T O N IQ H T Host: Johnny
Carson Ouesls: Robert Klein, sing­
er Julio Iglesias
IS ) O M AR Y T Y L E R M O O R E
(7 J O A B C N EW S N IG H T LINE
O X (38) T H E R O C K F O R D FILES

11:35
a i ( I D M O V IE "Strom bod" (1950)
Ingrid Bergman. Mario Vitale

12:00
3J O
(D O

a X (38) IN D EP EN D EN T N E TW O R K
N EW S
CD (10) FUNDI: TH E E LLA B AK ER
S T O R Y Ju lia n B ond . Eleanor
Holm** N on on. James Forman.
Ann# Braden, and Rev. Ralph Aber­
nathy share their recollections ol
civil right* actMat Ella Baker.

10:15
0 1 (17) N EW S

10:30
OX (38) M A D A M E 'S P LA C E

LA S T W ORD

12:30
L E T T E R M A N Quasi: actor
Hall ol the "Bowery Boys."
a il (38) N EW 8

Hunt*

1:00
IT )

Q
M OVIE
"I Remember
M am a" (1948) Irene Dunne. Barba­
ra Bel Geddes

10:00
0 3 ) 8 T . E LS EW H ER E Dr Auschlander m utl decide whether lo
undergo chemotherapy. Dr. Morri­
son treat* a beaten youth whose
bigoted brother vow* revenge, and
a lemale flasher prowl* the halls ol
St. Eilgkrs. (Part 1)
( D O HART T O HART

th e

Q 3 ) L A T E N IG H T W ITH DAVIO

9:30

T O 8 Violet's romance
with a young asaculive leads lo the
otter of a big promotion lor her.

Q U IN C Y

1:10
3) O

M C M ILLA N 6 W IFE

1:15

12) (17) M O V IE
"Tim b u k tu!"
(1959) Victor Mature. Yvonne De
Carlo.

1:30
O 3 ) N B C N E W S O V E R N IG H T
CD (10) A L FR E D H IT C H C O C K PR E­
S E N TS

2'30
O

3)

3 ) E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
O C B S N E W S N IG H T W A T C H

3:00

O 3 ) N B C N E W S O V E R N IG H T
„

3:10

(12) ( I D M O V IE
"The Qul*l Ameri­
can" (1958) Audi* Murphy, Michael
Redgrave

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

WEDNESDAY
EVEN IN G

8:00
CD0 ( 2 3 0 news

O ®
0 ]) (35) C H A R L IE'S A N G E LS
t i l (10) F O C U S O N S O C IE T Y

6:05
©
(17) C A R O L B U R N E T T AN D
FRIENDS

6:30
0 ® N B C N EW S
I V O C B S N EW S
17 ) O A B C N E W S Q
CD &lt;10) F O C U S O N S O C IE TY

6:35

February 23

© (38) M OVIE "Th e Eiger Sanc­
tio n ” (1075) Clint Eastw ood.
George Kennedy. A former hired
killer Is lured from his job as a col­
lege prolessor to perform n moun­
tain-lop assassination
t D (10) T H E HO R R O R O F IT ALL
Jose Ferrer narrates a look at
soma of Ihe foremost horror films ol
the last 60 years, featuring film clips
and Interviews with ihose who
helped make them

8:05
©
(17) N C A A B A S K E T B A L L
Arkansas vs Te ia s

9:00

a x (17) B O B N E W H A R T

7:00
0 (3 ) U E D E T E C T O R
1 J j O P M. M AG AZIN E
(7.) O JO K E R 'S W ILD
a 11(35) T H E J E F F IR B O N S
ED (10) M A C N E IL / LEHR ER
R EPO RT

7:05
aX (17) G O M E R P YLE

7:30
0 GD E N TE R TA IN M E N T T O N IG H T
1 J ) O T IC T A C D O O O H
( 7 ) 0 FAM ILY FEU O
ill! (35) B A R N EY M ILLER
CD (10) U N T A M E D W O R LD

7:35
© ( 1 7 ) AN O Y G R IFFITH

6:00
O
®
R EA L P E O P L E Featured:
the Stuntmen'* Rodeo: the "B e«t
Cho*t In the W a it" conteet; a tiger
trainer Irom Circus World; the La*
Flortste* Ban m Beverty Hills; a flo­
rist who delivers deed flowers; a
hlppopo tamus-shaped car.
ID O O R A M M Y A W A R D S John
Denver host* the silver anniversary
edition of this award* ceremony, to
be telecast live from the Shrine
Auditorium In Los Angela*.
(D O A L L -S T A R FAM ILY FEU O
S P E C IA L Richard Dawson host*
Ihl* competition between male and
lamale "Perfect 10'*.“ Including
Sloven Ford, Richard Simmon*,
Ptiyttl* Diner and Marilyn M cCoo.

O (31 T H E F A C T S O F LIFE Blair
resorts to drastic action to change
Jo and Meg'a minds about becom­
ing nuns. (Part 2 )g
(7 ) Q T H E F A LL Q U Y
£D (10) T H E M ARX B R O TH E R S IN
A N U TS H E L L Film clips and Inter­
views are featured In a ealute to Ihe
most celebrated comedy team In
the history of motion pictures - Qroocho. Harpo, Chico. Zeppo and
Gum m o Marx. (R)

o GD FAM ILY

9:30

TIER Alas becomes
a "big brother" to a Vietnamese
boy

10:00
o GD Q U IN C Y Quincy

and Emily
patch up their differences and their
marriage ceremony goea oil on
schedule - but |ust bar sly. (Pari 3)
CD O D Y N A S TY Blaka lights lo
slop Alexia. Dan Cassidy file* to
Slngapor* lo Identify the oil rig sur­
vivor. and Fallon ends up In Mark's
arms attar her Haitian divorce. Q

10:05

11:30
O
®
T O N IO H T Host: Johnny _
Carson Guest. Peter Allen.
GD O M AR Y T Y L E R M O O R E
(T J Q A B C N EW S N IG HTLIN E
01) (35) T H E R O C K FO R D FILES
CD(10) A LFR ED H ITC H C O C K PRE­
S E N TS

11:35
a x (17) MOVIE "The Green Pas­
tures" (1936) Rsx Ingram. Eddie
Anderson
H A R T T O H A R T Jonathan
and Jennifer's lives are endangered
when a dying man gives them a
valuable gold statue ot Buddha (R)
CDO T H E L A S T W ORD

L A T E N IG H T W ITH DAVID
L E H E R M A N Quests: parrot train­
er Alba Ballard, comedian Andy
Kaufman with former wrestling
champion Fred Blatsle.
© ( 3 5 ) NEW S

6:05
©
(17) C A R O L B U R N E T T A N O
FRIENDS

6:30
O ® NBC NEW S
( D O C B S N EW S
(? ) O A B C N E W S Q
CD(10) E A R TH . S E A A N D S K Y

6:35
© ) (17) B O B N E W H A R T

O

7:00

U E D E TE C TO R
O P.M . M A G A ZIN E
O JO K E R '8 W ILD
© (35) T H E JE F F E R S O N 8
CD (10) M A C N E JL / LE H R ER
R EPO R T

M OVIE "T h e Big Caper"
(1957) Rory Calhoun. Mary Costa.

7:05

7:30

8

8

® E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N V JH T
O T I C TA C DOUGH
0 FA M ILY F E U O
(35) B A R N EY M ILLER
CD(10) U N T A M E D W O R LD

O®

8:00

FAM E
M A Q N U M , P J.
C O N D O Th e Kirk ridge and
Rodriquez families gather In a huge
church for Linda and Scott's wed­
ding.
© (35) M O V IE "T h e Man Who
Loved Cat Dancing" (1973) Burt
Reynold*. Sarah MJlee An outlaw
Ialls in love with the sole survivor of
* train N s gang robbed end must
outwit his cohort* to ansur* her
n r ip i
CD (10) 8 N E A K P R EVIEW S Neel
Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons review
"Table For Five" end "Return Of
Captain Invincible "

6:05
© - (1 7 ) N C A A B A S K E T B A L L
Indiana vs. Michigan

1:10

(D O

M OVIE "First Love" (1977)
Susan Dey, William Katt.

O

1:30
(3 ) N B C N E W 8 O V E R N IG H T

1:35
© ( 1 7 ) M OVIE "C a x a m U j" (1965)
John Ireland, Carol Ohmarl.

2:30
0

®

E N TE R TA IN M E N T T O N IG H T
(D O C S S N EW S N K JH TW A TC H
(D O M OVIE "Eaay Living11949) Victor Mature. Lucille Ball.

3:00

0 ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT

11:00

O ® GDO CDO

(ID (35) SO A P

NEW S

CD (10) H ITC H H IK ER 'S G U ID E T O
T H E G A LA X Y
11:05

© ( IT ) W O M A N W A TC H

3:20
© (17) M OVIE "W lndom'* Way"
(1958) Peter Finch, Mery Ure.

4:00
O (3) NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
( D O MOVIE "Th e Frozen Deed"

February 24

8:30

(D

O A M A N D A 'S
CD (10) T H IS O L D H O U S E Interior
designer Bob Dllmer makes recom­
mendations tor the decor ol the Arl­
ington house

9:00
O ( 3 1 GIM M E A BREAK
I D O 8 IMON A SIM ON
(? ) O
T O O C L O S E FO R C O M ­
FORT
£D (10) M Y 8 TE R Y I "Th e Agatha
Christie Stories: Magnolia Blos­
som " Attar running oil with another
man, a woman discovers that her
honorable husband I* Involved in a
scandalous swindle, q

9:30

®

© (17) P O R T R A IT O F AM ER ICA
Nevada, a land ot rugged snow­
capped mountains, greasy valleys
and formidable deeerta I* profiled.

1:00

(D O

© ( 1 7 ) NEW S

EVEN IN G

0 ® ( D O (D O new s
i) l (35) C H A R L IE 'S A N G E L S
CD(10) E A R TH . 8 E A A N D SKY

12:30

O ®

TH U R SD AY
6:00

12:00

CD O

0 (3 ) C H E E R S Sam trie* to help
the Coach after he Is taken In by a
fruit .

(D O IT TAKES TWO
10:00
0

®
HILL S T R E E T B LUES
Evidence that looks bad for Joe
Coffey surface* m the Investigation
of a suspect's death, and Joyce end
Frank reassess Ihoir relationship.
(Part 2)
CD O K N O TS LANDING

(D O 20 / 20

© (36) IN D E P EN D E N T N E TW O R K
NEW S
CD (10) T H E HO R R O R O F IT A LL
Jose Ferrer narrates a look at
some of the foremost horror film* of
the lest 60 years, featuring film d ip t
end Interview* with those who
helped make them.

10:05
d X (17) N EW S

10:30
©

(35) M A D A M E -8 P LA C E

11:00

Gruesome Tales On 'Ripley's'
By David Handler
Here's your big chance to
witness cannibals, kamikaze
turtles, blindfolded bull­
fig h ters. gian ts, shark
c o n ju re rs ,
N e p a lese
goddesses, Swiss boulder
Murlers. Senegalese wres­
tlers.. Texas rattlesnake
sackcrs. Peruvian torture
devices. Japanese mystic
healing rites and, for you
nostalgia buffs, a penny
arcade museum in tireenwich, Conn.
This queer grab bag is. of
course. "Ripley's Believe it
or Not!." the ABC video
update of the old Robert L.
Ripley syndicated feature. A
one-hour magazine made up
of short features, nature
films and historical reenact­
ments — a "journey into the
strange, the bizarre, the
unexpected" — "Ripley's
Relieve it or Not!" may
sound a bit like "That's
Incredible!," but it isn't.
-For one thing, they don't
talk about a doctor ampu­
tating limbs without benefit
of anesthetic on "That's
Incredible!" Vou won't see a
story about an aquarium
shark that barfed up a
human arm on "That's
Incredible!" — at least 1
don’t think you will.
For
a n o th e r.
only
"Ripley's Believe it or Not!"
boasts the great Jack

Palance as host. Blessed was the same.
with a deliciously menacing
"An Incredible coinci­
grin, a cat-like purr of a dence?" wonders Jack “Or
voice and the world's creep­ something else..."
iest set of cheekbones.
Or the gory tidbit about
Palance Is one of the public hangings held in New
screen's most convincing York City's Washington
heavies, going all the way Square in the 1820s. Same
back to “Shane" some 30 tree is still there.
years ago.
"There are probably a
Dogs growl at him. then
million oddities in the
run under a table to hide.
Naked City..." smiles Jack.
Ho seems to have a great
Or the 1934 tale of the
time rihglcading this ghoul­ Sydney. Australia, aquarium
ish cavalcade, playing it like shark that spit up the arm of
he's telling you ghost stories a missing saloonkeeper.
around the campfire. He's
"One of the strangest casperfect. You keep waiting •es of indigestion on
for him to cat a live insect.
record..." concludes Jack.
What a guy.
Or the 1840s Scotch physi­
Fashion model Catherine
cian who held the world's
Shirriff started out the sea­ record for fastest amputa­
son as Jack's supporting
tion of a leg — this being
host and narrator, but lias
before the era of anesthet­
recently been replaced by
ics.
Jack's own daughter. Holly,
"He once removed a leg in
who is an actress and some
25 seconds," Jack informs
kind of dish.
us, eyebrow raised, as he
Don't get me wrong. Jack.
fondles the doctor’s shiny,
I mean that in a respectful
razor-sharp saw.
way. She seems like a real
"Ripley’s Believe it or
n/ce kid. Well brought up
Not!" tends to be a bit grue­
Holly handles most of Ihe
some sometimes, maybe too
nature and travel flint®,
gruesome for little kids. It
leaving pop free to bar lie
did turn this reporter's
the good, creepy stuff. Like
stomach more than once.
the Edgar Allen Poe short
But it isn't as bothersome as
story about cannibalism at
“That's Incredible!,” which
sea that actually took place
sometimes seems to func­
in real life 50 years later in
tion as the "Let’s Make a
England. Same details.
Deal" of the suicide prone.
Even the name of the victim
This is harmless fun.

GAZEBOS, SHEDS, CARPORTS AND
SCREEN ROOMS:.THEY'RE ALL HERE
V is it S H E D S
A M E R I C A and
check for
q u a lity . O u r
b u ild in g s are
co n structed for
the south
F lo rid a
h u rric a n e
code.

(1 ) O

M AR Y T Y L E R M O O R E
VIEW PO IN T The relation,
ship be Iween crime portrayed by
Ihe media and crime In Ihe streets
Is examined by a panel ol experts
who discus* allegation* that crime
reporting Is sensational and may
even encourage criminal activity,
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Richard WkJmark
N B C N E W S O V E R N IG H T

3:05

CALL FOR ESTIMATES
• ALUM INUM A W N IN G S
• SCREEN ENCLOSURES
• MOBILE HOME ROOFOVERS

O ® ( D O ( D O N EW S
HI) (35) S O A P
CD (10) H ITC H H IK E R 'S G U ID E T O
T H E G A LA X Y

© (17) M O V IE "Sweet Smell Of
Success" (1957) Burl Lancaster.
Tony Curtis.

ORLANDO

11:05

4:00

8112 E. Colonial Dr.

© &lt; 17) A L L M T H E FAM ILY

11:30
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C arton. Gue*la: actress Eden Bsckin. The Weather Oirta.

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"Spell Of Evil"
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Friday, Feb. 18, 1*83-7

Orlando, Fla.

273*6663
S A T. * A M - * FM

�I

8— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday# Feb. II# 1883

T J . H ooker' Is An
Old-Fashioned Cop

SEARCH FOR FREEDOM
In honor of National Black History Month,
NICKELODEON, The First Channel for Kids,
premiers "Voice of the Fugitive," the tense

odyssey of escaped slaves who make their
way to freedom across the Canadian border in
1851. The show airs Feb. 27.

Jaclyn Raves About Rage O f Angels'
By Peter Meade
Of all the roles Jaclyn
Smith has played, from
“ C h a rlie 's
A n g e ls" to
" J a c q u e lin e
B ouvler
Kennedy," to her latest In
NBC’s production of Sidney
Sheldons "Rage of Angels,
the role she likes the most is
that of mother to her infant
son, Gaston Anthony Rich­
mond.
Filming for the four-hour
miniseries, which airs Sunday,
Feb. 20 and Monday. Feb. 21,
began just four months after
his birth. However, the baby
accompanied his mother to
New York City for the filming
of what Miss Smith refers to
as "the best role I’ve gotten to
do."
"This Is not a character role

with wigs and costumes," says
Miss Smith, of. her role as
attorney Jennifer Parker.
"I was thankful for the
Jackie 0. role, although 1;
wasn't critically acclaimed. Il
was an autobiographical
sketch and I think it was a
positive view of her life. I'm
told they (the Kennedys) liked
the movie and it was a step
for me to do the character.
"This role is not built on
st looks or image,” says
iss Smith, "so it's a step up
from the 'Charlie'# Angels'
days. Jennifer is very strong
— that’s what attracted me —
and she’s a survivor."
Miss Smith knows about
surviving. She was the only
one of “Charlie's Angels" to
survive the show's 1976-81

K

tenure. Although she still lists
'Angel' alumnae Kate Jack­
son, Farrah Fawcett and
Cheryl Ladd as friends, she
disagrees with their individu­
al exits from the show.
"I signed a contract and I
upheld it," she explains. "I
saw what it did to my friends,
but I wanted to sec it through.
It wasn’t right to leave."
Staying did mean turning
down several big film offers,
including the 1979 James
Bond film "Moonraker," but
the 34-year-old actress is now
content that future roles will
materialise because of her
acting ability, not her good
looks.
“ 'Charlie’s Angels' is an
image to fight," she says. "I
want to be accepted as a

JACLYN SMITH
serious actress.
"I turned down six scripts
before 'Rage of Angels.’ The
main thingl Is not
. but
waiting for good ings.”

By David Handler
lie has the warmth of a
Marine drill sergeant eyes in a permanent squint,
jaw squared, shoulders
back. He is a grimly deter­
mined bulldog who has little
to say once he’s on a case,
aside from the occasional.
"Right now, we've got a job
to do."
Mostly, he tracks down
thugs, and he'll do anything
to get the cuffs on ’em. He’ll
dive from rooftop to roof­
top. onto the hood of an
onrushing car. over a wall.
He'll knock down a door
with his shoulder and come
up firing.
"When he gels involved in
a case." observes T.J.
Hooker's rookie partner, "he
gets a little intense."
Hooker Is an old-fash­
ioned TV cop. the kind for
whom there is only good and
evil, right and wrong. He
has no se lf-d o u b t, no
patience with moral or
social complexity, no life
away from the badge, no
first name.
He is, in his own words, "a
street cop." William Shatner
plays the heck out of him —
clenched fists, swagger, the
works.
Trouble is. after a couple
of seasons of forging ahead
into the gray area with "Hill
Street Blues," it's hard to
swallow the old black and
w hite of ABC's " T .J .
Hooker.” To me it seems
dated, a throw back to
"Dragnet."
After all, what is Hooker
if not a bulked-up Joe Fri­
day in uniform, a -guy who
does it by the book, a guy
who never smiles, a guy

whose few brushes with the
spoken language lean to
terse sermonizing?
Take Hooker on teen
alcoholism : "K ids and
booze. What a waste."
Like "Dragnet," "T.J.
Hooker" bears the official
LAPD stamp. Our hero
operates out of the Los
Angles Police Academy,
affording us the chance to
see recruits learning the
ropes, as well as doing vig­
orous calisthenics on the
lawn — often led by Hooker
himself.
Hooker has a stoic com­
mander (Richard Herd), who
in turn employs his own fluf­
fy blond daughter, Stacy
(H eather Locklear), as
dispatcher. But the only per­
son he really has time for is
his partner, young Vince
Romano (Adrian Zmed). who
he a ffectio n ately calls
"junior"
Romano is a chip off the
old block, complete with
wavy hair and swagger.
Like Shatner. Zmed seems
to always be concentrating
on holding his stomach in.
The big d iffe re n c e
b etw een
H ooker and
Romano is that Romano has
em otional a tta c h m e n ts,
attachments that haunt him
from week to week. Il seems
he’s mixed up with everyone
in the city of L.A. who com­
mits a crime.
"T.J. Hooker" lakes us
back to the TV cop show of
whinv, acncd villains, over­
simplified police procedure,
impossible coincidences, inthe-nick-of-time shoot-outs.
We've outgrown this kind of
show. It's almost nostalgic.
Almost, not quite.

NOW ! 500 Extra Parking Spaces

G O GUCE

If j m f t t thlaklag of getting eat t i the hawse m i a n
loakfeg far aemething to da this weekend, here are ■
few suggeattawat
Zoo benefit, 11 a jn . to 5 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 19,
McDonald's parking lot, Highway 17-92, Sanford.
Petting coo, carnival games and prices, plant sale.
Dusty Boots BHE Open Horse Show, beginning at 9
a m., Sunday, Feb. 20, Wilco Sales Arena 4 miles west
of 1-4 on State Road 46, Sanford. Spectators free.
Roek Lake Middle School Raider Day, 11 a.m. to 6
p m ., Saturday, Feb. 28 at the school a t 250 Slade
Drive, Longwood. Carnival, auction, entertainment,
flea m arket, barbecue dinner 1-6 p.m.
“ Y ounf-atH eart" Dance, every Sunday at 8 p.m.,
DeBary Community Center, Shell Road, DeBary.
Instruction 7:30 p m Open to public.
Central Florida Regional Scholastic Art Awards
Exhibition, Feb. 12-27, Robinson’s, Orlando Fashion
Square. Open to public 10 a jn . to 9 p.m. weekdays and
12:30-5:30 p.m. Sundays.
"Celebrate Life," fund raising party for Central
Florida Nuclear Freexe Campaign, 24 p m , Sunday,
Feb. 20, Rollins College Student Center, Holt Avenue,
Winter Park. Beer, wine, cheese, and snacks. Musical
entertainm ent
Annual Antique Show end Sale, Feb. 25-27, Maitland
Civic Center.

VISION and FASHION
Need Not Be Expensive
W H ITU OLASS L I N IS S
IM CLUDBS P A A M B

| # | K B B
/ J

U N O LB
VISION

LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES
T IN T S a P H O TO ON U Y A V A IL A B L U
• Your Dorian Prescription Filled
• Olatsat OunHcaladwFrot Adjustments A Repairs

FRIDAY, SATURDAY A. SUNDAY 8 - 5 PM
............................................ and

family Am.

Al Under I Roof • Open Rain

Every Friday

SPIN-TO-W1N

$4500.3x1
DCAUERS WANTID • 250 New booths • 50 Space

produce market under construction. Cal 645-1792.

YOUR EYEGLASSES
S A V I N G S C EN TER

BUDGE
OPTICAL i

SANFORD *323-8080

2 5 4 4 S . FR EN C H A V E . (1 7 -9 2 )
(ACROSS FROM SAMBO'S)
(N E X T T O A Q O IIS )^
.Ciese* Wea.aftomeeeat 1

; f a .m .-l p.n

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